The New York Herald Newspaper, February 26, 1856, Page 2

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2 NEW YORK HY. RaLDyy TUESDAY, —————_—- —3——qu—— ' - to foreste for him anc’, @etat which Aceruitin: he recede from it ADDITIONAL FROM EUROPE. age nt f ee may well oot ‘on in’ gn the Unti ntly wi tHam.in the belle that » fall, ample and ~ * heh ted seninoeciay ‘MPELET F oBLIGUED By J. WILSON, GEORGE ‘deen made aated ed ¥ To sustain one nell in his hidden machinations, © sunr, PIGADILLY, LONDON. So, no doubt, the Tinves has deea informed, and if right- Seat en OUR RELATIONS WITH ENGLAND. | svtsparty, te goon stacy thon oltmral rinse | win st" aivucane wera a anagem | URecieral apotain Sees Nl ry balwery wales rt rt i : ples, appear tO, We foiwifisient. The democratic party | States, © es the intent wo he cullntol ta tbe service of a eceiza | fon the other ‘tho Times discovers tnat it has | eoptars ase b treaty was wilt not be fo" 2a sleeping when the trumpet of the revo- | Cres he shal oe deemed guilty of ahi > misdemeanor. not been rightly intormed, there is little reason for dou rt | approved raw Eoreremsata, no other twenty wae Our Paris, Madrid, and Constantinople Corre s- lution soun¢ g° “Ales for Gen. O’Dorwell, the day whea, mavens, 1818, as to the course that journal will take; it will never a1. | to be ranctioned w iilaxea im spirit or inteution throwing of 2 the mask ke now weers, be shail present | 4m unbappy difference has arisen between the govern- | yoeate w dishonorable war any more thea it woslds | from it. This cause was intended to stop all farther pro- pondence. himeelfin ‘ais true colors! The ‘democrats don’t take | “aente of Great Britain and the United States, wash cer- | gisnonorable pesce. ecedings with respect to the treaty of Mr. Squiers, and — ‘om him for one ret Gre it ay weil 9e fate partion srem desirous to euvesom for purp res of Buch believed to be the Position of affsirs, and ee Lomalecmpey’ C parte trom that treaty ; Ht —_— they By own. such the it of Our governwent' question erie, articier. 8 lous to ‘reaty, a well as» ia the treat; Our Parts far ‘pal ery, The Engltsh government decline to produce the corres- | what motive can have induced such a course of con | _ The rest of the project wae derived altogether from Me. | itself Fibe onxvession of Bailes’ the cocupation ot Bests it ie unnecessary to speak, Yor dence cn the hackneyed ples that to do #0 “would mot | duct? Lawrence’s correspon jence Palmerston. It did | ang Bonaca are, wholly distinct from it, Ne evil bes, Ramee, Seber, 0G...) del fons Dullitiee they ail ctewd Ch 'achind | be comdnetve t> pails te'eredta.” Nir. Crampton, no doubt, only obeyed his instructions; | away with the possibility of either Great Britain or the | Soncequen ly. s:tended it which would’ not otereiso ‘Fe Carnival as it is and as it used to be— Fever of Specula- | yal party wishes to make somechivg The publi: belog thes kept in the dark, it may be ad- | and om that account, the Cabinet hesitate to disown | United States corapiohieg, Somsaines permaneatly on | hayy come to pa ad it has only tailed in accomplish- Jation on the Stock Exchange—American Ball to Celebrate | ‘ present Yan do nothing. ‘ventageous to endeavor to trow some light on the pre- | Bie: but it is a grave question how fara minister is jus- | that region, which seemed likely to become the causeway | ing alli was intended te acoomplish. because there is 29: és ‘on—Theatrical ta the situstiun of Spsia—a | sent etute of affaire. in ‘on fostructions, which involve s breach | between two great commercial worlds, and it preserived treaty which cannct be contested when there is a dus; Me Birthday of Washin,ion— Newe—Return soon be changed were the | Tbe war with Russia, tbe proposliin for the foreign | of {he law of the country to which he is aeoredited. that all communicaticns by railway or canal between the | sition tooo ro, avd that the éfsposition of the United: @ Rachel's Troupe 0 Paris—New Opera by Vincent posed of ‘independent men; bat more | enlistment bili, the opposition to that mearure, i's flaal ‘The hirtory of this whole case fa au; Atianticand the Pacisio; were to be opened to the audjects | ctatos ip very different now from that whieh it was when bii igeestive. rs ‘We have raised thirty seven men at a cost of $120,000, | of Great Britain and the citizens of the United States, and | the izeaty was oondluded. cash cown, an tere anda possible war, with | in¢eed to all Se weed, oo jual terms; while the same | "We Meall acd, no mene, to. tile’ Siaan hiilienet the United States. inc oodsuios ions were 40 be placed under the Joins protes. IS cman tie: cheese Uy wiamowtcgs (yoni ‘Mr, Ravkin, an eminent Canadian gentleman, (if in- | tien of the tro governments, 4 Rye is elude, the corn from the chat, and vetting deed it is to 02 admitted, that » colonial man eam be |, This project, having been tent to England, and submit- | diplomatic payers on tue one aide, and party ragged etther ¢minent ors gentlemao,) wrote to our govern. | ted to the Britivh g: vernment, which fa! y mowed it, persoral cavi'al making on the’ other, the groan on ment, offering to raise and equip » regiment of 1,000 | become a treaty. terms by which Great ‘Erimia and | which apy quarrel between Great Britain and the United Hilemen, Alter a Celay of five months, asd on renewed | the Uzited sates were restricted from apy hold on the | Sates can, as iar as Central America 18 concerned, be- pplication, he received an oficial eommunicstion, ro- Central American _ishmus were ‘copied vera! in trom | Shed. turcing hiv original le:ter. with ¢ pie observation, ecu mu ‘between ti that tttLad been directed to tho Eeoretary of War, in: | 1m Lerdon and the British Mivisier of Foreign Phe Sapo laser saat such Paget pe set ap wlond of the Seacetary af (War; In o.her words, Re hed | Affltn, tut pur the United Suter soould ossupy. for. | Unitea Siateno vid bave quarelled with Great Britain at eentit (o the wrong si ‘e 0! ‘ios Gre However, mere ‘official fedifference, isa thing which | tify, colonize or take possession of the coast of Mosquito, | 9% spe ede 30 pearts 2x sity, Jong habit, and the eventa of the Isat two years bave | or any por-ion of Central America, whether in their owa | 4) om whtch-wilt rH pean eicter. go oo accustomed us to endore; sud perhaps with the glorious | right or in right of ‘any protec‘ion hyd might or did af- ined that xe giver park obra ts government of Lords, we nt preent possess, it is alow | fcrd to any jx ople or State in Central America. The sp- | i910 tans Mabléxed that we sen be age nd Cradenicaclike way cf looking at the thing, to atiempt | parent puryoce of the United States In this artic'e was vo | Uri eat,» lealinek ist Se, xh. sone . to balance Lord’ Clarenden’s thirtyseven Germa: Prevent Great Britain by fortifications and armies from | cop) >moticn © lit the " etl amma $120,000 and a wer, agaist Mr. Rancin (a mere calunist) | *stsbhebing herself as the protector of "he Mosquitoes on x ORAS ven a and his 1,(.00 Canacian riflemen, armed and equippe!. the Morquito coast. The apparent ovject of Great Bri- As to Greytown, it is now cocupled by aa ters el iefy Official’ indifference msy allow us to ‘drift into war,” | ‘aim was tontrip her Mosquit» protectorate of all that | from the Unis d — J ce omnes Caer AAR Dut it does not provoke was c@ious oud suspiclcus therein to the Ualsed States, | a pronyerous o:mmunt 7, and oaly denise ro There is no inoifierenee” im this ease, There is, | snd to prepare the way (or retiring honorably {rom the | fr'm thelr own bucaneering countrymen. | ae on the contiary, an “activity” to which, of late, we | whole business of the protectorate, The main reason | | The (no question, therefore, at _Practisal lasue relatos ave been but little accustomed, Why, our govern | why tbis could not ke doze at once was, that it wou'd be | to the 1wo isle La . brgy fore FE tapes ment have the very pix of the campaign cat and | mecesrary in doing 1: to decide to whom Greytown could | settle among themselves, might Le ret led by an nope, Gried. No, it wen not “‘intifference” which on s | be most salely and rightfully given up, and also to pro- | who would in balf'en honr, easily decide a t whether late ocension prompted the Morning Post, the | vide for tome means of protectioa for our old allies the ay ave revl'y depencencies of our sett ement or of Spa. specisl organ cf the Cabinet, to recommend ths | Indians when Great Bci'ain withdrew from protectiag | nish Honduras. ing and favors | ‘enectment, and the ciscussions on questions relative to ‘the blood of con- | the rights of neutral nations, are all too recent to require The pregramme so loudly proclaimed of retting forth here. It is therefore proposed to treat the gana Justice, Is very far tom being fuldlied it ts uestion of the re'ations between the two countries ry ure ofworcs—nothing more. There exists iefly o6 regarce what has zepeny, bis said by tro just as*much morali:y and corruption at present as unter | great suth rities—Lad Clarendon the Times. baleen eg The United States complain that their municipal law In“he session ef the 28th ult. the deputy Teijlo made has been violated by the government of G-eat Britain. en (oquiry tf the Miniser of State, asking for the dosu- Grea; Britain replies, that although it may be true ments in the cave of the Bisek Warrior. thet the American government had xome reason fu: 90n- ‘The tale of church prop-rty up to the present moment | -plaint, yet tant immeciately on it becoming kaown, thes, ‘bes produced esore than seven millions of ¢ollars, It is | the British government, gave instructirne to thelr agoats eaid that the odious gate tax will be repiared by one up- | and reprerenta‘ives to Gepist from the acts that bad gtvan ~on sphituows Hiquors—no part of the chamber su-tained | tise vo such eomplaivt; bad uascred the Amerioau gv. the otber ‘tox; it is hated by the Ye. Thectate of | ermment that they desized above ail things to reapect the misery produced by the foundations exconatve raias | Jaws of America, ani had expressed ia tho fullent way hes not yet entirely ceasod In Seville, the Guvttsiquiver | their regret that any cavse of cvnplaint had arivea had tmumlatea nearly all the town. A subscrip‘ion | #t ail. had’ beer opened for the poor, which already amount The English government have declared thet beyond ed to twenty-five thousend dollars. troops | this it is inconsistent with the cignity aud tha bonor of were occupied in preparing the rations daily distributed | the ration to go, and they lat that at the time they tothe poor. The officers af th> garrison ptid oat of their | &V6 this explanation is was fatisfactory to the Ameriein own pockets seventeon ‘housand rations of ric) and cod- | Sovernwent; but that sinc» then, for ‘he puzpose of in- fish, to as many indigent persone, In Malaga a like affair | fluencing the Presidential elec im, that government is had’ taken place, ‘Tue Guadaimedine, which passes | edeavoring to rip up am old grievance, ant to make po: throvg be city, had inundated a part of it. and hai cut | litical capital at home vy bullying ‘hy Koglish Cubine’, off communicstion with the neighboring; towns, Tho Cagus | nd they rely on the supp>rt of tbe pesple of this coun- Dore Aranguez, the other day, reverteen cead bids try to uphold them in the course they beve taken. The Gararma carried away its bridge, and efterwarda a at ‘upport they certainly wilt not fail to obtain if Wallace—Naw American Invention—Handeome Gi p, | feom the Emperor to tha Inventor, 4 Vereigners and provincials, and the young and ver” sept | tm Paria, (there are a! ways enough of the latter to gw the masked balls at tne Opera,) may believe that pecar. mival still existe—for the feuilledonists have raphed, warmed over and served up their annual dish ey ery si. tion, tracing the history of Mardi Gras to thes ge des fous, ‘tthe files de Vaue, the Fools’ Festival, the A g pestigal of | ‘Bie middie ages, to the supercalia and saty ppiits of tue Remans, to the baechaualia of the Gre ‘and to the, vine honors rendered by the Egyptians ,»> the €x Apis, | whe bas this year been represented by § woud e trinity of | tenf gras, or fat oxen—the pride of ¢ pittiogrowing Nor- mandy. But there ie nogreater di Agence’ botween the @eremonies at Memphis and those & ¢ Mauris than between ‘he Carnivals we read of and the Ca safval of the precest me. The feuilletonists are righ’ sradwelking on the-an- taquity of the Carnival, for it is, atipad, avwery old story— we old that I need not weary ™Y senders with any further mention of it. M, however, the Parisians sa'longer renerate tho Apis even @ prima facie cave cam be made ont that they de- 2 ofthe Egyptians, they dow saPtip the imftetioa of fx by | BEER comtrneted by The engineer tate werea. | rere it 7 he coast of Aiierien with our two hundred | them; for which long negotiation there was not sulficleat ‘Whe Ieracittes—the golden ¢ ak. ‘Phe Bourseis the temple | smries are still very Ingh throughout all Spaia. ro Hence the vi ceasity for inquiry in‘o facts. , and the sending an army of biask soldiers to | time, Mr. Sqniers’ treaty being befure the Senate, and Fashions for February. of their idol, and no church, wit) thror; towns have been destroyed by this tempest. There is Tet us bégin by sta‘ing the last fact of the case, to see he negroes of the South, or, in other words, to mar- | rome decisicn imminent, [From Ga lignani’s Messenger, of Paria.) > ye more ed diam) | tail fe Boatik cme towa with the chorea. where we actusly are. sacre the wale, end te violate the female population of but no socuer was the treaty concluded than Great While viewing the rich, varied and elegant materials Britain proposed at once to the United States to concert | that are presented to our notice this wincer, we are led jive canre. There mast be some | and egree with Ler as to these two points, and thus to | to inquire. where rball we find sufficient wearers, or 7 at work, to move our aristocra- | make the convention complete by carryiog out its inten- | enough guld io purchase such luxuries? .Never has there teg Lent than is dat'y the twmpie of Mammon ir the Rue Vivienne. The frenzy for:peculation never reged more The government have asked fr a conscription of 16,000 | The government of tae United States have terminated | haif the United State their pertion o’ the Jorg ard angry correspondence re- men, to replace those who are ‘free from the army tbls tande im the Honeoct Lords, by demanding the ycall Gereely during the reign, mf Louis Philippe than it has | SPritg- Erdal sca Of Mr, Cramp'on. the British Minister at Washington, pa quarrel with a prople who | ticns to their tu extent. Me, Webster entered into the | been 1 giest a demund for rich laces and embcoideriss,, ering the past fort Ayht or thie weeks. Since the Our Constantinopie Correspondence. This demand wilt probably be reglied to this day (FW. 5), | nay be saic to be our -éluticns, aud who are cer.sialy | split of this progoaa!, and negotiations were proceeding | far and magcificest materials of ail descriptions; tue em- “peace news” Sret re yehed the ears of ‘the tnitiated”? at ‘Jan, 12, 1358 and it is generally understood thag & will be met by a refusal. | the most impertent coer xXions We possess. favorably for that object when that statesman died; and | brolderies executed in sewing silk, in etch-r veivet, moire , Coxsranmsoris, Jan. 12, 18 ‘As tar asthe Erglish case iv known, it resis on Lid The word war was huidly wanted to bring to our | itis remarkable that Mr. Webster, of a: mea tne most | or rich striped brocudes, for dinner or evenicg dress, a8 Paris, more than on, tucky courtier has woo mibions | phe Fanduliem of the AUies af Kertch—Phdr Barbarous | Clarenden’s speech on the opening of Parliament, trem | mirda the tact that for two years past we havo waged a | acute in comprebension, and who beicg likewise a candi | well as for mantenvx, &c. Ribbons arein groat demand, enough tomske prbeon and Eugenie a present of the edset @ ‘ants — Desolation of the Cri- war wih Rassia—a war in wh the whole sympathies | date for the Presidency, wae not likely to construe any | gud ave most exquisite, bovh in design and fabric, Tae eradle and the ent! re tyourreae: of the pete hour ex- epre neerpenpie ene mo * a ss ant of mexpondence or your lordabip» tavle, | aden gies of the people have boon engaged—a war | public instrument unfavorably to bis countey, never | ceimtares brettelles of velvet or talfetas are extremely: pected at the Tuil Bs“ sdiolosk mean Peninsula— Peace Only @ Temporary Rapedient of | ooh tave ed to nose factory coneusion. The most revoot | wih hovever fur it tse in ite fitst two yeurs falledin | raitec sy quéstioa as to nature and import of words, | convenient as wel nt, being prepared ready to be atthe Tuil aries, althoagh the crate aloue cesta | Russia—Bngiand Overrenoved by France in the Results | demande of the govertmens of ihe Caled Staten arrived oo'y | gegcmpiiebing all that war 20 ardently looked ter, bids | wbish have, since Mr. Pierce entered into offic, been the | Placed on the drecs. and formieg rerthos and foatangss stx hundied thor gand ‘francs—about $120,000, Inview | of ue War—LHostile Ftekng Belwesn the Alliel Armies | {*0,8Y8 K9 and It would nor bave been conducive totne pn’ | iirin thia coming compaiga, to resultin an end at- | sul jeot cfr much diccussion, wa on the middle of the b-dy. The broad and magni- of the-snormovs.expenses which the birth of an heir to i Camdutch: ‘Deplorable Ampoct ofthe Place | seater, (o Presa neo ae ey ota tootia fo ceo | tained better proportioned to the means used, Iv is kere cxly bitetly to be observei that the sottle- | ficent ribbons are desined elmply to pass round the he throne will “mpson-upou the city of Paris, t flea Si wc ee ei apd namie aime Manta er redcsresjni sdb g 0 8 AAA © Goes ‘A prospect incéed so bright for us, that we way wal. | mext of Belize und i's island dependencies were expressly | waist and tie in a kaot on one side, mpoer upon the city of Paris, t: say —Contrast Between English and Prench Disc ing jo (he briten army, could be received’ at Halltax. ‘I imsgize how in crtain quar‘ers, itfhas caused the grea | set apart from the treaty ot 1850, and left in the same Balls anc fétes begin to multiply. Veretian Iaco aod mothing of the.wovt oi th» royal recep‘ions of the past | Jam gain in the City of Mosques, atter ex tag | justructions were mede known ta Mr. Crampton, aad he was | est cesyondency. ay IE | condition in which ft ha fund them. se the poattion ot | 20WEH are Touch worn by all Indies of fashion. The your i chori'fes have decided uyom ts 1 aii of f wevercesirous her Majerty’s xuveroment were | - What it this American dismr'e ia simply @ bold effortto | ‘Ie foregoing oarzative will make cleat the position of | dresses worn at there files ave extromely clegaat, One , the mu aicipal aurhori‘ies have decided uyom tae | 4] the novelties and horrors of nearly every portion of vita, thay weve stil more woxioas that there shout! | pareve wer with Husea tnco & War wih Aunacica Giaanleiinia rig: satan Cingisa ane’ Balaae conve w toes ses, we iy Samat. O09 jon or intriaigement of the municipal ‘aw of tho beta i sia'es Shortly afte wards an agent opened an agevey uction which the allies | ctfice; and, upon compiaint teing mace, Mr. Cran ptoa de sued that il might be made punie thatthe British government did not recruit or ri: ju ibe United states, and he wise econemy of not giving this winter any ballet the | the Crimes and Black Sea, Ail that I wro.e you fom ‘Bowl dg Ville. Bas what with balls at the Eentchintiahe: Vantal-Wkeasen Bafis at the hetele of tae different mints:6 inflicted upon that former beautiful, happy and pros What if the court des're to change the venue? tiem, the circumstarces which led to that convention, nother of pink srape, eiged witaa dood What if this pamis devired to atfect the approaching | and the inten'ion which the contracting parties seers to | poniilonnée of toile to matyo. Ano.her robe ia compose covgress in Paris? Lave carried inio it. It now cnly remains to state the | of white crape, with three flounces, covered with moss.) What will the people say to thie? If-the contrivar of | points which ere at prevent in dispute ve:ween the two | fringe cf feahers, iighily spotted with red, green and| ya . to eile, children’s alls, masked balls and privare bal ous town, and of the beastly and atrocions outrages ade known his ineunetions to Mr. Marcy, whothen expressed f ¢ , ? : ; } oye arcy, the scheme were known t> them, what would they do? | gevernments, and to sbow how far they are connected | seppbire tlue ensmel, The came fringe forms a heart there has been this season as mach Gancing as Texpsi- | which they perpetrated upon its (evence'ess inbabitants, | haln‘g enitcrwan pride and Tulse Kane Inld dawn {we rule, | ,CaNAC be, that wa are iadebred for the acherae to thet | with or dustine: from the treaty of 1850. both on the back und at front of the body, gad eo:ara ' 4 Norma ¢)r’ ised by Lord Jobe | _ The first diepate raised is as to the right which Great | goyers the thert sleeves The eniffure is which has already | Britain had to re-ertavileh her proctecwrate over the | ner of leaves of : ifferent shades of green crape, the veins c:nlifved to degrade as brave an army as we ever seat | Mosquito coast, without whe express coasent of Spain, | marked 1y s'rivgs cf email olamonds. ‘wreath is| to the fiel, aud has recwed this great emptre to the | after ter old treaties with that Power. placed over th. handesvx, and ibe enda ere united| exact political level of Saxe-Cobuig Gotha? This querti n, though distinct fnagelivc practically | under the curl’, which are twistel together low oa the| If so, 1t is, indeed, what next and next. merged in the recond point in dispute, which is, as to the | peck, forming tre knot. A beau'iful dress of pink crave < meaning of the vgreement not to occupy, fortify, colo- | hes seven flounces, ent in deep scollops, £0 as tomake the ‘Whe Central Americon Question. mize, or take porsersion of the Mo-quito coast or any | skirt appear t: be covered with tulle pomte; each point (Frcen the Lendon Times, Jan, 31) pert of Central America. The United States g vernment | jy edged with @ ruche of white blonde. The body and That which may be ca led the Ceatsal American ques- | now assert that this ergegement exacted the immediate | ploeves are alco covered with polots. The coiffare ia 0 tion, snd which has reocntly beea the subject ot eo:ren- | snd total wi hdrawal ot Great Britain’s protection trom the | white ard pi: k camelias. fastening on exch @ barbe 0: pendence between Great Britain and the United states, | Morquito ccast. . The Brii-h government affirms thacit | blonde, which bangs over the baek bair en sache pe in subject to three divisions=—First, what were the nighte | meant merely what it statec—viz., an engagement not to | For demi-reglige tollettes, brown, of ¢ifferent omsible imfiuence,’? so b swhere could reguire—pechsps, indee}, I shoud rather | wos, Taseuse you, far short of the realizy. Tho india- | that to pay the paseage of men to @ foreign port, and then to vaay there has deen as much as the prepretersas size of | crimtnate violation of the women, followed as i: wns, in | SMW EG. wiane vio sien of injersilanal law. tt ee ‘Whe ladies? ball cros-es would psrmit; for the fashion har | several instances, by the wanton and brutal mur¢er of disclsimed lcm ne oe Bi! the United ti 0 ¢ . re : " ; ates, 1 e t he m4 weed 0 nese the crenaterence of Saline oops that | their unhappy viesiras, boing imsullicient to wppease their | ycriesuy aatified 1 tort am convisced, tis ‘nelther intent on. Paris parlors of ordinary dimensions, dancing bas | dastardly vengeance egainst ® community which did not | Ally vor unintentionally, Lor wccidentails, jolaie any + te ‘ I f the United sta’ Lord Clarendon’: ch, He weally become quite difizult, Bat the number of | offereyena show of,opp siiion to their entrance, they Lords, Jon. 8); 1e86200de ime, Mls iA private bails (as been unusually large during Carnival, | transperted hundreds of the poor creazures, fresh from ‘This meagre statemect renders it necessary to narrate na mid-Lent will agein for one night sammoa the ‘i 2 ‘i more clearly what has cecurred. Sea a er one signs snemon the | {he cuitivatel refnemenss and tender eadearments of tbo | IT) Trttey water govermuent, coxoslviog themealyes Strauss of high ‘egress Post, baiom in | domestic cirele, to this ct’y and elsewhere, with scarcxly | agpreived cy a violatl x of their law, remunstra'ed with hand. Moreover, the American revidents in Paris in- | gny means of procaring the shelter and support of which | the goveruiment cf Great Britein, ‘tend, it is said, to celebrate ball at ‘amde Ho- t be i a In reply to their remonstravce. Lerd Clarendon sent» | of Grew; Britain in Cen'ras America, and the position she | cecopy, foriily, colonize, or take possession of Mosqui:0, | is decided'y the most tashioneble. ‘A dress of dark dra ataPicis ta tests mre ried Grande Ho- | they bad deen so summarily and ratblessly deprived, savo | 4 7 PIN JO Uen the ame-ican Micister bere, exprossiug | artused previcus to 1860? Secondly, what wete the | or any partof Central America, ia riant of such provee- | moire, with fi unces bound with black velvet, ia, points 2 y by prostitution in its most cegrading and revolting form. | thegreat regret felt by his g.varnmert that acy exue | ceures whieh led to the trea y calied the Bulyerand | tien. An important consideraticn here presents itsef | three quar ers the width of the flounce; each point ‘Mires, the Sampel Bernard of this epoch, has just add- | No ene in Kertch, frem the highest officer to the humb!est | shoulc have been given for such complaint, stating that it €4 to his series of marvellous purchases, by paying 20 | private, attempts to ceny these facts, bat those of each ps i hrgpite Tetdeghegee iesbigenenti ca kate ei miflllio: for i 2, A ny D: 1 v1 ions tre ae te Gone toptiog wpias | Country, Iemely enough, eneavor to shifstne ehiet nart | iaw: that ihe rictost orders in conformity had been Dy exchan’ment. It should be culled Miréspolis, He of the in'amy from themselves. Out of ali the f.rmer | sent to our representatives and sgents in the Unived wast count upon prodigious retu-ns for his investeut, | inbaditants I could mot ascertain that there were more | States. Mwe judge from tne ‘“pinmoney” by which he secured | than two or three old women pe:mitted to remain. teeter ie sche apenpedin tema hee ile at point Cisyton weaty, which took place in 1850, aad the precise | If the promise not 10 oc:upy, colonize, fortity o: take ps trimmed with a narrow ruche of b' 4 pituation in which it was ntenced the, that ireaty ehoulé } sessior of Mctquito afford matter of dispu'e, that dispute | body, with basques and rovers timed ais eek ted pluce the contracting parties? Thirdly, what are the | would have arisen if no treaty had exicted, since the | flounces. Boviilonuée s’ceves, * terminating at the elhou Gifticulties which at thia time exist, and how far are they | words thus cited im ihe convention had been used pre- | with two broad ficunces, trimmed en sulte. Maslic copnected with or distinct from the treaty in question? vious to it, {and there wercs beirg merely copied from | undersleeves ccmposed of bouillonnées, trimmed with The treaties of Great Britain during the last con- | former dccurents cannot create new obligutions. uarsow hinck walvatt olin teeta tury with Byain left ber, at Beiize, a setilemex; | The ireaty, there‘ore, of 1860 cannot be chargeable with | ™"Eiaprcidery in silk, which for some time past has beer establised for the purpore of cutting logrood, | amirfortune which, at all events, if the government of the | ont of favor, is now much used for sortiea de-bal man %; and of woich a single {vem may be set down thus:— ee ee : b i thin those limits | United Staves were animaced by its present dispositio ear wetthe toes he <In perfect keeping with this, is the unrelieved desola- | Sater. ard evidently restricved within those lim aw xed by its present disposition, | flee and rotonces in velvet, Some ‘manteace, itl The prevalence of & parton ior semey-rnaktow ix sufi. | tion, which at the lower end of tue peninsula everywuere | Ccmplatnt war mace of @ grievance aud an apology | Which the object tor which it was granted rendered weal UAPeeG Ges, hale pili ata sleeves of black velvet, havo a little the form of paletote dently incicated hy the titles of the new books wud new | conironts you within the allied lice. With the excep- | P'CTPrly tercored, ne ee ae Pa lle ctype pay oar er ren ore lee seeveiee difference as to the | and nave pcorets ; these manteaux ar Gheatrical pieces that appeal to the attection of the Pa- : : Pp | "Bur in the weantime, batworn the sending in thseom. | hurd to withdraw trom the Mosquilo o-ast, on | construction of the above cited paragraph? trimmed round with sable ard have # smell collar, whict Ppeel tive of house here and there, such ae thore in wach which there wan # ccpsiderab e trive of Incians, wh», ia | The United states ccntend that the engagement not to | with the leven are also borderea wi " Ve ‘, Noint and the receipt of the apologetic despatch, x new ee Pe ttionan hae ee Timgelt Js, pot #° | she commanders in-oblef and other high fanctionariotre- | state cf things hed srisen. “ it t Ten Teousand a-Year,”” and olfer | sive, ail ot which havo either been entirely built ane®, or Prepon rege ypompe ori ersten ated baie! Bee Sind Cat Malte le Reni, | Alexsndre | Damas, | repaired, with tre moterialof the former iahsbitant:’ de- | matter—ihe crimp wao had actusily taken pert. in five acts of bis new picee’ ucder the deficicws title of | cilished dwelings, there is searecly a vestige lef ve- | eruitirg On the prosecution of ene Heri, at Phindel “Question d’Argen"”’—the mony question. Mess, | yond the massive foundations of the fice capasious farm eS. reais) enn aet er! \Noered bapertincrorhy oar i Hoes Laring ond Raymond Deelandes wit in efor even | ‘owes with which the whole country was everywaere so | been tae ian cpen, uncviguised. wat, by woyertise- Vaudevi'le, and finally, Pousard, the Boileau of our day, | Fécently embellished. Where tens sf thousands of asres | men‘s in American popers with the royal arma prefixes, will soon produce “the new dramatic epistie whicn he | bloomed with the oulsivated vine, nothirg remains but a tha Pia pipe J eee, fer ad ated sae ee eee re te Fig trusian, namasaxe | few spote here and there, on which the indentations of | explanation, 7 ‘Odeon of the rive droit, under tne teling title of “La | the billocks where they grew asrure the wanderer that (Thia is the explanation referred to ia Lord Ciarenton’s e.”” the sei] was ever used for the purpos:s of protuotion. Lietcae' ila Praga bs be Bec Arséne Houssayecoveral of whose pleasant, ingenious | Not a tee, not ® shrub—and even betore winter eet io, | where he summoned bis various recruluiog ogents t) enriebed the Mairon de Muliére, which he found +ix yours | b'ightirg effects i tho-d »vastatiag strugg'e with which the That there, with the Gove-nor of Nova Seotia and 4 roost age in debt—eurcendwred his important post of mauager | ecuntsy has been 60 log and #0 grievously alllisted. | Consir'g tho laws of the Vnited states amrineroeriacasne ae Theatre have wen forbes oc celta: foe kant { Ard there are rome of the fruits of a war which those | “fuat wich this view, 1a acditin to various verbal orm. be =, and whore admicistrative experience promises to | whv erected it have the unblushing effron‘ory to assert ai rapanouee ¢ Ny tone in deli | (el gate t advantage to the Odeon of the rive drii’c. is weged ‘‘in behalf of civikzation.” A terribl (| te (ow thore laws wereto ve evaced. Ine Veron, 11's afl, ts woul tv parekess, ia scecestion canes : i Pear rth ie ae a ; pooegae | pst He perticularly dwelt om the necessity of doi ‘with a company of bankers, the prop-ietorsnip of the ation awsits these who bave preduce: rain to attract the attention of the Untied States ¢ Belg ” e b ilty of there atrocior aud be supplied bie resruiting ita with w secrs lance Belge, the well known journal published at | been guilty of there atrocious eutrages. OSs onal aie slid dr Be ble. her wars with Spain, bad acted with her as allies. At the | ccevpy er foitify is an engagement not to protect. But bon Deguaning of the present aah ie new wats ree things we manlperpset ae Seoaiy mo to protect all zal cunt neseen ba een Set one eae St te 0 erisen—wars between Great Brituin and Spain bao | and carals iy Central America; notwithstandi: taken place,” After a ts 0 the Spanish colons of Sout | the two parties are nether of them to occupy cr fortis Se ea oe aiie unde soemenotting America hed throwa off the Spavish yoke. Durieg these | any pertin cf C ntral America; it is clear, theretore, changer and revolucions. Great Britein had eclarged her | that there pai ties foresaw the probability of dolog the ome SIS EERO ith Feathers of the, Dota setilen.ent of Belize and given to it consiceratle territo | thirg without dcing the other. atthe crown, and filling over ihe'fcoak. fue ent vial dimensices; she hed reconnected hereel’, aiso, with | Again, tke treaty ceclares not only that Great Britain | blonce, trimmed with egleotine ard. striaga of jet bende the Mosquito Inciens, tahicg their chiet or king again | anc the Unitea States rhall not ocsmupy, fortify, &. ‘Another bonnet: of Crines wabrtie alts. blandl uncer Fer protection, baving him solemaly crowned at | their own right, bu: that they shall not ‘do these things | Placed at the crown, faling Gver the trout, wed, formis Jamaics. : in right of any provec'ion they may or do aff'd to any | wide plaits ot the sides, under which are placed oom Iu the mean‘ime, the Isthmus which separates Nort | Sta ecr peopiein Central America. Will avy jarist for | Water lilien made of velvet, with eripe follsge: a bloud fom¥outh Americs, and which is ence called “Centra! | one instant preterd thas, when you say you srem t to | Sap with the same flowers pumplotes this erobent colthos: america,” bua been divided into different repablies, ac | do certain tuings in right of some general power, this | Amore simple, but equally clegant, bonnet 1s mace ¢ coroing to the different captain general hips or provinee- | ergegementdves more than limit that power, or chat the | Eepastopc] blue: the crown trimmed with a fold of velvet which bad esisted uncer thecld tule. ‘Toe cspiaurgens. | provinons for liirg a poner do not plsia'y indicate eéged with biack lace, falling mm rogulsr piatts ship cf Nicaragua become te republic of Disarugua, | that euch power is prsmible, and known t> exist? The | under which, om tbe right side’ are tee small” ping esptain-generalzhip of Costa Rica the rapuslic of Vos- | wo: de in question, uf ivserted by the American govern- | sigrertes. Black Chant iy fall. Blonée cap trim ta Tien, &e. ment, surely shoe that the Awerican government | with white roses and marrow black veren, Pe On tbe ecrfnes of these two Srates, and at the mouth | th velt that the protection of Great Britain still existed, | ™ . of tle river Sar Juan, wasa mall town and ie-ritory | and that ete wight attempt todo as protectrix what spe ery pretty eciffure fs made of white and blac claimea ty teth Nicarsgua «nd Costa Rica, for as these | coud nct do se sovereign. On the other hand, if they | blonde, trimmed with bouelettes of narrow black velvet republics Gerivea their rights, as bas been cbserved, | were suggested by the Britinh government, they as sarely bev plony very small rosebuds. This headdress, whi fiom the old captain geveralstips, and as these captain; | manifest that that government was anxious that it | ¥88 intended to i'l up the space between the bandeau generalrbipe of.em varied mm extent, according to theravk | should be understood that though {it ut once aban- | ®Pdthe pleitat the back of the head, was finished a and ability of the governors or captain generals plased | doned most of the rights of @ protectorate, that pro- | each side by a long end of black velve:, rounded at th over them, their frontier could not be very precisely de- | tectorate was rot yet altogether given up. In order, parker and placed so as to fall cver the shoulders, an fined The town ard territory soove alluded to were, | however, to make this yet more clear, there ia the fact | t#immedall round with two rows of blonde, one whit 1g nothing inorities, tele: Brustels, the only Journal in Kurops that approximates Any peace whieh might now be patched up, coull, un- the scale of promptitude »nd universality of ners of ' we of evatling them to correspond wih him at the otber b'ack. A wreath of very m die tha cetdanestiuene, Ve withing ait thad's clenaiinn coe 19 opratS shes be. | ow-ver, at the pericd here spoken of, in the possession | that Great Britain negotiated immediately after ta0 t black. Very small wild roses an which the New York Hexatp has iorg beea » model. r erty a esnips 2 ras the ecntenls. ot the Conped: of Nicaragua, 5 treaty with the most emirent statesman and jurie | DUd® Was placed rigxag up the centre of the velvet ri" The preject (ao often spcken of lately) o: erecting on | of hostilities, Even were Russiaina coniitioa to com- see to the teltgraph aut: a . fhe Boulevard cu Strasbourg anew, thestro. to be cailed | pel her to aevept the terason which alone it {: sid the | ment and Sayeed dcuee ty me : Srp ery eapadle of seating six thousand spectators, fs agein under | W8F 4B now cease, she would only the moze cacfally | oneoi theirown couris of justice, thas Mr. Crampton, after sexicus consi¢eraticn, and will probably be executed. rnd untiringly prepare for a renewal of the conilict un- | #apparently candid explauation wita Mr: Maroy had left peSeveral morbers of Rachel's teouje have, returned 12 | der more certain acruramces of succens, by an iuszeased evi semnertae suipatnn ee a Spree fy wheter the great wagedienne has, herself retariad vo | cevelopement and gsruerieg of all her resources during | cfcouspiriog with thea to evace the laws of the United pest through France on her way to Nice forthe re »vary | the interim, But if there are these who realty bettewe | States, itis obvious that theapol gy of the Erglish govern- if ‘y ment, bowever raiistectory when supp:sed to be houest Samar avin contend the is still lying f3k ani di+ | that Russie fs now, or even IMkely soon to be, im a situa- | Sra truthful, became in sect only on scditional insult tion where ecncessions seriously cetrimental to hor in- | when found to b sulent aad hypocritical. Among the most roteworthy mew pndlications when fou 6 irausulent aad hy poe: . are the sixth velume cf Henci Martha's ‘Hr. | teresta and prospective power, or huwi‘iating to her na- ‘Yet this #as the condue: that receives Lord C'arendon’s datre eg teanee MED, | charming | acerant | ticnal pride, ean be wrung fom her fearannd necessities, | “FECT, noweyer, that tho American government art 4 - : a ft - Greig unk sown: dud the sPeuores Posthomes” cr Tren. | they labor uncer a most aad and milly delasion. As yet | cesircen of presng this matter with undue har-buess, rie Chopin, the great artist, wh-se name would have been | her enemies bave accomp ished, comparatively spoakiag, In reply. it may be stated tbat they have st in their Seabnetaiesel Wy Win aoe oie bea ace | 4 i % power and possess a mass of evidence suffivient to prosecute nee by So penne wren It Bed no Seats nothirg but the falsification of their own predictions. T | ee eet Ta eee Comite tm the, Uni Wee pil pect 9 te Rag have several tires walked around the whole civcait of | stars, William Vincent Wallace, ths eomposer, whose name | their prerent porversiona ia the lower end of the Crimea, | | They hare not done ao. fess faniiariy and vo favorably known in the United | and do not regard it as moze than a very moderate day's | p, fe SGha resent, tr & ee ir bee Sa of it we come i 9 a ch le y “ “ = cba hen Sora ieee Lemon oie or | tramp. Surely the seme amount of ground was never | ¢ nnected with this very matter of foreign endstuen, Bovrojouniog for a tie in Germeny, Tues ivevery | before purchased to dearly. The men killed and meimoi | actually tprisoned cur Covsolar Agent st Cologne, 1° Fearon to expect that one of his best produe fons wil b2 | in cbtaining ‘emporsry posces-ion of it’ might | Must de ecmit'ed that the charge of unusual hatrhnoa Drought out at the Grand Upere in Paria, maxt winter. stand five or tix ceep, and form an unbroken ebsin | /#/ls"to the ground. name of Drouyn ¢e l’Huys i omitted from tae new | arcund it by joiniog’ hands. With the alhes, au | ,However, it may be deemed indecent to compare a eatalogue of Senators. which shows that bis redgnaton | is jeslousy, dlatrust and divided eouacls, walle | “German” monarch with an Ame ican repuoiic. was at length accepted. The addition ef a ne# name, | everything in a moves with the singles Tet us see how we ourselves oebave, when we have to that of Sarda Garriga— (Sif you evar hear of hin bef and celerity of ove man’s wil, All euppo-itions a. eal wit ai powen” thats tn thes; 18 powerlens. bas oceasioned much icquiry avd not afew expremions | their movements, intentions, or resvarces, is mere | 4. une [ove ring js trom the Globe of February 6, 9 minis- ef rurprize. But the latter wore soon eheckea by the | twaddling, groundlers conjecture. Tavugh dying ia | tial paper—the property of the Attorney General :~ whispered assertion that the new Senator —« violeat re- | the streer ybastopol from ettual starvatioas more Tue Bans Towns ax» THE Coxtranann ov Wan TRapE.—It Wointinnist in 1848, seen rushing through'the gai f | thene year ego, the Brench and English pa- | jh 95% ct here that the rewly appeluied resident minister ot the Tuileries with on axe in his hauds, acd wh ull oeeupy the north wide batieci Toorpennea ta paket Lard. Uae ince ea wequently to the coup d’élat seat to Cayenne, potas ® y ceir camp on Mach hin with this ots a a Fe be ‘as Governor—is a natural son of the late | npon taeir ¢pponente, who, though o Sanatthapad keen he ee eee Meny vexasloue proceedizgs took place at this port with.| ccntult in the Unitec states, and that he understood the | bom. The cciffures for full dress sre composed prince. respect to foreign veesels visiting it; and the B:idsh giv. | treaty as Great Britain urderstoodit. Ncr was he alone, | Pally of blonce. with lorg ends of ribbon or velvet; 0 erpment, baving been informed by its cifferen: agenss in | Mr. Fillmore, who was President afcer General fayloris | #°métimes with Jong branches of amail flowers, wit Centro] America that the port in question had anciently | demise, was Vice President when the treaty was signed, | Ct®P¢ keaves. A head-dress ot great elegance is forme belonged to the Morquitos, claimed it in their behalf, and, | and member of the Senate which approved cf {:. Mr. | Of maratout feathers, mixed with rosebuds and ver on the Nicarsgusns retaring to give it up, seized ic by | hing, Crairman of Foreign Relatians in the Senate during | Dg green crape leaves. Others, equally recberchéer force in the neme ef the Mosquito King. The Nicara- | General Teylor’s lite, wes Vice President at his ceatl sre made of gold net-work and pearls; «hich fail in lon inec; their complaints were unheeded; | General Fcote who became at the same time Chairman of | *ttings cver the neck. Some are formed to resemb! apers re'ative to this transac‘ion were laid be- | the Committee of Foreign Relations, ba? been a Senator | CO!al, interlaced 20 as to confine the back hair, an ke British Pariiarcent; no objections were raised | in the cemocratic party proviously. ' It is, therefore, ne- | *#tened on each aide witha large pin with a coral head. in Periiament as to the course which the British govern | cerrary to euppore not omy that Mr. Wedster was com. ment bad pursued, and the honor of Great Britain be- | pletely wrong in the view that he took, but alo that he came henceforth pledged to support what her government | xcted without eensuiting all those persons be was bound ‘Theatres and Exhibitions. had done. to conenlt when be took tha: views 1a order t> bear out | ,, BROaDWay TuxaTwE.—Mr. Clarke's dramatic spactacle c cAREUE this time the Usited States took possession of | the opinion which three orfcur years after the eonelu- Jifors' “Herne, the Hunter,” will be repea'‘ed this evans: 4 made that discovery of its mineral wealth | sicn cf the treaty is now started ia the United States, | There cesirous of procuring seata should make arrar; n anew tendency to the cestinies of that | Ir 1s eary, indeed, to tee that the British Minister, | Mente for them one or two days in advanco; otherwise part of \be worid. in agreeing to tte project of @ treaty at Was aing fo great ia the rush at night to see this drama, they ma\ ‘The at‘ention of Américan citizens was thus necessa. | ton, cautious'y confined hirelf to approving only | be ditappointed, rily bent om cbteining the shortest and most convenient | these words whieh had previously been employed | — Nwzo’s Ganvex.—The gorgeous pantomime entitle! road to their new conquest. Central America nasumed a | by his government at home, and of wnich that govara- | “Tbe Eif-King,” has caused conrigeranle sensatio, | new poriticn in thelr eyc#, ané our protectorate of the | ment iveif could best uzcerstand the moaning. Forhim | am ng the patrons of this popular establishment, no: Mosquito coast attracted tnefr attention—the inore esne- | to beve adced to or explained those words woukd, it is | withstencing ttey have alvays been accustomed to pe: cially as the Nicargxuaue bad tor sometime been clalw- | true, have been an ast of unjastifiable imprusence; and | formances of the very. best description, The Ravel i ing their assistance sgainst what they deemed British | be oid his Cuty when he gave that oppo-tuni:y to his | the “Elt-Kiog” to-night, and M’le. Robert and cthe agertesion, Moreover, there seemed a strorg probability | coief, who, as the project'was submited to hit, eould | dancers in “Katey, tne Vivandiere,”? that it might be pors‘bie to establish » ship canal té. | bave made » yslvera'tone or addictions ke thought ad- Bowrny TiraTex —The fi tween the Alaptie ard Pacitic, by way of the river San } vieable. But Lord Palmerston, no mean judg» of sush ATER —The romantic dramn called i L, ; “Broken Vew will again be performed this event: Juan, at the mouth of which, as it has been stated, the | words, made.no adci ion to or alteration of them; dnd Per! ee town we had receutly taken, snd which rinee its capture | he could have made none advisediy. ; stowed by the amusing burlesque of the Female Fort | had bren calles “Greytown,” was stunted. Mr, Lawrence had, relative tothe question at ixsue, | guaty centro thee ee of the Golten Region.” Thi | Accordingly, she goverment of Mr. Polk, (the demo- | arkeda question; the Biidss government iad answored | Spinner Vrs pac ee en ees Ward, Messrs | sratic party in the United States wa# then in'power,) be- | —a treaty embc dying that question and anewcr elfected, nt, Lamb, Barry and other pepular actors, i fire leaving office sent an ngent, “Mr. Hine,” to the | it might be evprored, the principal otjects of the two Burton’s TuratRz —The performances this evening, ar | gover:ment of Nicaragua, end Me, Hise concluded @ | parties. Moreover, the Usiied States dit rot acknow. | t0 begin with tte new farce called “Orgent Privat | steaty with the en‘d gvernment, recegnizing the right of ge the Mosquito Protectorate. A trea y directly de. | Affeirs,’’ {n which Mr, Bur‘on repre ents s very comix Nicaregua to that toen and portion of territory which | nyirg ite validi.y was then before the United States | Character. Shabspere’a comedy of the ‘Winter's Tale Grent piitain had just taken from her, end egreeitg to | Fenste for approval; Great Britain could not therefore, | Wil follw. dire. C, Howard wil make her sesond ay > wi flegrant abuse of the privileges of free treda aw tha o| pen Bys- Joveph. in overwhelming numbers, have not tern pursued by the Hamburg merchacts of sending theraw | gid in regainiog it. t that ihe United S' hi 0 Pearance to-morrow evenis A bighly euccess’ul trial was made Inst Saturday of | dent to attempt -beic dislodgment. They are well hutted, | Weieria's for the manu‘acture of guopowder—suiphar and | */¢,!0 regsiniog st. i expect that the United States should recognizs such mead dralepaotai bi nats ‘hat pie Biter favention the fro military wagse ¢f pe eat eppuarahoes o il an rer} Bly Sioa eur | Faltpetre—tcgetuer with ven, ia such large quantities to Rus- He: iia id Taylor, who shortly afterwards succeeded | protectorate apy more than that she, Great Britala, Lavra Krexe’s Varreties.—Three capital pieces are er, 1t is slso stated here t2at his lo-debip even went 0 far as k, (the whig party {2 this election sucveeding | shond aoancon it. The British gu 3 2 Meeiard by what mene is au impanstcane | Sha lis,ttuatated eretoai hs i-dehip even went xo far as 1 ( ig arty € ing ancon ritish government, by | nounsed for this evening’s entertainm xe | ete the demvoeratic,) di at. The firat is th ut envirely spprove Mr. Hise’s | the treaty, deprived her authority ia Mosquito of | comedieta styled “A Morniny Call” —characters by Mis | Mr. Francis, of New York. The Emperor wa praveat at | in what zm! tnal, ond has presented Mr. Francis with a gold | mystery to their ecemies, They may porsitly lesve by @ blockare ofthe Hive. his wou'd cartalol ; i : Mr. F A y hel 4 leave t tt Bl ibe | treaty; but he sent another agent, Mr. Squiers, to Nica | that ctsrecter which raturatly provoted dispute, aud | Keene ard M-.G.Wordan. ‘The comea | snuff box, richly adorned with diamonds. FIGAR). co in the socing. which T doubt very mush; but it | the seat way todo it by cul off the guppilow and, 9 Une Pobon dha with e mieion rivilar to that which had | Jett the rest, which in no wise touched the immediate | ‘Balance of Comcet™ follows--Wélaven, Resse end te] | Our Madrid © de compliehinent of some grext pucps foe the ac: | Gon cent three Or four ships of war to tie toaih of ihe Bemis, | been confided to Mr. Hise. This gentleman, Mr. Syaiora, | interests of tLe Uxited Stater, im siatuezuo, with the idea | Mre, Hough end Mr. Jorgen in leading parte, The fit Oar ‘orrespondence. Sarioe ana gotten cersoaaie aed a fared! ae e008 med ately, they might bave seized, or, ut all eventa, detained | 9/80 reccgnized the right of Nicaragua to the town and | of dealing with e sutject which no longer seemed likely | piece fs tre hurlerque of “Novelty.?? yy Manip, Feb. 1, 1966. | opportunities as eny man could—he more fi-miy amt | cage, cadres ofc nirabard recently here, and now halt way Btote of Political Afairs—Expartero and O' Donnl——The | convinced that some strange complica'ion will grow ou mn 2 i “ "7 Democrats Alert—Change InevilablemDocumente Called | of this war, Nothing can be more hollow than the p eseat | 42°, MSy tir hapa acres pets nat eiad opinion, of ” th + ag ;. | alliance between England xnd France, to say nothing of rel 7 g'aring vi doo For in the Affair of the Black Warrior—Financial Gonds- | voce Turkey, againet whom they are both intrizumg. | the law of nations, tiem, c.-Rains and Floods—Conscriztion for tue Army. | Bogland has suffered herself to be grievously cover: iid ner hn Rede ok Mi tha eas 5, wasnt The tate of polities here ecntinues the same as Ihave | rencled in the whole business of thie war, aud ucieas | Bnuy tte given that opinion os epproviag ibe ceanatt @ercrited it to you in my anterlor communications. a She ibe tad fekena® aa oan ee ef the Ez glivh ogente. 1 Nothing bas teen done to counteract the bad state of | ercire their best onergies in ths effort to «extricate Tassos ole tion by the Unit hirgs complained of, nor is it probable that anything | her from der present diccreditable nod perilous ponitim, | ernment fer an offen Rests taro 9 inganese 7 she sonst soon sink to the condition ofa second or thi d . o ‘will be, considering the elements which compose the gow. | the AGUA MOM tN Me Cempiy elvilitios ond attesteti im | CTuting, are brought be’ore Judge Kane on # writ of exrment. On one ride we have an Eepartero reprecenta. | offriendehip may be observed among the tinwile! gentry | Meas corpus. Ls tive and chief of the progressista party, the pueitiextor of | of both armies, about the Boulevards of Pais, « mlngiet | tq vot, ctie us oinees oat oF te United Sates, that Pyain in the tremendous struggle against the Carlists bstves = hosted — me tae ee 4 ir is oi . Congress cf 1818, under whioh all theve prosegutions hate and s very honest man, bat an ineapable poilsina, | {ate Crimea, The treatment walel ihe. post Kagich | Bech inett ‘tin not suificiens for one or either of without resources and wanting in decirion, who, at the | soldiers, autores and navwies receive in Kamsiash, p Know that he, the’ reorults tn lecving the taned nears head of the Counell of Ministers, kvews not how to face | cvlarly when # little the worse forliquor, alos: exavede, | jor the purpove of entering the aviiere eons pee 5 + in pitiful puiferiog rascality and craven brutality, every: | tei, et bce ery seeviog cf & fo- obstacles, and lie:ens to,.and approves of, the follies of | thing of ike kind I had heretofore seen else eae Pilots cf toe eroott, both mnust know it. (his the “‘old fogies”” of his party, who appoor bent upon | town itself na eorgrogution of wood Vaces tinted Coronas English guvernessot, smothering iiberty. On the other par! {s O'Donnell, chivt | leant two-tbirés of which the vileet p collected for Canadian railrays ), /°°™ ‘hat men were ; yt a, | abominable species of “grappling froa” Il nos i — ar age lc emapebses ‘a "a ligeld well knoe | No more striking or chequatiag ovateast ova be conceive’ strate bp get raving Pontose ong! 7 lo perty B) eet 1 ro . ‘“ tecedents, mlwey ing to we moderato pets; | then thet which the sliopery, money-worshtpping, mls- | xnowledge was provid in the case of the mea’ tasora thea, contracted in iene, jevuitical in manners, more intelli | creants who keep these cens, presenta to tae gillaa’, | and eosordingly he remands them to the one , be Wi thoughtless, unselleh and selfsacrificing poor felly #5 jody they gent thon Eepartero, at the hoad of the War Departwent, a 1, 4 ei Op came from. and without being an apostate to his political creed ho | fog tortesen™ Wet nee ny ® A onde yrmaeed SE, COS i reteacliy &> quote (2nd how an. 4snclog upon all movement, and knows well how t keep | thecne hand, and of sh-owd, caleniating eillaing TC eehabe ve) oue sentence from a decision on } ' writ of habeas corpus as the opinic Sah masy its Oiee; “ind wherdoun do 9 other, is to be met with in ewery cline and ane the ‘‘merite,”” which were not etore iitny aati Lo territory in dispu'e; and simultaneously an American | to cause apy esrential point of difference ia the most eon ps ocmpany obtained a concess'oa from Nicaragua for the | veuiert mance ard at the earliest opper.unity. the kath is ot tbe Erne aR ee] i at purpore of establ-rbing a bin esnal communication of the | The treaty wos not, io ehort, fn allgrespe.ta, « final and MTGuEe waylaa’itia of tie Yivel Bans Juba, ahd of cartals, | coelusive soenvure; th cetted'aoese feces Galinitelps Brotiniuy Wino we ispebaprr ty upto rg lands thereto belorging. It threw a bi foge over others, which was likevy to lead to | Gannon in the principal cherkcie it. The we It is eaey to perceive thatin this manner the American | definite arrargement cf them. It de.tied, in short, ali | Capital Match” is therattermiocs company came into collision with the government of | tbat wus of rent and urgent importance, and only'lett | “Teosoway Varurrine pede ak ee | ‘ L— wonder! javenile com: } The farce of Mosquito, under the protection of Great Britain, at Grey- | unrettied a teroporary question of trivial {mport, which i tb town. ought not to cccupy the atten‘icn of two groat nations Neted Qu ts Uren fd pear in the spectacle of “Thi | Moreover, the two American agents representing the | for a moment. Nalad Queen.’’ ard the laughable farce of The Wandei | two great parties in. the American commonweslth had The British government has, indeod, as we believe, | {re Mennerel.” tis worth double the price of admissio Srnowtaded tbe right of Nicaragua to inis town and | propored since to the United Sates government | {9 Dist ttle George sing * Villikins and his Dinah,” i port, and that right hsd becowe identified, through the | to ccnsider. first, the opposing claims of Nicaragua | the latter piece. coms spy just reterred to, with the rights of American | and Costa Rica to Greytown; secondly, the aivi- Woon’s Mixstnes this evening tender a variety «| citixns. Nothing wes wantirg but t the treaty of | sability of leaving that town in the hands of the | songs, dancer, &., aud the burlesque of the ‘* Hap)! red juiers, eats eee Na hte ot Bema people Rin aur, aca es eepecially keri Man.” | en jer, shou! accepted by the Ameiicen Senate | the United States, who now retide in and govern|[ ’ FF 0a 4) in order ‘o place Great Britain and the United States ina creating ‘gut ‘of Wore elementa a 168 toed os tae Fe allt er sepesiel ooaliie meseees | hostile and conflicting position. extry of what roy beocme an important river, and has | numerous oops, Re ~ ke) Such was the of thirgs when Sir Henry Balwer | offered to come to an arnicadle understandiug with the ‘Cun, aid, q went to the United States, and Mr. Lawrrnce came to this | Uried States as to which of there two plans ix prefer~ | cy MINA AND Jaran.—The panoremie paintings of views {| country. agie, ‘The Batish government has also, we underst. i, | Sine and Japan will open to-mor-ow afiernson, at tli | ‘A vegotiation commenced between Lord Palmerston | prepored to the United States te restrict’ the rule of the epwum, 664 Broadway, on which occasion an explan') and Mr. Lavrence, which produced no final arrangement; | Mosquitos within a particular and mived region, and to | try lecture will be delivered by Mr. Noyes, the Orients | but it would appear from the papers laid be’ore Congress | provide for the protestion of those Indians without any | *V¢ller. { that in the course of it Mr. Lawrence inquired whether | necesti y for Bii'ish interference. The United States ; Ore Brit Reovives.—Ole Bull {3 at present in Ohi Great Britain meant to occupy, fortifr, colonize or take | government, tince the aectesion of the present party to | where he has ben giving concerts with great succe. porrereion of Mosquito orany part of Central Ameries; | power, hes insisted on Graytown and the whole Mosquito | His concert cn the 18th, at Cincinnati,is reported to has and that Jord Palmerston declared that Groat | territory belng altogether and unconditionally surren- fies re brilliant and profitable affair, there beir Britain abiured all notion of doing any ot | cered to the Nicareguans. which, from preceding evonts, | resrly a thourand persons present. At Pittsburg, Pa) there this gs, It would also appear that inthe correspon: | would be humi'iating to Great Britain and hard and ua- | fo great war the rush for th ‘at hin second entertni ence whioh tock place between Lord Palmerston and Mr. pert to Costa Rica cn the one hand, and to the aborigin- | ment, that there wasa regular figh! for seats. He hs Lawrence it was agreed that the two governments o | istacm the other, and which, moreover, if the demand | #n excellent troupe travelling with him, eomprisin Great Britain and the United States would be willing to | im question had been compiied with, wou:d at this time | #mongetothers, Mad’lle Spinola, Miss Vail Herr Schriebr on la race! of making the present state of affatca ctidl more oraz! of Kameise 90 “or: rendon so quotes him, with the fall knowledge that Jud; protect the construction, acd the tree passage when oon- | have placed the whole region in the hands of of a set of | ond Herr Roth. lfour Norwegian friend will onty stick ¢ Fae e ea nenuld renge thennelgos on hit vite tan | fron earures Cf Kamevch are crmposot of watches | Kane was the very Judge before whom Herts, on wheoe | structed, cf any railway or ship canal that right unite | marauders fcom Gallente who cit soy tomscaag efor | siebow end ovehiew soloniootion and Unk acroesee: if pies Premera amenegmap oat Adria‘i and islands of the #ezt- | trigl the evidence {mplicativg Mr. Crampton was pro. | the two oceans, Nicaragua, and committing every epecies of cruelty and | will not be long regeining the fortune he has lost in b’ Teena arial and the archipelago, in wddition t> | guced, was proseonted and convicted, a : day when the revolotion shal! break forth. the French, and they are seen In this manner the jealousy of the American govern- | depredation; and this appsrently, in spite of the United | hilanthropic speculations, Hence, nobody believes in Kapartero, and be is looked | with each other esi 7 went and the interests of the American company were | States government i‘rell, to which Captain Walker and aS TT URES both oonciliated. But while this negotiation was pro- | his arrociates owe allegiance, Political Intelit ceeding in London the American people had become more i The Poughkeepsie Journal proposes “ State Conver and more ted against Great Britain. Tiger IsJand, off a Beitish 24 two subjects of dispute between Great Britain | 40M of negro worshipping editors at Albany, on the 26t the const of Honcuras, had been taken by @ Beitish ei at the instigation of Mr. Chatfield, the British ited States relate to the extension which, stace | H1¥.o, unica text, 0 adopt moana to produce united wt o ~ vigorous action in Hon fe Coargé d’Affaires in Central Amerio: reaty of Mr. | 1786, has been givento the settlemont of Bolize, and as ee Preparation for Equlers wer about to be adopted by the American Senate, | to the cocupation ard colonization. of two islande—Ru- Fee eared Taree ae ea inet were mbich begen to apprehend several plans of congaes’.on | atan and Bonsea—which have been oosupled ami oolo- | Crone acing ced imposters, Coase tw} oF ome ot the part of Grest Britain. Onse Adopted, Great Britata | nized sinco 1800 by Grest Britain. Fart exciting ond tmpottemt Presidential contests th poe By Pggh ot up to b Dog Biater, “ Wise there questions the treaty of 1860 has nothing | with refercs.co to the ten rp ihe goreee wt " a A had refui give up | todo a * fro’ io Nicaragua, & weak one, or she would hay The settlement of Belize and” its island dependencies | Prn4 npon united. vigorous and determined action to go to war with the United States‘on account | were left untouched by the treaty. But the Unived Slates | 2C,outret to the ond. It te for reasone uch as tho make common vase Comment on this is surely unnecersar It ’~ Ly : sgrinst the Kaziish, The mardae of | yamme of the evidence our poveruisont ehoow te sien upon as @ nulltty and hes #0 entireiyluut ais pres igo tat J Fonue ous or more of the iaiter icu moattar of aim™:nlen!- | yerwhut can that be worth whic aay eens FY ‘overybody holla han as a senreoron-—as n woak |Z cosutrence in ant ainunt ‘he tows, ant. there 'e mo | Cligndga ende Oy stating Wer eines eee ene yee man; whilet the libere!s have no confidence whaterer in nlo.in the place. The Eogiish offers, wib: ie sce Mio any lowrol the Colved Statey) Ct M®- Crampton view O'Donneli, on account of his evasive and mossured aa- canoes, aFe mere incompetent fps, though’ perhaps | "we APY 16M OM Pantie bes enone bite? tire belief that {1 ¥ ry | brawe Qucngh, look with evmposure, if no. 14 awers when called upon in Congress, which is f-ouuvsl'y | tie" erceq fguas and vutrage te:jetrated Upa the | MeTegna ome feargnaels ean win would dea . a the case; and they mistrust him for bls kaowa edietoo | bumbler, orgh wore meritorious country ash, Tore Uni of bates insulted, or lowered in the oye to his palace friends, for his cevided intention of formiag | a ae gle ee n ced V3 iw Pabos ofiees who We bave made 4) openies to our flesh and blood, such as no « al,’ ) Speaks @ wor ingiivh, while in Balaslava the Frensh | earthly power could have extoried from ¥ Aspe gt hag die sah ler i ea erp have proviced gendarmas and others to atiena to ao to ii ‘ond which no consideration whatever weald onrre fm which enter all his moderado friends, he beiaz the Noth gtd iy: weeded that it ia ‘be duty x @ vary Stat 4 iz tevests of theic people. Notting can be more raarked gas tclpreeerve i wl eapose whisk ig, aa of every edi chief; and because, finding he cannot unseat Expartsr>, | than the ¢ifference between the conduct of the French ntence. of this +mall eorq that we thir k th ld, and we ho, " 5 a a 'h ie 3 quest, in the m of 4 dery that the settlement of Bel 1k the convention should be held, and we ho} | be will to bis utmost, neeording to pabiicruaor, ty cis | and Lxglieh ofleern town ce tole ronpective men. Tae | ““Fheritah people are very How to 4o to war, ont they are | barburota race of Indiati, and have placed thereby an | forded beyord its ancient boundaries withent the evs, | 26 Proporit'on will meet with « general pproval amor — Inarss eovstvolsyy doo Saks delay: Sredohtaste Sad popgey: aie Vein pine cen atied latter as st Lalower to make peace, and they will never make & - Seapeciount in the may ot ‘het reat enterprise (the | aent ‘of Spain, and that the islands referred to are or ove: Lope boedeladat Sot a arent iio I i say pond ag Sorntnct to have beam sufficient for kim, when, by s | most dally practios of Hogging rolefens, setiors, ani aven | The fumes, in. discussing the Amerionn tabroglio, had which appeared at that moment itely to be undectakes, pes Sporwngebes the vas Hai bath robdonceeh os acceptable than the one we have selected, we are rea aqvm of conduct quite analagous to thet ‘which ne ts | ravvies and cividaes, for the most trivtal offences. Ths | already declared its opinion to be, that aa to the Conteal | and which it wan the common interest of the eho | the tregies with ber, and the severehee of tee weenie, | yield our proterenee with alt cheorfalnets. , blige Ty ae Fey 4 was wrecked, ps, ote deed seascn had before I lstt, and Was rucceedet | American question, it was not worth fighting for, aad 1}d to promote. Nor was this all. fhe connection re- her, freed the action of Great Britain in that quar The demcersts of New Bedford, Mass., have resolved ied in Our biste ty in fh yea heey bow co y on cold an Bip which, however, Was ranch | that ae to the recruiting business, we were clearly in uhe | e ished under very different circumstances with the nc also on whether Ruatan and Bineca were do. | Make no nomination for Mayor. i _pewent eblef of thy cabinet, ‘and Yul tists oni ‘eat facts coupected wih this tottert on rare ich Mosquito people, was now evidently about to assume a | pencencies of Belive, or dependencies of the Sta.e of Hon. | ‘The Newport (R. 1.) Newt hears of “no movement § y ¢ ec su ing empire, article from which the above extracts are mede {4 | new and ® very onerous character; an}, while {t was im- | curas, end theredy attached to Cyptral Amagrica, a whig epuntanliea, ead ashe * what is to be done?

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