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; NEW YORK HERALD, SU pay, JULY 13, 1856. plate he guerdon won at Doncaster by Touchstone, Ss ote welt’ A | hip conversation, tobe a violent politician, He dé | older than lther, the “Marianne! oy the «mill SSH taken in the American question inn it AFFAIRS IN EUROPE. serided bimeelf on the alieu list ay @ rentier of Lie | tante.” J be, greatly tone and temper of Lord Olurendon's reply to Mr. , ‘deeming the * will probably Amenget the members of the corps, diplamatique te ae bon, from which place he emoarked on board the | and it will probal oe two others, [will | Marcy's despatch, explaining the grounds of Mr. ‘rhe United States Navy Com| with that | invited to meet ber Mae Ay Enclany = be Ak t to“ make too ae 28 % be an | Tagua. He purposes going to Ostend. nay Luge fa" the “Jeune France So- Onapuae Memiscale There is, however, in some Rr England—Our Former Victories on the | Dallas, Mrs. Dallas and Mr. P. Dallas. pa ane misunderstanding, or». Either there t Ding Ba Loe, ‘fa de la Terre,” because I | political circles an impression that after ali it will Camm Sound Dece—Parliamentary | admonished on his embarkatie | 4Spoleea had been Secret Societies In Prance, have reason te amet , ght they axe merely aliases bea miracle if hostilities are avoided; and in the {From the London Post. June 28.} The Danish oo —— ince is admonished 4 &88 native of our [From the Correspondent of the London News.) e ve ny adopted to deceive the police. | meantime the incident of the ‘American Minister We have made within the last few yorrescvct | _ This committee met again on the 27th ultimo, | 49 beware of the cabme for London, | pjnigy'Jusa 23-—T have ately travelled throagh | THeTeere ajo 4 spoeties, the * Union” and the | and one of the atachds tothe mission having with cl be ats! ‘hatever reason, ? north st. I France, res} whic! drawn from the Queen’s levee, on Wednesday, upon Sur abips of war, and in the recent launch of the the Anglo-French cab C” .gizorereyrivalled in difficalty Penace feos to Soren, Boys ee? oe Tam altogether without details, A oe which | a point of etiquette with regard to court pf is Mr. Villiers in the chair. Frederick Bolderaman, s merchant residing | the Anglo America entistment question, and led to Mr. have seen things with my own eyes, and formed a | 144 4 ¢, ity in f in London, and chiefly in the Baltic trade, | a more nt at the an celebrity in the time of Louis Philippe, brought in to support the view of those who do not remains— made } them if. 1 was presel “ar + ‘Have we e to meet D TU" qare; for the cabmen, sus; judgment on for myeelf. Ay iratora”at called “',eg Droits de l’Homme,” still exists, It | antic pate @ very speedy or @ very ai the Se yry of the powentt 556, veel ban ages hone coliee nr A, 3 ed Aco el course, ‘drove off uapaid, with sum yo pao hh yong eg acon te wae contig of revalutionista of the inl He class who do | of the pertions remaining unsettled. we hive allt to isa aon » mae 4 4 , vail Boglish maDut Ch Sh . rte oaks vale vehicles, of more value intbonuine? atthe bar of the court of Angouleme, | ° ifeeat. Unfortunately he inence is a But as just observed political matters now possess hey tance ofc fori os evicg ao | Reary lao frm fancy it | hen sepia end acoustic wes teal | Stony Milano at tal of Berdeuas na | So vigr in any putes then remain ws | the bully ecomng cheaper, har sae fg ee Haare: Deumark rendered no -v¥ice whatever ie aoe anaes oainiag Ueahiiasabange wee many of the most eminent men i this conntry. Tha fs Ng ey a gee pe meer | namuceted reek condones So 68 depeianenti ef ear States are not only throughout with as heavy | for that it duty: the value of tmercham | the inemoranda of the royal traveller, and lend a | Teswitof wi ave seen al a deci dirt day me ag orp yon — markets. In Lombard sty the Enis p00 Be ea feeb pe a on all ~< oe batt stent a Oy ta. be believed, erred & Piceaney to the volume which, of course, will crown sleeping, ‘a fale ent ew tani of ae Yell the event? while apm ptoms have jonally been manifested po te many ee my Drosaside jt sigh duty, utes small ‘one—onl ly one pear, y the ‘voyage. cano. Secret inerease and maltiply in all Is 1t Worth While? of no bo er Leary Loree) ov At po 4} per ei while that claimed by Denmark | The Place Hunters of England and the | directions. The Puperor is seriously uneasy at the The following lines are the production of Mr. Kerg be gener ral he: ae am) , and ed upon end of « far r range. waa, 5d. bandred ‘ut. He bel that United States. irrefragable evidences of their progress which he | Martin F. Tupper. In a note to Mr. rtaon Glad- ny mn r rate — oll iy toe is tbat all. vessels are forspeed aswell, | charge was inconsistent wit! treaty e ments— ,{f¥om the Longo Teiegrapt, June 26.) e yoo fe cag Moeed pe witeia the space fone, President of the Financial Belore, Asvocla mong taal aie tee os ey BL gene when he meant treaty engagements betwee: Hanse - of a few months, a or seven mo! n, author says:—Your admirable address forapcetine-tnn iecthiuens of eb 500" Stade 3 gre srertces, Be Se srg se (Saturday) upon the new loan. From 4 to5 alarming revelations have been made. -These socie- | he full a certain sentence about Prince Albert) in- S 4 cent was then required for short advances, but rabeaded. No sooner does the govern- | duees me to volunteer a sympathetic hear,’ which I | Foye (Tea. 0m oaunes lon BAO Bed. ster fry evel in the course of which traly | our American cousins (though I will not endorse to yd ment fancy it has rushed them at one point than | trust you, and those whove mouth you are, willex- | “Te'han? yas earckaned the greiser, part of alt By Mr. Liddetl—The distance from Hamburg to } ble people—will PY, comparatively bat little atten beck was about seventy English miles. ‘tion to the smooth phraseology of Lord Clarendon’s i ae _ facomt for what they are worth, i ‘spate d will out the having the power of closing with her, By the Chairman—That transit daty was meant } despatches, an Mth rteous things said ot th they start up at another. It is all in vain thas afew | cuse and te k nd Tsent the et she is ‘corvette, and commanded by a | a9a protection for the Sound dues; if the Sound | @nd no more, all the courteous things said of their "fet ey AeA 2 . and accept. A week ago and more he gold, the arrival of which was announced in the y ‘were abolished, it was to be hoped the transit | country and themselves in Parliament; but ae gunesting noon we ee prisoners here und | enclosed to a London newspaper, hoping, through | 54 weekly aeadars cae of course, its stock of bal- of the affiliated | ts columns, to show to America that we spoke and ‘almost all the - Tiugieaders batHle re- | peace and reason; but I suppose the newspaper in an Be tra nex Teturns will again show @ con- search and defy pursuit. The utmost that | question was too warlike, and I have not yet seen it The return of the most promising weather for the dues rome) would jikewise wey swallow es Evglish opinion whatever appears “z Mr. j haosi Aage te no "haty charged on | newspapers. We cannot object to their d this, u . | for it is precisely what we do ourselves; and it is, u wanedtniseeie Garcon Lig oe ee Bee en a from Russia to Labeck, ia tra: eho to be lamented that there are prints which | the moet active surveillance and the most | in print. I fancy the occasion is gone by—happily; hevvesh. oun beigh y 7 ooten as Atlaztic do not stop at coreettes. A fine Mr. S. West. of Hull, was next examined. He | are in the habit of adupting a line of proceeding | energetic measures can do is to repress insurrection | however, if any one of your Liverpool rs likes | Soney, "has mies pool a prospect oh pee frigate is a very fine ship, and they knew how | said he was engaged a good deal in the timber trade. | With regard to the government and the people of the | for atime. The government \ radi impotent | o gives the bailad vent 80 rom an Eng- | Dight otherwise ee as monty reg Brose Spemacks tsa toectig wees balls ‘andtheyhave | The Sound dues on timber came, in same instances, | United States, not more ungenerous and unfair than | to find out the living heart of the couspirucy. Itis | ish quarter it can get reprinted in America, the | [O15 from the downward othe er of ey Paris some in weight of anal fall, ual to poets to 1 per cent, and in others to 2 per cent, owing to | ebviously unjust. It is not only the institutions of a | within my knowledge ‘'\:' o high personage, who | +entiments may do good; and they seem to be so wat, aud tee edtanes Geen ee po mie deckers, and si in “ te American (80 | the difference in quality of the timber. The ‘tate | Tepublic which promises, in power and pi rity, to | sees every morning the reports from the gendarme- | nearly your own, that I have thonght it worth while pours lane. Consols bave em 7 . pa called) fifty ‘ate would throw a broadside of | paid on Russian deals was somewhe* less than that | surpass by far sas Sowocreys lg. of we mn Ranory. oe se No cceorgha pe lmge marrige bid anor A transcribe them for you. Do with is as you think | Sotraay, having slosed hat ace EA Rens , pee Donat pounds; Prussian deals. Deals from Prussia were charged | gives us a record, which are referre con: { bave taken in no t lepartments. ae s een guns, the welghtet ee Teeahcesatt | $0 chalee Der shock of 60 pieces; deals from Kasia | tempt, but the people themselves are treated with | But what is more terrible still for the goverument, | Patience!—O proud and high spirited nations, Sighs 58 548 to fn vlan eee te Yotwo thoasand four hundred and twenty pounds | paid 36 thalers per 1,000 pieces. The Sound dues | derision aud insult. Wherefore should we have | is the certainty which it has snquired that “a very England, America—bear and forbear; Bear that wnsiness hen tncronnsd Ot he tates ws 4 —— discharge. The Duke’ of Weil: y m, we | operated on the tic trade in the same way a3 an such constant allusicns to the sordid ecard active, Penpagmes. is going on in the rauks of the Patience!—if both of us wil! but have patience, tion; in fact, the advance has taken place Previte a import duty bere would eperate; there were a con- and the mean motives of the =. the United | army.” The “Hautes Ventes,” as the central com- All may be well by a trille of care; i; a ansaid market, ‘a clear proof that its p spi believe, throws a broadside of about two thousand nd a key to their | mittee are called, know perfectly weil that they can Only, instead ot hot words with each other, is sound and healthy, and that the public do not end inc i idera ency houses at Elsiuore, and | States, when it is attempted y ; Fee aaa ee ace aunt’ bat the | there ‘was a, good ‘deal of competition among | Policy? and why should the joculor journalist make | do nothing sgaitist the army, but they hope to doa |, Metr withou striking, and ¢mvak without gulle— | agin an aca tte tee ae During the peediy ow Ae ‘of one of our ordinary two-deckers may | them; they paid the Sound dues on the cargoes, | merry ut the expense of the i» .merable political | great deal by and with it. In cousequence, their Gack ca thnaeati ced aati ik ‘he por = ue tndiaty te seatians be taken ing from twelve hundred to sixteen | which were charged in the bills of lading; the | Parties and factions which are ie results of a free | main efforts are now turned in that direetion, and, Pp i wee! “se A — pe Aa pwr hanaved eee cok maonteaste five hundred nts were paid 3 per cent for the commission. | 2nd enlightened conditiza? If we have not | as it would appear, not without success. Several be be tay feo rt ang Loong by eapenctin snl ink a oe of be “ sufficient range to reply to the whole Sins ver a strong feeling among merchants in | our “Know Nothings,” our ‘“filibusters,” our | privates of the ‘-Douane” force were among the Mor sce rage re bet ee aaa tar wal col — ised by th pitt nd drosdeide f ber be vg the ‘aietance the lat- | favor of getting rid of the Sound dues; they | “nigger drivers,” “anti-nigger drivers,” “‘democra- | members of the “‘Militante” tried at Bordeaux. But Partisen aquibe and whatever beside— r cota J ta, . ane dete that wd will Mronid. if pousibie, preserve.and we should have | considered the English government might make | tic tickets” and opposition ticketa,” have we not | a much more serious fact is this:—It has been lately | qyere should be wrongs and much long-enduring, ae ell yale peng Map — peioes the mortificatlon of seeing our frigates taken or | & ise with Denmark by compensation; that | our tories, whigs and radicals, and are there not half | discovered that the leaders of the Paris central com- Mutual sins 3m a black double file, 5 a eg ig plore ies sunk ageaticn te mveties ‘ana oar line of battle. | could have been done on more advantageous terms | ® dozen of difierent shades of toryism, whigism and | mittees have secret relations with parties high in ‘There should be evils past bearing or curing lato sitvenee in the ed poy fay 4 Ame! ap - ‘tieahen 4 some time ago than it could now, and would be more | Fadicalism? If American Presidents aud place ex- | government offices, and !’ rn from them every move- Ere such war could be ever worth while. — , and a foagrent ne — Cag SUR he tra roesd eraller acale proportionate | difficult still hereafter,as the Baltic trade was yearly | pectante are not generally chary in the methods | ment of thai .s decided upon at the | What! shall a blunder or two and a bluster, | wane om, ateaay, wpe: neni, oo. Ee to the increased size and power to which ships are | growing more important. He considered Norwegian ey take to obtain political eapital, and to streugth- | Ministry of War. For many months past, not Got up by governments for their own ends, pony mo ip dak at £ pe Le Gereloy now built, is isely what happened in the early | and Swedish veseels were built cheaper and sailed | ¢0 their positions, what right have parties at home| a regiment bas left Paris for the provinces Or the tierce pranks of some shrewd filibuster, traf ie money market and by rapidly ip part of the lust war with the Cnited States. Out cheaper than English ships, and were wentiy | here—with a knowledge of ali the corrupt jobs per | but the revolutionary chiefs in the neighborhood Turn into enemies kinsmen and friends? ing » cacmntiten haa aion okguanal, tac ato. considered it disereditable to decline en- | to sume extent displacing English ships in the | Petrated, and all the dodges and stratagems to catch | of its fresh quarters Kuew that it was coming, bas of padag fl be samen ana jlo Foreign t a — Torkish 6 ce » the pi Fo gaging any vessel of their own rating, however su- | Baltic. Steamers were cheaper in Eagland than in | Votes and retain power~to point sarcastically to the | and were fornished with list of the names of all | ,Some even Nore in this tight little tile, Pook end misc been rt ‘or athe ctuamusat: ap te ‘consequence was that | the Baltic. Steamers were on the increase in the | mote in the eye of their trans-Atlautic neighbors? | the men with whom they might communicate in But $0 be foes woald be bardly worth while, epee pane} shares there been a oe trigeeee met nominal American frigates which | Baltic. The Americans, should they have u taste to py us | safety for the purpose of continuing the work of Sraotens eoncliie 2 sallen dinate err 8 tic rege ain thi i Bramley Moore—Ow tonnage had back in our coin, and to retaliate with effect, have | propagandism. Since this discovery was made the TEOeen's CWS. CAREER G0Ge ObRee Cesiroying, 8 was anticipal is circular on Saturday were really, in com itive ‘ht of broadside, By Mr. Bramley Moore. aze noto- he Raving in folly, and raging in siu! last, reasoning uj the facts shown in the last. Moe of battle ships fn long (so called) | riously decreased in the Baltic since 1849. only to consult the reports of some of our election | most severe orders have been issued to prevent the | phink aww the Caapots off Europe enjoying skly return of ‘the E Bank of the forty-six gun fri ase os, Sttysix't> | “Mr-Bremer, of Huil, was the next witness. He | committees, and to republish almost say portion of | secrets of the war offize being betrayed; with what Such a vile massacre gladly would grin ; wee Titer at th of Eagend, endanee sixty guns, and those’ of much larger calibre than | said he had been engaged in the Baltic trade for a | the proceedings of the prevent seasisn of Parliament, | degree of success I am not at this moment able to | Think of the blood to be poured out like water, athe hag erg carl ce” Shon Carved at tat period by oar ships or indeed | great maps. Eero war ports of rasa | revealing acrie of dugrcel o7mprmy td | Mutant aaah secret sowie theve‘u is | Taste ve nd apn seer the minimam rae of tntrent this day from 8. to 4b by those of any other naval Power. following | which ivileged,and paid omy a small amount ea of g) hos ol . w many secret 4 re are in of the havoc and rapine and slaug! cent. The hb h ‘eompariso relative forces bata! ‘Sound dues. ‘conse: le, by both our whigs and tories, in which we have They are continually changing their All in one family—Is it wortn while? street houses, though they ipaueee —g — aon pcoan ot ae =— pair cont nr gi po tear roy! _— hte fm sbaurdity any abeurdlty of which they | names, in ondee to thwart the unremitting efforts of Ruin without mitigation or measure, Bae not iven mies _ a tention, have an illustration of the past, and as a wirniog for the | [the ports be alluded to were Stettin, Rostock and | have been guilty. “if the United States has its | the police to track them. ‘There are, however, Ravagingtall that is good in the world, sien been inane a6 4 to & per cent below te fatare : . 6 Mecklen He believed there was a “united democratic party,” anxious ‘to walk into | three well known principal societies, which are pro- | Myriads of lives and millions ot treasure a reduction satis- a8 ion, both in this country and Prussia sguiss the loaves and fishes'” have we not our oligarchy, | bably the parents of most of the others—I mean Down to perdition remorselessly hurl'd; “nthe. arg in; but as all the causes which led to the Sound does; the captains were equally against | with its half dozen of governing families? t | the “ Marianne,” the “ Militante,” and the ‘‘ Com- Liberty scandalisod, progress retarded, " It ap saliva pprastion, 3 is more than Bo tis Quen txea marcha, we not place the Sutherlands and Greys any mune Révolutionnaire.” The most considerable and Commerce by wh on bankruptcy’s file, bable that this day fortnight, or perhaps this meu is « Ma- | Countries laid desolate, cities bombarded. week, it will be extended to one per cent. fter vidence as to the increase of | against the Fillmores and Donelsons? important of these is beyond all question the “ Ma. Prussian ships in the Baltic, the commitiee adjouro- rianne,” (this word, in soctalist slang, means the | All Decaise pridesays, a war is worth while! French Views of American Manners at the ed until Tuesday. i “ Emigration to Cannda—Poor Prospects for guillotine) which finds its recruits prin among Oe eee sean Cones of Qucen Victoria. ee Strangers. operat large “* Marianne’ 5 (From La Patrie, June 26.) Si 4 ” % fevses those doctrines of communism Where the good rule of humanity guiding who have tra in " ee ee whos mast | aioe mor pe Gee auaaaes Li citizen Blanqui teaches, and would aaa Governments ho # to keep peoples good friends; Feige if, h lpr the hopper The Paris Union publishes a letter from the Duke | _ The number of emigrants who for Canada | practice if he could. | Blanqui is the high priest, the | © Wat no sanderous.evi suspicions. more or lees’ comfortable sock in. a steambont or = de Levis, with a communication addressed to the | in 1855 was 20,207, to which are to be added 36 chief of this society of Ali | fade us all utterly pon a . railroad car, while a woman, whether a cook or a latter by the Count de Chambord, on the subject of | births on the 5 ‘a total of 20,243. founders of different revolutionary sects have Dreaming that such a war would be worth while! tarkey herd, is without seat, there will be found tea inundations which have desolated France, and | The deaths on the passage were 97, and in quaran- | seen themselves deserted by their disciples. The ‘ officious Yankees for one who will in s brutal man- ay towards the relief of which the Count has contribut- | tine 36; in all 183; equal on the whole number toa | “ Phalansterians,” the adherents of the “ Atelier | All that iz wicked on history’s blazon : ner signify to the seated gentleman that he has to © 35 01 whom were boys. ed the sum of 20,000f. The following is the letter mortally of 65 per cent. The number of immi- itaire” of Louis Blanc, of the “ Triade humuni- Gan nen oie ee aia toe give seat for a lady. ‘The Java, which was taken by the Constitution, | of the Count de Chambord:— grants {nto Canade in 1854 having been 52,365, the ,” of Pierre Leroux, of Proadhon, and the | ““Wive'ts the world, and unbending with time ? We have. nothing to object to that rather brutal whore equipment we have given above, was of the Vewicy, Jane 16, 1856 lecrease was 32,122, Of ‘hese there were n: “ Tearians” of Father Cabet, have all gone over with For our carnage fraternal, gigantis, . gallantry. May we, however, ask that if, for the same class as the Guerriere, but had the advantage | 1 was on a journey, my dear Duke, when the news of | of— arms and ige to follow the standard of Blanqui Broadly would crimson for mile upon mile very reason that they travel in Europe, the Ameri- ‘of being much better manned; and we may here | ‘e {rightful inundations which have desolated France, 1855. | Hie name is the only one which now carries anthor- | Both the world’s highways, Pacific, Atlantic, cans think that they may exempt themselves from a the t of the broadside fon be particularly in the south and west, reached me. I could 4,310 | ity among socialists and communists of all shades Ay, and both jpheres—Is it worth while ? showing to the fair sex the serious of which remark, that the weight o not reac the details of those scenes of devastation att 5,091 | and There are many reasous wh 5 pe tek ee inited States frigute—nominally @ forty-six | mourning without having my heart deeply affected. On 5:35 | Blanqui has attained this supremacy over all hi Neither of us (we are both Anglo-Saxon) ec exagge! home’ returning to this city my iret care is to send you, asa 3,815 | Fvals, In the first place, his lon; hard Ever give up, or ever give in ; its are suggested to us by alittle mark of my lively sympathy for the pumerous victims of 1,288 Hi 4 an cap- Vietory neither have ever turn’d backs on, scandale which occurred at the last levee of those terrible catastrophies, a sum of 20,000f., with the 9 | tivity has enlisted sympathy in his favor. Next— Always we perish, or always we win. Victoria at St. James Palace. An American tapression of my deep regret that my circam=tances will | —Showing @ decrease in the Irish emigration of 72 | and this is a very cogent reason—he has never been | Russians, and Pr , and other like tissue, had solicited from Mr. Dallas, United States Minis- hot allow me to send you more, It is particularly on | Per cent, in the German of 65.43, aud in the Norwe- | in power. But what more than anything else has Fight With « courage we woskin’s revile ; ter in London, to be presented to the court levee. these occasions that I suiler severely at finding myself | Gian of 77.84 per cent. Of the 133 deaths on the | contributed to invest him with undivided authority | But for us two there is only one issue, That desire, expressed by & republican, may, per- kept far from my count ot being able to hasten per. | passage and in quarantine, there occurred in the | over the party which he now wields, is the fact that Both must be conquerors—Is it worth while ? haps, induce people to smile, but ‘ought not te pl senaily to the assistance and at ony | emigration from— he is the izcarnation of the revolutionary tradition | No ! we are cianta, but sons of one mother ; tonish them. “However, what we have a right to pasaitla he Las 0s canisibute go eotenlly an Lcoald have | Hiyerfetlssc=: of 1791. Biaaqal te, so to speak, the apostotical Lot not the pigmies rejoice in our strife ; be surprised to is’ the oT tuat Pished in relieving so much distress. My wife is notless | pryet :2slieh pos successor of Babaat, having received imposition of | Let us forgive, as brother with brother, entleman to present himself at the Queen of Eng- aifected thar Tam at these disastrons events, and its in frotian i on bupil, bags emer neat F seong welsh ac gusl'oy phones rattler: — el {Romig pants, yellow wi ‘ e own that I send you this sui , master, yy % cf an neckcloth,a dress Day aes fecbie sasrkol wor ainaert teamaet eve some | Ruan? dained teacherof his doctrines. ‘The Mariannistes” | Witting man’s welfare and Heaven's own smile, | Enough to go to the club or 0 Tattenallie Ths toe alleviation to the suiferings of those aitlicted people. 1 |) were the first who openly broke with all those revo- | V¢, “4? do evil—the scale is @ featner— decorum bas not been tolerated, and the master of renew to you my deur Duke, the assurance of my con. | The emigration may therefure, be considered utiontsts of the achool of the National, who seein | Wich worth while, brother, which, is worth | Ihe ceremonies informed Mr Dallas of it. This stant friendship. HENRI. | the whole satisfactorily healthy. Including cabin | yery popular movement nothing but anop wane? enti "FT ‘Jeman, not to eay the worst, has had the . suffered The Paris Constitutionnel says :— passengers, and passengers from the lower © get, places for theuselves. Whether the Ms: | ‘The Daughters of Louis Philippe and Na- | ‘otake'the part of his countryman ~~ her buli, and it is doubttul whether any serious pro- | __ The first step to be taken will be to to repair the | the whole number landed at Quebec was 21, rianne" people will be more virtuous when their poleon. raw, with the entire personnel of the -legation, Jongation of the combat would not have seat her, all | highroads. roeds which have been cut will be | i# calculated that of these there went to the day comes, we shall, perhaps, live to see. How- The followingis the capes des motifs of the bill | without saluting the Queen. ” standing, to the bottom. It is worthy of remark, | reconstructed, the bridges destroyed will be re-built, States 5,500; but, on the other hand, that there en | ever, they can find uo terms strong enough t» presented to the ‘. ow body of France for grant- There ia, naturally, no reason to demand from the howeres that without counting the lamentable mis. | and the dykes of defence, the rupture of which gives tered Soe ee + ngage ate less a 10,000, | express their contempt fur those gante jaune, BE , 600,000r. to daughters of the late King | citizens of ths United States that respect of royalt understandin; importance to the slightest rise of water, re- | making the additi populatior Canada | those talone rouges, those “rose-water intri- t— to be found in monarchical countries. peed Belt, the | oe = established. There are urgent works that admit of | during the year, 26,774; of whom it is supposed that | guers” who think everything is well as long Gentlemen. 'The Prince President of the repablic, oe ede reserve their worship =< and Americans terminated in favor of the latter, | 20 delay. But it is nota question of confining the nine-tenths, or about 23,000, proceeded { Western | ax they bave the power in their own hands. | then invested with full legislative issued a | ers and dancers, whose horses they iT viz: Guerritve and Constitution, Frolic and Wa-p, | labors to placing matters in their primitive condi- | °F Upper Canada. The progress of railroads and | The “Mariannistes” profess to desire r, not as | decree on the 22d January, 1862, which, based on | whose they draw with enthusiasm, But- Macedonia aad United States, Java and Constite. | tion ; the country will no longer remain exposed to | Other means of internal communication is contina- | an end, but as a means to establish their social sys- | the old public right of France, brought back to the | what is to be expected from them is, that when tion Peacock and Hornet. Then, however, after | catastrophes similar to those we now deplore, and in | Sly added to the advantages offered by the St. Law- | tem. Asta what these means would be they are very | domain of the late the comprised in the do so much as to solicit the honor of being in- more than a year's disasters, the fortune of war iting by the terrible warning we have received, | TeBce route to om pocennns to the West. | frank. The poinard, the torch, pillage and confisca- | donation made on the 7th August, 1430, by King Sobissite a lady, whether that lady bea Queen changed. The capture of the ‘ake was ra- | it will be sougbt to discover the serious means of | The Ontario an... Simcoe opened last spring, | tion ore all lawful in their eyes, so far as may be | Louis Philippe to his children. This decree, con- | or not, ‘conform themselves to the habits ‘foliowed by that of the Growler, Bagle, A preventing their return. flitherto the means gener- | *“ords, in connection with a line of steamers on Lake | necessary to insure the triumph of the good and | firmed by a £e:0nd one of the 27th March, 1852, re- | of society. A and tq , indeed, by the loss | ally employed consisted of a s: of dykes, which wenmeping oes f iia of ng og the princival | holy cause. The affiliated themselves by the | ceived its complete and regular execution. The ad- This reminds us of a characteristic feature of of the squadron on Lake Champlain, and the loas of | has produced in some coun such as Southern | towns on Lake Michigan, w joarney to the | most terrible oaths to shrink from none of these | ministration of the domain took definite oy praate’ life, which is little known, bat deserves: dona a means. The form of the oath has varied frequently, | of the property and estates comprised in 7 according to circumstances. In the begianing the | tion, and has sold partof them. But that which | vited to be present at a feast of the Court novice swore to strike with the poniard whoever he | State reasons have prescribed, and which has been | XVI. In honor of this solemn event the should be ordered to strike. It was afterwards ¢ n- pecroweer Ag onmnens ty pede Tage pan ry envoyé had ordered a new wig. Now, the sidered that this formula was too vague, and a | appeared to the Emperor to be capable of leave for Vers: illes was arrived, and the = z i i e E Z 8 é Italy, most admirable results. To-day, by a turn of | }ower part of the province has been facilitated by the lo pears grand wen ede | TRU tees ae ene Se 3 Chay eee Getommned Cmpeceey | 6, present season emigrants will reach Torou'> » as wating the t that they are to prevent ,* e +9 { | Hamilton from Quebec (which formerly occupied ly Cag 2 ae We believe that | three or four days) ia from 36 to 40 hours. Ta respest i ascendancy, but mach mischief been done in the meantime, and much discredit thrown upon the Britich arms. Now, in the event of hostilities breaking out be- i : true strength—not according to an obsolete mode of classing sbips, in which a six-pounder counts for as vu af tates, @ great amount of injustice exists in the ays pledge in terms to ‘‘assassinate the cl of the | tion as regards the three princesses, daughters of | was not yet at Pasay. The au’ * ute ot ferment into which various cireutastances, | tematic atiacks directed against the ‘use of | ‘0 the prospect for emigrants to Canada daring tho | Stato” was substituted for it, Ata still later period | King Louis Pritippe; these three princesses stand in Tichard’” wos aot guile a motel of febooaben tak which we need not specify, have thrown the New | dykes. Without a doubt, the system admits of Hein pop pny given the immigratioa the engagement taken was to “assassinate the gov- | the number of ch of the Ries ta tho dees of em he was blustering when the poor hair dresser arrived. World, renders it impoosible for any one to predict | improvement; they might be constructed in a more | AKent of Quebec is not encourasing. With refer | ernor— thet any man, no matter what his title, | August. Ata later period the advantages resulting | at last with the so much expected wig. Franklin, what may occur, in case of such a misfortune ; we | Substantial manner, and an issue for the tarbalent jargon ie pi oy of 1856,” he aa 8, “I regret to | whether emperor, king or president of the republic, | to them from that donation constituted marriage | in his eatisfuction, hastened to cover his head with gay that not only these disasters and these morti- | Waters might be provided by means of a coming | *8¥ that mavy of the causes to which I had occa. | was to be devoted to death for the single reason | portion; and the marriage portion of a princess | the ornament in’ question. But, alas! the wig did fications may occur again, but that it is positively | tion of discharging canals and lower beds. Thus | Sion to allude i my report of last year coaninue to | that he personified supreme authority. The “Me- | who quits her country toenter a foreign family may | not fit; it covered but half of the’ head of the grest Gale Gel a 2 need fem they will do. so, | improved, the dykes will continue to play an impor- | ¢Xist, mre = prey in Pag section of the pro- | rianne” seems to have borrowed many of its lead- | be consideredas one of the conditions which deter- | American patriot. The imprecations commenced ‘We use the term modified because we presume that, | tant role in the protection of the soil. Bu’ itis | ¥' ca re ~* ber mar it has mot only been ex- | ing rules from the Jesuits. The affiliated member | mined the cong ted On the other hand the treaty | anew against the unskilful hair dresser, who, in this im euch an event, our Government will not suffer our | certain that means mast be sought to prevent, as far yee y depressed, but the immigants had grout | no | belongs to himself. Perinde ut cadaver | of Paris of 30th h has justhappily restored peace | critical circumstance, exclained,“I am I ships to attack singly vessels of twice their force, | 88 postible, the irruption of waters from the higher os y a gd the «ammer ia procuring suit | js strictly the motto of the society. Join it,and you | between the great Powers of Europe, and this treaty | confess, but it is to Le acknowledged that Monsicar Dut will direct the lighter armed vessels to cruise in | Te |, Whilst also increasing the means of resis- | * Ra yment. a the western section of the | swear to become a piece ot mechanism, obey- | is doubtless calculated to reopen, and even to create, | the Ambassador has not a head as every one.” This twos, or accompanied by squadrons of those litte | tance offered by the valleys. ‘Phe question of re- | Prosince, to which nineteuths of our emigrants pro- | ing the hand that touches the spring. Think | relations of friendship between the sovereign houses | skilful flattery pleased a good deal the Frank- gun boats of which we bes recently accumulated | Dewing the mountain forests and meadows here na. | ©¢C4, prospects and appearances are, on the whole, | not to betray the secrets of this new Veh-| of Europe. Under circumstances, the Em- | lin, who, after having done all that habita of euch a number; but, in the name of | justice ty our og A presents —_ Fo not —. denied thet ~~ 8S arena aK -y- Xe 4 me. If 4 “4 5 a =p = b pom ny tyre —— determined to — re aoe society required from him, himself to tha officers and eailors, let their ships be rat the: e dirap, ee of forests and pastare la hog 4 . . sworn wi sure jt net reelf. You | three —— ippe, 't of Louis XVI. with - = fas ot hele | which ebted in the abrupt declines of oar moan. | fort from Mr. Hawke, the immigration agent for | are free to die, but not to Wetray the secret. ‘An ex. | ameanure which the international character of their jean well received therefor. priganieRe: estern Canada:—*With reference to the prospect f if tain chains has increased the rising of the,waters of of employment for unskilled laborers during the ample of the working of this cruel alternative oc- | matrimonial conventions and the present state of The beautiful and noble head of the streams and rivers. In fact, the waters, no long- curred at Angers the other day. A_y appren- | our relations in Eu permit to the equity and | by labor, but illumined by the lent of the tri overt contr Vostok 4 Di J much a6 an eighty-four. Let our ships be armed , ensuing year,” says Mr. Hawke, “I would beg to ob- fact na posible with heavier gun in fewer num: | £m thens. are tarred away rapidly, and in og. | serve that hey are not vo promising as I could” de: | tuuai: appeared in court dari the drat two days | fis idea the Bonpeser has ordered me to subeat ts | Sf Voom “neuter, Ghat head "us capable pet ney i oe te po rents. Nevertheless, it would be an error to con- | Sit Many of our railroads are nearly completed. | of the trial, but on the third day, when he was to | your sanction the fol bill: — lory and nearly an event. But in the same of bat, in “we po Bm Rg = oS not "ani ong | sider the disappearance of our forests as the sole | 8md the laborers that have been employed in their | have been examined, he committed anicide. It was t Only Milan e The Minkter of Finance is autho- leaven, what could ify, at St. James’ Palace, captains to oppose thirty-two pounders to eighty. | and cerential cause of inundations. It is only ne- nie ge _ iy ey a on aiterwards ascertained that he was a member of the | rised to inscribe on the Grand Livre of the public | the plaid pants and A waistcoat of the fours in cqual number. The mere distance ofrange | °Sa hin to. be" conviiged that the scourge | esuse s reduction of wages; but as sooa as the sar- | emanating from the parent, hive, the’ Marianne” | per Cent Stacks for the following sums 00/0008. | London? "=u ‘nt Uauled States = fA poe he FOE par to wes equal], felt” whea those forests existal, plus laborers scatter themselves throughout our | It was founded in 1 3, and ia the short pace of Phyo as anal the 1 of the Bel- “ send them to what is certain destraction ifthe ene. | and covered nearly two-thirds of our territory. Qar | Widespread and prosperous districts in the interior, | little more than two years it has extended its rami. | gians; 200,000f. in the name of Dnchess of in Liverpool. mz be reasoned prudent. The orderin council of | plains, according to these two historians, were co. po Il aasume their Saw Sete. Ph Ee fications into every principal point of France. Its Gotha; and 200,000f. in the name of nal.) 1817, by which the present ment of rates | Vered with s water; Hainault, Handas, and pete an; —— i a ne ‘aim lass | votaries are es} ly numerous in the west, at Bor- | the Leirs of the Duchess of Wurtemberg. Baltic by oe i and classes was fixed is wholly out of date now; it | tlie Boul , were eubmerged; Paris itself waa = = of allo on Roy, “4 ulty | deaux, Nantes, Angers, Niort, Chateanneuf, La ane hardly contemplated a gun heavier than a t surrounded by swamps; reposed oa a | in ap ory Sy A tien of searc! < we phn} Rochelle, Angouleme, Cognac, &c. The very nu- pecutennes pam a foar pounder, and never contem steam at marsh at the mouth of the Garonne, and all our pa eg hy tee t + illed | merous members of this society are all under the ford, yet here we are fightiag cighty , and | rivers, badly restrained, spread over their banks, ae be Me + good farm ser- | ordera of one supreme central committee, whose ee See Se hn 08 beet wi a stitch of sail set. ae py Sp eg et penned a ae every t of juarters is always in a large town ae ‘value of a ship as an instrument does not in | If we at the time of the middle ages, we find Jyh Toy geek wane. ar dinate to this directing commMttee there are many already these » monly in fhe muasber of her 3 ae TY, that in | Village in U © a ping Og tn oy bapa pey Re wep Soatannen, comes _ ee ~ waselese, and tight as well be in the hoki. | especially at Lyons, where the ‘and the Saone & very unusual degree of prosperity for | soetety. Bordeaux, where only a fortnight ago one | Tungon: pease of hia arene. bot in the nt of her broadside and the distance | united their waters and reps awry 8 portion of the FY farm yA ex: | of the many prosecutions lately instituted against | “Ir may be said that, as we have experienced in Paris the , havi ou abe can send in her speed both ander sail or | town. 1427 the Seine covamms entire island ont — | ve become | 5 members of the “ Mifitante” came to a | infuence of the embarrassments felt on the London mar. invent to web steam, or both together; in the strength and quali- | of St. and rose on the quay of St. Paal to the un versal. 7 opinion that , is the residence of one of the directing commit- } ket. we shall aleo experioace the effects of the improve- $7.0 Ber crew, and her own capacity of carrying of the first story of oases. If we re- mechanics—such as bMacksmiths, wheelwrights, | tees, which corresponds with the central committee | ment which is manifested there. It is, however, ncossa pane bee Seaeee end guns and according tr these circumstances, it is in order to | *#ilors, carpenters, masons, bricklayers, sh. at Paris, and also with the décuries stationed in the py A A wach—the true elements of her strength—she should | prove that the scourge reigned even in the od | et, &c—aa well as agricultural servants, country distrieta within a certain distance around Bor- | If we confine ourselves to « belief that cannot be be rated; and according to a system which has long | When mountains and plains were covered’ with likely to seek yment in Upper Canada in 1556, | deanx. is carried on either through | *bundant in London without affecting the Paris mar- ° td Ri will be able to it, and that farmers wao know ket, we shall be in the right; but if we imagine that ceased to be to naval war, and which i, pee It therefore results that inun- tow u ao , or by letters couched in com- | Po o.use a ditterence of twenty france oxists between ores the prin condition of access by which its (rovld not cease, even ia the event of the coh ga deg Ty PE . hte 2 Key agreed | English Three per "and. French Rentes ; that operations Present governed. meuntains | again covered with forests Ly — Se deal as strious, | upon. been expreasions | because French rail their present value pro- 4 means would be such | Will be sure to succeed. ” “travellers,” “shares,” &o, mean | duce an income of six te coven por cont, whine asa of floodgates properly arranged, either on “arms,” “em ,"” “subsori; * and so om. | the Englith lines produce only onan average four per cent, Queen Victoria's Visit to Grosvenor House f On the 26th of Jame, Queen Victoria paid one of ravage our territory. th world eewtal toa. Among the passengers by the Tagus, which arriv- | to Paris an orderffor ribbons and which is | ¢rror.. There exists no level in ‘the value of sec o Phe highest compliments to the Marquis and March. | visible to create large basins destined to receive the | €4 at Southampton on Tuesday night with the Pe: | sever executed coverding $0 the Wetter” but never phn My Dy Rd OLE ye sabject—by honoring olny her my hes which Se nr] time @ Ge melting | foam, M. lag -¥; S fails to be understood secording to the spirit. The | ‘¢ cayrtal, the security of a country will always be pre- Grosvenor. House was formerly the . would aliow them to flow away the life of this | “Militante,” like the “Marianne,” works with a view | erroa by the savings of that country. This can be ex- Claren- of the Duke of Gloucester, Sous dithcaltien, tore ‘eeu S which offences. He Teo: osakenecd to donth ia Lee oat poms In art rt icant. Tt salcg | finned by. mere Gham cue renee. eee ees awed A - bya oon Ti C4 came ito tas peanenion reservoirs formed by Matar herself may ue 7 time, and his life was spared at (4-1 aa Kenta articon tie abolition of alexa. povond Ue frontiers-—the ne S dearantecn Geay ethos are 20h out by and {op yh — OT re od with advantage. The Lake of Geneva might thas of the’ daughter of that, monarch. This fact | tng laws; confacation of the property of every indl- | knw, ten oll ais the Ueto Soraas | cord Se oe aad ty his Pete eine, Prince comers, figh anthoriey it val aut Crea rope Philippe and his Yamily were, pubtished ty the Pro. peinrment of mt individeal possuutag more thes orimterent As longa this general jorance exist pho a by ia Roya Highnesa Frederick Wil | her at ‘not hy a ree similar 7 that these difficuities have not disappeared, there’ will Geneva, not only to prevent to Vislonal government. Barbie was again in prison 100,000. of all pablic functionaries; over- | |’ level between the value of securities Manchester , organ of the manu- "the lions par upd, with the members | {20 we, have witneaved, bat in order to render the | efter Louie Pilipps's sbdication, and the prosent throw of all established Teetitationa; death to al | '* ghegcorvict ince! ee" sgtatavan wil jarcanee | (ane eee et ttreentthe Brace aor of the royal suites, seven of the Purposes of navi- rance, some sentiment | Cesars. It would be a great mistake to suppose that | cousols with his savings at 92. or 93, whilst the ment lays claim to no territory on the Queen's dress car- All rivers do not the advantage of | relative to the French army in the Crimea, which Whose wild depletes are promensd by monty afew Frenchman will procure the same income for T0fr. or bry | not that it could take and Queen pansed through the line of guests in oo aes what has been effected } had expressed, the prison doors were madmen. There are dds of le whose | Tifr. We Mention the word savings in order to die faerJaan de Nicaragua consistently with the treaty the rooms, courteously acknowledging their by natare’ be by = doubtless on a open, and was allowed to go at large. | pulses toga DY who them and | tinguish it from t oe ~Aa at 5 of respect, as she entered th ball | fv tat te 66 6 Gaedh tat oe. gud cheantely want to Ponte povscin ta ae’ comes, to them every day. Before | Metin ve of the securities of elther opuntry. Bul, how: Star, a democratic organ, says:— Bape aaron 9s sh Ray et | etnies gh dl ot pr | Sd vet act rare | ing etn pom rae | yn iliaat Mehat Fis reat SOE aon on rt a AF. ich the | diem does net always present itself with the | of reincarcerating him. Very recently We parhe examined by the elders of the woclety to wee Senaral suvinge, abet there abtion is consequently attended / a hein a with poe oe Toe ay gy pony al mn po phe SD Ie bas been driven out of Spain, and has cansed some hold fast the right fafth without waver- | Qi: only a limited influence in supposing, what is not ri Hee led off tn + | and localities, But this mach , that it is pa yt his regard for the og at length reported for fall ad- | aiways the case, that this action is exercised in face of end @ falee about. oS ent teens py led off in a quad | not above the of science to moderate the ef. | Spanish and hin contem tor panian mission, the novice is conducted to an | the income to be procured rather than the difference of palace. ‘with the Lady A, Grosvenee. feta onanationn, thatthe meane of solotion ex- pa = At one time M. Barbes was co: isolated and there an oath much less concise | capital which is hoped for. We must not, therefore, givo inne 28 :—On being cing, aaleatie aun veleck, the ot | Stand that, thanks to the will of the Emperor, handsomest man in Franee, bat the snfferings | than of the “Marianne” is administered to | way to any illusions. The English market, however rich Master of the Ceremonies, winter the Marquis of | resources will not be wanting in order to out | of imprisonment and exile have wrought great | him. He swears, among other things, to “ exeoute | | may be, can never bring more than a limited assistance friend, not in anger oF ‘extminater condneted the Queen to the gallery, in | those means. changes on him. He is a tail, thin, very ail commands that be may receive | '° the embarrarsments of 1 ~g the oceurrence. which a m: was laid ont for the royal ly man, about 45 ot yf = yn EK - to accontpliah the Cr, AVEN’S CIRCULAR.) the. party. The services of plate on the table were of | Prince Vapotcon and an English Cabman. tache and imperia!, fosly like those ofthe mee fect emancipation of the working classes.” is Politics hav censed to exercine any material twelve gold ani : ne less than | | A London paper says:—Prince Napoleon and his St Ni. Barbes was remarked on board | needless to add that the most terrible im influence over the ‘and stock marketa; but old and silver vasea—race cups won by the | fellow voyagers had a conpie of Newcastle cabs en | the Tague for his gentlemanly deportment and the | are repeated by the new member against himself in | thongh this important the palace—quitté la réception en fureur. horses of the late marqnis—and in the re ir in of pistean on the royal table, was a lofty piece of case he should break his oath. I have | value of public securities is for the time dormant, it may spring up egain at any momegt The chief in- for their conveyance hither and thither, of 5 it p= ry: er an her, | mildness of his manners. He conversed on political The Liverpool Times of Jane 28, says:—We ony their purevit of knowledge om English ground, ' matterg freely, and uo yng would imagine biw, (rom