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2 NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, MAY 10, 1857. ¥ , to the before Greytown, to AFFAIRS IN EUROPE. _| Priccts which bore coured mich excitemens Gecaged Wook Ministers wore oe the lawful autho- ae out the kingdom, and whish, after a severe | = es beeline ‘ected in strict oon- Our Paris and Berlin Correspondence, hdr need lit tor, ale ‘thet {aiet to him oe or oe i ae, dm. | expromed that the odions malt-tax will be régime in France, The fiat is, ae eee | aor in the “Lorda:” perce! people organs ouffer : Our Parts re pteenysttoars Sa Sage woe Hy Me ame the peice 0s Se ee poy Sneed in y second time, Sg ee it cnaaley trou Panis, April 23, 1857. | before the holidays. The committee appointed by cuted for their attacks France, and the latter demanded & heavy decuniary in- ta two wasaiin of, p bp 25, ca ms of the Financial System of to exemine the project has, indeed, de. | for thelr attacks upon ; indeed, the. philo- dewnification for the looses vustained by the Tran- ts ‘ Proposed Reform the House Project has, » do: | Pissians were worse off in thls respect than thely y.. Tt was refused. ‘Tho town was per presont year. , that we are France—Grand Pawniroking Scheme—Installa- | clared against it, and that almost unanimously, only | antagonists, as the French government is more thin- defenceless; bet Captain Holings bad his lo: taking our Mare of the of the Cubam élave tion of the New Archbishop of Paris—Recolu- | one member out of thirteen (an officeholder, by the | skinned in such matters then the Russian, and any structions, and would not-stey bis hand. On the | trade. Tf, ss we Semen gu cunine, isk tionary Indicalions—Arrival of the Grand Duke | way) having voted in its favor; this, however, aa I | article derogatory, to. I Et, wae paz to be Sly, 1864 5 sras:bombared, the pte Ty ol al te BC Constantine— Movements of the Court for the| mentioned ina former communication, is by no pas Sef revel cm , this country is deriving advantage Sumner Season—The Law Againet Prsudo Ties | means decisive of theultimate fate ofthe motion; the, | Bhs bea of theo Tae at} pum, he Commanent Se rican —The Emperor Desires to Restore a Landed | committee merely give their opinion, and the House Interior colmeanes Sade a feeble ’ ined to Cuban produce, bat also that Aristocracy to France. ia at liberty to acttupon it or not as they think proper. eat ee sine a nomena! aes ova colonies. "Valea therefore, this alave The present apperent insufficiency of the precions | During the recess influences have becn brought to | renta at their command. had ae 10 tere ae honey pall ot metals for the requirement of trade and manafactures | bear on the noble legislators which it must be didi, | within the limits prescribed by law, they said: bat curring unealied for hazards, it is induced a M.J. Nobel people were never satisfied. The state of the ‘lave our prescient readers followed the dod, ‘the'country, or inc r a has induced 0 M. J. to publish a brochure, | cult for them to resist, unless they a1@ possessed of | PSORIe Ta Sot bo do bad ae was Fepresanted, au not. | ‘Nota soul of them, we will venture to aay. that England is now open to the reproaon of under the title of La Banque, in which he advocates | much greater firmness andrindependence of charac’ | Wwithstandin oo alleged oppression exercised. | inthe world are they to enter into the mystery of & sweeping reform of the present financial system. | ter than their antecedents would load one to antici. | against i of nearly ali the princi- -am American of @ Russian fnsncial ony He proposes, to use hisown words, ‘to dethrone | pate. There will undoubtedly be a strong opposition; a gE eg ere ee they, have, seta wetaah ‘and vie canal pe means stale by brine flor valas- | great deal of eloquence will be wasted, andit will cost | o¢ measures taken relative to the preas, bat in i Property into easy circulation, saggests 8 | ministers. some trouble to their point; but I of them, and is to be attributed more property bask: ‘This bank, the capltel of which ia | can hardly believe that an Pig gaia chatty to the Oriental crisis, whieh made every cue | It was the scaffold of the building.—the contra tors’ Dot to be pestricted within any particular limit, is to | gclf ecpeclally upon its loyalty and devotion to the anal at indepen s ar atic. tho sey pepper de ete meee by : transforte eh he ralnable property of France into | grown will plack up courage suficlent to reject a | pwpere have token advantage o extend their reports | fut us the canal was pushed oa the railways on both rag fy ng eres he fleet of gun boats bequonth money, upon pledges having a real and | mcgsure which the King and his advisers have act | on the moucy market, a theme of muoh greater in- | sides were pushed on yand the canal thent ” was prepared to fight to give Cuba, and the ono gua poste beg red undoubted gulaes Thee pledges may consist of | their bearte upon, and without which they declare it soy pola! eaters Soomaegert crn tee votall kinda it ae ve recently received # circular from M. De pilghing iis in the most eecboal taauner. landed ptbperty, ef goods, or avy kind of moveables. | will be impossible to keep the machinery of govern- first of See oP ekeibins offered by | finished it commenced a most , Banvert, who represents as the is the simple course at once requisite and suffi- Alt these the bank is to value at their mini- Y M. Mathis wos negatived yesterday, by 153 votes | and beat the old canal, or rather the of the French population at Greytown, | cient to demands imposed by justice to our ge mont in working order. It is urged, indeod, that his, was, terday, by ye ees hs already gitar tothe world Gwo" of | coloalsta by the dlctstes of humanly, ana by 40a mom, ant ably; 60d to the amount of twothird, | thie is not » question in which political princtples | #Esinst, Sh; Sod onan*a cay. mer the wrens wear | thecccond or third year after the bargain, and at ‘ochures apou this scandslons affair. M. De | ty toour own " of such misimum; the loans to be for periods no | are involved, but a mere affair of finance, on which | [ung, and expressing’ nearly the same thing in a | their entreaty the abetained from actually en- Banvert bas 60 far eucceeded in enforcing the ree | exceeding one year, but to be renewable so long as | even the staunchest royalist may be allowed to en- | more round-sbout manner, was carried bys majo- | tering the field against them. But railways, of ice of Sin sietink Of Sheen tes reprensate tht X baa Bae een ah. Sate ane the piedge retains its former value, the bank to pay | teriain views differing from those of government | rity of one (126 to 126.) It refers to in A carey a sions, to demand compensation the SHERIFFS’ COURT. withont any imputation on his “patriotiam;” and of roment is enjomed not to ican government. It appearsiiat M.Sortiges’ | _Lowpon, April 23—Baring ve Gordon; crim course if this were pot the case, the idea of any mi- Gcteoat the verdict of a court of justice, nay for and the work went on apace. For time, then, | demand, made to the Pierce administration, “‘mis- | con. Damages, £3,000.-—This was a writ of . ypenal orati sanguine canal i hich, ‘ it has not heen renewed we are | quiry to assess the damages in gu action brought eed ae Lair a eee ee oy Woes yi eg ie iajunctie site SS pie a ee perio in ‘dts more pia Rood for than for the ailence of | one of the superior courts the defen‘ant for in notes of 1,000f., 100f. and 10f., retaining one per cent for « reserve fund; in case the loans be not re- imbureed at the stated period, or renewed, the pledze ae to be sold, te net surplus, if any, derived from the | house, would be perfectly utopian. Ais matters stand | Perhaps may igi having had criminal conversation with : , a8 they have done on similar occasions, or it | and the neighboring States were all made. I now | Lord Na} jier upon the eame subject. . tee sale, to be paid 'to the owner, who, in the contrary | at present, however, the defeat of ministers in a & ‘ Ae would seem tht the fore icy of my Lord | tiff’s wife. Judgment ead been suffered. to go by case, is ANEE to hake uD ey. In fact, Pp tay be reversed by another amendment. But it is | can only just keep itself going, if tt can do so much. en, policy, my. “ deta Fyn ee ‘ ition which they have ad t and fact that pubi q ts and tolls are swallowed in the ex- is by a int ey have Meg strenuously, | an val pm ‘s ring “ ere ‘io opinion, | The rent £ swallo up in ex: una, Py yen ion et : mn 0 ot Bovill. Q0., and Mr. Unthank ap d ter x the chambers; the Prussian represeatatives aro not | of what they were, bat, as all the profitable traffic le can be sensitive indeed about tee oa og ered thority to pass through the second chamber, wou! r * . Unthank eaid the declaration set forth that iy to be » would ‘is Napoleon’ is Of to tho railways, and the greater part | the British flag in the Canton river, but he can suffer | ,, Mr. Unthank said the déclaratio eh da Gat 9 f 1 1 z g : i i i the eebemne'ts a grand national pawnbroker shop. The instalation of Cardinal Marlot, as successor to ovr meréered Archbishop, will take place the day 4 x not only derange their financial schemes, but be islatif; their are public, and this of the heavy traffic too, the canal is a banxrupt con- | the same flag'® be apurned and insulted on the river the ‘were estimated 000. The after ti 1 (Saturday, the 25th inst.) at Notre | justly considered as @ political event of no slight | li ai a orm upon the: procéedings o cor. cern. It ma answered i SeOeAry, ‘purpose, and is bs (fore herd nae 9 et pe Beople we rhs se Souee Prederick edna eat the de- . a DID least. suffices revel rossi good q shareho'ders a: 4 Dame. honorary canons, the curs of the | importance. Who knows whether it might not even — yet in the aoa ag Ak aie oy oi pern Boog, praise | parse. He can be valiant with the feeble Chinese, | fendamt George Tomline Gordon. diocess, thé chaplains of the different esta >lishutenta, and other members of the clergy ,are to assemble at the cathedral at half-past one o'clock. In honor of the ceremony of tiking possession, the bells of all the churches of Raris will ring out the evening be- fore, 28 well @8.00 the dsy of installation. On Sun- give rise to a “ministerial crisis?” Baron Manteutfel } that haa swallowed up the liberties of her brilliant | course, as indignant creditors—tbey have lost Mr. Bovit then opened the case. He said it, was might threaten to resign, or come other direful ca | and merourial neighbor. position—but as oulwitted and rulned mortgagees, toring and lood-rolged, Wut brave, snd resoiste Yan. Ree 9 very perm Siaie_peeeeh. Sees Sar, So he ensue, more terrible than the approaching It is stated this morning that the salt tax will be | and ack for a dole from the State Treasury. Our | kees? Is such & minister fitted to protect the honor the jury that they would 4 teeta the tenet 4 withdrawn, the opposition in the First Chamber | readers know, of course, how likely they are to get | of England abroad and the interests of Englishmen? aury, Seattay; tn Greet comet that is to put an end to this vile world on the | haying been found insuperable, and that an in- | it. But, can anybody say they are a bit more at the | If 80, 2 Li Padme Receive gy A Prarie Sd 13th June. Such reflections are not likely to be | creased duty on tobacco will be substituted in its | mercy of the Indians, or that they | afforded by his pitiful submission to the outrage on | the fact alleged in the declaration, ith the sere without their due weight on so conservative @ body | stead. This rumor is probably unfounded, but Iam | have proved themselves a bit more and cre- | British subjects and the violation of the British flag, food rsdares Rectan oan a Pincestren amas as the Prussian House of Lords. assured ‘in that the “ ” continue staunch, | dalous than any ordicary Englishmen throwing his | committed three years since at Greytown, and si saan be denial the only question the day last the cath was administered to his Eminence ‘i determine 4 ministerial project ot ssian rail dreased aud unatoned for. at the Tuilerics With the ususl formalities, and an In the Second Cuamber there has been very inte- a bs verrons. “ es On me Pe we A ee pa bend en Jory phir “ pdt ye whan epeer” ted unexpected scene took place. The Emperor, in | resting debates on s very interesting topic-the | The following statement of the circulation of the | than in Russian rail shares, for there is always | ‘The Case of the West Indies—Slavery and ees De neeees ‘placed before them. ‘hove presasice the ‘ceremony Had beta performed, | preve; and whatever may he their practical effect, | leading Prussian newspapers may be of interest to | some hope in tae sie ere in ether ee [From the Edinburgh Courant, April 17.) ‘The piaintifin the action was a son of Mr. Henry endécaly, oaby imprompta fiong himself | they have at least given the liberal party, and even 1852. 1856, | the desire to pay of a corrupt bureancrcy.; The historian of the “Spanish uest in | Baring, a brother of Lord satiation and A fions on his knees before the Cardinal, beseeching the | some members of the extreme right, an opportunity | Berlin Vorsischo Zeitang (organ of the ; . ee ae fate! apenas 4 poe Lage Webon ies t subje or thoes privilege of bis'fitet benediction, ‘This having been | of exposing the petty manwavres and mean equivo- Ph mage 5 ae. T1800 MO | ree, Wiens as eee eee Bie out of tose fruits of the saree eee pets if was the danghter Bir Richard Som- given, the Cardinalwas conducted to the apartments | cation resorted to by the government to stifle the ex: | “gine "10,200 12,500 | [Naples (April 15) correspondance of London Times} | slaves, “ Every ducat,” says Mr, Helps, “ jane bod fertane end, pesiiien; ecmabialte-witie pression of public opinion in this qountry. Previous | Bern N to the revolution of 1°48 the political press, not only Ra the en if : m4 a government, it would appear, still cherishes | on those stately alcazars may be to have been | personal attractians, ae panies in Prussia, but on the whole continent of Europe, | Silisian Gazetic (semi iberal) their this 00 6,750 | its intention of transporting those in prison pained at the cost of ten human lives.” Each early ne 6250 | to the Argentine Republic, and bas put in ‘mae Dee 980 merc! the Noneissure, om Saturdey, frent ‘the hands of | with the exception of France, Holland and Belgium, | )Sftelore Gazette (liboral Regina. Negotiations were to be concluded today | merce in the fortunate holder, and the premiums | they went in 1852 to reside at Haton Hall, near Ret- Monsi, Sa ,, were subject to the censorship--a useful and inge- one vaitune ( lemoor Sue by Fence foe chartering ten of the best gladly paid for the lucrative privilege ne ford in Nottinghamshire, They oe —o a How fallef the odorof sanctity and of peace all | nious institution that owes its origin to his Holineas | *!#dderadatech (humorous, 26,500 | and most of the Neapolitan cael Genpieame Oe Reg dnd yor a sbita- pad edn ee Geren. year of ane; cae this reads, spd) whist’ m state’ of calm and | Pope Alexander VI, the father of the virtuous La: | », Quy the, Spenereche Zeitung (servile, with an af. | wanioe. Fane of puose rome belo On Somraiig, | Nearly three centuries mit cfhalf have paseed away | Unghamehire they mixed in beat society of the troxquillity ‘ought, to be augured of the repose | cretia Borala, who, being rather addicted to polson. | {o°6,600 copies, minished from 8,000 | mie" negotiations have been golng om since last | since, in 1617, the first of thoge licenses, autho- | county, and visited and received visits from the gea- of the Emperor, whose head is thus occupied. | ing his flock in the body, was anxious to prevent ho- 4 Thursdey. The expedition for the Argentine Re- ; rising tho importation of four seen roo os ee eee eg Binger i ghd Alas! 1 fear appearances in this as in eo many | ritical suthors ft oisoning their minds. Financial Speculation in Russia and the Unit- | public isto be wholly completed by the 10th of A, years, was granted to De Bresa, the master a be 1y pigmgh Soe — — be > The | * ca States—The Indiana Canal and the Rall- two armed vessels are to act as a convoy. of the king's household; the glory of the Spanish a distance from other sublarary things, are deceitful. The tone | duty of the censor was to examine the proofs of any | way of the Czar. cxpeniitae wigce te Neapolitan government will ee ‘lies crambed in the dust; the slave | Hall, and was Berson of some meena end position, of the public mind is by no means satisfactory, | book or newspaper issued from the preas, to erase [From the London Times, Apri! 23.] for this expedition, including the armament of | trade, revelling through po Bn ear pics captain in the Notting. and the recently discovered scheme, for—to use | such he thought cont preg to say—for it really isa fact,and s re- ee In the arsenal | unholy freedom, has been at disowned, de- | hamshire militia, or Sherwood foresters. An the conv language—ridding I'raace of her on ypc trary to religion, | markable fact—that most eminently oredulous per- | three ‘and eighty-two men are working | nounced, and bed by every civilized nation soquaintance sprang up between him snd the despot, hag more than ever stirred the “lees” of socia- | morality, or to the political interests of his employ. | sonage, the Briti-h capitalist,does not come forward | night and day iu gettmg these vessela ready. wee cars: we founded hopes might be cherished tit, They ioqeensty visited each o:her. - All mea, indeed in circles Temoved | ers, and to affix his imprimatur to the rest, if in- to sow his sovere! broadcast over the boundless ‘The golitiod! serene in the bagni of the two the abomination was in sare train for extinc- ry Sees “thrice come Gaulle detail, tos rote deed he aid not think ft to veto the publication al. | d¢minions of Ra He does not calculate how | portions of dom who have accepted tha | tion. When suddenly a new, but not less atrocious, | out together to enjoy the sports of shoot that would probably have followed tne success of * many of those precious articles it will take to form | offer to leave the country do not exceed, I am told, | monopoly arises out of the original cradle; the ing end hunting, &., and visita were fre- such an en! from which an eaay accession is | tosether. In Progsia, under the late King, | » continuous line from St. Petersburg to Keffa, or to | 23; but there ares number of soldiers, amounting | shame in which Spain trafiicked in her strength she | quently exchanged between Mrs. made to as to what would happen were | the censorship was remarkably strict, parti. pry Rhee) of goldleaf over the ste; to upwards of 300, who have lately been turned out | suffers in her weakness, and Great Britain looks on Gordon. ‘That was in 1862, and such state of thin Napoleon removed under any circumstances what- | cularly in regard to politics, the newspapers Crim Tartary. He distrusts an em the douestic | of the army on suspicion, and sent to the Islands, | apatheticaily at a consummation which at once turns continued down to March in the year. ever, 8 for the “ lecs,” they bavolong seltied that | Gmiy being allowed to publish official reports, | Pélicy of which is seclusion, and ita foreizn policy | who will be gent off. It is the inteution, aay come | to nought Ker toils and ssorifoes trae a Ges tacplent enitarees, entintee, gue of 1» ression—w! ications formants, to send > " d Sou ‘denand ber nevte with s ory for 0 Te send’ 10,000 off, having Threatens her colonies with ruin. every comfort and luxury wi juence . + and to translate or copy such articles from foreign | for external operations, and makes mercantile value reason why it should not) 'y which aan cen meee cet bess vestondary oo His snapicions | the power to do 80, and no conscience to control that | No one can doub! teat when in 1346 Lord John | station could give, until the’ unhappy discovery waa journals as were approved of by the censor. After second: i it ws a ; but, Mer 8 few of the political = Ruseell’s newly formed administration succeeded in | made, which led to these pi e Ar- | inducing to strategic importance. breadth ; and ia Pons copsctiing; tas orttinsa ct the accession of his presené Majesty a little more | are not silayed when ng ina oe the very mate- | power: ngs, Peovaboe taken root.) latitude was accorded to them: some of the papers | rials of the proposed limes are to be smuggled in ii leave. M.F the Counsul f Parliament to equalize the duties un slave | had destiowed a life of happiness to Mr. Baring, interest ae ding ny Py act begun to give leading articles; Deak of | duty free, ney an ambassador's luggage. He recoils pond cd republic, is daily in communication with | and free — , the success was dae to a belief | bad sent to ruin and disgrace a woman upon whom tense ,that no one doubts the ‘of saturnalia that | More than twenty printed esheets were exempted | from a region where it is all state and no public; | General Bracco and Signor Carafa. It is this treaty | that the slave was already virtually extinct, | the least suspicion had never fallen, and redaced ould foto a elancbely tlh ta ee ae Ted ae a | Cansei Pala non | Much han bec pot forward othe ae O aeeOA | en tad the aepeved ofthis avurce of sayy | Mareh the pln fount hat Captaie Coton; wh i tow rt jons cK submii ie always on the march ‘ot ird a3 | tions bet our jent and the Two Sici- jeprivi source of supply foun at Cay on, Ke ee yy : ks | he is, T'tears to" venture his bill down the taroat | lice’ Should if receive, the slightest countoastes | slave’ labor would be unable to compete with free. | had professed ‘so much fclendship_ for. biz caused - | been ted by the censor on grounds deemed in- had, undoubted self negation, has not hs gove 2 rejected by of Sir Robert Peel detected the pro- | whilst —enjo his hospitality, seduced his topped <3 | Sufficient by the authors or editors. At that time it | which invites him; for though, no doubt, there is a | from our government it will cover it deservedly _ The prescience we neva pat erp easte creedeck, was quite Zoe fashion to a liberal, to talk of | bone to be extracted, there are teeth als» to be re- | with pv ay The treaty is nothing more than | bable fallacy of these expectations, and although the | wife. On the lith ef that month Captain Gordon if be but only know it which,if not ded agains:, the march of intellect and progress of enlight- | pent. In fact, our old gentlemen and our old | an act for transporting all who may have | measuro was plausibly represented as | and Mrs. Baring left Nottinghamshire and came will one day upbeave himeelf, bis ¢, hig infant | ened ideas; even the Prussian bureaucrates had | iudies, and the motley group that aoe turns up | been condemned or simply shut op as | crowning step to his own fiscal reforms, that | to London together, under circumstances of the heir, bis fal Exopress, ‘and his troop of needy | caught the infection, and government not then hay- | in a list of shareholders to bubble and Did- | obstacles to the free course of the present system of | eminent statesman refrsed to acquiesce in abolish- deepest distress, not only to the plaintiff, but to speculators, with ‘an overthrow too territie to chink ing the feat of benny ry =r bol ee many | diesex railways, are just now in no hunor for the | government. It substitutes perpetual exile for im- | ing a distinction which the genersl intarests of mo- | Mrs. Gordon, who was at that time in a condition of. jogs were winked at we no! | 3 bait, notwithstanding the clerical decoy duck peommen. It is @ punishment unknowa to the ity and the special efforts of Great Britain might | which rendered the matter a great doal more psinfal. De. Keru, the Swiss Plenipotentiary, has left for | Dow. The events '48 swept away the censorship described in our city intelligence, whois always | law. It moreover acts, not only against those who | Wellexcept from the common ruleso/ free trade. | In the greatest agony of mind Mrs. Gordon weat to Perne, etter having been received at the Pnilecies, | and every thing appertaining to it; for eight months | ordering £20,000 “worth of Russian scrip | have been tried and condemned (wnatever the nature | How amply that presclence has been justified by tho | ,hamed Huntsman, a friend of both her and and the conferences ave again delayed. the Prussian press was free as air, and newspapers | from ls or Amsterdam. The sphere of | of that trial may have beea), bat against detenuti | result has long been painfully manifest in the pros | Mra. Ing, and with that lady abe came to Lon- the Grand Duke Constantine is at Marseilles. He | of all sorts sprang up like mushrooms, whose unre- | enterprise is #0 distant and so vast; the | politici, men who have been laid hold of withoutany | trate condition of the British West Indies. But a | don. Mr. Huntsman, who was a friend of the piain- left Nice oa the 19ta instant, im the Russiam steam | strained violence of tone and language contrasted | lines are so long and so straggling; the conditions | reason being assigned, and without being subjected farther blow was reserved for them which the clear- | tiff, followed them, and he and his wife and Mrs. trigate Olaff, escorted by the serew liner Wiborg, | strangely with the guarded circu ction imposed | so utterly precarious, the contingencies so veyond | to any trial. Su; that no force be used, and | est foresight could scarcely have imagined. What- | Gordon traced the defendant to the Great Western bearit the flag of Rear "Admiral Behrens, the steam | upon them under the old system. This liberty, or | all English calculation, the donestic infincace s0 ab- | that man: ly leave the country to avold a | everevent might attend the competition between | Hotel, where he was to breakfast with Mrs. Bar- frigate Poikun and the sauwg frigate Castor. Phe | Hcense as itis called now, received a firat check | solute, the rivaliy of all kinds so possible, and, if | harder fate, no political amelioration be effected | free and slave labor, ne doubt could be entertained | ing when they arrived. Baring rose from the Navette was sent out to meet him, and ata quarter through the counter revolution of November, 1848: | ae comes ps so certain, that, strange to say, nobody is | by it, but the contrary. Arbitrary power will be | that fair play would at least be secured for the for- | table, and when Mr. Huntsman went in he found to three the battery of the Grosse ‘Tour fired a aalute | Several of the journals most obnoxious to govera- ying to steal a march on the Stook Exchange and | yet stronger, because it will have to dread, and | mer; tha; existing treaties would be enforced in | Mre. Gordon in a fainting condition on her knees. of 101 guns. Soon-after all the ships in the roads | Ment were suppressed, and in 1549 a law “ for regu- | get his cent per cent by an empirical exercise of his | in a short time excrescences ag frightful as those | good faith; and that the trade in slaves could never | When he was appealed to he refused to leave were dresaed with avd had yards man- lating the press” was octroyéd, which was followed | private judgment. Hnglishnen, indeed, dearly love | of which the Argentine treaty will have relieved permitted to revive. No one could dream that | Mrs. Baring, such was the shock to Mrs. ned, and on he O! them in succession | two years later by one still more stringent. | to win mone; tremendous odds. They like | jt will be formed again. It is mortifying to think it | this couatry, after first hazarding the prosperity of its | Gordon that it well-nigh proved fatal, she ahe was hailed with ad mary Geary cheers, while | Every daily or weekly Paper had to deposit | mercantile , and swallow kill-or-cure spe- | even possible that by sending baek ber legation | colonies in the hamane desire for eeeaiion 0 then close upon confinement. That adultery the ealute Gred was taken up by each ship.’ When | ® certain sum as securliy for its od | culations with wonderful gusto. Itis a proud mo- | England can lend her countenance 1 a measure | next them to the rivalry of localities where | taken place had been admitted —there could have off the first port the Olaif hoisted tne French flag | bebavior, and for the fines it might be sentenced to. | meut indeed, in the most sanctified of lives, when a | which would be cruei and unjust in principle and | Do such change had taken place, would then suffer | been no answer to that. Mrs. Baring was semt ‘and saluted it. General Todtlepen avd Count de | Not only the Prussian, but even foreign journals were | man can let out to his confidential friend, and | perfectly inefiective for good. the latter to reestablish a traffic which obviates | to her mother, Lady Jenkins, and the jury Kisealiff, the Russian ambassador to the court of the | Subjected to a stamp duty; offences of the preas were | through him to the whole town, that he has got —- every Cifficulty alleged to warrant the equality,and | would have to assess the damages which Cap- ‘Tuileries, ‘went off to the Olaff to salute the Dake. | removed from the yy of the jury to that of | £20,000 by an investment which he alone had the | Lord Palmerston’s Foretgn Policy—Lord Na- | which it heldin its own hands ample power to pre- | tain Gordon should pay for the great wrong he 5 ial a Star Chamber—a high court of justice appoiuted | sagacity or the courage to try. What has a pler's Centra: American Instructions. vent. No one could dream tbat ihe abolition of | had done in destroying a life of happiness yy ert lcanetiae spam | for | by government; and tinally a copy of every paper | mun to do after that but to die in the odor of (From the Tondon Herald, April farted slavery and of differential duties in the British do- | which the plaintiff had been leased with. Peould him in the Champ de Mars on itis reaching Paris. was required to be produced at the police office pre- | affiuence? Yet, with this short cut to wealth | In the recent intelligence from the United States | minions would just result in securing to Cuba the | not conceive or suggest one single circumstance pal- Prince Napoleon visited yesterday the exhibition | vious to being ‘iscrfoated, thus indirectly reviving | open to us, nothwithstanding its risky and para- | our readers taay have seen a paragraph relating to | monopoly of & revived slave trade. Native of Captain Gordon's conduct. Received into of the wa MECN Deane 26. dn ode a rhip which had been abolished ‘‘furever’ | doaical character, nobody comes forward, at least | @ certain demand for indemnification which our Yet such has literally been the case. The di- | the plaintiffs house as a bosom friend, accompany Beaux Arts. On leaving, the Prince lett 100f. to the | by the constitution. One would have thought such | not openiy. ‘Ten years hence we may possibly hear | minister bad intended to make, but which, u tracted state of domestic politics in Spain may part | ing the plaints in shooting excorsions to Scot func in (avor of the distressed urtixts, for whom the | Tegulations euffisient to attain the object proposed | that the worthy Prebendary Saveall, whose will has | second thoughts, Lord Napier had dotermiaed to ly excuse a certain waut of control over misgovern- | and other places, he had abused the friendship with exhitttion GEE ’ by government; and, in fact, the press has been as | just been proved, doubled his fortune by Russian | withhold, moro especially as the French Minister, | ment in her West Indian dependency; the uncertain | which he had been regarded, violated the generous place. “ A ‘ Plom- | tame ever since a4 any reasunable would de- railways; bat at present the establishment, tne fa- | who had received analagous instractions from his | tenure of their office we exposed her liea- | hospitality which it had been the plaintifi’s sure wo Penge the 5.0, ae — sire, confining iteelf simost exclusively to the dis- | culties the haif-pay list, and dowagers keep aloof, | own government, had failed in his application to | tenants to more than ocdinscy temptation. We to afford him; he had brought disgrace vag the Castiguone hes already secured @ residence within | Cussions of forei ioe aud evincing the mos, | and the Exnperor of Russia will bave to revait his | President Pierce, and had not thought proper to | only know that between weakness and oe plaintiff! and his family—broken up @ happy life, easy access of the court. The Empress will go to | cautious Feserve in its allasions to domestic affairs; | Look, to alter bis terms, to give up his enterprise, or | renew his demands upon the governmont of Mr. | this detestable trafic, #0 lately on the verge of ex- | and had eent this unhappy lady to a in of in- Bisritz, where, after a time, the Emperor will join | but not satisfied with this forced moderation, which | to make his subjects construct their own railways. Buchanan. The demands were for compensation | tinction, has sprung into fresh life. At first it was | famy and disgrace. No amount of damages oould iia P : still admits of at least a semblance of oppositio Noi, then, for the sake of further warniog, for | to the French and English subjects who had | prosecuted with more or less disguise; but the | com ‘a plaintiff in wach @ case as this—the Tho following tabie will be in as showing | ministers have proceeded to muzzie it still moreeifec- | none appears to be necessary, but rather to justify | suffered inthe bombardment of Greytown on the | Cubans, growing bolder with impunity, now | verdict-of the jury was sought,asthey would have m tually by arbitrary interpretations o: their own laws, | ourseives for the part we bave taken, we will tel & | 13th of July, 1854, many of whom have been | cerry it on almost as openly as if it were a lawfal | surmised, witha view to ulterior proceedings, and the progressive increase of the population of Paris | a o = and by administrative enactments of a character | short story of a much more promisiog echemo, ina | beggared by that gross outrage, and allof whom, it | calling unencumbered by any restriction. Dari he believed that had not the damages been set at fee ae the pre entday:— "| Stall verations and absurd. According to the lor | much more improving region, aad one much more | was believed, enjoyed the protection of the British | the last twelve mouths it ¢ Delloved toat no fewer | £3,000, the jury would readily have awarded. more 18. bet 38) 108, Pin ono | ter of the law, for instance, no one is allowed to edit | witin the reach of Britisn knowledge and | . We are at a loss to understand the supimeness | than 20,000 negroes have been landed ia ed than that amount. Captain Gordon had four chil- £63 266000 1500... a newspaper, to catablish » printing office, or even | surveillance. Ten years ago there was the | of Napier in this matter, except upon the sup- | American vessels. We need not repest the ofthn- | dren, and he repeated that he could not see any- “"" §o0,000 1697 to keep a bovkseller’s shop, withoat a “concession” flourishing State of Indiana, which every- | position that his instructions restricted him to the | told and horrible story of the sufferings endared by | thing whatever to his conduct. 576,000 1866. ‘ | or license, and government is authorized to with- | body could know as imuch about as he | gentlest form of remonstrance—that, in short, the | these miserable creatures. Let it suffice to say that | The certificate of the marriage, which took place Hence it appears that the population was doubled in | hold suck licenses from persons who are what the | pleased. It is needless, however to extol its government by wom he is accredited have neither | the agonies of the sea voyage arenot lessharrowing | at Paris, was then put in, and a settlement exe- 4 202 years, interv ween 16 Germans call beacholten. This term has always | position, its resources, its everything; for, as the | the honesty nor the cou to insist upon reparation | now than of old. The labor in the sugar plautations | onted on the marriage of £3,900. - a thee, white ees same Soess bas oven poe Ne | been applied im legal piraseeiesy to persons of | sequel shows, they were ail considerably too good, | of a wi bya government like that of | is enforced with al the reckless rigor that might | Henry Huntsman examined—I reside at West Ret- in the couse of the last 50 years, from 1807 to the bad repute, and means |i iy “one upon | and are the very cause of the whole mischief we | the Ui States. be expected under the prospect of an unfailing sup- ford Hall, Nottinghamshire, and have done so seme present time. a whom rcproach has been cast, in contradistinction | have to teil. Ten years ago, then, this very promi- With the circumstances connected with the Grey- By No day of rest, we are told, is allowed the | time; | was living there when the plaintiff and hia Pubtic discussion is sti to unbescholten, irreproachable. Now, uatil quite | sing young State had made immense improvements, | town aftair, and with the peculiar relation in whic: uban slave; no Sunday shines a holiday for him. | wife took of Eaton Hail as their residence; eujen tae mee Geter sate tore » <4 lately, no one was considered bescholten who had | and still found great room {ur improvement; the British government stands to that of Mosquito, | Moral or religious iguretion ho has , and | that was hh the antamn of 1852; 4 assumption of faloe tities, and it is eamy vo see that | Bt been convicted of some criminal offence and suf- | what with past, present and future improvements, | our readers are doubtless familiar; butas the eatire | a:ound him: the decencies of civilization | plaintiff's preseut residence, and is about two miles if a it will not carry with it the sanction of the | fered punishment in consequence; bat all at once a | both owed and wanted a great deal more mon eae Must be soon brought before the notice of | are unknown. In short, there is too much reason to mine; after their arrival mypelt and Mrs. Hunte- re cetataily. in fact’ ail classes, except those | Bew interpretation of the word has been discovered | than its government cou'd jast then lay its jamnent, we may aa well glance at its leading fea | believe thut the facilities now afforded to the traf: | man visited them, and the intimacy was Sependent on the court, speak with contempt about | by the Minister of the Interior, parsuant to which | uyon, In fact, it had got into that stage of ditionity | tures. ‘The British connection with Mosquito, Ment | fle, coupled with the fact that it i neverthloss, | between os and Mra. Baring ati! Wis, dia . -—~ ‘—s -uh ve thege a 3 uot only the editors of jou prosecuted for | which we have been lately told in the spine cal with the Mosquito Protectorate, asaumed the form illegal, are now developing conssquences in Cuba | matter was known; Mr. Baring, I should think, 6 egitimiste say Ar offences against the press laws, but even the printers | Court is certain to ocour in the second or third | in which we have been accustomed to it | which one might rather wn some savage race | about five or six apd thirty years of age, Mra. Baring ding about their titles; that | the disturbances | Of j , “ works or icals displaying a factions oj a ear of the voundest undertakings. It owed some | towards the close of the last century. had | in a oarbarous era than nineteenth centary, | somewhat ger; they have two children, a som pi reg item sapent, 8 ee tion to roma, oF oe ing opinions Dente a iilions sterling, and, having paid no interest on LA degrees established a footing on the shores of the | and to a people themselves Christians. and Sleeaten eleven and the other about eight the hee Louis the Fourteenth -is eat cone. to the existing i entfous the conutry, are in- | its debt for six years, {t was on the eve of re ‘arribean Sea. She had acquired from Spain the Thus much forthe of humanity, The ma- age; lived in good style, and of courre prachable pow. Their genealogies are sacred pe- | Clnded under the denomination of Lescholten, and | tien, just as ils natural resources were showing | ‘useful domain” of that territory since known as | terial interests of the British colonies, which tho ro | had horses, cai ane servants requisite for hates, not to be violuted by the hand of Nay jeon nor | may be deprived of their business accordingly. This | themeelves ip brighter colora thanever. So, after | British Honduras, aad it was considered highly ad- | cent policy of the mother country gives irresistible | their establishment; and Mrs. Gordon lived his myrmtdous. The "siadie pan gy protest is a speci nen of the measures employed to circum- | some pegvtiation, a compromise was made besween ble to cultivate amicable relations with wild | claims opon her , are also deeply im- a nine or ——_ m Retford; the two famt- visal consideration ‘i presen| gemen soribe even the narrow circle in which tho pres is | the State and tts creditors, a good many of whom | tribes who inhabited the adjoining region, in order | piloated in the question. It is manifestly as unfair ¥ on tales L- & farce rend tee = RY ah nen condemned to move. Add t this the {requent seizure | were at New York, but many more, wo fear, in this | to anticipate any other Powor who might desire to | as it is hopeless That they, with a limited eupoly of cious igeay within a fow months of Mr. Baring tion ery aiond that to distinguish men from one ano- | Of new=pal by the police, the expuision of ob- | country, which strikes us as about the most splendia | do so, and to place itself in disagrecs)! ptciay free laborers, should be expected to e saceess- | coming there. Captain Gordon is about thirty-four ther by distinctive erediteny honors, is to strike at | B0xious editors from places wnere they have not ac. | conception that entered into the head of finan. | to Balite. In this policy we have bcen entirely suc- | fully with a neighboring isiand p: with an on- ——— age. They have four children living, the very foundation of civil Tivert hat for all this, | @aired the nght of citizenship, the cautionings, and | clal detayljer. We are not surprised to find a com- ‘The Mosquito King has been our faithfal | failing inflax of slaves. Nor can we feel any sur- we had more. They lived in good society. Ca, the government, it is evident, has eet its heart upon | * forth, and it will be seen under what difficulties | mitree of the wnfortuns'e dupes saying of the auo- | ally, and we have undertaken to protect his border = at learning that such a state of things is at | Gordon was a hunting man, and associated the having 8 titled aristocracy, and, eoute qui coite, | He expression of independent opinions mast lavor | cessful performers that “they smove the rock of | against all intruders. We have kept our faith for @ | last rousing them to energetic reclamations. In Ja- | best society of the county. Mr. Baring and his wife Napoicon will have one. His organs are everywhere in a country where the laws aie strained to suit the | financial resource, and the living waters gnahed | time, at least. British subjects who received grants | maica, Demerara, Trinidad and others, influential | always lived very happily together; it seemed his amerting that the decline of the French is traceable | Convenience of government, and where the unfortu- | forth; they touched the rock of public credit, and it | of land from the Mosquito government have been | meetings have been held, and resolutions a leasure to gratify her in any wish she might express. to the present tranaminsion of landed p ty, by | Nate authors and prinvers only escape the public pro- | sprang upon its feet.” Indeed, after a careful ex- | protected on two or throe dil it oocaxions against | protesting strongly against the continuance of the fie was extremely atteative to her. He was once z t of Y | secutor to ‘all into the clutehes of the police. amination of the whole scheme, woltake,the liberty of | attempts at dispoasession on the part of the neigh- | wrong, and demanding the redress which common | absent for six weeks when he went to Amerioa; pny A pow Fle A the par. It waa against euch abuses that M. Mathis, the supesting to the Emperor of Rossia to send at |. borin republic of Honduras. Towards the close | justice and obligations of treaties entitle them te ex- | and once he went to Marseilles to meet his sister om mJ & growing population, and that | leader of the i:beral conservative party, brough! in | ence to Im ianapoli#, aud secure, on any ter;na what | of 1847 avery determined attempt was made by the | peotat the hands of the home ment. Such | her way from India. I went to see him off by pons of eee be persevered in. Under color of | his motien which has formed the subject of debate | ever, the services of the gentlem: made this | state of Nicaragaa to encroach upon the north bank | demands can only bo disre, at the havard of | the steamer for America. These were the oaly cheseiog @i ural division of property, the | it the Second Chamber for the last few days. He | arrangement: for weare quite certain ifanyhodycan | of the San Juan, to occupy the town at the | ineurring the united affection of the British West | two occasions on which he was absent for any = sage 's0 aa to leave room for « landed | W8 Willing, be said, to sabmit to legal enactments | cover all Russia with @ reticulation of railways at the | month of that river, in view of ores comma | Indier. time. On the iith of March ® com - cN against the press, bus it was contrary to reason and | expense of the British, French, Dutch, andeverythi: nication ‘between the two oceans. d Palmerston Thore is avother grievance, arising out of an al- | was made to me. Mrs, Gordon and Mrs. Hantsman. erintocrney and thus the darling olject of Napoleon | ‘tee so render these enactments sill more striu- | except Russian pubs, ivi the parties in questions | was then Foreign Minister, what did he do? Why | loged abuse of the nese Piawngers Act, of which | Same to*Loncn by tae xpress trva,and 1 ol ve gororny lied in, that his Majesty hat best take | Reut by forced Interpretations and arbitrary en- | Our own immediate parpose, however, in feerring | early in 1848 he ordered a ship of war to fan Juan | the colonists comnplain, and which appears at least | Towed them hy 4 Inter train at 12 o'clock. At four heed im time, aed Mot age the people he rides too | CToachmenta of the executive. Such 4 line of action | 0 it is just to show our own countrymen how utter. | de Niearagua; extruded the,Nicaraguan authorities | to require no little watchfulness on the part of the | in the morning I found them at the Great Nortaern ‘ar. Worma will sometimes tarn agcia, and the | DIY aroused the daagers it was intended to obvinie, | ly unable 7. must be to estimate the proapecta of | vi ef armis; Teinstated the Mosquitos; hoisted the | authorities conaerned, We refer to the importation | Hotel. There had not been the least possible sus- - by producing o feeling of bitter, though subdued re- | any new and distant enterprise, and now entirely | British fla ged the name of the place to | into Cuba of great numbers of Chinese laborers in | picion of Mra before that time. From in- thelr t aa ae “ Lope ey sentiment, that -ooner or la ler would lead to disastrous they must be at the mercy of governments, social | Greytown; and fixed the southern outlet of the San | British vessels. The utmost caro is necessary to Lene T made iy , E learned that ey hae has prow plete; ie assed L and nothing that ean | ComFequences. Tie old censorehip was poweross to | infiyences, commercial chauges, ad avcidests of all | Juam as the Morquito boundary thenceforth. These | prevent this systematic emigration from degenera- | Gordon and Mra. ing had from the Great gow ve dene cil crak CaritG on adlinciens tata tp, ], area ine catastrophe of "48, and if Europe should | kinds beyond their control. | facta chow that Greytown wad not only nominaliy, | ting into a real slave trade. Late accounts Northern Ro!iway to the Great Western Hotel. We tek th, quate feuary whe and suit in Bae. again be convuiced by the volcanic throes of revolu- | The following, thep, was the compromise made | but really, under British proteotion; a3 wach it has | China have expoeed some of the artifices by which | went there, and having found Gordon's land, « bulwark between the people nad the throne. tion, the yoke of the would be flung off with | by the State of Indiana with its wearied, hat still | contiuved to the present , exoept that mder the | the human eargos are obtained, and have alsoshown | room, Mrs. Gordom was ushered in by @ waiter, T isi * | mo leas facility than that of the censor. Asa proof | hopeful, creditors of all nations:—Among varions | Dallas-Clarendon tronty it is erected into a freo some instances of a successful revolt against the | remained outside with Mrs. Huntaman: and after Our Bertin pondence. of the state of subjection to which the press had | improvementé in progress or intended the most Tn the year 1851 & company styled the“ Ame. | imposition, attended by a frightful revenge npon | same littie time I went in, when T saw re, Baring 63 pe been rediced, be mentioned that not a single paper, | advanced and the most promising was a canal. | rican Accessory Transit Company” crectod an osta- | the ships’ crews. In their © these unhappy | ri by the breakfast table, Cee lon was Beet, April 21, 1857. with the exception of the government organs, hed | Do not start, British reader, at the idea of an | blishment on ® spot call.d Panta Arenas, over | creatures fare little or not at all bewer than the sanding ‘with his wife on her knees before him in The Pinancial Projects of the Gowernment— De B mown be Goan'y involving its | unfinished canal in the year 1816, or sippose against Greytown, under lease from the authorities | negroes, and their treatment in tho plantations ta | fainting state, ‘The scene was most pafhfu' le wl re ventured bates in the Second Chamber on the Press—The | interests. Ministers might argno, in ed, that this | that there must also have been a gross of hat place. Twe years subsequentiy this com- | aleo much the same, It is su taat some sim lensor only showed the newspa writers were satiafled tacles offered with it to prepare the eyes th finding it inconveniont to pay the harbor | ple amendmenta might pe made in the P sired Mrs. Gordon to retire, as the excite nent might CO ‘ship in Pruasio—Defeo! of Ministers on ith thal present condition, and had no complaint credhors for an inspection the berpes.. The oes levied TY the mantotpal of Greytown, refused Ket which would have the effoct of preventing This have been cengeros i? oe so \ Mr. Wagener’ Motion on Py ving Licences | to make; but they knew very well that the silence of | canal was almointely necessary to the developoment | to pay them, on the pretence that they did not hold | gross perversion of ita design, nn A a ag) Rumored Withirawal of the Salt Tar, Ge, re. te press was nfo motives of 0 ver diferent of Indiana. It wae fed by the, river Wabash, ‘and | from the Moeqaito ag the 0 Nice: How, let it not be « manposed that we are king ivy, wine Stee tem.” At mF | y ‘ nature. Bes! |. Mathis, several mer! bol ran throu ne 5 Course avoi ag | raguans. shal ol in wi a ", ‘The Chassbers have just met aguin, after the va- | Of'the right and left, made telling and eloquent | much as porsible other States, and. joined the Ohio | sefrure of the Fy of the company: the com | no Girt. intensat ‘oe Feopweaibility, "We Had it | desire 1 consented to her husband Cations, and in the course of this week the Upper hes, among the rest M. (uiach, the head | and Lake Erie, The financiers, brokers and engi- , and 4 ®y to Isth of | stated in a recent ett of the Times that the | In about twenty minutes I went in, and found House mey ve expected to decide upoo the fnanotal the Janker or aristocratic party, and am ocon- ' meets marked out an extensive Wasin that the canal Tne, 93, the United Btates sloop, Cyane ap- surplns prod of the faat her knees. It waa q most year's pagar crop in Cahn her again on