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2 AFFAIRS IN EUROPE. Our Parts Correspondence. Pans, Oot 8, 1857. Oyect of Lowis Napoleon’s Mission to Stutigard(—The Em press at the Ohalons Camp—The Troubles in India —Reduc tion in the Price of Silk—Ourious Anecdote of Mzissoniers he French Painter—TPhe Opera, dc., de. ‘Fhe ecoount which I gave of the motive for the late imperia! interviews has at length become the more popu ‘ar view, and journais of all shades of politics are now in- Forming their readers that to lei “well enough alone” was (ho real object of Napoleon’s mission to Stutigerds. The In diag diMoulty is, in fact, of a nature to restrain for a long (me aay of that offictousness on the part of Hag and which ‘bas #0 long been complained of, and the events with which ‘Ghat dificcliy ts pregnant may be safely trasted to them Selves to develope, From sourcet of a strictly privaie tare, which I can only allude to generally, | know that ‘mothing could be more satisfactory to Nepoloon’s mind (than (bo result of his interview wiih the Emperor cf Rus ia, and as bo there sing any slight passed upow him by tho absonce of Eugenie, Fmpress of the Frouch, I bollove has mothieg could be more distant from the truth. Tho éraih la, Kagiana was aovor parusulariy content thai such @pubiic manifestation ef good will Rhould take place at ‘al, and this mare’s nest about the Empress Kugenie being Jnggied (nto not coming, by the tntonded absence of the Empress oi Russia, is jum} tbe thing t> picare the popular meind—boaoe the wonderh:! discovory of tbo fact. Bod ai. nove who.ase at al, convervant with the Freuch Court know perfectly wel! thai the beantiful lady who pro ides over it (e mom emphadically,\‘n9 poli haa Dolkasr the nocomsary \erte, tact or ab! Character; and It Is eaty to Delieve tat on eo wher gursrament momorter were io be covp events of the most vast importance would Ls foxusksd cpoa—jort enough a0 and Bot too muoh-—wh Napoleon dynasiy was, asf wore, for ihe Jirst timo wince the fall of tte mighty founder, to strike ita roote into Gor moan soi. under ihe eyes of cne whose family ladicence was hardly iss important than his sxtooracy —Napoleoa wonid fool himself more free and powerful for his object when Gisembarrast es Of oe WhO Dever Fes MoAPUred tne longto and Drosdid of that conversational po rer which, however socially ‘e'tphtrui iv her postion, migdt prove polliwaily perilous, shen if he bad enjepoa ine advaninge of ner gracefel anpearance emcng tuat galaxy of rovalty which, the tia, distinguished tho house of Wurtomburg. The fa0: 1s, the Span'’A marriage bas given to Napyleon @ most ViriuoUs, aDUdie and deaUit{al Companion; and ii we edd to ibis, 6 fond and alten ‘va mother cf the heir to ‘whom be baste bequesih » megziticunt careae, we have sa Gil fhe Javt pattern of ceniol d the last exqcistio ensemble cor bas more value in Eogonie’s ey: ‘oose revories which fill the Ean) A One subject to another, giving her opinion @reut apd fmali, anceasingly curiog ine dic Emperor all the walle sitting by smiling! y to tae praitic of s ohlld—or has sitended ber | ‘mg Along see Cuampe Els sees or the 8») 08 occasions Of Sime visite top member abow which St Paul m oraliz a esully running ou—cen doubt the trath oi what I as Bot enough, and perbaps too muoh of this. Stace Ne, return he has joined the Emprew at tbe camp 0! Chalops, where her Majesty has besn inning allbeerm by ber gracefal deportment, ac mocntsd oa @ Gery andaiosian abe oped along the lines of bristling sented in her honor. Uafortanate. faiion, todnterfere with the boaniy ' up (a & fom’ days, ave already quitted it, touded by Pelusier, C bas » afore Oxbting his last battle | in tals camp, bat upto the presest maki “4 iutle there are varioue tumuli where exsa) tos are coutinually going on, but boyoad some obj oom @Ed some vases nothing bas been found. oh | occupies an almost circular space, of about sixty sacred ia erxient, ond is surrounded vy an embantment of some | nimety feet. and at tbe period must have been a place of of pulishos & Cecroo promulgatiog (he traa‘y | conc'nded on ube 14ib of #arch insi bi France ont so the Belts oe rbing subject of inte and. Ib ie im raingthat tho of the Spanish acminiatration obirale thom. eulies whith, vader oer circumstances, consenirated all aveniion—weo's minds aro 1g eXoavations, have ditoc | j thirteen * genuemen at large,” or of | lar profession, Tre religious Sencralnatioasto poo to Austrian poitcy, and tolerebly piaia hints are brown cut that ihe time Is avproacbiug when ber tatrigues Will reccll upo herseif, aud the two groai nations wacom abe bas endeavored to seep asunder will uniie to ber perfidy The advisers of the E opsror of austria moved boayen and ca'th to obtain bis admittance to Btatigarct confcrenne, bet their efforts were ailing, apd they were given 10 unceratand in @ civil way that bis Presence was not desirable, Ho then atwmpted, winrut suocesr, to arrange an interview with the Emperor of Rus ola at Borlip, aud finally anno inced bis tatenticn to pry & aftor the dopartare of his Mus ‘visit to the King of Proreia partare © ater sovorcigns are advertod to, aboand in ontting | Napoleon. We had the renowned Liszt to conduct, ano the much talked of Opera by Richard Ware “Tap y” to listen to. The great folks bore ‘bis for two acts, probably on account of their curiosity to this dawn of a new school of which it has been put on the stage. of the contest of the singers on the Wartburg bein; one of historical aud local interest to this Gran Duchy, the Opera has nowhere been treated so well as here. Nevertheless, no amount of care and splen- dor in the getting up can save such a production as a dramatic conipeee mn, constructed on the principle of anti-climax, an inverted pyramid, with the apex of interest vested in the be; , and lan- ‘wg France ~ Rosair, with whom they are | guishing rapidly into insipidity as it proceeds. As Bt presen: onthe most friendly terms, this ose) met with the same fate av ibe previous ones, aud the King, tn stead of recetving Francis Joseph a\ Berlin, despa'ched Use Prince of Prussia (o Baden to welcome Louls Napoleon on German ground The Austrians were almost at their wits enda, but in spite of these repeated rs uffe, thelr usual edrcitness apd self-posvossion did not forsake them. Oa passing through Vienna ibe Oxer bad promised bis aunt, ibe Grand Ducheve Doweger, to spend aday or two with ber on pls return from uth; a musical wor! ig stray claims to admira- tion by sporadic passages of beauty, but on the whole a wild screaming jumble of innarmonious in- strumentation, snatches of melody that never amount to a wine, and a constantly recurring succession of forced modulations, interrupted cadences, diminish- ed sevenths, and tearfully im) ive pasaages for the whole orchegtra in unison, all about bean greg 4 yal No soouor had tue | be true that this is the music of the future, igardt. Emperor of Austria been informed of this promise than be | more remote we calculate that future the more cor- Bodberg, that belrg at Dresden about the seme time, on & vito bis relaive, ibe King of Gaxony, he would take the opportunity to call at Wetmar and pay his respects to bis brother Emperor. Of course 30 otber answer could be returned (ban that the Ozer would be reo bim, and thus by inviting himself to Weimar the Austrian bat improvised = & VOUS whieh seemed perfectly hopeless, aad from the Coveatry to wbish he wes condemned, and which he spat bave foil oxiromely axoomforiabdls. It ip *sxibio. DO: admire (ae cleverness by which this result has been ebeined, wid t:@ perseverance which so many checks wore Boe able to ovsrocins, but it remains to be seen what Pollina) sawantages be will derive from tt. There can be no doubs tha! sae Cabinet of Vienna is prepared t0 make greai concessions The sifair of the Principalities, for nainnoo, will hs eetiled in aay way that France and Rassia may ceaire, Dusit Louis Napoleon realiy has designe in lisly be is Gob tha mee to be diverted from hia plans by | emply com, imeute, end the Russieas bave some old scores to pay of whiob @re not Ukeiy to be Sargetnn. Ub ts stated elresd, t Oourt Bool, who is ly obnoxious to Doo, will be dismissed, aod that tt was only on this coa- cutim that Alexaxdor agreed to the meeting. Alt fe such es to tax the proverbial as \utenera of her eta’camea to the utmost, and timidity have completely deprived her of the iafluence of the other Powers, aad she bas nething left put the ua- Lit risl Crisir ocoas'~ned by the threstened i. Yon dor Heydi, bax been terminated by that Sweouton of the government railways and wires from his Tt had originated ine proposal to remove the Cogn anne, aance, jut revenae derived from these establishments, Of r Voa der Heydt resisted Vis proposition with all ight, ac {would have sbora bim of half his attri. of the whole patronage connectedywith two of «% important branches of the atminisiration & dim odetinate, bir yielé, ae Soy could not afford vieen Det it is thought tbe preject ‘: only postponed, ‘Will be brovght forward sain ai tomo future period. zbamsp of undenleble ability, the haughty and rary cbaraoter of M Von cer Hoydt has made maty ecoenics, and his laie Severe measures ag fore ca banks Dave mot imoreased his popularity in ine meno: ed werii, who would bail bis ‘all with undisgaised Satiafection A -oiror pestive review of the proceedings of the Evange Heal Alilapco in tbls city was publ'shed bere the other day, Dy whiob it sppears tbat 1,254 persons had entered their Larec ez membere Of ae assembly. dowicilod im Barope, 3 im Asia, 8 in Afrioa, 23 in Amorica, ralia Tue European con! was farnished wbirty four different kingdoms, principslities or froe fen, viz 876 by Prosaia, 166 by Great Bittain and Iro: isxd. 16 by Hesse, 1f by Saxony, 18 by Wirtenburg, 12 (zer avd transfer tt to that of the Minister of Fi Of these 1,222 were by Frenge,)2 by Russie, 11 by Holland, 1l by 8 ot. a) by Mi bv rg, 9 by Sch.eswick and Holsein, 8 cy Aamburg, 7 by Hangary, 6 by Arbalt, 7 by Aanover, b by Bavaria’ & by Beden, 6 by Branewick, 4 by Belgiam, 2 by Deemey. 7 Frankiori,2 by Saxe-Altonburg, 2 by 0,2 by Tarkey, 2 by Denmark, 2 bj Lope, Siz bundred and Ofty etx of the Oty orofessors of universities, n litermi!, or teachers; three phy- a, ninety wo government officers, mow, cleveo farmers. ninety-foar mer- ongaged in trade, fifteen mechanics ‘wo papils of grammar schools, and one bundred © while that is a The British are the secret thoughts which pervace, more or less, upized under Son is as Inst muzzied, if not the words, ine hearts of all. “ Under the most fortunate cir- cumstar ces," said Marshal Borquet, two days ago, at the Sovss of « private friend, tae sext five years. What an roj for Franco, What ewides will mot ine ple “England >as her hands {ali for | aivines who attended at the conferences. belonged, were pisoopa'ians, . the Soottiah the Soottish free church, the Reformed eharch, the light of am (riental sum. | he Lutherans, the Moravians, the Metboalats, the Presb; - terians, the Independents, the Baptisty, &c Options dif fer as to the practical results attained by this ga hering of nations and cbarches, but! have no doubt you will be folly enlightened on this subject by the eminent American ‘The grain barvest in the Eastern parts of of galas People of the Uaitet | been fin'sbea for some weeks. Whoat and rye are a very States be making towarce wai commercial ana meri fair eroo, but prices up in cemsequence of the ac Vme supremacy to whieh they areas surely destined | counts from ene, a reset te to 3s, 09 wheat having as the earth is to make tu caly orbit. England, I repeat, | eon reported in tho’ Faglish markets. Barley and oa is chained Gown as she nover war cosined vefore, to kocp | are ikewive an average crop, but prices continue high, the peace and altend t> her own sifnirs, aad it is atrarge | nor is there any prov pect of their falling, the crops of these to Be |! France eepectally de not maxe the most of 11" coreals having failed in other distriow, owing to the Tt |a & source of great Congratulation vo /he ladies, to say drovgbt Poraioes have hitherto been abundant, and, as sothing cf teir besbands, ipet a very material decline Sar aa they are got in, of a very goxd qui BO appear. bas recently texen piace in the price of slik —the price of | ar oe of disease being visible. If tho water in the rivers ‘which bac become so bigt an .o (hresten a revolaticn {2 | were pot so low, small craft wanting, prices woald the provalling taste, which reqaires so muck addiional | crop here ooval . The later sorte are only dug Juantity \c the robs The fall im Chica silk ‘a 00 less | next month, and ihe yield cannot be arceriained with any sban 20fr. the kilo, or 10 franes ine pound, and a corres. | degree of precisoness :Ibut thelr appearance ia the bottom — ie the manofsctured arvcie ts now taking | jands ie stated to be quite fine, aod o0 signs of blight have The famous Hotel do Ch bt " 7, with which all lovers of | beanty and dos "© faroiliar, bat just bees ed by One of the wings facing the Rue des Matlu Jacques to the south, and on the square of the Theomes om the wort being raleed e story. Thir ecsttiee allows the Mosic du Sommogard t be ooatidere Diy enlarges. emia, 40 ods aaeodote ie being told of Melssonter, our creat forest artic. He was lawiy diping at Brusvole, aod eg the compan Atsly 20%0 Charming Inadecapes at P the order of ibe day, and # head & make end. The Baron 0 ond wea carbonize’ rt and by the time he bad leg BMob.8, aad a e001 Sarr Close &. the Fronon aisbet bie sonmpd separ be flashed = chermizg ob of ao Cid renner, beaut! executed. When ihe wf over M. co Kay ff tone the table clotb, foi be Gown to ine witinere of the extab ith: ime, b® g00d enoues tw look care. To morrow I ‘Sod pay you the value of" “ But, al aw er’ { must at least got it washed." sort’) sard the Baron, “I wish to bare ac i ft with all i spots and marke day, ecoordizgty, he came and took « the prec abioowotm, which he has eirce had framed in a ¢ yi, Re double frame. the skoich being pi apallor Cpt, Gad the rest Of tbe lumen caref vif arracged in the 87 re wad thet ec amaieur bas already offered M. 6,000fr. 7 Of theairicsis the Malian Opera hes operst | ‘Wim the univerenily poms lar “Lrovetore ” Tae cast, with Whe exception of Alben), wear w “Grevings wore bob | a | they were received by her, the Dowager Queen of The Iwperial Meeting at Weimar. ROYAL BANQUBT—SCENE AT TAB OPEKA. [Weimar (ct. 1) Correspondence of London Times. } The Emperor and Empress of Russia, Prince | Alexander of Hease, and Prince Gortschakoff arrived here yesterday evening at 9 o'clock from Darmstadt, accompanied by the Grand Duke and Duchess of the Wartburg, where they bad all dined together. Thence tne entire party drove to Belvedere, the country seat of the Dowager Grand Duchess of Weimar, an auut of the Emperor of Russia, where | th | lends, another anat of the Emperor's, and Du rnhard of Saxe Weimar, the uacle of the ng present Grand Duke. , ‘Tits morning, at nine o'clock, the Emperor of | Avatris arrived here from Dresden, accompanied by | the Grand Duke of Weirwa imar, who lad gone to meet ion, and attended by General | Count von Grunne, the Austrian Minister at Dres | den, aud two Adjutants. He was received at the tation by Duke Bernuard of Saxe Weimar, inder of Hesse, General Count Clam, or-Genera! of Bohemia, ond a numerous aifot austrian and Weimar officers. The guard i resented, and the band played the Aus him at the frontier stet after but few prelimina f tothe town, aceom ; lowed by Count }. : achess, Naotior Diller pad no r e household openupe oe Annee presente im, the ve off in the same pop ~ mn ane anve ae Gar 4 | carriage that had bro m from the rail an b-- 4- 5 eupenion thal outa the patent | open varouche with six creai-colored horses, to pay Soving ecmpictsly ¢) iis visit to the Dowager Grand Duchess and her the lowed ibe gipry wulbor we well | goesta, the Emperor aod Empress of Russia. Toe rs Lumperot Francis Joseph hed for the occaston as- ‘Ths gey world te pow fovkirr pro. | sumed the uniform of his Rossian regiment, and the mises @ magoifoent supply of what tne wel—Rapvians, who girs #aoh em rues prices for emt me0% Wal Oren Who Most ArErc.cas house twee soom for c29e Wo de eaunded. Our Berlin Correspondence. Banus, Sopi. 29, 1857 The imepertal Inierviews al Btudgard! and Weimer —Manru wee Oe Emperor Francis Jeceph tw (iawn a Recep tien from the Orar—Anticipaied Diwnisesl of Count Dum Dotitical Porttion of Austria—Th: Lair Kenny of the Prangelical Society The Orope in l*ruama, do , fo. ‘The meeting 4 Bivitgardt beiweom the Emperors of tbe ‘Baa acc (bo Weet evil! forms ibe engrossing topic of son VOrvAlior, and all eyor are fixed on that quaint lille Gor. man “ rosidens’’ where the tele of Farope is possibly just Delng decice’ The movements of the two great poten (ales are weiched with any one interem, and the absorbing qnomions of who (Rid Ihe Cra visit, how long It lasted and ow soon It Wa returned who took he right hand and who the lef, bow offen they were closeted together, and bow they looked on ey Cinco tmed * ib al the riows import, Aa far er can be judged by ouward ap- eeudE WOE Of Ibe moEt cordial deserip- 0; Froueh and Rossias vied with exob oer in expres eioae Of friendabip aod muteal esteem. and no one would havo imagined that they bad josi been engaged tv s doa peraie atv oggie which bad cost some 100.060 ives and come busdred millices of meney, Th futocrals Lave ob viowsly Come to the conclusion that they oan grin mors by 2 ojvee alliance than they covid by hosiliities, and \\ is nse Jere to deny that euch an aliases will render them the masters of Rarope, While the into Crar Nicholas wae al're #0 Ominons & Conjanetion Was Bot to be fomred, ae bis Ligh Conservative novions would always have prevouted him from forming an intimate connection with « Power that owed ite origin bo & rerolation, but fis son hes notim- b ded his principles, or a! best he dow noi appear inclined bo wncrifics his interests to abstract ideas of Diy! Ano (haw the antagoniom between the two grest rr 2 tere of absolute which secured tne liberties of | urope, tas mote for at nie covdavale @hioh It ie tmpossible © w\lhow! Apprehension of Acstrin at the proepect of this combination bor two formidavie ngighbors ls exces ee tone adopted the French and pree le Wel calgvlated to increase her a The article is the Pare end 4 jvurpas le which the (averriews of thelr re by blue rubaud of the Andrew Order. On the arrival of the Emperor Francis Joseph at Belvedere che Dowager Grand Duchess came to meet him on the steps leading up to the house, led by the Sioperor of luswia; on which the two Emperors em breeed and kissed each other. After they had each of them presented their retinue to the other, the two Emperor retired into a room apart, and conversed for some time alone; they then drove back into the town, still alone, and without a single attendant, the Emperor of Russia | peated on the right, which is by no means his cxs- | tomary seat when he is free to choose. To judge by the expression of the countenances of ‘the two youn| ia rey good health and spirits, matters must be go- | ing smoother and more rapidly here than they did | at Stuttgard'. Shortly afterwards the Emperor of Russia retarned to Belvedere, and then went out shooting. The Emperor of Austria, on the other band, went on fost two pay a visit to Duke Bernhard at the Furstenhaus, and then took a drive with the Grand Duke, who himseif drove. This meetirg of the two Emperors of Russia and Aurtria in this town has a precedent in the meeting of the Emperor Alexander J. with the Emperor Franeis Li. after the battle of Leipsic, in 1513, when they met at the headquarters of the allied army un der Prince Schwartzenburg. The dinner at the palace consisted of about 140 persons, many of whom were visiters from the neighboring coarta, Lhis evening there was, as uenal on these occa sions, & gula opera, for which ali the great world 0 | Weimer and the neighboring towns and principali | ties have been struggling for some days pastto get | ticke It was the same scene over again that I lately described to you at Stuttgardt, only on @ | emailer scale, and with a less extent of courtly pre. tension, and was only in a very small degree to be called splendid. Tne house, small as it is, was too large to ve occupied by the court only, aad even the first tier of Loxes contained a number of persons ched to the court, and not even tn full The Empress of Raswia sat in the centre, the Dowager Queen of Holand and the j Dowager Grand Duchess of Weimer, her husband's | aunts, oo either hand, one of waom was flanked on the right by the Emperor of Austria and the Grand Doke of Weimar; and the other on tee left by the Emperor of Russia, the Grand Ducheas of Weimar, apd Prince Alexander of Hesse, There was nothing | of that beauty of toilet and splendor of ornament | that was vieible at Stottgardt; out, on the other hand, there was @ total absence of that resteaiat t of the Hussian Imperial couple which nt at Stuttgardt in the presence of Louis she bad ecqsirod come }ears since through the dissensions | the waves during a tempestuous restmiug bis poriz/suille ax Minister of Com. | the Imperatrice alexandra, the Vladit who om long boss carting wistful eyes a the | Pamiat Asova quitted the roads, Weimar, who had gone out to meet them as far as | | said that in certain Emperors, who by-the-by, wame both looking | geve rotice wtbe Russian Ambassdor at Vienna, Baron | rect will be our judgment; and it may also be trae, 9s Wagner's admirers say, that this music will be heam: with delight when that of Mozart and a is forgotten, but it certainly will not be 10re, zi On leaving the theatre the great folks proceeded to Belvedere to supper, and enjoyed on the way thither the spectacle of the rather pretty scenery they passed through, lit up by tne fitful ght of numerous torches burning with a red flame (rather a favorite scones 8 ‘aguer’s “ Tanuhausee”’ by- the-way), carried by the outriders and mounted attendants. Whe Loss of the Russian Ship Uefort. The Journal of St. Petersburg of the Ist of October contains the following account, communi- cated by order of the Minister of Marine, of the recent 108s of a veseel of the line, the Letort:— It has pleased Providence I should participate in one of the greatest disasters that can Beppe at sea, and to make me a witness of the instantaneous and inexplicable loss of one of the vessels in my fleet. er vasoiliation | A few minutes have sufficed for a beautiful ship of the line, thoroughly seaworthy, to be engulfed by night. Not a cry of distress reached us from the scene of the diaster, aithough we were but four cables’ length distant to the windward. No one survives to explain to us the canse of this unparaileled catastrophe. On the 28th August (Sept. 9) four ships of the line, ir, the Lefort of 84 guns, and the Pamat asova, of 74 guns, which were in the port of Revel, received orders to arm and return to Cronstadt. Ten days afterwards the towed bya steam trigate. ‘The three other vessels were ready to set sail two days later; they had water and provisions fora month, and their stowage was the same aa at the end of their cruise in the preceding year. The Letort was thoroughly repaired at Cronstadt in 1852. Ibad received instructions to profit by the favor- able weather to set sail, without ae for the steam tugs On the 9th of September (21st) I got under sail with beautiful weather and a tavoraple breeze from 8.8.W., the barometer marking 2979 English. A lictle later the wind freshened, and abreast of the island ot Rothskar we were obliged to take in two reefs inthe topsails. At half-past 8 | P. M., otter passing the isiand of Hochland, the fieet was making more than eleven knots. The wind increasing, | ordered a third, and then a fourth reet to be taken in. the barometer being at 29.15, and tle weather foggy, we sailed as close a8 possible to the wind, eadeavor: ing to keep our course by short tacks until morning; | each tine I gave the signal tor the mancevyre. at batt-past 1) the wind shitied to the wes, as mid- night tthe N. W., and at tour o'clock to the nortn, with squalls andanow. Atcaybreak we were near the island of Grand Futers. The fleet was on the starboard tack, the Impetatrice Alexon ira @ little to winoward, snd the Viadimir in the wake of the Letfort, with four reets in ner topsails. At a distance of five miles from Tutors we tack- ed. During our manaevre the Lefurt appeared to us as if about to tack; suddenly a violent squall laid her on her sige. Though her sails wore let go, she ber masts would go, but she continued gradaully to the Viadimir took to tuck about, the waves. Exclusive of the commander and twelve officers, the vessel had on board 745 seamen, 55 women and 17 children. All perisned This disaster took place on September 10 (22) at 23 minutes past seven A. M., at five miles and a half to the N.N.E. of the island of Grand Tuters, at a depth of thirty fathoms, After this unparalicled catastrophe, the wind continuing to increase, we brailed up the poe aoe and topgallant sails, and fterwards the maintopsails, and decided to anchor at a depth of 31 fathoms, letting out al! the cable of ‘wo anchors. Fitty-three hours the wind caimed, and the steamers arriving in the meantime, towed us to Cronstadt. Signed by the Rear Admiral, Noxgpuax L, Miscellaneous Foreign Items. French advices from Privas, in the Ardeche, Gated lst inst., announce that fresh inundations have destroyed all the works constructed since the inundation of September last to prevent a repetition of euch a calamity. In the valley of the Ardeche all the proprietors of dwelling houses and mills situated near the river have been forced to abandon them, happy to escape with their ives. The note addres*ed from the Paris Foreign office to its representatives abroad, in reference to the pur- | port of the Stuttgurdt meeting, has been expedited, | and will be communicated to the foreign Powers. The Tuscan officers who signalized themselves in putting down the late tpsurrection hesitate to accept Austrian decorations; and tae Duke of Modena will, it Is said, refuse to renew his Customs Vonvention with the German Power, Advices from Galatz mention that the commission for improving the state of the Danube is displaying considerable activity. After long balancing between the St. George and the Sulina mouths, the commis sion has definitively decided in favor of the other. Native boats lately arrived at Singapore, E. I+ from Pulo Aor, bring reports confirmatory regarding the proceedings of the Lanun pirates at the islands of the Natuna and Anambas groups. These pirates are said to have visited Bungooran, Siantan, Jama- jah and Sirhassan, and carried away upwards of a hundred of the popwiation. The Hong Kong (China,) Register mentions that considerable disaatisfa-tion bad sprung up in conse” quence of Lord Kigin’s sudden departare for Calcut- ta, instead of taking active measures to carry out his Excellency's mission to China The complaints of a desecration of the Ruglish and French graves in the Crimea, has been confirmed by Russian investigation. It is believed that the interview at Weimar be tween the Sovereigns of Austria and Russia will certainly result in an improvement of the commer: cis! relations between the two countries. It is even respects the customs regulations of Russia will be altered so as to amalgamate with those of the Zollverein. ‘The finances of the Papal States wear for onee a roseate live. The estimate for the ensuing year sho vs a surplus of income over expenditure. Le Nord announces a second meeting of the pleni- ntiaries at Paris to settle the question of the Janubian Principalities. A congress is also spoken of for “a of canvassing the expediency of reducing the military armaments of Earope. Some authorities are so sangnine as to entertain no doubt ‘that this was one of the subjects discussed at the re- | cent meetings of the emperors at Stuttgart. ‘The financial embarrasaments of Turkey increase, To meet its more pressing wants, the Goverament has resolved on a new creation of paper money to the extent of 100,000,000 of piastres, and 75,000,000 have been issued. The Emperor Napoleon intends providing suitable employment for the marshals o: France, who are now resting in inglorions ease, by ens By coun: try into five or six large military districts, each of which will be placed under the command of one of these dignitaries A ew Swedish railway loan of £1,500,000 has been brought out on the Hamburg and Berlin Ex- change. The terms are very favorable to capitatiats. ‘The public debt of Russia is stated to amount to 3,000,000 franca, about £277 320,000, A Tarkish telegraph from Constantinople to the version Guf has |xen decided apon, and Omar cha will commence the work next January. The Paris J’otrie is instructed to contradict a statement of @ Toulon journal that a second French squadron of evolution, composed of ten steamers, will be organized next year uuder the command of Admiral Komain Destossi¢s There are at present in Prussia 710 tobacco mann factories, in which 15,194 persons are employed The Rbenish province is that which has the most manufactc ries and workmen, the numbers being re spectively 213 and 4,306. The most considerable tobacco manufactory in the kingdom is that of Bern- castel, in the circle of Treves, which has at least 260 workprople. The nomber of women and children The company formed for recovering from the waters of the Kastern Scheld the flat ground lyin betweren it and the western branch, has publisher a report on the situation of the undertak The expense of banking up the water is cai ted at 140 florins per acre and the value of the land at 720 florins. ‘The first portion, completely dyked up in 1856, and now fa fail cultivation, has a superficies of 1,100 bectares (24 acres each), and since then 1,760 other hectares have been recovered, the land being magnificent. The Paria Univers has the following remarks on the Day of Humilistion in Great Britain, and admits that England is still Christian, while deploring that she is not Catholic. England offers to the world at this moment a cent and uoble example. An catia tt dnp Pere te ake ee) e God, imploi n for its faulta, that its Kins bare ht about the eviis whic! ‘ict it, and supplicating Him for victory. ‘This is certainly a grand spectacle and a solema lesson for the world. A Categnlies peepee Seraiet in a paste lao. ture, wnil wing epecies of moving power have their origin in the rays of the sun, stated that while the iron tubular railway bridge over the Menai straits in England, 400 feet long, bent but balf an inch under the heaviest pressure of a train, it will bend Ey inch and a half trom its usual horizontal line when the sun shines on itfor some@ours. He stated that the Bunker Hili monument is higher in the evening than in the morning of a sunpy day. The little sunbeams enter the pores of the stone 80 many wedges, lifting 1. up. The concession of the railway in Biscay from Tu- dela to Bilboa has been accor by the Spanish government, which rey @ subvention of 83,)44.- 080 reals. ‘The line of 140 miles will cost, it is cal- culated, 220,944,080 reals. Messra. Durant & Co. of London, report as fol- lows:—Another month is gone, and still no business in silk, consumers restricting their purchases within the narrow limits of their daily wants, ana :his only when of the most pressing character. It is said that a direct communication is about to be established between Trieste and Now York by meaas of Lioyd steamers, but Austria produces so few articles fit for export that the lation is not veiy likely to su . Almost the only Austrian wares which are at present introduced into the Unit- ed States are Bohemian glass, Nuremburg gooas, (playthings, &c.,) and Hungarian wines. The Czar has conferred the Grand Cross of Stanis- laus on the Russian capitalist, Baron von Stieglitz, for his zeal and co-operation in the developement of the Russian railway system. The total number of emigrants from Ireland from the Ist of May, 1851, to the Ist of September, 1857, was 460,640 males and 450,326 females—together, 910,966. Inthe first eight months of the present year the number of emigrants from Ireland was 72,186. Itisestimated that the ulation of the island is now 6,015,768, against 6,552,385 in 1951. The Avenir d’Anvers announces that the Brazi- lian government has applied for the enrolment of 2,000 Belgian and Dutch seamen, to serve on their ships of war. Accounts from St. Petersburg state that extraor- dipary exertions are being made in the construction of Russian screw steamers. The buildimg yards are full of activity. Austria is bestowing great pains on the increase of her navy. The works in progress at her various AGriatic ports evince her determination to have a slice of the dominion of the sea. Projects are afloat NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1857. for turning the navigation of the Danube to better | account. The Principalities question has been the subject of a special interview between Prince Gortechakoff and the Emperor of Austria. The principle of the | work, revised by the Prince, union of Moldavia and Wallachia was conceded, but | | Austrian States to examine the different details of not uncer the headship of a foreign Prince. Acchange has been decided in reference to the course of the great Russian line of railway projected | fiom Kourek to Libau. It will not extend to the latter port! will go by Dunaburg to Riga, 80 as to avoid a rivalry between Libau and the Prussian port of MMenel. The authorities at Constantinople have given per- mission tor the erection ot a Roman Catholic | church in that town. A wall has been erected round leaned over 80 much to larboard tha: we expected | lean over till she foundered in tae short time that | The keel of te | Letfort appeared once, and was then swallowed up in | the ground on which the church is to stand. A curious result of English official printing and publisning is shown by the annual! reports to Par- liamentof the Patent Commissioners. that from the beginning of their operations. in printing £119,886 16s. 9d , and have sold printed copies of specifications, indexes, &c., to the amount of £3,932, 80 that they have on hand unproductive | stock of the nominal value of nearly £116,090. The trialof the members of the Gymnastic So- ciety of Hesse for taking part in the Baden insur- rection of 1849 bus ended in the acquittal of ail the parties. In St. Petersburg efforts have been directed for a twelvemonth past to formalize some old treaties be- tween Russia and China. Russia fears that coi events may deprive, her at a general settlement, ee required from China as far as seventeenth century by treaties that have never been fully ratified. Fresh complications are making their appearance in Sontesrad where the cantonal sovereignty is openly resisting the federal authority. Several can- tons have refused, on different questions of seconda- ry order, to obey the ipjunc:ions of the central power. There will bave been coined at the Paris mint in the year 1857, 600,000,000 francs in gold. Pane op fiom Teheran Fos ro ‘20th of Aacust men- tion on the pre of Major Taylor a fea ie mission to Meshed and Herat. The London Chronicle of the 6th of October con- | cludes an article on the loss of the Central America thus:—The story is a melancholy one; yet we pe- tase it with many emotions of grateful . such as are excited by narratives of heroic self-devo- tion. For ourselves, we are proud to claim kindred with these men. They belong to the same race from which are sprung our own herces, who, on many a scattered point and station in India, have withstood the storm of revolts, and faced the most terrible perils with calm intrepidity. The London Herald observes:—It is impossible to peruse the narrative of this shipwreck without ad- miring—nay, reverencing—-the features of noble- ness it presents in the conduct of men whose way of life haa not been such as to lead one to expect the generous disinteresteduess the and displayed. The London Shipping Gazette of 6th of August says:—Oor tribute vf admiration to the steady and devoted behaviour of the officers and crew of the | Central America is readily freely giveu. The London Chronicle of October 9, says:—Whe- ther the course pursued at times by the bank direc- It appears | n Oc: | tober, 1852, to December, 1856, they haveexpended | half the amount that ng have heen aay ted to arize in this time from tion of war duties. dhe London Star of 10th of October, remarks :— Kivation. the appétatment ‘ols acccaor is, ve 21 ation. ay @ succeasor is, we heh eemeerines Ly Lord Canning not to report the of his illness; but if al to deeide upon the uestion the military and the whole of the Oisbitcote the civil service excepted, vote for Lord kilenborough. The London Times of 8th of October, remarks :— It is atrange that the ious government of France should ge iteelf unreservedly to the proiect of Rouman kin, on the fron- r of the three of the ‘The tradi- tional policy of Nay was followed up when the Rossian passage Pruth was considered a suffi- cient cane ot war. The connexion of the Princi- palities with Turkey was rightly considered the beat sours against their absorption by a more aggres- ive Power. The Boepoiiien, government has hot neglected the commeréial interests of its subjects. Bince 1845 re- ciprocity treaties have been concluded with the - cipal Euro) States, and also with America, have led to a considerable reduction. of import da- vies. As remults of bo cer the imports of cotton from England have inc: in 1854 about 23 per cent, those of coflee 40 per cent, of woollens 90 per cent, of hardware 136 per cent, and of codfish 144 The London Examiner of the 8th inst. says:—If Lord Canning be uot the man for La pie exigen- cies of the empire, no personal considerations should be permitted to stand in the way of his im- mediate recall; nor we believe it ible that Lord Palmerston will a moment to take this step, it he entertains even a doubt of the Governor Generat’s fitness for his trying position. In England the month of ir has been sin- gularly prolific with mercantile failures, number! no less than ten firms, one bank and one cotton mill company, whose liabilities range from £20,000 to £60,000, or more. ‘The Lords Commissioners of the British treasury have certified to the commissioners for the reduc- tion of the national debt, that the actual surplus reve- nue of the United Kingdoms of Great Britain and Ire- land, bere the actual iture thereof, for the year ei the 30th day of June, 1857, amoun’ed to the sum of three hundred and eleven thousand one hundred and eleven poands six shillings and seven pence. A company has been started in Paris to work the gold placers of French Guiana. For the present there is no idea of a Freuch ex- pedition to Cochin China All the naval forces sent to China by France have arrived at Macao. Letters from Africa state that the Engiish Gover- nor of Aden has supplied officers of instruction to the different sovereigns on the shores of the Red Sea. The mcoens pabronae ot “ La Relation du Voyage fait dan les Mers du Nord, par le Prince ints tga on board the Reine is announced. This from the pen of one of his fellow-tourists, M. Charles Edmond. i voyage extended as far as Iceland and the country of the Squiceanx. Several Russian agents who had been sent into the the working of the railways, had met with obstacles of a very uafriendly cl r. These in coneequence been ordered to change the scene of their examination to France, Prussia, and Belgium. The farm now cultivated by Allen Pollock in the west of Ireland, consists of 20,000 acres, There are | uncer turnips, 2,000 acres ; oats, 3,000; wheat, | wweh cylinders and 8 feet stroke, nomina’!; 1,200 ; potatoes, 400. He bas 1,000 head of cattle for stall feeding, 400 working horses, and pays £4,000 monthly in wages. There have been erected on it 50 miles of stone wall fences. Whilst the cotton trade seems to be almost in a languishing condition in Lancashire, Rogiand, it is extending itself by rapid strides in Rue Mills are being built and enlarged in a! ‘ions. —_ st the former is ee Pate which is in progress of e1 mn clone to“. P g. This new mill will have in it 100.000 dies, for spinning 38's and 40's yarn, © but with some proportion of throstle. power will bea pair of steam engines ug 60 00, vat of 900, bork power, capable of exerting a oy f boilers, working a. Lom with double flue cre A0ib. to S0lb. pressure. Several years before the Eastern war thc Haperor Nicholas had sent a committee of officers and scion- | tific men to explore the course of the Amovr to the back | pond Or wach ie ts ite waters into the Pacific. After receiving the report of this committee, the Emperor decreed the foundation of the port and town of Nikolajeff. This town is now daily increas- ing in wealth and population. Many Chinese and Americans have emigrated thither, and its commerce is considerable. The following is a statement of sums brought by the rebels in India into the city of Delhi from the different treasuries tors in fixing the rate of interest be at all times judi- | cious if , or whether the act of Pariiament by which the currency of the country is regulated is, unger nt circumstances, expedient or cou- ductive to the material interests of the nation, or productiveof benefit to traders, are questions which admit of grave doubt. A well known outsider at the Bourse has disap- peared from Paris, leaving behind him liabilities to the amount of three millions of franca (£120,000). | Axother has been “execated,”’ as the Pas goes— that is, bis securities in the hands of the brokers have been sold to cover a deficiency of 1,800,000f. (£72,000). The Paris corresponaent of the London Globe, writing on the Sth inst., says:—The reaction on the Bourse has set in with violence, and all the efforts of the great speculative establishments to support the crumbling market have proved fruitless. The Brussels Independence of the 8th inst. says:— Waihin austria, in a short period, thore have suc ceeded each other, at intervals, a loan of £5,000,000, another of £3,500,000, of £50,000,000; also, the sale of the State railways and mines, and the cession to the bank of more than 1,250,000 acres of domains and forests; and yet in spite of these sarrifices, a new loan, dieguised under the form of an issue of treasury bills, has become necessary. The London News ot October 10 says:—No one who had paid ordinary attention to Indian finance believed a syllable of the assurances lately given to Parliament. They knew that a‘government whose expenditure year alter year exceeded their income could not be ina Position to meet this frightful crisis, not in its affairs, but in its v ex: istence, when they saw in the pero laid before Parliament deficits like these:—1863-4, £2,044,117; 18 1 £1,707 964; 1855-6, 791; 1856-7, eati- mated £1 ,\s1,(6%—deficits amounting in the last four years, before the routiny burst forth, and when the expenditure of the Indian government had been largely diminished. Liverpool 4 imes of the 10th} of October re- marks:—An opinion prevails that another source of temporary embarrassment will be found in the rea- diness with which English merchants will employ their capital inthe American markets at the present tempting rates. This course, it is alleged, will check the imports of British goods and stimulate the shipment of American produco, ‘Ihe London Advertiser of the Ist of October, remaiks :— ‘Lhe troubles of India will:-or some time affect our cotton trade in two ways. They will de- prive us of many of our customers, and also dimi- nish the supply of the raw material. The late cirou- lars from Liverpool show that buyers of manafac- tured goods for India were holding off, while the dreadful accounts continually reaching us from that scene of carnage give us little reason to hope that the pursuits of industry will be resumed until a long term of misery aud famine has succeeded. The sum total of the produce of all the taxes of Turkey is estimated at £°,000,000 per annam. The public debt of Turkey, com, of various items, smounta to nearly £20,000,000. The metallic cur- rency in circulawon amounts to between six and seven millions sterling, containing more than 45 per cent of intrinsic value, and the balance of value, therefore, constitutes an additional debt. The Londop Times of October 1, remarks :—Two quarters of present financial year have now ex pired, and the total net decrease upon them ia only £1 155,401, which it is confident y stated is lees than | conduct of the British soldier. in addition to the amount in the The above is | Dethi treasury, which has not been touched by the King. The latter has forced the city bankers to ad- vance him mone; ,soving that he would repay out of his stipend of one lac of rupees. An official report of the French General Desvaux on the Artesian borings executed in the Zabara of the Province of Constantine in 1356-7 has just been published by the Moniteur Algérem, On the Lith of June a perfect river, yielding 4,00 quarts of wa- ter per minute, at a temperature of 21 degrees, burst from the bowels of the earth. A letter from Hong Kong, China, aays:—About the end of September, when the Gulf of Pechelee is <-e by storms and the anchorage is insecure, the English and French plenipotentiaries will probably revew the postponed expedition to the Peiho. They will act in sweet accord- the egies to open trade for the whole world, the French to open the Roman Catholic religion to the world of China. Mr. Disracli said in a recent speech:—I for one protest sgainst taking Nena Sahib as a model for the I protest against meeting atrocities by atrocities. I have heard thiny said and seen things written of late which would make me almost suppose that the religions opinions of the people of England had undergone some sud- den change, and that instead of bowing before the name of Jesus we were preparing to revive the wor- ship of Moloch. I cannot believe that it is our duty to indulge in such a spirit. The jal Journal of the Two Sicilies an- nounces that new telegraphic lines were opened on the 16th ultimo, to gro, Cosenza, Castroville ro, . Rossano and Spezzano Albanese, in Cala- bria, Citeriore. R. Babinet, the astronomer, has armounced to the Tnstitute of Paris, that in consequence of a favora- ble in the currents of the ocean, a series of years of has been entered on. The Belgian Moniteur publishes the new law, by which adhesive stamps are ordered to be affixed to all commercial bilis drawn in Belgium, whether payable in that country or auy other. M. Moore, steward to the East India Service Clob, London, has decamped with a iarge sum of money. A late letter from Melbourne, Australia, anys:—A census of the popul was taken on the night of the 20th of March. It is seen that between 1854 and 1857 the total ion increased from 236,776 to 403,519, being an of 70 per cent in three years. is an improvement in the proportion of the sexes, though ES of females to males is still lamentably The following isa statement of the two enamerations: — Males. Fem's. Census 1854. .155,876 80,900 21 Cengas 1857. 268,116 145,403 4034 3 In 1854 there wer: w Chinese in the colony; now there are 40,000, ‘ales. If we deduct these from the males Pees of the European race will be 218,116 jes and 145,403 females, or 66.6 females to every 100 males. ‘The first number of a new Russian journal, aamed the ate aoe er last, in Sibe: ria, under managemen' pechneff. divided into two parta—the offi the measures of government; and the non-offi one, reeerved for local news and artioles on Siberia OUR MASSAU (N. P.) CORARSPONDENCE. Nasaav, Oct. 10, 1855 Wet Weather and Fever—Wrecke and Wreck ing Agents—Accident to the St. Thomas Mai Packet—Collision with an American Bark. ‘The past month was very rainy—nnasually so— and the consequence has been that fever has been prevalent, thongh not to any considerable extent. The present month bas also been ushered in with heavy rains; but the north winds have set in and the weather i, save and except the rain, very pleasant. Nasaan is not gay at present, notwithstanding the head quarters of the Pinst West India regiment is here. The manly old Fnglieh game, cricket. | for certain underwriters, is, I understand, about te return here im the a Boards of Underwriters have ‘@ “aplit;" while some accredit him others will not. Wrecks, at the best of times, cause troubles ie every shape, bickerings and so forth; but with two 8; agents we @ terrible’ rumpas. Mesers. T. Darling & Co., have beea for years agents for New York underwriters, have, I believe, sent in their resignation of the agency. The mail which sails between this and St. Thomas with an accident during her trip last ranges Spenren ge — was a 80 violent was the concussion that the mail boat was unshi| and the vessel in oc position. res, Nassaa ‘analy and repaired. teresting from Central Amorica. OUR BAN JUAN PRL NORTE CORRESPONDENCE. San Joan Dew Nonrs, Sept. 29, 1857. Expulsion of Americans from Nicaragua—Decree * of the Union Executive—Its Operation and Ef- Sect’—Mr. Carey Jones Ordered to Leave Coste Rica-His D Fruits of his Diissi Another Walker Invasion Dreaded—Prepara- tions for War—Colonel Schlessinger Homeward Bound—Trade and Prospects of Nicaragua. A veasel leaves here to-day for New York, and therefore embrace thfis opportunity of sending you the latest news of interest from this region. The most important item isa decree in Nioars- gua expelling all Americans from the country. ‘The decree in question was published in Nicaragua in the early part of this month, by Martinez and Jeres, and provided that all those who belonged te the ranks of Walker should leave ‘the republic with- in fifteen days. The decree has been carried inte execution, and not only those lately connected witk Walker, bat every American in the country, with the exception of a few in San Juan del Sur and La Virgin, have been expelled, including many indus. trious, honest men, who were never inany way compromised in favor of the filibuster chief. There is not now a single American to be found withia the limits of Nicaragua, save half a dozen on the Isthmus, and these it is likely have received notice to take their departure ere this. Several o. these exiles have lately arrived in this town and ar’ men of known worthy character. They have beer, compelled to go away, leaving behiad them theis property and interests, and that, too, for the sole of fence that they are American citizens. It is a la: mentable fact that the American flag will not pro’ tect our countrymen from the blind and mali ha’.ed which the inhabitants of this petty rep : icel against our race. None of them have applie<. for consular assistance, judging too well by past x perience that petitions to our eonsul in San Juar del Sur would be of no use, so fearful is he of gain, ing the enmity of the inhabitants of the country. #' is a humiliating fact, that while the subjects of smal Italian States and Hanseatic towns enjoy security o; person and property, there is none whatever for thi; citizen of the United States; and if he remonstrte’ against injury and threatens to protest to -his govern: ment he is only replied to with the trite sneer ha the United States “never protects her citizen, abroad.” The least our government can do is to sen an envoy to this country to protect the few Ameri cans here and such as may wish to enter; for taei’ residence among this barbarous people at this tm. is extremely dangerous. 1 Two days since a letter was received from sa Jose, Costa Rica, that our s] envoy, Mr. Joves, had been ordered by President Mora to leave th; country, and that he accordingly departed (for wha point itis not stated) with a native guard. *h: motive for this measure is not known nor surmisd’ fwrtber than that Mr. Jones was suspected of ben, @ spy, and of having filibustering tendencies . will not vouch for the truth of the report; I will ml; say that it is quite probable that under the exaspera’ ed feelings which the Costa Ricans, in common vit! other Central Americans, feel towards us, na! have been led to commit this indiscretion. th. way, the alleged object of Mr. Jones’ mission—th’ investigation of the alleged murders committed o American citizens in Ni much mor easily and more speedily have been carried. on i Was! There are many persons now in th United states, and also here, who are perfectly a" nizant of all the facts relative to the massacre oft Americans in La Virgin in 1856, and also c) Lawless and the two preachers in Octdx they declared themsav ’ was well known) he; ' Nicaraguan Granada, may be attestei t: The country is in a terrible tarmoil about anol: invasion from Walker—when or from what poit preparato: the Legit publiciy known ia many witnesses. po pn to gi ‘oe syed are being 80 as ive veyed mn ts be is termed by his aduiring friends.» warnt ? such a terror to the sim have strangled him in t ' As said, extensive preparations are being nav for war. A decree has been published competi: ' all able-bodied persons between the age of fite and sixty to ready to take up arms in cae auotber invasion, so that if another filibustering e — \ands upon the soil it may be expected b arder fighting ‘han that which has memorised tl ; blood-stained streets of Rivas and Granada w occur. @ people, too,are united, and kaori ' that it will be astruggle for a national existax are determined and will doubtless act deaperte and fearless.y. Walker has yet a smail yin the county , his favor, bat most of the leaders are banishal . imprisoned, and the rest, consequently, are «¥ awed and kept in silence. The brave Gen. Pim who held out with Walker to the last, is now a soner, working on the roads in M oC Raymunda hay tion. I have no doubt that Walker, should be turn, would meet with aduerents in some of the » families of the country. " Among the ets who left to. for 8 York was the fer famed Col. Louis Schlessirg lished, and the le are regaining their industri habit Granada, lth Tall © vad meme | her and to assume A gt | deal of its old life and hi . If one year ire wi another revolution Granada wo bei nearly as 4 condition as she was bef Polltical Intelligenee, } Varmort Stare Orecuss —The following are the | OMoere for the coming year jaet ehosom by the leg tare of Vermont — pane ¥ Date, of Orateen, Reareiary of Gate, Fraatue 3. Camp, Sergean' Wm. ae: Se itiee Auditer of Acomae. Him danow, 8 of Mats Prieve tpector General ' ‘Goorge . Davis, of Cavendish, Quartermaster Gene Aloona G Allen, of Granville, Judge Advooste Geos Tao Stares Sevarom —The Ww pbis Appeal, of the 14th (natant, anys. ‘Wo learn that the democratic members of the Tee oe Legisiatore he'd a onucus on Fri was reaorred ‘This Ie the eat to which Gon. Pi! ow nepiree. Cactovo SeowTs rRom tr Dem—The talk in som the olf fogy Journals and the letters uf ol fogy politi About remunyitating the whig party, They will not oo Tus Dexoceact Rewowune The Potersbure ( Democrat, whew editor a looking towarda the ler) ' Of the United States House of Representatives, | Article om banking diMenitien, eays that “ihe om Will Rold the democratic party to a severe sodount, Tail to uRe the amoentaacy which \t possesses in onto rrison have commenced that fine | me measures of rotie’ amid dangers so (mminent Wastrous, And, onder existing laws, apparoaily so Csptain Hoyt, who was here last winter a4 agent | youiadis.©