The New York Herald Newspaper, February 18, 1859, Page 1

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WHOLE NO. 8202. MORNING EDITION—FRIDA PRICE TWO CENTS. PORT. ea Dark quiet: Philadelphia, Qe. 6d; Baltimore, 7s. 9d. a 86, , ANT NEWS FROM EUROPE. Chemeri and Montezuma. Also the screw liners Tu- the speech from, the Grown waited on bie | Fait Sig io " “a> “iat Ste THAT SPIRITUAL RAPE CASE. Ik reune, Duquesclen, Bresian, Imperial, ‘sit, Ulm | YY % : pee Resin heavy, abd all qualities slightly lower, owing to : end Wagram, with the steam corvette Gassendi. | spontancous act to prove more forcibly heavy arrivals: common, 68. 8d. a 68 6d. Spirits turpen- | pers gaveh W. Morrill vs. Ni re ‘Alwo the floating batteries Garonne, Mange, Forbin, | affection and devotedness, and to show jelson A. Humem tive dull at 398, Tea had advanced slightly: % Testamovy of Mre. Julia Thorn and Mrs. MEETING OF THE BRITISH LIAMENT, | anacongreve, “I do not speak,” says the Minister, in | tbat the rentiments ex: in the. otcrens Coagon, tp. 3M ET OF PARI . conclusion, ‘of the screw liners ‘Louis XIV., Tage, Da- iepromeed cn einenes ae Sd LONDON MARKETS—FEB. 4. Julia Gale, d&e., dic. Faz, reaes sem Bart, and Duquesme, nor the steam | bim, and seized the occasion to announceto Baring Brothers quote wheat firm. Sugar dull, and 6d, This curious case was brought up at the Jefferson Mar- is. lower. : Congou 1s, Tron dull: rails, Sita. bore, £hme. ba Cotte shanty,” Rice frm. Spirits | Ket Police Court, before Justice Quackenbush, at 10 . 5 ‘ust daughter the EEFECT OF THE QUEEN'S SPEECH. | tyopurcs thers puis and engines” * "|" | Guide wits se Impotal Prisco Napoleon, cousin 10 the AL ov vue Pane auseer, |e O'clock yesterday. The court room was filed by no- A field train of forty-five howitzers two si Em of the French, fanny ly ABBIV: INCE HAVRE MARKET. torious spiritualists and others interested in the od tha aak potas Sad "ans ietaeane taaaee ot woes for | telte’ the news’ Wo the ‘karwlotgs, of ihe Cham " ‘The cotton market was atvancing at Havre; New Orleans at Lote domed Fall in the Funds in London and | Toulon, ana ia thal city cight baking establiahments are | ber.” From this event, which was extromely wes ordinaire 99 fr. Sales of the week 9,000’ bales; stock | *# #t wasuncomfortably exposed, many of them withdrew at work day and night in the manufacture of biscuits. dear to bis heart, bis Majesty then drew ip port 187,000 bates. before the testimony closed. Paris. Th the meantime to prove the good understanding of | omens for the future of our counury. me , | ONE WEEK LATER INTELLIGENCE. co SE, pi a a RI war the lish and French Cabinets, it is ostentatiousty | that as the year bad began so favorably he had confidence BY TELRGKAPH TO GALWAY, 1 oat Mo. 45 Robi p) (gan thewil os bast arts stated that at ten o'clock on Tuesday morning hie Majesty that it would algo bave ‘and favorable termination, Livenroot, Feb, 5—Noon. resid insom strect; Threatened War Between England | left the Tuileries for 8t. Cloud, on & shooting excursion, | declaring that he reckoned firmly on the frank assistance | The screw steamship Prince Albert, Capt. Waters, from The cotton market is duil, and prices are weak: sales | Leonard Thorn; recollect circles were formed in my aten a sccompaniod by Land, Comey, Couns Waleweki, be. It | and support of the Pashamaees ant Capron emer Galway on the evening of the 5th inst., has arrived at St- | today Saioniad 5,000 nates, house in 1857, as stated by my husband; Mr. and Mrs. Xie: turns out, however, wiley contriv excuse | over apy ies arise. I conce! shoul Breads! wiet, but firm. » « and Mexico. MMmeett. » y be making myself the Interpreter of the ideas of the | Jobns, N. F. frovilless ope teak. "Lard tenet its, i bek. Morrill were in these circles; I can’t tell when the first From Turin wo hear that a grand banquet has taken | Chamber by assuring the King that the aid of our devoted- ALIAN QUES TION place, at which were present bog ee aes he ng ness eonle never be Moana are by at one time : + | elect, the Princess Clotilde, the Prince ignan, expressing the conviction iament bappi THE ITAL diplomatic body, the Presidents of the two Chambers, the | event he was pleased to communicate to us, would be wel. Ministers, the Knights of tho Annunciada, Gen. Neil, | comed with joy and gratitude by the entire country and other persons of the imperial ute, and feveral high | with joy, because whilst one of the most ancient and Gignitaries; that in the evening all went @ theatre, | most illu 18 dynasties rope was being allied SEVERE PASSAGE OF THE PACIFIC TO GALWAY, where every one was blazing in dlamonds and the richest | the dynasty of the greatest captain of our era, the bonds toilets to receive them; that the King occupied the centre | of alliance and amity that already unite us to the power- of the box, having on Bis right, tho Princess Clotilde, and | ful and vallant reach nation would receive thereby The Neapolitan Exiles to the | on bisictt ine Princess Maria Pia, her sister, aged about | further coveolication; with gratitude, because the United States. twelve. On the right of the Princess Clotilde sat Prince | proved how well the King knew how to conciliate his do- mate es. Napoleon and the Prince of Piedmont, the King’s eldest | mestic affections with the interests of the State, at tho : con, dressed in a captain’s uniform; and that on the left of | eame time it evidenced that bis Majesty had the welfare ‘Theadvices by this arrtval are from Liverpool and Lon. circle was formed; it was some little time after Mr. and don to the evening of te 4th by mail, and to the 6th inst. | The Italian Extiey Ba Route to the United | x15, Morrill came to our house; theee circles were gotten by telegraph, and are consequently fully one week later. [From the Loadon ‘mes, Jan. 22] up for the amusement of the parties who sat in.them; Parliament was opened on the Sd inst. The Queen’s : Before Jog the unfortanate ereons abo have been 80 Mre. Jarvis, Mrs. Kenny, Mr, Barrister, Mr. Morrill and speech was very non-committal. Though silent on the | long confines fe prigous of the King of Napies will be | family sat at the first circle; Mr. Hume was not at it; I war question, it caused a declive in the funds, both at Lon- | Catt S860" Oran ee oe a ceptionns wit | 0’ recollect that Mr, Hume sat at more than don and Paris. The speech threatens the use of force | prove to the world that on the other side of the Atlantic | ome circle; I don’t recollect at whose solici- against Mexico. the detestation of tyranoy is notau empty word. These | tation be sat at ft; Mrs. Morrill never asked Warlike rumors continued, but they are contradictory. | Senuemeh aro ttue voume, of posit aera, thay me to tolicit Mr. Hume to it at these circles; never saw In the Liverpool cotton market prices had advanced | not intriguers; they are not impostors, They are | Mrs. Morrill entranced at any of the circles; Mr. Huma 1-16d. a 344., the market closing steady at the advance. not even amenable to the charge of having | was not a profcesed believer in spiritualism; don’t re- the Princces Maria Pia were seated the Duke of Aosta, | of the land at heart in his every act, and was cpmpletely stirred up resistance against overwhelming force when | wo ber that I sat at th ircle 3 Military and eparations | the King’s other son, and the Prince of Carignan. We | preoccupied with the future of the country. Breadstuffs were quiet, but firm. resistance was hopeless, and revolutionary movements an . e same circle Mr. Hame aid; I ae of P acs re hear, also, that the Princess Clotilde looked exceedingly x ‘These words of the Presiaent were pa ived with tho ‘The market for provisions was also firm. error, Their tanta are pure of blood, their reputation | know Mrs. Gale; I brought her up; she dia not ait at tho brilliant and in high spirits, and conversed frequently | warmest applause from all sides of the Chamber and from with Prince Napoleon, whose great resemblance to the | the public benches. Emperor Napoleon struck every one. The marriage seems mone: Consol unsullied by apy taint of venality. No scandal atsaches | Circle that Mr. Hume did; never saw Mrs, Gale git at any ‘The money ers raps send st is for | heir pagacs-Awere are no uncxpluined charges aifect. | circle at which Mrs. Morrill eat; cannot call mmyealt & 9p\- money were quoted 9474, and for account 95, ing their past conduct when the liberal cause was for tue | ritualist; I never declared, ia the presence of Mrs. Mor- r REPLY OF SARDINIA TO FRENCH MONITEUR. tively Oxed for Sunday next, the 30th, and it is said The screw steamship North American, from Portland‘ \t t in Southern Italy. Their suf- | rill that was not a spiritualiss, that { rememper of; I do GTATY! OF THA MARESTS, | the newly married couple will leave the same ‘oven- Paar ep each ag ghee oo fey wh Rmacetl-acig ae was 8d inet. ferings pobre y Teg = they have been un- | Lot remember who the parties were at tne circle the uight &e., &., &. ing for Genoa, whore # grand ball is to be given them the aaa Heit’ the Bolla stone Convene bile echoing merited, Not for & month only, or a year, but for | Hume sat, except Mr. and Mrs. Morrill aud their dangh- following evening, at which the King and the Prince of | }res\c8 liself In the following forma, which, while echol The steamship City of Manchester left Liverpool for | ten jong years, they hayo been condemned vy the | ter; Mrs. Morrill was more intimate with sr. Hume than Lemupreniee Carignan will be préeent. The Marquis de Villarparina er been eacripced e potas peste srsoume the | New York on the 2d inst. cruelty ‘of an ‘unfeeling and absoiato sovereign to | with any ee L gpm there; £ coco spoke to » her re Rocca » . regard to it; Mra. ‘once THE MALLS OP THE AMERICA AND LEBANON. | {Spun Wut Ss ose witscorpeny te Feo | rida hymns wien guprton ce aed | Tear hr sor vre ow Secs th cry ait aa wie | ESR acs tensa at at sno a SE shacms suey The ladles who constitute the fem'nine entourage ot | St denied Uy the French ofa organo lance ‘The mails of tbo america reached this city from Boston | the Coarto: the Tuileries are not without a certain deyroe | Tarriage, The latter strengtens the bonds of amity be- ‘ie of anxiety as to the positions they will be permitted to Nee ‘tno aceuieee sad boo the oa Jast evening. Those by the Lebanon, of the same date, | hoid in the estimation of the imperial bride, herself the be shell oe perteatly suitiog Tbe iniatante of Fekahe end at this port, were received several hours earlier. daughter of a hunared kings. It is well known that Priace Piedmont. If Frange is to intervene for the independence Onr files are dated in Paris on the 28th, andin London | Nepoleon is as thorough an aristocrat as ever don. | or ihe Italian peninsula, it is because her interests induce Warlike preparations are going forward actively in | which that sovereign himeclf bad adopted,and to which he | rested all night in consequence, and 1 then said to her that France, but the ministerial journals are recommended to | had lent the sanction of his own royal name. True, he | I would not have anything to co with Hume if it displeased keep silent on the subject. was insincere; true, be Bed but put on the mask of uberty, ay ee this Ci peed bed Peg ns Bee & four 18 protestations in soar jude afte . Mor came re; remem! day The latest letters speak of the war symptoms being do- | fin Drianavuns i Tess were Dot snares i wit thera, | Mr. Hume left our house to go home; ibiuk thore had beer cidedly on the increase. when, in truth, he was but gaining time that he might | 20 circle formed within three weeks previous to Mr. Hume ned the purple, and that in his heart he piques himsolf . tthe | destroy them tor having believed in his word. The words | leaving; I thiok Mr. and Mrs. Morrill occupied the’ parlor on the 20th of Jaauary. more on the iueage he inherits from thé house of War- | Bef t©, do #0, independentiy of the family alliance just | Great anxiety was felt for the Emperor's speech # of freedom ‘were on his lips, but the deapov’s | dedroom something likes week before Mr. Hume left; ‘The telegraphic summary of the news which appeared | temburg than from that of Bouaparte. It is, in fact, on ca POvoees m opening of the Logisiature on the 7th. Itwasrumored | code was all the while fast ‘engrained in hia | either my husband or Iam usualiy up untit the house is im the Hexau last Tuestay morning, after the arrival of | thi8 ground alone that he is at ail noceptablo to many of |, |, THE POLULAR TAPRSASION IN RUSSIA ult, | wathe is preparing © surprise for the wold, and that | wind. In a few short months that deceptive | closed; my husband and I usually rete at the same ume; day , the nobie famiites of the kingdom of Savoy. If it be tru a rom St. Petersburg of the 18th ult, | yar is certain, dream of liberty which bad just hovered over | I saw nochange in tbe conduct of Mrs, Morrill towarda the America at Halifax, embraced the main points of the | that the illustrious Carignan—the proudest family in Eu- pa dpote p pra) spb do not ee in war, and | ‘the Minister of the Colonics had decided that the immi- | the sbores of Southern Italy was at an end. Toe | Hume upto the time Hume went away; have heard Mr. news. rope—has already imbibed a contempt for the characters | Ou” Journals express the samo opinion. The goverament | gration of Africans shall be superseded by Chinese. hour (or and awful retribution had arrived, ant the | Morrill speak of the intimacy between his wife and Mr. . | of the parvenuee who surround the Emperor's Court, and | iso appears-to entertain a like conviction, inasmuch a8 | “there were rumors in England of extensive warlike | wretched accomplices of the King were left to feel tae | Hume before they left—that Hume ucted more than he Our extracts, pnblisbed this morning, will be found inte fe the garrie the 4 south p r +P : tbat already, young as she is, ehe ia learned ia the an- | f0F many years the garrisons of the west and southwest | Drenerations, including three thousand men for the navy. | vengcance of their chict. spoke in the matter; Iheard Mr. Morrili speak of that in- Feating, when read in connection with the oumpilation | cient lore ‘of — heraldry, miegivings which | “istricts have not been so weak as they are now, and as | Propern ont oc nine Coes oreo nd the King of Sar- | “Sony pears bave now elapsed since Mr. Gladstone first | timacy after Mr. fume went home; have heard him spealc from the files of the Indian, given in tho Heratp yesterday | are enid to prevail among some of the “ strange women” of | DUmerous eminent generals have obtained leave of ab- (Taoreday) morning. "i the Imperial curt may not be altogether fureasonable, gondola My a i when the uncertain character of Prince Napoleon ‘on | LORD PALMERSTON’S OPINION OF ENGLAND'S COURSE The return of ihe Bank of England for the week ending | jn1o copsideration. ve feb SN an ‘Wednesday, 26th ult,, shows the following changes, com- cae riage, peg ina less be giepiee ne ns pila the London Fos, Jan. eg voted ed with that for the week preceding:— en produces a striking change. mpossil fortunately Parliament mects in a weel en days Saal in pro ite : id £270,306 | tbe change, if it take place, inay be s beneficial one to the | hence we hall elicit the sentiments, and know somethin dinia’s dav, a at oh celebrated at fol = fl drew attention tothe hegre! Bs gerund io gg eed found r . eee last spring; don’t recoliect the words; he spuke (? 80th, bridal party started forthwit . | the unfortunate Poerio an is compan! mm ithat a ¢ funiy’ deters say that alee looked slightly more | time to the present the knowledge that such an iniquity [A digcussion here arose among the counsel upon the ifc there. ‘was in course of perpetration has been felt by the civilized | adwlesibility of the substance of Mr. Mornili’s remarks ‘The Austrian six million loan had boen introduced in | world asa reproach to humanity. Men have often won: When bis exact words could not be recollected. Ou con- London. It was five per cent interest. It was quoted at | dered why Europe did not interfere by the strofig arm | sulting ‘‘Baker’s Treatise,” the Court decided to exclude a discount for some time, but suddenly improved, and | and free these victims from the grasp of their former the evidence as to the substance of those conversations } closed at a smali premium. accomplice. The maxims of state policy prevailed. ‘Witness cootinuing—But two or three circies were held * cbaracter of Prince Napoleon. In point of morality, a ion of the ment in ion to forei f- Jacrease in poblic deposits, + 258,784 | more unfit personage 1a have the Fempousiblitiy ot a ne “it high tine, for the Cabinet ts betraying be ie No matter how evil the King, no matter how inno- | While Mrs. Morril! was at our house. Tnensese in saber erst aed fetid young and beautiful princess cannot be imagined; | terests and endangering the peace of this country bi GREAT BRITAIN. cent the subjects whom he was tormenting, it was The witness was 20k orosa-examiaod. : Dokceane in pellion, geass ? but, iexperienced as she is, she may have the art to de- | pledging our support to Austria, breaking off the Frenc! Queen Victoria opened Parliament in person on the 8d, | Slt that a direct und forcible intervention on taeir behalf TESTIMONY OF MRS. JULIA GALB. . 8,415 | velope noble qualities which hitherto his Highness has | alliance, and even menacing our neighbor with the hosti- : 5,339 | indusiriourly concealed. is lity of England. f Fi rs e thor 4 General Zapatero has been turned adrift by the Queen ¢ position of matters is very simple. There is agreat + 19,177,854 | of Spain, in consequence of his attentions tothe Count de } ferment in Italy, especially in Lombardy and Venice. Sar- + 21,678,155 | Paris onthe occasion of his royal Highness’ recent visit to | dinia is eager to aid the oppressed in another fight for to call for special | Seville—anotber instance of the astute manner in which | freedom. Ifthe attempt be made everything will depend could not be recognized by the law of nations. A half. | Ihave heard the evidence of Mrs. Thorn; Iam the per« ‘The speech commenced with congratulations on the | meagure was adopted teetead. The two greatest Powers | 800 she referred to as Mrs. Gale; I boarded with Mra. state of the country, and on the progress made in India. | of Europe resolved, that althougn they could not ai- | Thorn, in Robinson street, in the months of May and June, oa kecan cline a rectly intervene in behalf of the captives, at least | 1857; {au not now, nor was I then, n professed spiritualist; foreign affai ys: they would not hold any further diplomatic inter- | 1 did cot sit at any circles formed thgre; I have not sat ia T receive from all foreign Powers assurances of friendly | course with a sovereign whose acts wore a scandal | @ circle for live years; I know of circes haying becm Increase in rest. Circulation, ineluding bank post ‘This comparigon p-exents few featare! our Emperor bere mannges matters. i inaction of t Powers. Now, it | feelings. To cultivate conform these feelings, to maintain | to humanity, and calculated to endanger the tran- | formed there during that time; I was in the room at tha notion. The private deposits Show an tnoreage, and the } "lis presumed that Prince Napoleon intends thas his were von dd Meer ek ae Posner Bie leon ig | inviolate the faith of our public ireatine sane noutribss $0) quillity of Enrope. Like most half- measures, this oue was | time two circles sat; did not see tem formed; ouly re- bank has slightly eolarged its securities. There isan in- | youchful bride eball make ber appearance in public drawn | heartily tired of his position in Italy and of his co-o} os far a8 my iufluence can extend, the preservation Hot productive of much reeult, although there can be | coilect of two circles being formed there; saw srs. considerable-reduction in the bullion, but the reserve has | by steeds whose milk white hue is emblematic of the pu- | with the tyranny of Austria, but he cannot withdraw iis een augmented in proportion to the decrease in the cir- | Tity with which she came to his arms. For several days | troops from Rome without their being instantly replaced enue, ast his carriages have been scen proceeding from the | by Austrians. He is therefore in this dilemma—either the 3 is Royal drawn by superb chargers, white as | French may remain where they are, and thus combine Her Majesty's screw steamer Curacoa, thirty-one guns, | tbe driven snow, and attention hes been more | with the Austrians in upholding every abominable misrule Capt. Thomss H. Mason, had left her basin at Portsmouth, | ¢*Pecially drawn to the fact, inasmuch as King | at the point of the bayonet, or they may retire and aban- See Mil a having bon iy Pl im, | Jeteme, his father, delighteth in a species of Hano- | don the whole of the Peninsula to the « Tedesco.” er interior 188 having been completed for the accom: | verjan steed whose color is jet black. It is said that | But, while puzzled with this difficulty, the phantom of modation of Lord Lyons and suite, her destination being | Emile de Girardin—the liberal par ezcellence—is to be the | revolution arises and projects its leng shadow across the general peace, are the objects of my unceasing solicitude. | jttJe doubt that the position of isolation in which he | Till at one of them as I passed through the room; ramem- ‘The conclusion of the treaties in: regard te the Princi- | found himself has gove far to cloud the couciuding | ber of secing Hume at one of those circles, but don’t, re- palitles, and one of commerce with Russia, are noticed, | Years of King Ferdinand’s reign. In his palace by tne coliect whether it was the one at which Mrs. Morrill sat a 2 ? | shores of that beautiful bay where mere existence ought | OF not; think it was two or three weeks from the tme of and, the latter is referred to as an indication of the com- | to be a boon, or in the solitudes of Caserta, this man’s | the last circle that Mr. Huma woas nome; Mrs. Morrill plete re-establishment of friendship between tho two | life for many years past hag been, in ite apprehensivos, | and her little girl, who was then sick, gecupied the parlor countries. but the reproduction of the last act in the life of that oi bedroom avout a week before Mr. Hunfe left and at tha 4 Roman tyrant who built bis last refuge go high on Capri | time be left; there were no circles formed there after the The treaties with China and Japan are mentioned a8 | ihathe might be beyond the vengeance of the worid, | little ar! ws sick; cannot say how long it was after the - Prince’s Grand Chamberlain. jlains of Northern Italy. oy nisin, PRA SIE POE ‘The fears of King Ferdinand have been no secret to m=a- | little girl was taken sick before Mr. and Mrs. Morrill o¢cu- Mow York.and ‘Washington, Her day-of ‘sailing ta.not | PTNS cetain gumbo Of political altura throws. cioud.o | bates Saucy ans’ nel ame! ame Resear eee tone aotge — tne atesation by France ot | kind. When wandering amoog “his cheewalt. woods | Pied the parior bedroom; the relations between Mrs Mor mentioned. dulnees over all things. Commerce feels it severely. french ‘sympathies, and ibly French arms, to back Satiafact expressed Spee, PY wreatned himseif the aif of Moatesarchio, | rill and Mr. Hume were very friendly up to the time he A letter from Galway, dated on the 23d ult. says:— ‘The galeties peculiar to the season are shorn of half their | Sardinia and to free Italy from foreign dominion? negro immigration on the East coast of Africa, and the? chains were not upon his limbe, but upon | left ee ee inumate than a married woman ‘The royal Atlantic mail steamship Pacific, Captain | proportions; and though the Court, by its constant visits | ‘The course of the liberal party in England admits of no | the pending negotiations give promise of = +~st abandon- bis heart. Why should he have freed these men at = tt ve been toa man other than her huusbaud; Nicholson, arrived here about noon to-day, bringing 110 | 0 the theatres, its punctual appearance abroad, its balls, | doubt. Every liberal and right minded man must wish | ment of the system. last? Was itthathe himeelf might breathe freely and heard Mra, Thorn speak to Mrs. Morrill about her too pasae ers, of whom fifty are cabio passengers, ‘and the | /fétes, dinners and receptions, does its utmost, an invisi- | the Austrians out of Italy; but they cannot be driven out In respect to Mexico the speech says, the state of the | stillthe mutterings of his own conscience? Was it that | gieat intimacy with Hume; Mrs. Toorn told Mrs. Mor- Ploniet mails from St. Johus, Newfoundiand, which | ble spell bangs over all, and Faris is decidedly not itself. | without a severe and desperate struggle, and it may not | Republic of Mexico, distracted by clvil wars, has induced | the signs of the time denoted that the hour of retribation | Till that she ought to have nothiog to do with Mr. Sereeumniaed bs B00 tge cack, fie ott New York o8 pact To'cosy to limit the range of war when the flame is-ouce | te to carry my fewostanoe to tho utmost Limit in | might xot be so far distant, and that it was well, while it | Hume; the expression that called’ out this remaric the 9th inst., and St. Johns yesterday week, making the ‘The Italian Question. lit up in any partof Europe. The liberal party, regard to tue wrongs and ep me to which | was yet time, to get rid of one countof the indictment | Was Mrs. rill’s complaining that she had voyage from’ thence to Galway in seven days and twenty ‘Paris (Jan. 26) correspondence of London Times.) however giad to see Italy freed from foreigh ‘occupation | British residents have been subjected at the | wi might sborlly be preferred? It ia not our intenuon | Ot rested al! night, because Mr. Morrill had been scolding ours, in the most fearful weather ever experienced in aie wapiSor nbeorving tnverest i» sul ponds Or war, and or dominion, should not, and we are confident would not, | hands of the two contending parties. so oes at to discuss that matter here. We write witn another | her because of her intimacy with Mr. Hume; this conver- crossing ‘the Atlantie. On Wednesday Inst the hurricane | matters are come to that pass that it is difficulttosay apy- | undertake the responsibility of advising or recommending | length been carried to such an extent that [ have been | object. We would recommend those victims of » most | sation was about three weeks before Hume went home; ‘was so terrible that no one on board cror wrpoctad tamce jpg certain one way or ihe other, There are, ag always | & war for the accomplishment of such a result. compelled to give instructions to the commander of the | cruel oppression to the kindly sympathies of the New | Mrs. Morrill said that he (Mr. Morrill) was v foolish, Jand, and tha ship euffered terribly. Everything, from $abE. te in pooh chr cuvsstances, persons who. Boo nothing ‘The tice lime fer Kigmnd to take im tho cuutcst is toro | ravat forces in those seas to demand, apd, \f meceasary,to 7 World. They may venture there to take our word | to bave any fears about ber intimacy with Mr. Hame, or the paddle boxes to the figure head, wascarried away— | but war; others who cannot precisely affirm that peace | main neutral, and to watch events; to collect her reparation. for i that “these poor men are no charlatans. | aby othor man who so frequently spoke of the quall- Dulwarke, stanchions, caboose, deck house, ice house, | will be maintained, but who think that the probabilities | etrength, and be ready to use her influence with effuct if a | Increased expenditure on the navy is asked, on account | Had matters turned out s0 that they had beon | tes of his own wife; I never beard auy from deck saloon, &0. ‘The tremendous seas swept clear over | are quite as great on one side ag on the other. Among the | proper opportunity should arise for it, of the universal introduction of steam power into naval | liberated on English soil, here they would have | Mr. Morrill that Mr. Hume eee much ‘the deck, and carried away all before them. Tho m- | latter, as among the former, are men whose judgmeut and ' been a all that @ gencrous sympathy | attention to Mrs. Morrill as usual; Mr. Hume never pro- ter’s mate yas swept off and never seen after, and three | whose position decidedly entitle them to respect. “Who | The Military and Naval Preparations or The rest of the specch is devoted to local matters, and | could have accom: ed to alleviate the rigor of their | feased to be a spiritualist. of the hands wero very badly wounded, having been | shall decide when doctors disagree?” I believe tha . pain. amongst the measures —— are Parliamentary re- | destiny aoa omaly and cheerfully bave been done. Cross.examined—I don’t know what a spiritualist is. Garhed against the side of the ship by a heavy sea. | a pacific influence would be as advantageously exercised | [Trangpted from Le Pays, Paris, Jan. 25, for the New forms and a new bankruptcy Ww. Eagssod, however, 10 too close to Ttaly. An ovation in ‘The defence here rested. Ainge the cain Pamengeretirty threw of whom cam: | at Vienna and Turin as at Paris. In Lombardy, ac ‘York Hxratp.] Addresses in response to the speech were agreed to in | London to his prisoners would not bave been acceptable The beget counsel then recalled Mr. Thorn, and en beard at St, Jobns—are the t Rev. Dr. Field, | cording to trustworthy information, Austria is all bu: | Our private corres frou Madrid furnishes us | both bouses. to their late ‘at Naples. He will only consider him. | asked him what a spiritualist was? He replied, “A Protestant ens Rg Right Hon. Chi f Justice Brady; | impregnable. She has been fortifying herself in hor | some interesting pike 4 upon the Spanish budgets of war Earl Melville in the House of Lords, and Lord Palmers- | self secure when the waters of the Atlantic roll between | &piritualist is one who lives forever.” ‘the Hon. James Tobin, Financial Secretary; andthe Hon. | position there for the last eight or nine years, and | and of marine. According to a- royal decree issued, in ton in the House of Commons complained of the silence in | him and the men whom he bas unrighteously detained in ‘iaintif”s counsel also recalied Mrs. Thorn, and asked her C. F, Bennett. preparing for the events which some think imminent, and | comformity with the vote of the two Chambers, the effeo- — to the state of the Italian question and | such protracted agony, and whom he has now cast out same question, to which she replied, “A spiritualist is others postponed. It is undeniable that Austria baso! | tive force of the Spanish army for 1859 will be 84,000 matters of ‘pest aadther beataphirs, shattered ta mind and body, | one who believes in communicating with departed Our Paris Correspondence. late shown an inclination, as in the caseofServia, tomake | men. This figure is rather less than that of the Lord Derby and Mr Disraeli expressed their confidence | penniless and miserable—noble wrecks of humanity, not | spirite.’ Panis, Jan. 27, 1859. ght of the obligations which she accepted in the Paris | year, which amounted to 88,000 men; but s& i | 1m the maintenance of peace. ‘The case was then adjourned till ten o’elock to-day. men. Warlike rumors were still in circulation, but nothing We do not su that in such a case the government | Plaintiff's counsel expects to examine Mr. Fox to-day, and decisive was known, ‘at Washington wii) for a moment question the right which | then the case will be closed. the King of Naples tacitly claims to deport bus political . Congress: on that point it is difficult to defend her con- government of the What ts Thought in Paris of an Ralian War—Significant | Suet: and it she relice so much on her strength as to be- gh Wived at, and this circumstance is due to Signs Everywhere—Internal Bubbling of the Volcano— | tieve that she can safely disregard her own engagements, | present political events, and om the state of the rations of France—The Marriage of Pi the same indifference and the same abuse of force may be jastion of Cuba and the affairs 4 Mexico. wh FRANCE. prisoners to its shores, and castthem there by the han- A Great Scene in the Office. ‘Novel Prepar ide od Y Prinze | pprehended with respect to Pledmont, If Austria be | “the gocerument hopes coat from the present tranquillity | . France continued her warlike preparations. dec, as though the United States of the North American | re “Case on gem ones pdt eer oad b: Napoleon to the Princess Clotilde, de. sincerely desirous to maintain peace, she would do no- | which tho country enjoys, and the early arrangement of | _ Jt was rumored that the Duke de Malakoff would soon | Union were his penal getslements. The citizens of that ‘Ve L Our Bouree here, which, like a sensitive plant, responds | thing to disturb it either in Seryia or in Piedmont. sever! ve questions now pending, the normal figure of | Teturn to Paris, and be succeeded in London by the Duke | great confederation will, we are confident, rejoice #0 hear- — AULTER. to the lightest touch, madea rally yesterday, in conse- The Sapna rare at Vienna is perbapa equally ne- | the Spanish army can be fixed before long at 5000 men. bags oreg ee cathe a Bia) tly sawy ena tes herk ge Faas Goran < ee Recorder Barnard’s private chambers were the scene of cer I mosit bride arrived process: | quonce of a roport that the Austrian government had 7 at Turin. | With the deep animosity, that existe | This tgure=-atill higher than that of the army in 1760,after | Fo Oe) 2D guotuated considerably, and declined nearly | bot be too closely scanned. After ten years of chains and | °ztracréirary excitement yesterday morning, when 3. T. on, eithér side, Austria perbaps would not be # to | the war of the Austrian succersion, under Ferdinand VI consented to the overtures raid to have been made for the | geo Sardinia ccivmit an. (udiscretion that could hardly | und in 1833, at the time of the death of Ferdinand VIl., appointment of @ conference to examine into and arrange | be pameet over: apa Gerdiie; if she were Feary rag = en ree ae ee ae be suill- + of France under any circumstances, wou! - | cient for @ requirements and every even- existing differences. It is certain, also, that a dogged be- | P00 meet her more than half way, and even thrown | {ualiiy, so, much the more as independent of Nef pervades the majority of all clarses that no war can | down the gauntict at once. Whether Sardinia has beea | of her regular standing army Spain still possesses spe- possibly come of it, Ack the well read man of the world, | from the beginning nothing more than the tool of France, } cial troops perfectly organized in the colonies of Cuba = “a the man about the court, the di. | 2°UK for her own private interests, I do not affirm; but l | und the Pbill:pines. commercial man, ? believe that the more prominent attitude assumed by this ‘The Spanish army, renowned in all ages for its merits ope cent after the Queen’s specch. The three por | misery, the King of Naples has now, by au act as | Jomes, who isnow under arrest, charged with obtaining cat closed on the 3d inst, at 67f. H swears 5c. 7. despots ag any part of his furmer proceedings, banished | $1,600, by false pretences, from Warren Leland, one of them from their pative land. We cannot, however, pre- | the proprietors of the Metropolitan Hotel, was brought up SARDINIA. tend to depiore this part bhi tecagsop We cannot ¢ of bal A civil suit Tho Sardinian government had decided upon a loan. doubt as to the reception whion these unfortunate persons | °° ® ibeas corpus. It was instituted in Tt was reported that the King of Sardinia was about will meet with in the United States. Europe has too often | the Supreme Court for the recovery of the above amount. to seen with a sorrowful smile men, whom woe knew to be marry Lge of = Wc of Russia, the widow of very undeserving of such of, ‘e i: North Judge Ingraham granted an order for the arrest of Jones, jomat, the proprietor, the small dealer, you receive but : towards a policy of action, American States with honors which should have beea re- | Which was given to a deputy sheriff for execution. aa poe ae 7 ‘Matas war Gk ealbiing, wrencl hare ean eaten canner WIEN Whe: reoolgh Of atoms | ancte ta tae polnt'ot wiee OF He orgentention and taaseral: PARAGUAY ts RIS served for patriots of a purer fame. Such triumphs are of | The room was densely crowded by officers ana citizens si from the King of Sardinia to the Emperor Napoleon de- | As in France, there has been created battalions of chas. course transitory, but they are triumphs while they last. We | interested in the case. The Recorder commeaced tha ‘Would not stand it, and it would prove the Emperor’s | cisring that Austria-had resolved on attarking Piedmont, | seurs @ pied, and with them the usage of the best arms rain.” Ee fe! sly pepe gg oR fact of howd i) bas been introduced, The yiragn department Tonly wish that, : participate in this } letter having becn received is. jeve, Certain, but bas been formed, and operates ia the most regular man- ie lente Durcnesid i wt sit baracter, | ‘ue demand contained im it, as to whether, under such | ner, ‘The artiliery has ikewiee been the object of impor- ocean Aerial meyer pear + | circumstances, Piedmont could count on the aid of France, | tant improvements. Among the inglitutions that have also in spite of myself, stand in my way. I recall to mind the ey abel I = fa FS ge that z aye we in | been re-organized, Rnd will mention the school of ‘§ memorable letter to Eagar Ney; the | the aflirmative. The question is, were the plans of Aus- } artillery of Segovia, which raises excellent ; the ar wor ai ‘e i fathae ed adit eal trin faithfully described, and bad Sardinia good reason to | tllery ‘school of Barcelonia, consecrated to tho spectal publication singe i | believe that no fault of hers provoked them? Or, again, | instruction of sub-officers, and the royal staif- school, des- The Brazilian mails had arrived at Lisbon, bringing the | would not, however, say a word now which by any amount news that the Brazilian government had olfered its me. | of Ingenuhy could be misconstrued, for our objest to | Proceedings by reading the complaint upon which he is- diation with Pa 3 the American commander had | ask in all earnestness @ hearty welcome on the other side | sued a warrant for the arrest of the accused, after which accepted the offer, and that the Brazilian admiral had | of the Atlantic to these unfortunate vict'ms of King Ferdi- | he asked the counsel for the defendant if he wished an ex- gone to Paraguay on the mission, pand’s tyranny. Europe will judge by the manner in ieatienl, | Atti alain tee tt oe wits te janine Which they are treated of the real amount of aympshy | ‘enn counsel anid he would plead n0% culty, Dut waa DOG Pyich exets in the States for the true patriots of the | ready to proceed with the investigatioa at that time. AUSTRALIA. featern World. Poor men, we should imagine, | Ty,’ Whiting produced a requisition {rom Governor Mor- ‘Tho Melbourne mails of the 18th of December had | bave but little about them save their wrongs and the re- , , dated Feb, 2, upon which he asked his Honor tocom- the acrimonious tone, 80 long persisted in, of the semi- | was the demand thus conveyed but the consequence of a | tined to © staff officers and ical and . | reached England, and gold valued at $568,000 was on its | collection of the cause in which those wrongs were op gan, cia jure tori the Catan of Vian; heb. | erin sergaanng etree two soreeemne + | Guha ebony fog mibargaceat came i | way oe APE sere recommen ha nny enc, | PEE a ho appeared for oe nat, ad resembles our sence of M. Hubner, the Austrian Envoy, from the pre- Whether «formal treaty of defensive and offensive al- bhi inapertams dave pn mun Lanne: knws. any way to dazzlo the eyes or tickle the oars of the | had procured a warrant for the arrest of Joues on a civil ‘oundlings. They are bat men who have suffered ten | Process, which was in the bands of a deputy sheriff, who Loxvow, Feb. 5, 1850. | Fears of ‘dire agony in the cause of freedom; that is all, be Sag ame mony to take him in charge. ‘There was a debate in the Commons last night on the | but we hope that ail will suffice. = made out wien nnge hark encouragement of the cultivation of cotton in India, An American Captain and Crew tn a Row at | Tombs. ‘The political disquietude is decreasing. Havre. The Bombay mail of Jan. 11 has been telegraphed. According tothe Havre papers, it would seem that ment made out on the requisition of the supreme authority nent court festivities; the New Year's day speech to that | jiance exista between Fr: and Piedmont I cannot say. | two distinct parties—the one in which elementary inatrus- diplomatist; the King of Piedmont’s spoech; the matri- | The ambiguous langua the Moniteur, denying only the | tionis imparted, and the other consecrated to superior ial all with Sardinia; and Isee with open eyes allegation of its being price paid for the matrimonial | instruction. moni ance id contract, but passing over the main point, would lead one ‘The: ish fleet, according to the instructions of the Min- the vast preparations of a military character which France | to suppose that it docs. ‘This, however, {do not take to | ister of ‘approved by the Chambers and decreed by is silently but strenuously making. be a point of great {mportance, The result would be | the Queen, will be composed during the year 1859 of seven- Any of see-saw is kept up, with an evident pur- much the same with or without that instrument, ty vessels armed for the military service of the country and ! 5 hostilities break out. Such treaties, as they are’ usuall tery’ stations. es seventy vessels Captain Stil ofthe American ship Johannisberg, and | °f the State; but the Recorder refused to comply with the pose, as if the court party were one day with the hare and | understood, do not, { believe, bind ‘one Power to accept | thirty-three are paddle and imelvoare screw Fioamers, | Various British suocesses are reported, including the do- | crow, have been showing the Havre folks ttle life. roe bak ge ng ba gh ag the other with the hounds, Now, it is suggested | the quarrel of its ally without any regard whatever ‘Among the latter are fr! ‘and sloops.of-war of a very | fat of Tantia Topee’s forces. isberg was about leaving the port, when . Well, , you got Jobanni Pants, Feb. 4—Evening. | someof the sailors, fasRed with wine, got into a row, Mag frm tet ho een flies aired ‘The Bourse is muoh depressed. The three per cents | Which subsequently drew im to it the Captain. One of the Ofieer have declined to 66f. 85c. a 66f. sailors threstened to strike him with a bar of iron, on The Prince Albert had a boisterous passage, and is | ing on the deck. A French surgeon got on board, and at lightly damaged. She hasnearly a full complement of | there . steamer oro ae | cans CN SL alt °c, 6 ee ae eee one on nem the cause of that quarrel, to its justice or injustice; and a, ES ey ee mUy neerica Of annoyances, unprovoked and | “independent of these seventy vessels, which consti. fering and Christian charity, in proof of which | wholly unnecessary, drew her enemy upon her, theques- | tute a naval force of such importance that it places Spain her moderation on the Servian question is specially | tion would be different. among the maritime 8 that follow Pamedtebety ted on, with divers other matters of detail. We But the Emperor of the French should Logs foe France and land, dre" Spanish fleet wilt in 1859 em- bays eg tieed terested in the quarrel before we should be justified in | brace 188 vessels of war of an inferior clase, and 7 are told, 100, that at Milan all is coulewr de rose. Suddenly | expecting him to act thus. Now, it is known that he | destined to the surveillance of the sea coast. and. 10 the {a to be, other, it service to order the pilot of the J to bc paar pan the’ aed. sll, tatoo’ Che governeent lide, | <s the Idea that, he isto be, in some way or other, | local ervice of the Philipie Islands. Among these vee- | 1224 ana wr. Mulloy, of New York—ail well on board. | Sut'lnuse ani it the oe ine, ane vee At thig Interesting period of the “‘eutertainment” sug. spitties—the Prewe, the Page, tbyde Conatite- | remind him of bis “mission,” and who urge him to it— tre couponrdl abies cuutentely of feastaur Meee ae On the 4th inst. Mr. John O'Lever was rotarnod to Par. | of the sequel has it that Captain Sttipbens answered the iy Rh mag a tonnel—with articles full of venom and hot rancor againat | and, if circumstances permitted, he would not be sorry at | other vessels of war. Sissons fot Calwey Lieutenant in but complimentary terms, and oo Venn Austria, which paralyze the heart of the anyrbing that would Justify his fotervention. Independent of these armed vessels, the effective force aa It eoepe pieces of toed Ap at hicn, Tee Cavan afte 0s: the protectors pubtic peace”? Tourer an nt ke 8 wot Maat ou the moat manque | aye ta nagama aaa ot Nagle | nem aut arur, fy te peo ase wale | COMMERGIAL, INTELLIGENCE. Uattneaper hee esr trou | Sit mer Toupee wi mts dn aposties of peace. Franceas thatany ‘would be pardoned and forgotten, | the Marine Department of of Ferro! and of Cartha LONDO! agent jing on the quay, for having sent him drunken One of ther Jouraals sighs for the return to power of | or any disasters, however reat, would be supported feos, will Be: pushed. on With great activity Woaro | The London money market was slightly easier. a NY Og OL ay the egardloas of the Hee Lord Palmerston, who, with all his faults, took @ correct ’ lappy to state, in terminating, nay Spain, quay ‘man, and while measure of Austrian policy. ‘Another thinks the arbitra. . Oe ee ee eee . poral A ay oad noe tion clause in the late treaty of Paria might well beevoked, | Wo ontortain a great regard for peace, but there is . pO ao fant, District At notwithstanding that, failing a favorable result, a resort | something in this world superior fet pe) Justice. Mervican Affairsin E: that the to arms must be the inevitable alternative; and tho | 12t.us, therefore, seek what w just and practical, What is [From the Loudon News, Jan. 28.) Consols for money are quoted 946% a 047%. on the 5 recommended both by the greatness of oye ged Tt has been stated confidently, both in American and The political diequietnde is increasil waitag's samo journal avails itself of the opportunity. to | interests of Kuropean poace—a lasting result, not of vio- | English journals, that Mr. Worrall, who has lately arrived Po ng of his Honor, who said in reply to Mr. Wares ro: ark on tho gross “ impertinence,” “miserable ar- | lence aud oppression, but an equitable satisfaction given to | in Kngiand, ia charged with a special mission from the if any officers should in- ts,” “lying reproaches,” perpetually exhibited invincible aspirations. And the Bourse by a | government of Mexico to that of Great Britain. Without he would have them ar- guments, us fills ita | {t!! 40 this policy, we might say that the Bourse has noth- | stopping to raise the question as to whether thore is any bs : ¢ ote by Austrian journals. Another of these alarmists ing to do with questions of ity, that it always | government in existence in Mexico, we can state, upon the all i Mr. the prosecut intimated that columns with reviewing s rubbishy pamphlet, entitled | exaggerates evils in order to make ‘profitable, and | best authority, hat Mr. Worrall has no mission of the kind. the 0 game. “Rat-co 1a Paix? Est-ce la Guerre?” Then tho gracoless am. | (iat when A retraces caten=bo was banlebed frets 38 , Mr, Whiting Wore 0 te Soi mits ofloe neaty of the King of Naples and the arrival of tho Gran psy ot el ‘Court of General Duke Constantine of Russia at that court are fertile topics, * that were in Bot without their influence on the feverish state of the a ourselves, ie A to her = nl public mind. talian question, ‘of | Teasonably suggested it wutually ne shoald wake In this morning's Monileur we read that the Napoleon, Algesiras (ships-of war of the first class), and the frigate L/Umpetuounse lef Toulon for Genoa. Tho Minister of Marine writes to Brest that the true de- sige finition of the term “state of commission of vessels in ; , rahe Port’ is that a vessel should be ready for sea in a very ‘The ate short period, and should only have to take on board her | sent Cabinet no means of ‘s collin Grew, the part of her stores which had been landed for | we bave described ite. with this Macher aon, a Ge aniee bow’ W. Pirseon, Richard A. M’Curdy’ Stephen ”, the vom intanen Mee Senet ns remand "ie Terese cag tard 7a dangoron ato herd wil terstre | rm for ‘cocci Taney fr “Ansan if. tx | tard Lathrop, Ocrgs A. Late, Gorge reed, It f einen, aa immediate serviee—that the order, therefore, | it should be ‘and replaced by s combination, of ast from the. pre ‘Wheat firm, but quiet: |. 8 08. ; white 3 avery. to pute vessel in « atate of commission {mpliee that all Which Lord Palemotmon would again be the moving to bave amoontod 60 nbatly 610,000,00027 racor $0 lsaenaet sd an savenve bathe dag mixed Ahk mt! hunger fhi> —— phate ran ony eae the works of construction, repairs, &o., are to be com- | ‘ht? day and yellow, 6¢, 10d. a Ge. 23.; white, Ts. 1d. a 7s, 2d. Roscoe Wickes, Richmond. ‘to form a pleted, #0 that sho may be at once fitted out. After giv: LIVERPOOL PROVISION MARKET—FEB. 4. ‘TRUSTER OF THE SRAMAN'S FUND AND RETREAT. Sato the Usten, ing these explanations the Minister prosoribes that the oes cee no ok vo netreaatt 12 wringing forward such ‘aad tho vessels Feady with the greatest expedition, ‘accord- ‘and then mentions the names of the vessels now in the ny own, port of Brest which aro to be placed in commission; that LIVERPOOL PRODUCE MARKET. Monroe—Henry R. Seiden, of Clarkson; John W. Dwi- Judge fs to say, bo fitted out ready for sea, , De re Cte cee ane a ne nelle, Samuel Richardson, Jacob Gould, Orlando Hastings, di ‘am pot These vessels are the steam frigates Caftarelti, Panama, | "0 . and active ok Sta, G4. 050m; pearl steady at 228. 8223. | of Réohester, Imm CANAL DHPARTIONNE atin te ,_ 1 jaty announce to cite in similar |. Sugar iy forts qu AUDITOR OF 4 Descartes, Orenoque, Dansé, Amazon, d’Assar, Onlon | tho deputation Appointed 10 prepare ho reply 10 | wAly'when acknowledging inp recuiplec the mranter come: | tone Were Taimtained. Codee dull. Rice quict, | Nathaaiel'S Denton, of Litue Falls chances on bis position fairly im that organization.

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