The New York Herald Newspaper, March 13, 1861, Page 2

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WEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1861—TRIPLE SHEET. pe The people of the neat deer to the |, Duchess of Mecklonburg..fichwerin, when 8 telo- Court would have Freres, center kare ee wical liberty for graphic despstch arrived with ‘the, unwelcome Instead of that the es steam tat he pr age of ne oe pope ews that the impregnable stronghold of the Neapolitan Den ck Bret be bidden from the, stber, on, Sere King bad submitted to the conqueror, and that instead of wish the authorities Semee wer, aan tego is srt, oryy &4 burying himself under its ruins, the chivalrous Francis ‘and ad- - = ethene teres : ‘un using their liberties and had departed very quietly to take his place among the e Prisoner, re: moderation, calmpess and he pa royal exiles whose paternal yoke had been thrown off by 4 the power of the priesthood—and ap ungrateful people. They are pretty numerous \ : Rood Roman—| ive; grant that the Propriety be addressed to the Governor of New. : ae Romeanerally what world be oonaidered “in. already, The Count of Chambord, the Count of Paris, the | Rico, the Island of Cuba, Manilia, countries which owe | gate and the Duke of Cambridge. He spoke the thas an English or American Duke of Modena, the Duke of Parma, the Grand Duke of po ty mp to similar institutions; and, moreover, | sentiments of some of the ablest lawyers in this : eee, gy 0 phos ‘Teeaty, Then Tne ae fhe, Don Miguel, aud sow the eae which she disappro 3! tl foe oe of ig (yh here, ahs trade; Beart . No a Shinty and sul tak, admit tua biry‘e a fons King of Naples, form quite a respectable assembly of dis- there would regult from ita denger to the providing Fher | and he knew that it had the sae con: Ste eree a ipte “eit ialy, 's speech ill have rece! fe | eee a cen ee mpePmaa dew son ‘bey may b0 |e chee meal ann sendiion har, Re yy Ce pe a ee ee J AR ig avatbinehr rong hie Joined by still move Iieairions amsociatest since the commencement f this conoary, tn a direc retss | equally to any other cage, The of ‘Canada com. jwfant nations on every side are r in their] The excitement caused by the Mires affair hasquite | 12 consequence of this untoward event poor M. d¢ | with the increase of cotton. Js not the colton trade of Eng- plained that their rights hed been The Court of and aséerting ir manhood. Let slavery | drowned all the interest felt im Francis ll. His departure | Certeofiano had to make hisappearance at Ludwigalust as | land, and that of Lancashire, in s sufficiently {uecn’s Bench, no doubt, founded itg Jurietiction on She OMe [cecil Saeed Sonali As caeaicd'| comet him. We'heal fem, Mame teat Visior Meameel sae rensenenietlnn Fee Paras en sorties bg | = from the tf er operation? tee tie power'cf any suileriigr ta: thin country 12 40 Seas thirty diz millions of people in the west of will soon be proclaimed King of Italy. The garrison of | 0 the extreme discomfiture Grand Duchess, w! 2. Do there ‘nother soil and climate called in question the treaty making power. coanet bo sasiaved; nor Deople worship the omnly Gaeta have bese pamtte GO MonatiinY iaente Ohnrones ‘one of the most zealous members of the legitimise’ coterie, | 80 well adapted to the culture of cotton ? eee had a government and a Legislature of its seeds act themocies, a0 kong’ hat name does | Of the citadel of Messina’* vee UU the capitulation | and wasjust proparing & testimonial of er admiration | yp 0'.bitiyn of ths probes ee ee TMD | ors mccenuary tone goversaont of fis poopie, There r at name for @ Pe oe ane We hear but hile sald now of bal isthe al for the heroic defence of Gaeta, pana mage of © Tenet Ser Yooues » Yee, Wi ae fortunate, vale va provision made ie creas ‘fom the deckioa fs oom. before storm. , a8 he has all al assert of laurels, that was to be presented to the Queen by geria, but which cannot count on a @ aman digsatistied ‘There hope vaasty of Napoleon, and his campaign against Austria in a short time, and own consumption until after the of that , | cision of any of the ordi courte, he had a right of that is such su ameent or palisicu liberty and voice in most likely suen upin Hungary, He knows thai the | Prussian Ambassador. The Grand Duchess Alexandrina } ort Ceeenpelee Hout svat Sey: Vieni tee Saker ellel, cok Hom tab he the State as the epirit of the age demands. Many of the tapoe ero: eweicing bie coming withannieap, ond ig a sister of William J., and mother of the reigning Grand | the acclimatization of cotton on Boil. could to the Privy Council. That was ‘only RT | os cableiadalptiontteng peter peeing fered RO kL TCT Re ee ee pe be all p= Wd eee elt is rumored here that Russia, Austria and Prus- | D¢ reputation of being the -worst governed country in them aizectiy ‘between France and the Southern aiaton, Sil 0 wen. Howere able ond lanel tbe Bow bave stock speculations, and even many sia have entered into a compact to act together in case of | Germany, which is saying a good deal. In 1848 this ex- | and sacrifice interests so important, to a question of false | Canadian Judges yo be, they were themselves ready Sess tray, ibe, beenth of power ‘haa “blown | good cuihorty that Ue amor le unfounded: "No'sucn | “7PAIY Privee was frightened into giving his suhlect# | Poieatiary tunity of crinding” her, commer’ | erudition ofthe Judges of Sngiand. ‘Te oust a, writ to » . y pm @ constitution, which he took asolemn oath to main- ‘4 a} ‘pha a mamenadtan oe hed Senor area of pate csinien tak cota toe. SOOT _— fain; but no sooner had the reaction set in in fe sae, ‘Sualting from Ne ohh wose perth over here to be adjudicated werner con- ions required. Of courseno mere private indl- Our Paris Correspondence. Prussia thant he dissolved the Legislature, sent its Presi- | obtaining by degrees and in a more humane and politic Pgs mel ar pain Sh ecg’ hime ey aed : Sy sichoecs ee AS tie hen of thdese pbes- Pasum Fob. 22,1861. |} dent, M. Wiggers, to the penitentiary, and sinco then has | Manner tenant tele azehem of Labor, aod of Bee” | hes toy had got pid of We uity of this canes by the } ‘the most unsorupulous | Zhe Di/alcation of M. Mirea—His Relations to the French | ruicd in all the plenitude of sovereign power, only | tion of ruin and annibilation. im that lies the entire | ond were foe houses; but atill the; ‘Shain all ‘Serene, Morny. M. Mires has Government— Prognostications and Prophecies—Mires and 4° \imited by the Chamber of Nobles, who have assisted him | American question, which sentiment alone cannot resolve eet oe 9 ne tone legally, and not at Se" pmetained he would expose everybody ubove aan | Count de Morny-—A New Mortar Cannon—Anecedite of } to his heart’s content in reviving the laudable customs of | I manner satisfactory to all the great interests at | te expanse of Mule gale. The ondianey course Of Ps ground him. But ove Ree rg and twenty million dol- Napoleon IIT, dc., tc. dc. the Middle Ages. It is fortunate for his Grand Dukeship But in awaiting these r@sults, which would flow from Cote eat over, and an officer sent with it to receive the { Imre was too heavy a load for evenan purse, and The defalcations of M. Miree--the report of which hig } that the Mecklenburgers are not Italians; that Baron | the cordial weloome given by Europe to the new confede- pool — wait Sen eee seeming to = fine vccubout continental Earope wig in | iso pees A rere beh os mined in- | Schieinitz is uo Cavour, and that a German Garibaldi is a Tay meee ie _— ets rane ee: | capa meee ome mtg ny tin Sa tr tte Sa ve a war, 1 don’t know but that the political and com- i” eam O86 BOG! : moral impossibility. blacks of the South. We willingly admit that their error | receive. The answer would be that in Canada they did | msersial complications on the two sides of us would create When it is remembered that this eminent financier has If the capture of the Neapolitan fortress excited profound | ig pardomah’>. ‘« «voy have pede the relations of mas- | not the authority of such a Court. He certainly Rorieis here. I have heard more doleful gossip an | heen mixed up in some degree with almost every govern- | regret in the Court, circles, it was hailed with the utmost et vm the work of Mrs. Beecher Stowe. | wished | that, they | would deliver the man up ‘Change bere than has been talked since 1557. One » «» |. steomdition in the lucubrationsof that | under protest, as such a case was not likely to tiew an unseen or an unusual quarter would make | ental transaction since the advent of the empire; that | enthusiasm by the public, whom all tne efforts of the | romance, ruised 10 the importance of & occur again.’ (Hear.) No one pretended to say fm bad time here. he is, or rathgr I suppose we must now say was, the pro- | reactionary and pseudo-liberal press here failed to convince dissertation, but much rather inspired, that there was any intentional violation of the jery great interest is felt inthe ap hing news | prictor of the Constitutionnel, the organ through whose | that the unity of Italy is prejudicial to German interests, | ly to the author, by the desire of volte at Cap end Ee been done, P| sup- frem America as the oe draws near. The columne the picked writers, the chosen statesmen and | #54 that Srey qed pari ought to oppose it with might | public opinion astray, of provoking revolution and = judges Court of Queen’s Bench some ie enon meectaters see hee coe, ters of ah {alternately admonished, in- | favorable impres war thought the this riliaat Ser tenan eatin che cone catnin ool winatckooh that there were such paces ae Gu ewe er. a continent of Europe, and you ave @ war. | minist e government |, in- | favors ‘ession, a8 it was thought that t! ant a wor! one: wi a > v4 ‘Mere will be very great derangement of commercial aad Mi f Fu. | success would strengthen the tion of the Sardinian | serveasa to any argument. In our discussion we | Bey and Sark. (A laugh.) He took it there seenstary ataire” one pede td Drcibei toa aeprgliea cat} fovernment and eeable it tohesist the pressure of the | must seek eleewhere for authorities and material. Fagts | was such a place as Sark, as it was tobe found in the Prodsee Ail eyes are now ‘turned towards Hungary, | 70P@; that he was the intimate associate of Morny, the | Pevoiutionary party, whoare endeavoring to hurry on a | are eloquent, and statistics teach us that, under the , but he had never seen it, and never saw a man who ‘and and with good reason—an outbreak may at any mo- | Emperor's half brother—if being a son of hisown mother, | war for the recovéry of Venice. This impression has | superintendetice of thore asters, 20 gruel and so terri: ba OR). aaa Soe Cree aes she mosses sated, e owe — ees ae yee ig Mee 3 the Queen Hortense, can make him so—of Morny, who, tem ie flan atiament but pty naa) cn cee | nee ee esa AL ee Pobvor. | hear.) With regard to the orders, sent by make ot springing over the fina ‘a8 marking the ‘The Co- | gious qmactments of 1848. Austria is weak, doubly weak, . | to be on the eve of a suspension of specie payments; and | of the North, the bi in a deplorable Office seldom interfered in the colony at the right | built Beth in finances and the loralty of the people. You may | cu" {0 Believe that the summary consigament of M. | tt rise that tho Bank of England has sdvanced its | proportion. "How could Mrs. Beecher Stow reconcile | time, and when it did it usually did so in A pro} a@xpect at any moment to hear that a war has begun on | ™ires to tne prison of Margas as a common felon is quite | rate of discount to the almost unprecedented figare of | this fact with her extraordinary assertions? The fhe Danube. I do not expect it under two or three | enough to give pause and reflection to the pablic | eight per cent is looked uponasa grave symptom of finan- | condition of those blacks is assuredly better than 5. Hl J Hi i months, but it may come much sooner. Let war once | mind. cial embarrasement. Such a step could only have been | that of the agricultural laborers in many parte too, might be bent en por en : emmetice within two hundred miles of the Blick Sea or "Go wherever you will, nothing else ia epaken of. Poo. | lakenfor the purpose of checking speculation, orfrom tho | of Pr ee eee, a ae eer, ssid bat the constitution of Camda, As the | dom A . ust have been considered immi- | that negroes, 5 plan- See Turkish dominions, ssia. w fear of a run, which mn ve dered | ina ioe i Rominge of the Colonial Office, the Governor of Canada | under 1 ence pour into Gonsianhinante, sale for the instant in- | ple call to mind how the peculations of Geste and Cubieres } nent, since, according to the last statement, the stock of | ters encourage marriage, and thus endeavor to de- terference of John Ball. The government and the | in Louis Philippe’s reign gave warning of the rottenness {e and bullion in the bank amounted to’ upwards of | yelope among them a sense of the family relation, with | Was in communication with the Colonial Secre- 1g Were awarded to the depttts ‘Britich le haye means at home, credit abroad, and Weve anh GMhir million erect , against a circulation | the view of attac! them to the domestic hearth, con- | tary, and there ht be many occasions on which it | tion, and the proceedings terminated with er. Dasiness everywucre, and, whatever botites, they. are | that lay at the foundations of the citizen monarchy. They | {o‘notes of nineveen millionsea froperiion that, in ordi. | sequently to the family of the master, "It will be ‘then | Was ‘necessary for the latter v0 communicate advice to i my eertain to havea large hand in the adjustment of af- | now look around on the wondrous prosperity which | nary times, would be ampiy@uflicient to meet any emer- | observed that in such a state of things the interest of the furs. clothes everything in France, and ask themselves if cir- gency. To be sure, the Bank of Prussia is stil! more can- | planter, in default of any other motive, promotes the ad- the Governor, amd to recommend that he should take | pqy image of the Em; ow : es, so to Jerusale: one 8 in its operations. By the monthly returns, pub- | vancement and well being of the slave. Certainly, we The political face of Furope has been ma ments, and as.such ought to be made known. The coun- the Levant Herald.) Sk abalh of Yerialty changed by the cumstances really justity it. How is it, they say, that we | ished on the bth inst., it appears that the amount of guld | believe it possible still to ameliorate thelr condition.” ext f i ) the Bourbon reign and the Sicilian kingdoms in Italy, | can thus afford, not only in Paris, but in every town and | and silver in their possession was 77,281,000 thalers, aud | is with that view, even, that the South has labored for | Seen. hear.) The government of a constitutional | tne object of Admiral La, Ronclere le | fa yet greater changes remain 10 bo wrought in the hamlet of the empire, to indulge in an expenditure which | the notes in circulation only $8,144,000 thalere; go | 0 long a time to prepare them for a higher civilization. was to be carried on by the Governor, by end | to Constantinople had Teforenoe 19 the for tan : seeming events on the shores of the Adriatic, the Danube : that they have more than seven'eights of a thaler | In nopart, » of the continent, had to | With the advice of his Council. If, therefore, any order | tended pil of the of the to Jeru- ao 8 electrifies with astonishment all other nations, but which went out which directed him to pursue a certain course ‘nd the Bosphorus. In a long race it is bottom that in ie or bullion in their vaults to redeem every thuler | the by exist more gifted, ealem. is said have had such a. ‘wie, and the tether of some of the despots is nearly all | we take as easily as if the gold of California and Aus" | of 1! ir iasne, What are thele notions for restricting i nobler or mare pencrous sentiments, than in the Southern = eee oe eve hf ae rot ihe ema Goan} ry view over since the death of her late simer, Bauled in. How France themselves to so limited @ circulation? Whether they are | States. No country possesses lovelier, kinder hearted ay constitutional y chess d’Alba, and the official now he qoveiument Ministers and Jow bankers of Paris, | abs were all cur owa? cil ped is boing | SppreheDsive of a war or of a commercial crisis looming | more distinguished uomen. To commence with the immortal | The Duke of Newcastle had been recently in re intention. in t6 be carrie? into effect belies dhe and the Floyds, Thompsons and Cobbs of America, must | CoBverted into an earthly Paradise, that everywhere | in'the distance, or whether the pernicious results of a | Washivigtom, the list of siatesmen who have taken part in enormous works, magnilicent palaces, parks Highness the Prince of, Waleor be hat seen the {roope, leave Syria. | 4s the Imperial voyage, howe mot creaie a mortifying impression among Americans and babies) wy a i depreciated currency in Austria have inspired them } the government of the United States shows that all those who ig! 5 seen u- | ever, cannot be made least ‘March, Frenchmen that only’ their great onal are delinquents. | mest the sxe sae that our former domestic Soonoa St a alerts. iiet dataced tineca rather to err oo of. Snlaat clone the country and won the admiration of | Siasm and heartfelt demonstrations of the ~ na this fact is put ruertorees eee ee eee tha and We have bad some bad scandal here during the ig converted into & profuseness and eX | tion's side—is only to persons in the contdenco of Burpe owed their being to that much abused South. Te it leet few days touching a late prominent member | PeDditure almost fabulous? Men but yesterday contented | yf yan der Heydt, who, with bis functions of Minister of true that go much distinction, talent and grandeur e ) of lord erston’s Cabinet—Mr. Samuel. Laing, | % toil oo nie Promagdd Fn f Mie Wg ied are eres, Pema meral, Director-in-Chief of Rail- | of soul could have sprung from all the vices, the } honest outbursts of lovely and ete hear)— | the Porte dispores of this insinuated wow Financial Minister to India. He was mixed peng oy = spla Be gt ve bee aelbs roade and Public Bulldings, &e.» unites the ofice of Presi. | cruelty and corruption which one would fainattributenow | he might have seen what the amplest offers of escort and manitoosd coder tak =P. in the speculations of the Great Western | the multitude with display of unboum Troalth. nit | dent of the bank, Possibly there is not sullicient trade | to the Southern ? The laws of inflexible logic refute was—t were Englishmen in feeling and | jesty during her stay in its . Tt ie said that tha Railway of Canada, aud took profits from two opposing ici ooh ehoe Use wm en oh ihe | inthe country to produce safe acceptances for the em- | there false imputati And—strange coincidense—while | Principle, and not a likely to put up with what | yyy, ik other Ymterects. The reports and rumors are too palpable fac yn o Sony ‘unt mer ployment of surplus capital or discounts; anyhow, the | Southern men presided over the destinies of the Union its | the} pene 5B! t or an insult. (Hear, hear.) He | race her visit to the Places by the foundation wizeng to be contradicted. Really, frauds in high places | “Tole conn iat Seren, finittng tht to | sbareholders appear to be satisfied with the management, gigantic prowertty was the astonishment of the world. In poe oe that the of Newcastle | of an hospital or a church v will nover cease. Mr. Laing was the Under Secretary | _,!t is wel Logan! Page et, Seaitos Snes. comingto the bank loans are ata high premium, and discount re: | the hands of Northern men that edifice, raised with so | Would be cautious ho addressed them, and that the and, in fact, to make a g ‘effects shall ba made the ‘statement,’ as it was called, in the | the worst, went with Viscoun ry Talons 0 mains at the low rate of ur per cent. much care and lator by their predecessors, comes crashing | oFders contained nothing that was tutional. But | at ante ue tent of Commons, ou the motion by the’ government to | ©! Crunaaetionn, to Count de Moro, ot desrccs | Notwithstanding thi8 fouriabing state of the Bank of | down, threalening to carry with it in its fall the induttrial | if the production of these orders was refused he would the diamond tr eenirm the Galway contract, and he bore down pretty a oa alowed assistance for the Bonk or | Prussia, however, business in general has long been ina | future of every other nation. For long years the constant | take it for granted that they were like certain letters ae Severely on some of the parties exgaged in getting up | et eee a eee ae he inevitable and that with bis | abeuishing condition, and shows no siga of improve- | efforts of the North, and a certain foreign country, to | Which he wrote to the Mayors ot some of ‘that concern. When he was offered the post that he ac- ment. One of its most importans branches—the calico ead am¢ the blecks incend: pampbiets and tracts ‘cepted in India be resigned his seat in the House of Com. | Twin that of — — Morny, it is <= inting manufacture—has had to suffer sxme losses by | bave powertaliy, contributed wo eupe every Southern ‘wens, and very great surpries was created when it leaked | 8t00d, had, with » lu | failures of deasers in the provinces, especially those | movement towards emancipation. People have been | These wore not eee gy ape tant apostolic, chief of the Lazas at that he aa. racomsmsneot Sohn, cometaseney 6: the ea nee mae ee ie seed im iat Seopa, ae. tie frontiers cf "Rawan compelled to close thelr cars to ideas Which threatened they would donpy ng pron ghee me Pa ints, and the nl ito, a } rem! (om—J rGi ‘8—to elect as err Poland, where smi is carried on upon a grand scale, very existence. a are, it is her Majesty at Jaffa, tender ‘ Ris rucceascr Lord Bury, one of tho fimsicst and most | & letter to a common friend, which was afterwards favored by the @uaee erate thabvextent slag the tie’ Let the independence of the South» mtg ee foen baa managed. He would, however, 4 fatioes of tee Latin ingen ad shown to Morny, the result of which was the instant ar- corrupt of the junior members of the Britigh aristocracy. | © » ders of the two kingioms. The merchants inhabiting the } vile insurrection openly and boldly preached in the } ‘Mo was clected. laing went to India, and now the a ee se oo rr frontier line have organized this contraband trade in | the North may jaan tee oe pra tangs, takes place. remy ree! an akin _ ond thong “tai is | quite a systematic manner; they have armed bands cf | Leave her w her own inspirations, and at her Ne faitures of Particular note have occurred dur- } 5€! aS ne amin ‘4 itlene 1 id ig) heal smugglers in their pay—desperate men who defend their | hour, in her own good time, with (be assistance of the week, though some have been expected. One Dr. | Under the omaha Pap neg wer = wot aay ate | Hves and their loads tothe lnct extremity, and cften | Furope—that isto say, when the biack shall beeufficient- tatK—a native of thie country,a baron of Sardinia i A at = Porety ih gga, 2 th univerceliy copped, | Sebt regular battles with the revenue officers. But for | ly advanced to undersiand that, free or slave, he owes it and a sort of roving epeculator, who bas spent come in at Cel ween. ted aes y Buppoeed, | ail that the latter frequently get the detter of them, and | to himeeif and society to assist by hie labor in the com. ly become Pignat to asking the Under Secretary of State for the News from Jamaica. Late files of papers from Kingston, Ja., have been r@. ‘fState for the Colonies and the Governor in Canada, and Mow Vork-tne unek pankrapt, with | the disclosures his trial will elicit will strike at the very arabenauih. Gall We whech, ceed, ; : in New Yor pt, wil the contraban ir goods are eized, when of | mon weal—the South w'll herself commence the great | 1{.iverm whe Colonies and th : . : inl entourage, it is impossible to sup- 4 i ilities xmounting to some £36,000. Hehad something | Tots of the imperi course the merchant loses his property. In such cases | work of enfranchisement. Nothing will then prevent it, teao with getting up the unfortunate Galway Steam Com- Pa ee power of the empire will not be | ihe Berlin manufacturers are the luk gathrers, faa:| Lox sco laliee ‘AI Dhoome deur banteneeese ee planter, inasmuch ag he brought into the management my | “%zr¥ed te Prevent tein tome wey or er. cubject of | they, have been induced to give extensive credits | at the same time that theentire of Furope will not find Bory—everyahing aad everybody compected with wooed nie regent te Englaid alia get . ‘the | % the mercbants in the frontier towns, in order | itself threatened in the vital interests of ite industrial re. Mr. C. Forrescus did not intend to follow the honorable and learned gentleman into the observations he had made Farnese a aw Pata friend in his dealings with 1 is foreign interest—! " he Oran; Canada, he to hear it ‘whom ecemingly being in disgrace. Mr. Wagetai! bor- ig! to clear off the large stocks of goods that have accumu- | ations, by the dearth of material which would 1 ' a8 he was glad was vewed money of come Americans, and got hold of proper- | King of Sardinis Soe gig Cmparel with the | jated in consequence of the depressed state of trade. |. the frst od mevitable consequence of a servile war’ °° | ‘Btended to give his noble friend an o iy saat. ty up te the very day he got into the gazette. He is a er ann i oh, land, it remarked’ | Their creditors generally offer a compromige, which the gt Ngee cee Ogg de hands he Bed fot, and it wil be strange if it does not go hard with | Very, well received Pxgland, ft is remarked, | ranufacturere, are fain 10 accept ratuer than 6x Clearances of British Vessels in the Port | /eave st. the honorable and learned gentleman had, Ieim on his final examination. He was a member of the be Sof brance, “uy tenth pong oer He eee oP Re | themeeives to interminable law proceedings that J of Charleston. however, spoken in @ tone of complaint, which he felt American Aseociation bere, and 1 believe went 90 far a3 Ital = bile ta vand chy ee “ug re ted th ivi up the smal! residue of the estate, It is possible that thie In the Britieh House of Commons, on the 22¢ ult., sure would not be echoed in Ganada, of efforta made te pretend at times to be an American. He sailed exe!n- mv, iy r A: a ae fms unsatisfactory state of things may be remedied by a com- Mr. W. E. Forsrer asked the Secretary of State for | by the government and by private Yves in this country sively under the British flag, and if he turns out a pi bet a wa the ay ee Pops sr only confirms | ™ercial treaty between Ruseis and the Zollverein, which | Foreign Affaire whether be bad any objection to lay |. for securing to an unfortunate fugitive afull and fair con- let not hie deeds be laid to the credit of the great WE. | Slmays said. and the more 7 see and hear only rms | is eaid to be in agitation; but as long as the Russian upon the table of the Houee 2 copy of the recent corres. | Sideration of his rights. He represented that there had poblicfof the West. aa a aren te rench pa ape SY e nr Lg 'Y } vernment adhere to their system of high protective du- | jndence detween her Majesty’s Minister at Washington | beer two invasions of the righta of the Canadas—one in ——- aeuiadicin -Aomainn saat lie teaeemaae aie ing | nin, | tes the illicit traffic offers too great temptations tobe | and the United States Secretary for Foreign Affaira, rela- | the action of the Court of Queen's Bench in London, the Our Paris Correspondence. ber sly Mob abparaaeniaie the cant” te readily abandoned; in fact, the Polieh and Lithuanian | tive to the clearance of British vessels at the port of | Judges of which thought ‘t their duty upon an applica- vans, Feb, 29,1801. | {tat mguite aware of Had i industrionaly working te | Jews, who form the entire mercantile population of those | Charleston, South Carcizs. He observed tbat atthe port | {om made, not by the goverament, but by private parties, Arrest of M. Mines— Excitement in Paris—. ors to scenes to @ pol capital witl nia. In Pi rea or he iss Ao tare kl wre ees ones. @istricta, have no other means of subsistence than what | in question the federal officers of the States fad been #u- duty to discuss either whether the ’s Bench were Katy ing. ded, and that that inf rf is afforded by smuggling perseded, ai Seen eaten an, Even t0t entitled to iewue that writ, or whether, if they tad, 8 Seren Him—Panic on the Bourse—Financial Condition | the meantime she is arming with ee Bince the debate on the address the Chambers have | the British Consul by gentlemen professing to sc? on be- ’ if she believed that the Je must come wi PR gg cl f ought to be the state of the law. (Hear, hear.) The on) tice, dc. - public meetings, which have been | half of the Convention cf South Carolina. The House gh ei (Hear, hear. ly get Arwen cea ere ta eae mentee ees. Tenen ee Se ees Were Pe exclusively devoted to local aftairs, and do not present a | would observe that such = notification placed the owners | View taken by the Colonial office amounted to this, that Interesting from New Granada. The great excitement of the week has been the arrest bboy gr: 8 “fa, AMM agin single incident worth recording. The next discussion of | and captains of British vessels in considerabie | Song with that writ a despatch it by his noble OUR ‘A Mi inia is never left tranquil. Now it is Gaeta; now a “ ? friend to the acting Governor General of that, BOGOTA CORRESPONDENCE. ‘of the celebrated financier Mires. Some time back an Muratist ire 43 anchor time Austria’ is general intereet will beon the War Budget, when the | difficulty, inasmuch as the laws of the United a a Booora, N. gly bitch occurred in his atiairs, and bis books were for | Mura! macy. mented, Indeed, | Ministers, and M. de Patow in particular, may expect. to | States imposed stringent penalties for the non- | i0, the event of bis being called upon to, take any 1 N.G., Jan. 14, 1862. or Pope’s protection augmented. Indeed, afew hours in the bands of the officers of justice. Hig | caly the Stker day auothor regiment enberked ar Stes’ | be roughly handled by the liberal party in the House of | observance of ite revenue regulations, and be was, Deputies. therefore, anxious to know whether her Majesty's | esn-io-law, Prince de Polignac, averted the storm at that | ®eifles for Rome. The arming, too, of France is every. | VP : a Minister at Washington had been instructed to ask the Aime by seeking an iterview with the Emperor, and cb- | Feport of dhe naval arvenals of Pragce wan forwarded to IMPORTANT FROM FRANC Unived States government whether they woud hold re- rej Sir Edm Head, who was then in this countr; fining from his Majesty an order for the release of the | the British embassy by the new naval aitache, Sapte sonagtied shipmartors who, ander preaeare Coutbehqesenia liken os hapiako al camees Gast te yin ne aca of the — Bolicar Concerning Docks. It wae evbsequently rumored about the city that | Flore, and in spite of all the explanations offered by the | jhe American Crisis—Necessity of « Re- | Convention, and wi , on the other hand, they would | ment, which was wel known to the louse and the country, imerica—Ihe Preity Girls of New Granada, dé. Miree would not have escaped had he not been concerned | Minister of Marine, Lord Cowley was obliged to say that | cognition of the Southerm Comfederacy | indemnity them from any consequences that might reeult | Considerable misaprrehension existed astotheetfectofthat | On the Sth instant another American citizen and my~ cpt iadhs pielbdenged tak rutin evial weak 86 for 20 0 po gra wach a report “(aves in | Euro) he Value of Southerm | from the cot-complance with its regulations? | The po eg hh niee oan peed ty lad self arrived in this city from the Santa Ana mining dis- rade to French Intere: os dee ‘with Charleston and the other Souths state that the Emperor himself had mixed in the specu. | Talking of armaments, a new mortar cannon is now | ‘translated for the Naw YORK HunaiD, from Le Pays, of | Dorteot ase Union wae vast ana important and’ te fen, | of Queen's Bench had the power of setting a man freo on. | ‘ict via Honda. It was my purpose and desire to send ‘writ of habeas corpus, or of refusing to do 80; but to de- | you a letter by the last mail through our Minister, whe deliver Anderson upto the American government was | was compelled to appoint a bearer of despatches, there not within the com if any court of law. (Cheers. Mi = Ce eee. ee ru being no mail facilities in the country and no post office, J under a committee of inspection, which, it is said, is to Paris, Feb. 21 Je lord ‘would wish to ‘ } Intions of Monsieur Mires. Annoyed at these scandalous | Qutrival all former inventions. In the’ Grst plaot, the | The rapidity with whian ike: American criaia pro. | fare the.noble lord would wish to keep all ‘aterested in i veperts, the Emperor determined thats stop sbould be | manufacture is all open work, and thus no rapidity of see Obliges us, in order to prevent public opinion | not go into the general question whether diplomacy should ‘ pot to them, and that the best method of 20 doing was to | fring can heat it. Tt is loaded at the breech. To effect Going surpelsed by events tombendoa the diacussion of | to’ Sent ce eon al oe cea need Soe ay anon Tustice : ventilate the business affairs of Mires. So ata recent | thet ar willit muy be elthes sonmon or mortar nent otic secondary points and arrive, at cnee at by far ihe most | wempt to carry out octet diploniaey with ihe United wruinoas_ to werrenter_s fugitive cold | cr United: Staten Coumal. ot Honda, to Serwasl. bers. council of Ministers his Majesty asked M. Delangle, | able to project or shell (at an enormous range Bone yg Sill re yan Mew oe: meget more ; le. ~ ¥ ‘with the honorable | occupied; however, that I eoult { te Miniéfer of Justice, whether due attention was | 12 consequence of the facility of being removed | Tumis of the government Nanaia apd nh engine ra gentleman in bis assertion that the Secretary | DOt Write. Since my last there has not been any news of | i q piecemeal, it can be transported sarily to any die. | ee eee Taranto lobeer. South Carolina, | Any, Way im the lamenta he tin for the Colonies bad no right to address the | much importance to communicate. The leaders in the ¢ being paid to the Mires orang M. Delangle answered tance. It ts termed Sieyanst Srasel meriar cannon. rk ‘ oe oulaes oad between ppt ae ‘hat any i L Sant a “574 at ‘war pul mastotata. ar 7 ‘ 7 het enough wae elready known to arrest that French ti are to have another three | Fita'sre, at the moment at which we write, assembled in | Iitis as it would be unjustifabdle, but th ising from a treaty masterly insstivity.”»Thowgi i Mdividual, but that he judged great care was needed | Mouths of Whe Turkieh Fer ned fag ree but | Convention at Montgomery, with the object of formisg a | cntia not forget these two facte— ties a socal Canada and a General Mosquera, with his command, is still at Puri- ‘ me Cy the what use is it? And England, sees the mean- | new confederation. fp entering on his functions Mr. Soe cream cal of. eavechs ad secon the Imperial government and ficacion, beyond the Magdalena river, waiting, and M. tregmacting. the proceedings, a8 Consequences | ing, ‘wishes to keep well with a8 long as ebe | yincoin will find himaclf face to face with another con. | with the United States « treaty for the On the oth of. ‘the Duk “eager for the fray,” as you may know, from hie eerd. would entail ruin upon so many, The Emperor an- | can.” federation, regularly constituted, which he will be obliged | slave. trade, the relinquishment of which be belie iting to the Governor of Canada, said:— c a =! pel fwered that the shock must not bo avoided; that pablic | , 128 recent letter I gave yous little anecdote of the | to recognise as an independent nation or reduce by force | wonid be as injurious 10 their interests as destruct verse tothe prisoner, you will | 16 the message attributed to him to Mr. President Or :' she sent the Count de Morny to fetch to their honor and the cauee of bumanity, ‘bear in mind that under the treaty he cannot ivered | Pina, in which he promises the government army a free of arms. , nine years who ‘The time for recrimination is past; philosophic aepira- Lord Jouw Russe in reply said:—With regard to be dell the mereaction of tholaw, but | passage across the ri Boulogne, aad | tiong, however seductive they may be, most varias be. | corrrapendence which the honor ‘Governor Tiverand a rest afterwards, if they will uw morality must be satiefied. In this view his Majesty was Bavoueviage 51 little red — boy of cy the only by @ warramt under the hand and seal of the ‘brooch General of of mded by Count de Persigny. A was skating on the lak de warmly £¢c01 yy Count de igny. rumor of ae ine come to fight him. Yesterday there was a review Proceedings haying come to the ears of M. Mires, he ao. fore reality; reason commands master them, that | ford wishes to obtain, I have to state that I shall Canada, | The case is one of the gravest possible pote a the Empengy a letter, the contenta of which con. | Cfonurse, such am occasion waa not to be lost for want | she may eet before us a situation of affairs in wiigh a | wiling to, give. it, abd it will be y | character, ang her Majesty's government aro not satis. | of cavalry, 1,500 strong, belonging to the goremmext wrete to the Emperor ye of » little attention on the of the parent, and the | more general interest is involved, for soon the new coifed- | next, and I may further say that that ce ig } fed that the dBcision of the Court is in accordance with | army. The presence of many boys, however, whd had veyed that many of Bis Majesty's nearest surrounders | little fellow, on his retutn home, had his hatid guided | ‘ration willbe knocking at the doore of Eurpe Righiy honorable to our Gone! A Charieetnan the wan, | she views of the treaty hitherto held by the authorities | bees obliged fo serve ag soldiers, made one doubt very were impiicated with Mires, and that in caso he wag | While be indved an ee will amuse sume a your | 2 recognition of i e¢ and claiming a place | placed in a position of great dificulty, not able to | 1m this country. | You will therefore abstain from com- | much the efficiency ascribed to them by their frietide of dealt with harshly he would expose all. The Emperor at | °° TL tcominn itrectatimn, that th Tow | among the nations of the globe. the new roment which sprung up, but | Pleting theexiradition in aay cage unill the government | the party. The looker on is more apt to iB y readers if I E stim, ey may see how In presence of tuat approaching Srey, {t appears | at the same time be 04 mot negiect the interests of Pri. | have an Pe on considering that question.” | sigh for the bereaved mothers than indulge in specule-" ence, upon receipt of this epistle, vent for Count de | we do these things in France:— tous indispensadle to give arapid sketch of ‘she unpor- | tisk ebipping. (Hear, bear.) — Hear, bear.) The Governor General had wcknowledged | tions concerning their conduct in war. Geureral Mosquera, Morny, M. Billault, and one or two others, and the result | 4 84 Masesre L’ co pemeyser N pore Sox, Ste ere peatetamane: —— the receips despatch, and the government now | I am told, notwithstanding the defant ‘above of conference was the order given to the ae = - my good cm” The Soutbern states, to the number of Afteen, comprise e reson bad she ma:ter under its consideration. As to the pro- | mentioned, made a roposttion th ‘General aren police to arrest M. Mires. This was done the next day fag & ay hed’ contuacen dod “to - | aeuperfices of a million of square miles, without includ- | Im the British House of Commons .. Mr. | duction of the ci , it would not add to the | who had ealled upon bim, as the nob! ‘and day), wMile the tnancier was at dinner. Again did | formed her thas you Io My aaaion ale ing the portion of common territory to which the | Haliburton, before putting to the Under-Secretary for the | Substantial knowledge of the case now possessed of peace, to try and sccommodate difterences thee if en Fic inner rca mi: | neh ound Coden malo “Duar | SPT. yet Aaya SL: oe | Clie as rn of ic ea gen tin ot | see et ue, dean, at wean t | he feermen wou ra his sn, toy m-law, but in vain. His "e answer was, ‘jet . hag | ooean ie © Gulf of | thiseubject, wished to refer briefly to }y Whi a ma- rents, and not rebels, i him clear bimecit of the charges teade against him.” T.can now die in peace. God will protect thee since he hag | Yexjon, into which ®o Misionipp! empiice itelr, | reapecting the He had be polaid be ee ae Great was the consternation on Monday when it became | Wrilled that our gracious Express pressed her lipson | ster & course of 4,100 miles ‘ninca, | tant of Missouri and had escaped from elavery. He took ‘Low! their present stage. The delivering up of the prisoner | andregardiees remember that thou hast been ennobled by | Mississippi, Tennessee, Kentucky, Missouri and Arkaneas’ | the life of a white man, also an inhabitant of tbat State, nis known that Mires was in prison. Rumors, starting, and was not in the bands of any court of justice, but in the army. The President Ospina replied, sentep:.ous of them unfounded, circulate, but né one can dont | this kiss of thy Soversign—it will aid thee always to | presenting the only normal and economic meats of trane: | who was endeavoring to capture him whilohe was iry: | bands of her Kajesty’s government, and there the Houte | that he Would not accept the verms.” Tate ce 4 ‘that many, very many personages of great distinction, | OT IBY criky gy toa Sater nabetin ve ee for the productions of a considerable portion of the | ing to from his master. After that event Ander- | Might very safely eave it. (Cheers. ) end the ardent efforte of the good Gen. Herran to sch'eve ‘sre deeply compromised by the papers of Mires, now | 10 these words Of my motets my 1y to vendor | Western States, pence, foe be country, unfortunately, ao “ailing, being examined by the officers of the aw. Wehave been | Commendation tat” fous Mr —, Free Fegroes of the West Indies, (10, mie), very reasonable was re. maried by the sudden death of M.de Richemont, col- | ™Y' TE nee Ange FO pea tere toe cm the London News Feb. 21.) Jected to suit the ends of Personal party malico and poii- Jectar of taxer in thie city. He committed micida, It | Maiesty, Tiajeat ing was held at Wiis’ Rooms, | tical spleen. I understand also that our Minister, Genera @ allered that be was to be arrested, and got wind of | SF#cious reception of your Majesty, nor the recommenda- rps ; a cnt D over w Mr. C. Buxton, Ma P.,t0 receive & re- and British Ministers Me faci, ond in hie dismay committed the fatal | Vone of my Parente, rith «view to propose a plan me @’ uking his own Tite leven! serene prayers Iw never ap, me sation of the society—Mr. Underhill to discontinue the present war, but without on The Rave taken place; but as all is done in the | ame you eee ees iv = . 3. Brown—of their recent visit to the | rumor has reached me that ths French Minister has pecreay it ie almost impoenibie to say who are | *d my poor mother -- aes yw doy ‘West Indies. rectly aided the government of this republic by a trif? imprison. All stocks baying Leen under the | Donor to be your Majest; ee Seeks ee ui, question been the | The Rev. W. Brock, of Bloomsbury chapel, baving | loam of 60,600f. Hence I infer that he, if not the Britian ‘cont! have down fearfully, and, as you and chove st 5a Galea, oh aa He Bugar... sssees 76/000;0002, 15,000,000 } Supreme Judges. It had been inquired into and adjudi- | opened the meeting with prayer, Minister jb indifferent whether the war ia sone stop- may ee, ‘Turl in San 4 dene. (On will bear in 1 telat eth tora Sass tiers toe cn on 20 | Food and mun.tions of war 30,000.000f. 6,000,000 | caved on by tnat court. He now Sabes he might an Herne ed corre the partes, Me An ma icone \ wee mppoved when 1 was in Horda thas ft @ queer complica~ 5 been . not ve ‘me case of this kind, ‘f clally interesting, an '& contrast between the con- Buccers of General Mosquera would s02 a - gram ay pn Mgr “pl far. A few days after this letter hed been deepatched— Fr ee | Gack ciihe United States on the one band anc of England | the contention. “Monds ‘ae and in iis toe pomanuonne and I fancy some considerable manwuvring was necessa- wie ge portion of these pr fusts figure now in the ex. among Tap nemised Serviens of she 00 insure t tbds from tho porte ef New'Work, Boston? and y ite de! 4 fame Nadelphia, where they are stored betore crossing the wr 4 importation trade 0” the Souchern States ig not iese | he was righty captured in Canada, or as to whe:her tho Fea cap to Ei, He then ‘issed. lie forehead, told bien than eight mitlions of fr oan) tak Stane 2 Sho Emarees ei vecetres: Bes yes, Create vee, ae | ie ae emanation waa wae tae Norineen lpeee, Fhe peded i in mind the c!rcum- ptenows of thelr im fhe would t to hear | ¥ Cpa ER quantity of cotton, _ neither to vindicate the rights of the State «: mn , for 1 — 1,130,000,0007. _ $2:26,000.000 | bad srented so mach feeling in this coun:ry, he might bo odaste Be aj Md er on the subject of slavery, and showing the | the liberals, and, of course, every opinion nearly wae misre presen: ‘When the | faice c! the United | favorable to’ the Lfverals. So’ wags the world. nd hers ‘was established al] her great elateemen looked | the conservatives luxuriate in their own Party opinions jom,of slavery at no distant day. ds ed Ay of the wer and ite case and yeare nad passed since that time, but £0 far tae =homoioon following copy of a translation of f yay having been put an end to, the numer of | the“ 08 del Libertador Sion Bolivar,’ in the slayer bad enormous:y increased, and slavery had | year 1828:— v . become one of the natioral institutions of the country, | There is no faith in America—neither as a na+ién nor to which the Southern States clung with extraordinary |, individually. The constitusione are merely booxe: the ; a Propor- yy the Submiesion io all laws that are not palatable, | himself though holding high office, is double dyed in spe- }' 4y the gioamy accounts’ received from the French and | tion than the white; while in the Antilles, in Africa, » Newcastle to Canada, he should like to know oe scecmtance with the provisiens of the constitutional | culations: when, I say, such facts are remembered, it is 4 fab wines cuariel. ‘The Bank of France is reported | and ‘ally in the so very philanthropic ‘States | all what authority he had to send orders at all. lack race decreases Jonial Ce pe ee Ey The increase of lation, On @ soil where the poin- + to state that there deen two. vi pacity. The result was, that while the cree States had |! .Ws sheots of : the elections struggles, Brod arrived, if he continued to be as good and ag well | nayited and tincultivated parla far surpass the quant:ty SF rights ef the vechie.of teande 2oriay Prorested in commerce, seins, erature, ‘hearts and | easteby ana life torment. ne Uiberiy ieposed as at present i eee would giadly | of pec! janda, being oni it is eto | the trial of thin case and before He final cer- t contributed to the c!vilization and of | ,, Another is dated November 9, 1890, and ie as fold. 9 — ) see bim in bis service. Wher reupon ir him suppoee that, in a future, more or remote, the mination. an jeation was made to the: Cour: of | mankir:, the Southerz or alave States had ind, | ‘America is ungovernable. Those who served th ‘@ gold penoil case, with an ‘‘N’’ engraved upon the end. | 67’ ‘aad importation will follow a Bench in thie country for a writ of habeas corpus aad mare powertelly was thibe ied et this mo- | Revolution ploughed the sea. The oni 0 de : j ‘to the increase of population. to Apdergon out of the jail im Caade and berore ment by the threatened disrupt: Unig, and con | im America is emigrate. coustelen att . Our Berlin Cerrespondence. The §) of the new confederation is then the in 10 have bis case inquired into, Tero | sequent sacrifice of the prestige andgicry of thet great | evitably into the hands of an unbridled mob, n: ter + Benuwv, Feb. 20, 1861. bound up with im and in | bad been some ciroumatances aiten 1‘ American expire, On oti , wards peer to petty tyrants of every ~ 200 teraus in All thore , we have thie cage In. the Here, be considerabie sacrifice to hers’! for thé time, abolished by every kind of crime and dee: yb Fi fhe Pollof Godla—The Effect wpom Continental Purepe— ‘of necessaries and consumers wo thet it was very far from’ jon. 10 avery 's Ali se osienee, Sad the Jon’ would in- | feroclty—the Eu} » perhaps, will mot de i won Condition of te Bank of Pruwia~—Prusian Finances Iu time they will extend their on. Jobe any remart whatever to the jodgeg: | form of, eho ect whizh that had bad upon the b ml ys If it were possible that any part ¢ ona ¢ ene 5 Me MOA chest’ ports will Bé open to the'dommattn oh ite’ | cd'tNe nutes mad lmptesilon WHS ALE moar aes: | Satie bea ot bees yente bese ame seuantabie’ trench Petiod of Ameren Now Shire, ad vale x — wl SP. ‘i , ‘ ! ‘The fall of Gaeta ie a great blow and discouragement to world, ned Peres beortans tora ‘that favor- .} cided that came jb Regia tae on no doubt for the fret two or. after emtancipa- Aivar, whom the poltvinne’ tate a gnified adel i the party of reaction throughout Kurope, and nowhere | abie circumstance which facilitates the prac- | titled them to, omy ge tor them, tne rezpec: of | tion ruin appeared to . The and | by the title of the Washington of his count ery @ ‘than in Prussia. The Marchese di Certeofiano, | tioof her new commercial policy , ‘the Een one, (Hear, ‘The country ough! 0 dé | imports bad largely in: . The negroes bad sequired | believer in ihe United Sates as a citizen, must ‘more #0 '" , ber trade MAY, Hotwithstanding a of such a court, he should be wanting in seif- whieb sould not'hé estimated ct jess than | wonder that General Bolivar should (0 wee the. who wasgent to Berlin by Francis II. to congratulate Wil. ‘competitor with that of the Northern’ for et if be 600,808 the | word America, woen he only referred to Bolivia, of ae j Pg liam 1. on bis accession to the throne, hed assured the Loe erro in demand in foreign ‘ete, | ju bat least South America. Still more must one jor and ' 3 had no idea of capita. | will find, besides, in the difference of the manu! regret that the great Libertador in ‘ King and Court that his master cap 80 soon lost the Lah. 7 would be price, an advantage which, with the custom daties one periods of Lope that nerved bis arm in battle and thrilled hie heart Jating, and that, at all events, the siege Pro. | will be undoubtedly, and by way of reprieal, levied on | of Lords; and at How different were the closing days of our tracted (11 the spring, by which time it wes hoped | merchand: coming from the Northern repubite, will in- revered. Te the Se are mangicn, who rejoieed in ble Great Werk, and something might ‘that would force the Piedmont. | sures market Meret med pore Court had seoke wore quan te itcren toed and be ae, ped nothing of conven: | e610 shandom seems ee, sarthee ete ha La rong aio beans 9 see ne ton brn paney * siti _— sionaliy oF etiquette about It, The ory wea, “iva a negetinens matural ally, sf need be, of giving to Bwrope, if | wae within their oo oe Hed Testa.” vig eis every appear. | setting cut for Ludwigstuat, where be bad been invited | ogcumstancer 1) ons Wek an in em | such was the fact, ponebie Frm Geir. terenke PGE TT CORdRity we Goud WH, panengs \u oe wo [Fpesd (a few days with the Dywager Gramd | change for a simple 7 very probably | reference would have been made AS} p@ red in the Porvener, of this city. The paper ip @ i }

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