The New York Herald Newspaper, March 5, 1862, Page 5

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NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1862—TRKIPLE SHEET. 5 next, whieh it willbe neces- | that they would greater and more permanent ford delight to spectators in Spam. (Hear, hear.) | murdered all alike. The question still remains to be | usually at 4P. M..has ceased to start at that hour, | ultimo. Consols closed flat. Money was in moderate 4 enone Be "army ecimaten for upon the relat eh ahauld ‘peevail jt ec den poner merteieg rg A dw od solved, how ean such security be obtained with a form of | and travellers now have fo start at 7A. M. to arrive | domand at the general rate of 23g per cent, this, as ‘ums incon > x. Mey, and the account he gave was something utterly dis- | goverament like that which has brought that vast em- | no sooner than under the former arrangement. The de- LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET. aime aetee Cy se SRG. C. LEWIS! REPLY gusting. (Hear, hear.) ‘the ‘was surrounded by | pire to its present pass? lay isall between this and the Austrian frontier, and is | The sales of cotton for four days have been 41,000 ‘of my honorable’ suggest, . 0. Larne The question w ‘ncived in the | #18tge and extensive wall. which was decorated ‘with | Public rumor attributes to Spain a desire to place some | increased by what seems (until the railway company | bales, including 20,000 bales to speculators and exporters. of the reinforcements be cover- has raised ia not necessary mnoct an extraor. | "uinan skulls on spikes. He himself was compelled to | one of her many infantas at the hoad of the old de- | shall think fit to explain Mt) & very cunecessary pave of | The market was firin, with a triling advance. supplementary estimate. YT ‘as briet! ieee. of this eatunate, ie ternforeements sent out | 2@.* Wituees to one of those human sacrifices, where the | Pendency which she once #0 sadly mismanaged. But of | four hours at Salzburg. At one portion of the read bo- TRADE REPORT. committee the principal iteme ‘ot which | ‘inary charge in consequence unhappy captives wore put into things like canoes and | all other people the Spaniards are said to bo the most | tween Vienna and Salzburg travellers have to leave the | Manchester advices report goods and yarns upwards, T will preface my explanations by re- under the "4 circums| that thrown over a parapet from forty to fifty feet high, and if | detesved. rail and to proceed for between two and three hours in | but the market was quiet. that the number of men was in excess of thevote | Now, lt may Me ates gediey whieh the 1 not killed by the fall they were despatched by Prince Napoleon’s name has not, I boliove, boen men- | carriages drawn by horses, Thoy arrive at Salzburg at civmaslbiok ‘iaciasuedes Wine ‘months of the year, and theretore 4s | 9)"* tanen tlds ty Standing below. (Hear, hear.) Nothing wasaccomplished | tioned as a candidate; but the Princo is too comsident | half-past eight in the evening.abd wait until haif-past | que maiVERPOOL BREADSTOTFS MARKET. necessary for the departinent to take stepa for | ¢)\ auionaen | id make a Jacge expenditure for their | PY ‘he mission, and I very much doubt whether any per- | @ democrat to consent crer to wear a crown. ; twelve. It is'presumable that there are reasons for not | Co. poport flour aiher wel. beaiy. Wheat ot an nee Caer See Ga Cwo miltary and naval defences: but, masmuch as that suaion nocd indnoe ihe present Hing af Dehamey, who Ree re fon mene So, neteeat, bes nae of Kins | ering Nena, ah cloves tavtnnd st poreh 2. Mid can? | somiy: ved Southern and Western, Iis.a 12, 21.; white Jattor $ and in ~ % scems, if possible, less imbued with feel manit} i en spoken of. ney ngthens » te , ms “ 4 lo oa MTs Ens A baiance imigt ‘bo established. Ac" provision had not boon made, her Majesty's government | than his father, to abandon this Practice, (fear, hear | Somo who kuow tho hinpetuons temper and anventur- | while this derangement liste, litle or no dvau.a:0 over Sad pela a catern, las. a 388. Coen quiet; mixed ‘the reeruiting of men was stopped in thom: | oo eed ee eee cae at if woe did’ not seny out this | Atthosame time T can assure my noble friend and tha] Os courage of Prim, the commander of the Spanish ex- | the other route were it not ‘that ou the latter there is a Se . But when aru “ i her Majesty's government to effect an ‘riends are sure gai - ube, ia this neighbor a “ “ oi al nc , . and tae a echt page — Heae, hear.) ‘The right houorable | wi'n the King of Dahomey for effecting our object, (Hear, | #9ire him with more ambitious hopes than any he bas | huge torrent full of eddies and whirlpools. hanged | Boot stowiy. Pork heavy. Bacon quick ab ¢ gontieman has taken a perfectly fair and proper course in Calling attention to a very important principle of policy which is involved in the case before us. Now, during ican war, tho Parliament of this country passed an act by which it declared that it was illegal to tax the colonies. Iam afraid that it would be very difficult to pass an act declaring it illegal for the colonies to tax us. (Hear, hear.) The question virtually amounts to a tax imposed on tho mother country for the benefit of the colonies; but inasmuch as the colonies are dependencies, as we ailow (hem no option with rogard to our foreign relations, but make then follow in our wake, make them share our fortune:, and involve them in our wars, it is not unnatural on the part of the colonies to require that a very large portion of the ex- penso of their naval and military detence should be de- more ; 58. 868. Lard Grmer, at dis. 0433. Tailow quiet. hear.) Wih to the slave trade, I uasion | hitherto manifested; and ho has probably not forgotten At Floridsheim, near Vienna, where the last station of na Oemer, al wall cohdeduce fo npg cn other prs n chiefs, to | the example of Iturbide, who gat n by. defending the | the Northern Railway is, it has invaded its shores to a LIVERPOOL PRODUCE MARKET. @onden i." They” wil only bo induced to abandon i | Soanish rarnareby, Dut who soon net up for himsel. great distance, aid has done a good deal of damage. Sugar quics ead steady Cote see eet ente epee Sorinced 170s © wales be Bore to tap Advantage A NATIVE CANDIDATE OF ROYALTY. t's inany years singo such Hoos wore seen in these | ates small, Rosin dull: common, I Prvedraych Foc Spcitor 9 to carry on lecitimate trade. The | [paris (Feb. 12) correspondence of the London Globe.) | PAT Pentine quiet at 63s, ee iF Resist davines [eye from br slave | “ Respocting the throne of Mexico, and its acceptance by Givens Btens LONDON MARKETS, Josititante trae.. The ocoupation. of Tages ‘hax veaiten | &,22Psburg, the principle of hereditary right, 80 0e- | the Parliamentary proceedings en the 19th were unim- | _, Breadstufs dull. Sugir Ginn, Colle active, ‘Tea firm. ie impediug the élave trade in that Graver, ant if we | romptorily upheld in the cage of the dispossessed claim- | porant. ‘The bill logalizing marriage with @ deceased | Ricequietand steady. ‘Yalow firmer at 40s. 3d. Lin: could only chest Whidah a. ld’ he uf id id ants in Italy, has led some journals to notice the exist- wifo's sister was pasuod to a second reading in the Com- seed oil steady at 34, Cd. Spirits of turpentine steady to drive the slave tride from that part of the coast, | tuCccf direct decenlant Of the Artec dynasty of Monte, | mong by 144 to 133 2 we at 67s. a O78, Gd. . at 3 + | zuma. He tozches grammar in the Indian College at raehgoed 2 n fiaieseie ecern ‘ But, ag stated by my noble friend, the slave trade is | Mexico, and his name is Chimalpopocam, which signides, | »,100,/rish Himes says that Sir Robert Peol iereparted 40 | consis ctoget-gn Folsruary 20 at 027 408 for mone though thele govorements have as torerae ee abr? | in the Rative dialect, “Burning Shield.” Galway lino,_ shat when. that company were prepared to AMEIICAN HECURTTIBS. ek doned the practice of the slave trade, yet habits to (From the Paris Siecle, Feb. 13.] perform their part of the contract government would bo | Hlinois Centralshares, 46 3g d which people are once trained are very dificult to bo The Spanish government, which has set itself up as the | rpady to perform theirs. itis imferred from this that LATEST VIA LON dy. Ries upward; . 9d, Spirits of ture bad of the recruiting was resumod, only 1,803 men having oy vernment must satis’, use that they hat Dot scaceruplaced any war; that they did not fol- low any warlike policy, and that the preparations which they of unexpected the extraordinary sums now asked are owing to pro- visions made for an emergency. There is a considerable charge for a medical stat. en it seemed likely that vie Railroad, 20, DONDE! frayed by the mother country. It is an unquestionable ‘ defender of the prinicple of 1) ight, and which re- m 7 the militia in Canada would be called upon to make great . 7 . evaticated, At the same time much progress has been prinicple of Divine right, and which re- | when tho company pr ameut Inspector LivBRvooL, 1, 1861. exertions in assisting to defend that 00) A Gooettt iit han been bho case with very alight excep. ;nd my woblefriont is right in saying that, if this | £488 to recognizo the King of Italy in order not to give a | four first class, ships, ngth and speed, | _ COrtox.—The rales of tho week foot up 85,009 bales, ip to the present time, and it is a matter for rade from the West Coast of Africa could be | blow to the imterests of legitimacy, is about to tind her- | gove;nmeut will give the tors and 13,500 to incliding 22,000 baics to spe 4 a onsideration of this House whether a change in this es- ne | se:f, without knowi ina vi ra iti i ' p hacpend ah Sent, And plan, 2 TRAIN | cout sof th obange i stopped, there are sources there of legitimat: trade of in- . without knowing it, in a very embarrassing position | © \ proposition was pending among the Scotch iron mas- , . aad price’ have ad- ‘all we had heard, there Nig ‘@ confident anticipation that Slane baliey stoald be effected. There AE 05 JSinite value, nt only th that country itself, Lut to England | @ Mexico. for there exists in the capiial of that country | ters to blow out one-eighth of their furnaces, owing two } ¥! ighth a oue-qu: @ pony ou tlh the North American provinces would exert themselves to | MIE appouited last gexsion which went iuto this sub- | ana arma! part of Europe. Cotim plan's. have been sven | #4exe ndant of the anciont Aztec sovereig:s. That son | tho depression of the iron trade, but it fell to die g. od, | The sales today (Hriday 10,960 ba the utmost for thelr Own defonce, end in order to meot | etary fully, and peat Sb Ni iar giver prowine notiratly, within a great zone, in overt abuntanee, | of 8 mary kings is a Professor of grammar at the Indian | oving to @ want of unanimity among ihe masters, 4,000 to speculators aus’ exporters, the m: the assistance which they were to receive from the ‘and shedding (he colt: on the ground; and it is evident that | College; be is called Chimalpopocam (smoking buckler), | ‘The London Post has an oiitorial urging the removal of | frm at the size 1 quotations tar. notice of a motion founded on the report of that cominit | fyi: : ; | Aname’ which was also borne by one of his glorious ai” eindiee onc r idl . Mother country. . hear. ce i , : Wt this isa matter of zrcat importance to th , 4 yon glorious an- | the prohibition in the West Indies against the efforts for P Afuddling. pa OC ie dvantogee would ray that | 2% abd it is his intention to move a resolution shortly | Yais country, Test: pies ute case facturers of | Cesuors. Wo find. those detaila in the recital uf a travel- | obtaining sclored laborers Siem angpanh ‘of Narth ames isd. the reinforcements sout out were strictly of @ defensive reat tanger ced rit wide je aap that no exertions will bo omitted on the part of the | If Who is a Protessor at the College de France, and who ivecates tite mieration of fred’ negroes from 124. government, first of all to endeavor to eradicato the | forms part ofthe French Academy. “M. Chimalpopo- abominable system of human sacrifice, and in the next | CM,” says M. Amporo, “affirms that ho is a descendant phice to put a stop, as far as possible, to the stave trade, | Montezuma, Te even declared to me tha character. If it so happened that England had no colo- nies beyond the Atlantic, undoubtedly she would not have moved a single soldier, The reinforce- ho West Indies to c yolope the cotion culture of those islands, selves until that motion is before us, her than now go into @ somewhat desultory discuss: 1 of that large ons. line between Canale and the Bri America n ie one hand and the t was some years ago in entest, ant tion, conducted ty a Plenizotentiary f Mary pecple thovght the ling which he obtained between the menits sent out were for the defence of our own eolonin, | question, which i3 not contined to Canada, butextoucs | CHoar, hear.) Ie is quite tus that owine to tho civit | Of the United States expedition, some overtures were France. ch hs downward cart ineht aam’ sapicanien coretnen clave need rs to the ‘colonies im general. (Hear, Hoar.) As 1 | im eastea in (eaazat corti tionk hap withdrawn mae to him on the subject, but he ouly regarded them It is rumored that Princo Napoleon is dissatisfied with qualities have slightly declined,” which Canada and the othor provinces stand with respect | 2 90 the case of Canada, T will point out cir | the greater part of their eruizers from the coast of Afri- | 48 intrigues, to which he took care not to lend himself.” | the terms of the address on the R tion, and will PRovierNs.—The market is quiet and steady. tous, we manage their foreign relations. Any offsnca | CUMstances which T think will not unnaturally weigh | ca and I cannot say, off hand, whother there stil ro. | We are not at all in the socret y, and know | move an amendment iu more energe! LosD ON, Feb. 21, 1862. given tous uaturally affects them; and we should be | Witla Canadian, | He would remember tha! the frontir | maine that number of runs which the Uuited States are | BOt Whether an Aztce restoration enters into its views; | — It is believed that the speceh of Prince Console cloned at 0275 a 99 fur money. Previnces ¢f North ited States on the other negetia- this country. qeatly obnoxious to ‘the charge of pusillanimity and of ing unmindiful of the interests confided to our charge M, when the people of C ’@ were threatened with in- ‘vas‘on in consequence of an insult to our flag, wo had shown apy romissness in giving them that assistance bound'by tacatyto maptain on that’ cOnstfay tha sun, { % fine ourselves to reminding it of this fragment | the address of the Sonate \ill express the real policy of pression of the slave trade, but it is quite tree that the | {rom ths yoyace of M. Ampere to Mexico. Perhaps M. | the Emperor on the italian questio federal government have shiwen the most anzicus and sincere | Chimalpopocai woutd show himself more accossible to | ‘Ihe Bourse continued very heay desire ty put in foree their laws against the slace trade; ana | “by overtures which might be made to him at the pre- per cont rentes further cet it may beexpected that when the present unfortrmate | Sent time, ue latest sales were:—Illinois Cen- ; Erie, 29 a 30. ase in bullion of and on the 19th the ined nearly one haif | £148,000. ent, closing at 69.95. The four and a half per cents which undoubtedly was their right, inasmuch as the |, [™ Lager om provinces was unfavorable 0 the } dispute in Amorica terminato, whethor in tho ostablish- WHAT THE ARCHDUKE MAXIMILION REQUIRES. clined’ more than one per cent,closing at 99F. Disaster to the U. 8S. Ship Vermont. quarrel was not theirs, but ours, and "Canada ‘was only | P/E, and that he pave wp vighis which he might have | ment ut one or. two governments, the American fith, [From the Paris Patrie, Feb. 14.] A decreo is published admitting into France froo of | The following extract is taken from a private letter to fheidentally involved ’in it. I’ quite agree with the | “tied. (Hear, hear.) Well, 1 am not saying that | ryties will concur with Great Britain in some arrango- | We aro assured that tho propositions made by tho | duly rough and purified cast iron, old iron. bars, hoops the treaty was not for the interests of tho empire, but 1 think it ig not an unnatural thing that the Canadians should say, ‘If you take the negotiating of our frontier out of our hands and bring the Americans clore upon our ment by which more oflectual assistane> may be given | Mexican envoys to the Archduke Maximilian Mave been’ | aud choot iron, steel, in bars and sheets, and rolied cup: | *"i0hd Of Acting Assistant Paymaster and Storekeoper by American cruisers to check acrime which t¢a capital | seriovsly examined by tho Prince, and that he, before | per, when coming {vom abroad and destined for re-ex. | Of the United States ship Vermont, which sailed from offence bu the laws of the United States. With respect, | giving a definitive reply, has demanded that the foliow- | portation, after having been converted in French work- } Boston on Monday, February 24, for Port Royal, giving therefore, to the A‘rican coast, hope ny noble friend | ing conditicns shal! be fullilled:—That the population of | shops into ships, machines, or avy other work in motal. | ghe particulars of the disaster which occurred to th.t opinion given this evening, that the insult offered to our ‘Qug was.an unhappy accident, but as regards the offcor imselt it was premeditated. He himself informed his countrymen that he made the seizure in consejuence of his _ iver, if you even concede somo portions of our terri- " tyncid ‘s o! pata ss e nf Studies of internatimal: law. (Luughtor.) | Tnerefore it | TX u som 0 , will believe that we are anxious to carry out those views | Mexico shall manivest their desire to establish a liberal | Another decree reduces the interest on ‘Treasury bonds : Py i cn ep oh —_ preci Dat as | {ery for T Dellove that was a fw-t—vit 16 fair you | which he bas xo properly exprestel. (Hear. hy in the country; thatthey shall freoly make | to 214, 8 and 334, according to the time of falling due. ship:— regards the government’ it was unintentional and acei_ | *2ould do something to help us when we are threatened | pord A. Curent. said:—In the present distress arising heir intentions a8 to the cheice of a sovereign, | — The Paris Montxur says tho government of the Emperor | At about seven o’clock, on Monday evening, while Genial. Every one mast haye acon from the. fret the: | With a war on that dcoount,”* (Hear, hear.) I think whew , 4 from dearth of cotton, we naturally locked to India for | and that their choice shall be ratified by Europe. has requestod information at Rome respecting the pastoral | goi it i supplies: but the shorinens of” the atarlo was suclt that at a ae rte ite a OC lotter convoking all bishops to Rome fr the canonization | 8°iné along comfortably 4n tow of the Kensington, the ship compared with Americancotton our operatives sustained | yp jg asserted that the governinent has suid thore was | Of martyrs, the letter haying been Published in France | W% Stdéenly overtaken by a violent gale from the west. a loss jn manufacturing it equal to twenty-five per cent. | contrmaticn of the news via Amerien that tho syeriete | Without having be-n previously commanicated to the | ‘The Kensington tmmodiately east off our hawsers, and in we discuss those matters we ought to put ourselves in the position of our colonists, who do not take the sume view as many gentlemen in this house are incitued ft was utterly impossible that any instructions could Bavo been sent to Captain Wilkes, Ho never p:otended that ho ha: any, and Mr. Seward gave the most positive to take, (Hear.) With respect to the time during ars 2 5 assurance to this government, throngh Mr. Adams, that . : The African cotton approximated much more clescly to ot government. Cardinal Antonelii replied that the invi- a which the 18,600 men will be maintained Cans ~ ee 7 t, had sustained a decided defeat by the Mexicans, and that s eT ee . half an hour was out of sight astern. The Vermont. the act was éntiroly without the ec of the Ameri- hope the Rondrablo gentlemen will ays sap ane the American than that which was obtained'from India, | tho despatch of reinforcements is rendered necessary, tation was siinply afriendly one, and not obligatory in s id vernn:ent. (Hear, hear.) But, though so far an r it, still, om the pat of an officer of the United States government it was a deliberate aff: ont to our flag. In consequence of that affront our North American pro. ‘vinces were entilled to our assistance—(hear, hoar)— and think we should hive shown an utter absence of all sense of honor and a fecling if, having drawn the people of Canada and New Brunswick into our quarrel, we had left them to extricate themselves from itas best they might. (Hear, hear.) Ithink we were mot only justilied in sending these reinforcements, but that every obligation of national honor made it necessary to send ‘soidiers to the frontier. (Hear, hear.) ‘The and by getting @ supply frim Africa, therefore, the wages | "the Tempe and ethor Frenc character—only intended to give weight to the religious | “Ader double refed topsails, was immediately «ff at the Of our operatives would virtuatty te increased to the eztent of | monarchical restoration. in North Averiee woke nie | COFSONY. 3 Fate of about ten knots, We kept her before the wind Gren five per cont. the entire country, fiom Dahomey & | yenefit spain and the Spanish monarchieal interests exist | OF this revly the French government expressed the | until about eight o’clock, when she gradually fell off and the Niger, was one vast cotton field. ‘The cotton plant was | wethere, wish that the bishops should not leave their divcesses, and - ; incigenous and perennial, and conseqvently it didnot } A Aron‘Teicagoli stated in Parliament that the govern. | Must not ask permission to quit the empire, exeapt where | £00 after broached to on the port tack. By this time require replanting year by year a8 in America; the crop | meng had 10 intention to send ships to rejafores the | Se'ious diocesan interests shonid call them to Rome. the gale had incroased to hurricane. Breakers were had only to be picked and sent home. Of the sgar crop | yoxiean expedition, but merely considered it advisable ‘The application for conversion four and a half peroent | reported to leeward, and orders given to let go both the same might be gaid, 80 that in considering this ques- ida few frigates to the colonics to protect Italian | Teutes liad roached twenty militon francs. bo th tion the Honge woz!d not be d ing with it purely from | Lose Pokin news of the 15th of January states that the bated ho starboard one wont first, carrying wiih | asentimental point of vie hey would naturally bo Sy a French Minister would leave China early in the spring, | allthe chain: the port one next, which brought up with 7 DAVIS’ COTTON ROUTH THROUG: C fr Pas day 9 sae? animated by such high princip'es a8 tho desire to arrest is Cheb. 14) Beis eee egs rey A ada ‘ returning to France via Siberia, Pekin was perfectly | some seventy-five fathoms out. The carpenter's gang» cruel practices, and, if possible, to put an end to tho Puirie reverie ton subject it hat before mantiodea | Wangail. The Emperor had been ill, but had quite re | aa vine wy fared ated a slave trado altogether; but they might at the same time : ned 1 covered. aving been mustered, stood by, ready to cut away the him or the se any pledge with respect to it. 1 can only say that it is certain!y no! in the contensplation of the governnicnt lo maintain for any time like five years the ine creased force which was required only by ‘w teniporary exi- grReW, ad which was meant to mee’ a peculiar occasicn. do not contemplate the necessity of keeping the present amouut of force fur a long time iu Canada, but how long it may be necessary to maintain it there is a matter upon which 1 am not now able to give a very distinct pledge. With regard to the militia, it is certainly tre that both in Canada and New Brunsw it has not been very effective, and that there has been a neglect in calling them out aud training them; but that ‘ afar same time | ag a consoquenive of the occupation by the allied Powers af EE SOIC Be ert actos manner | subject has beon drove under the aitention of | merciatadvactacen.on thin costry ifthoy could estab. | cf the const of the Stato of Tamuiipes, a provines of Italy. Es els btractei ot apr Obed Bott ‘iMeulty im consequence of the short notice und of | {8° Governors by the Colonial Department. and they | tish in Dahomey a better state of things. y Mexico, adjoining Texas, which, a8 is well known, forms | no now Italian loan was anuounced in London on the | "ane sit ne, amie. : pongo sean pei area str peerpy rupture with te | B&ve exerted themselves very much, and Tam part of the States separated from those of the Nor 10ih inst. The total is £1,782,000 (issued at T4), requir, | _ THe ship now labored heavily and shippet considerab'e bound to say When, in October last, President Davis was informed Imprisonment of Another Englishman. | of tne combined expedition which was velig. prepared ed for railroad purposes, One-fourth of the loan was | Water. One of the ports in the that the population has responded with United Stated, becanse I can give the House the most great spirit and readiness, for they have s'iow.: the i:t- bay got open and so mm Provinces na‘erally imi tate the example of their neighbors in the United States, who never kept up any large standing army, as. we see by th: measures which they are forced to have recourse (o. ‘hey are driven to very extraordinary measures in order to rajse an army, and of course labor under a great diff- culty in the absence of trained officers, or of any regular milit:ry system, and hence they are forced to suppiy by positive assurance that tho news of this geizaro came i . In the He f Lords on the 18th the Earl of C: t Mexico, he occupied himeelf with eetablishi: He | Subscribed for tn Italy. much water came in that the decks wore ficoded nearly ite unexpectedly on the government, and c inost alacrity in meking pecuniary sacrilices for their in the House of rds 1 18 ¢ Earl of Carnar- inst 2 he Uf wi ening a mode —_—_—— » f Bo expectation of any rapeare with the Tinited ‘Nata own defence. (Hear, hear.) I think it would be im- | yon called attention to the imprisonment of Mr. Shavor, pares. palo ee plan ele ae Gran the fren ea Spain. wa'st deep. Tho pumps were manned and ths crew were Hear.) Tho news camo, too, at atime when the com. possible for mo to eareeen in too strcng terms the excel- | 4 British subject, in Fort Warren, and said it was a clear ty 39 tal eaetan OF sation. aint FONE te ihe base iv. f Mapnin, Feb. 20, 1862, busy all night clearing her, The sick were ali removed mort, difientt, and the weathor it vary inciement ia | jute) %y balicva they wil tke measures for IPE, Tmeclisieal ete: Pues tea pot: Siuieal sans. cory direction, Enrope nay the supply horsele with cot: hy aaaaaasoriatl Rows, Feb. 20,1962, | @ietnext day. One poor fellow having already departed Cana * riteul- | the systom of their militia; but the committce must lear parnind n in the ports of ult of Mexico, and the Powers lice have made man: . . i Ihis life the previous evening, it was found 11 ible to are es we ato pt ‘on The Husa will agro withms in mind that the North Amert sation, and it was not for tho government todo Itfor | yould no longer have to occupy themsclyes with the | 220 Police hav arrests. Pp ng, impose him, neither kad he rebutted the charges brought agulnst | ‘quostion of the blockade of the Southern ports by the | eqiiayb eure yes of He National Committee bas been ton tins, al of which were blown into shreds, a The ittee hope f¢ 1 cept fo and mizentopsail, which h: eon furles ssqng commision, hope for early anooean, but counsel: Dae | 1 tace the gale came.on, The tioleelorbated by” the Wiskt I Karl Ruseell deeply regretted the ¢ivil war in America, | een ee a chee ade and expressed the hope that Englaud wosld treat with | marks your contemporary, that tho shipment of cotton | gyetyent uae the Prem eons wilh ace Leake ance | and the flapping of the sails was terrible. Orders given ; . ; » Mexics r i Id not be heard, and all was confusion accordingly. forbearance any gtretch of power not intended to injure | in the Mexican ports will not be iu oppesition to any of |” "4 popular manifestation was prepared to celebrate the | °°" a British interests or to insult the British flag. the principles of international law. by anniversary of the capture of Gaeta; but numerous patri- | The crew are generally inexperienced, many of whom that the government had no option as to the course which were called on to take. (Hear, hear.) Though I move the votes seprately, it may be convenient that I should now explxin a few of the more important items. Invote number three there is a considerable for the purchase of horses. Some of those were for Bi tteries of royal artiliery—ninety-four horses him, fatoral government, as this transit road will be quite i equivalent to froe accors to the Southern ports, as far as each batiery—making © sum of £564. Only | ‘Vis expenditure the dovect of a regu'ar trained army. 5 Sarees ots traversed the streets to prevent its taking plico, secmed perfectly paralyzed and good for nothing. Durin, 380 wore sont out from Kugland, 90 that the rent. had to | (Hear, bear.) Ee ae ee ae ee ae The German Confederation. the night a gun got adrift on the spar deck, which was be provided sa Canada. Other horses were required for ‘Trent affair was justified, but said that he entirely dis- | rug AGITATION FOR THE LEAD OF THE FEDERAL Prussia. finaily secured with dificult; On tins: da: two battalions of tho Military Train, which were sent to sented frém the views of the petitioners. ALLIANCE. Beau, Feb, 20, 1862. ly y- 'y moru- THE STONE BLOCKADE, [From the London Times, Feb. 14.) The division between Prussia and Austria is continually | ing—the gale as yet unabated—the scene alolt What is Thought in France. Prussia is now tho leader af the German Confederation, | widening. The language of the Prussian and Austrian pa- | and throughout the . Ship beggars description” Of Her position hag also been strepgtheaed by the demon- i 'e howitie. Tho reading of the-agdrere to the Emperor of Frarce | strations of attichment mata by the inhabranteot the | “The'agitation in Germany 1s fnereasing. Numerous | %® ‘ils, nothing bat fragments remained, and hn taken place in the Senate, and debate commercod | Rhine province_two years ago. The Rhinelanders, it | mectings of the National Association were to be held, in | te decks were covered with ice and debris, facihtate the transport of thé stores. entire number pire ‘was 716, br plea Crest £35 each, give a gyoss charge . re are then ite: for medicine and for expenses rendered necessary in oe sequence of the to which men travelling through Canada at this season of the year are exposed, Earl (Lord John) Russell Thinks the Ob- structions only Temporary—Charleston Harbor Cannot be Permanently De- There is upon it on the 20:b ult, need not be said, expressed more their love of German | which Prussia was oxpoctod to take the leadership. ‘Below everything portable was adrift and in ruins. The Teadhmnabsumensiqesvhreiectiak ute}. |i aes of Lords on the ath ult. the Fartof | T&a!drcss regrets the sufferings inflicted by the civil } ‘iam ire ser ietetes timer Ueunlccnohameel.& te Cocco aaoieeoaer Lanse, Feb. 15, 1862. | mon wore engaged in pumping abip, cleating the wreck ‘to sond outa supply of muskets for the militia in Canada. = loan aa ee is ae war in America on trade and manufacturers, but agrees | who stand in the first line of German defence. Since | reason to believe that the Prussian governmont is about | 924 bending new sails, One of the principal items is £173,000 for the purchase of | STX#OV# rose to put a question ‘oreign Secreta'y | sm the Emperor that the friendly relat‘ons of the two | King Wiiliam’s visit to Compiegne, and the deciaration | to recognize the kingdom of Italy.” ‘Wednesday was more moderate, and the crew were cn in. reference toa report which had just reached this ‘warm and extra clothing fur the troops in British North Countries render noutrality incumbent, and believes that | wat, ®,evod unterslanding exists Hotween thi two | | The sumo journal attributes, this rorolution to the dil | gaged getting thexhip to rights, Early ia the morning of Q rer a 1 influence on the Confederation | culties now pending between Prussia and Austria, 1 Beriea.Tkwns ought necesary to incur considera oon eS Ma cuaanis pal dba cemaarectte tbe quarrel willbe all the shorter if not complicated by | i¢ ‘nataraly ‘more powectul than ever. “Tt. may ‘j ahi ee this day the iron tiller broke, and while getting up an. ‘who had to serve in that-most inclement climate. Those | rites States to bo #uuk in Maflltt s Chauuel, in front of | foreign interferonce. be that t - Py of Berl igre to take Austria. other the rudder brake to pieces and got adrift. Had i, aoe gentlemen gd til be re in pot boot opinion Charleston harbor, and algo that a third ‘squadron, laden anand aiiadied camiathiaas fedora n aa e 3. gees. Re ea ; iP qn biveiiasorea ‘i Ag sept Ne ictal forced the stern posts, which was feared might be the who read accounts imate, of opin’ nf ° vanen| 5 ustrl r recent conduct, has lost much of hat the expense incurred for the purpose of providing | 3, timllne mantener ot (crc ener rspagsorerbagen {Paris (Feb, 18) correspondence of the Lendon Branko} rival of Vienne. For the present Austeia can do tte or ih aeanee ta icethern Garman. 7 cane, wo would have all gone to the bottom. Providen. ¥ 1e thing for the trcope, although not inconsidera- 4 t whether he had received any desyatches from Washing- rie says that it has received a private despatch | the Fatherland. She is a cause of danger, and not of ¥¢ is reported that the Emperor of Austria will be hore | tly that was not ths case. wane precaution for health and com- e i ‘ from Washington which states that the United States | safety. In any convulsion she would exhaust, and not | on the 96th inst., aud remain until the 4th of March, ‘Thursday morning we bent a hawser on to the cable, fort of the men. shear.) The 10 cap ea ee the ter seat course | Govercineut is abnut vo send an expedition to ocecupy | foes ite resources, Sho has enemies to ght far beyoud | “ae Archduie Maximilian, itis rumored, wil Teave | Jed it threagh the starboard quarter port, slipped the Cate soldier amounts to £2 1 ., but that includes a com- | B°, a ee" Oo bk 1 had laid er | Austin, sas to preven! the export of cot'on to Burcpe via | the limits of the Confederation, amt too strict an aliiance | tor paris and London towards the end of Februar % os Port, sl Fidi provision of all that was rejuired. ‘There was one | <emPatches, of the noble earl had inid | before | rece, wih her would not only cail down the enmity of Francs, but 7. chain, set head sails and tried to wear ehip, but she Srticle that was not used by any of our regiments, and | Se? Ameren etn teh unauawerable arguments | _S9m0 of the evening journals mention, on the authority | would acaupy the forces of tho Gorman States in other aetna wolana would not pay off; parted the hawser and luffed up again, which was not im storo in this conntry—the article of -| tye considerations which ought to guide them | ofN w York letters, a report that the’ Foathern States | concerns than defending the sational independence, ‘Tony, Feb. 18, 1862. | the windon tho starboard beam. At two o'clock P. M, Jong boots, The government haring been informed =“ iterprises that he had hoped that i, | Bave male propositions at Washington for aa arrange- ‘To make the forces of the Confederation more available Archbishop Felinck! haa received the clergy'of War- % . M. Of our difficulty, w the supply of 1,500 tors, which | in Regard to exterpr! o 107 tit | rent with tho North; bat Soathern gentlemen ja Paris | for the safety of Germany p-oyer by placing them, when rel clergy ‘ar- | this day we descriod a sail, fired guns and made othe? p ; na iad settlod the question. (Hear, hear.) ‘Auat dospatch | Cvores stzong doubteo! ite truth. necessary, under the control of a single sovereign, and to | 88W, and advised them toabstain from singing prohibited | signals of distress. The schooner Flying Mist, thus at- in hours cheers: (i ct fr which they could sarely hace ben ob. seemed to be & most worthy sequel t) the policy with respect to AmericaD affairs which ailparties were agreed foaway with the cumbrous maehivery which, though | SBss in the churches, tracted, bore down for us, A boat was now manned wit caloulated to preserve the rights and’ satisfy ‘The priests who were confined in prison have all been | and I boarded the schooner with orders to pro. cod to the ul i tained, inking had dene so much crit to the notle earl an Americans in Rome, ts bit removed to Russia. “ x 7 - to, ment tad so tally lad ate! the bauer of the ute sell TOPE FIUS THE NINTH AND THB REBEL STATES. ie as ee Pe rung. pets pecans eller M, Schlenker his veon condemned to ra-ido perina- statis by oy pe res Fis.) Moles bmp bint ped i ln al ak ane Hin H.gocresm adeno ot e London Lost] | the wishes of some of the best politicians in Ge-many, Ses PERE Sue eal eh ONRsyn ely sixty miles | Chatham on Saturday afternoon; we could no: make the is Hennadtoaestncs how the stuking of large ships iaden-| eaveral dutiogniehed Geitish andfureign visiters. aurng. | 020 te vate oer Sra rpsnclice amas gta ee pa tetas cdncarhotaenpicwdiontg ih = with stone on banks of mud at the entrance of alitbor | the former were Lady Graham (widow of the laty Sic | BC. Mt Have itt tate iat mum fee mae tee Waakees Hh ihe ge Srna tn ppwnsemrne Rr in will be useful toa great extent, and, altho could end in anything elso but the permanent destruction | Bellingham) and her daughter, Mrs. Blunt, widow of Pro- pers, ‘and even in some of the Chambers, the governinents ConstaxrixoriE, Feb. 17, 1862. from there telegraphed to the Boston and New York of that harbor; and it was on that ground, as fur as he could understand, that the measure was originally pat forward and afterwards justified. The permanent de- struction of a ha: bor was not justified by the laws of war. (Hear, hear.) War undoubtedly sauctioned many grievous acts, but it did net sanction any act of this kind. (Hear.) The permanent destruction or a harbor was hot an act of war of man against man, or of nation fossor Blunt, of Cambridge (Mass.): Sir Richard Kirby, | iro without any definite notions of what is to bedoue,or | _ M. Fourd is preparing a report on financial affairs and | stations the condit'on of the Verm:nt when I left her, re- and Mr, ani Mre.E. Culling Eardley, Miss Rucker Mr. | oven of what thoy: themselves desi-e. Nothing can’be | the incans of liquidating the floating debt. questing that assistance: might be sent be: without de- Bryant. Mr. T. Uzielli and Madame Uzielli, Mr. J. Bras- | Wore misty and unintelligible than the’ s0-c alle projects lay. Having effected this, we bore awuy for Gloucester, seur, Madame Ticlens, kc. Of organization propounded and-combated. by persone in ‘ities eli fro‘ whence I reached this vity by ral. When [left te _, he Pope locked very il!, although net so much soascn | yitho-ity. Of late there has heen a correspondence be- Interesting from: India. Vermont she was under heid sails, having rigged a drag Sunday meraing at Gaudlemass. tween the Saxon and Pressiin governments. Baron | NEWS OF A WAK BETWEEN ENGLAND AND THE UNITED | 0 steer by, drifting northwest by w. st; she was then in In his conversation he touched but little on politics, | pougt, tie Saxon Minister, may be supposed to represent STATES—A PERFECT PANIC PRODUCED IN THE NA- | seventeen fathoms water, Dut was gradually deepening; that exciting topic being reserved for private audiences; | the interests of the minor and purely Gerinan States, in | TIVE MARKETS—PROGKESS OF THE COTTON TRADE. | she was free of water aud tight, and by to-day (Mareh 3) extraordinary expenditure, yet the stores will be availa- ble toa great extent. One of the principal items of war- stores is for gunpowder, urcha seof saltpetre to £20,000, and various other stor:s of thes kind amounts to £170,000. If the committer wich I will givethem all the deails—(n0)—but I maf briefly state that ample provision was male for every contingency, and that the comfort, convenience and Ith of tho soldiers wor i ‘ inst nation, but it was an act of war agairst the | but his Holiness ssemed much ajectel when Mrz. Eard ey jon to the twoxreat Powers andtothestaes, | [talcutta (Jun, 9) corresponcerce of Loudon Tiues.) | at twelve Mf., T suppose her to be in Cosp water, two hun- Ber te dannstie the tale te ak Hrd matier: bounty of Providence, which tiad voucheafed harbors | mentioned to hin that in thesouthern States of America, | Chins Niue, phe tk Dave —peancastens beyond he Maint Santniesemane Deuiediog the awerions aim: KQrGt Sia. elute: salieas nonihanata ar Capo Cod,’ Highland if war eateries 3 broken cet, and fo moat anner, | for the advantage of commerce and for the civi'izing in- | nnd especially in Louisiana, there wero many who loved | jimnits of the Fedoration, Having pondored over the nature | eulty received in India was that war had been declared | Light. The stcamers which have gone in search will, I troops as effecive aa possible. (Hear:) ‘Thelieve’ too, | figences of intercourse between one people and another. | bim and reve-cuced his name. Lied of the Confeteration and th interests of the States, Baron | by England. ‘The effect on the native tradere and banters | apprehend, have no difficulty in finding her, and sho may that no waste. was incurred’ mut thie: prea eye: £00» | (Eenr, hear.) On this ground we were well entitled and | The Pope inquired after Mr. Eardley's henith, ard ex- | Yauet recommonds, so far ae we can understand, that the | wes marcellous. Not an Englishman be:ieved the fact of | soon be expected to arrive at this port (Boston) or Now taken by the efficient officers ‘of the War Sepacimans ty were bound to enter a protest against such acts, (Hear, | pressed gratification at seeing in Rome, compli- | eu organization. should be recoustituced by uniting | the declaration of war, but-a paric seized and tor some | York. hear.) He wished to hear from the noble earl whether these roporte were well founded, and if so, whetner he had taken or designed to take any stops in’ the matt ment for which Mr, Eardley ,with his oaruest sympathios 4 (inved to prevail inthe bazvar, When intelli- Boston, March 4, 1862. for the Italian cause, was he whole of the sovercignties composing it into some: somewhat more pacific was communicated and the ‘Tho steam tug Board:nan, from New York, arrived at u observe economy, even whon A great pressure was put nite unprepared; bet, in & | thing which shall have the character of a federal State. | Ke! them to send out the men as soon as possible. io t Private audience, he will goon have an opportunity of | 4h" eon ane Art testa: Tatts ase ies 7 ar ita Leciotn Colzpae, neptine, staan take ho ; re inne for Cory Cmte by moving a vote | fre should algo wich toknow wheth the noble earl nai | conversing more freoly wich his Holiness. ane ortilevote a very long aad most ouceure | Fnginnd. to obtain. satisiaction reached Calcutta | Provincetown to-day,and reports:—Spoke a fisherman q (ie ‘ received any commun‘cation from tho @vernment of _— despatch somo wecks azo tocombuting the arguments | by the Bombay mail of the 3d of December, | who saw the frigate Vermont, on March 1, at anchor om o : MR. ADDERLEY'S 8PRECH. Franco on the subject, and Ribera the Cire The Question in Other Places. of Baron Berst. The Prussian minister thinks that the | Englishmen were reassured, but the matives did | Georges Bank, with her masts cut away. act, Abram sald at he vole ering, aciaet, ice’ | Topreacatatvan tothe goverament ot thoUnited Sates | _ OfUers had Deen received at Shocrness vo dismanti all | gfcatevilof the present Confederation, 1s not that it ie | bet ceane, Ohcit ats, tee Wey ore, ar tale stom Fir colonies, it would be well for the committee toknw | with respect to the destruction of the port of Chrlest gunboats prepared for commission under the American | Teva in purely civitand domestic matters, ‘The federal | gram, prohibiti.g the export of saltpetre, and by a more From Albany. Far] Reseri sajd the government had no official infor mation on this subject gubsequent to that which had al- ready been laid on the table of the house. However, tho sinking of vessels at the mouth of a ha, bor was an Opcra- tion of so much importance that Le could not but believe that tho reports which had appeared must have some founation. He was happy to bear the noble earl’s rotest against the permancnt destruction of any har- yr. Considering that there were commerc! har- bors, and that in time of peaco, when tho-e was severe weather, vessels of all nations, even those not uiti- mately destined for them, ran there to find refuge, to destrey them was undoubtedly an act of barbarity. ‘The noble earl would have seen that tho reply of the Ame- rican goverument was that these stone vessels were int-nded to be an obstruction in the channel to aid the blockade, but that they were not intended for the permanent d.siruction of the harbors, Inconversivg with the Amo:ican Minister at this Court that was the view which he took, He sait what their prospects were to Le for the time to come. It was difficulty. . constitution quite trac that it would have been an act of pele il. i y ty not to send ont troops for the defence of the colonists, as they had been drawn into the diapute without having ‘been consulted; but the quarrels that affected the empire ‘affected all its dependencies, and it was extraordinary if those who shared nie tenths of all the rego all the burdens of tho expenditure of the . He did not blame the government for what had Deen done, nor did he sympathize in the least with the honorable member for Birmingham, who, as the noble ‘viscount had said, stood absolutcly alone in the senti- ments ho had expressed. (Hear.) Every other person in the House must give tho noble viscount credit for the promptitude, vigor and succces with which ho had avert- od war by succor to Canada. When, however, it was truly said that Canada was our weak point, he it undoubtedly was at the commencement of the dispute. ouut Bernstorit complains, has not pro- | stringent ordinance, dircoting that all siltpotre already Aunaxy, March 4, 186. a , 0 ° fe id be landed, whicl Crooks, Eighth regiment cavalry, New York ‘The London Daily News and Star publish the corres- | served the ly internati nal character of the Diet, | in fureign ships in the Hooghly should be Colon ; iment cavalry, New " 7 a3 ed it by fering wiih questions of | was ‘ssued on the receipt of despatches from the Secre- pondence with Mr, Seward relative to the passage of sr poo —, 9 aera rth wo rs 1. | tary of Bigte: Rather tah do this many Bnjlish mer. | State Volunteers, having resigned his commission, Gov. British troops through the State of Maine. The latter | that four of the States have ‘their point of gra- | chante purchased the American shire which they had | Morgan has appointed Capt. Alfred Gibbs, Third United journal accords great praise to Mr. Seward for his course | vitation and the centre of their organization’? | loadat wi'h saltpeire that they might be ailowed to pro | states cavalry, to the vacant Colonelcy. Captain Gibbs beyond the jurisdiction of the Diet procludes tie poesi- | ceed on their voyage. Trade has been paralyzed and | 44 4 wew Yorker by birth, and is endorsed by General iu this respect. bility of the constitution bein, r “developed in a | the history of the money market has simply beon that "i i! It is reported in Livezpool thet insurances are daily | federative sense.” In bone a hile \eretnag of Saxo. | Of ore ming Pek oe aR — - McClelian as one of the best officers in the army. i argocs , ny is endeavoring to ermasy into a federative | native holders 0 ne . 1 effected on ships and their c# to run the blockade of pf ote,90 bee by sting together tee minor States may | auxions to get rid of them at prices threo per cent below The Maryland Legislatare. the Southern ports. The highest promium paid is fifteen | Fo" apie to control Prussia, Prursia, on the other hand, tos provailing a week before, I know of no large Sturkcechie Wels Smnentes Col: guineas,and tho ships arc entitléd to select any port: | js thechampicn of State indepensience, and wil not give h holder who has sold, but of many cases in which ehinncinsaa waa Symi coho nd In some instances the risks to ports easy of access are | up her freedom of action to an auibority which might s threw away their paper at prices courierably ry’ Logi iro met in caucus fa'l under the influence of her rival, Austria, or of a com- | below those quoted to-day | The official and, £ | yoted,on the tenth ballot, for Hon Reverdy Johnson for as low bopepuenyen Nearly all the vessels insured aro | j ination of petty States. It is th: sarae Crates? as took bee oe Ker eee, hi a ke om United States Senator. He received thirty-eight votes stoamers of tons. Luce in 1860, Whou tle minor States, instigated by Aus- | not be avoided. affect i Tria, endeavored to draw Prugsia iate a war with Franco, | the passenger vessels which leave Tndia, vin tho Cape; | out of sereniy-two. Senator Pearce received thirty and Prussia declared that her duties as.an Europenu Power | for England, in such large munbers at this season. All | yoteas The balance were scattering, ter and Tusearoro. d their charge: high agreed that it was a matter of good fortune that the | that the rermanent destruction of Charleslon harbor was _— woreto be considered before herduties asa member of tie | svem t be full, and their charges aro as high as usual. role ‘viscount sueceoded in averting war and in savi fmpossitle, that the two rivers which formed the hartor would ‘The Tuscarora left Gibraltar on February 13 for the | Confederation. It is interesting to those who have studied | . The throat of war has done much to destroy the confi nS But he would ask the noble lord. what would | tefure to make a channel, and thai i was impossible, even | spanish wators of Algesiras, She had been watching the | American politics to soc the jealousy with-which Prussia | deuce that continued high prices had begun to create in Weather Eastward. Rave hay if England had been at that moment at had been intended, to effect the permanent destiuciion | — hich still ined at Gibraltar, unable to | Tesists the supremacy of a federal Assembly and federal the Indian cotton market, ‘ulation has been wild in Bostor, March 4, 1862. yy her own shores, end the of France ‘the harbor. That he taid, howevr, was not the intention, | Sumter, which still rema: ne Presidents, Count Bornstorif declares that in the Diet, us | Bombay, and a continued fall of 1d. in the pount of cotton | org inundor showers anda strong gale prevailed on concurred with ours, out been adverse to our intention was only to make a temporary obstruction, | procure coal. alvocated by Reust, the two creat Gorman Powers would | will be simply ruin to some of the houses, 5 “ own? Canata would not have boon able or ready to hold | and when peace was restored that obstruction would be BRITISH SUPPLIES TO AMERICAN WAR VESSELS. not send haif the members, and he implies that tho idea | The whole tondeucy cf our railway and road system wiil | the Sound last night, from eight o’¢:ock in the evening her own, while England would havo beon seoking in | removed. Thathe believed was tho view taken by the [From the London oats, Fy 14.) of allowing national affairs, and consequently, in some de- | be to beg cotton bed bene ey and Sedas- | 141) one o'clock in the morning. every quarter for assistance, This might bo American government. There had been some communi- ‘The Commissioners of Customs have issued instrac- | gece, the affairs of Prussia, to be administered by minor | heghur. The ere ‘om Calcutta will, for'some years, Passongers by the steamer City of New York, of the cation between her Majesty's government and that of France on this subject, with regard to which the grvernment the Emperor took the :ame view as that of her Majes'y. fae whether France had made any official representation on the matter to tho federal goverament he was not tions to their officers throughout the United Kingdom, chosen by any federal machinery, is quite inad- | be trifling, and the quality inferior. At the first. pub ic Speers’ be ciswen to Ue singed on bontt ext, | stermier vie py aalo, some six Weeks ago, high prices wore realized; but | New London and Boston line, arrived here at eight A. M. vessel of war or privateer belonging to the United | — we haye given this slight skeich of along controversy | the staple was short and the bales dirty, the whole hay- | 7pe Fall River steamboat train arrived at noon. States, or to the so-called Confederate States, during the | pecause it shows that the German sovereigns, in expecta- | ing been brought up merely as an experimental ship- present war, in any way contrary to the provisions of | tion of great and perhaps not far distant dangors, | ment. Tho second sale, held in the beginning of this ti: Lave Raw axp Svow Sronue rm Vinanaa.—From fortune, but it was not good statesmansbip, he luck for the defence of the colony, and to leave it the next time inastate so defenceicss that unless had her hands free, and was able to send out troops, Canada must be lost to this country. He by no say. Ear! Russell's letter of the 3ist ult. ‘@ actuated by a distrust of eiwh other than | week, was a failure. ercehe sympathized with the opluions recssily exprsent | “And inorder to provent any such vessols proceeding | by’ fear of s ermmon enemy. Tho Confederation is F oe the Petersburg (Va.) Daily Express of February 27 we by Mr. Goldwin Smith as to the value of our colonies. HE AFRICAN SLAVE TRADE, from port to port, and thus cbtaining supplies at several | not to them merely an organization for defence, Affairs in Japan. Jearn that the stroots and river of Petersburg are ina Socially, commercially, and imperially, they were an T m ports within the prescribed period, the Collectors of | jt isa machivery by which they can obtsin influence INFLUENCE OF THE UNITED STATES MINISTER. deplorable condition from the late rains and storms absolute necessity to an island country like this, Still, he did not anderstand why we should consider this quar- rol as belonging to ourselves so exclusively that wo should un ke it, and deprive the rest of the empire Liege and offort of freedom, or why, from some imperial pride and vanity, we should allow ‘our colonies to remain in a helpless atato and prevent them from putting forth their own resources. The noble ‘viscount had published the fact of the good fortune of the Customs are called upou to use every endeavor to ascer- | over each other's policy, and pursue their several | (Hong Kong (Dec. 31) correspondence of the London tain from what port the vessel last arrived, and whether | schemes of ambition. phew wee ivutate ‘on the defen- (Hong ¢ Chronicle.) which have visited that section of the country. For the she obtained supplies therevt. Any shipment of oun sive. In spite of her great superiority of strength, and Mr. Townsend Harris, who first opened Japan, ts still | jast two months hardly ten days of fine weather were or of coal on board such vessels to be speciall; im- | the position which recent events have given her, she is | pursuing his quiet, ellectual line of policy, unaffected by enjoyed, the balance having boen divided between heavy mediately reported to the Commissioners of ms. actually content with resisting an attempt of the minor | the general agitation that has distressed the other minis- . -_ States to draw her into subjection toa federal authority, | ters, with Mr. Aleock at their head, Ho has, beyond all | falls of rain, hail, snow and sleet, and an occasional very From such a condition @ high spirited monarch would | question, the peculiar qualities required in a minister to | high wind, and the nights have been so dark as to occasion soon deliver his kingdom, It ts for @russia to take the | such acountry as this. His immobility amid continued | great inconvenience to pedestrians. Tho James river initiative in plang of reform, and not to rest satisfied with | alarms and assassinations has evidently secured for him | wag swollen to a fearfal height, but at last accounts was Lord Palmerston’s Speech on the Da- homey Sacrifices and African Cotton— Efforts of the United States Government to End the Traffic in Slav 1m the House of Commons, on the 14th ultimo, Lord Pauwerstox said:—Sir—In regard to the question put by colonies, and the vigor with which the Imperial govern. | my noble friend (“ord A, Chure hill) with respect to Da- objecting to those of her neighbors. Germans all fee! | the respect of thi nge » and Mr. Alcock’s } rapidly receding from the wharves and streets, which it mont had com ir aid, but he had also published is necessary, and, in the absenco of an lish fight from Jeddo when the American Seoretar: wee. toro world chat England was the ony partion ot | homey andthe slave trae on the cut of ‘tic, he Candidates in Europe seats elayscnch'aorefegnandeneh muster pee. | 6 tgaign wns snurered, norer contracted more dep. | °°=Tt™ the British dominions that was active and ready | Houso knows very well that measures for tho suppres- [Paris (Feb. 14) correspondence of London Times.) pounds his own. rablp with Mr. Hurris’ stay in the city than it does now she olea's Wines tobe ‘ht, and that all the rest of the British Empire was | sion of that traffic have occupied the most anxious and __— when the tangible results of either policy are bogiun! yea pen ‘aud to bo fought for.” Te trusted that the right | active attention of her Majesty's government for & great | The question of candidate for the throne of Mexico ‘papas bcitliaedms msn r 446 | own ctected an aiace at, Moun Ie gentleman “teli tho House a little more Hear, hear.) My noble friend pro- | has been before the world for some weeks, at home as | | me cane Hide moro immediately to the following item of | S¥ening last week, to lecture « aporanse bg escagl tan. Yee talastoms ‘have tora ‘well ew abroad. Tt_has been moro than insinuated that | SUFFRRINGS OF TH® PEOPLE FROM COLD WEATHER ally ig item of | Pitot Lieutenant Colonel Tom fi about tho ian militia,and whether the Canadians ted to be taxed as them: selves at home. (Hear, hear. po pater reotvts Sanent chara too fal years ¢ pres were sevel for the purpose of enabling the North American Colontes 0 form an army on the same basis. Wore the colonists oing to pay anything, then, towards the oe) of Set troops and stor Would they pay for the medi- cal stores sent out for their prospective militia? (Sir G. C. Lewis—Modical officers have been sent out.’? There were ito in the expenditure for hospital and other stores, and the colonists for whose venefit they were sent out might fairly he ex- pected to contribute towards such expenses, He did not think by asking thom to take their fair share in ‘he expenses of an empire like this we should be depre- intelligence in the Japan Herald of November 30, as d, with @ squad of men, and AND THE INUNDATIONS, . ’ Fourth Iowa cavalry, attended, wil sq Ns Austria might be induced to listen to proposals for the | (yignna (Feb. 9) correspondence of the London Times.) quoted by a Shanghao contemporary :— compelled the Rev. Vir. Dean Ad, pretace i sone ‘with unciation of her rights on Venetia on condition of one ‘Tho inundations in the Austrian dominions have ay We are able to announce that the American Minister resi- | an oath of allegiance, duly signed, um ar. _ dentin Japan, HE, Townsend Harri ‘succeeded in get: HL the guardhouss, Then Dean abused Drummond, of her archdukes being called to the throne. This has | sumed tho portions of agreat public calamity. They ting from the Japanese government, for the mother.of th rest and the gu Sod the by y been denied with more or Jess acrimony by the official or | are due to the suddenness aud rapidity of the thaw, and | je H, O, J. Heusken, ie ‘Acting ‘Becrewry of the Uni ‘and Drummond couelu: performance by knocking somi-official press of Vienna. The French Monifeur seems | are doing great mischief in various parts of the empire, | States? Yount Who was murdered at Jeddo on the night | Dean down. fly avoided it, and the sem)-official journals Being Cory a —e —_ Cy Oy send mya of the 16th of mates i the sum of $10,000, , ken of it vingly. ‘who, in many instances, are driven from their dwelliags, It will be seen that the indemnification Mice Domarchical papers #00 in tho establishment of a | andiind no shelter clewhore, Ia the bight from the ih | qhe friends of his late subordinate ta nearly. ontel te oes tA : constitutional sovereign on the throne of Montezuma the | to the 7th instant, a hard frost act in again hore, and in | gach of tho sufferers by the treachery which led to the (emAneoe eieen 4, 1008. future prosperity of the country; while the so-called de- | that from the 7th to the 8th; it was yestorday reported | destruction of the summer palaco will obtain; but theone | «, Stocks steady, Pennsy! a Stato 5's, 83: , Reading mocratic press turns into ridicule the notion of a monarchi- | that soveral deaths had taken place from exposure. Sub- | was the regult of conqnest, while tho othor has merely Ratiroad, 3165 Morris, iret 40; Jang Island Railroad, cal form of government among these happy republics. Tho | scriptions have been actively got on foot in Vienna for | Froceeded from an attitude of cool firmness on the part of ;_Penvaylvania Railroad, 46. Sight exchange on subject i stilt veiled in mystery. Each of the three Powors | tho sufferers, and the Emperor has headed the list with | the United Siates Ministor, New York at par. that has wrongs to redress Tes declared that it will not | 10,000 florins. turn them to its own advantage beyond satisfaction for | ‘Tho inconventonce caused by the interraption of com. mt times to the late King of Dahome; for the purpose of endeavoring to persuade him to aba don that barbarous and inhuman practice of human sac: rifice, and to assist us in suppressing the siave trad ‘Hear, hear.) Iam sorry to say that they were not at- nded with success. (Hear, hear.) Persons, however anxious they may be for the attainment of their objects must recollect what obstacles the passions and habits of mpankind sometimes oppose to what they have in view. This practice of human sacri§ces has prevailed extensively over the whole of that part of Africa, and when you go toa barbarian (like the King of Dahomey for the time being) and ask him to forego these practices, to which he has attached a value as symbois of authority and power, ‘and as being tokens of respect for those who haye gone before him, it is just as if you asked the ancient Romans Markets. PHILADELPHIA STOCK BOARD, PimtapeLema, March 4, 1862. Flour has declining tendency : suporiine, $6 25. 0 1 $8 a $154. Corn has t hich oo tred i ‘ , and security that its subjects shall not | munteations is excessive, and thore has boea much delay Commercial Intelligence. firm: sales 10,000 bushels ret Cee als heer be ruigo tn bperae: bition ent co So Eeeee ear the panier of the wresent iby teeth tpatn be expceed (0 the rf M of the brigands who, under | of maiibugs in various directions. 8 train LONDON MONEY MARKED, a declining tendency, Coffee — ~ 184c. a We, Khe connoxion with this couutry; but he firmly believed | jighte which would disgust an Knglishman, but which af namo of government, hayo successively pillaged and | from Vienna to Paris and London, wit this | The English funds were dull, but steady, on the 20rh | pork, $15 60a $id. Land, Sic. Whiskey, 200,

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