Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
2 NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 7, 1862.—TRIPLE SHEET, ———————— a = —— Whe Emperor of Ausiria that he was to do nothing in op. | and Orleanists ever since theformation of the present 2 q empire—ihat, in case of restoration, they would fuse their Position to this arrangemont. Not to cause fruitless | PmPIN . ion , oul fuss thai J Permitting the Count do Chambord to be king isoussion, howover, the young priest of imperial blood | white ‘he lived (with the distinct uudorstapding, of hhas been kept ou the lowor steps of the temple, till, in | course, that ho was to have uo chidren), when, the eldar the fulness of time, he can bo exulted. The cardinals, sono a she Bossbins dying with him, the thione re lesceud to ths Count te Paris, the grandson of whoge conclave will have the duty of election, will re | | ouig Phil 90, 00d. Row.s c2plain. ip the Union. army. ceive from Fravee such couvincing arguments in aid | Suil, even though the Countess may have a of 8 wise cloction that there is no doubt of their exhi- | heiry it ay not ibe ia male child, and, thore'ore, “ ° Aw, will be excluded from the throne, in Diting @ docile mind, and the new Po, will enter on bis | which case ail Unis rejoicing would be (or naught, and the duties duly impressed with his duties to the church io | legitimists would doubtless be glad to unite their forces general, and to France in particular, with thse of the House of Orleans. + Such is belioved by aii parties here who have opportu. oF Travia ean ae a A ees Nities of a glimpse behind the scenes to be the Emperor's $ own individual one. On the contrary, Programme. In the meantime his Majesty is very desi- udence and foresight which certainiy, under all Tous of winning good opinions from the world, 1’ #m- ances, are decide ily laudable, he has be pire c'est la paiz is the text on which perpetual homilies Fathor who sits in St. Petor's chair, spiritual!y at loa2® | mates, but on'y to drctine the imposition of now taxes, | botonging $0 the United States governmout. The fact he is still doar to the hearts of the faithful, People make pe crt op Ser oreernant of ihe neveane pro--} was thus aupounced in the Nkw York Huraup of April 2— € Heap.ad = “ 1e old ques, thelr cevsure of the govern . . istuke who fal! in with the cuckoo cry that 19 | Tyent pulicy will be of very litte. use, as they Me Unrrap te tas resnmu Javns Ances. 0 Franco there is no relizion. After a residence of twelve | practic iving effect to it. They may ty yoare, aud with my attontion particularly directo! to the # sbout German unity, the Hessian catton, ‘As 2 cate “ wig-Holsteis, and what wot, but as long as M. Subject, Ehave mo hesitation iu stating my beiiet that | Yedorbeyde doce not want money. he mced pay mo, MOro w of no Protestant country which at all approaches | a :ontion tw thom tian to Uhelucuora iousof a debating 80- a tho faithful discharge of the external dutics of | Cloty oF of the Zavectal Order of Oda Fellows. And vet si : wer 3 to be & genoral tooliug that his rei: " hon tu unostectatious charits—labors of | wil not tor long duration, at Teast ho. has not suo- opiain and papers tothe sistoreincer, who eoademne! love and almegiving—it is scond to none. It is import: | cooded hitherto in prevailing up.n any sexpeetab’e person | Reh i) prize to the United States steamer James ant to boar this in mind at @ time when tho poace of | t comucet himeeit with bin by accepting the port-fuilte | Pyfi.deisnee Mpeg, Nae But on board, and sho was sent lo Ear pene he hoa ot the eharch | 0,1, Yacunt by his own removal tothe Ouauce ds- | aud wastormerty e Ohariesem ant kite tpoot meoket mat ‘urope may be broken any day by the head of the church | pasinent, aud wiiich has even gone begging for nearly | bas ern ev ploy eee nk ereee ore and the impe: ial chiof of France. Sih. As a dornier resort, it is to be oflered to Count | 8nd Charice ou tr Whither the Roman qucs'ion ia dragging us I euppose | Eulenburg, the nogotiator uf the treaties with Japan aud | W4 ostemsoiy bo : Siain, us svon as he returns from his Eastern expedition, | *)0Wed uo colors, only one man in the world knows,and that is the Em- | jy which ho is said to bave evinced remarkable tact and | +°, peror himself, Certain it is, however, that already | ability, The Navies of France and ttaty. (Toulon (Apri 18) correspoudence of (he London Times.§ Yesterday was @ busy day. Tho engineer of the irou- plated frigate Inviecibie his Gres at cight é the morning, and the commander sailed on a trial trip for six days, suring which she is to touch at Hyores aad ot Vullafcance. ‘this voyage will conclude the trial of the jn vinci . Al tweive o'clock the Italian iron-plated frigaee'Torrr blo sailed for Gonoa, having three boats in tow. It has boon decided by the Kmpcror, it ts guid, thas no further chango 1 be made im the Toulon fleet bere it ahall be replaced by ships protected with dvon 08. An order received from Parts yestorday by tolegr. wl has been communicated to all engaged im the ny 4 tion of the frigate Themis that she must be launched ten o'cloek on Saturday next, the 26th of April. Hi {or the lass tutes years tu the Gacaie » She hada full cargo of gumnics, au ‘tor sit. Johns. New Bruns She OF Was any pational ensign found on A few moments before she was boarded those on \oard were obser\ el to throw over the serm asmall package, ing for a contugeacy,, which, froin present ap iil soon be converted into & ruality, 1 ba The Navy of Holland. Walch immedately sank, Bh vi cy fare rung, Look at the financial difficulty, and the frank | from the most tndoubted authority, from a source whic | gigng of coolness are beginning to manifest themselves | 1h0 rumor of an interviow between the King of Prussia | Charleston, uid doubuteas tat preseate Mary gnings on | a tees tee ine fees Montior und the Morrimeo, saye excludes the possibility of error, that he hs, withip the and 1048 Napoicon is again revived, and im quarters were markol SCiarteaton.” “snd on the “sera | Dressiun the amore profound that tor the iat Ove. raouus ‘is m Ord between this country and Bugiand. which I Lave usually found to be well informed. Whether | “Charleston” Lad been erased and “Liverpool’ substituted. Lord Cowley, the English Ambassador, was deputed to | the meeting wili come off at Potsdam or somewhere Messrs. Fraser, Trenholm & Co. , of Liverpool, the con” wait upon tho Emperor aud discover if it would be agroos | Bearer the Rhine does not appear to be sottied ,uor is it | Signecs of tho ship, dony that the veew:! was intonded to able to his Majesty to accopt of the Queen's hospitality | o°.t8n whethor it will be coufined to a fele-a-{te between | Fon tho bicckato, and stato that tha captain's ordors , jeaty to accop et tality | those two sovereigus, ur joined by the Emperors of Austria | Were to call off Charleston, and if the blockade was raigad at Buckingham Palace—ber Majesty remaining in retire- | and Russta, The admirors of tle French autocrat ima- | to enter that port; if not, {he was to go om to St, John N. ment on account of her recent bereavement—and give | sive that he will endeavor to persuade the three Wise B. They say that the vessel is ewned in nd, and ike edaiol his oto the opening of tho Industria, | MoD f thé Fast to acknowledge the kingdom of Laly; | Communded and manned by Englishmen. ‘The tirst mave la! o! preseuc: opening but, considering the equivocal vature of bia policy and | o the Emilie, Lieutcuant Pierro, is in the hands of the Exhibition, to take place in London in May. His Majesty | the vbstacios ho is c-ntinually placing im the way of | federals, and'aot on board his ship. somewhat curtly intimated that he would bo unable to | itllan union, it is difficult to believe that he will exert Wo 00. Lard Coyroy wrote home, three, to any | Masuiusnos nas divoian. “ils Nepoleone aaenty | | THE NAVAL REVOLUTION. that no such invitation must be givan, ‘Then it was | sehome fod trauafoeming she: Mexican sonabiss istovse that d the speech of Lord Palmerston on tho oma re, sad no doubt his vexation-will: bo sys wi ‘august coutrores. exhibived b ministerial papers in sand only Joneriny, e these epublica icy moetiying: ta wit continue ts. wees Agr ie peror | exist, a ments rar ithstanding, that. step of great "tance: hhad'no such intention as had boon falsely imputed to him, | Sq vren the Thamleres of Prarie Hone canta is un! | extoting ptate of onr naval atnirs his just. been taken by manner in which it bas been avowed. Look how his | ast four months, sent over two hundrod thousand dol- Majesty resigns his most cherished plans and leaves to Fraace, and which is securely invested for bim in everything to M. Fould. Look how carefully he abstains | Trenctt stooks. | Wo lope it nny oot be Io sore te * We tho pleasure of secing him here, unless yo al from interfering with the growing freedom of speech, | require him for an example and a warning to ali future ‘and leaves the clergy, whose hatred ne has incurred, to | traitors. show forth its wrath without molestation. Even whilo | | Our distingrtshod countryman, John C. Heenan, has ite been dividiug the honors with tho Japanese for @ few ig undeniable distress stalking thronghout tho | gays past at the Hotel du Louvre. All his assoeiitio 8 land, while insolvency through all the great cities of the | whilo im Paris were with ‘fast men’’ of the ‘sunny empire 1s ates ence: South;"" but this might have been simply from tho tack Hing: the ‘congequences of the American | Thos nung them lee found more congenial ties, mare strife, and the Anglo-French treaty, whose birth bas | «sporting men” than he could bave done among those ome in troublous times, is adding to tho confusion | from his pwn, secon of the countey He js looking bow tmpassive the Empe: ins. splendidly, ho does enter ting with U Gousense nae Cappeativetaccnity of the arvubcip et little English champion be will doubtless make even ‘Toulouse that tho government interferes at all. worso work withirim than he did with Sayers. Re 4 4 Partiamentary inquiry has beon pursuod, ata grcabex- Bouse, for ie study of Uap beak moans of {um roving the national navy, ‘That ingllry inchujed a mumber of quos- tions now decided by the progress Ofmilitary seience, thus the inquiry bas beea perfeotly uscloas. Trial of M. Mfres, the French Financier. HIS THREATS OF KEVELATIONS AGAINST HIGH PEE- SONAGES AND ACQUITTAL BY THE APPEAL OOUBT— FIRMNESS OF THE BANKER AND BFFORTS OF BIS mitted to prison on ths various charges you aware of; it was rumored that ho-would at. revenge: joa by disclosures alfecting persons ee ry Apropes ‘under such circumstances that mon cast a wistfnl a Uhas he did not come over for the America, where, because ence is placed page of fight he will not fight unless 1 paged ‘ M a is = be mado a ne — ‘ t, and tee eae of at present visiting any foreign country. 2, ° the Board bf Admiral . ‘ , the whole population rises ag one man in the able W pai them down, - lt isreally too bad. What isto ty. i¢-ts woll Known that at tho 0. “conceived, would ‘not from Of difficulty to make good its country. Here no one | &frangements are made by which most perfect fair The Moniteur publishes ‘she following sacs be dove with suck impractioabie sont ‘our entire fest of amall vosrols-of-war is | tho exposure shiek railyotetbers phe. "2 ca. ts trusted, noone is appealed to, The very freedom of | Play anda fnir, honest decisim are guaranteed. These | fro journals are picased to announce that the Buperor is dutlt of wood, und ta any ‘by armor | rosity was excited to the utmust, and the names of ‘vouchsafed the Logistative Asser. bly sorves only | ‘big: being seitied, he will, he says, fight any man liv- { about to make au excursion, ut ono tine to England, and at pinging. corvette, sloop and gunboat inthoser- | partis supposed, righily or weowly, t Lave pmake known the causes of discontent. Journsls daro | x for the sum of ton thousand dcliars. Heenan re- — 3 Prosce, We are aut oriaed to dechaxy tals Up THE MEDITERRANEAN FLEET. vice ig Mable, therefore, to gidden and complote destrvc- | accepted largo geataitias from “hiin wore tn pot diaouse them. or ko much a9 hint at the remedy; and turned to Engiand on Sunday ¢vogtig, and It isuader- | sin of going atta Set oo {ion by (tho shell Gro of an oncrmy. In view of those | body's mouth. It was then, -shought- tha’, ta ‘Ghereforg it is that, like ie fa tha ‘i tood th 8000 E sparring complete stop has reeently been jut to the con- nccodings M. hose hibit game, are seldom cope Giscuattose, bat qiecinan exhibitions with his former antagonist, Tom Sa; ers. In the meanwhile the only Ca sn4 vouchsafod to those Our Lisbon Naval Correspondence. struction of further vessels of this kind in tho royal eae renee suit: ues a Ay interfored with by the hautsman’s cry, the wholo peo- Ponte are to-morrow for | russes, wena ae eroy actly enero penetra ‘Usrrep Stares Suir ConsmiLaTion, } gyre er France eee ifame, yonre past, and | to be boyond all control, would let the socres ¥ erm! Rome. re bee 2. in Ameci rin, ty \- pie are looking towards the mysterious being who has Wn have hod theres or fous daa ao aoa for Jamia | that ho is the mere-c.eature of circumstances, watching Lasvon, April 3, 1862. pl at Nae 3 “ uaee ent its po pal er ee, La fe yin gp ore Beized the holm of government, and whose nod is as po- tent as O'ympian Jove’s in shakmg the world trom pole | T¥, aad tt w feared that vegetation has buen serious!y in- to polo, for a sign. I ain of opinion, for the roasous } have | Jured. stated above, that no sign just now will begivea. What- SBE, ever word is spoken, that of italy must be tho most im- Paris, April 16, 1862 portant, and the shadow of the dying Pope at presout | 4 French Semi-Oficial Organ on Lord Palmersion—lvon the indication of tho popular galo—that ne is without | Poyage of the Oonslellation from Portsmouth, N. H.—Run | fo" ai canes these have been fi¢ to plan or a political policy, and may jong find himself to Fayal—What Was Seen On and Of the Coat—A pothe and harbors ooly, Sit aaretuae pier without a threne at ali—is that given by tho Count de} peiy cgicer Overboard and Drowned—Hoalth of the | eacable of performing general sea service. “Our own Al- Morny at the Agricultural Exhibition of France, namely— ‘i . that thoro ig nothing new in language of this sort; that | Crew—Saluting the Mag of Portugat—Companions in peng al ieee cotton Lekog he hetatate same whils at home tho imperial government has found de- Harbor and Good Feeling Towards the Union—Koyalty | time no means of producing sea going plated ships of confirmed the sen:o:co of five yoars’ impraonmont and fine pronounced by ths inferior tribunal, though, strange ly enough, if eliminated ove of the serious charges aga.tm6 him. i@ brought it bofore the Court of Cass: which quashed tl.ojudyment on the ground of iuforuul- ity, and sentit o:co more to anothe: tribunal, As the Makes that word a sealed letter to the Emperor's lips. Clad Ships—Theatricals, de. , &¢. prop! ‘The Imperia! Court is shortly about to adjourn to Cla Shee icals, de., de. i tractors everywhere, and abroad more fatal hecies: Inder a Cloud, de. moderate dimensions haye beon dovised. At length, Hy C tainebiexu. Her Ma,esty weit there two ir ys ago to The Constiltionnel of yesterday pours a broadside of | thin Cassandra over ene people have enjoyod a ee ne frag i ange ea a fow lines, | bowever, @ method of construction hus boon devised’ Richa temiiont re het es cnaae ths Gar, or frrango what is termed the pour. The meaning of this | hotshot, in the shape of a three column article, into | tanquillity, a vrmeeg snipe peter pear aa 3 ae + | which is said (0 afford great seourity, with a compara | pouai, where it ts now going on, aml it wil probably torm is, that from time immemorial it las been the | Tord Palmorston, for his recent speech on the Roman | 1¥,Uaknowa in thelr history; bile exterualiy every na; | which may bo of intorost to your readors, bofore the | tively small amount of plating, and which has met with | come once more be‘ore the Court Of Cassation In cous. ‘custom for the highest porsonage to affix the name of the 3 : aneaiee ese a ert i, Bi8 ship which will convey it will be off for Eng'and. tho full approval of the Koara, quence of the expuision of Mires from tho Qvurt of Duuas observance inferior to none which has distinguished her Pn in the proudest days of her records. Tae Constitutiomnel, | We sailed from Portamonth, N, H., on the 11th ult, for roan Me tie BANDE OC Hate! Oocainetins: pena’ the most important of the semi-officiai organs, contiaes | this const, by way of the Azores, intending to stop at | mouth, now Socretary to the Institution of Nava! Archi- itself to intimating that the Emperor will simply con- | 13.4) on some business of minor importance, and to see | tects, tinder tho general supervision of Admiral Robin-. tinue todo in Maly what bo has done. ‘Catholic and | '3¥' i son, the Comptroller of the Navy. It is applicable to shipa liboral,” it saya, *‘France knows 89 woll what she re- | what could be gathered of interest to our government | of yarious classes, and provides for the use of a power ul for svine violence of language on his part, The infoc- mality consisis in the expuision beiug enforced by the presidiag judge, without, as the law requicos, previous consultation with his fellow judges on the bonch, Bat public curiosily is nuain roused by co tain myte rious menaces utterod by Mires in upon court, when he Seine on ths very verge of tho long expocted disclo- sures. Jo the course of his address on the evidence che Prooureur General obsarved:— On the 23d ofMianuary, 1956, Mires bought of the city of Marretlies 400,000 me‘res oO iand at 50: the metre, On the a7th ot Maren, 155%, hy ormed, for the working of bis jure ith al of 00: ded inte chase, a compan; in 10,00'shar . the share, tion ssweeded, und the firat instalment, 150f. per share, ave him 15, Gn the bth of Jum, 15), bo reiea-ed these shares v: 106, and t#aied 2/000 debe tures at £00f, in order to com, the company's capital. The Mayor of Marscilles tox 09 of these deventi tes, and the subscriptions for the remain ag 15,100 fea ly esceeded the fesue. Ev ry hing was sucores- tui=the subscription to the shares—th nt.Le8; Mires could uot ve satisted with legitinate auc. evs, was the double wrong, both as regards shares and debem- tures, The shares gav- him 15.0W,00Uf; and he co lacted secretly 6,000,000f., which disappeared trom the common ni a ‘At these words M. Mires, who {s said to havo with ditnculty restrained himself while the Prooureur was me bis statement, suddenly interrupted him and said:— Af 1s Cort ails 2 So none At ne eee ee 6,000,000f. Igavethem away, and, J repeat, I wil oe the parties whom I gave them, s ‘Tho Judge vbse:ved—*L0 nut interrupt; tako notes; consult with your counsel, who will Rene cat ta fence;” and the Prooureur, without noticing inter- ruption, passed on to another topic—that of the Romam railways. Miros on a eubsequent 0 casion repeated his: offer, or his threat, of disclosing ths names of the to he unduly paid over solirgeasum.as 6,000,- rty to bo invited on the apartinent allotted to them. | @estion. Hoe-o is the opening paragraph'—‘‘Upon the then (ho Queva or Empress does this, thee can be n> | Italian question the orators of the English goverament dispute with subalterns, and it would seom that the only | have shows thomsclyes faithful to themselves—they Yanner of preventing such dispute is for the royal | 4. y tre i : hostess to do it hersclr. Tha impress scrupulously | BA¥@ comtinned to indiifge in an amateur policy. Upou Performs this rite by fixing thecard with her owa hanes | the Rowan question Lord Palmerston has played upon year, the surf but hi o om, ‘Tho Covatess do Morvy has had a brilliant musical | 4. q osncey ind fom ee se Se, eee party, ia which Kastner, pianist to tho Emperor of Aus- cousummate Parliamentary orator, ho has, fia; bivori, the celebrated violinist, and M. de Cora, above all, studied his audience, and had bo panish singer, assisted. It was understood to be tent: fi givon, instead of a bail, to Eari and Countess Cowley, the oa ented. Biewesit wiih. Oe: _Diepalts: of the English Ambassador abd his lady, because it 1, wen | Camber, bad he uot at the close of his discourse invoked Known that uo one bélonging to the British mission is | the judgment of posterity, we would willingly have left er as tat Trince Albert’s mourning, to } the nobie orator inthe peaceable enjoyment of his tri "A confirmation was hold yosterday at the English | U™P4. But silence is not pormitied us in presence of church, roe d’Augerreau, by the Right Rev. the Bishop | statesman who views matters from euch a high ground | of Ohio, who confirmed’ for the Americans, and also coun ch assuranc judgmen: undar the soal of the Eishop of London, for the Engl.sh, wes pret ay Brame wrenches aed One hundred aad fifty young persous ‘presented tue. | the futuro, and who, in misrepresenting the policy of solves. ‘the Bishop addressed the candidates with rare | others, givos to his own such complete evidenco of cinir- eloquence and impressivencss. voyance, wisdom and genorvsity.”” Tho writer then caiis ra Som the attention of Lord Palmerston to the fact that, while he was talking against the French occupation of Rome as ‘& violation of the principle of non-intervention, the des patch from Corfu arrived, in which, in reply to the annu. ally reiterated statemont of the Ionian Parliament that Overa, ac, de. : the people of the Jonian Islands desired to be united to Old Europe is rapidly profiting by tho revert lesson | Greeco, the Lord Commissioner replied that the Parlis, given her by Young America in the art of ay con- ment had no right to discuss the question <a Pemieae pooimmmenine rvecia saciid, Hie and adds, “What a respect for tho principle & pPohigesae- 4 pogo Create an iron-cled | of nori-intervention and the principle of nationalities.” m3. 4 'g Says that the Grand | rhe writor then goes on to give the reason why, in spite quires in the italinu poninsuli—she is 60 nobly disiate- | there. lated battory of Armstrong guns, with a great range of taide or false fa ? land in lesa ‘than eloven days, experiencing heavy | fovfor ty that of the present unprotectot vesseiay ant for x ‘The Quean Hotes. comet Paris next week on | woathor and northerly gales jr tho way, bat proving the | the protection of nolers, spainen, rudder eat and steor- eee she cas oxcellent sailing qualities of our good ship. When wo | ing apparatus. These advantages are said to be secured of eis Wagram, tho eon of Borth@er, Bonaperte's | reached tho point opposite Fayal, wot hove to”” and at. Seach asbeliate ter das muntnunth as thee sn oy famous gonoral) is soriovsly ill. In the present siato of | tempted to effect a landing, but found soon, that the | bo fit for son sorvico t ‘any part of the world... Tho d>- pat ee erined wap teat hahand effort would be unavailing, and that we wore more than | sign, we understand, has been placed unreservedly at the Sut in:eusely fond of hoarding. It happens, however, | likely to have such weather at loast a weok on that coast, . Pree eed hi apes eptliarene aa order for that the peculiar line bis ambition has followed—that ot | and that it would be useless to wait longer; 90 we putoff | sir, Reo!, to superintesd the construction of the vessol dosirwng a bee roméation, Taovennnetl tt ~* to sea again, sailing dead ahoad of a terrific.gale and rain | in her Majosty’s dockyards, ‘The timber now in swre, ples wil uot stir foot without money’; and this monoy | storm. Wesaw at Fayal only three amallcratt, appa-"| th ,¢w wyossols which aro to be timber built below the can only be obtained from. the Prince. @ struggle that | rently in charge of the Consul, flying Amorican colors, water, but incombustible at tho upper part. Although pall a Ph deg «agg eh oN nie led which wore all the sail seon within six hundred miles of | the design was only completed a week ago, all the pre- Mean has’ “been called’ upon to. make, ho | thatcoast, We regretted boing unable to communicate | {iminary srranominia Tr cltry ng tot ee earn will rofuse to advance another coatime. In vaiu ho is told | with Mr. Dabney, our Consul; but it could not be | and tho Duke of Somorset. Tho first vessel is to bo com- that all previous professions will be fruitiess without | pened. monced forthwith at Deptford dockyard, and is to be te pebed Semper to the pee Sid me Four days out from Portsmouth we met the American named the Enterprise. nothing for it but to let the peculiar vbject in view fall to | ship St. Helena, trom Bristol, England, sixty days out, Immonse Armament for Two New cae Fr a ae ae ce newer nent | bound for New York. She knew, ofcourse, bat little of et . tone nt osttops the anor mmm in the Prince's mind, | the feeling in England towards our people. She probably | uring tho past few wooks large enpeiise be the beat and again his thousands are squandered among ths rab- | reported us upon arriving at Now York,as her captain | deacri ‘of both anglo and plate iron have poured vie of Naples, that the graudson of Joachim Murat may | poarded us. into Chatham dockyard, to be used in tho construction havoachance of sitting in the seat of Furdinand the | "27 aayy out wo lost overboard John Campbell, a na- | te oe reins Se anand q Panis, April 11, 1862. The “Fron-Clad”” Excitement in Europe—French View of Amzrican “‘Equatity”—La'e News from “Tommy,” of Japan—Two Dismal Seceshers—Thurlow Weed—New Second. Suddenly, however, mightier aru thau man’s ‘Duke Coustautipe, the Grand Admiral of the Russian . ig inte and ‘his ter is stricken down, and | tive of Scotland, from Lowell, Massachusetts, one of our | to 700, the utmost number that can bo accommodated ia | 000f.,, oF £200,000 sterling; and he oniy waited fur @ of the obstinacy of the Roman court, and the hatrod of | i yng! seth ni , ‘ i Taceensed word or @ sign from the Court to do #0, ~ ts agthe eeap hece: oR of the | its coungsllors, France still occupies Rome, preoccupied ¥s Ke credtee amy > the marine department. | gt the xame time with ile duties as a Catholic Power, and basa: correspondent very justly saye,*“Whatwou'd | ag 9 tiverating Power im italy. Every day takes morg Decome of St.Potersburg and Cronstadt if steol-plated | 514 more from the Roman question its religious eloment, Ships could, notwithatanding the cross fires of our forts, | anq piaces it more and more upon purely political go of death; and the unhappy father officers. Though every effort was made the factory adjoining the dock in which tho Achilles is seca before him the prospect of ail his sacrifices, all his ee ible, it proved lane as tho sca wag = ae under constructions Mesers. Collier, of Salford, have ambitious hopes,ending in that dust to which prince aua | him possible, it p runnin | received orders to crect two poworful machines in the peasant must alike return. ; high ‘and the-ship going ten knots. His body was re- | factory—one a “ slotting” engiue.for cutting and shap- ‘Tpe correspondent of the Consitutionnel, writing from | gyyered, and buried the next day with appropriate cere- ing the siabs of iron whioh will form tle shield piates of ‘Turin under date of April 15, says that the language of | monies.’ This is our only serious accident ee yet. the Achilles; and the other a planing machine, the largest Garibaldi is visibly softening towards France, amd that ‘The crew consists of about two hundred and sevent of 4s kind in the world, seep ee thosurlace of the Now, when we cail to mind the searching mannor ia which accused porsons are interrogated by tho judges, how every eliort is made to draw from them an adinis- sion of their culpability, or to put them in consradiction wi:h thomsetyos, so that the Judge of prosecutor, it 13 considered very strange that the get through the famous Pass of Croustadt, and burn our unds, The tem) t ? bi " 9 he it instance h. 5 poral power of the Pope was founded, | he has written to the Genocse carabiniers to stir them ‘men aud thirty-five officers. Allhave been, an: ates before they are affixed to ip's side, Court shou!d in the present instance have turned a deat be eect = has continued, by submitting itself the conditions | UP ix the suppreasion of brigandage in the Neapolitan ey healthy. . + | Pine projecting bow of the Achilles, forgedat the Thames | car to Mires’ offer; and, stilt more, that the law officer In @ recent discussion in the Chambers in Belgium id ‘and to beg them to be in readiness to join the ‘We made the coast of Portugal on the 28th ult.; but on | iron works, has been fixed in its place, and the sternpost ] who prosecutes on behalf of the Crowa should have ita We. aepeidanting,.aiiatlioms 40; Uae: Sortifiganiven of free een rene: Lntiealn ber nt as soon as it shall call them, actount of bad weather and. the ruggodnous of the coast, | will shortly bo received from Glasgow, wero it is being | Fassed it over in complete silence. The Prvcureur dis- a weg ae ever, this government had been so badly administered ‘and strong current of the river'at Lisbon, did not reach | forged. following are tho principal dimensions tinctly charged Mires with having secretly abstracted Antworp, in the course of his remarks M. Coomans pro- | that ‘‘moral lasurreotion was ee there, and that Our Berlin Corresponde: anchorage until the 2d inst, ae tbe Achillea: —Length waerens porpeadiculars 380 feot; pl eeprtod a fait egitim: eer OS posed the construction of piated revolyi material order was no wer possible,except through * tain Thatcher gave @ im salute, which was length of for tonnago, 3g inch; extreme ., qui ‘alssen| Caisse De tuere . ving towers (similar | foreign ald.” In this painful condition of ailaire “two Bumuix, April 16, 1862. | CAMO" rom the castle. ‘There we found’ the Rng. | breadth, 68 foot 3% inches: breadth for tonnage, 68 feet | could Lo no suilicient reason why the accused was not permitted, or rather not called upon, to expiain to what purpose he applied this large sum, or to whom he gave it, for he does not seem to have disputed the fact. ‘The consequence is that the strange rumors which ctr- culated a year ago are now revived,and persons whe may really bo innocent are brought once more under suspicion. “An allegation phew’ kind, so long as it ed unex, hangs over almost every one au; cong hee , 26 it would only be to such aman the one employed, upon the Monitor) on land, and i - courses of policy were offered to the Roman court—the which should replace all other sorts of fortifications. one wise fs pragent, recominending indispensable con. Here isa specimen of the information in reiation to page = rere, year however, mri dig- the mannors and customs of the United States, which is | Biy: the other distant, exasperating | aad coun. selling cndiess obstinacy aud merciless protest- obtained by casual readers in Europe. The Siecle pub- Seon ‘The first of these~ has for its areniast 2 Rome lishes it and vouches for its authenticity, and I give it pointy roe which —— t ipa y — and o wi for tea yoars protec with ite sword. to you as it was tid te the Sicck's thousands of | Sine" fe"sutsioed by a couliuon “of men, who late The Republican Bubble Will Net Burst—Hlectioneering | \igh frigate Shannon, which had arrived the day pre- | 1% inches: breadth, moulded. 58 toet; depth in hold, 22 Mocements—Flowers of (ficial Rhetorico—The Univ-rsity | vious; ® Spanish sloop of-war, & Prussian naval school | feet 1 inch; burden, 6,079 5.94 tons. Berlin—The Prussian Merchants and Fair— | ®hip on a cruise, and three Portuguose men-of-war. All Orders have been received at Chaham to preparo the ~ ~ ate of thom boarded us as soon as we camo to anchor, and | following quantities of projectiles tobe supplied to the Provable Resulisof the Elections=Coun! Bulenburg—In- | presonted their compliments to tho commander, ‘The | iron screw frigates Hector, 32, aud Valiant, 32, now un- lerview of Louis Napoleon with the King of Prussia, de. | Shavnon, which sails for England this morning, kindiy | der construction at private establishments for the Admi- If the result of the coming elections is unfavorable to | Olfered to take charge of our lettors, which we, of course, ralty—viz: 200 common one hundred and ton poundor s gladly accepted, dolighted to got so good a chance 1d | and 200 of the segmont one hundred and ten pounder ‘the Prussian government, it will certainly not be the fault | send home. Armstrong shells, 118 common and 113 sogment twenty Teaiere— rnined every cause they ever served, who unite their . Vonderheydt and his colleagues. The activity of had a chance of a few moments’ conversation with | poundor Armat, aud 200 twelve i Armstrong | like Mires, ia 80 many speculations, would think ‘The Prince Napoleon, when in the United States, was | ambitions in their common ruin, and who may be called pet official is ts is sicaanie and main the oficers of the English man-of-war, and was surprised | shells, 258 of the si ixty-cight pounder smooth bore Moor- | it worth while to ta Buin of 6,000,000f. If the travelling ove evening ona river steamer, when, about | the pilots of all the grand shipwrecks during tho pa: a = ws at their apparent change of sentiment and the tone of in- | 82m shells, ninety-six of the seven anda half naval six- | affair come again b fore the Court of Aj , and if every nine o'clock, well-dressed, gentlemanly man came up | forty years. Aud it is to this policy that Rome lon they resort to exceed everything that was known even | reaping good feeling and faith in the federal government ple aot remem trees rod perme tye peewee «Nag may then make wi end entere t into conversation with bim. He gave him | complacent ear. All this is only too trae; but the faults a groat deal of information about the United States, and | of the court of Rome do not prevent us from having a ed #0 weil that the Prince, charmed with his elegant | great interest im protecting the person of the Holy Fa- manners and conversation, took the troubie to ask the | ther, aad in assuring his independenco, as certain ditfec- Captain who he was. ences with the Italian government ot prevent us from “Your Highness,” replied the captain, ‘that is our | making the. independence of Italy a question of honor. t under the regime of Manteuffel and Westphalia, The | and its power. None of these nationalities, as here re- sixty-eight pounder and fifty of the twelve-pounder name of the King is placed in the rabiinsnngst elec- ented, have much ears a with rebeldom, particu. | diaphragm smooth bore shells. The solid shot to be au r > ly the piratical part of it; and all talk to us as if thoy | plied to each of the above sbips is 1,690 sixty-cight tors are told that the late opposition aimed at nothing less | would rejoice to seo the war settled speodily and it favor | pounder, 280 one hundred and ten pounder Armstrong, than the subversion of monarchy and the establishment | of ihe Vale, Bo — had as ver igo Bompeg: thus phere een senior Arment me Fob mehr far; we have not ye jme to sound | pounder . ‘supp! of arepablic, and that any one who votes in favor of | TT; Mine" feeiing of the people of this country, it is | with 115 common twelve pounder howitzer shells and COURAGE OR HARDINOOD OF THE PINANOIER—HIB APPEALS TO THE LAWYERS AND LADIRS, {Paris (April 20) correspondence of Londou star.) ‘The Mires trial stili goes on at Vouai. Mirea continues to be as hopeful and energetic as he Catholic and liberal, france knows so weil what she b mS sd that man?” said the Prince, of course very | Wishes in the peninsula; she is so nobly disinterestet, | thelr candidates must therefure be considereda persoual | ciearty favorable to us. sixty twenty-four pounder congreve rockets. pg be ad gage Ctoanreckion or the, wmnite surprised. and so, faithful to all her grand traditions, that she is | eueiny of the sovereign. ‘This thomo is varied accord- | The news had just arrived last night, via England, of | The above is the largest quantity of projectiles ever | year's confinement in ono of tho most gloomy of the ndrat refec: the exploits of Morrimsc at Norfolk and the acci- | ordered to bo furnished to any vessels of that cizss. tag to: the: Coney: Sa ay esis ~ a who are | the oxploits of ipa. the facts were grostiy ated, appointed to superinten e elections @ several | os wo happened to know from having hoard of th» whole | The “Steam Ram" De: e in a Danger- provinces. Oue of these gentlemen assures the people that | affair before we a from Key fry oe yen Mie gamo ous Co: co yas 61 mail also brings the news t war is settled, or is to ‘From the London 08, April 22. the soy’ angen wm he wiapiseringe'e are gevany be immodiately , by a proposition which has been made | ‘The reclioet eighteen, iron frigate, ae R. A. verned in future by the King or by e' second | by the foderal government, to yield all présent points in | Powoll, C. B., in No. 10 dock, at Portsmouth, on the annovaces that the liberals want to introduce a commu- | dispute and acknowledge the Southern confederacy, pro- | water boing pumped out of the dock, inte which she was nity of goods and wives; others do not even condescend | Yided they should stipulate to abolish all slavery in | haulod on Friday last, has been found to have an oxces- ith the “vil Ititude,”” bat inf rong thirty years from the date of the compact. They seemed | gively foul bottom. ‘This will now be thoroughly cleansed to reason wit ‘vile multitude,’ bat inform ¢ greatly pleased with this here,and expressed much sur- | and coated with a preservative composition. ‘The defects simply that it is the piensure of his most gractocs | prise and apparent Oy yer when we informed | specified are not numerous, but they will increase in Majesty that they should return the government candj- | them that wo thought if the abvlition of slavery and set- | number if ail apparently requisite alterations and repairs “of injon,”* Landrath Von Schwel: tlement of the war depended upou any such terms os | are executed while the ship is in the Lands of the dock- dates, ‘In my opinion,” says Landrath Von Schweling, e, that consummation so devoutly to be wished for | yard officials. ‘The popular beliof is that she is no divided “it would be best for the army to take up arms, march would never bo arrived at; and they were quite taken | and protected by water-tight compartments that iu the fvom one end of the country to the other, and tread pa —— so Mees Mer nice we serreet ts event of her bow or stor, the Parts, unprotected by s a ‘ us like a big 7, itunes sell. as | armor plating, being partially destroyed by an enemy's everything into tho dust.” ‘The original is rather more | the authority for the roport by the Portuguese papers. | shot,ahe would sti float and Nght hor guns nearly as energetic; but the snavities of Prussiag officialism are It is now nearly 6ix years since an American man-of- | oficientiy as she did before her bow or stern was in- not always fit for publication in the Herat. It is but haem om | ¢ bp ead — ed jared. wo Vtg iy A is ie from haies ualy. te vi ‘ ‘ 4. 7 althou; se, the ni au ye woul: non from right to mention, however, that last night's Preussiche | had hoard by way of England that an Auricau man-of- | the fect SF ner oftcers ond eres, her co-ealice eater hgh “Yes, your Highness,” again answered the captain, | 20t disquieted either by the ingratitude of the cue or “that is the boat's cook. During the entire day he is aj | he false interpretations of the other. We expected, his furnace; but when his work is done aud his fires are | however, greater justice from go oulightoned a states Out he takes off his apron, puts on his cost and becomes | man a8 Lord Palmerston, This time the noble lord @geutioman. After eight o'clock in the evening he is | Seems to us to have been the playtiing of an optical tho equal of every oue on board.”’ ary Will he ne — last ee It, io « oie ¢ of criticising France, the powerful minister would There is a Freuch idea of American “equality” fo- | Pobioy the influence which ho has over a certain Cabl- you. net to determine that Cabinet to recognize tho new king- T inquired of a very intelligent Js |, after “Tom. | dom, it seems to us that he would rendor a great service my,” who has beon reported to be ; and it will be graiitying to the many admirors of that tawny youth to ‘The Constilutionnel is known te derive its inspirations ‘that he was alive and well when the Embassy took | from the government ministers; and the article in ques- its departure. but that be says “he left his heart in | tion indeed bears the marks of a greater vigor and America.” Let its fortunate possessor rejoice. power than do usually those which appear in that jour- Yesterday tho ambassadors had an interview with M. | bal. Since the difference of opinion exhibited botween ‘Thouvenol, Minister of Foreign Affairs, and to-mor- | the two governments on ths Mexican question, it is said Yow are to have their formal presentation to the Em- | that notes of not the most amicable description have peror. been passing across the Channel. 4 article of the ‘Tho bad news which will persist in conti Freuch prisons, have not in the slightest aegree brokem down his elasticity. A few days ago he was compli- mented by an old friend on the strongth of character which enabled hit to boar ‘p so Btoutly against adverse fortune. But ogi eke "Que vules vous? Autre- ment je me serais pas Mires."” The double condemnation which has been pronounced against him has not in the least shukeu an apparent com- viction in his own innocence, or, as be calls it, his own ity. Accnstomed and hardened as his conscience ‘been by the every day tices on the Bourse and the chicanories of financial life, as wellas of financial laws, he can sce nothing but logal subtioties in the aecu- sations brought against him. So insensible is ho to their moral beariug—if they havea moral beariug—that he ‘one day said to Jules Favre, who, at his request, went to neohim at the Mazas, ‘I was very desirous to haves chat with you, because I believe you to be one of the most honest men that it is possi to meet; but, at the same time, allow me to say that in poiut of houesty you aro not one whit my superior.” Far from. being angry at the compliment, M, Favre felt greatly flattered by it, and has, I understand, frequeatly repeated it to the mem- inuing to come | Consitutionnel will excite a great «eal of Ive In England, from the United States is affecting even that hopeful | and the Fnglich journals will come to us to-morrow youth, Bevoricy Tucker, who has been “whistling (and | loaded with vituperation. What a warm, loving “al- drinking) to koop his courage up” ever since hia arrival | liauce’’ is that which now exists between France aud fm Paris on the important mission conferred upon him by east. Zeitung contains an article stating that the Minister of | war, theSt. Louis, had boon sent here. They appear | compartments, a3 at present fitted, being quite veeless in pre- | hors of bis ion who defentied Mires, the government of the “‘Cunfederato States.” I met him ‘the Japanese Embassy visited the Grand Opera on instructi "7 ‘to seo us 08 shore, and speak in the kindest terms tis water from eliber end reaching (be mid 4 profess: 5 ant another ‘traitor to the country tm. whose’ om, | Weduesday evening, to witness the performance of | ‘%@ Intevior has issued such instructions to his subordl- | Peon cintey, ” Nyetieg water Seomm 3 sip part | "They included the greater numberof the first cate ave nates, roquesting them to temper their zeal with alittle |“ we have not communicated with the Consul, Mr. Rob- discrotion. inson, nor the Ministeg, Mr. Harvoy. As soon as that 8 | agmiral Wa R. N., om the N ‘There can be mo doubt that this system of terroriem | done we shall have adie things of interest 0 write you. - avy. ‘a ed will have some effect, particularly m (ho rural districte, | Nows fine in the Mints te today. I wil pore westenerting tte Linge ines, Aprit 22.) whore ty peasantry live ingreat nwo of the powers that | again from this placo, giving such gossip of intrest as1 | gai ’the Lous’ Majoress gave the accustomed entertaine De; but Tis not jess certain that it has excited (he utmost Se jets King Louis. is said to bo in very low mont at the Mansion House t nerous assomblage of Aixgust among the moro intelligent and independent por- | spirits: never having recoverod {rom the shock occasion. | dice and Entemnn A eledging the toast en be tions of the population, and converted numbers of very | ed by the death of his brother. He hasa physician con- | nuit of the Navy Said the recoat battle in American moderate men into violent opponents of the present —, fe ro Scone fevting av ouaee aa oa waters had reodored (he toas' yrigh had mot with so 3 t. ‘The § University ya. | drinks, and a ; a growing ns a Feaponse, one of peciiliar interest. ‘Ihe wlio government. The Senate of the University of Borliu— | ‘against the Prime Minister. Jadging from these re- Soantry tot econ sucriiod with the sows, an ferurea'e a highly conservative body—to whom a copy of the | ports of Madam Rumor, and what little we have scen, I ‘the emer: 4 Circular of M. de Jagow had bem transmitted by the | sould say that royal sports and court Mummery are do- | Promttness eaued te the emerceney ‘ue noble lord at Minister of Public Education to serve as their guideas | Sidedly dull—duiler even than the country aud people | gq einand that our entiro feat should be reconstructed yy hs were Plocque 4 art, mieux, formerly Minister of Justice; for the proparation of his case for the Supreme Court, Berryer, Favre and La- chowd, and at pre-ent Leze and Mouguir. But nono of alt xy have defeaded their client with as much imeelf, His last statement of his case {s considered a masterpiece of legal discussion. It is true that there is little of technicality in ft. But all the faan- ciul tranzactions which are brought against him are justt- day practice of the flaanctal authorities ry omic theories which he advances with @ breadth, originality, and apparently @ strength of com- viction, which would certainly gala the day were jury to decide his canse. ‘Tho Indies who are in the habit of listening to the | overs 4 are evideutly gained round to his side. They cial service ho was sent abroad, and to whose | ‘Pierre de Medicis,” and, to judge from the criticism and constitution he swore ‘allegiance, com. | upon it given me by one of the olicers, they must have down the Champs Elysees yesterday. This was | been very bighly delighted. His remark was that the Mr. James Buchanan, late United States Miniater at Co. | actors “‘make great noise, and make ugly face all the Paphagen, and who stayed here as long as there was any- | same as oraay peopie in Japan.” They were better thing to be got out of the office, after (he act of secession | pleased with the performance of Hamilton, the eieve of Bad taken piace. They both looked damp and disma'. vert Hondin, at whose exhibition they rendered them- ‘They both have been expecting iat oifices under the new | Seives immensely popular with the ladies apd children government, when it should have been fuliy organized | by distributing among them # quancity of perfumed and recognized. Buchanan wants to be Minister of the | colored wood engravings, of which they seom to have Confederate States to some one of the Furopoan conrts, | brought with them a ploatiful supply. it ts said that and would even take his old place at Copemhogen, if he | some of the iadics of Paris have besn as infatuated with ould get uo other. Tucker, ou the other hand, could not, | one of the translators as it wag suid (it is to be hoped Tam inciined to think, be induced to take his at Liver’ | without reason, however) some of those in ycur Isiand —: Boisy Oditors might inte disturb | City were with the charming Tommy, and that he re fs equanitaity ; but he would tuke the Consulate at Paris, | celves say where from a dozen up to fifiy biliets douse per Thurlow Wood, Esq., is still in Paris, but returns to | diem. He iscertaiuly “s man to love,” with @ fine, _ which they represent. ~ "3 “te t 7 a bi oe London in a few days. , open, pleasant countenan nd a clear, brown com. | the next elections, have returned it with a diguised pro- ‘The steomor is already under steam and preparing for eae princi) te. canausens udgin ely would wort rep Bren coy Lanny fo eee ‘Anew opera, the music by Felicion David, entitled | ploxion, and speaks englich and French with great per- | tect, stating that such interference with their constivu- | the salutes and formality of departure, and, lost t ovr for,es, cur pablic arsenals apd private yards would | he ts being brought into the duck or taken from it by ® ‘Lalla Rook,” and founded ujon Moore's poem, ta to be | fection, he being the only oneof the party, indeed, who } 51 ricnts had not been attempted by any former | Somsndating “Liou should be euch © beast as, to | farnish and wield the native iron whiolt provited | pair of gebdarmea. Tuay also send buuquete of Sowers rf a ‘ ‘The houor and safety of the wipister, aud would not be submitted to by them, nnd ada- British I taked npon cur ieumediateenttasceon ing atthe same time that they totally disagreed withthe this great work. Meanwhile we need have no alarm. ‘The ministry in regarding the present contes* as oue between NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS. problem had yet to be solved toconstruct on the other bilo of the Atlantic i els which cou'd, without produced suortly at the Opera Comique. speaks the latter language with any degree of accuracy ar correspondent in the lurch, 1 must cut short Tes stated that aix projects have been submitted to the Aulmiralty for the transformation of the wooden stern Panis, April 15, 1862, | voagels into iron-clad onee; and it is auld that a veace! is to The Emperov onl Ialy—The Reported Pregnancy of the | pe vuilt which, besicies hor iron-casing, will carr} ww Dix cell, and one who hag cousuerabl liered by daring traesactiona is the one who is tl for bis acquittal. Mires sont a copy of his brochure te ery fair sympathiser whose naine he could discover, With @ message to this effect:— Your wnerring inatincls Countess de Chambord—Revival of the Hopes of the Le. | weighing sixty thousand pounds. Spain and Aus royalty on the oue side and democracy on the other. were ee inscribe = . paring mn-cly ¥ re 1 imple las been followed by the Universities of ork of the Blockading Squa danger to of justico and of mercy have slroady acquitted me. Bus gitimicts— Reception of the Japanese Bmboasy vy the Bn. | Preparing to build ironclad ay ine: and two m ppm fo enn berks Corith the exception a arte jeente ee eae “gS ne on i garacd & T now want your reason to prove me innocent, " latter are to go tothe United Sta peror—Jeff. Davis Investing in French PundemHeenan— | Wom the laren ire to 69 to x Thurlow Weed, de., cho., de. The result z ——— of gee Pre ‘expression of opinion on th tlemon who, “kicked up a row”? at the perforu- saaiee eniibdinids oot oi rot Palmers. | §o0e of the “Cotillon,” at the theatre di Vaudeville, ton pation of Tome was violation | yas been published, although the judge made a spce of the principle of non-intervention which France had | cial order Sorbiadieg, the ee of es srk recognized as well as England, and thi dence or remarks counse! ie pon tetag given pense v after rhe cabression of | ‘inflicted ‘upon M. le Comte ‘amnmont Caderousee opinion being «' Fhe arrival of the | gag a fine of fifteen franca. M. le Comte d’éstournel was Marquis de Lavalette, the French Ambassador to tho seuloted iS giana amount; —, - vee de en ot Papal Court, in London, is by many considered an ey) | Count Pozzo go, the Count de Merlemont Marquis de Saint Sauveur were acquitted. This bas been Aenoe that the Emperor is preparing to abendon Rome, | Sn unlucky week for the Comte de Gramtuons, Walle and shield himself as much id possible in doing | riding a steeple chase pa Sanday »6 She last meeting ot 0 behind the advice of Fngiand. Tt is congj. | the seaeon, at La Marche, he was thrown from his horse ~~ jnst as he eame opposite the tribrne of the jndges,and ered as not unlikely that he may be preparing Burope | though ao boues were broken he was very badly shake for one of his periedical startlers. And, now thatthe | The theatrical novelty, ‘Les Volontaires de 1314," at u rst representation of which it is suy a“demon- stration’’ on the part of studonts and others hostile to the ip ee mye And be made, will be produced at the Porte it, Martin on Monday next. of his dynasty the great liberal majority of Rurope. Musard has received permission to give a series of Sun- "EZ porate ‘edeiek' the pr el of tho | aay ooncorts at the Pre Catalan, in the Bois de Boulogne. nord thes revived hi Since the opening of the Jardin d’Acclimateur the fermer gi piace has veen er the public, Someep CREDLE Iegacamin Fone ans ics | Mace ba Ven alm Generic by the pb » The Countess de Chambord Panm, April 18, 1862. i iY Cathol® profes: og rd are ae oy warn by the THE PRIZE CREW SURPRISED BY THE CREW AND ain Bet erleton w wae overy Archbishop) , and tea me yee i ihe hankes 4 TAKEN TO LIVERPOOL. ropeun country would take part, ers.) Whi other influe Kae > Kiiasen Cons oil of ‘tht [{Livorpoot (April 21) correspondence of Loniton Herald.) | might be the changes in naval warfire, however d! Commerce rt chore significant demonstration, however, | ., About sixgr eoven o'elock this morning the Einilwe st. | forqnt the manauvres of oUF ships, and tue conditions of city. A still oy ee aeremienirtement y wever, sey from Charleston. We ha: our tactics, we shou, he was proud to believe, preserve proceeds (rom a Bie Spied ye Am gh — the nature of her cargo, but she brings | tho ayirit and courage of our seamen, anituated u Bie ate ee ee erie ine Qyrwelvle. | as wondortil aatory ax any on record. Tk appeared that | sawe indvinitable Fes lution whieh’ led our fatfers to The primary elections have been fixed for the 28th inst., | the vessel lelt Calcutta und proceuded shence to Charles- | Victory, and the future would adorn as bright a page in the day on witiel & pai fommences— | ton, with the intention of running the blockade. While | the hiatory of our country as the past, (Cheors.) evidently withthe berger br | (hemorchants, | recgnnoitoring in order to effect that object she was ob- y = most of whom sm, OF | perved and speedily captured by afodoral cruiser, As , « from at any rate have no sympathy with (ue red reaction | Gaual, under such ciroumatances, & prize crew was put | land’ Ie tan Ma Bo et from appearing at ine pols ving ‘heir weight | on board the captured vessel, che main portion of her |, (®FO™ : aioli Tas into the opposi own crow being transferred ‘to the foderal biockadin; ween = on Pon oe ae oss the: Emaeine Reng Hon § eS ship. antes oflicers, ee ae captain — a the Phat even be frm mgr ee hens sha peor mercantile commnity would be subjected; but as it was | fist on parole eee Coe Kumily St. | Monitor are not in any respect to be compared to those thing, the ery obvious, the merchants of ali tne | recapture took place, which the most remarkable | Pian eNO peteould certainly give m good account of ‘the pele ni citien, “of. Prussia have ‘oonelided. to stay | feature in tho whole ontorprise, The, prize crew twe American ships builtin stich a hurry. It is, never- igo ‘on the 28th, and not to leave for I. ips | 19c a amall watch, on Be ae Th forded theless true that, suchas they aro, these twoships, or th ‘sttor, tho ‘lectious, "This. revolution has ‘boon | She ecessary opportualty, and the ofleers of the Lanilie | rather lating batteries, would destroy the most gold announced, through the newspapers, to their correspon. cee the hatches in order to prevent the prize wooden fabric. This fast being admitted, the conse- dents and to the public in geferal;and, as it is calculated | Pegching the deck and Any assistance co there | quence in clear and incontestable—namoly, that at this that the fair ia attended by upwatds of twenty thousand | Tesching (he, tc Mad, seg eee, resisted and « | moment the nob of | uuplated wood merchants and manufacturers from Prussia, no import. | COmrmaee, Oe orem sme SG through theahoulder of | Se powerles® as instrumente of warfare. This ‘ant business operations can take piace till after their ar- a ‘ hf eventually were oven ‘and the | fact our neighbors cannot perceive without regret—they wee hree or four years more ri yiew aera ae rn, it may | tatchyaia rercgecray stn They arrived heres | Seq Yiry'hanired mils tn puldng sty ncoden ‘ a pany pero a aera teineag: | ina at nog tu corel ar Mr. | $2 ra is ut Sat succeed raser, Trenholm | rm as acrensing t! Bs array, tng ot oer cag | rma anno oP sto ow Foran} | Relay A'S la neha et 7 ° Budget Paria (April 22) correspondence of the London Times. he AGuittal of M. Mirea by tho Court of Douai, wil his immediate discharge froin custody, communicated by telegraph, has taken fow people here by surprise. Inde pendent'y of his innocence of the Voy against him, but of which be waa found guilty in tho Paris courts, M, Mires uttered threats during tho Pouai trial, or thing that looked like threats, of disclosing the names parties to whom he paid over five million fron 8, which, ae~ conr'ing t» the Proctreur General, had bern absiracted from the company. From that moment most people were certain & the reanit. Now that he is acquitted and resiored to liberty it is mot likely ho will make disc osures whicli, apparently at least, were ineant to intimidate the persons menaced, but who now breathe more freely. fhe Charch of France Against Slavery. ‘THs FAMOUS BISHOP OF ORLEANS PRAYS FOR THE UNION CAUSE. tho 7 ine8 Ww t restriction the senti pts the loarusd prelate, aud expresses ita satis- faction at being able to admire at the same timo the quent noe ot employed and the opinions exprossed. ‘e openly acknowledge, says that journal, that the PietcPaace, While peovesting tat he. will take ‘uo part . jo inthe an Duper quarrel which i, divides the te States, . Dupanioup sums up the circumstances terms; he then recalls the regular, equi‘adle 2 szniklog Y and adopted to put an end and pacific measures proposed toslavery, concluding in the following precise terms:— ecattered the wife of the Count de ‘bord—Luc de Bordeaux— bo is the on of the Duke de Berri, who was the second | Réligious Observances of Holy Week—France as @ Religious wi he ep ‘the oa Count de Chambord, there. Country—Napoleon’s Relations to the Holy Father and {is the grandgon of deposed monarch, and i: i , 4 living male representative of te elder branch of the | Znoland—Miness of Prince Murai’s Son's Wye—The Naval Armor Agitation, dic. , de. the elections, The feudal minority of sixteen ‘ll di ve EMILIB ST. PIERRE AND HER CAP- ‘ved the regular and moderate resources of the say revere ts yor. Toe Emit Pols oe | unforeseen tn mt ego athrrin ot | uM OOF | ra ating hoi org hy unk | 2 4 Zea at 0 ir of its being converted into om the London Star, April 22.) God, give a P natiot qOTOUS Ot! stantly attended the various services with which the forts 5 ‘a the new Premier appears 0 hope is, thathe | Few oveale ses the breaking ot of dhe fyi war in ploite of the Merrimac have again proved the insuf™- sesihen tee erik he dneeteay Meee ee “Without by said that he was incapable of re | Roman Catholic church marks this solomn anniversary | will be able to tule over the next session, of which it | America have caused greater excitement in Liverpool | ciency of land fortifications to protect the coast. Phis, | UE inuted, ts seriously entered, step hie heen nade, ‘be admitted there is @ fair prospeet, since the Kin, than the sudden and uuexpected arrival in the Mersoy | also, ts a somewhat leasant fact for our neighbors, who wad ‘the Minister of War have been obliged, tongs of the woll known Confederate ship Emilie St. F x on jand fortifications. jy of hope has been opened. ‘eo, re- ‘cunsent to the proposed cutting down of the | ooutly annovnced as having been captured by oue of ‘the 1 u nat te a ‘or myself, and an imperious need to pray Get that He deign to Wore un cmerprin | pacific solution of which must ardently wished for. ‘Then, rising above the local question, Mgr. Nupanioup combats land to hand the principle of slavery, and ter~ minates by quoting that famous declaration of the Coume cil of La Roobelie, drawn up in hat ee after the tmmancipation of the slaves in the Freneb colonies, The x re Gi ttable evidence: thkt eicyor Eesceun, | never omitted his attendance at the morning service of - Decome @ grandfather, But shore ie | bis private chapel. Everywhere throughout the capita @till toom for doubt. Tho Counters de Chambord, if she \@ principal churches have echoed with the grand mu. fi Indi b . ee ies jam veered ‘her tissue” ha caliy sorvices of the “Stabat,” “Tenebres,”” &e., and the speaking, for she was born on the 4th of Juiy, 1317, | multitudes who have thronged the aisies of these gor. eens cea: the Primes Mery said, however, about | of Christ's suffering and death, and the Emperor has ry estimates; and he if consequently spared | federal sbips-of-war. 1 Teooeslty of ‘applying to tho Logisiature for ‘Tho Kinilie St. Pierre pailed from Calcutta in Novem. | strength with sailing powers. The prolongation of the additional jncome and | ber last, with the iutontion of running the blockade into | wieldy ‘vessel, had to retire before lization of the budg : fon if posible, Jaden with 2,0 smaller and less powerfully armed. alization of ‘the budgos, | Charlenton if possible, She waa laden with 2,000 coarse | is amaller and less pomernitly Are i we zi 3 5 u provision tax. The which de Patow declared t be impracticable, } canvass bags, tochnically called gunn® bags. Sho was ‘bound for St Johns, N.D.; but her com. | worlds the war navy is undergoing ® complo\e transfor 1 wil consequently be forty-five years of ago on the Christian worship, and th 0 aud which led to the dissolution of the Chamber, | ostensib’ - Chu 0 the severe slavery im fan July next, Shs was married in 1846 geous temples of Ips and the almost | Bos airouly bsen promised by his successor haac. | mando ,Captsin Wilson, after un’ ordinary voyage, ar. | mation, and that We must continue in the same line, | Cotholic Caseen ed are Yoomed to the great ditri- if this. story be true, it will pat an end to the tocit | satire cessation of ordinary commerce, attest that, | cording to tho Prussian constitution tho ropresentatives | rived off Charies'cn harbot on the 15th of March, when | without precipitation, certainly, but also without wenk- | which @ mutinne Cent a caased to labor to remeds ie(audg had existed between the leaitiuuisis | whatever may be (he political quarrel with the Holy | of the poople are not allowed bo veto Lhe regular ot: | hie veqscl was captured by tho steamer James Adver, | uss. ment of . e feuds boop 6