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2 ‘ EUROPE. © City of Manchester Of Cape. Race. FINANCIAL ANC COMMERCIAL, Sarorpar, Oct. 29—6 P. ‘Tho stock market recovered this morning fram the Slight depression of yesterday afternoow, and the geveral tendency of speculation was upward, ‘The closing sales at the first board, as compared with those of Friday's second board, were ag follows.—Erie advanced %,New York Central x, Pittsburg and Fort Wayne 174, Hudson River 13¢, Reading 1, Chicago and |. Northwesterd 13s, preferred 114, Michigan Central 1, DA TER Us. Michigan Southern 3, ljivoja Central 87%, Chicago aud yous ‘dette aed Rock Isiand %, Milwaukee and Prair‘e du Chiea 4, Cum-. Derland Coal %, Ohio and Mississippi certificates 3, Government securities were strong at an advance upon Yesterday's quotations. Coupon five-twenties sold at Pilea bew issue 1007¢ & 101, coupon ten-forties 436, & M, Oe year certificates 95}, a 34. State stocks and railroad bonds were firm but rather dull. After the oaii there was a more coniident feéling shoma,d . and at the open board, at one o'clock, quotations were |. higher. -Frie sold at 9714, Hudson River 122; Reading 133 3g, Michigan Central 12934, Michigam Southern 70%, Lilihois Central 127, Cleveland and ‘Pittsburg 103, Cleve- and and Toledo 1114, Chicago and Rock Island 97, Chi- eago and Northwestern 44%, Pittsburg and fort Wayne 1034, Prairie du Chien 56, Cumberland Coa! 523,, Quick- silver $15,, Ohio and Mississippi certificates 26 Afterwards, on the street, there being a9 second regu- Jar or open board on Saturday, the market was a fraction lower, but steady at the decline. Gold tended upward under unfavorable constructions of tho news from Grant's army. The quotations were as i. ‘DEATH OF THE DUKE OF NEWCASTLE, Our London and Paris Cor- respondence. Failure of Twenty Mercantite Firms in Liverpeel and Othor Fail- ures All Over Engiand. Suspension of Four Banks in Bio Janeiro. Origin of the Peace Address from the English Copperhzads. Fall in the Rebel Cotton Loan and Advance in the Value of “ Greenbacks.” 1PM. r « 29% The ebipments of specie to-day amounted to $620,543, making for the week $932,645, This shows a consider- ‘able increase upon the exports of each of the last few Previous weeks, and is attributable to the reauction which has very lately taken place in our geueral exports, assisted by a slight increase in our imports as compared with recent returns. The advance in gold is partly in consequence of the increised demand for customs duties and shipmont, The operators in gold aro anxiously on the qui vive Tespecting the movements of Grant's army, and future quotations are dependent to a great extent upon that news. Trade in like manner will be influenced in its course by that of gold und the aspect of the military sita- atioa At present it is in a nearly stagnant condition, @ad opinions ditfer widely as to what turn it magtake, ister to Washington, Buyers wre holding off for lower prices, and o . few seliers are bolding oa for higher ones, ee Dey phot oe aad trailic in mercdandise bas thus become Mazzini’s Manifestoon theFranco- italian Treaty. almost ac much a matter of speculution as a venture in stocks. Maby are purchasing in anticipation of bighor prices after the Presidential election takes place, and they are mainly basing thelr calculations upon oon tinued inflation of the curregcy and a steady persistence ia the old financial policy. wre it ts to be boped that they will find themselves egregiously mistaken, and that their expected profits will be turned into positive losses Af Congress does its duty this will iney:tab y be the case, for Congress has the power to compel the reductioa of the gold premium, woich is only another name for the appreciation of the currency, ant with tbis prices for commodities of all kiods must decline, The money market continues to work with ease. There 18 @ surplus of capital ofering at seven per cent on cail altbougn the indisposition to discount commercial paper shows.po abatement. Tho rate “Yor first class vam varies (rom pine to twelve per cont, with an oveasionsl exception at eight. ‘This ease in movetary circles on the business day next Preceding that on which the second instalment of twenty millions of legal tenders, om account of the new five- twenty forty million loan, becomes due, 16 a symp tom strongly im favor of \an easy money mar! during the winter, It ‘shows that’ there is | @ rapid contralization of carrency at this point gomng for- ward, avd that those who keep oo bank secouut, Dut hoard thew greeobacks, are (reely disbursing thor monoy in favor of government securities. Ag usual om Saturday there is little oF no Jegitimate domand for foreign exe: Drawers ace fem ip their rates Ww waticipation of an advance, and buyers are crit} eal of wanes in wew of the disturbed stite of Dmanciai’ ailairs ww Grom Britain and Frauce, Bunkers? wwic 10% @ Jg (or their sixty days bills tor sterling, and 110%, a for those at three days irom sight, Merchauts’ bills are . * Noted at 10lkeri. | Frade jars Mac anaNe ae The new stéamor Ontarto weat ashore near Yarmouth, a | wo! will prove a total wie: Kk Tue ‘Assistant Troasurer im this city reports to-d»: } e vas | tue ship «6 le, for San Francisco, is reported at AN, ENGLISH PRINCESS IN A LOVE: FIT, The Ladies of Paris Dyeing Their Hair Bed. and Red Hair the Fashion. EXPLORATIONS IN SOUTH “AMERICA, EOC en € THE TELEGRAPH IN INDIA, tbe ken Tho steamship City of Manchester, from Liverpool 19th ria Q ieenstown Zin, passed Cape Race ou Friday aight, en route to New York Her advices ape four days later than per steamer nada at fiaifax, The political pews coitstas no features of importance. Commercial faliures in ‘.oglaid continue to tuke piace ‘weaty Livorpool Arias have failed, Tho Dnke ot Newenstia ia dead, A commercia! pan:c tas occurred in Riv Janeiro. Four banks have sus;ecdedl py mont. Tbe (rigate Niwara psesed Beal on the 20tb, bound west. 4 fotiows hens rend Receipts from cus‘ome, $10 io Funeiro diecoarsive cargo Wer! reveipis, MW dhe steamship Nesth American, from Quebec, arrived Vaymenis 6 248 $ at Liverpool on the 18th wet, Bilance i} ‘The steamship City of Ruttimore, from New York, ar- Poor ow the 18tO Lest j to covernment jon 774.250 | te value of the manortations, otber iban { Aud specie, at this port tor ibs week ending | 278. fis Canal Company Lave anticipated their usual nual dividend period, which docs cot come round untli February peat, aud bave auaonneed a semt-aunaal dividend of five per cent, on the consolidated as well ws the preferred stares of the compaay, payable on acd filer the Ist day o Tho following a Penneyivauia company re ports shows the coal Lonnage for tbe season, a8 compared with corresponding time last year:— Thy Oar Londunu © pondence. Loxpen, Oct. 12, 1364. The British Copp rivats w Their Brethren in America— Hiscry of the “Peace Address—=[te Origin and Fra- mers—The Fail in the Rebel Colton Bords—Advance in Greenbacla—Cren!, Sherman and Sheridan Proepitat. ing the British Financial Crash—A Royal Lady in Le ‘wioria’s Family Alianca—City Omnibuses on their Last Trips, fe. fe. - that was sent out to America oo of the month—the manifesto of British copper- . ited to aid of their brethren and the rebels in | América—will uo doubt be apprectated at ite real intrinsic But to kuow its real worth you must lvarn ite Ite hiatory is brief and very suggestive. Sir Henry Ge Hoghton, Baronet, who acts as spokes cowd of rebel sympathizers, some months ) dred ond sixiy the jers—and w ord About half of his aacestral acres. od pounds—pear two million dol- to raise the money actually gold off Rebel stock being “Total on the wane, and fikvly to toueh zero, be adopted burg merece ete Anis mothod of assisiing the tottering fortunes of The coal tounage the punt weok bas increased some | 150 confederacy. By the ald Of priests aud -clergy us Week. This is jor com, and en hn 50 per tun in pri twenty thor aud the result : | men, whose (locks would sign amythtog, plausible or not, the names were procured and the document traos- mitted -‘to the American peop! All the leading journals here—sven the London T¥m-a— provonnces ita misteke, The address is certatuly the coolest piece o: impertinence ever penned, The siguers simply ask the -‘American people’ to disrupture thetr pation, break up their government and ruin the country. No doubt that would please a rival nation, The address was drawn up by the Kev, Mr. Tranlett, who bas figured considerably in the atteotion paid to the pirate Semmes. ‘Ths reverend gentiewnsa isa needy clerical, a cure,” but vot a curate, withouta parish or a “living,” and he js actually Bired togo avout and write up and talk up the cause of the rebels. Revel bonds {eli again yesterday four per cent— vow down to 50. By the way, brokers and holders of “*grecnback’’ currency bere will pot sell Uncie ‘ paper at all# It is rising so fast im value that they will thoy will sell at. But the; ny exteot. "Lear tbat St Henry de Lorn says” he wiil pot sell bis rebel bonds if they go dows. to i por deluded noodie, that they will yet tw bes » Pee 4 re Ho bas more money than brains. it, are agaia in oper gold, sod other mines are expected to etart the coming if this depreciation of currency upd cotse,uevt BCreIse Of price continnee. b the price of coi has advauood $1 to $2 per ton, tc i stil! $1 50 Lo $2 60 per two bolow what it was two months ago. The Toledo and Wabash road earned the third week in October: — 1864. 1363 . ot Increase. . nye. Stock Etcha Sar $5000 U 8 2K 700 500 350) du...new ieswe 101 10) U 5 104 coupon, 96%¢ 0000 a) 50 rere 10) Mich Cent RK BD) do. ut 4 ‘200 US 6a 1 yr cert. 100 dO... a e money market continues just about the same as at 07 ° Wo MSA&NT RR. div ov ate of my last Failures are continually occw . 15000 Missouri 6 a0 do. z 000 to £200 000. Interest silt 1.00 01 amouate varying from £20, r crit per cent, aod thongh there is plenty of 4 great lack of coniideace, This is now 56.0) Moos Pi 1.00) Ohio & ¢ e main difficulty. Noone knows whom to trust This Nos a tate of ailairs win poey remain for one or two weeks, or more. wankers and capitalists are tS ee eeaeeraa' as it veers to mie eitnout adequate lence, and, ae jt veers to , 00 do SSasou. When the bard biows of Grant, Sberidan aud 38 Clevea Tol Sherman knock she bottom completey out of the * 20 Det, M & Tol od 4000 Mariposa bet um rebel tab, the fos! crash will occur among tho cotton gpeculators and dotiers in rebel scrip and then tiwes MhwO Ameren gold c s 109 sbe Canton ¢ Will begin 10 MeO. atin ° gest relating. Princess Mary hema aorta Oe cre nity got a ben! She has allen desperately A ‘uards’ bail she met young Lord Hood, with at ber bears, fis lordship is a peer of the realm, wi handsome and twenty-six. Her foal bighness is terms of the royal marr) 10 outa Ruck ‘sid 0 Chit Ruck is 10) do. Nd. os 2¥) Astiburton Coal Co, 2t 2° ee ee Tiage—and let royalty whistle, Copsiderabie uneasiness in bi Peewee and ber brother, Prince George, took her travelling o the Cootinent for Some time, in hopes ibat “change of scene'’—the usual prescription for love-sick dampels—-would cure ber. But bo, the arrow had goue into the capacious bosom too —c She declares she wit marry him whether or no. Were she to coptract a jaw/ul royal marriage, there wo Ch. 2 joo Mu & om ie nothing Stranger than that her heirs might git on the @ the chances, Abrope of England. ‘Old Goorge IIl. Q . Prin. cose marry the Luke of Oldea- burg, one of the claimants to the duchies Prin. cess Dagmar, of Denmark, is to be (be future Fmpres Kusaia, So, with all these royal alliances in the north of Earope, botwapn the Eng'ish royal family dnd the othe: rogal poteotates, the Borapartes wit! bave to'busband + strength, ‘There 1 trowbie ahead, be Italian euularou bubbies feroey, You witl ace the gore the Eeropean journals hatween the Lonton Me Tawiv Company aod soo wd Aa areang ww ‘St Lov, Oot. 29, 1964. Official deapatehes just received at headquartora say that {bo guerilla Bond Bill Anderson and soven of nis wen we 4 lod at Albany, Ray county, yesterday, Six 0! his mea Ming the columns oF a! rence bas taken 1! a 4 69 be Bhot bore (o-aborrow in retaliation (or the mut Weer of byor Wilson and lis mow tropyitan (undergror Pasuaatic Deapyatch Co Sketch of the New French Min- bi bogum, mod dir: Darmstadt, lowed by every Qi acter. rok ponthe hus boett ab f uncertain state, pod Buc ere rife. within a fow dart oF cheval ae ‘are to be carried wer. ‘ihe great eliing venicies bas ad @ur Parts Correspondence. Pars, Oct. 11, 1854. Pre Lahan Problem— Diplomatic Chanjes—The New Min- Gler wo the Waited Btates—A Panic on the Bourse— Horse Rating ta Brance; be: The Italian prébiom coutitites to furnish almost the sole topic Of disonssion amotg the political circles aod journals of Europe, and ‘the “treaty bas been chown to mean the guarautee of the tetiporal power, tudependence ‘and soverelguty of the Pope, or” the one band, and bis entire abandonment by Trance on the other, until it seems almost cruel that the Monitewr ehoula refuse to publish a platd.anit distinct statemout as to wh: ‘The+Monitenir does ‘nothing or'tue kind; but the Constitutionn:l im ail it3 articios seems desirous of im- Pressing thedden that tte’ treaty moatis that the Pope ehali remain in Romo a temporal, iadopendent ruler, At altevents, the treaty has uusettied more thay ever the politica’ condition of Kurope, and’ rany lead to grave Complications before its consummation. it doos ‘the The Monieur of Saturday ast contains an imperial decree making a number of chavges tn the perscnnel of ‘tho diplomatic representativas of France abroad, Among these is the transferor M. Mercier, the Frouch reprosen- tative at Washington, to ‘Spain, and the appointmont in big place of M. Chateaurenard, late Minister to Hoase- M. Chateaurenard bas not heretofore occu- pled 4 very promineat position in the diplomatic corps, having, before his appointment to Hesse, filled the post Of Secretary of Legation at Bertin. to be avery amiabie and sensible gencleman. He will G0 to the United States tn about two months, Mf. who has heen in Paria for the faet-eix months, Spain immediately, Ho’ is gaid, however, nercier, jeaves (or ‘There bas been quite @ panic on the Pourse bero durf3z the past week, almost atigorts of gtocks having beon tumplipg down at a fearful rate, and sellers outnumber- Tho [ati conmmenced tho day the Creag ‘Some enthusti boullie, cheval aux of tng buy8is ten to one. Franoo-Italien treaty was published io the Moteur, and began with the Jahan tgan, which) was immediate ort of Security at all of @ “fancy” char. within the past four ty of moat. on 6, which ¥ (Ol and which ten days ago was in be thonsaad, has gone dowt to 900. Sevorul causos combined have ted to this ail, which docs not yet ceom yw plunge Kur doth the Bar ended. For the next two yetrs, al least until the cousmm. mation of the Franco-Itatian treaty, everybody feels that political matters um europe whl be ina very unsettled aud Ramors of all sorte of scgotigtion fotricue between Kurope.n goverumeats, wi afl must inevitadly Tho last reporia of and of Lance arc very unsatisiaowry, exhibiting a largo Gimination iv tho bullion hold by them, and finally, to cap the climax, it hi d ied, af true into a wRr, of Pnetend been whispored abut the Bourse, ugou which ¢key were feeding, and bad been killed om sccuut of the trecture of a ley, which tendered bim’ useless; and the rpeaxer stated that could the absurd i cating Dieat palatoabie as heef—-would chou Cheval past, thar “Bright's dieise”” is mak tag rapid: toroads upon the Imperial kidneys. provubly Is not yot. tic bippophages recently gave a dinuer at Lyons, at which horse meat waa served up in of shapes. The tollowing are aome of the items tn tue belt fare:—SJailiene ad’ eheval”* + esteurce de trutios,’* pie de cheval a’l [Laleaue,”. + cha," “Pate froid do cheval.’ superivtended by w ine end i ports co da “Cervolies fa mode,” od a ot. de cheval al. bro- The dinner, whict®was veteringty surgcon of” Lyons, was Hi attended, and ta originator, between Lhe courses, oulertained the guests with a Blight bistory of the ammai He was wix years old, eXi8 8 agaiuat pre, 11di00 fo orertbeley torcy-ogue mal hous of pounds of this meat—which be allezes to quite as nutritious and healthtal, avd fully as be added to tho dictary Franco, aod aid much in. boi which la pligaicaily dexenerating ficient quant this race be wat of abut! Horse eating bas kad some dis. tinguished supporters im #racce, among them M Geof- frey St. Hilaice, the celebrated waturaliat It is ohrewaly suspected, however, that more horse meat is oaten by PI of’ meat, Pain & discretion” is iucuisbed for Parwan people (han they got credit tor, nud that tue priabors of many of the cheap restuurants—in which diaper with soup; tw bottie of wine and dessert. bat a she emr'}am of sixteon sous—are firm believers io the Bbeaposss, as least, of horse teat. rt, noar Pai In tho vilinge of 1. where there 15 a veterinary school, horse meat is pubucly sold in theahambics, arid As it on'y four sous a pound, while the mest ordinary hou costs teuive Ar percnnal Corn Ciiniletanie achat BY ihe #1 ers. ri ‘Southerhers io Paris aro singing excocdinsiy small of late, aod evidentiy are arriving at the conclusion that their gume is ovarly played out for Moperpeer’s Africaine hag been Ab length ca at made a the Graud Opera, Naudia aoe there from the itattans to ing the rote of Vacse de Gitia Our amiable Seccotary of Legation bere has been prac: t Unveiling of the Father Mothew Monum-nt— Slane ain Ine Machew Mo: OUR CBE CORRES « “bantingism,” and has succeeded ip reduciog his ut wibout aflecting bis ‘*muscie’ to a considorab! ument in Gora. DENCE. > ek. 10, 1 Demomstrction in omar of the Memory ar the Apostle of Temperance—Descrapteom of the Statue, * Au event tone place in Cork t-tay wh: 1s us interesting to a great portion of undoubtealy © people uf America a3 to those who wereths immediate actors ther Mathew was born, Oa this day sevonty-iour yeas ao iheodold nd bn this day the statue of the patriot, saint and sage was unveiled iu the prev: cow a tmuliitudo of at least Gly thousand peopie—a mase which, although composed of atl creeds, from the Jew to the atheist, uaited im the most fraterna! mavoer to teatity thus in public thei estestn aad respect for true, sierting worth. _ Early in the morniog the trages, baods acd benefit societies marshalled thetr ranks ou the outskirts of the soutbeasiero part of the city, but owing to the distance some Lad to come (rom—Clwyae a 4 Skibbervca the bumber—it was twetvo o'clock before wil Linings were iu resdiness to move. The \ two Pherills, Ac., were alsu present, perauce societies, with their bands, followed, thew Commiiter led off, followed by the Xi the Town Coancil, Aldermen, &., im official ro yor, “8. The Nine diderent tem Thencame the guited trades, n.ucteem dillereut bodter; next came the Gdd Fellows, and Forrestera, dressed ia full cosinme Mea’s society and Society of the Immaculate Heact. dierent bodies carried magniticent sfler vem the Ancient Order o1 then, the Young ‘The , arms, areata. ers, &6., and the several members of ench were d ted iv a most tastetint and appropriate inehuer. tbe all were so ependid, Both in appenrance wnd order, it spectator coul Boime over U the ould be inv 08 ious’ to make vot help remar remainder. eof ihe Forresiers body; the tings of the Odd eliows satistied @ ‘Th: iatinetions ; at stu ibe ie tbe Frominence of oe ewsiag elect of fol by ever: y eri ‘the farvicrs, mounted om horses, snd having each a goldea Lorecehoe on the right arm. delightea overy ‘ont and sve ‘lag Of the stove masous, for simplicity chusteness of style, gratitied every eye. } ‘Ibo provessioual part of tbe procession alone must bave Dumbered at least Bix thousand people, for, on an ave- Tage of four deep, its length was not short or two miles aod a half; and if those who followed on each side were ranged in {be rame manner, it would be uo exag: to put-down the extent of the procession at iif through the principal streets Atter paasin, 100 miles. ‘Uhe city the procession filed past the statue, which was screened from view by A red cloth covering; and at abont half. past two o'clock the Mayor—Jobn Fran ascended the platform speech, in which be gave a tive aud admirable life of the Apos' ia Moguire— delivered bts inaugural nciae roume of the jnstruc- of Temperance, and 1th the sentence, ind, as if by magic, off, and the benignant features of Father Mathew were exposed to the reverential view of the multiiude. The scene now was beyond anything gree rr seen in Cork before; second, for one second, and the vext ac! was a eoce for a burst from the multitude, which was repeated nine times in succes- ry and, inc Mathew 1 rrezented in band elightly &., is ei won, and with such @ Unaaimity and force that the very Tr ju the windows shivered. 10 wate executed by Mr. Foley, R. A., is of bronze, ting the plinth, iS = feet hi ae stan tion, rigt ded, the lett Deiding the folds of bis joutaine and the Hessian boots clouk, and weariig stant £0 geberally work Sy" am" and on bis breast ts a tem- Ravel ora cele creer, waaeound 1 Glled wp by the re, eee ie read: ry coe les ie 1ew,’” ““Apoatie of Tempers. “*the Tribate Uf & Gratolul People,” “Brected i”! Jon Fran Maire M. 1, 1964." a: aes pt A statue is fixed on podertal nine fou high, executed by Mr. of this ef ote | driuking foantains are attached 10 the pedi r ‘Vhe bridge, and in the vertix of a trisagia made breadih of the atrect and two imaginary tines The site, which seme of your readers wil doubt», 170, 18 in Patrick street, ope bundrea yards froth ol sity yards coach, drawn from the eods of the street next to the bridge, 10 the monument itseit. ‘The fgare favor the bridge, and with tbe background of nouves in the dis~ dance, formed by she angie of Patrick stre@t, it rently appears the inost appropriate aite (or @ public monument which could be elected, Rov. After the Mayor, Davecom ing this glorious day Fathor Mathew Taylor, Mr, Haughton and the addressed the people, and the latter goutleman especially dwelt on the pecessity of true tolerauce of which himself aod bim whom they all uptied, without distivewom of creed or party, it Without egotism on 6 was @ itomau Catholic priest, ina, snd Mr. Dunscombe. te a Prote*tant minister, This gentie- man wag enthusiastically cheered at the di(lereat pauses of his speech aud atthe cose, His speech coneludes the proceedings. Thus tbe day's glorious without a single accident: an tudes who were pressut mey be formed away tome idea of thetmulti- tbe plat. form, capable of polding three bundred persons, was as fr of uoveiting Emigrant Mecratts forthe Un pool Méreary, Met. 11. AUteation Ww Ue arrival in sober of Germac dusoi W heave thee @wa gouatry Lo pr Lie bea (From the Bome time ago we Cali pool aud Hull of i now visitants, oager to g hall past eleven o'clock ue figure at three o'c of the ‘the cine lose Army. no had eed NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, OCTOBER: 30, 1864. bo made by which the present one, and all the future underground railways of the metropolis, oo by (be aturospheric or pneumatic revolwsion in motive power for tray ay, slow moving Omnibuses FAUNSYS wil! AoOU bo among the thiogs of the past. This immense Improvement will be the greatest boon to way- iarers acd residents of oromded cies. America, for the purpose of being employed on some new | It will have the Coart of at pTesent at railway which was said to be in course of construction ta | Milan fe doubtful, as tt mi ‘Sssatiaty that cquury, I wan alleged that the ‘‘railway” oaly | the Lombard capita). rae, wal remain the avfiary thas the Germans: Deen persuaded to leave Vateriaud | garrison, 20,000 men being spoken of. to become {vod tor powder in the United States armies; MAzzINI ON TY, VICTOR but some hitch having taken place in the arraagements, rei © number of tham reused +o proceed further thas Liver. ag AND THS BONAPARTE PLAN OF FOFUL 1 It is that agents - Oe ser Atte ate te Bene EE teeoteo, and | The ftalian journals publish the following as the text (bat a number of artisans and persons who have leit the | Of @ letter from Mazzini on the Franco-italian Treaty in Danish army bave been inauced to.sign an agreement to | ©irculation at Naples:— work at some “ mines,” bus actually, it ig amphosed, to Serrenene 94,2964. be taken to ‘Atiérica te be enlisted toto the federal army. Let our observations be but clear, The con- ‘Ime * memorandum of ig rather | Veutton between the Italian goverament and Louis Napo- 88. elaborate docu ports be «between | leon on the subject of Rome ie an act of treason against the pubscribiog ‘partion and’ Hecjamin F. Telly Came. | the declarations made in the italian Parliament, and suc- rican consul iy Stockholm) ‘a8 agent | Cessively repeated by Ministries which have succeeded Easel . Loring, and | Count Cavour, as also against the announcements con- » execu ‘committee of cortain min- | tained in the plebiscites by which the kingdom of Italy 10g companies in the United States called the ‘Qu! ‘WAS conatituied. Plebiscites, government, Partiament Company, the Fewabic Miniog Cotapany and | 80d country baye all decreod that \taly should be united ’ qnd sets forth the arrangements which will be | &24 that Rome should be the metropolis, ‘the solemn made for conveying thi raute'te the ‘ands of the } decision now consecrated by the conyortion means this: Sommpeny ‘and ihe remaueration which they will receive, } 10 accepting the dillerent clauses the right of tbe in- Two Swedes, ut 1. G: Bweasfon and 1. G. Swenstoo, | Vading foreigner. over Rome aud oursslves is recog- masous,atate thatithey and forty other Swedes were io- | Bized, and italy is condemned to bo ensinved and dis. duted to sign eemens a} Stockholm.on the 19th {| Memberod, or false to her engagements. If the goveru- of aca roy rth they were conveued by steamer | Ment maintains the clauses of the convention a stale of "to Grimeby, from thence by rail to Liverpool; that | feudality is decreed. Rome is abandoned for two re during ihe passage they were treated as prisovors and | ta fierce conflict which will be without a result, 1 is enchained and immovable in preseace of that struggle— it is Aspromonte in permanence, If the government docs badly Fore that they were praroed that they were to be taken the not matutain the clauses of the conveution the italiau oa- America to join federal army; that when they arrived ia Liverpool they made their escape from the persons watching them, avd that they then applied | tion iedisvonored; France will make war on us to pupis tr tho eentich pad te ‘consulate tor advice, They’| the violation of treaties freely consented to, and Favope do not not know what beet will 9 in the engagementd whieh ltaiy for. Ddecame of their fellor gers, but they believe, aa they weré penuiiess, that they were | May thao in the fulure, Lbo couveution Las, indosd, unabie ¢o ‘escape,’ aud were taken ou board the ateamor iher inconveniences—secondary ones, it is. true, but still immediately upau leaving tho. railway etation, to be cou- | very grave. To take to our charge a part of the debt of a yeyed to America, government which expends its money in subventioning @ war of obrigands against or 2 Italy fs the beight of Why England ye ed Lincoln and bs rad a tree ‘Fom the Loudoa Times, Oct 10.} day; it offers a strange ipl and says * © @ So long as the uame of General McCiclian was | to thé enemy of Italian national unity, “We are about to Associated with the ides of peace on the only terms on | Md you to reconstitute your crodit, not that you should whieh it can possibly be procured, ‘as sincere weil. | withdraw, but 10 order that you insy the more easily or- wishers to the great American people, were heartily | @apize your forces in order that you should remain an eugiovs for his success; but when the only question ts to nal obstaclé £9 $bg accomplisiment of our desires, which of two rivalgactions America will delegate the task | and that you may eladgblor opr brothers when the whole Of exterminating some four or five millions of he¥ white | of Italy shall rise up and cry out Tho Romer’ ” A drote popula ton, we Confess the question becomes to us one of | Upon liberty, subscribed at two years’ date on such con- very little interest or couceru, Whatever be the import- | ditions, accepted and sizned by a governmont which can afov ot the decision, there really séems no reason to | Place ou a war footing five hundred thousand men in o doubt in. whicd direction i: will be given, Thesecession of | month—by 4 covernment which is the master of twenty- the sontherp Siates bas deprived the democratic party of | two milion men called Itatiavs, is afact upheard of in a great portion of iis power without materially atiecting | history, Will it be accomplished? Will not the the repabiicans, who could ecarculy be &aid to have any | first italian Pagiiament, wheo ils pstieuce shall footiug io che siave. States, Tue democracy hagdividel | be exhausted by a-serics of repeated outro; into two hostile camps, aad its reduced torees are further } have sufficient courage and Italian price to te: dimiuished by the eecession of a considerable part of its | Up the compact and say to those men who Rumbers. Mr. Lincoln is in possession of the whote ma. | buve signed it, “lt you have not the heart to achieve tho conquest of what belongs to yon, aud it you are not caprble of plactug poursalves at the head of Itely and rising with her when her bower is ar stake, at least keen silevt and maintain by #8 endicss protest the eternal riguts of the mation; loave she field open to the events which wil arise from unfor%eceu eventualities, chivery of pevernment, of vast means of influence and intimidation, and of an army aud acavy auch es have bever be‘ore existed on the Atucric.n copiincat Lhere 18, besides, a not unnatural {eeling tut 1 sto be the Polisy Of the repubpic, aud the vuly questioa is Key ri shalt (hat war be carried on?” it will probaly bo ci ried on with more vigor aod more success by a | @da reply 40 the foreigner as ilitcon years ayo the Ko- party bitterly opposed to the South, and possessing | mans, t gt any rate tue experience drawa irom thres and.a | with w We niay fall, but democ. | canaot sign any troaty with you.’ If there sti}! remams an Italy a spark of houor; if the prosent Italian genera tion is noi dec: epit from the cradle, the couvtry will one day remember that piebdiscitos violated by one of the parties to the contract ure vo looger binding on any, and that the popuiar sovereignty cannot abateste its rights, Now, while still free. we swear bo constitute italy, with, without or tn opposition to the present government. If the convention becomes an accomplished fact the two first couditions are atan end, We will then try the third, uv matter what may he the consequences, » GICSErrs Maca hall years of incessané couilicts, chan .by tbe racy,” whese ‘policy bes always boea to play tho slaiveholding iaterest against the abolitionists of the North aud govers by their aiscord. ‘The same reasvns which make the democ: acy theproper iustrumeat tor re- storing peace to the Union if a paciuc pulicy be once de termived on, seem tv point out the repudlicuns as the proper depositories ot power so ing as the vows. of the bation wball be Cor war, We regret sinerely che tri umpb whic this war pol'cy bas evidently acnieved, but wo cumnot induce ourselves to care much which party 13 10 give ellect to that war voliey, It is by no means cer- tain, for tue reusou we have given, thas (be unted de mocratic party would bave been strong enouge to over. throw Mr. Lincole; but, at uny rate, disumien is fatal, Thera is, tuereiore, every reason to oonelud: tbat bir. Lia coln, by’ co means the best or the most successiut Prosi- dgnt that Americ’ has knowa, is destined to the grext nor of ad:ministering the wtlairs of the republic vor a kecubd period 0: luur yuars. For ourselves wo haye uo particular reason w wish it otherwise Wo have uo very serivus mutter of cum- plains that we are aware of ayuivst. ine present govera (ont of America. Allowance being made tor tue difti- culties of thor position, they arc conducting (ua wat with a (air regard ¢@ the righi# of beutral nations. Tie war nas sue American commerce from tie set, and Hapa Al Am great maastire, tn Our hands; w: hive sup- plied he loss of the cotton which was suduenly waddraion from us; the retaros of our revenue ard vur trade aro ‘Soe Brencn senate. SSETCHES OF THE NEW SENATORS APPOINTED BY NATOLLON, The Duke de Montebello, boro in 1801, is the son of Marstal Lu Ge was peer af France in 1314, but did not take his seat in that Cheraber antil a'ter tue revo- Jution of July. made bis debut im dipiomacy by a mission to Copounagen in 1533, and was twice minister— be Ist of April, 1839, of Foreign Affairs, and ou the h of May, 1347, of Marine. He bas beeu Ambassador 19 Switzerland, at Naples, and lastly at St. Petersburg. In 1849 be repro-ented the Department of the Marine ta the Natunat Aevombly. M. Ad Parrot eutered diplomatic life under the reign of Louis Phatipye. He bad bees oo « Meriva to Hayti, Coa gul at Carthageua, Consal General in Kyeypt, Minieterat roroucbly santafactory, aud we nave eecsived au-oguiva: | Zatben. Naples, nod in Belgiom,and lastly, “Ambassador font for tbe markets closed Lo U8 in America in the wast im ae eetialand pulse that hp been giveo towards tue develovment of te | ‘Gres rmost disti gatsved pupils of the Feligvous somioary Prosperity of Indiu.” We se a grea’ muti. woici Bes | of Sanzres, where he was afterwards profeasor of phitoay Bot been io times past sparing of its menaces and | ony Ho wns Vicar of St. Vizier in 18%", ebaplain to Predictions of our rum, cppurcutly reoi.e4 wo «arcu, | Biteag Hearrly. hinoraty: canon of Nokes Tame, ant without pause ant without remase, the most dreadfus ) Girentor of the Doniteur Cathotjus, The Abbe arboy NE in ee NN et Pescemely Nit: r to Rome in 1464, and was Paticud sgacing ive bandases irom Lis wounds and thrust | POOMPLCID Ter se em tox aside the hand that would anu sge his miseries. aud b wardy bocume Arch bisho»or Nancy, every day that the war goes on Wo See 16-8 Ad 38 em eee ne nae ae eee von Of very na ability shat the great (avrie of the Uaioe will ever bo | OF, Ati, Ue ons nullahed u Feconsteucted 1p He ofigimalt rar, and more and more | yf. Droviltiers ta ‘the son of Zhe author oF mort of Tikeiibood tbat the precess of cikiuiecrasion will extend | yM- Br ee tasted Camano uae far beyoud the present division betiven Norte and | {Be MPIC Howes | hulelod | wer ee nn Boutth. We cbwerce bie ropul urstruciion 1¥ (nc: muh | pele proauced. rome. works, on juriepradcnse aiet Fabri of prsrr iy wireh was oa furmdante o | crtigiyin, M. Bouvitions to de part im the rowsbuion of Fiat to our mono hissy wih wo 1K rw at feet eye eal Lavayatio, tre was eton no distant date, to tbe day wher. the credit o: tbe copud. | a1Ny A= aM! do-calay to Coaeral Lavayatie retell tic mast .be ree erage aresyeet emmy i Pred WOT for tho seme ot the Naten © of Foally apimaied by (he spictt o bosuity suied ieulwaya | ye nett Tawuaied to provall amocg uA howacds America, Weshoud | SIMMS, Mur the 2d De ener, 1882, und. lastly, President view the torribie sp WHO oxulbition abd delight; Dork Tad eecotary wernber of: the We should rejvice that the Ameriew peowe, uniannt by neat ar tia that cance teak tien pes isi mistortunes, have reanived to evuligue ie war to erg Kena the end, und hall the provable convinuscee o ibe power Macken toe teemnalieiicy Of Sir. Lincaln wy tue event most calculated to plege tuo seat = ented lbs Sgt pation to a Bieady Cutionance in tka sniedit poltey, - win ad 7 Lut we are persuaded that the peopie of bits couwiry ¥ fe Senet terner da, Congaiiien eeapate ned the prispect of aouther ‘oue years of war ta Arune with very ditereat (eohuee. inoy ure ux adie divest themselves of sympathy for a fs tueir own bloud aud language thus win ug down tho customed themselves to the ia its future and vw coutide seo with indiflerence tue eclipse of 80 many vory well what are the semisinite with which dete foam nt Amercan criasirophe ws epardet by there gonerniente WhEA comsiaer xt their mussion t+ Pl dowmnberty of eceny bind in the whole world, ani to iw Weake tbe doctrine tast Oedor caa ouly be plerrved by tyranuy. ‘Lim of this coumry view wu dismay the overtirow and abviitipa of the rights of swwdividesis whiek imnemorial traditioy has taught Wea to Lod sacred, and ws they mauge on the appalling spectoo'e ther fata im the witimate triumph of the good cimbe grows wea aud thele apprebeasion that huinin uatire hae it something suicidal which ‘the vest are powerless long to resist becomes strong. fe Ove yoars ayo had predicted. we will not Presitent Count de say after braving fulfilted diiter- ent diplomatic ious. was LS year Preach Minister Pleowpotentiary at Frankfort M. de Cnanrier, before enterine the Court of Ace where he was councilor, lind doen Birector Gener: the Archives of the Enzpire. Count de Nienwerkerke. born im 1811, 9 native of Hole laud, is a dirtinguiched souiptor; his’ namm@ wee first | brought into notice by Ms plosrer modetor Willem the ‘Paeituen ; his productions Dave been since frequently ie. | marked.’ He 1s a member 0° the Acidemy of tae beanx d since 1949 kas beea Director Geucrai of the 1 Museums. unts, ot 20 mapy hopes, ene ius. They k.ow Revolution tn Kreach Pashton. ROY MAIMED LADIES ALONN ADMIRED LN ALL THR Av! OF Tits FRENCH OWING TURIN HAIR TO A DOUBTYUL “G 8 of the Landen Most, ‘nglish ‘rend Daurved driving themse:vee 10 strange, bow many or | ris (Oct, 12) corresnon ust away trom the ¢ ¥ pretty you rennin istence of the jeast and most tolerabie evils w! 4 mwr thom, from whom would he Pave found belt buch is the te of thins now, what wili n be after ‘our Youre more sueb as the Iast four years have been’ [i Comparison with toese tremendous questions Le success of ope war party or the other is a toatter of tudiference. ent huspaad of the, Kuro stares the Vann m the face i the war toto be parse eased, whieh Mes. M. ducted vy (-everal MeCetlin. and if it be cone a broke eventually bf vbsere — te otr ton the Linperor is lane, impress never speuks to ber huebaud ’ What wonderful stories we get over tro Great Hrtimin!” i T dain | may eay afew words abort the singular pre lice of doing something, I presume, cuemical to the nu. | President Lincoln the reawdt inust be cxuctly the same, Why shoula we feel anciery ae to the succes of One party or tbe other, Whee either must be equaly fatul to the woifere of the repablic and Gyusity peeuiclons to the cause ot liberty aud good goverument turoughout the world? myn hair which turns certain doar li ad —— varied complexions into a pertes of ny. proaehin what a Yorkshire man w red. The Bogus a f the London Batred 1 3.7? PORtR and painters, we kuow, p this | Stock Hxv color. Shakepers, lante ‘Taso aad Gootho, dud ail th rom the Londou limes (city article), Oct. 10.) ofd Ttalfan atid <panich peinte: n fn fer ¥ Oiten when the climex of a siorm 18 jast passing, the | Hain aitthe tess of the auney sonih ike thoughtless, who bad yueglectod every warniog Of its | Be inctinot lint, autil twe present Bor, lovely womga Approac, chow the mont complete loss of courage: and | Piairiiiy intented. themecivon wii the Lint be " it is not aulikely that for some little time yer bere may | F , i ; be a degroe of agitation and uncertainty which, but for | 9.) the happy fact that, contrary to what was the case a | 2 few years back, the namber who are ignorant of finan- Gial princivies are now a miorily. instead o: a majority, | 6 were at the back of the { period in the world’s history did @ lady whoxe hair | might grow into something approaching to @ panic. As . - Oe Oe eae rind shor com. | tRCY BuO 19 corksorow Ineuriance abou oct toms of the recent folly, a reper wwe share. | hie. dnstancaealy in " Aotders to inquire into Uierr postion. ‘To the genoral pud. J ws SAEAly Brose osc et Oe othe aad hie such matters need now be of no concern. ‘Their earcor hes Lome “adie at Porta are iow GoW 1t'to as Kreat distribators of oaisital, to be locked up io every | ihe faghion Yat morewonder{ul things still are dove to kind of echeme for which engineers could furnish pla oF promoters obtain a concessio though they may still find a sphere of useiulness, ita Iimite will be barmiess., ven. the parties interosied fo these couceras should be tuankful, and congratuiate themselves toat they are now moro tafe (aan when pro- miums were at the bighest. !f the illusion of one bun- dred per cont dividends had been carried a little further their directors would have had time to involve them Deyond the power Of extrication. It is probable pow that with a few emart lorses « leson Will have been im- pressed that may answer all purposes. Monpwhile, what- ever may Occur im these respects, und whatever jndivid- wal justances of speculative disaster may be inevitable, Or may be brought about by a withdrawal of assistance 1D special cases just when its withdrawal is most Injo dicious, ail that the great body of the sound commercial pabhie @ to do ts to watch with perfeet coniidence the course of restoration in progress, and which, if it were more rapid, would in the prospects of its permanent re- efits be proportionably jess satisfactory. make Indies moro beautiful. Magses of bair, ever aug- menting in size, are stuck on Where nature's haudiwork ‘Theso borses commeneed with us modesty enowgd ey ate now Aboot the ference of a soup plate. As much us one Rungged irance is paid tor one of these hairy deceptions, which are generaily imprisoned in network, occasionally studded with diamvads, and often bal’ circled vita & broad golden comb, Do you think inven tion ends here’ Not u vit of ir ‘The front Watr is 2 curious nest of floral and other con- coits, reminding us of an old poet's limes Her hatr was reiled in many ® curious fret Much like a rich and curious corone ‘pon. whose arehes twenty cuptds lay. And then the litte bats with more curious feathery con. celts, Asa Frenchman said the other day :—Tron de cha veux ot pers cease che Wha‘ an elaborate get ap ap- pears to be now necessary to Invite the more delicate allec tions Of the heart, And how edd this om/feur will look when a quarter of 4 century has. taway, Dowe not now wonder bow our fathers fell desperately in love with ladies who droesed in the fashion of the first empire, with waists under their arma,aud such @ comie head dross? We almost marvel they married such queer figures, and that we were congejuentiy brooghs into this wicked work!. Go and see the pale gingerbread wig with of Madame Carvalho, T France-Ita! Troaty. POSITION OF THE POPR, HIS FRUENDS AND TH CITIZENS OF TURIN. According to the Memorial Liplomatique there another docuraent to be made known, forming part of t ‘ boat to bey bey be a & goes ond Jon hn, addressed on the 28d September by M. Drouyn do Lhuy# to Count de Sartiges at id calling t Tomamele coien Mttention of the Pontifical Court to. the ‘gosrantces with | All {4sbio% with sublime respect ne their induence. There will always be at least one tyrant in the world #0 long as fashion oxiats. Al! youthful mate Paris now falis down and worships red hair. te id French government bas surrounded the exe 10 Cote The Tanna Qe, Holy See the formal aesurance that if the Hates ‘nment should fail the Emperor Napunan “wou would energetically”. ‘whico bear The Angio-In Telegraph. TO THR BDITOR OF LONDON TIMES, It will (interest those who have watched the progross Of our telegraphic communication with the bast to know that the injury to the telegraph cable jo the shaliow be M violation of « treaty A letter from a trostworthy ter on the Mokran coast, lately reported ia your Mmdian the Po reoei ‘ baa been repaired. back two bundred French pricsts, sat‘ ‘A iclegtam bas been received by Sir Charles Wood other things —*There are persons who from Colonel Stewart at Constantinople, dated the 7th sifmple convention ia sufficient co eettle our een insten Compromise was possible with the conselence, and, the Coronel’ Church negotiate on the abandonment of its principies, 1 6 re thererore write y the COT of & message from ne conveving Kemba‘ bats my children, to continue the atrug: jee, AOd announcing the receipt at y,and not to make the «l from India, 1h of * Io the course of thte a jusisted again and again on ine necessit dad to Hilla, thence to Di- 1g With courag righte of the Churom, and | wany: rates, ie completed, but between of opposing with Arinness every i 00 theme. | Korneh, where the Tigris and Advices from T peak more fully of the compensa- | Euphrates unite with the Shat-oi-Arab, there remain yot the ancl capil of taly. "they "would, be-ctalie to | graph to complete out through: telegraph ‘commuttes: nclent © aly. me to comm, our through raphio communica- the extent of twelve millions in favor of the propristors wi —" . = Of houses; also O90 of ten millions the old The rates has ceased to hea navigable river for debt of the city, andthe reduction of an annual sum of | some years through the banks being neglected, and thus, 700,000 franca of taxes for an iodeGnite period, Turin | watil the land line is compioted, the only communication would, moreover, bavecommercial savant which | betweea Bagdad and Hussora is by way of the Ligeis, by woud make ba Kiad Of (ro9 City io We Of itwy. § the British armed steamer Comet, Turkish stonmere ‘ugh Mossal, Diarbeker, Sivas apd An Another route from England to India Blin hp Persian en copie, asou. Ca = wal , thence to Tek iotas tee cobie et each ene chee ac tats length will be completed in a weeks. Wesball then have two distinct routes to India—one by way of Turkey, the other through Russia, bY together Calcutta, towns im e Indian {olographe, wrbteh o connect Bombay, Madras, ‘the princi India, aro. now advanced ia and the routes thence to China and to Austral! of Singapore, Java and Timor, aro almost entirely im comparatively shallow water so far as the submurine part of the line ts concerned, and do not otherwise offer apy difficulty which should prevent our baving, daily telegrams from Eons Kpag, “ueiuonre, Sydney, Ade. taide and Brisbane within years from thisday, I ani, sir, your most obediedt servant, CHARLES T. BRIGHT. W,, Oct, 0, 1864. No, 1 Vicroria street, Wesrainstes, 3, Explorations im South Amert A NEW DISCOVERED PASS OVER THE ANDES—IN- DUCEMENT TO EUROPEANS TO SETTLE IN SOUTH AMERICA, . k * At a moeting of the Royal Geographical Society ta London, the paper read was on “A Newly Discovered Low Pass over the Andes, in Chile, south of Valdivia,’” by Fon Guillerme.Cox, translated and communicated by Sir Woodbive Parish. Sir Woodbine Parish stated that Senor Cox was the zon of an English physician of Valparaiso, and bad unde: taken bis recont remarkable journey with a view to dis- cover an easy route betwebn the new Chilian setilements on,the Pacific const, in forty degrees and forty.one de- grtoe south latitude, and the River Negro, which eizhty years ago had becn ‘proved by Villarino, @ Spanish ex- plorer, to be navigable from the castern side of the ‘Andes’ to the Atlantic. He equipped an expedition at bis own cost at Port 00g : herd Mgper Fee Uoment now econtatn! 3 habitants, near tha Ighind of Chit Rha Reaek a fs Docerdber, 1503 by. way of the ‘two takes, Liaaquilbae and "eddd.ost Santos, towards the almost unknown inland sea of Noguelbuapt, He traversed the lakes by megns of guttapercha boats, three of which were cartied by the party, aud succeeded tn discovering a pass over the Cor- dillera, at an altitude of not mere thao two thousand eigut bundrod feet. Arrived atthe end of the Lake Naguelhuepi (Lake of Tigers), which lics on the eastorn vide of the chain of the’ Andes, Seaor Cox's purty wore reje'ced to find @ broad streara issuing from it in tho direction fhe rivers which flow into the Atlan Nine of the sixiéon persous who formed the expedil here returned to Port Moptt; the rest embarked in ore of the boats and descended (ke Eyer; which is calied the Limay, and torms one of the @ 3 Or who Rio Negro. At leugth, when withla five miie: the point to which Villarino had attained in ascendiog the Rio Negro from the Atlantic, the boat was upset, atid the party escapod drowning ouly to fall into the bands of asavage tribe of Pampas Indians, encamped ear the spot. The Cacique ‘at Jength promised to assist him in reaching the Kio Negro, on condition that be firet went to Val for presents. The reorossing of the Cordilicra at & more northerly pois towaras Valdivia was accomplisbed without much diQeuity, but the main object of Scour idly, the opening of au easy passage e coptinent-— hus been up to the present tive Crastrated by the hostility of the Indian tribes, Admiral Vitzroy suid that the region to which their attention bad been calied was, with respect both to and Climate, well guited to the coastitution, babits and pursuits of Englishmen. ‘The wostero ‘side of spe soutberu parts of South America embraced some of the lincst resioos in the world, ia proof of which bo had iy to point to the fact that the new German colony of Port Montt, in a region whicd, when he surveyed the c ust, was peopled only by scunty hordes of savages, bad in ten years become « town.of fiftoeu thousand inbabitapts, A little further to the oorth there was a place where we now heard of twenty of thirty ships at @ timo loading coal; while at the time of bis visit Bothing but & few freyments of coal were seep lying about, which ho one thought worth picking up. The range of the Andes ig rich in minerals, and the whole of the country to the west is woll tim- bered, Indéed, tne country 1s already becoming the Bhode of civilized men, for a number of new settlements had Intely sprung into existence along the eastern coast aud in the Straite of Magetiap, us well as on the western tide. The forests of tbe Chilean side include extensive forests of apple trees of good edible varieties, and the country also possesses thres different kinds cf potatoes, bouerthan any’ he had ever exten at home. Re oelypurprisod, cosidering the detertoration of the'pe- ‘ato plant in England, that some auventurous Kogisbroaa bid not been out to this region to procure a stock of (resb plants, ‘ Misecllanecous Fereign Items. Mgr. Mezlia, Archbishop of Damascus, who bas been appointed Apostolic Nurcio to Mexico, has teft Rome tor bis post, “ Une of the contractors for the iotended ow Fzyptian lout: of £5,000,000 has visited London and Paris to make tho nece-Ssry arraoge;ents, Dut it 18 understood that she foun will not be brought out at present. It is also stated that even whon it shall be introduced it 1s not likely to exercise aay material offect on the Londou moncy mar- ket. ag the greater part of the amouut will have tobe dixbursed im England and France. Incondiarism was extending fearfully ia the eural dis- twicts ut Koy iand, > ‘tho cothers’ etrike in Staffordshire, Engiand, ut asaum- ing a¢erave character, They are having recourse to oa oryanived system of intimidation in order to Lorce thelr demands upon the masters, ‘The Bank of Ho'land has informed the directors of the + credit and finance companies nt Amaterdam und eisew that it will not discount any bills deawn foreign companies upon them, The bank docs not w to mcreaso the rate of discount, and apparent! Ahig mothod as a more direct moans of patting a stop to tho recent unlimited (abrivation of questionable paper. A Madeid ministerial sheet taforms the world that there is bo probability of a recognition of the kingdom of Italy by Spain, and impties a doubt whether such @ step bas ever boen contemplated by tbe latter country. ‘The ciandestine journal of the Roman National Uom- tes, iM its jast number, thatthe moment of on of Rome will probably give occasion for « pronounce between the Pontifical govern- entand Victor Emanuel, eonatitutional King of Italy, 4 it exhorts all citizens to be prepared, if necessary, to apport their vote by arms. Toe Eoulevard des Italens bag lost by the hand of death ove of ius old requenters. Miter Fraser ts dend— Major braser, an od dandy, who trom 1827 to 1364 f- aud whe, when in town, was raroly to here than on that smalt but choice section of the boulevard which extends from the Chauseoe d’An- tin to the tue Lailtte, Major Fraact was the grent grand- fon of the sin Lard Lovat executed for high treason in £0 tre lo, Esa'er—has been fortunate at Badea, amadea Sani of £4,000 at a guming table. Her friends remark that ‘she never played 0 well before.’ fhe returos of the growth of finx in Ireland for the Inst two years show an increase for Ulster of 70,000 acres, oF Aurea ti nore than the entire extomt of sho flax crop im all the east of Ireland. in Ulster In 188% the crop coveged ) cores, this year it I 278.000, while ta the Other three provinces iti only 23,638, The infer- ence t@ that the Ulster farmers, being the bast judges, would not have extended the cultivation of flax it they did not find ft prodtabie, r ‘The rest journals angounce theMeparture from that Port of the {riyite Sybille, with a convoy of emigracts tor the Preach colony of New Caledonia, im the Pacuie. The spbille har already made (ores voyages with oml- grasts, maay of whom have sines married young women bronzht np by pubic cbarity im France, and who bad voluntarily gone out. Thos women received dowries frou the Empress, and are eo well satiated with thelr Jot that several uavagwritten to Paria to induce their for- mer companions to follow. An embasey bas arrived in Cashmere from Kokand, am lndependont eovereignty in Central Asin, en route to the Vv y of India, to procure the advice and asaistance of the Priteeh in reference to the attenrpts of the Rusetinw to make a bigh road for troops through that ktagdom. The old pretender to the throne of Thibet, having ised a forces ta Chioch, {8 threatening Thibet Proper ié French m nytacture! goods exported during the firat clgnt months Of the present year amounted tn value to 1,196,000,000f., while the manufactured goods im- ported during the same period amounted to only 219,000,000f, Of the exports there was 282,500,000F, worth of wrought silk @ud only 4,000 000". worth o: the same article imported. Of woollen cloth there waa 232,000,000f. worth exported, and 19 ,600,000f. imported. Of cotton cloth 86, . worth exported, aod 6,600,000f. worth Imported. ‘The town of Troyes, in (bampagne, is about to crect a statue of Pope Urban IV , @ native of that town, whore is father was joemaker, Urban was elected Pope im 20 ‘The list of suicides at the German gambling houses te this year higher than ever. Haif of them are fore: whove friends in most cases vever learn tue fearful they come to. From the tast general report on public inetraction in the Lower Provinces of the Bengal residency, which bas just reached |ngland, Dr, Norman Chevers, the Principal of the Medical College, states that the nambor of bodies disrected ‘uring the year amounted to 1.112, An oxtraot¢inary fact when it is counidored tbat only @ few years ago a native gentieman lost bis caste by touch. ing a dead body A commission bas been formed at St, Peteraburg for tho purpose of preparing Princess Tagmar, of fen- mark, (or the reception of the rite of bestism, aceording to the form in ase to the Groot el apae a0 biaperor of Russia bow presented her Ito; with a pearl necklace valued at £12,000, and the Emprose bas also Presented ber with a costly pair of diamond bracelets. ‘The Archduchess Maria Theresa, who tae beon} be. trothed to the Puke rbilip of Wursemburg, is the oldest whter of the Archduke Albert. Her Highness, who vora in July, 1845, excels a8 a sculptor, a« is proved by bor statuette of the Maid of Uricane, wuich ts esteomed one of most grace(il works of modern statuary. Duke Philip ix son of D 0 Frederic William Alexinder and Princess Mary of Orie 8 Philippe. mittee intr Commercial Intollige THE LOWDOWN MONEY MARKRT. L Console clored at 88 Yy American St atest sales wore: —Ilinoie Coutral Railroad, 6034 @ 61s discouut, Erie Raticoad, Wy ads THE LIVERPOOL MARKETS. Liverroot, Oct. 20, 1864, Comox. —Salea for three days about 20,000 bales, the market cloning dull, with a dectine of oo0-haif peony Brnapervers.—The market is dull PRoviaona.—Th9 markot 1 1active, Vagpocs. The masekes 6 dull. Gygar jg caaior. _— | i |