The New York Herald Newspaper, January 30, 1865, Page 8

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e 4 f ‘ 4 8 EUROPE. Arrival of the America With "fhree Days Later News. O'R PARIS AND BERLIN CORRESPONDENCE. Bonora to be Occupied by the French, What the English Think of the Settle~ ment of the Florida Case. The Proffered Protectorate of the South, Refused by the European Powers. Spain’s Abandonment of St. Demingo. Zs the -Author of Hnoch Arden a Baronet? NAPOLEON'S JULIUS CESAR. “IEEE ATLANTIC ‘TELEGRAPH, &ec., &e. &e. ‘The steamship America, Captain Wessels, arrived at “his port yesterday morning frem Southampton, whence + ghe left on tho 18th inétant, bringing threo days later ‘The most importast item of intelligence is that relative "¥e the French in Sonora; important in view of the recent “ wews from San Francisco of Dr. Gwin's movements in Nerthwestern Mexico, It was rumored in Paris that Marshal Bazaine had received orders to occupy Sonorain he name of France, and to hold it as a material pledge for © fe payment of the indemnity owing by Mexico, One of the French journals asks the pertinent question whether “potting and keeping possession of this security will not ™@est more than the amount of the mortgage money. ‘The Paris Moniteur announces that s convention bas ‘Deen agreed to between the French and Pepuvian govern- ments that the duty-on guano brought to France in Poreign ships should be reduced to eighteen francs per ton, on condition that the price of Peruviam guano in Wrance, por ton, should not exceed three bundred and fen franca. The Paris Temps of the 16th inst. publishes a lctter from its Naples correspondent, in which the writer re- dates a conversation that had taken place between him- @pif and Cardinal Andrea. His Eminence declared him. self a man of progress, and as such regretted the pubil- ‘wation of the Encyclical. He sympathized with the lib- ‘eral Catholics of France, and expressed a wish that Italy ‘aight be entirely independent, throwing off the yoke of - Austria in Venetia. The correspondent further states Yhat in reply to his questions if there were any other + @ardinals having similar views, Cardinal Andrea said, ‘I ‘Believe there arc ftve or six.” Letters from Rome state * that the Dean of the Sacred College has sent to Cardinal Andrea an order to return immediately to Rome. The expectation ts that in case of refusal be will be the object of disciplinary measurca. ‘The Hon. Joseph Cunard, the younger brother of Sir Ganiue! Cunard, died in Liverpool on the 36th inst. ‘The first instalment of the Atlantic_telegraph was dis- patched on the 16th inst., and thus a most important step forward was takenin the means of providing a telegraphic @ommunication between England and America. Her ‘Majesty's ship Amethyst, an old sailing corvette, which @or some years past has lain at moortags in the Medway, bad received in the iron tank which has been constructed fm ber hold a coil of two hundred and seventy-nine miles ef the cable, and was duly towed dowa to the Medway, ‘where she will be laid alongside the Great Eastern, to Geliyer up this first instalment of the Atlantic cable. The entire cable will be reagy by June next. It ts expected that the inauguration of the Wilson @atue will take place at Edinburg next moath, and that the statue of Allan Ramsay will be inaugurated along with it. Both statues are from the handof Mr. Joba Brecll. The Wilson statue will be erected in East Prince street Gardens and the Rameay statue in West Prince mroet Garden. M. Rénan, on his route to Syria and Asia Minor, landed @t Alexandria, whence he was induced to go on to Cairo to visit bis friend, M. Mariette, to whom the Viceroy has @atrusted the superintendence of the excavations there ‘mow in progress, Hearing of his arrival, Ismael Pacha gave him the kindest welcome, and, wishing him to make Egypt a portion of the field of bis Biblical investigations, ‘ke bas placed at his disposal a steamboat to ascend the Nile, M. and Madame Rénan will, during their stay in Egypt, be accompanied by @ most experienced guide in M. Mariette, to whom we owe the discovery of the Gerapium at Memphis and other important excavations te Egypt. The Jtalie of Turin publishes a letter from San Nican. aro, near Lake Lesina, in tho province of Capitanata, on that for the last seven months whocks of earthquake have been dally felt there, that all ‘dhe houses are in a ruinous condition, that several Have falion in, and that the people are gradually emigrating from the town. To this phenomendn are now added subterranean noises, and-there is a genera! conviction in fhe place that a volcano is about to burst into existence there, as those phenomena bear a strong resemblance to ‘hove which precode ruption of Mount Vesuviua, The Duchess de Chartres gave birth to a daughter, the Gest great gravcchild of the last French King. Thoevent took place at Ham-common, near Richmond. ‘The adopted son of the Marquina de Lavalette (M. Wellos oe Lavalette) is reported to have sent a challenge to the Duke do Bellume, formerly Secretary of Embassy at Romo, but who resigned the diplomatic service for ultra- montane reasons. Ina letter recently published be ac- @used the Marquis de Lavaictte (who, it will be remem- ered, wrote very strong despatches to M. Thouvenel re Presenting the hopel of attempting to megotiate ‘With Rome) of being an agent of “Piemontese manceu- ‘vres."’ It is sald that the Duke of Bellume declines a Bostilo meeting, but demands am inquiry to give him an @pportunity of proving the truth ef his assertions. Count Sepel, Minister and Secretary of Btate to the feigning Duke of Coburg, and who Is eighty years ofage, is ebout to.bo married to young lady whe has seen but Sixteen summers. ‘Tho Empress Eugenie will, it ts eald, appear at tho next ‘ball of the Tuileries In a dress of sew manufacture, a pat- fern of whiel was sent by a maker at Lyons, and which has had ‘mmenee success. It is made of silk and gilver, the reflections.of which are so splendid and the shades so. soft that the general aspect resembles the effect of the moon on the waters of a lake, This sui has alroady re- eeived the name of Drap de Phanbe. The steamship Washivgton, which was to haveleft Blavre op the 11th dast., we are informed, 5 detained on account of an imperfection having been discovered a aay for two before in a piece of her machinery, which it was pradently decided to displace at once rather than run any risk. Tho Lafayette, of the same loe, will leave Havre on the Sth of February, and the Washington on Abe 8th of Mare. Our Paris Correspondence. Pants, Jan. 17, 1865. Bonora to be Made a French Province—MMore Episcopa, Protests—The Emperor's Lifeaf Casar—The American Legation—Mr. and Mra. Angustus Frederic Thistle Cwryte—Meyerdecr's Africaine, de. ‘The derigns of the Emperor upon Mexico are becoming more plainiy developed. It is atated dn political circles, end In generally believed, that orders have been sent to Martha! Bazaine to occupy the province of Sonora ia tho fame of France, and that this portion of Mexias shall be eld an o pidge until the entire stipulated Indemnity @hall be paid up. Once taken pousessian of by rence, you can rest assured that Sonera will paver be voluntarily abandoned. The eanperor bas ope bad his eye upon this rich province apt ess Jong ago os 1854 was intriguing to ob fain poss ion of it. The ilistarred expedition of Count Racy. 4¢ Boutbon war encouraged by M. Dil. fon, hon Broo. 4 Consul at San Francisco, until t) wag | —: evident 05 it waagottén wpon too small a scale, and | of then &albom and bis companions were abandoned, and | ‘718 elu i 5 E i i é fy inawef the confederacy; and one of the principal rea ‘cons ‘wrged for his appointment to the official position ia Somom. was that he could induce an immigration here, frem California and elsewhere, of « consideraple number ef Goutherners, ready to fight for France. Gwin, who = hs® much rather “reign in hell than dwell in heaven,” | 50) @ad who never was true to anybody yet, will, unless he a ny oe ae lige mer eb wo nen oh eae ‘ppers Mersey en Saturday ry pon sharply watched, throw off the Emperor yet, and | dinners, ph jaaB greens) fe, Natt Sd Dereon. eames aecnles rar ainiat | canezpodition soe wien? eee a come Wt decane up on bis own account: ‘ tho master; L. J, Petersen (of Copenhagen), frst mate; | European sovereign, would not consent Protests from the bishops against the interference Grown Frinees hes had her favorite brother, Prince George de (or anna), aes ; re rt vise vi 4 . n 3 jpelalr, gay pln Pease tie heed | wree esdumman te helt to the mighty monarchy of | of tho ‘olatederate any ma inne; Captain Speale, | priuce, dad when it appeared that the Emperor of beem summoned # . ee, crue, are geen, er Tamecsat | Romessinag reves bemmratoqmene wil cs con bem; | Wisse, chet oe cl et rt 0 Ons Pact | Genes te cemei Pree es lie were [ H i cy 5 i F PF to appear “ ‘Brien; several anda crew, the th nearly years power’ in having read and commented upon the Pope's | ine quarverdeck to study -the art of governing at the | number on board bring varioualy stated at froma shirty 401 | oo constant pro ego had En Guat the nation ts convinced encyatical letter Tn defiance of the plain _ University of Berne. Allogether there is quite an in- | fifty-six. She ied as far as tho Great Ormeshead, ‘the enterprise 18 hopeless. on the minister forbidding them to cor ee are — flux of Engl and the coolness between the | there being at the time a powerful gale and a heavy sea. ‘We cannot wonder that the Queen, with her family and now to see what will be the result proc two governments appears to have quite sub- | Of Ormeshead it wasiound that the Gre compartment | national pride, and ler share in the responsibility for the Formerly citations of bishops before the Council of state | Saea ©Tord Napier’ the new Ambassador, has | was rapidly fill rapidly filling with water, the anchor, it is be- | acts of her should have shrunk from announcing — ap ter Wye. Saas ool —_ oe met with a most "flattering reception, and all | lieved (which was over the side), having been forced by tho abandonment of St, Domingo at the opening of the sed ekving tne visited them with a ‘neoral condemuation, | {02 Wnpleasantness that existed during the ‘Danish war | the seas into the bows, and thus made a breach in the | Cortes; for the document which Marshal Narvaes, porse- cud ering thie visiiod caet co further Aver boing de. | laid t@ the door of ir Andrew Buchanan. Butsl | compartment, The Mesiner was at once reveread, £08 | vering ia his purpose, bas nted to the con P Btate, these gontle- though courts may find it convenient to have short mem- | put back for the Merscy. In about two hours she was | taining the reasons for the repeal of the decreo of the 19th he ouncil of State, these gentle. | orles, nations are not apt to be so-blivious, and it will | within six or seven miles of the N. W. L.ghtship; but | of stay, 1861, 1s uational penance which, to some min a a Tecate ie tie tastructions of-ehe | Be long beforesthe conduct of England is forgotten by the’) then she began to settle down, and being washed by & | must be humiliating in the extreme. But Qucen Isabel an oroemael "Weta ne wok weuer ie Brrr | Sirus bee, Sees, nce sara wan gue wien | common MOET em Some vce stains | oe enagarth wnat ts ese aaa ‘woul 4 out, ing mortification ‘ni e © al act goverament considers {teelf sufficiently strong to brave | Ont “or when ‘the eelfish: of lap polloy wan et Leena tine thems eee = py i ng mordidcation a a ung na ane ee ther ports. but suffered blocked in, like rats in their holes, and witness trade cut off by@m established blockade, 9 % 4 the fury which would result from a criminal condemna- " " versally condemned. were got away from the ship, eighteen persons’ on. need that nothi ore honorable to the nish If the project be realized, a choice will probably be San one eetae areees, +e Se Tere | an Maes. ice, on the contrary, are increasing | Secsd bose of thom, and twelve on board tho other, ‘The | Doe aet end nation, uothing more 1. iting ef good | made betwecn the lings that ure now considered tho twe Th preliminary “puffing” and “gogeing” HA Snags ig nan bye = the Union. The begin nae and one - ph sone eis ieee - board, and both, | in the future has emanated from siadrid for many years —— bebe bed hese Bovetien! = first of which . ere has been 1p rind ence of the fall of Savannah was an agreeable sur- feared, would go down w! e ship. The two boats rash to build up hopes on an isolated een ‘ eat cuast of ant about the Emperor's forthcoming ‘ Vie de Cassar,” to give as, after the first report. hed proved to bo | suoceeded, after great exertions, in reaching the li,huship; eee en uit there le reasou to trust thas this plain | E kendfsrde, on the Ballio rite; and the seeond — at spot somewhere near Brunsbittel, a port of: Holstein, the Eive, near the embouchure of that river, to Kiel, ot the Balt The former would have the great advaniage of being the shorter of the two, the whole distance from sea Lo sea Dot being more than thirty English miles. The ground bas already been surveyed and found to offer m serious technical ditficultios or engineering obstacles, it @ most extended sale, even though it worenot tho | Briss, as, aft iat gates tate ree ingen (a ngth nded, we'began hold ut the larger bout, containing oighteen persons, and in- easion of # national mistake may mark a ee Ee ree ce ee aie prvgionmobent I & Sek Oe ee all, ike Mobile, which, } eluding Mae or, seven Passengers, was driven under or eolut fo spavish history, and that ee te oie Frating ofce! but alee in the setablishnent of M. Henri | despite tho brilliant exploits of Admiral Farragut, still | either the bows or stem ‘of the —lightebip neo and the discussions upon {t in the Spanish Feeney eee armor an adition de luse, comprising only | fenains intest, Itscapture is certainly the heaviest | and swamped, the whole of the persons It contained Qevislature may bereckoned anew period in which the a ee aes a eee publiched. Thee are | bIOW that has befallen tho soceasionists since | being drowned. This occurrence caused great alarm to | national affairs will be cond :ctod with pradenoe and con- Titel ong “tor ‘crowned heads: foreign’ am- | Be loss ef New Orleans, and le ask how | the occupants of the second boat, four of whom jumped | gcientiousueas, In which economy will permit honesty, anal cal’ cit britien, | long the confederacy can sutvive such a series of disas- | overboard in the hope of being picked up, but were | and a modest demeanor to foreign communities, and i and | poli tersas it has sustained during this last campaign. In | drowned. The remaining eight got on board the light- 3 ‘ palar ght ularly those of Spanish descent, will encourage to be published by M. one The feces tomers this the speech of Henry 8. Foote in the | ship, and theso are the men who were brought to Liver- igi to Ceaw closer their relations with the Spanish | The Championship of the Prize Ring. is to tee got up in-very handsome style, and will be sold | Bichmond Congress is extremely significant; the ship yesterday. Amongst the persons lost are:—Mr. | poople, [From the London Times, Jan, 17.) lication | mst be sinking when the rats bexin to leave her. mas Miller (eon of the bu the master of the fe government of Marshal Narvaez declares—what we | The belt, which was manufa.tured some years ago b ata high price, It is now believed that tho ‘these editior ‘accom; Here tn Prussia the “small but powerful party” of the | Lelia, the three mates, Captain Sinclair, two stewards, | ean well believe—that the policy of Spain four years aco | an eminent London firm at a cost of £100, subscribed b. = ra pero plished by the end | reudals, or reactio are ins very bad humorat | the boatewain, carpenter and cook, Most of the men | wag determined by a real Moe Bl that the Dominicans | noblemen and gentlemen who preset ley in thee Everything is going on smoothly in the | ar, | the roversse of their Southern protapie; they were | have left families, | Nothing further is, known of Te eres wniry to be reannexed to the monarchy. | ploits of the prize ring, haa bocn handed qver to Wermal Bigelow has turned over the consillate to Mr. Tuck, and | us fateritg thomeclves with the hoy the great | men lost from the lifeboat, which went from Liverpool | ‘There are many reasons why this belief should have pre- | the victor in the late fight, who is now the acknowledge sae eoved hinnelf upto the old otfice of the legction, | tansatlantlc repablic, that eyesore of all despots and | on Sunday te rescue the survivors of the Lelia, even | valied at Madrid. ‘Tue troubles through whieh the | “Champion.” | the conditions on which the belt is give Mr, Bigelow's sppoltnment meets with the most tniver- | aristocrats, would fail to plecos, and, perhaps, be replaced | of the crew of this boat, are Known to be lost Gress | Gpanish American republics have pessed sometimes, | are that the holtes muss defend his claim to it again’ eal approbation in Paris, by ® monarchy, Iike that in’ Mexico, when they find | quantities of wreck are floating about the mouth of the | ending, ag in Sexico, in downright anarchy—naturally | all comers for three years, aud fight for It every & English “awell piety? have been having iemerging froia ite ruins more formidable than ever, | fiver, and, as the weather is sill equally, news of more | jeq the Spanish goverament of the day to trust the as- | months if challenzed todo go. In the event of tt a ten ae Bae during the past ve and displaying symptoms of which must mako | disasters is anticipated. surances-of those who asserted that the Dominicans, | holder maintaining his claim for three years the bolt be. Some three weeks since a Me a | Sree ees ae ee Brammagen throne. All but @ feeble section of radicals, desired nothing | comes his absolute property. Tt was first won by To ‘Bounced one morning that “Mr. and Mra. Augus. | By the ° Moniteur informs us that ‘the } ‘The Fenian Brotherhood im America. | 4 inuch as the protection of the prosperous and | Sayres against the Tipton Slushor in 1867. There wer tus Froderic Thistlethwayte have arrived at the hotel | Lmperial Mexican Genoral Miramon" was ted, at TO THE EDITOR OF THE LONDON TIMES. advancing monarchy from which they have been unhap- | goveral contests for it, but Sayers succeeded in holding Bristol, from Grosvenor square, London,” Now, you | Court the other day. The gallant General honored this | Ono of the most extraordinary developments of the in- ply sevred. | Thou the military instincts of Spain may | up to bis Datile with Heenan (the Benicia Boy,) + Presb bre. ct he reaih,concnpion wh, | fain il 9 int, To tse aegis | tim Hominy whlch emmkamene inact Amn: | bare ens uted us caer caret | fe it eS ee ae Mrs. Augustus Frede’ a . H the mother country is ly Mlust - | that the e: ition was not exact! ambitious war | from the the belt was in com: P you live tine during the pest ten years, | known that ho had returned to Berlin, This usiness | tation in the Statos of the extensive organization known | of conquest” ‘Tho result howover, shows how danger. | The result of the late Aght rendered Wormald entitiod \< ft, but circumstances seem to show thet be will pot allowed to retain it long um It is said that the course of a few days will throw down t untet to the new champion, while in other quarters firumored that King is inclined to reconsid:r hie reso): tion never to fight again, and to oI in a conflict f° the belt, Marsden, who was unsuccessful in the li fight with Wormald, is no- likely to enter the rin: aga one of his arms having been rendered almost uscless the rou; treatment it received, you lived in London any time during the past ten years, and been at all that ‘great London) | may bs I cannot pretend to say; it is not probable that | ag the Fenian Brotherhood. This organi not com- | ous js tho belief that populations which have once tasted you have a nese panies es Be ls here in a diplomatic cage ed Mexico is repre- | posed exclusively of Irishmen, noreven of Catholics, | the sweets of independence will willingly return ‘Some twelve years since a star of the very first magni. | sented at the Pruanan Court by Don Thomas Murphy, | now-numbers over half 9 million of men, and has st ite | to colonial subjection. ‘The Mext-ans themselves tude made its appearance in the sky of the demi-monde | "DO !s accredited at the same time to the Courtof Vienna, | disposal over $1,000,000, andalready forms a powerful | would probably have foucht the French for years, in London. ‘This’ was @ beautiful young creature of | Perbaps he wants to study the military system of | element in American politics. The movement for the | had iv been proposed to mako their country @ about sixteen, with an eléyant, lithe figure, most exqui- | Prussia in order to communicate the result of his in- | formation of this body originated in Chicago, Tilinols, | French or Spanish province. The Dominigans soon titely chigcliéd features, beautiful bine eyes, a com. | Stsstions to his Imperial master, whose army will } about thro» years ago, and since then tho organization | gaye the Queen's goverument reagoa to know thatthe Jexion which put rouge and powder to shame, and | © 18 need of a very su rior organization to withstand | has spread almost universally throughout the Northern | sssurances it had received were quite delusive. They er most deliclous silky, flaxtoolored ‘ringlote”’ that | 6 torriblo antagonists he may have to contend with at | tates, and even gained a foothold in Canada. It was | rose aguinst the Spanish troops, and the war has been ever wero seen upon a female head. Sho created a | 2° distant per! Bat will any organization in the cciginaly intended that the objects of the body should | going on ever since. Battles and a pestiferous climate, fromendous sensation, and during three or. four | World convert the Mexican half-castes into good soldiers? | be kept profoundly secr.t; but it was an Irish organiza: | as the bill truly declares, aro making terrible ravages in yearé she carried everything before her, and any | Besides, the better soldiers they are, the leas likely they | tion, and little by Uttle the objects at which the | the ranks of the invaders. The sanguinary struggle use- quantity of lords, dukes and other manibers of thy | Will be’ to aight for Maximilian, who would never have | Fenians aimed.leaked out, until now no secrot whutever | Jessly expends the public treasure and consumes the pro- Mnobility and gentry” were brought down, and paid | sscended the throne if his French allies had had regu- | ts made of the end in view, and in a call for @ | d ois of the ovignics. This the ininisterial descript on their homage at the feet ofthe besahful Laurk Bell "ta | UT tnsds of gucriina Poor: Maz, will certainty | SoneTt convention of Tora ated hat “before thee: | contrmed oy tue, votes of the’ Cortes its acknow the midst of her brilliant career she captivated and mar- hio, a few weeks hence, is st “befor - | confirny the votes the Cortes. It is acknow- want the consecrated sword which the Popo is sending | ceguity for another convention exists the fires of liberty | jeged that tip aeiasalion hod mak thet spontaneous and Commercial Intelligence. LONDON MONEY MARKET. Loxpon, Jan. 17—Evening Consols closed at 894 a 89% for money. LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET. Livan ried Mr. Augustus Frederic Thistlethw: young gen- POOL, Jan, 17—Evébing tleman then an officer'in the army, ‘to an ex. | Dim. Will bo rekindled upon the altars of Ireland, and Irish- | unanimous support upon which it was : cellent family, and supposed to ‘be the ‘possessor of © mon from all parta ‘of the world will be Hocking back to | when tne war Teacup un it was too late to recede. Cortoy.—Sales for two days 6,600 bales, including 1,1 considerable ‘more amount of money than brains. THE AMERICAN REBELLION. the Emerald isle to right the many centaries of British | 1+ was thought the duty of the government to ascertain | bales to speculators and exporiers. The market 1s d» seer eee yest, took bu witete his eleqent resis Protecto: south | "That the organization has consistency and the Vacant a = ag ety negro ee a ga [Rmedenpscmycironatnng ese Fan about a year, ie wo it resi- 1e mn tent ew. is inormation soug! LIVERPOOL Bi e dence tp Grosvarade suuaaey ‘and where, being tabooed cage Not a be erent Hog mT which unanimity gives there can be no doubt; neither | during the last three yoars by a war which bas oxhausted Flour dull. Wheat inactive and easier, Cora dull, w by the aristocracy for his mesaliiance, he held high car- Jan. 16. can we doubt that it will finally involve the ontire Irish | the Treasury of Spain, led every Spaniah com. | a downward tendency, LIVERPOOL PROVISIONS MARKET. {From the London nival for a year or so with his old companions and | The intel nce woealved the Africa pre ste inte. | element in the States, and, by uniting Irishmen every- | munity of America with dislike aud distrust of those of the late Laura Bell, resting by what it indicates ‘what it announces. The | Where in this country, enable them to wield s much | the old country. At last a Se, ae Beef frm. Pork steady. Bacon quiet and stemsy. now Mrs. Thi thwayte. While thus living in clover Thistlethwayte | fail: the attack on Wilmington, which the federa} | more powerful influence than heretofore, and an influ- | over by a man who w@hld be the Lard firm. Tallow easier. went one night to hear Richard ‘Weaver, the converted warement published 90 hastily and ‘contradicted after a | ence which will always be intensely to Great | popular Smear tee dcclares, “That it was a delu- LIVERPOOL PRODUCE MARKET. pugilist, Broach, and ‘Thistlethwayte becaine biel ome few hours deliberation, ts fully confirmed. Ind “> me JB he tei dll hell dane soi (pierre erage heer people ee ci | _ Ashes quiet and steady. Sugar steady. Coffee sten » erted. soon followed suit, i Porter’ added : Fenians and, above mand om ” cos ae an tothe | TO ey eusion, Every ‘Irishman who can rend | thor annoxation o Spain;” and for this, and the reasons | gus” “Potrciewm aueady. Rpirtts turpentine Seems, Mr. T. folt a call to preach, and during two or three Fesult of the action; but the contradictory reports appear | ©! travelled over England, Ireland cad Scotland ‘“exhort- | to have created so much doubt and “onfusion inthe | and write, and who has no yy at stake, | consequent on it, the ministers solemnly advise the Cortes ing.” Mrs. T. only received her “call” lately, and tt is | public mind that tho return of the fleet to Fort Monroe | {8 an “organizer” among the Feni and lodges | to “repeal the royal decree which made the Pomin- one preaching mission that she has recently been in | could be announced at Now York as a rumor only so late | are Inging up with incredible rapidity. In their | ican republic part of the Spanish monarchy.’ Paris. asthe 6th of January. On thet day Admiral Porter's ed documents the Fenians state their object | It is a disagreeable lesson; but the rf I met Mrs. Thistleth fn London in 1861, at the | official despatch was far on its way to Europe. to bo simply to restore Ireland ‘to an independent | bears it wily and in 's manner indi- bouse of Lola Montes. seoms that in their * * 8 8 © © # # # 8 position, as it was before the union with England | cative of sense and good feeling. To bring ‘Laura Bell had been ‘The recent gleams of success do not, however, consol and Scotiand;” but in their daily conversation they talk | back these revolted colonies to their former political con- ‘did not feel | the Southerners for the loss of Savannah. Like New | of the entire independence of Ireland, and this object | dition is impossible. To unite them to :pain by the ties had Orleans, it was allowed to slip through their fing»rs like a | they seek to accom th h their secret organiza- | of friendship and mutual advantage is open to any states- by a sudden | tion, cither by involving Groat Britain and the Northern | man who guides his course by wisdom. = The failure in attack ; but Laer ag egy ban semen ford lear Ireland ‘and St. is the to ab ive pa MANCHESTER TRADE REPORT, ! ‘The Manchester market is fat, and quotations were 8\\\! declining. Interesting Orders from Genera‘: Meade. in , Doninge may teach true correspon is up with the | de pursued in Peru Mienshere; anid if. the jpan.ards discontented im Ireland; the poorest here sub- | act with prudence, Maxie, St, Dominga, Peru and every ards the other land where their is apoKen, may one day are dei dl ‘and distributed among the members of | be united te them by an alliance even more fruitfal of Pring yercePothers are belng stored for slipmeat 10 | pivantages than a common eoverciguty. bio sooo oa ea tie a Inetand te opportunity cies, tach. tacwa tininer etiee: ‘Weaih ott Saemedactind but no such @ case can ay leshua 8. to eee latent ialgrara, Indicate curren of | the tat cutbrenk, and wosacrie Bin e for tbe cause, | chrom the Landon Iisa News, Jan. 18) | Emulation and Meritorious Oondo«i leverves consideration, in is overy e of Joshua Bates, |., formerly Boston, . 1 ized by & | the United States, afterwards ‘of Bishopagate street,’ of of Enlisted Men to be Re ‘or England, or is atit | body of five hundred thousand men is pled; South, as in the North it is still | solemn take up arms agaiast Great | Portland place, and of Arlington street, was proved in Some Southern agg ‘express or | Britain in caso of war being declared between that coun- | London on the 16th ult., the executors nominated being rays A. e only woe try and the government claiming to represent the Unfted | Thomas Baring, Charles Baring Young and John Bariug, ‘States. rsonalty in thi nd Gan that | The Fenians do not, as might at fret appear probable, solo Mon Pie testator died Ya: sepiamber inst at New warded by Furloughs, . Rey Res, y, E Powers. that she isan angel—has been preaching he recogni purchased by sacrificing the insti. | rest their chief hopes of success upon the prot ‘Lodge, Windsor, baving executed his will in August, 1863. Sundays and “eo in the parlor of Er'tnglish real. tution? That sacrifices is contemplated ra ble, and | a rupture betwoen Great Britain and the government at | The principal leaateo it his daugiiter Elizabeth, Tite of ‘Wasuroror, Jan. 20; 1868 Aletter from the Army of the Potomac, dated Fray dent in Paris, and drawn large audiences. She posed as & itic measure. The Southerners have | Washii . They seem to know somehow that such an | his Excellency Sylvain Vau de Weyer, Ambassador at speaks with a good deal of fi and “expounds” with Parted a long hm forward the idea which the employ- caventialty, ‘selfish people as the Americans will never go | London for the kingdom of Belgiuin. To her he has left a considerable degree of force. She preaches more upon | ment of negroes in their armies seems to have originated. | to war for the sake of the Irish whom they flatter, whose | an immediate Iegacy of £10,000, and all his pictures, the “horrors” than the beauties of religion, and it seems | The plan of arming negroes as a measure of defenco | votes they buy and sell, and whom they despise with @ | books, articles of virtu, and his residences, East Sheen at to bear issuing from those exquisitely chiselled | has made it still moro familiar. The argaments for and | depth of contempt which is perfectly astonishing when | and Arlington street, und a life Interest in the whole of lips the warrants of dainnation to the greater portion of | against such a measure, the necessity for it, and the | one considers to What un exteat the Yankees are under | the residue of his property, real aud personal, and, after mankind. She and her husband have returned to Eng- | value the negro would aitach to freedom as the roward | obligations to the Irish; tho Fenians do uot rest thelr | her di to her huebandand her children. There is land now, without, 1 fear, having accomplished any very | of military service, must be perfectly woll known to the hopes of success on this #o much ag upon the feasibility | a legucy to Dr. Booth, of Gower street, and to several of “great shakes” in this gay, ungodly city. white population of the Southern States. On these points | of raising @ revolt in Ireland. ‘The idea that obtains | the testator's friends in America, To the tostaior's sis- Mteyerbeer’s Africaine {s in active rehearsal at the | they cannot casily be deceived, but as to the effect | among them is thut tt would be possible to land surrep- | ter, Mrs. Cowing, £5,000; and a like legacy to the chil. Gravd Opera, Madame Scribe demands forty-five thou- x Ym offer to abandon slavery in tte present form | titiously an organized body of some ten thousand Fenian | dren of the late Samuel Surgis. All legacies to be paid sand (raucs for the right of transiating the Voretto into ing the governments of Europe the Con- | brothers in Ireland, and then proceed to “regenerate” | free of legacy duty. evening, says quiet still continues along the lines, po only variation of the monotony being some occasion») picket firing in front of the Ninth corps, near the Appoy mattox. To-day another deserter was executed at City Point, ‘ne @vent attracting a large concourse of spectators, 1) name of the culprit was Newel W. Root, alias George Harris, First Connecticut heavy artillery, who was found Gerinan. federates may casily deceive themselves. To any | their beloved isi fer their own fashion and to “crip. 5 ‘scheme of eccancipation effected by the South ttseif } ple England, the enemy of democracy.” It never Alfred Tennyson a Baronet. tind vod nce mera << ten th: Our Bertin Correspondence. England, as a nation, would cortainly offer no word | seems to occur to these misled men that the peaceable 18 THR AUTHOR OF ENOCH ARDEN A BARONET? The following orders have just been Mued from thes Baa, Jan. 11, 1865. ¢ ere! Pe hong oar! we 6 rejo _ in peso ome - org might ree igi anon ed or [From the Londou Atheneum, Jan. 15.) headquarters :— °% 6 change, and wish it every success, But we know | that England might have something to say about being Sir Alfred Tennyson, 8: * aa Mission of Prince Frederick Oharles to Vienna—Nego- | well that slavery is not the only cause of the secession of | “crippled.” Ireland, they say, is all ready ; aud it must | style of our poet lgarest:. ‘The Qieea, as enderet tiie tothe Moa uel epeoner spt of saemiioe us 9 tations Between Prussia and Austria—Festivities at | tho Southern States; nor is emancipation the real object | be admitted that the ‘only soarces of Inforsiation which | choice honor to the great poct—an offering from tie ‘ of the North in ‘ing on the war so persistently. @ | mostof th se ignorant men possess—viz., the correspon- | hea: not to be denicd, t the Prussian Court—The Sailor Prince—Dmpression one among many | deuce of their friends and relatives in Ircland, tends to gress past bas sosopied bis Madesip bette tae aptric ro aroused among the enlisted wen of this army, and mort torious conduct recognized and rewarded, furloughs w’\i negro and his condition were on > Produced by the Fall of Savannah—Arrival of General | causes of the rupture. The tendency of the republic | coniirm their delusion. which it was offered to his accepiauce. Sir Alfred ix the fd aly dciih cond set be a leon = fort 4 it re Miramon, ée. to separate existed from the day it was constituted, ‘The American politicians carefully foster the hallucina- | first laureate who has been actually created a baronet; | care of arma, horses and equipmentap have proved the te was seen, dreaded, and undor certain conditions pre- | tion under which these men labor. The Springfleld Repub- | for the same mark of royal favor, made to Southey | selves to be the best soldiers in the brigndes to which, It is evident that the alliance between Austria and * digted by {ts first founders. Thoss conditions have | lican, which is about the most candid exponent of Aweri- | through sir Robert Peel, w Prussia 1s in considerable danger of being broken up, | been brought about, and a fierce civil war is the couse- | can opinion in this country, and which is conducted by | than hese or cater savtie fog dectieed patie eee since it has been found necessary to sond a Prussian | quence. The negro was introduced into the quarrel by | the first newspaper talent in New England, says of thom Mr. Alfred Tenpyson, the poet laureate, vpon whom prpattyenniny than the hero of Duppel, to | a2 afterthought. Let the Southerners offer to emanci- | that “the objects at which they aim will keep them onthe | her Majesty has graciously conferred a batometcy, is & Prince, — PPe!, pe their slaves immediately, and propose ft to the | right side o, American politics.” And tt probably will, | son of the late Rev. George Tennyson, M. A., rector of ‘Vienna, with a personal mission tothe Emperor, Theidea | North as tho sacrifice by which tbey are ready to pur- | for “the right side” of Awerican politics is hatred 40 | Somerby, nour Grantham, and a nephew of the late Right {s nota bad one, and showean lotimate acquaintance with | chase its recogvition of Southern independence. The offer | England, not beca se she is the enemy of democracy, put | Hon. Charles Tennyson D'Eyncourt, who was for many the character of the Austrian monareh, who is nothin; would be rejected as valucicss, and submission and return | because they consider, with @ lately deceased American rears Member (or tae metrop jitan borough of Lambeth. 4 8 | to the Union would be insisted on as the only conditions | politidan, ‘that {t {s’ preposterous that the inhabitants | He was born in 1809, at his fuiber's rectory house, and if not military, and vith whom, therefore, theargumenta | of peace. Every State of Europe acknowl the re- | of a little island in the middie of the ocean should govern | having been educated mainly at home, proceeded to of a military negotiator aro likely to have more weight | public when it el chp by a constitution permitting | one quarter of the habitable globe, and rule one bendred | the University of Cambridge, aud entered at Trinity yea regular diplomat, To be sure the minis. | Savery aa fully as the Southern States p.rmit it now. | and tity millions of people.” Whether the gentieman’s | College; but he does not r, from the published than those of « regular dip! ‘Why shoald 1s abandonment by tho confederacy bay @ | estimate is correct or not, the principle ts the same. In- | lists, to have “taken elther classical or mathematical terial organs agsert that the journey of Frederick Charles rocogntiias that fs withheld for many other reasons? | ordinate national vanity aud Jealousy are the parentsef | honors. In 1829, when ap undergraduate, he gained the has no political object, and that ho merely wishes to | Dwelling on this theme, the Southorners have indui.ed | bitter hatred. Chanceltor’s medal for the best poem in heroic verse; k the Em for the Cross of Maria Theresa, in spec: which induce a d whother thoy do not It is impossible for one who has watched the Feniana | and recited it in due course in the Senate house on Cor thea! net dream dreams and see visions. they would prefer, | as the writer lias, to doubt their mischievous intentions | mencement day. At the commemoration of 1855 U which was conferred on him for his foate of arms in the | in case of the worrt, to submit to any goveroment | or their ability to create trouble. Whatever they might | University of Oxford con’erred on him the hotorury di Danish campaign; but, as orders are rather more plenti- | than that of the North we can well understand; | attempt would, of course, result in disastrous failure for | groe of D.C. L., und the Masier and Fellows of his owa tul blackberries.im this country, amd it can be bute “protectorate” of England, France or Spain can be |ithem. In tho meantime it would be well to convince | colloge huve conferred an bonor ou him by placing his than d only a strong mode of expressiny a hatred of “the Yan- | thom beforehand of the chimerical nature of their pro- | bust im the vestibule o' their library. It was in 1830 that of very little consequence to the Prince whether | koon" We know of no European Power likely to accept | jects, and so confound thei at the start, Yours, uly, Mr. Alfred Tennyson published his first volume, entitied he has one more decoration to add to tho poet ON sre = agg Coup pps | ig A bo teeliblace, nin FITZ HERBERT, ame Chiotly Lyrical.”” This was flowed by “Mort ‘rance, ‘ Pi Massa. Arthur,” © “the wn,” the galaxy of stars that sdora his manly breast, 4 | rence, would, we think, ‘decliue, with thanks” And te iy omega Yoissn "ans over Foornay ane upon the auth of Words. they are attached. Tie following will be the mic of apportionment and selection:—To each one thovmas men presevt for duty in cach bi je one furlouy ®. and if the excess is over five hundred, two f lougha, on selection made by the ——— command Should the excess not reach five hundred, a farlou. * will be (orwarded represonting such excess in the d: cient bri 8 of the division, and_if the total oxcec 6 five hundred, one furlough will be selected by the di sion commander, Such furloughs will be for twenty-£ « days, will sta‘e that they are ior soldiery conduct unc the provisions of this order, and will be forwarded on t 26th day of each mouth, for action at these h ters. — of Major Goveral MEA! 8 F. Baxsrow, Acting Adjutant General, ‘The next order is as follows: — It having bden reported to the Major General comma) « ing that the colors of the Twentieth Massachusetts Vol teers, recently lost im buttle, were Joat under clroumstan: that reflect no dishonor, the right to carry other colo of which this regiment was deprivea by General Orc 37, September 1864, from these juarters, hereby restored. By command of Major General MEADR seems hardly possible that he should post off | the idea of pitiating “pain, the most obstinate The § , paniards in St. Domingo. worth, in 1851, the post of Poet Laureate was offered to | §& F. Barstow, Acting Adjutant General, in the midst of winter to express his gratitude for such a rps! re ees wovernment in the world, bya Lie THR ABANDONMENS OF THE WAR OF rope IN er, | Bim and aco pied. since that time he has published u trifle, ‘The fact ts that the Austrian statesmen are gotting | St! fo.sbolls iy at dds tn DOMINGO, many works with which the public are familiar, ainoug The Moravian Outward Bound. tired of thetr subservienoy to Prussia; they feel that From tho London Times, Jan. 16.) anaes tears PoarLaxn, Jan 29, 180% bre eae fi Pe he fs i debtieuseul of the We o Marshal Narvaez has given a new proof that he isn THE LAUREATE. xD, Jan 29, Germany is gradually escaping them, Th ee ¢ Flor: jase. capable aud resol te taineter. Even those moss opposed ‘TO THE EDITOR OF THX LONDON TIMES. ‘The Moravian sailed at forty.ve minutes past ten.b and that unlews they make a final stand they wit! becom: | 1, rang en f rik py thesoner | the pre tples with which his nae has been aseociated Moe an BT a erg having a lettor from Mr. | night for Londonderry and Liverpool, . rare! be will not dewy (hat at this important crisis of the red Tenny state that the report is wholly un- pletely eclipsed by their old and grasping rival. | journalist to comment on such «despatch as that ad- | pain tr lind tie wisdom to oe What ie the fake matte. | founded of his belng about ta ba made baronet. win nae EDITOR OF DEBRETI’S NETAGE AND PEERAGE. jan, 47, 1865, ‘Tho secondary States, who are always accustomed to lean | dressed by Mr. Seward to the Brozilian Chargé @’ Affaires | aya the sir h of character to r - « e sire of eb 10 enforce it, The oj upon Austria, and to whose.co-operation sbe owes the phy ‘ner Nhe Advi of ho Florida, x the | stances und r which bo took office were ind ly BA preponderance she has hithorte enjoyed in the Germanio fount of this, pon to a repreveutasive of tae CE GaEaIaO? ee ees F ae cnn Pridout; yet we have so a Se ae Confederation, bave lost all confidence in her policy, | Powers, his tone would buve beon very diferent; bis yield ‘eure uae we ie Seats deere aiet be Napoleon's J and are turning their eyes towards France as the only | discretion, — as tt is, wonld have boen sufficient | gipiicness of his colivagues, and the iutrigues of those [/ TRE EMPERON OF THE FRENCH AND THE LIFE OF Power that can aiford them protection and ave than | to master his habitu ition to tneolence. | wily are beotited by the public profusion, of else bo JULIUS CARSAR, from boing swallowed up by Prussia, As yet Loulg | But Brazil, compared to tho United States, ts @ weak | carried by the move generous, though’ mistaken, at the imperial printe Napoleon bas maintained a passive attitude and betrayod | Power, ove towards which he fecls that it is not unsafe orand military glory. Maral ng of the forth omini no inelination to complicate matters by his tnterfercnce; | 1 assume an attitude of superiority we impertinent as it y and edbered toi He was | ition of one tees Dut it is not to be expected that ho will let so favorable | 181i ined. In pretending to apologise for a most fin- is said, through the desire of tup for the purpose of an oppertunity pass, and hisgnoral support would } stant and lawless outrage upon ral nation, he has mily arrangement which the ubassadors, and guffice to strengthen the coalition betweon tho minor | endeavored to make tappear thet Drazil, on the whole, yours, twaly, vit D . McBatpr.—On Sunday, January 29, of consumpth Tuouss McBruve, a native of Colon, county Louth, I land. The friends and neichbors are respectfully invited > attend the funeral, from bis late resideuve, No. 15 Be ee Brooklyn, on Tuesday afternoon, at + o'clock, [For Othe, Deathe See Seeond Page.) \R, ACHENCK WILL BE AT HIS ROOMS NO. Desc vircou. covery Tuesday, from 9 unis § o'ctox to or was afraid to lar ed'tion, how- States and to produce a revolution ta the political rela. | {8 in the wrong, and that the government of the Unie n; but the main was, beyou 1 appear abou e middle of tons of Germany, from which Austria Gocld be the | States has just causo of complaint against her, Mr. Sew~ that Spain was in inevitably. Daj ated, hal oréaeee ‘thee orn be Uo irkene “oe ely Wok OR aa CNN greatest suderer. acd is obliged to eat the leek; Yat in following im the to finaneal roa. It may well be imagined that ish, ‘and has undertaken to revive the RESPIROMETER, ‘Aa the miasion of Prince Frogerick Charles ts of anon. | footsteps, he is careful (o imitaio ihe example ef his pro- na ot take @ | lo frighten Spanish politiclans ¥ Dis charge will be three dollars, When thoroughly + official nature, it 8 difticult to say what offers he tsom. | YWpe Ancient Pistol. He eats, cud eke he swoarn, io this respect. People who by nature aud b 4 deal of sp°eulation (nm English literary ned, one must expect Lo Ve told the true condition of th owored to make to the Austrian Cabinet. If ramor may [From tho London Tivos, Jan, 18.) afe fll of prile and pon tilio, and. jealously suscept ble | Crcles as to the probable translater of the French Em- | “28° nog, patmonte Syrup, Seaweed Tonle, and Manders ¢ trusted, however, he t# to preposo an agreement be * bd hd * * ° . of the'r Honor, and yet allow the nation's creditors t re | poror’s Vie de Casar, At is raid that several eminent | pills, will cure even tn the advanced stages. Consump tween the two governments on the following bases:—The Hers, thon, ts the cnd of this tittle atfuir; for we can | vile thom year otter year wich fue utmost indiffer:ne Auchors have gone from London to Paris toyapply for the | liver complaint aod dyspepsia, which 1s generally the te duchy of Lawenbirg to be Incorporated witty Prussia, | dary doubt that Uracil wil declare hepwelf waileted, | myst wea very vagie nse of the suncity of é | perniseion, but that up to the present moment no ap- of coustinpln ure cured by ihe wee of Boawe conformably @ desire expressed by the estates with as good a grace a4 she can muster, It is due to thé | obligations. The Spanisu government would never ha’ voinunent bas been inate, The day of publication for ke Pill, a that litle werriory ; the duch es of Schlexwigaud Holstein | American public to record tbat Mr. Soward's disavowal | been alarmed at the prosjrct of not boloy able to pay its | tie lusts ome bs tixed for the 10% of next montin, and, a, Sher Der Pea Seideers to be nequestented until the clains of the contending par- | end condemnation of (he capture was auticipated by tbo | debts Ae long a& Cast lian profit and glory could | #1 is the Smperor’e wish that tt should appear simul- Pe ovliged to come In carriages Will receive bry ties to the succession aro decided upon; their fu- | mort en! ghtendd part of the New York press, and the | lave been extract d frow the purses of foreignor tuneonaly in French, German and English, there is not | tion at once. ture sovereign, whoever ho may be, to con- | fallacy of designating the Florida as a pirate, only be- | no fet of ministers would have thought of giving | very much tine lef > task, M. Frobner, Conger. Price, for the Paimontc Bye and Seaweed Tonio, $1 sent to the revinal of the democratic consutution | cause she had burned her prizce ai sea, wasexposed with | up 9 Angle wational lixury in the shape of | Vateur of the Library at the Louvre, has done the Gor. | per bottle; $7 60 the half ns OF two bottles of Byr of 1843; the military and intoruational adfairs of the | great force and falrness, Nor arc we disput dto bear Wo | Inposiog armaments aud romante expeditions—much | man translation. Volume one will be devoted to the and one of Tonic Sor eae aie ft 2% crute duchies 'to ve confided to the administration of Prussia; fara wpon Mr. Seward for qualifying his apology with a | Icox of resigning thet offices, But there t# @ point at | geographic aud archwologic description of Cmeur's cam- Cy es me By sata etalaneinniadaad __TOO LA'TE FOR CLASSIFICATION, Rendsburg to be a foderal fortress, with a Prussian garrt- | lecture on the enormity of receiving her in seuteal porta | which the most extravagant have their Bt of economy. paigo in Gaul. son; the harbor of Kiel to be deciared a Prussian naval | All governments, but especiaily republican govern. | The man who can contemplate @ ruined crediior with TO THE BoITOR OF station, In return for these concessions Pruseia wader | mente, @hould be judged by their acts rather tian by | porfect co rataken at the prospect of hav. Gin—In reference to the 8 LONDON TIMES, nowneement made in the takes the immediate reimbursement of Austria forthe war | their words. The former repres nt thelr dahberate | Ing no y This te Spain's case. The | Times of this moruing, we, the publishers appointed KATING._DON'T PAIL TO ATTEND THE GRAF I> expenses, which are submequently to be r funded in am- | foreign policy, the latter Lave ofieu no other object than | me lon bas exausied is eredft, and its most capable hority, beg to state that the first volume of the Fancy Dress Carnival and Tilumjuation, on Weanesd nual payinents by the duchiog of Holstein ant Schleswig. | bo grauiy some party at Lome, We aved not take of | MO Know that Wt most rotrench, It is not re work will bo ready for iesue by the end of if 1, at Sylvan Lake, foot of Bevonth sire” Thia,of course, would be anything dutan equivalent for the fence at ning which Mr, Cacsiue Clay may say chowe Unt necessity. By deeper February, Wo aro, rir, or ion’ aslo 26 conte, advantages accruing to Prussia, apd itis added, there. | or Gene: Dix may order, or even &t Sr, Soward's way whom it ts poset a Nome r fore, that Ute two courts would ‘entet into eugagemonte | invectives against Lord Wiiarnciite and his cok etng fresh itnpos La Baus Saveace Yarn, 00 ean Raises Cine nunaoe meter piles oh for the guarantee of their respestive clominions, promis | leagues, so long o& the Yoderal government will the pleas ures of aggressl i tone bund iM 6 ing to assist each other, in case of attack, with allthe | Hatem to reafou in cach case of dignate and is f lasted for a few yea Art News from Parts, card tleket pans issued to Mee, Colonel material and moral forces at their disposal, Such a guar | supported in so doing by a majortiy of the peo: | fequires 4 anion OF Mudwcit oxerxoven’s pret OF wx. Bavron—sfmrova | Cinetnnat! and Louisville Mail steamers, antce te what the Cabinet of Viena hax been atming at At the same tine, We cannot chink is cousistent | mini-ters fort: mately do tos ILLNESA OF WALLAGK, THE ( sen. Ti Ge chetereen that and Walhesie, teat Varis letter, dan. d the studio of AM ever since the Italian war, it was given by Prwasa during | with national dighity’ bial such eilusions as Mr, Webb's | trav agauce of tie Tast few yearn | sso whi h at bad { t a the Oriental dimiculty, but” lapeod with the treuy | Joitor vo the Brazilian governwen! sould be allowed to | Spain hud low froun je w-¥ghbor and modgl tuo Frouch 1 yesterday \1 Pease ee eee j Greenough, tho | Diwiet A\oruey's Qilice, Chamvers

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