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. __NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, MARCH 14, 1865. i 5 to have gone all one way in military mattera Generals | papers ofan troupe destined for Mexico, and | the Huwatp alone being excepted) the only news obtained 2 to Ge United States at the commence ent of this new M X 5 (@) Echeagaray and Gutierrez have been sigi defeated, boy he alk, the American pianist, will | @t the North from Mexico was through Mexican cor E U R (@) P E period in her annals. A wild fancy had a Uitte time sO a and have intimated thoir intention to yield and come inte | 6002 be here. The opera troupe of Liachi and others, | respondence, made up in Havana from newspapers re s possession of (he Ainerican mind Lat Bugiand and France the imperial fold. In fact Echeagaray has already made | whe wereat the New York Academy last winter, were | ceived there on the arrival of steamers from Vera Crus. Contemplated a sort of underkand recognition of the soon to that effect; but the Prefect refused to re- | in ébis city two months ago, and afier a tolerably suc- | ‘The result was tis confederacy on the 4th of March, by acknowledg- colye any terms whatever from him, and he has renewed | cessful season took to the provincial towné, and are, or | the New York prows cularly the caso ing Mr. Lincoln as President only of those 0 reltablointell ¢. but this wes e over reached ‘Whe application to the head of another department. were recently, performine at Jalapa. as regarded the real’ sentiments of Maxailian mod his States which hadtaken part in his ¢leetion. The in- HIGHLY IMPORTANT NEWS. | ,, i bazeine tas ‘ast givon pusticty to his report ATTIC APPAIRS IN. NEXIOD, xovermment respociing dhe Uuited States, Secessionists | AYYival of the Hansa with Three | credvious surpree with wiich thie annouscoment of our in relation to Oajaca ‘and its eapture. The several A Bangarian artist (Auguste Schootft), of Buropeon as | in New-York took copectsl povus to Blue that Maxiratien bioniions was received on this Of (ue water wor French corps are of course handsomely mentioned, and | well as American celebrity, arrived in Mexieo not long | Was their especiat (ric that Dr. Gwin was bis right Days Later News have beon sufficient to eouvince the public of most oo there is ony amount of judicious glorification. But really | since, bringing with him some ten or twenty of his paint- | hand man, and that nobody could hope for success te a tries of their mistuke, 25: the Americans are peeuliariy ime atic rafocts great Credit upon the skill and especially ines, inently oF Omani scenery and grovpa, On learning except Lb: bard to convinge pre pe will, ae it may be fone. ie rapid achievements of the French engineers, who | of his arrival the Euperor gave him perin avion to place nd on tho C nate, thorefore, 4 marked refula'ion wall Le g ven Wo ther RELIGIOUS TOLERATION FULLY DECREED. | icse a ctean job of a Set eee cane eee ene iad have real aoe iain scion bo place ow Nordhorn ¢ ai uct. The arrival of a bew ister ace 4 tothe Teaching sich ‘a distant place, and then scientifically in- | they have remained for three or four weeks, anit have | to the core,” in New York, s LORD LYONS’ RESIGNATION, | government whose authority we stili acknowledge will Vesting it, aud keeping up their supplies through so | been rey uy visited by their Majesties. The Emperor | undergoing a priting transformation onder the unflu- be « more conspicuous evidence of the fullecy of these Tounlainons and peta) @ country, the French | will ly purchase the greater part of them for his | ence of a troy un; and, oa the way up to the capital strange anticipations then the returp of Lord Lyons Bb ultepac.. i © to Mexico may, perheps, be made more evident that instead of im have vastly improved in the last two years as Mexican | palace at Chapulte; from Vera Cruz, tie neayor the diligence ca The Emperor Declares Against campaigners. There is little new since my last in rela. | "A Nations! Bank of Mexico is among the projects of | she more Of acs tioy considered Butler, end. the any way slighting their goverament, we are paying it the tion tothe war—nothing fronggeonora and Sinaloa, now | theday. During the regency of Almon'a, prior to the | greater the euorwity of the uuiempt to s.bidgnts the Sir Frederick Bruce Accredited ag | dsinct aicution of eclecting a adw BMimstor to ropee- th Ch h Part the principal remaining field of 9) ‘ions. Here and | arrival of Maximilian, ao arrangement was made with th. Arrived at the Iturbide or Grand Bazear Hotel, ‘sont us. 6 Uhure. J. there guerilla bands pounce upon villages, strip haciendas | Messrs. Barron and Bourdition and the Count of Germiny | all traces of loyslty disappearod, and for a wook or two British Minister to the United yes aounge,d or commit ravages on @ emall scale; but the imperial Rosey, director of the Bank of France) for the estab- | Mossrs. Deughface & Co, courted Southern tnfluence and The Rebel Ram Olinde. rule is fast becoming a fixed fact, save in the ex- | lishment in Mexico of such an institution. Tho basis was | Ten with lotters of introduction to Dr. Gwin end others in States, One and Undivided, {From the Opin one Nationale of Paris, Feb. 28.7 treme north, where Juareg stili holds court, at Chihua- | to bo somewhat like that of the Credit Mobile of France; | the most approved sty. but very soon they found not ’ J The tam Stonewall, of which the destination has se hua, there is scarcely any respectable force of liberals. but the Emperor has not yet approved of Almonte’s con- | aly that the secorh nuderstood and dispised them, but long occupied public opinion and the press, is detained Abstract of His Decree on Ecclesias- KUROPRAN NATIONS ON THN ADVENT OF THR EMPIRE, cession. This, however, is, wow in a fair way of being | that they had entirsly mistaken the ideus of the govern. at Ferrol, in Spain, in couaequence of a leak. Tho ‘Tho official journal has lately published a number of | done, and the bank will probably be inaugurated during | ment: Dr. Gwin so far from being the grand vigior istence of thie leak, however. ant antheatignibndaaanne tical Property Pei erty by Maximifan from various Euro) the month of March. Bourdilion and Barrom are now | of Maximilian bad novor had an inlervidw with, nor German Quarrel Over the | stratoa, for the Sionewall ts taking on board s large au. ° countries, in response to the officia! announcement of bis | im France making the necessary arrangements. spoken to him. They found that the Emperor cared ply of coal, and it is singular that a vessel in dauger of adveut in Mexico. Among them are those of the Em- ESTABLIGHMANT OF INSURANOK COMPANIGS. Dees ane politics of Northerners or Southerners, but Danish Spoils. Sinking should augment its chancea of destruction by peror of Russia, the Kings of ‘and of Prussi The governmont has just granted 10 M, Florentine Ro. decidedly favored the representatives of any branch of pols. filling its bunkers vith coal, instead of emptying them. nd the 7 Dokea of Beuewiek, oo neepengceboreri mero erat fo. ee motel fire and 4 e peters rmerorement which be colonia a to Sevsion ‘This Suspicious craft is watebed by vessels of the federal of Mecklen! e Swi oun surance companies in Mex: e Concession to for is empire, hese facts gradually pavy, which are cruistos off wet ‘coasts of Spain. Tremendous Excitement at | Gam, Coutederaiisa, the treo eliy’ of Harbury, and | Sfiy years and the capital to bo $1,000,000 te sgtuet pre: | dawned upon thom tho yoltical kalcifowope tok a i te oe oe es apueaeumne We aro assured that (ue captain of the Stonewall, Me. others not now remembered, The same if 00] a | perty. Neither company can emit bonds or valu- | ther turn, and with the arrival of fresh nows of the Page, is now in Paris. a cece Sona Somers ae nerkt oo | mieemee amare’ | oem S| Sen etna, paar races | eee Reet eS | opening rt, in wl Fecognizes the em| are under the surveilliance of a government int ericans. Let no one from the North imag and accredits its envoy te oe ae ploye, paid by the company, the city of Mexico to be the | for @ moment that true patriotism is not appreciated in Patrimony and Palaces in Mit ea percep a Re ry Wentiaey. A, letter from Tialy, pul Yesterday tn | principal place of business, with agencies in other parts | Mexico. Ameriotns are respected all the more for their Aid of the Treasury. ‘The following aro she demands made by Proasia, bs RESIGNATION OF THE COUNCIL OF STATE ihe , tates thas Signor Erippi, ‘who had been | Of the empire. ‘The Barrous, the Ercandons and. other | ousspoken opinions as to the war {or the Uujon, andeven _ reference to the Danish duchics in the last nove whl f L OF STATE, | named atinistar to Mo ‘been superseded by the | heavy Mexican capitalists are the managers, and their | the bitterest foes of our country despise a cringing time- Ferrer tle iciny og Tromontad tena * ‘ Count Latour, the former having been unable to make | pamphlets, like those of the Unitod States, are every- | server, who courts favor at tho expense of his manhood. 1. The right to levy sailors in the duchies for the Prus- ie Sen's Fata‘ ale Magna ae"Bet Eee | "none bas eat Ren pstiied sis uatias eatdeen us| The Pope Watching Napoleoms | *? "7. e vi t iv nvoy COMMISSIONERS TO ROME, 1b pul in the Mexican newspapers. e 'o) ic) apoleon’s " 5 Extraordinary, &c., '&., of tothe Court | _ By the English steamer leaving Vera Crus on the 3d of | is long and full of Spanish details and superiuous ver- ne me * shnadanisinenbon Git tasal bed pra the ce Departure of the Emperor 8 Pri- | of Maximilian. This diplomat was formerly Spanish | March the Emperor's Commiasionors to Rome will leave Ritaey Babin | Isabella ackapeledges the indapenionce Cesar, Ocean and the Baltic, At eacti mouth of chis cana! large Minister at the Portuguese Court. The arrival and for Europe, via Havana. This body consists of the late } Of ape formahy renounces all claim to her fortified docks aro to be erected for the on of Prus- vate Counsellor. tion of the British Minister (Mr. was Minister of ‘Beato, Joaquin Valasquez de Leon, Bishop | former dependency—a decision which Spain has bean, it &e. . A &., &e. pon o aro rectes reception . scribed in a former letter. Mr. ‘Searlett iFeald to have | Ramres and Joaquin Degollado, ‘The precise business ct | seems, forty-two years in reaching. Spain, hee never " a hn nse at talagedunlo dcoaianats ak deeded formerly been English minister at Constantinople. M. | these commissioners is not generally known; but of | been in hasto to ize republican governments. She S55 tire toter the decom cere Von Blondel Cuclenbroeck is another notable who has | course it relates to church affairs, was the ge 16 United States a seat in the family The steamship Hansa, Captain Von Santen, which left 4 To connect as cents ta possible the forces of the Collision Between the Ch fuse Gane ee fos Belgian aaingian the same hoy PS tlhe reenteyerin toe ~! fy snngleg eens sare ininexeane. pep rf rd Southampton on the 1st of March, arrived at thia port | duchies with those of Pru‘ ia #v far as thy oflicering ie Open tw Paha, Saee Years soos crates Statos. ven the Sandwich | ruary, and was to have received some public ovation for | It seems, however, that sho was not long In making up yesterday evening. pa hie Dn geen acum abelian 2c and the Empire. lands are to be represented here; so say the papers, | bis successful reduction of Oajaca; but he declined all | hor mind as to the establishment of Maximilian’s ompire, | Her nows s three days Inter than the advices of the | Typ the federalarmiy: | and publish the fact that Kamehamoha III. wishes to be | demonstrations of the kind. It was rumored that he was | In recognizing Guatemaia the Queen conferred upon | Guba, ‘A deapaich fom Vienna of Beteuary oh, sayo-Iije counted in, and that he has so advised the imperial gov- | to have left Mexico by this steamer to make. report in | Rafwel Carrora, President-Dictator of that country, ot - (he Missi ernment. "At Constantinople the Sultan has given a | person to the Emperor Napoloon relativo to Mexican | the Order of Charlos ‘Third. Whatever Carrora | _ The Paris Monitewr publishes the proface of the Life of | slated that the Prussian note, wiih arrived hove yostop. : grand retoptlin th tnelentey Of Matiatinns Dea ratie | cities bl the remeet is eitect mamation. Tee kin Geevhave. ‘been in Th earlier” carser,’ "Reis | Julius Cesar, written bythe Euoperor of the Wrench, | GAT, tance Wie proppesl of Ausizia, provslonsiy Maximilian Stands Firm and | Sfartines el Rio—recognizivg the empire, deoorating the | shal being the special representative of Napoleon, and | undoubtedly the man for Guatomala, where’ bis tron | nin will be pubtished on the 1st of March. Fee ataRbue oatit rhe cabin oh GF the eewabeian ae : envoy with the “Order of Mejidie,” who then proceeded | having boon sent here jally to supersede Forct, ho | hand, like that of Dr. Francia in Paraguay, has pre: 2 Lona : tex’ Benans toads cies ee aiden aero ee, Unmoved. to Athens, and received equally gratifying honors from | will be the last to leave Mexico, particularly when the | served order and maintained law among a people about The Congregation of the Index, in Romo, has received pce : ae eee ae ns Lara poe reer ., repeat Goorge I of Greece. In fact, every government ia, Eu- Marquis eo Montholon, now Fronch Minister near the | a8 gapable of appreciating or exeroising the blessings of | orders from the Pope to examine scrupulously the Life | Dent inthe Piel en ewe paar ag, + 7 Topo, autocratic, despotic or democratic, emperors, kiny urt, asi ror his recall, For, the same | self government as so many Hottentots or Lascars. el ve pM whi tigusanalal, ne pe Averett -peh tf — pn lg Bong A rence ti, Bg Ml ug Bomeor Res Gemeat Adheatis of Ma: n sometimes | °! C@Sar, by Napoleon III., immediately after it appears. | clusion, the note enumerates five pouts upon whiet it ta 4NCREASE OF COTTON CULTIVATION, pire on the head and promise all the friendship com. | Diaz and his two hundred. Oajaca officers arrive in Mexico | wish that he would show less heart and benevolence of | Few of the Paris journals comment on the preface to | essential for Austria and Prussia to ay be eae oF : ; " A lution can béurrived at, Tae po patible with the circumstances, with him, as was suggested, as sort of triumphal entry | character and exercise a littlo more of Carrera’s Indian | the Emperor's History of Julius Cwsar, Tho Constitu- | °° ee “he &e & CKLEBRATION OF WASHINGTON’S BIRTHDAY. and trophy of war. "aa is. now én routefrom ras dd inflexibility. It requires no long residouce among these | gimney aia of it ie eeig of painfat and. burailiatin papas hae (ete peorie tye ce vedigd and would adv: fey 29 Co Meantime the loyal Americana of Mexico, or at least a | and despite the decree lately issued, condemning ‘‘dessi | decadant Spanish Amorican populations to see that they 8 Me oestat Grote Rendsvire oe: webene ae a good many of.them, got together on the 22d’ of February, | dents in arms’” to death as bandits’ and robbers, he will need not only a master, but an absolute one whom they | bomage. Wiig sboeentiig' oo asiaiaien trees thie: seems aprenedioas at the United Siates Consulate, at the invitation of Mr’ | undoubtedly be pardoned and sent out of the country, | must respect and fear.’ Under such a government alone | ‘The London Times! Paris correspondent says that the | Srscuisowig und Hol.vein, inet liere today. A. rowolae ’ By the arrival of the steamship Liberty from Havana, | Otterbourg, United States Consul at Mexico, and cele- | and, like Santa Anna, be kept out until the entire coun- | oan they last even a few more gouecrations, and without agitation created among French paper makers in conso- | tion was passed to tho effect that the inhabitants of the ” | brated the one hundred and thirty-third anniversary of | try ‘is pacified. There is more in thie man Diaz than | it there will bo in perpetuity the old scene of revolutions, t ; ugustenburg ‘aban early hour yesterday, wo have recelved highly n- | Washington's birthday with a dianer that would Lave | most foreigners appreciate. In fact, I tiave beon void | bloodshod, anarchy and coutinual decay. quence of the reduction of tho duty on rags exported | Duchios should leave to the Puke of Augustcuburg and ‘teresting news from that city and from Mexico, which will | done honor to the most recherché hotel in New York. The | that a large number of the old Iiberal party, in case of a Cea sieiets3 has greatly subsided. a8 would be to the interest of the whole of German: bo found ably and fully detailed in our city of Mexico | occasion brought out a deal, of patriotism, in the shape | restoration of republican government, would prefor him Our Havana Correspondence. - rags Gf areest, SUGERAT aeinnEA Ge oe ERIE eat Cedereneae Dole Ree ee ae The London Times says the report thatthe Queen of | The Bavarian Minister for Foreign Affairs hus new and Havana correspondence. We have again to record in Mexico in those days of sna es diplomatic relations: plepesshas yeast pal Havana, March 8, . Spain was about to sacrifice her private estates in aid of agreed upon the following motion with Saxony, and has lied to Vienna, inquiring whether he may reckes the national treasury must have struck many with eur | uhbn the assent of Ausria: . prise. Itcame like arevivalof the virtue of Roman That the Federal Diet would— matrons, as manifested in the best days of the republic. | _ 1. Express its confident expectation that the goverm- INTEREY. : our thanks to Mr. C. H. Denison, purser of the steamer, | The company sat down. in tho bestof humor at nine P, | ‘The Monterey Journal of February 8, speaks of the | “erty of Worship Deereed—The Laws of Juares in Rela- for his promptnoss in forwarding our late filés and do- | M., Mr. Otterbourg having been elected president, After | arrival thereof Madame Anna Bishop, who was about tion to Church Property to be Enforced, dc. the substantials had been duly attended to, the patriat- | giving a sories of concorta, to which some of the wealth. f Spatchos. jaan whieh, aveerbody ‘had been: bottliagisn fotmaccr {tors peonle in Nuevo’ teeors: Nad sibeorited Thenoe ahel| sts ee ete Wore and: eoctenlen ments of Austria and Prussia would be pleased to trans. Our City of Mexico Correspondence. _| tie (ays for the occasion began to make itaelf mani- | was to come tothe capital by the way of Victoria, Tam. | tal Properly havo ut longi Deen Published. Tho former | gy royal palaces and thelr contents—Buon- Retiro, | fer the administration of tho Duchioa Oc Schloswig. amd Crrx ov Muxico, March 1, 1865, | Au nosauing Are Of tonate end sb aie fendi sachs epee eae pe pipe doa rotecta the Catholle Apostotie and | AT#Aéues, the Kacurial, and ten moro—the Musoum of | Holstein to the Hereditary Prince of Augustenburg at + On the 27th of February the city of Mexico, though filet bat that marking chasipayue could evoke and a oe the preat vangenr — vier marie mn Hen Roman religion as the re igion of the State, si ie Art, the Alhambra, and some other property, are to be ne gee ep Cie» Ga a ae “ong in ex: tion of the event, 1 th ppy audience appreci ruz are incessant. Detachments of Austrians, Belgians RT. 2. forms of worship not contrary to moi : | entailed forevor on the crown; and when so much has cl anal alage o eg Math coal ha ent HOW THE THING WAS DONE, and Poles are continually arriving at Vera Cruz, and are | Sivilization and good manners, shall have free and ample i one Dake piper they mg froapee bese by "Publication in Hl Diario del Emperio of the “Laws of | The regular tonsts having been disposed of with due | at once marched into the uplanda of the interior. ‘Phe ice in all the territory of the empire. No worship can | been put aside to serve for the perpetual lustre of majes- Reform,” or “Decree of Revision,” as they have been | formality, they were followed by an endloss list of volun. | French are rapidly leaving, but not in proportional num. | 22,cresblished without the previous consent of the govern: | ty, tho rest of the patrimony—horeditary possessions and | “#!’. reply to the inquiry of Bavaria, Austria: hes called, by which all the sales of church property made eee bea gag ene torre mebae ie me Lowes me Berane Snayen A leaker! a 26th for Ant. 8. As circumstances shall demand, the administra. | other estates enjoyed by the Queen—are to be sold. | answered that she must for the present remain passive, : i ; ‘all by police regulations, will arrangeall that may concern vunder former governments (and which the chureh party | handsomely decorated with American flags sad portraits | pear glad enough too. Asis well kaown, the Mexloan | the exercise of worship. ricsiead sweet de apeen heN ud beecp ae tad iuinisea tae coat ory Sibu Wetevet kame considered they “had effectually smothered by calling | of eminent Americans, among which that of Washington | war is not popular among them, and the sooner the | , ART. 4 Abuses which may be committed by the authorities | troasury, and the remaining fourth to herself. Bavardad Mande Maximilian to Mexico) are contirmed. I forward here. | W8# conspicuous, and occupied the most prominent piace. | country is cleared of French troops the better Maximilian pete merece nmpin Samedi oy Be'inideefore the | The Africa arrived off Roche's Point at Ofty-minutes piggies ino’ “Old Abe” was duly mted in the most approved | will like it. Council of State. Ital; “with the official journal containing this important law. | likenoss—-turn-down colar and all. The wholothing was TUR RAILROAD FROM VERA CRUZ. This decree shall be placed in the archives of the empire | PAst three A. M. on Monday, February 27, King Victor Emanuel has signed. an amnesty for all “Its offect upon the whole country has been marked. The | a grand succes. It was mnoised about Mexico | Work on the Vera Cruz and Mexico Railroad. is being and publi’ in the ogletal Journal. ae a Tho City of London, from New York, arrived at | acts connected with the receut riots in Turin Hie lergy and the many news; in their employ have na “or Pere nica” ake “ Jutended seperate Fp peg oe or. Rs Por tip Laseabgw' tere, ee eT AXIMILIAN, | Queenstown on the morning of the 2d inst. Maicoty 4 appegred in the Corso and was entht fought the measure from rst, ever inereasing in| speculations as to its cause. About midnight a | late wrestling match with the governmont for bottor | By,crder of hls imperial Majesty.) | Lord Lyons Resignation. Puee *Qaldndee ais the blow. was , and construing this | couple of gens d’armes were reported on the sidewalk, | terms they sticceeded in oxtorting one yoar additional for ys s . : “ Spain. , 5G EPS MOMTEEN® IN, CRIA Marshal Narvaez declare in the Cortes that the cowa- probably attracted by the applause following some rather | the time of inception, which gives them five years for | The decree rolative to church property is too long to bo | SIR FREDERICK BRUOE, spread-eagle speech, or perhaps sent thither by the au- | its completion. It ip btatod that no railroad in the world | inserted’‘here. It commences by promising a revision of THE NEW AMBASSADOR TO WASHINGTON—NO RE- try and the finances were both in an unsatisfactory vem- ‘delay into fear of their power. Now it has come, with all its-attondant and consequent circumstances, it seems | thorities to take notes and sco if any treason were ut- | passes over mountain ranges of such altitude as must be | the laws made by the government of Juares, declarin COGNITION OF THE REBELS. dition when the nt min! ‘assumed office, . vo have'paralysod tho ecclesiastical magnates into the | tered; but it was agrced beforchand that, considering the | encountered botween Cordova and this city. A portion | they wh, Aes a iain ta esi Fi Bs {From the London ‘Timed, Fob, 28. is chGot thal Te nie tomehary sat oak weorly = dasa Taina coe detontanaleade ” | fact that the United States ‘vere not represented officially | of the route, howevor, ts over level table lands, where | that wherever it shall nppear fraud has been committed, | tho public will hear with great regret that Lora ryon8 efforts for the service of thir country. Pp pair. an aatonishven ia Mexico, the subject matter of spocches should be con | the work of'bullding. will be almont as simple az Groseing | DY oficial abuse or otherwise, full Justice shall be done | has born compslied, by the state of lis health, to resign | °"The address to the Quoon was then passed by 166 GHARACTER OF THE DECKER. fined to. what immediately concerned our own country, | a prairie. ‘The cars are now running neatly to Paso del | %,agarieved parties. It establishes. an office for the ad- |*tho post of British Ministor at ibe rag which he has against 84 votes, and the Cortes adjourned until March % Its not merely the enormous mass of property in- and that being a rather oxtensive field, it gave the widest 10, about sixty miles from Vera Cruz. The grading eee ettemsictey optician beard anny bieophsckne filled for six z years. with ‘80 moch abil ity ue Larne . : wi wa tho nature of the work whic volved—amounting to untold millions—but by this mea- | ‘Aiitud CT pong oon leer perenne batbspe eon Re canunan eae oeinieiticoe iad be remarked, that the lawson this subject made by | Nepathad to discharge during the last four years of his Commercial Intelligence. guro Macimilian crosses the Rubicon and takes the first | The American eaglo flapped his wings and crowed long, | lending money to New Grenada for the purpose of “ac. | Juares, are those now being acted on and onforced, they | omco will be surprised at his being compelied to retire. THE LONDON MONEY MARKET. step towards merging the church power into that of the | loud and frequently on that night, and Washington's | quiring” the Panama Railroad when fis charter is up, | D¢ing ted as part of the laws of the country, with- | ‘The mere physical labor which has becn entailed upon (From the London Times (city article), March 1.) pn birthday, even in these distant climes, did not pass upap- | which will happen ina year or two, England will soon | Ut ® of change or discussion. In fine, it ts not too | him would alone pe enough to account for the necessity | Tho English funds this (Feb. 28) morning opened with- te; or, in other words, depriving ecclesiastics of | preoiat have an extensive hold upon the trans-continental routes | much to expect that both these decrews will be gratify- | of his resignation. Mr. Layard gave anaccount the other | out the slightest recovery of tone, and soon experienced ll dogroes, from the archbishop down, of their ancient sreiaisa ‘énx”? IN MEXICO. in Spanish Amorica, Who will push for Tehuante- | D8 and acceptable to all people of common pense and to | night of the business which has been transacted during | ® further fall. The first bargains for delivery were s® tributes of distinct government, and, divesting them of | ‘ The interest in discoveries of petroleum continues un- | pec is yet to be ncen, The ory was, when | ‘he friends of order and progress, both In Mexico and | tho last Chree or four years at the Washington embassy, | yesterday's price, 887% to 89, and lons subse- ‘all temporal authority, reduci 7 abated. Springs of undoubted value have been found at | the French came to Mexico, that their object | ®broad. and, except such authority, the amount would be al- | quently took poorgeee At the close the quotations mporal authority, reducing the church institution to ‘Huasteca, and at several points in the Department of | was Sonora and Tehuantepec. and and the most incredible. ‘The ndence of ono year filled | were again at 68% to 89 for deliv: Ad. 80 to 36 for.the. ‘what it is in Enropean Catholic countries, aifixing regular Luis Potosi and on the Tampico river, aswell asin | United States had cach : Yegions, | the aixty large follovolumes,, In less than threw years there | scooun’, Beak sock lef of at 948; reauced and shlariog to the offices of bishops, priests, &c., and evon | several places in the valley of Moxico; and even on the | one in Australia and British Col and the in ‘wero 13,048 entries of ringle en in the Foreign Of. | new three per cents, 8834 to %; India stock, 215 to 218, ks the chureh of all right to hold 1 Pacific side, on the coast of Jalisco, the unctious fluid is | California and the Pacific coast generally. France must s fice and allot contained enc! and Exchequer bills 3s. to. 68. premium. depriving a ight to hold property. Iam | saidtoabound. Where ft will next turn up is yet to be | offset this by seizing Sonora, with its gold and sliver re ap ie a ah terse She Ciecouah Gtmane: sh Wie ask to-day wae informed that another special decree to that effect will | known, but “prospecting es”” are on the alert for | mines, and get possession of Tehuantepec route as Arrival of the Steamship Liberty. The close and lose. relations of this country with | and in the market choice foreign banking follow hard upon this, which has been promulgated as » ftir ta gi an jndication. Messrs. Covert, McCune | an Intoroceanic communication to preserve a trade equi- | phe steamship Liberty, Captain T. W. Wilson, left | “™47%0a have, in faot, boos ontangied and twisted Jn inex: could be n ted with ease at 4% to. Ih the Stook and je, American residents of Mexico, havo come into | librium the commercial progress of the Un tricable confusion, and these voluminous letters and en- | Exchange also the supply of money was ample. preliminary measure. possession of some valuable ‘and Mr. William H. betas aah pagans. But {tis now quite apparent that | Havana on Wednesday, the 8th instant, at half-past four | closures are pec but an inadequate representation The arrangement of the account in the market for ‘MAXMULIAN COLLIDES WITH THE FOPR. Arnoux, representing a number of New York ean” 4 Ni wants neither Sonora nor Tebuant j; and | o'clock P. M., and experienced strong winds and for | of the innumerable knots which Lyons has had to | foreign securities has in several instances favorably in- Not only has the Emperor thus, in a manner, dofied the | has rece left for the United States with | but for bis being in honor bound to see imilian | 5 pert of the a anya Deadinns. . There io nal untie, Questions of blockade and of nationality, com- | fluenced prices. Mexican is fractionally higher, at ; important papers relative to roleum | through in this Mexican business, he would not have | * Part voyage vy ing | plaints from British sul domands by the British | @ %. The confederate loan is now quoted ex di Sut'by the nt throw aricln of the rammary of the | Suman ""*Me Cover Neues Yee Crus bye Balan | fae proany ike day upon te eat f Sowtee | Mum Tot Manes non the mam day, was rere | Li icnamah comands and repreenaion®”al thong | thy Oc @ lie wee: Bruin, (ia 8% Moxey icles of the summary of the | zumas. r. Covel ve ‘uz inglisl Pp upon it, wana af noon the same day, it was rui * * i steamer-for Havana and’ New York, with equally interest- itfires who flocked to Paris at the outbreak of the re- combined have tasked the energies of the mission and | 265; ditto (1864), 264 ; Peruvian aie ase DEE a tore jhe. ecicicat, barriers of intoles: Mille of lae'iheet vale: |.boliun and persunted Lim Into this tenet for Halifax. the ay Of the ministor to a probably unprece. thi ant prieg trom ‘Faria thls: (February 28) evening in ing information and representing some of ing affair, pri ance and establishes nniversal religious liberty through- | aufe discoveries yet made in Mexico. ‘The oll is clear | with anything but pleasant reflections, The resi | ‘The following are extracts of a letter from Havana:— | donted exicnt. But the amount of 1 cae thas | was 67f. 60c., chowing a further dscline of an eighth. out Moxico; a freedom of religion which he pledges him- | and of good quality, and is accessible by navigable | cause of the whole ness was Saligny, for- On the nights of the 4th and 5th our harbor was the | transacted must, afterall, have been the least part of its In the foreign exchanges pedis there was me is soon to be commenced on a large | merly Fronch Minister here, whose singu! port parts streams. Boring abi- | scene of an attempt at piracy. The as I am in. | burden. The of the office must have teen far more | matorial variatign from the rates by post, get orem irks SS mecmanreenhte Sane ty scale, for which any amount of capital is in readiness. | lity and influence paved the way for the rebel | formed, are as Geers caanent eleven P. ‘on the 4th | fying than Frigg ey Seldom has there been @ more There were no gold oJ at Bank the laws of the land. Thus, forthe first time since the | ‘Tho exclusive right to refine this oil, which, as stated in | stateamen in Paris. faligny hasbeen diplomatically dis- | two boats approached the American steamer Shoot! important post at a more critical time. The conse- | The quotation of goid at Paris is about 1 per landing of the Spanish conquerors, porfect religious toler- | former correspondence, has been granted to some of the | graced for hie misrepresentations. He has been retired, | Star, with muffled ‘one on each side. Only ono of | quences which have depended for the last few mium, and the short exchange face finds an asylum in a country which the zeal of the | SDOve named ‘parties, makes their monopoly of almost | snd has uot iow, and probably ever will have again, | tho boats was perceived at frst, which seomed to contain | Years on the due conduct of our relations with the United | sterling. On Somparing these rates with the inconceivable value,’ particularly when it is considered | any official position under the French Emperor. 0 | about twenty men. Other boat had only | States havo been momentous in the extreme, and there has | Mint price of £3 17m, 10344. early discoverers and their accompanying priests and | that they have not only the outside world asa market, | are some of the reasons why Napoleon wants to wash his | three men. Finding crew on the alert, the | scarcely bora any moment within that period at which | {t appears that gold is about 2-10ths per cent dearer ‘monks overran with fire and sword in the name of Chris- | but some seven millions of Mexican, population to sup: | hands of Mexico and all that concerns it. There are | large boat retired; but while attention was being called | those relations might not have been compromised by a | Paris in London. tlanity, and have held for nearly three centuries and a py local trade which is ties dls increasing, and | other reasons, such for instance as the absolute certainty | to t the other boat came alongside, and a man, unpor. | failure mn courtesy or discretion. Mr. Lincoln’s govern- Ph opting from Hamburg the price of is 423 per whic! . > can defy importation from of a su ion of the rebellion—a thing believed at the | ceived by any of the crew, managed to get on board, | ment, indeed, has, it must be confessnd, displayed a cred- , aud the short exchange on London is 13.6. per £2 Balf in superstitious ignorance and’ semi-barbarity. The ‘MOVEMENTS OF PIERRE SOULE. outset fa France to be lumposaiblo: the possibility. of in. | Shortly armewerde however, he was discovered inthe | sable a prudent ro-control under tho various excite: | serling, Standard gold at the, English Mint, prige te ‘attles betwoon the Mexican clergy on the one side, and Pierre Soulé, who arrived two weeks ago from Havana, | terforence by the United ; bis own increasing y engine room, when he was seized and handcuffed; but | ments of the time; yet the temper of the American pub- therefore about 5- per cent dearer in London tham the French Catholics on the other, by n rs and | {8 Feported in the newspapers as having on hand a gigan- | now verging apon old ago; and the decided disconten during the night he succeeded in getting the handouffs | lo has constantly been auch that a sii ht indiscretion on | in Paria. dye tiresttety tic secesh immigration scheme, but of what particu! manifested, not only in the French Chamber, but among | off, jumped into the water, and called to the steamer | OUF might have made it impossible for the President AMFRICAN GOVERNMENT GRCURITING AND RAILWAYS. Pamphlets, on this subject, have been incessant and vin- | nature is not generally understood; perhaps it is an off. | all classes of people in France, as well as in ‘the French | Fox, which lowered a boat and picked him up. and his minister to be more moderate the people | Maryland § per cent 00 3 ictive for several months; but the die is cast, and hence- shoot of the exploded Gwin affair. A more than usual | army in Mexico—all of which urge him to contract, rather “On the Sth instant the Captain learned another | Whom they represent. It reflects the greatest credit on | United States, 6-20 y an forth M if she fails to rise to the level to which her | BUmber of Amoricans, loyal and disloyal, are in Mexico | than extend, the cifcle—at least as faras interference | attempt would be made that night, and, in conjunction | Lord Lyons that during this critical and diMfcult period | Virginia State 5 per cent Pry lexico, just now. Calhoun Benham, of the rebel army, | with Moxico is concerned. with friends on shore, applied to the Captain of the Port | be bas uniformly amvothed the roughnesses and adjusted . 3 watural resources should carry her, the fault cannot be | ‘and formerly United States D! Attorney in California, THE CONDITION OF THHUANTEPEC. for protection. It was communicated to the Captain | the difficulties which arose, and that Mr. Layard could | Atlantic and Great Jaid at the door of the Church, from which the mantle of | has been here for several confined to his room ¥. An regards Tehuantepec, the imperial government has | General, who ordered that a barge of armed men should | 88y the other night that “‘in no one instance has he not | ton, 1st mmopleage, or {a ictanity ent terevoeably stripped. illness, at the Iturbide Hotel. Captain Beaurega: recently been investigating everything connected with | be sent, and that the steamer should be towed under the | received the entire approval of her Majesty's govern- Do. 2d mi , 1881, 7 per cent. ea power: 7 met ee brother of the General, is in Sonora, having the former contracts with Sloo, Hargous and others, and | guns of the Admiral’s vessel. This was being done about | ment.” Do. eagr bhoe ‘1st mortgage, 1877. eo ‘TUB RPPECT UPON THE PROSPERITY OF MEXICO through this city some weeks since on his way thither. | it is a well established fact that no further concessions | midnight, when two boats ap) coming towards the | . The more satisfactorily, however, he has filled his | _ Do. do., 24 mortgage, 1882, e ‘will be immediate. The decree sets loose and establishes | General Shields, who has been for some months in Sina- | will be granted at present in connection with that famous | Shooting Star. The armed started and captured | difficult post, the greater our regret at his enforced re- Erie shares, $109 (all paid)... eyed “ title to ili if fe pe | arrested at Mazatlan recently, by the French | transit route. Whatever is to be made out of it, the gov- | the boat, with twenty-five men in it, who were taken | tirement, particularly at a moment when clouds on all Do. 7 per cent preferred do. 43 “a positive many millions of property which, for | suthorities, asa Sp7 or suspicious perronige: bat, by the | ernment is shrewd enough to keep for itself; and wAat. | ashore, and, my informante tal me, liberated, sides threaten @ difficult if not @ stormy course to the | Ilinois Central 6 per cent, 1876. 7 Want of a decision such as this, has lain dormant, and | intercession of Mr. Barrow, of Topic, who visited Mazat- | ever is done there, will probably be through European 1 shall probably learn more so as to advise per Corsica | Pilot of our interests in America. Lord Lyons has seom Do. $100 shares (all pai 6356 thus capital will beput in motion through various great | lan for the purpose, he was liberated, and is expected | capital. But many years will olapse before another at- | on Saturday. At present I only give the above asa re | the ship of the American State drift from a safe harbor Marietta and Cincinnati Railroad bonds. CJ hich has hentte awrek in this city to-morrow, having arrived already at Guana- | tempt will be mado to reopen the Tehuantepec route. | port, not vouching for it. into the unknown waters of @ dangerous and tempes- | Panama RR., 1st mortgage, be -@bannels of business} whic been patiently awalt- | jnato, He i# believed to be a true blue Union man. | The Coatzacoalcos river ia impracticable at its bar for | The Owl, which I wrote you of In my last as having | tuous sea. It is no wonder if he is overwearied by the | _ Do. 2d do., 7 per cent, ‘ing the decree of the Emperor. Its effect abroad ir. Royal Phelps, a well known citizen of New York, je ocean steamers, however favorable above that point | refused to doliver up her ‘crew list” and other pape strain of watching her perilous corse, but he resigns a | Pennsy!vania RR. bds., 2d m., 6p. ¢., con. o ‘Will also be direct and favorable, as indicating the liberal | has been bere a few w and roturns by this steamer, | as far as Minititian; while on the Pacific side the so-called | bas been detained. She has, { am told, between sixty dificult and uncertain task to his successor. It is, in Do., $60 shares... ” oo Be ee Christian policy of Maximiljan and his sincere desire for | via Havana. Mr. Mc! bag an formerly Superin- | “harbor’’ of Ventosa is a mere open roadstead, where | and seventy men on board over and above her compli- | deed, extraordinary to reflect upon the changes which Lonpon, March 1, 1866. the welfare of Mexico. 4 tendent of the United States Navy Yard at Brooklyn, | tanding is always perilous, and oftentimes impos- | ment of crew. his comparatively short term of office haa witnessed. A Console, 88% a 89 for money. A NUMBER OF IMPORTANT CHANGES has recently arrived here, with the intention of engaging | sible, Tho very name—‘ventosa’’—indicates the The Francis has been receiving boxes of arms and am- riod is not always to be measured by the mere LIVERPOOL COTTON MARERT. havo just taken place in the Cabinet and Council of | in some extensive engineering business. windy, boisterous character of the locality. E. G. | munition, &o., and, I hear, even cannon, but whether to | !apse of time, and @ succession of events has been Lavmnroot, Feb. 27, 1865. :Btate, though not, as has been supposed, with any direct THE IMPREUAL COURT Squier’s route across Honduras, from the Bay of | arm her asa Corsair or for trangfer to another vessel I | Crowded into the eix years of Lord Lyons’ em- ‘The demand for cotton continues on a ‘extensive Teferenc® to the promulgation of the church decrees. It | has bo gone out of @ term of two weeks mourning for | Fonseca to Port Cabaillos, is far preferable, and the | have not heard. loyment which would have been thought, not | seaic and tho sales to-day exceed 12,000 bales; 4,008 is probably ovis to tome radical differences of opinion | the Emperor's brother, whose recent death at Vienna | distance betwedh New ‘York and San Francisco is few pighta since ® supper was given to Maft, the | long ago, too many and too vast for the lifetime | on speculation and for export, ‘The dnndance of the Detwoon M. Eloise (Chef du Cabinel), and others, that | was duly anrwunced in the official journal. All officials, | about the same; but the Honduras route bas the | captain of the Owl, and formerly of the Florida, atthe | Of one man. He waa appointed in 1858, yet | trade has been large, and their purcl ‘show counider- sevoral have rosigned their positions, &nd a new deal in | visitors and guests ut the palace were required to dress | advantage Of fine harbors on each terminus, with deep | Hotel Cubano, kept’ by Mrs. Brewer. A band was inat- | What an era has isince then! Three short years | able confidence. Holders, however, freely ply the fhe diplomatio pack is to be the result. M. Eloise, who, it | in mourning black gloves, &e.—for the first week, and | and secure anchorage, offering every facility for passen- | vendance, bave witnessed the violent disruption of the greatest | Gormand at the ratea current last Balurday, olosing with, supported by the Empress in the re- | half tite for the second, At the ball given mean- | gers and commerce, huant»pec been used by one March 6, arrived the English steamer Asia, 926 tons, | Power in the New World, the growth of a'war almosi um | givadiness. z is was cent tiaundioee on this subject, has been for some time at | time at the palace theeo rules wore dispensed with. apd another plausible speculator to make money for | with coal erampled in its magnitude, San weatere may be the ul- variance with some of the Cabinet, and, as a sort of QUITE A SENSATION themselves, but not for thelr dupes. thing was March 4, railod the English steamer Evelyn, for | timate rosult of the struggle, the utier subversion of all ‘There has been a small business only done in cotton te -@ompromise, was offered the position of Governor of So- | has been produced in Mexico lately by a religious cir- | fairly tested several years since, whon @ line between | Belize, cleared by Messrs. M. A. Herrera & Og, of this | ie most cherished inatitutions of @ great ond prosperus | day and the sales do not exceed 3,000 bales, incl Bora; but the shrewd Belgian failed to perceive it, espe- | cumstance involving a pos act of inhumanity by a | New-Orloans and San Franeiaco, vi wuantopec, Was | oit: nation. When Lord Lyom went to Washington the | 1 699 on speculation and for export. Prices ss Giaily whon that distant portion of the empire is yet | priest. ‘The facts, ia brief, ure, that a poor woman whose | established, and its impracticability fully aad finally de- | ° the English etoarnor Ruby, which left on the 26h | United States stretched in peaceful and prosperous do- | gasier, the process of pacification, the sword, | child had died applied to the priest for the rites of burial | monstratod for Belize (2) was captured on the 7th by the | Minion from the Gulf to the St. Lawrence and from the SovrHaMrron, March 2, 1866. of the olive branch, as the mediator; and conse- | service under the Catholic forms. The compensation THE MFKICAY COTTON INTERPRET. Pacific to the Atlantic; they were the favorite model of Sales of cotton In Liverpool to-day will probably reagis quently he has refused to be expatrinted, and the result | amounts, in such an humble case, to four or five doll Cotton ie the word In Mexico at present. Everywhere | Just as the English steamor was leaving Vera Cruz | free and republican institutions; they scarcely possessed | only 3.600 or 4,000 bales, The market is opening dull. is as above stated. M. Eloise remains, as docs also Sr. | of which the applicant lacked about two-thirds. TI they are cultivating it with gratifying success. In came that the commandant of that city, Mr. Mari. | @D army; they had an absolutely insignificant debt, and ‘LIVERPOOL BREADSTUFFS MARKET. Ram#rez, now exorcising the double functions of Minister | priest refused to officiate without the entire sum, and | Yucatan the cotton culture ts starting into Life, with all ne), inthe fight with the guorilies, March , was shot | the wholo energy of their industrious and vigorous . Livenroot, Feb, 28, 1968. of State and of Foreign Relations—a gentleman of the | consequently the child was buried without the Church | the energy that certainty of succets can piro. The | dead, with quite a number of his men. q lation was devoted ww commerce, to agriculture, There has been a fair attendance at market to-day, highest respectability, and whose advice is heeded by | rites being performed. This, in a Catholiocountry like ernment has just granted extraor inducements , a to Jearning and the arts Lord Lyons leaves | wont nas ruled steady at last Friday's quotations. Flour Maximilian with special attention. Igiesins, Minister of | Mexico, is a thing horrible to contemplate; and the fact {5's company of Missourians who have located on the Our Havana Correspondence. thom in’ the covulsions of a political earth- | sow of ante, Indian corn neglected, but holders firm ef Finance, has igned as has also the Minister of War, | getting round, the French papers hastoned to avail them- | fino table lands below and around Orizaba. They are Ma Maron 8, 1266, wake. One vast chasm yawns from Kast to West, | fiiy inte rates, Onte and oatmeal quite as dear. Beane ‘and it is said that Robles, Minister of Fomento, now ab- | selves of it as an illuatration of the mercenary character | allowed to go armed, and have been granted every privi- Heenan reps age ac ividing by blood and fire two hostile sections of ascarce | a4’ peas scarce, and the turn higher. 7 gent on an official tour In the Departments of Puebla and | of the Church and as an evidence that the proposed | ledge they demanded. This colony is said to comprise The Death of Virgie Whiting Lorini—The Massolent | ly kindred race; republican institutions are rapidly be d cong ut Liverroot, Feb. 28, 1868. ‘Vora Cruz, will follow suit on his return. But the most | @hange in its power (merging al! ite property into the | thousands. Their advanced guard reached here al Troupe, de. coming impercal in almost all but the name; pewona | 1° 4 Pax ote Rigas ory! gg ‘enn. 4m portant of all is thatof M. Schertzenlech- | State and giving the regular salaries) was impera- | @ month 4 freedom is a met of the past; enormous armies, like full. Pork quiet. Bacon steady, ment ‘au old and experienced Austrian satesman, who in | tively demanded. The newapapers have been at itevery | The most Important and valuable concession yet granted | TB® Many friends and admirers of Signore Whiting | swarms of locusts, devour the face of tho country; adebt | Lard quiet. 4 Prsvor eng aed on Ot ‘the youthful days of Maximilian served as bis tutor and | morning, and the subject was discussed with ability on | to foreigners is that to a New York company for connect- | Lorin will be pained to hoar that she died of asevere | unparalleled for ita growth and threatening aspect ovor- Ba LI Pin snt ‘oe : onal travelling compant and who has occupied a posi- | both s! and certainly with no lack of bitterness. The | ing the city of Mexico with the United States by an elec- | hemorrhage on the might of the 28th ult., at Santiago de | shadows the resources of the nation, and the whote ener. Ma gar — ee oe ie. ‘anti ty ae. tion nearer to his y than any other of bis | publication of the laws of reform puta an end to these | tric t bh, passing foe the principal cities of the Cuba, g the people is withdrawn from the life-giving oxer- ae Sana penty. Splatio’ 6. bal re counseliors, Schertzonlechner accompanied the Emperor Jes, in which we foreigners have taken but slight | empire. | The contract having been approved by a major: | NE oe Mazzoleni has returned from Moxico with his | ‘i#¢ to the exhausting fever of war. When Lord pack uiot, wt 1a, 10d. «2a. for om are to Mexico, and hag been his chicf adviser here—living at | interest beyond the curiosity to see when and how the | ity of the Council of State and by the Emperor's private ‘and they are new od to aive a few perform. | LYONS first went to bis mission the country he was accre- q tho palsce at Chapultepec, on the most perfect terme of | long pending decrees would appear. counsellors, is now before his Majesty for signature, and pm hay Mtl @ - dited to was the United States. Tt ts digfiewl: » say what STATE OF TRADE. intimacy—an intimacy entirely devoid of formality, and THR DOINGH OF CARKIVAL TIMR. will probably be decreed this week. Its terms are very he ‘over, and @ more disorderly one has not | % *uid be eied now, and ssibl- to foresee what it will Mavonustun, February 28, 1868. ‘dased upon a life’s devotion on the one side, and a ha- ‘We are in the midst of carnival. All Sr sner forthe Ponte te exclusive, and extending for thirty years for some years, Th “ic of persons be. Those six yoars, 2 fact, have seen the rise and tne For shipping yarns the market bas been quieter > Ditual rotiance on the other, upon the «incerity, «l.rewd- | Inst day or two, has been in a ferment of mal ed ball, | from date of contract. ‘The importance of such a work ADO Bonga ae hte | development of a mua revolution, and if we are | and the animation which marked the close of last in nd nigl tending out a new minister i is fo an entirely new stale of | and to some extent continued yenterday, ness and wisdom of the old counsellor. The gossips and | riding, visiting+ilaminatin ing and merrymaking | can scarcely be overestimated, espectally as recarda ite | Murdered and wounded during the three da: quidnunes are all wondering whither there diplomatic | generally. Eeerybody ana Kiet her neighbor is di influence. tn bringing widely copersted eommnanition popes ebay he pte eg ct lanl ring. the Changes are tending and what the next move on the | todeath, and the streets are alive with gayoty and fashion | within talking distance, removing ignorant prejudices | ‘Rove teen Milled ou right, hing else, 1 | _ The sueceeor of Lord Lyons inthis momentous post | Friday's prices. For home trade yarns we ha chessboard will be. Ss fs whispered that Schertzentechner by day, and clogant canipages, fancy costumes, flashing | and establishing friendly rejationa, Perhaps no two ti wy he, ng oem pers or to - ing Said will be Sir Frederick Bruce, who at present holds the | very quiet market, at the prices of last has rosigned entirely upon personal grounds. The Em- | uniforms, flowers, silks, boniires, fireworks and nonsense | nations, just at this epoch, stand so much in need of such | Police of Ite « Consderalie Nativity in the house bulld: | ofos of Minister in China, but happens opportunely to per with ‘all his coneiliating ability, could not harmonize | of every descsiption by night. The thing winds up this | apaciying medium ae the United States and Mexico, | 'Ds ine require at least two thousand new houses, | 6 in England. There is no reason to doubt that in mak- | quieter. }On@ ‘antagonistic elements, especially when the influence | (Wednesday) evening with a grand masked ball at the | The applicant (or this grant had many prejudices to over. | ®84 1 hope w | bave them. ing this selection the government have bad amplo ro- ‘ of Carlotta in favor of her father's rola, M. Eloise, wi {Imperial theatre, where the parquet, having been raised come and unworthy jealousies of Ametaon licy to kur. Bxchange Gao York has slightly improved, being ‘ard to the qualifications necessary for the office. Sir F. 7 ee, poworfully exerted. 80 Bobertsestechier leaves tokio. | to a level, with'the stage, offers a spacious arena for the | mount; but just and liberal views have fnally prevailed, | @woted Dow at 49 to 68 per cont discount race has groatly distingniebed himeelf by hiscondnet | suger firm. Ten quiet. Colle itm. row for Europe, and Eloise, remaining master of the aivu- | disciples of Terpsichore, ‘ks in motion by a combined | and Maximilian will ere long be in hourly communica- o of our troublesome negotiations with the Court of Pekin; tion, will continue, as heretofore, to wield. the baton, | French and AeattiaA, WAGE a there thal & hapared | tom, noe only with New Yor , but also, vie the Atlantic | WAULACR’s Teare—Banmre or Mus. Jon SerTox.— | Sng though he will have wry differen’ persons to deni | TAllow frm, ab 40s, €4. a 400, od Bioiso is enid to be the best business head among ali who | pieces. The boxes on these occasions are taken by the | cable, with all Europe. Mra. John Sefton takes her benefit at this establishment | with in Washington, yet a man who has been evergetic, Dave surrounded the Emperor; but, like many active | principal families of Mexico, who act am spectators of the UNION VICTORTES—THETR RYPRCT Ix wExION, to-night. Mra. Sefton has had goverai very decided sue. | scute and succorsful ‘In one place will probably be ener: MAILS FOR EUROPE. ‘working mon, he is avaricious of authority, andsojealous | revel. Carnival has been unusually lively this year, The recent glorious intelligence from the United States hie wi etic and acute, and will at leart doserve to be success. ee & interference in all branches of government chat he | owing to the great number of European officers in Mexico’ | haa given the coup a grace to the hopes of wecessionisia | cenee® this winter In the parte in her line—eapecially in | fi °in another. Perhaps, in the surging soa which begets profers to take everything, however Ixborious its details, | Not only the bon ton have prepared for a more than ordi- | in Mexico. They are furious or despondent, as the facts | the parts of Sally Downright, in Secrets Worth Knowing, | American politics represent at the present time am in- ‘The Cunard mail steamship Canada, Captain Higekley, Eira, Fos ber cue ok einen of mechs | BUeMTid ay tas aes bait meson craton | (OE"fere Puoer bEeseks Grk hc dy Tacs | nt Me Wilbwenby, tm tha Rekei of Iaare Man, Hor | Sow wes mers of fs mporese ans | Nit ere Been, om Wedoee, ee aucovodod in exciting, if not tho enmity, ‘at lenst | The masked. ball of ‘to-night is the culmivating potnt, | monthe ago were bintent with defant iene aan one | TO happy personation of those characters has given her | Would have boon otherwise, The mwwrmen's are so rapid, | The mails for Europe will close in this city this after. the jealousy, of most of the other members | after which everybody goes to church, where accounts | atill clung to the musty tradition about one high toned | *Nieh pince tn the free races of (he patrons of INI | ihe influences ao uncertain, that the course pursued at owe | noon, at a quarter past one and at halfpast five o'clock. of the govemmont. The resignation of Iglesia | are duly aquared for the year’s sina and peccadillocs, Southerner being able to annihilate five grovelling Yan. | ‘eatre, and they will turn out largely to-night. The | moment may have to be forgotien the next, Butthough | The New Youx Hxxacp—Edition for Europe—will be man Of fine ablition, & native, Mexican, eda. 7 ieee Tan AMOeRaanTO OF SERIO Keen, & ntow admit that the game ts up. teetend | [ieces for the cession are the Unequal Match, Uy Tom | gir F. Bruce has not been recently employed in any thee elook thie mora! gated in Paris, and a particular favorite of Maximilian) | for the last two months have included a weekly bull ight, | of fire-eating invitations to hospitable graves, to which | [tyler and Turning the Tables, by Poole. This is a0 | how connected with his jioe, he ix not entirely in- | Published at ten o’cloe , fs especially wondered at and regrotted. Ramirez, how: | a French dramatic company at the Iturbide, an occasional | the chivalry would welcome the government, with bloody | S2™mirable bill, Neither of the pieces have ever been | geporenced in American aifairs. His firwt employment | It will contain tho latest repgrta of the progress of vor, remains, and probably will not allow any ordinary | Spanish performance at the National, and, last, though | hands, in cago it attempted to maintain ite constitutional | PMFed st His house was when attached to the late Lord Ashburton's special | General Sherman's Army in So%th and North Carolinas circumstance to induce him to retire. He has the repu- | not k “BL Grau Circo de Cherins,”’ whiet, strangely authority, we now hear only of Northern barbarity and Arrival mission to Washington in 1642, when the fatnous Ash- nal particulars of She % the tation of being the Nestor of Mexican statesmen, and his | enough, ls held at one of the eld convents—that of San | wickedness in overrunning & defenceleas people, and piti- rivals and Departures. burton treaty was negotiated. Subsequently, fora year, | *ditioual p ridan’s Viotory in the Shen- hearty concurrence in and support of the oxinting order | Augustin, I belleve—which, under the recent sweeping | ful complaiute of the cruelties of war. ie atieally aug: ABBIVALS. he was Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland, and from | andowh Valley; the later, despatchos from Generel Of aflire (s the more valuable from his recognized intog. | reform, Nas shared the fate. of most of thove venoruble | festa teelt that. these possible reeulls had betwen: have eA TAs Stoamipeliin, lberty—Geo I Drew. Jone Vent | 1847 to 1661 he was employed in various posts in South | Grant's Army near RichFaond, and reports of the Move rity, ability and earning, and particularly as the hoad of | institutions, and has only the {mmense walls etand!ng ws Goon taken into consideration before rushing into an um | Yargov j Ds Genet, Weeauel Getends America. Four years after this le wont with his brother, J Joh ¥ Hargovs, Mr Concit, Manuel Delgado r ‘ monte of the Union Fe res in all sections of the countrys one of the oldest, wealthiest and most influential families | the monument of its former graudour. The {eatare of | provoked and causeloss rebellion. Eaton. fb Hart, Pd Olartorn, & Dye # Bla Lord Elgin, to China, and has since been entirely em foes in all sect q of Mexia, 1 Of what material the incoming Cabinet and | Cherinv'e rouse Mayo, the flown, well known New ne of the Feta IDRAR OF Awan Cha Koper: “y do Arai nn Blas AR wer arg | ployed mn thet country, tne, | eee News firm Mexico, Central America, Cuba, yunodl composed remains Atom ‘orker, wi joked and grimaced bimeeif into uni- 0 of the funniest phares of American character in Dey « D Coyirt, R Maxson, ne y a fortunate coincidence he will arrive in Amer ike. ; and re v, event THE RFPECT OF LATE IMPERIAL FUCCESSES, versal favor among the Mestosn He hind a benoit laet | Mexico has been noticed jo the political complexion of | 4 vines and Rervamt, WY, Khigli orts v7”, all interesting and important git, Capt Winchester, | jugc when Mr. Ligcoln will have entered upon his second rison, to church gay. cary eo hic's Duvid | Loreal ofce. “fe wilt perhaps, have an opportune cig. | Of 90 past wee A Since the fall of Oajaca and the defeat and capture of | night, whi Genvrals Romero, Porfirio — Bond. W Sehway,, hy aku, h Wooded. niticauce that a new f chould thus be accrodived Single Coplr4 in wrappers, ready for maling, six conta, Sus aa i . ich capped the climax for fun and was atvended | wore who have late i te wl with Oe idea of residin; hiree peuple, One of the Havana | bara vermanently, Wor more tou poy | 2 year (the