THE satin an dot 
[Dec. 97, 
4l4 
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withont foundation Her Majesty, x ape in- j establishmen system. Various measures | mad, and had been = 
stance rhe King of the -e had yn ane dle + AE ed for the pate. tion of the Cha: mew | cruelty ; he was the cay malien ae: — = 
= i a ngage <* law with the important | been previously, and a regent ap Aad re 
than the Foreign Department, The Siècle eon- object of endowing, in a perm ent Fry mi manner, | of = Eis = st son,  Shondoonge mentha impa perso 
fends that the pora in forming the English| public worship and the Seat = "he guard mo removal from power ar Me nder 
Ministry kad been oc ioned by the indispositio ion of Speech, = eon announced et poi oe was | in ies ose fam y madness is said to be ara 
A ’ legally opened, and the — een re etire ed. _The « elee m of oe ae ve ows by de Ti ’ 
and that it had been proposed, in consequence, t that | President of the Chambe rigate Galatea has BE appe a 
Lord Lansdowne should be First Lord of the Treasury. | when M. Cas y Oroseo, “the ‘Government ‘ond re ate, of of taking Pat the last Danish Governor of So, 
The Siècle fu th t we elected, E 7 M. Paclieco, the rom China no ‘intelligence had "read aie 
Mr. Cobden —Tho Débats publishes a va riety of de iti did Three of the four vice-presidents  ecibuequent to the 30th ge sei mber. he 
spatches from army in Africa, shith, Di wever, are belong » the Ministerial | party, the fourth is M. Sala- UNITED Srates.—By R a, pack ket, which 
little more than r repetition of what has already a ap r Sse Monday rz ent Mew York a phe 
f y.—A le from Osnab ruck, in Hanoy er, | of Preside ent’s E hisen; which has been look. e 
s Fa ther 1 Mathew, of Ireland, The Me essage was delivered 
e, has found an emulator in M. inst., the day after the forn rmal opening et Ce 
Th P = ngre 
of 
Lord Palmerston should have some anon reed among which is 
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ting ap pred —— eo General | apostle of tempera: in 
n, perai having - " Ma gone Christin Frederick Seling, a sae theran minister 
Victualled Sebdon, E Lalla Maghrnin; and Ghaza of o a ona man has just, retur. red the new ebaini stration a ye Polk, ar one scarce} 
The Traras were laying down their arms. The Beni. from tee ‘throu f Bildesheim, kable thar s Mess sage. The election o 7 
Amers comme he return to their country. Colonel | 50 towns of ya, he has xeceived pledges from about | Davi ies Democ , as Speaker, w 
St. Arnaud had sw prised a tribe excited to revolt by | 20,000 perso f both and all ages, to abs tain | carried b najority of two-thirds over the'ed Drs. 
Bou-Maza, and ad mae chastised it. This appears entirely mer ‘drinking spirits liquors. uring the candidates, pn that the power of ey ae o pa 
tote they of the despatches, which, however, | two years a half that M. Seling has d 3 and both Houses are said t Den 
i rnals. in this piny iis he has procured for a different | —the Senate by a majority ba six, 
adjudications of the concessions of the Creil and St. | temperance societies in Germany, 82,582 members, of | by a majority of near rly two ede Soe olk 
Quentin Railways took place at the office of the Minister | whom 25,141 are men, 27,770 women, and 29,7 41 kage ng has at command a powerful pet ys ergetic par my 
of Public Works on Saturday. “co Rothschild, Hotti- | persons of both sexes, of from 12 t 16. Houses ; but it is doubtful whethes they are 
md Laffitte Company offered to take it for 24| The German journals state that e Bavarian G prepared to run all risks in carrying cut his 
years, 335 days ; Carrette ae “Minguet e> = years, ment was negotiating with the 5 ake ‘of Rothschild : a pi and aggressive policy. i 
280 days ; Colbert and si sE r tg of 30,000,000 or 40,000,000 florins, for the construc ti ion | length, but being the first delivered by Mr, P 
Pr aama or 49 = e.s erar The | of railroads. considered necessary to explain in detail his views 
er Company did not ot bid, a te of the mazen Iraty.—The — of zemas left Pal the g l policy of the United States. It begins 
chid ae om Enan within the | 5th in a steamer for Naples, accompanied by Counts | the usual congratulations on the prosperity of the eg 
St mima arranak was | Nesselrode and Orlof. His Majesty cred st Nepia | try, which it et as “ gS — 
dicated to the Company Rothschild. | on the 6th, and proceeded im as e king’s | specta i i 
or paar same si the adjadieation of the conces-| palace, where every preparation "hed b eats affairs of Texas, aos that annexation is Ow ax 
sion of the Paris and Lyons Railroad was postponed | ceive him, After’ staying there five one his Majesty comp lished fact, and that Congress is bound byg 
sine die; the only company bidding for it (Laffitte, | proceeded to Rome, w the 1 
neron, illon and Baudran), having offered to took up his residence at ~ Giesiiniani Palaze accession to the United States territory is nae aga 
take it but for 42} years, and the oo minimum | It is said that ete of commerce was ined: saa at | “ bloodless achievement, “a oe ed ty the volun ntary 
being 41} years. M. Laffitte in the name of the com- eg on the Bd i between the United States | consent of both countr: and as the “ 
deposited on the rg evening with the Minister | and the „Neapolitan ree ent, by w aa American | homage of each aan, ‘3 ae great principles of our 
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Minister de deelined to act upon his o own responsibility, paving the same — - the wines of other nations.— | France and Englan 
g il of th e Augsburg Gazette states that a revolutionary plot | nexation. The Message says that 
rate upon the rivi Th tthe Tuileri in the Grand Duchy of Tuscany, | the grandeur ae i 
Sunda: myi ya ord ordinan was issued ames object was AR seduction of a whole battalion of | the result w l pite of the diplo 
iance 
is m 
on afternoon, a 
on Monday mei f the o et ann for| Tuscan troops, in order to invade the ‘Roman states, | terference of European monacehian??. 
this is, that the min maf fort ae pre © en ic conve- | Tw soniy 1 men of this battalion have fled. France with England on this occasion 
nience, and to prevent the losses whic pe fien It —The Overland Mail from oe of the 15th | topie of unfeigned regret, and ex “ almost un 
from the fact of 200,000,000 fi ranes bein meet during “hes week, The point of most inte rest | voice of the people of Texas” is said to have “ given t 
the time the question is pending, were unwilling to refuse | is the a of the Governor G d k [te 
the ofer. — formal of the session of the 1 further upon the same point—# Br 
French Chambers being fixed for this day, the ia ma eran out that he was , proceeding ok, —_ iis exam pie, European Governments may learn 
when the vache aem will in econ deliver the Speech m | he was b jarr ive at — on the Sarg of November— ain diplomatic arts and intrigues niust ever prove u 
h ose t in tem e 
try an ot’ the pected dhe ere. unj hich s 
ara. but nothing certain infirm except that | their interest, although no late atrocity is recorded. | resist foreign interfere rence.’ 
has rr ot Sb M. Dufaure | The situation is most extraordinary ; the troops have | closed by the 
-— candidate for the Presidency, in opposition to the | murdered ali Prime Ministers or Wuzeers, as well ieee pirit will actuate e Congress in 
Government candidate, M. pid ~—The King and|as ‘all the Ki Kings that do no t act as they please. The boy- cerns her Roney and prosperity, and 
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Royal Family have left the Palace at St. Cloud, and cause to regret that she has united 
taken =p their residence at at the Tuileries for the winter. nik po His mother has contrived to keep the | ‘lone star” to our glorio tsë constellation.” 
Moniteur contains a royal ordinance increasing the | Soldiers at bay since the death of her brother, with Mexico arg 
bw of the members of the “ Conseil des Travaux de | Jowahir Sin ‘Singh, eer she has had no Prime length, but nothing new is stated beyond ti the ansoune 
Marine,” in x uence of the attention which the | Minister ; pik Saoi , whom ae. à 
poe hg requires.—The Seine had risen considerably | wished to for wealth to most | potentiar y has been already sent by the Presi ne) 
i mig a announce agony dangerous Shea ander and bnie him, Mexico, to resume diplomatic intercourse wi 
fon Sey become swollen by the lat as they = ue Brothers and Eis nephew, The OREGON Question occupies à 
wy rains.— Ambassador of Moroeco Renys at | to gain fortress of amoo, where he has space, ‘and is of course the most interesting to Eag 
— on the 19th, and was to leave on the 21st for | formally refased their invitation. Tej Singh, the late | readers, After ripe apn he ae te BE 
ae wl es = e| whieh had taken place previous to his phe 
Cortes were opened on the 15th | Briti on the frontiers of the p Mr. oo Faas to that opened by Mr 
by Queen Isabella in person, with unusual state and pono ga ae Sars march on wre in a at Washington, and thus 
ceremony. The young Queen was received with loud | if sige ga ot is nothing positive es of t case : x 
ome , and of Peshora Singh, who was, asit now appe: ative he British Plenipotentiary offered to divide the Reif 
Chambers. i the sp iu a strong, | in his late attempt to hold Attock y Dost Mabosned territory A nS a ARA paralel dt boda a with the 
, and distinct tone of jroice + though Her Majesty's | and the Afghans, who intended, if Peshora was sue- | oct anol of tho mbia riren, 
: rapid, ev cessful, d 
word, was distinetly heard and understood in the most Prussia, who 
ea was at t Umballa the 4th be enjoyed in 
distant parts of the Chamber. Be ‘speech, which was abast i to proceed to nea s TER ‘Vat his pee “ri g ee batted a Tat 
by M. Martinez de la Rosa, alluded to the| return to the former pl a aden oc wr 
5 : ; : ace w. pect ield United S 
friendly relations with Fonsi Powers (not mentioning | that the invasion of "the Sack wall .. = Co shia, ee along the 
ans wae Be the ratification of the treaties | In agha all is tranquil. a Napier was as preparing to ed States 
so ae an aor ~ in — = the | move from Kurrachee to Hyd rabad ona tour, as it was peer rary ‘hi the ey 
the establishment nie laws, and t id,i 
reforms in foes * À many imagine n Quadra a 
the department of publie instruction, | that if an invasion of the Pas i as required, he will ye by the ‘American.62 
in the ka istration of justice, and in various other | lead the vanguard is name alone at Ste 
MRE iT 
Peninsula, and f the laws ha 4 > 5 i 
ve been tory. His conduct as G z 
prrs xe every a at treason has been | the cana E teapa sp j oyeron s s Na 
rities, as well as by the a a ae e ana T DO finan maki ea, it i oinie contrib 
Gaile ad decker yes te permed = en by h of the Punjaub for n a equitable a 
for the world ; and, in fin napere ag pea sturb- 
: » in fine, by the excellent spirit of | ance at Indore, arising from an Though er rather 
pas gaa and worn out by revo revolt, and ponte | happily frustrated, to assassinate k the ie aa pra a e Drepa E ie 
the Be i ie oe under the he shade of spiracy against the British is ay tgs E ir Set 
> ont 
; on, got up wi Administrations ato a 
Ni > rE ara = ‘oli ae 
Nizam’s dominions continue in an unsettled sta: te, and Se om the basis 
: itis that we ma parting Sing da r fo, break 
you for ex4 pinia seg si y ee my duty not abruptly =. 
rities to restore the country to order, and gi - tire ea p efort ia b 
[parte ck fealty to the Government. ong pe in the of  propest í 
India tranquillity a to 
Paty stagger aly He onenen of 
