Newspaper Page Text
pto*. NEW-YORK., Afkil 18.
5 Au\ \uVe\'I’toiu LwgVauA.
• tl.r p.ukc.t ship Shefli-If), Chptan
:! itoui Liverpool, w«- have oar lile>
■lulmi papcisof ili'! Til' «1 M »«ch, anu
‘v or pool of the Bib, both inclusive will)
tnmercial intelligence up to the day ol
i HE REFORM BILL.
l ne u 11 vrt drags m tin- House of Com
and the Reformers are becoming more
, IU I llt „ie alarmed as to i's ultimate (ale
A„ article from Hie Times of Hie seventh,
speaks dcspondingly, hut still in very threa
tuning and indignant language, in regard to
, t!e Premier. Evidences ot similar feelings
„t alarm are exhibited in other journals.
The impression seems now lo be that it is
Karl G ey himself who laultcrs. ncitvyi l.
standing all his fair promises, even with a
full power from the King to create as many
Peers ns may b? necessary to carry (he bill
in any I'oroi he chooses.
The anti-reformers among the Peers, have
been veiy active in their preparations (or
the reception of the bill in the Lords, bu'
have not exactly determined upon the best
course to be pursued, there aie two c.ass-,
es of the opponents *«f the bill—those who,)
with the Duke of Wellington at then In-ad,
ore uncompromising in their hos ility to all.
relorm whatsoever, and hose who are in la i
vor of a partial reform, hut opposed to the
sweeping provisions o( the present bill, at ■
the head of whom are the Karl of Hanow
l,y arid L"rd Wharnclift'e. The former arc
in favor ol again throwing out the bill wi'h- )
.ut allowing it to go lo a second leading. |
The Litlei are in favor of allowing it a sec (
ond reading s"d then amending it so aa to f
strip it of its most radical features. A cor- ‘
respondenefi upon the subject has taken,*
place between the Duke of Wellington and ]
Lrd Harrowby. The following is an ab-j,
str.et <>f this correspondence, which we ;l
fin m Hie Times ot die 6th March, ft,,
will be -ecu 'hat Hie Duke Hirea'ens thath
shoo'd Enl G ey attempt l" create a batenj)
o' Peers to carry the bill, himself and oj|
peers • wdl take their leave ol the House |
altogether.” > . 1
<• r i* v r< mo rcsl re- iu the coun* i
try.**— Lord Hartoichy's Letter*
“ The bill i» already ' oul ol fashion.”’
Duke of Wellington.
•• ll‘ believes Loid Giey has a carle
blanche lo rrea'e as many Peers as may he
necessa y.”—Lord Harruwby
" Let them cream, and lie knows aheady
iwentv Peers who will take their leave of
the llr-use altogether. The Mouse of Lords
will l>r swamped forever, and the Minis
ters will be responsible.” —Duke vj Ik cl i
ling lon.
“ Neither die IViko of Wellington not
tie R. Peel will undertake the responsibdi
ty it a U ivennacnt formed on the condi
lion of bringing in a reform bill, wi hnu
which no Government can now exist ”
Lord Harrowby
•• There is nothing in the state of the
country, now, nr which is at all likely to a
iise, that this G v rnment or any other Go
vernment could not put down with ease, if
it had sincerely a mind to d<» it. Treats all
apprehensions on this score with the utmost
contempt.”— Duke vs Wellington.
“ After the division on the ••com! read
ing, he in >y safely njnin the 199 and w ith
them enfince such various invdificatiuiis,
which, though they may nut take the venom
out ol die bill, will render some oi i s pro
visions less i ox'mus.” —Lord Ilarrowby.
*• I) spuies reasoning, does n-t auticipo'e
auch lesults. If there is revolution in ire
land, and it the Church of England is over
thrown, Hi K 1 iz’sG ivernment wdl be res j
pui-sibl Dak-' of Wellington.
The Courier of the same day—the 6th—
in commenting upon this abstract, says :
The language of the Noble Duke, as giv
eo io the abstract of the J’inus is as we
hid said, bold und uncompromising; but,
il another statement tuny be relied on,
some of the most important observations of
the Duke have not come lo the knowledge
of our contemporary. Mis Grace, in ad
vising the Louis to reject Hie Pill, in the
first stage, expresses, il is said, a belief that
there is no reason to fear the consequences
of a rojection. except in two large towns in
Manchester and Glasgow, Mow laments
y ignorant must his Grace be of the real
situation of Hie country to make such a
statement. Who ere his informants f Does
he entertain no fear ot the consequences of
injection at Birmingham, & in othe. towns,
winch are, as it were, an embodied politi
cal union? Let ins Grace a*k Mr. An
wood, the President of the tiiraii'ighum
U ion, and Mr. Parkes, a gentleman whose
judicious counsel had not long ago great
weight in that society, what would be the
probable result of a rejection of the Bnl
They would answer the consequences would
be frightful—we have no longer that con
trol over the numbers which we once pus
ues.ed, ami which might have enabled us to
. estrain them from outrage. They have
' -on irritate i by deity, and are disposed lo
isteii !■ si lo counsels of prudence than to
..bey incitements to violence.” Such, we
think, would be the answer of those gentle
utn. and a aiiui’.ir answer would be given
in every luiga town of the country it the
Duke wuo io put the < uesHon to men of
.mr cter, who have no interest in false
hood.
the Cholera Mubus is on the increase
to London. The whole number of vast -
o to the Olh ol March was 300; the t.-inn
<t of ill at).t 168—a proportion which in- <
ncalis gieat violence and maligni'j in the j
iiKep.se. On .Marcli Ist. as appears by the r
returns of the Central Board ol lleald. i
here were il new cases and 15 deaths ; on ]
die 2d. 23 cases and 13 deaths ; on the 3d. t
39 i.tw cases and 13 deaths ; on the 5 h. |
including >he day previous, 45 new cases I
tr il 21 dealhs ;on the 6h. 42 new cases '
tnd 26 deaths. The following are the re- f
turns from other par.* ol the country : •
Central Bea d of Health. Council Office,
Whitehall, March 6,
Mil at New '
Piece i. date. c .„, D'.il. UecoVa, Rememing ,
N. wcMtle, M. 4, 4 0 0 1 3 c
North Shields, ,
Merton town ,
ship &c. M. 428 1 0 0 29
Shields, M 4 0 2 0 0 2
HaddinglonM 3 0 110 0
Preston funs It.- 11
3 and 3 0 8 2 0 6 [
Kirkintilloch, .
March 3 3 111 2
OliiSgnw, M 3 26 6 5 4 26
Paisley, M«. 314 l 2 7 5 41 I
Coal Bridge, 2 12 0 I 2
Baillieiion, M. 3 4 0 1 0 3 f
Ullwinnin ,M. ,
j 2 and 3 0 20 5 1 14 y
Total, 80 55 22 13 100 ’
I Total cases from ri/nunenceinent cl the,'
Disease. Cas.-s 2,053 deaths 707. lolal *
I I ruin places where the disease has ceased, n
or from which no re'urns have 'hi* t'ay been 1
received—Oases 3,Bl2.deaths t 050 Grand ’
total—Cases 5,865, deaths, 1..737• 1
(Signed) vv. MACLEaN, Sec'y '
The ravages of the Choieia in Lunoon f
liave taken jdoce, nays one paper, exclusive- r
ly among the poor and tliosc who, from ex- 11
posure and unwholesome diet are most lia-.'
hie to violent affections of the stomach. In 1
Scotland, the disorder is said lo be on the 1
decrease. It hid disappeared at Tranent, f
Prcstonpans, and Haddington. No violent 11
case had occurred in Edinburgh tor seveial h
days, and it is stated, on the authority of
medical men iu that city, that a icinaika- '
ble diminution of other diseases, parliiulur- a
ly typus fever, has taken piace since tlie 2
rncavures recommended by the Board otj
Health, for the benefit, of the lower orders,,'
have gone in'<> operation. Must ol ihecasesj®
of Cholera in Edinburgh, occurred in p r-jS
sons of broken emsmutions, and bearing >
matks of previous disease of such a nature
as must, in no long time, have proved fatal, t
A case had occurred iu Bi islol, of death
(ruin ihe spasmodic cholera. The patient s
was a sailor, much addicted to intoxication, '
who had been druok tor three days previous t
io 'lie attack, and exposed durii g that lim *■
0 tho if,cl* mency of he weather. *
British Manufacturers —Sir John Cm- f
to* is C'lmmaudeii bv the Do'chess of K.cnt t
to acipiamt Messrs. Disoii &. Co. Hiat Her f
Royal Highness in very much gr»>tfi>-d to «
find that there is a prusped «I nuking Bl nul
Lice bv the peasantry rt Buckinghamshire, <
so as to compete wiHi Hie foreign article, of ’
hat so-!. A id it will be m »st gratifying to 1
Her Royal H zhness, both for herself and 1
the Princes* Victoria, to do all in her pow
er jo em ui.-ge Hus Manufacture, as H**r
Royal H'ghuess feels it incumbent on her
to do so, on every occasion, in relation to
Ihe manufactures "I 'his coun'ry.—Ken
sington Fulctre. 28 lh February, 1832.
lo consequence <d ibo during conduct of
. larg bodies of armed smuggb rs on the
Jcoast, two companies of the rifle brigade
marched on Saturday from Dover to Shorn
\ ctifl":. to aid the coast guard. A few days
. ago the smugglers coofi >ed a whole party
of the coa-t guard in one ot tho tow «nd
. carried oft'a large cat go unmolested !
Kentish Gazette.
Emigration —-Gree* numuersot the most
|able and inicMig- n' taiineis of Cornwal',
hie-preparing ti depart for the shoes o'
. A oerica. We h.veseen duiiug the pas
. week, more than one advertisement of house
and stock to he disposed id t >r this puip -se
'Several parishes in the neighborhood of
Stratton aie sending off their paupers, and
’ithc compara ive wealthy farmers emigrate
J- to prevent 'hemselve* trniu bei g ieduce<l
‘to the same wre'ched condi'ion. Will
country gontlem -n teceive the satH.* rents
for their lands, it this sys'em g -es on ? No,
no, an eid mu-r b* put to the system, and
that ngh speerlilv; m like ihe Ist days et
V Sampson, lliey wii. A id that the d'-s ruction
j,,f ihe farmers will be the death t bis Pil
jilistine oppiessors. Western Times.
a j 'Typus Fever in Manchester. —lt is really
g ! su p isii g. t'»at whilst so much alarm is ex
(iciti dby reported xist'-nce ol cholera in va-
Iri- us p.ris of E ig'and, ao little notice is
!jtaken of the undoubted existence ol a very
.[dreadful a d fatal disease in Manchester
~1 and other ltnc,e towns; we m -an the typus
t . fever. At the H-use ol Recovery in M«n-
Chester, the resident surgeon, the matron,
e and six nurses, have ail been nearly sitnr
I lant-ously attacked. The residen> surgeon
j and (wo no ses hove fallen vie imsto toe
, disease; the matron is in a most precarious
!_ s a'e and is not « xpected to recover, whilst
u the various nurses aie still in greater oi less
e danger. Manchester ddv.
u From the Manchester Herald, March 7.
o Stale of Trade. —Both the woollen, cloth
e and (he worsted stuff trade of Leeds, Hud
dersfield, and Bradford, have been unusu
j illy dull during the last fortnight, though
his is a season when business ought to or
t recovering from Ihe stagnation of winter.
IRELAND.
'Tillies. —The question of f ish Tithes, si
c far as rela es to toe pre-cut system, is now
question co eluded, and the examina i -n
uelore the Committees of the Lords and
Common* for any piaetusl purposes of I
propping it up by a legislative crutch, can t
no longer hsve importance, even in the im-j
lijination of a tithe-fed dotaid. Both thej
Lords and Commons have. recommended thei
complete ex mction of the system, and the t
public attention is now directed Mily to the 1
feasibility ol the proposed plan of subsiitu-l
'ion. This is well. The system has only i
been maintained in Ireland by means of the
executio h of '.he murderers of tithe-proc- s
tors, and 'heir process servers.
The French papers have already publish- f
cd a list of the new Peers, including several '
ni'Mrfbers of the Extreme Left; wc haverea- 1
son, however, to believe, that very fe.w, if t
indeed, any of that party, will be elevated!
to the Peerage. The London Courier;
speaks of the necessity of these new crea- >
tions, "to represent (he regeneration of I
France in her highest legislative Cham- '
bi ts.” Ifib' se “regenerations” are to come !
round so frequently, there will be no more c
siabid y in the government of Louis Phil- <
lippe, than in the mobs cl the fauxbourgß. '
A French paper asserts that a courier !
frrtin Vienna has brought to the Austrian:'
Ambas*a i 'or,- at Paris, come instruc ions’ l
which do not much agree with the
of disat Dting. Mett' i nich, it is said, dr-i<
mauds a precise explanation with regard to j I
tlie expedition which appeals as mysteriousjt
a> V>enna as at Pari*. I
The Moniteuv contains the official pro
mnlgt'ion of the law author!?, ug the estab
|ivhin>,nt of G ivernmcnt bonding warehouses s
in the interior, and on ti e frontiers of the (
kingdom. The Monit ur also contains a I
rep rt to the King, by the Minis’er of Ma- s
line, on some alterations to be made in the <
details of the organization and general ad- '
ministration of the fleet and army. This re i
port is s ated by the Moniteur to be follow
ed by an Odonnance in £4B articles enaci 1
ing ihe various provisions recommended I
by it. 1
The Count de Rivere and 'he B run de
M aistre have boen airested, both of them, *
as it is said being implicated in the plot of 1
2d of February. *
It is sa'cd that the ministers were in |
much trouble, in regard to that conspiracy, *
as it is believed a 1 uge portion of the pic <
sen' officers were more nr less concerned t
in it. •
M tlosimond Gauthier dc Savignac, a j
met chant at Caen, on being summoned be- '
for*' *lu Counsel ol I) scplitu ol the Nation- t
at tiua d for refusing to do doty, said in his 1
dcti nee ll.at he cou d not recognis* tin* Go ■
vernment oi July, and 'hat 'There was no I
safety for France except in the re urn of 1
the elder branch of tin* Bonbons; tint if
(he whi e. standard re appealed, he would
immediately fly to its defence ’ For thesei I
expressions he has been tried by the Assizes
et Calvados. On being cal ed on for his de- I
fence, he was proceeding to maintain the 1
same sen tin nts with s ill greater violence,
when he was stopped by the Court. He
was found gnti.y, and sentenced to three 1
months impnsonment, a fine ol 3001. and J
he costs, i
La Gnzetta de Lyon (a journal advocat
ing the cause ol the late dyn sty) apologi-ed
to i ’s readers for 'he intenuption in i's Pa
risian correspondence, by informit g them
'hat its correspo dent was M. Albert de
Berthier the individual whose violent driv
mg of his cabriolet endangered the life of
the Ring, & who still remains in the custo
dy of the police
From tlia London Timei Co'respondent.
Pauis M arch 4.
Letters frem Spain ol he 25 h ult. con
firm h • departure of the R>y 1 Guatds fn mj
Madrid to (he Ironiiers of P rtugal, and,
s'ate hit the greatest ac ivity eigns in ihe!
War Department; Troops are daily con
en'ra'i g on iheti rente f natters of Es
ratnadura, where an amiy of at least 25,000
o 30 000 men will be‘ready to enter at a
moine ’s rjoice a« soon as the dis mb, kr
iion "f Don F.dn* ia announced, as Fer
dinand, noiwitlistNiidi'ig the to the
contrary, i> de'ei mined to support Den
Miguel, The army may be called one of
bservaito" ; but 1 think it will prove to be
one ol offence.
i BELGIUM,
King Leopold has es.abMshed a Council
of W r,before which a 1 persons are to be
tried who shall, by means of the press, ex
i ct'e to desenion, or correspondence with
the enemy, or any other crime dangerous to
the State.
The London Courier says a decree to (his
effect, has been signed by Leopold on the
. walls of B !gi;m. It comments thereon
j with seventy.
“ Thus i i this boasted land of liberty, the
■ writer of a newspaper who may happen to
, offend 'he Government or the bigotted priest
. hood who givein ihe Government, may be
called before a Court Martial, computed,
perhaps, of low military adventurers, and
, eceive sen'.cnce cf banishment, or dea h,
..whilst the tribnials recognized by the Con
t slitution for the trial of offences of the Press,
t look on in terror aod amazement. And it
j is the uncle of the future Queen of England
who has the weakness—we will not use a
s l onger word, for Leopold is incapable of
( any deliberate act ol tyranny—to put his
name to such a decree of infamy, Wehave
supported the Belgians in their just de
mands, but we little imagined lint the re
[ suit would be the sway cf a low tyrannical
priesthood, with,a Protestant Sovereign as
their instrument, If the Belgians under
«is'd liberty so little ns to submit to this,
! they de»e ve all that bigotry Ik tyranny can
■ imp s' upon them.”
'I G ea'alarm prevailed at Brussels, lest
the Cholera should make its appearance in
that Capital. A variety of precautionary '
measures had been adapted. <
HOLLAND.
Dutch pspers are to the Sd of March.
There is no news. The Dutch King has I
not yet consented to (he articles of pacifica- i
tiou with Belgium,
SPAIN AND PORTUGAL.
A Loudon paper of the 6th ult. says;
The representation of the English Ambas
sador, and of the French Charge d’Attaires
at Modi id, have it is believed induced toe
|Span Government to suspend their mili
tary preparations in aid of Don Miguel. It
Wifi, however, station an army of observa
tion on the frontiers.
EG VP HAN EXPEDITION.
By ihe U'est accounts it appears that St,
Jean d’Acre had not yet fallen—that Ibra
him had placed all his hopes up b a raiue
which was soon to be sprung—that hia army
had suffered great privations and several
chips oblig d to return in a damaged state
to Alexandria; but the respectful and sub
missive manner it, which the Turkish Envoy 1
had been received at the Egyptian camp,
refuted the reports which had been circulat
ed of Mehemed Ali having actually issued a (
declaration of independence, aod formally i
thrown off the yoke of the Porte. Letters!
from Leghorn cor fi m this statement, and <
add that the troops were much discouraged
by their want of success.
GREECE.
London, March 2. We were able to i
s ale, sometime ago, exclusively, that the (
crown of Greece has been off red by Great <
Britain, Fiance, & Russia, to Prince 0;ho,
second son of the King of Bavaria, and we <
observed substqaciuly that before the offer t
was made the Greek Conference wore a 1
ware that it would not be rejected. 1
We now announce, that official accounts
of ihe acceptance of the Crown by the
King of Bavaria, in the name on behalf of
Ins son, have reached London. i
The three Great Powers which have been I
engaged in this Treaty with the concurrence I
of Austria and Prussia will immediately i
take steps to enable the King of Greece to
provide an efficient military estab ishment, i
and meet the other demands'of expenditure
consequent upon his assumption of the sove- -
reign authority.
A Council ol Regency will be named to
govern the Kingdom during the minority
of the King, and especial care will be taken
not to appoint any person upon the Coun
cil who would be obnoxious to the Greek
Nation™Cupodistrias, the brother of the i
la e President, cannot, of course, be a mem
ber ol the Regency. f Courier. . (
I PALY.
On the 2f.st Febiuary a Freeh ship cf the
line, with two Irigatea, entered the port of 1
Ancona, having onboard forces to the num
b-r of 1 lOu men. The Papal troops retir
ed within the fortress.
1 Cardinal Albani issued an edict on ihe
20ih February, at B dogna, called the
‘Bloody Edict/ By its provisions, the pro
ject of a conspiracy of any king against the
government is declared punishable with
deaih. The authors and prin'ers of any
writings deemed seditious, are to be con
demned to the gillies fur life ; and equally
severe penalties are decreed in proportion
for minor offences. All secret societies are
dccloied to be considered as associations
in a state of rebellion. The same. Bologna
advices states, that with the exception of a
few persons attached to the Emperor, and
some few individuals of Metiernich, all so
ciety save Bolognese, have quilted the Aus
trians.
PO'TSt KIPT.
; ONE DAY LATER FROM ENGLAND.
Auer one ..’clock we received die Boston
papers of yes erday. The ship Lion, from
Liverpool, arrived on Monday, having sail
ed on the 9 h ol March, and brought intel
ligence one day later than ihe Sheffield,
Cholera. — There were 45 new cases of
■ Cho era in London, on the 6;h March, 161
i deaths. 17 recoveries, and 92 remaining j
f Total number of cases, in London,.(includ
i ing 30 from other places than the parishes
(specified) 343 ; deaths, 134 The returns
'at the Hi-aith Office, on the 7 h„frora the
I North Country, give 26 new cases, (’he
: largest number, 11, being at Paisley,! 11
■ deaihs, 7 recoveries, and 97 remaining
t Whole number of cases in other places,
) according io the latest returns. 5,891 ;J
deaths, 1 768. The excitement in relation
) to the disease was subsiding ; and busin ss
; was gradually reviving.
>| In answer to an inquiry respecting the
(landing of French troops in Italy, made in
i the House of Commons March 7, Lord Pal
) merstou said that so far as the g rvernment'
■ was informed, he saw no reason to appre-l
; hend that the circumstances which led toj
, the advance of the Austrian-and French
i troops into the papa! territories, might not
, be adjusted without any in'erruption ol
the peace of Europe. The London Coutier
• says ;
t •' We are happy to hear from a source
1 to which we attach great credit, that the
i Austrian C binet is peifecly agreed with 1
I that of France as to the unfitness of the
* Papal Government, ns it now exists, and
* that very important modifications, favora
ble to the interest of the inhabitants of the
Papal Slates, will be insisted upon,”
I A letter from the Hague, written by a
? gentleman who is perfectly acquainted with
• the objects of Count Orloff’s mission, and
, with the state of the neg uiations, savs
i ' There will be no ratification of the Trea
ty of the Conference, but there will be no
( war ’ This, says the Courier, fully accords
i! with the views which we have expressed.
That there will be new negotiations, it, m
deoil, pretty certain.”
Lokdon, March 8.
Considerable curiosity and interest arc
felt with respect in the expedition and plain?
of Don Pedro. The anticipated attempt
upon Madeira is variously estimated. At
vara da Costa, the Governor, is represent
' d as a good oificer, am) a man of resolu
lion, having at his command two battalions
of militia tis 2500 men each, and 700 regu
lars. Besides these, an auxiliaiy torce of
1400 men was despatched to his aid horn
Lisbon 5 but the transports containing 100 C
of this force put back on making uni some
vessels at sea, which were taken lor the
squadicnot Don Pedro ; the remaining four
hundred men have made good their passage.
As Madeira is inaccessible, except by
means of an underotandiog within the isl
and, the event of the invasion is evidently
dependent on the fidelity of the militia to
the existing order us things. The friends
of Don Pedro in the city show great confi
dence, and even resources. Letters from
Dover mention the purchase at auction, in
that port, by his London agent, of the Ster
rett, an American schooner, which had run
on shore, and been greatly damaged. She
is described as Baltimore built, and a real
clipper, capable of sailing in the wind’s eye.
Morning Herald.
Dr. Bramston, Catholic Bishop of Lon
don, in consequence of the Cholera, ha*
issued orders that for iha future none of
the Irish Catholics shall hold any wakes
over departed friends.
A great number of petitions from all -
quarters, have been presented to Parlia
ment, praying lor a bill to regulate the hours
of labor and employment of children in
Factories.
twelve day Plater from Europe.
By arrivals at New Yo.k English dates
to the 20'h ult. and French dates to the 17th,
have been received We compile the fol
lowirg articles of intelligence from the Jour
nal of Commerce :
The political slate of Europe is becoming
every day more unsettled.
. The Cholera continues its ravages in Lon
don. The nuafter of new cases from the
Blh to the 191 h, eleven days, was 585, and
of deaths 266 Whole number of case*
944 ; deaths 500. Consequently more than
half the cases have proved fatal.
In other parts of the country —Total in
places wheie the disease still continues, ca
ses 2342—deaths 841. In places where
(he Cholera has cca-ed, 4136—death- 1184
Grand total, case* 6468—deaths 2025.
The R< form Bdl had not yet passed the
House if Commons, bu. was expected to
be got through on the following day, thu
twentieth.
London, March 19.—The foreign in
telligence received last night through the
usual channels continues to be unsatisfactory
and inconclusive upon those leaning ques
tions of engrossing interest which agitate
the Continent at the present moment. Upon
that of Italy in particular, which, of all the
others, perhaps concentrates the greatest
share of attention.
London, March 16,—The I tilers from
St. Michael’s arc dated 3d inol. Don Pedro
still remained at the island, and was giving
grand cnlertainmen's to (he inhabitants,
who received, him with the liveliest de
monstrations of loyalty, and with great re
joicings. The squadron was expected to
sail about the 9vh instant for Teiceira, and
afterwards to re urn to St. Michael’s which
is to be the grand rendezvous; and when
(he second division of tin- squadron arrived
from Bellesle the direct attack upon Portugal
was expected immediately to take place.
London, MarchiO,—- , A mail from Lisbon
.has arrived, with letters of the 3d instant.
An expedition, consisting of a b ig of war
aci rvette, with nine other vessels, with
about I 200 troops on board, had sailed from
; the Tagus, as was supposed, for the des ina
jtion ot Madeira. This scale of preparation
I had caused no small speculation, as it was
conceived to be beyond the resources cf
Miguel, unless supported by foreign assist
ance. Don Pedro’s manifesto is stated to
have been in extensive circulation (hrough
ou' Lisbon, notwithstanding that to be pos
sessed ufa copy cf it was denounced as high
treason. The troops had ample opportunity
of perusing it, as it was placaded conspicu
ously in all the principal streets of Lisbon.
London, March 19.—Advices from .Bor
-1 deaux have reached that city that the ships
La Suzanne and Lo Bordelais have been
! chartered there fur Don Pedro, and that
seamen are hired at that place and sent to
(La Rochelle, from whence an armament it
• titling out at Terceira, Nine merchantmen
I were to sail on the 10th or 12'.h lust, to
'join the expedition ot Terceira.
Paris, March 16 —Yesterday (here was
a conicrence ol two hours of the Ambassa
i dors cf Austria, Prus-ia, and. England, at
' the residence of the President of the Coun
cil, at which Count S'-bosi'iani was present.
! The health ot Count Pj/zd di Bargo would
''not permit him to be there ; but the Count
> de M oden appeared as his representative.
' The occupation ot Anona, and the mission
1 ■ of Couut O loir, are said to have be 1 i
• jsubjects of this conference. M. 1,. 1
sjenski has not returned from the Hague
j Itisaffiimed that a military iu,t-r ,(
i|and officers have just set out for Ar
i which seems to be at variance with t
I parts ot die evacuation which have be
■ culated,
London, March 17.—An extraordinary
1 courier arrived yesterday morning, withdes
i paiches direct from St. Pelersuurg, which.
• are aod said to be of the highest importance-