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fered over and over again, their friendship to her. Eastern Europe hat nu need to attack tier, and )? wholly occupied in maiotal, in*; a doaiea'io stitu*, without thinking of foic;?,n invasions. The mag? nificent parade of a! ips of war and their concom? itant belligerent fetes, are simply a farce, or rattier ?tragedy?a shocking waste of the means of Itfe, and a disgraceful sequence to the Peace Cong-ess Which was held at Paria, and which the ?jvern ment pretended to uohold. Aaasp?cia:en of tue eloquence expended and approved on the occa? sion of the Presidential visit to Cherboorg.taka the following address of the Mayor to L. N. Koni parte: . "M. Lt PremUnt: On a recent occasion you made use of this language: ' I do not travel for the purpose of imposing extraordinary ??????? on the (owns I vUit, but to inform myselfof their Wishes and want..' The.e words etnaua mg from a noble heart, ought to be warmly welcomed by us. Cherbourg more than any other town, merits that its wants should be studied a?d taken into consideration. Here it is not the interests of the town that are in question; tbey are those essentially National. Tne Empe? ror whose eyes the importance of our inaratima in? terests could not escape, conceived and undertook the immense works you are oome to visit. The Breakwater, a real mountain, brought into the midst of our roadstead to break the force of our waves ; these vast basins, dug out by the hand of man from the solid rock; these warehouses; .his arsenal, in course of execution, all here is as pro? digious as the genius to which so many wonders are due. Napoleon wished to make Cherbourg the maratime bulwark of Prance. To pursue with ardor the work wbioh he gloriously inaugurated is, allow me to tell jon, the scquitta! of a dent imposed on the Chief of the State, the inheritor of his name. The difficulties of the times have reducedour works und stopped the excavation of our back basin, per? fectly indispensable for a naval port Now our workmen are afflicted periodioally with a cessation of employment. To resume the work is not only to give new life to our population, it is to increase the grandeur of the country. The roadstead of Cherbourg so sure a shelter, is perhaps called upon one day to play the principal part in our mar a time destinies, and nevertheless it has been for long time disinherited of everything that constitutes the vital force of a maratime port. May wo be allowed to hope, that hercefbrth some of our large vessels may constantly display thoir glorious flags in our roads. There is also another element of power to which you will, I hope, allow me to ca>l your earn? est attention and solicitude. The Railroad to Cherbourg was a question decided on some yearn ?ince. Everything tends to ainouuce an ap? proaching execution of it, which canoot long be delayed. To protect a port which has rost ao many million*; and which, like an advanced post, Would be the first point of attach, is a necesaity Which cannot escape your patriotism nor that of the National Assembly. You will observe, M.lo Prosidont, that what we ask for is nothing more than the execution of the lofty ideas of the Empe? ror, and the mean* of increasing the power and glory of France. Thus blending in ono idea, both ?ur reminisceiises and our hopes, we beg you to ?ccopt the following toast: ''To the memory of the Emperor Napoleon?To the health of the Pre? sident of the Ropublie " The following is a description of the banquet room : The roof and sides were hung with flags of all nations and of every color; escutchoons em fclomatic of naval n flair* and surrounded with ever? greens were placed at certain distances, and be? tween them were star* formed of naked sabres, pistols and tomahawks. Three long tables were raid down the length of the room, and across the platform was ereoted a platform, on which was placed a semicircular table for the President and those whom he invited to meet him. in the hollow in front of the table were placed evergreens, and on either side a small brass six-pounder, as if to keep the guests at the long tables in order. Over the head of the President was a scroll with the Words " Au President de la Rppublique," beneath Which was placed a bust of the Emperor, and on either sido a sun formed of naked sabres with a brass faoe In the center, and the rajs formed of ramrods. At the entrance of the dining room a double staircase had been creeted, at the head of Whioh was a triumphal arch, tbe base formed of two cannon placed on end, and the upper part of pistols aDdsabres When it Is remembered that the revolution of February grow out <>f the stot m of industrial ideas, tbe reader will hardly recog? nize in this terrible catalogue of death dealer*, the proper place to roceive the President spring? ing from all at event. Not satisfied with having one debris of Monarchy in the person of L. N. Bonaparte, Qirardih of the J'rcsse is busy nominating the Prince de Joiuvllle for bis successor. The old quarrel of the Nation ale and the Prette is burning afresh : the Nationale denying ?irar?in's Republicanism, and he giving in two numbers some thirteen columns ef explana? tions snd policy. The votes of 61 Councils-General out of 84 are known on the question of revising the Constitu? tion. Forty-four are in favor of it, 7 have re? jected propositions for a revision, 10 have refused to vote. A grand banquet is spoken of, to take place on the return of tho Presideut to Paris. The Winter Gordon, a fairy spot, is the chosen place. H.OOO guests to grace it. Of course the object is political. The Democratic press are all against the project of revising tho CoostituSion. The following is the oondouaed argument against tk? project: Tho clear, incontestable fact is, that if a Constituent As? sembly is oonvoked, it will be elected under the system of the restricted suffrage. Who, in fact, is to vote tho revision 7 Tho prosent Assembly.? Why will it vote the revision? To overturn and destroy tho Ropublie. How, then, can it bo ima? gined that the Aasembly should go and reestablish universal suffrage expressly to revise the Consti? tution ? It opposes every day the progress of So? cialism, which is pursuing its invasion , it declares loudly that the wave is mounting visibly notwith? standing the barriers raised by it with so much care; ii knows that Universal Suffrage would choose Socialist Republican constituents, who Would roviso the Constitution in a Demiocratic sense, and would reestablish I niverial Suffrage. In theatricals we have a new piece at the Varietloa, by Royer and Vayez, turning on tho fears and scrapes of a chorister at St. Sulpice, who will turn a panny by singing at tho opera? which is against rule. The idea is taken from tho Abbo Galart. At the Montanster is a now trifle, La fille bien gardeo. A chasseur, (a coach servant wearing a magnitioent cooked hat and feather, and splendid livery,) is caught along with the chamber? maid in making use of the toilette essences of his mistress. A child obsorves them, and promises to tell mamma, and wiil only keep the secret on re? ceiving a promise to go to the Mobile- the famous bsll garden. Cecile, tbe child is l?st in the crowd, sind tho trouble of the chasseau thereupon is very amusing. A 'phenomenon' played the child: no rarity hero, where children have a theater and act with precocious French skLM. Anew piece by 8cribe for the Francais is promised. Wreaths of puffs encircle its atnouncement. Anew composer at Milan is vastly praised. At the Hippradome an ass was taken up in a baloon?Poitevin as Sanoho Pjfeza, astride of him, and Don Uuixotte above. Wae Don was most unchivalrously frightened. Arabs of the desert, are peforming at the Cirque. Their motions combine the sinuousness of the eer Sent with the rapid : .tterings of the humming ird. They are transcendent in their way of ac? tivity. They are spare and wiry, with delicate hands and feet One of them, the hercules, stands ander Sve others piled on him. Under the law of July last defining Asso ciations, som-9 workmen are enleavoring to resolve the pro? blem of the age, by cooperation?with what success remains to bs seen. No gauge of success is to be taken from tho ditfcaities which stupid op position throws in trie way of this clearest of rights and duties An a*sociatfor,ist hat seller, in the Pwessje Pancrarai, told mo that tho obstacles to success are snorraoas: master workmen ottering ail in their power. While New York is kept ap? prised of tbe ssavciatitji-iiat attempts of Paris, and of tbe wecJe spirit of h*r social and political move men's, the Parisians art* gloriously iarnorsnt of tbe Labor end Land nuvvemeot* of Near Vorig. When the whole schemes of Protective docret'es, Asso? ciations, Ac. shall have b-eo cooipieted io the Carted States, when the old mode of making the -Ti8s>:i the toiling wagest laves of the capitalists shall have been superseded, we should sot ba sur? prised to Snd it grwely pat forth io tbe Freooh Assembly by the Cabinet Ministers, that sacs ideas are Utopian. The Continent! I papsra are absolutely destitute ?fintierest. The Ee^llsh are principally oooupled with dlaxoMlons en tho Committee of Inquiry re cpwttitg the redtviioB of Ambassadorial and Oon jrtla* sppeintments. Lord Palmejrstoa twaddled svr*y ,n roaponso to ail the questions pot?tha s^riewnt rsf wb? he ?airt was that no expanse was Hfe of WArjettott, I oommend to went notice tteicvaerkr of the 7(W* on that head. They sjr* .r.'t?l The Committee thoueht diffir?ntly from Lord Palmerston, and recommended X_5000 es tbe maximum Ambassadorial .alary, with OtO era in proportion. Con.ular agentsi with extraor <)<! ?.>? co-irimii'sions nreal sufficient fortbo present ? ?piomecy of Great Britain Lord Normrtnby, at Paris rtc'ivei 650,000 a year and a hotel; the capital of a country wnoie< -jmrnerce with Engla-d is r ot cmparab'e to that of the Unted rUnter. And similar monstrous acti of sheer plunder per vade the English diplomatic sy6?em. Xeverth? I.?s^ the recent Democratic gathering in Scotland, is represented as a failure?2 000 instead of 20,000, a. promised, being present If such be the apathy Of tbe people, they must expect to ba swindled. Inn tic-.ng the recent hustlinp and caitigatiag Haynau got from the men of Barclay Je Perkins's Brewery. London, it would bo weil to ittte that the Time* publishes a list of those who suffered j:tr contra by Huogarim hands. Taken at the worst, it does not defend Haynau Ha stripped Hungarian ladies and scourged them, and hanged prisoners in cold bVod. For such an incarnatioe of red-banded ruffianism to obtrude himself upon the people of England, while Europe echoes with his (?rimes, is to Insult public opinion. If itoaldb.i understood that all su^h b-utes, Nicholas of Russia included, would be hanged the instant they set f ot out of their own territories, it would strike terror to their hearts and unnerve the arms of po liticai headsmen. w. H. P. THREE DAYS LATER FROM EUROPE. ARRIVAL OF THK NIAGARA. Date* from Liverpool t? Sept. 14 ; London, 13; Tarts, Vi. The C nerd steamer Niagara arrived at Jersey Cits jtsterday morning at & o'clock, afterarunof 12 daji 20 hours from Liverpool. This is the first di? rect passage made by the steamers, of which only those destined for Boston will hereafter touch at Halifax. We give the rfetai's of the news from our British and Continental papers. ENGLAND. Tbe Arctic Expedition. The fo'lowing letter ha? been received by the f-'ecretary of the Hudson's Bay Company from Sir John R< ss, giving aa acoount of the progress of his expedition ih search of Sir John Franklin, which railed from 8cotlar.d on toe 23d of May last: " trux Discover v Vessel, Hoi.telnliorg, Jene, 1850. ?'My Dear Sir?I leave thii with tho Danish resident at Holsteinborf, merely to say that we l ave safely arrived here, ftfter a fair passage-. a;id, f-llhough we experienced two heavy ga;es, we sus? tained no damage, while we had ample proof of l oth the Felix and the Mary being excellent sea boats as well as good sailers?in short, they are both everything we could desire. An I do not ox pect that this will reach you till i lotjber, as i. wiii lo by the Danish Government vesiel that leaves this in September, I sha'l not send my accounts, vouobers, iVe. being in hopes that I shall overtake ihe transport Emma Eugenia at Whalefisb Islands, or at least Rome homeward bound vessel that will reach England before that time. My object in coming here was to obtain a Danish interpreter who understands the Esquimaux language, and before 1 oicee this I shall be able to say if 1 have succeeded. We overtook tho Danish Governmant brig Titus, days from Copenhagen, parted with her on the loth of .Juno, and arrived here fjur days before her, although we had ihe Ma:y in tow. " I havo only to add that we are all well and in high epirits, and that I am '?Yours very falthfullv, "A. Barclay, Eta "JOHN R03S, " J'. S.?I have tho pleasure to add that I have succeeded in obtaining a Dane who understands the Esquimaux language, and having now made nil the preparations necessary for our arduous un? dertaking, we are getting under weigh. 1 intend first to try to get across at once, and if I fail In that, to follow tho uuual course up tho east side of Baf? fin's Hay." Arrival of 81. Lamartine Intelligence has just reached us of the arrival of M. Lamartine, tho distinguished Fronch orator, \ oet and statesman. He arrived in London this morning (Friday), and has taken up his residence in tho neighborhood of Hjde Park. We under? stand that M. Lamartino's presence in London is ( n a mission connected with the colonization of his estate in Smyrna, and that it is his wish during his ftay to maintain strict privacy. I Standard of b roedom. IRELAND. iMlaceliaBOOUii. The rent at the meeiing of the Rapeal Associa? tion on Monday was ?3 and a few odd shillings. On Sunday about live hundred men assbmbled on the lands of Turrysknne, within oue rnile of Arningh. and there cut down eight acres of oa^s, and carried them away, without any one to ob? struct them. The National Bynod at Thurles have decided upon establishing a Roman Catholic University in Ireland, in opposition to tho Government and Pro testant establishment. Every ecclesiastic |in Ire land will be called upon to pay an annual tax of two per cent, on his incomo for its support; and a committee has been already named for carrying iho project into effect. Tho Archbishop and Dr. Cantwell for Ulster; the Ar:hbishop and Dr. Derry for Connaugbt; tho Archbi.hop and Dr. Healey for Leinster; the Archbishop and Dr. Foran for Muister. These prelates are to associate with themselves as many priests, and a similar number of Isymen are to be associated with both, to form a provisional committee for carrying tho project into effect. Dr. Cantwell, it is said, commences by a subscription of XI 1,000. A new proposition has been started in connec? tion with the projeot for a direct steam cotutnuBi cation between Ireland and America. Mr. M'Far lane, one of the speakers, at a meeting in St. John's, N B. suggested that a profit might be made by bringing the ordinary class of Irish emigrants in si earn vessels from Gal way, and he entered into calculations to show the correctness of his speculation. A vessel for such a service, affording accommodation to 350 passengers, might be con? structed, according to his estimate, at a cost of ?20,000; and his plan contemplates twenty-four voyages to bo made iu the year, thus allotting to each steamer, chartered for this purpose, fi.OOO emigrants. So well satisfied is Mr. M'Farlane that it would be a paying line, that he declared his readiness to embark all the capital of which he is master in the venture , ar.d his statements were receited with marked tokens of approval and con? currence by the whole assembly. FRANCE. Revision ol tbe Constitution. The decisions of the Councils general, so far as I known, have been in tbe great majority favorable ; to the revision of the constitution. The expression : of this desire has not been accompanied, except In . one or two rare instances, by a recommendation to prolong tbe powers cf the President. Generally 1 these provincial assemblies have expressed their ! confidence in the wisdom and firmness of the Na ? tional Assembly to effect the necessary reforms in : the way least likely to d.sturb the country. Seventy-five Councils-general have declared themselves on the subject of the revision of the Constitution. Tbe following have pronouacod in favor of the revision;?Ain, Aisne-, Alpes (Basses,) ArdS' he, Ariege, Aube, Aveyron, Calvados, Cha rente, Charente Interieure, Che-, Correze, Corse, Cotes d'Or, Cotes du Nord. Creusa, Dordogne, Doubs, Drome, Eure, Gers, Gironde, Indre, Indre et-Loire. Landes, Loiret, Loir-et-Cner, Lot Maine et-Loire, Marne, Ha ' ?? Mayenne, Meurthe, Wense, Nord, Oiie, Pas de-Calaii, Pay de D.>me. Pyrenees (Basses,) Pyrenees (HautesJ Pyrenees Orientales, Rhone, Saose (Haute), 8arthe, Seine Inferieore, Saine-et Marne. Seice-et Oise, Sevres ?Deux,; Tani-et Garonne, Vience ? Haute.; The following have rejected the revision; Her ault, Haute Loire, L. zere, Morbihan, ?rne, Haut Rhin, Tarn, Vanf-luse, Vendr-e, Jure The following have abstained.- AHier, Haute Alpes, Boucbesdu 11 hone. Eure et-Loir, Flnisterre, [fle et VUsJne, Lofre, f.n're In'erieure, Uaone-et tf Ire.Bomme. Var, V'oeges,Let et-Garonne, Cantal. The decisions of the fotk> wing are sot yet known: Aro'ennes, Gard, Haute Garonne, Isere, Manche, Mose ie, Nieure. Bas Rhin, Vienne, Yonne Hull I'lfihu or Par!*. The lovers of peats* may appeal in vain to the reason bf mackind, if Governments like that of Ftance give their sanction to amusements which have a direct tenderer to season the minds of men to cruelty, and familiarise them with scenes of ?laughter, Tbe Psrisieu correspondent of a motrc pollran extemporary write* as follows .? The bull? fights of Paris, si uded to in your paper of last met k, are rea'Jy to Isfc ;.a .. Tna Frenih paople ha'O already too many opportunities for rousing tlcir ssiigo'-.ary pro-pens ties, and we shouM hare thought that tho present G.vcrr,rnoni would have been the very !s.?t to have a-'tboriied Utah ai amusement It is quite certa'n that the exhibition of ?avage bul's, baited to madr ess, aod c >: teudiog w ith experienced " ma'adore*.'1 to crowd* of mtu and women, and children, must be productive of serious injury. Bat however tbia may be, the eu thoriaation baa beon given by tho Minuter of the Interior and tbe polico. The p'ace selected for the erection ofabull-ri g is an open space in the Champa Eljse?s, naar the Carre Maugny and the Roil-Pout Tne parsons who have jutt made arraugeme.-.ts with Lieut. Gale for balloon cscents at Boidesux, Bayonoe, and Madrid It ig said that everytnintr will be coa ' ducted on tbe largest sfRl*, and quite in tue Span I iah style. All the best Spanish bu'l Outers srill I come to Paris, and everything will be dooe to make the thing grand and attractive. Precisely because the thing is inhuman, painful ncd disagreeable, it will attrac, unleaa indeed, in the m*auti.oe tho GovernmentofLouisNapolecn should withdraw tho authorization. There is very little likeiibool of this however, for we hear rumors bf the iotteries and gambling-bouses bf-ins a'lowed o..ce more to prey upon the public. Frascit^ is once more, it is said to open its doors under the guidance of Vor n, o< the Contl?u?onel. What with bu !-6ghta, lotter? ies, and gambling-houses, Paris will cme ra?i ily back to tho moral style of the days of Charts X. when no decent woman could walk in the Palais lloyal of nn evening. _ Louis Phliirpe's Property, A letter from Paris of the 8th, in the Ind/pen dnice'if Brursels, says:?Since Louis Pnilippe * death, tbe journals have been speaking of the for? tune which be has left, and it ia. been even said tnat the i?f acy duties would amount to some m'l lionr. I lind tee exaggeration which I suspected in these accounts is greater than I had sappisad. The landed property belonging to the late King contains about 86,u00 hectares (the hectare i3 Dearly 2> English acreBi thus divided : i~> 000 c ltn prised in tbe donation made by the King to his children oh August 7, 1839, and of which he re served to himself the life intereat; 13,000 belonging to tbe King himself: and 28,000 bequeathed to him, foi his life only, by Madame Adelaide, bis sis? ter. The gross revenue of this property, calculated on an average often years, is 2,989,000f. Since 13af, it has been smaller, and for 1851, will not, it is supposed, aniount to more than :i,:'00,000f. But from all this it is necessary to deduct the expenses of taxes, iisurscce. management, agency, & >., amounting to 1 fl 11,000/. There therefore remains a revenue of 2,378,000f, wbiob at 3 per eent., re? presents a capital of nearly 79 millions. Jn this valuation I do Dot comprise noo produc? tive property, such as chateaux, pariis r,nd gar dens, which, it must ha admitted, are not without importance. For instance, the Park of Monceaux, in the Faubourg Roulo, cloae to Paris, is altogether unproductive, and contains 19 hectares, worth say i!,000,000f ; a'so the Park of Neuilly, containing nearly 188 hectares, gives no revenue, yet, if soM in lots, it would give at least 4,000,000f. I ought to mention that 1 have included in this statement tho property of tha Duko d'Aumaln's diroain, of v?hich the Uueen Ma'ie-Amalie has the life us*, and which gives about 137,000? a year, [n line, to be exect, 1 ought not to pass over in silence the Luoveable property of the King, consisting of mat? ters held in common by him and Madame Adelaide, arising f/om canal shares and tontines, which, with? out any exaggeration, mutt be worth 325,000f. a year; also Government secur.ties, belonging to Louis Philippe himself, amounting to 100,000f a year, including .'iO.OOOf. a year in the Five perCents, lor the Chapels of Dreux and Nanilly. Hut this sit? uation, so brilliant in appearance, is considerably diminished by tbe enormous debts contracted al? most exclusively for tho works undertaken at Ver i ailles and in the lloyal palaces. Tne names of the f xecutors of Louis Pi ilippe ere now known; they are MM. do Moutalivet, Dup:n, Sen., da Mont morency, Laplagne, Harris and Scribe, formerly edvocate at the Court of Cafsation." Miscellaneous* Dr. Cbaumel, tho confidential physician of tho Orleans family has received no express from Brus? sels, summoning him to repair with all dispatch to ihe bedside of the Queen o' the Belgians, whoso illness appears to be of a much more serious nature than was at first supposed. _ . The 'Uor?eaux papers brinp this morning au ap? palling account of the fatal terruinai.ion of Liwut. llale'e bnllor.n ascent, on horseback, from Iba Hip? podrome of Vincennes, in the neighborhood of the city, on Bandsy, Sept Lieut. Galo bad succeed? ed in reaching tt e ground with his pony, when the people who came to arsist him, miaunderstasding his directions, after the pony was released, hi go the ropes. The unfortunate aeronant, linnging on by his hands to a rope, was Instantly caught u? into the air with the balloon, which continued as cendiog for upward* of a mile. The next day a corpae was discovered in tho direction which the balloon had taken, which wss identiiied au shtt of Lieut. Gale. ITALY. Ths Difficulty between Koine it'id Sardlaiu To hin, Saturday, Sept. 7, 185(1. To Ike Kditor of The Trib<tne : I have no news to give you with regard to the ! question pending between Rome and this Court, ; 1 iure is, howover, an abundance of rumor?. One ol these, and perhaps the truest, is that Sardinia ; wiil sfree to pas* a law to prevent atttchs upon '< the Church in the public pres.*, in consideration of Which Rome Will agree to a now Concordat, con? taining the ersecce of the Siccarii law A condi? tion said to be insisted on by the Holy Soe, prior to all further negotiation, is the dismissal of Count Sie cardi from the Ministry. Tois tho King, who is awfully anxious for quiet, would no doubt agree to, but it would involve tho dissolution of the entire Cabinet, which is not so easy a thing. There is n0 doubt that some sort of a compromise will be agreed on; and 1 incline to believe that if Sariiaia r ad tbe advantage at the beginning of tbe difficulty. Home will have it at the end Brsg is a good dog but Boldfast is a better. Yours, falibfully, M. c. Kngllab Papers Excluded from Rome. The Roman Post-Office has recommenced iti rigorous exclusion of such foreign newspspers as express opinions unfavorable to tie Papal Court, or to any of the branches of administration. All the Democratic press of Euglani. France, and i Tuseany has been iong since prohibited ; but though the Ii'ffifs, Galignam and the Journal des Deba's \ have nominally free entrance, not a day passes but one or other is excluded. Remonstrances are made in vain, and even now the journals addressed | to resident diplomatists, to whom some courtsay was hitherto shown, are devoted to the same ex \ tremity. miscellaneous. The official Journal of the Two Sicilies publishes ; a royal decree, daclsring that the punishment cf : death will be incurred by any violation of the san 1 itary cordon established along toe coast, or in ; other parts tf the Kingdom. Ihe Stotuio, of Florence, of the 3d inst. quotes a i letter from Naples, stating that four General? and a great number of officers of the armv had been : dismissed tbe service, and tbat four Commissaries of Police of that Capital had been superseded in i their offices. A letter from Palermo states that the trial of the sixteen political offenders accused before the Qrim ? inal Court had concluded by the acquittal of thir? teen, the condemnation to the hoiks of one, and to death of two. A very remarkable engineering blander has caused the entire destruction of a dry dock built near the Molo of Naples, at an outlay of some i i.30,0Co. Yesterday tbe whole fabric fell in from i the pressure of water, fortunately when no wirk : men were on the works. The blame is attributed to Prince lschitella, the Minister of War. It ap ! pears the KiDg had teen warned by some Nea i politan engineers that the walls were too slight; . and for some time pas: the worka were pronouncsd j as unsafe by more than one Engli*h gentleman, ! whose professional knowledge at once discovered I tbe error. Had the accident taken place a shirt time earlier than it did, hundreds of lives would I have beeu lost. DEMMARK ABD THE DUCHIES. Latest froan the Seat of War? Coi res pond etc e of tbe Dally New* Duvenstedt, Sept. 3. The troops quarterod in the populous village of Duvenstedt, about five miles from Rendsburg, were roused from their usual inactivity by the sadden arrival this morning, at 9 o'clock, of orders for tbam to advance into their respective positions. Great was the hustle and burying to and fro in the open place?, in which previously hardly an inhabitant bad been visible. The Sabbath is. ftonerally ?peski; p, bifib'y rfipcctc.', and no kind of fiaM la ' torts unnertaaer. Thi soi.iie-, hnwevor, in war co Babbaib, and hit sudden movement* speedily brought life and nation into the otherwise \ ei'.er.i v?Isep In a very lew minutes thn ar'iilery hid pnt tJ, ? mounted, and wa? on the toad to itt position to the ri. i i and left of the mill at Steudten, which lies on tl e Sorge-brook, and hns baenconvene i*cto a per fi c. fort iince tbe Dtnes succeeded in crossing the I brook exectiy a month ago The. solo answer re ct-tved to rIi inquiries was. that the Dan*s were in Great Breckeudorf, a village about four miles and a hall to t! e northof the mill at Stendten. PAt-o!s wereftr.tcu; in ail directions on both sides of the Dutten hi is, iliw range of dawns which run in a rue northerly direction from Duvenstedt to Bick? endorf, ai d with slight intervale to the Dtnne eerk ' ht Schleswig. The patr-la advanced some dis? tal ce on both sides without meeting tho enemy. Presently, however, fJanith patrols ware seen to mount the oopoa'te hillocks, and were speedily followed by dense bodies of infantry and cavalry, until whole columns were seen to halt in several places. Meanwhile, several companies of rifle* : men and iafaLtry, together with a detach-nent of cav?lr} a; d half a battery of three pounders, had bt-en thrown across the Sorge, on the western \ tide of tbe Dutten-hilis. Similar measures had be<n taken on tbe eastern side. These were or? dered to advance. The statF of the etant garde, with its gallant commander, Colonel Geriiardt, nlro arivanced,in order to reconnoitre and endea? vor to discover the designs of the Danes. While doing so a squadron of cavalry, with four : twelve plunders, was seen to take up its position i some fifteen or sixteen hundred ysrds in advance. The two three pounders were at once ordered up, j and cemmandtd to open a lire on the hostile cav? alry and artillery. Two shots had been fired from ' them when the enemy, for the first time, showed : isigES of life. The twelve-pounders on the hill ; sent in a few shrapnels among the staff, with tol ! erably good aim, without, however, inflicting any : other loss than that of one horse. The firing from . the Danish oaitery soon became too heavy for the i troops, supported only by two three pounders, and I orders were given to retreat elowly upon the pc ; sition at the 8ttn??ten mill Tbe retreat had already commenced, when the '. Danish troops were suddenly observed to com 1 mence a similar retrograde movement, without any apparent cause. Smart musketry firing on the j right, however, soon dispelled ail doubts, and or ; dors were instantly given to advance. The ad? vance wps madr as rapidly as possible, and having i reached the end of tho chain of mounds called the : Dutten h?ls, it became clear that the other section j of the avant garde had advanced into Brecken : corf, and had succeeded in driving the Dantts oat cf it. The two corps, wohh together did not saount to more than 1,000 or 1,100 men, thou pro? gressed steadily forward, driving the Danes before ti:cm, withrut the la'ter even attempting to make a stand. In fad, notwithstanding the superior Lumbers?for they bad a force of at least 4,000 Dien on the ground?their retreat was so rapidthat it was moro like a flight than anything else. The j tirailieura who pursued them followed them at full I speed, hut without bringing them to a stand. The firing from smail arms, too,continue at inter? vals in this way until -1 o'clock, when we were within five miles of the town of Schleswig, and we 1 *d the camp on the Dannewe'k and its "ortilica tiocs plainly before us. At this moment orders v-orc given s'owly to retire, but the more advanc e<i of the riflemen were so obstinately bent on pur suing the Dane that they could only with great ?1 Ui, ulty be brought to turn their backs upon him. "i he frrces were much too oisproportionate to haz anl anything further, and the Danes having been rj iven out of Great B eckendorf, nothing further could be gained by sn advance but loss of life. 'ihe object of the Danes in advancing so far to the southward is cot quite clear. Tney either in? tended to forage or to reconnoitre. If the latter, they failed completely, and if the former, they wore too soon repu'sed to enable them to forage with of? fset. Four or liva Danish soldiers wero taken in the course of the day, together with a drummer, v>hose ofbee it will henceforth be to drum the stall (if the arnnt garde to dinner with a Danish march. ?o far as I could learn on the spot, not a single man i n Ibis side was lost or wounded during the whole sffair, though the lirst shot tired by the Danish ar tiilery killed one horse on the spot. The loss to the Danes is unknown, but cannot bo much, since they wore so clever upon their legs in retiring. The Danish Rrc:s soll'ered a severe defeat in the course of the day in the western extremity of the t<*'o ainiies. Early this morning they advanced cut of Friedriebstadt with a whola battalion and four 12-pouoders, with which they attacked tho two companies lying at S'lderstapel. The position oc cuped by the Schleswig Holsteiuers at Siiderstapol i* r most favorable one. The ground shelves grad? ually down toward the chaussee to Friedrichstadt, ?hieb, with good cannon, can be bombarded from Eiideratapel. Unluckily, however, no artillery was ! io tbe immediate neighborhood when the Danes r. iv&t.cid to the attack, and the troops in that posl tioo vere oppoteri to a galling fire af grape, with Ont bring bb.'e to answer it. Neither grape, shrapnels, nor round shot succeed? ed in drawing them out, and the Dints therefore ordered a bayonet attack. This was at once at t -nipte-, bot without success, the Danes being t riven back with ereat loss. A second attack r enting wbh a similar result, the Danes marched r B' in high dudgeon. At S? loratspel six wounded I nd five unhurt Danes were talten; about eighteen rr twenty of the Schleswig Holsteiners were wounded. There does not seem to have been the ? liphtest connection between this movement in the west and that in the north, but they both aerve to keep the people awake and in good ?piri'l ?eltll*K the Unsstlon. Sundry of the so-called powers have determined to settle the difficnity, aed have heid a conference ,t Ifchl in Austria, the resu't of which is as fol? lows : Russia will communicate to tbe Court of Berlin rs disapproval of the line ef policy it h?s hitherto pursued. Peter, Duke of Oldenburgb, will be nom inatad to succeed to tho throne of Denmark. Hoi stein and Laucnburgh will continue to form a part of the Germanic Confederation, llusaia will re > oonce the right cf succession that sho has over a part of Holstein (namely, on Kiel) in the case of the accession of the lino of Aueustenburgh, which would put it in possession of the important port of Kiel. The principal question is in what way to compensate the line of Augustenburgh. meeting or the Schleswig-Holstein Diet. The Lantag, or Legislative Assembly of the Duchies, met at Kiel cn the 9th September, for "the dispatch of public business, which, at the present moment, is of more than ordinary impor- ' tance. M. Bargum was elected President, and Dr. Uhiich Vice-President. The President, after his nomination, retu-ned thanks for the honor con 'erred tn him. His speech was a sharp criticism on the conduct of the German Governments to? ward the Duchies. He complained of tbe policy of i'runia more erpecially,and censured its Govern? ment severely for having appointed Count Eulen berg a Regierung-President (equivalent to a Pre- ; ?ect in France,) as if to reward him for the sap tort he had given to the Danish Government as ? Commissioner in Schleswig. On the other hand, le acknowledged the support they had received from the people of Germany. He exhorted them to sland fast in defense of their rights, and now they were abandoned to resort to every measure of defense - bat they would not make common cause with the party that was opposed to all social . order, and if they fell they would at least have the roBsolation of not having encouraged the policy of the destructive party in the Dachies. A few days more will make known what is to be expected by the people of Schleswig Holstein from this legisla? tive conclave. GER1VL&NY. Revolution by tbe Elector of Hesse-Cassel Great sensation has been created by the news re? ceived that the Elector of Hesse, by the advice of his reactionary Ministers, has declared the whole of his Electorate in a state, of siege and auVjeet to martial law. The proclamation?which was posted on the wails of tbe public places and corners of streets at Cassel, on the night of Sept. 6, between B and 9 o'clock, by the gensdarmes,*#apported by a strotg military detachment, to prevent the.'ormar from being interrupted and insulted by the people ?is worded as follows : We, Frederick William L by the grace of God, ' Elector and Sovereign LanJgrave of Hesse, Ac. i 4c. Tbe breach of tbe constitution committed by the parliament itself, and the Ineuf?ciency of the existing laws to prevent a state of anarchy and confusion, make it imperative on us to take extra oroinary measures in this emergency, and we . have therefore thought proper, after hearing the opinion of our ministers of state, to exercisa the prerogative vested in us by virtue of the 95th i paragraph of the constitution, atd therefor.-; ordaia ' as follows: / j "Tsr ii'-Tbe ?hol? of the territoryof E'eo.to.-al ! Hesse If, till further notioa declared in as'ata of liege, curing which, however, tbe usual p-Wate i'i lercourse ia t,o: to suffer any interruption, and the executioni>f the provisions contained ia the fo.low? ing paragraphs will be confided to a military com mandar in d ie', under whoie ordor.s the standing a'tny, as well aa burther guard of the different communes, and the whole of the civil authorities (with the exception of the Courts of justice) are placed. " Par. 2. The Commander ia-Chiet and hia sub alitute are especially entrusted with the adminis? tration of the superior police of the State. ?' Par. 3. Ad public meetings of tho people are prohibited, snd meetings of clubs and unions can only take place with tte consent of the local mili? tary authorities, and to be given in writing. " Par. i. No newspapers of a political tendency can be publiahed without the consent of our Minis? ter of the Interior. At least one hour before tne publication a copy of each impression of all polit ? cal newspapers most be sent to the local military c< mniandsnt, or the person he may appoint in his steerl fur that purpose, upon pain of the immediate suppression of the paper, to bo effected by the po? lice. The commandauts or their substitutes are empowered to seize and confiscate the whole im? pression of any journal containing abusive ex? pressions against oar sacred person, tbe govern? ment, or its organs, or provocations to disobedience, or stirring up tbe people to opposition of the con? stituted authorities. Subject to the same restric? tions are all political pamph'eta, placards, an J pic I torial representations. "Par 5. How far and in what manner the force of arms is to be made use of in case of ncert, ac ci rd'.rg to the custom of war, depends entirely on the decision of the commander-io-chie', or the mili? tary local commandant, wh<\ in this r;spect, are only responsible to us. " Par. <>. The commander-in chief? and, in ur? gent cases, the military commandant of a particu? lar district, who, however, is bound to mnko an lav j mediate report to us for the purpose of obtaining cur approbation?is authorised to suspend the ex i iatLog civil authorities and functi mariesof tho state, and to causa their duties to ha carried on by spe? cial commissioners, as well es to dissolve tha civic guard, it such measures should be required for the maintenance of order in the d stricts under his or their authority. '? Par. T. All offenses of armad opposition to the authorities and their representatives, and all cases of rebellion and high treason, will bo tried and pun? ished at ecrding to the laws of war. "Par. 8 The foregoing provisions will remain in force till the needful communications cart ho made to the Parliament, which will ba convened imnirdi a:ely to sanction the measure.' In proof of wHch we have signed this ordinance with onr own sign manual, and appended to it our a. ent cea! oi State ?Given at 'Inssel, 7th Sapt lr>">0. (Mured; FREUEtUCK WILLIAM. (Counie'Sljr.ed) Hassf.spfi.cg Havnac. B.umiucii I A letter from Cassel, of September 8, saya : Our 0 antry has been in a state of siege since yeater I oay ev'eninir. although we are In the midstof peace. 1 be only pretense lor this extraordinary proceed? ing is the refusal of every civil officer tobacome an i"?trnmcnt in carrying, out the subversive designs of Hassel j Hug. The last condition of oivil society ?lew, is thus blotted out. Meanwhile our people have not bean inactive ; the whole of last night was spent in providing to mee t, in a constitutional manner, the arbitrary measures of the minister ; and sn impeachment of Hassenpliug, which has betn prepared, will bo urged forward. Together with the proclamation establishing the state of siege, another appeared, appointing Lieut. General Hauer to discharge tita functions attributed 1i the chief Commander in Section I. of the first edict. General Bauer's first proceedings, after rusc-mblinir all chief otlicera. were directed against the press. At 10 o'clock last evening, tho office of the Nete-Hettian Gazette was visited by a party of gendarmerie and infan'ry. Sergeant Fingerling 4 f the Guam's, with two musketeers, proceeded to the editor, and produced an order, signed by Gen? eral Bauer, "commander-in-chief," which, how? ever, was nelthersealtd nor attested, and ordering the sunpension of the New-Hessian (1 a reff?', accord? ing to tha ordinance of the 7th lost, for the avoid? ance of further excesses of the press, and further directing the seizure of the presses and printed copies of the journal. No officer having accompanied the soldiers on their literary mission it was with great difficulty that the editor could learn anything intelligible from the bearers of the ruoaaago boyond the (Vet that they had been fetched from the canteon to carry it into execution. Sergeant Fingorllng said he had been ordered to take away the gazette, and showed tho order. Ho was told that no atten? tion could, for one moment, be paid to an order which General Bauer had no earthly right to issue; that no permission to print tho journal had ever teen naked of General Bauer who, in fact, had none to give, and finally that the General had been guilty of great presumption in issuing such an order. The "copies" referred to in the document could not be seized by the musketeers, as they wero not to be found. The editor "pointed out' to the three soldiers, in the presence of a number of witnesses, the penal consequences to which thoy exposed themselves by their present conduct, and ' rseared them that if this was persisted in, it would l ot go unpunished. Burgermeister Henkel, direc? tor of the Cassel police, had meanwhile arrived for the protection cf the property, menaced by tho soldiers, and drew up a protocol of the whole proceeding, after which the soldiers with crew, not having accomplished their mission. This morning, at 7\ o'clock, the attempt was re? newed; a strong military picquet was stationed in Charles st. before the door of M Oetker, proprietor t f tha journal, so as to block the entrance , a sub efficer then entered to c9nliscate the materials in the printing office, exhibiting a written order to that effect. No course was left open to the propri? etor but to yield to violenceunderprotest. M.Oetker and Mr. Scheel, t'ne owner of the printing otfhe, procured the presecce of a notary, who drew up a formal attestation of the facts upon which the two injured gentlemen have already founded a civil j, recess. The printing office is stiil beset with soldiers, and rotice has been given to Messrs. Oetker aud Scheel that the least infraction of the Government will be fallowed by their arrest. M. Heise, editor of tbe llumisi-', has escaped imprisonment by flight ? The railway station here Is held by troops, and the various school houses are also occupied by the mili? tary, not without the protests of their owners.? five persons were apprehended yesterday lor tear? ing down placards. Major Beiner has been sent to Rinteln ; Colonel Hillebrand hasleftwith a batallion of infantry for Marburg, and Major Schirwer for Fulda ; a batalion has also been sent to Fulda. Tho town council has just held a si ting, ai-d protested against the acts . : military violence now perpretatlog. The town is quiet, and a little satisfactory assurance ia re caived from all parts of the country. " The following instruction has just been for? warded bo the permanent committee of the cham? ber to 'be public prosecutor: Ihe Minister Hassenpflug, Major Von Baynau, and Councillor Baumbach, have issued an ordi? nance, in which the whole Electoral State whila In peace is, without any legal reason, without the con aentof tbe Permanent Committee of the States, de? clared in a state of siege: in wbich all assemblies and meetings of the people are forbidden, in which the publication of all political journals is made de pendent on the will of the Minister of the interior; tn which a military commander is appointed with powers raising him above the Constitution, and au- j thorisi?g him to suspend civil officers and to take other arbitrary treasures; lastly, in which citizens are subjected to military courts and laws. VVe find in the issu^ of these ordinances a mon? strous and unpaielltd abuse of official power, wbitb, in fact, clearly ccmc? under the de3nition of high treason cor taine d in section 1 of the ordinance of February 11, 1795, since it is openly presumed to lay tbe institutions snd laws of the land in the dust. We have therefore resolved, aocording to sec. 61 of the Corstitutiorial act, to indict ihe afore? mentioned persons on the ground of the above acts, and call upon the Staats-procurator, according to Sec. 7? of tte organic law of the Judicial Courts, to bring this issue to trial, and on account of the ur? gency of the case to cause the immediate apprehen sioa of tbe accused. CcuieL, Sept. 7,1850. The 8tasta Procurator has replied as follows: The Staats Procurator acknowledges the unconsti tution character of the measures taken by the Ministry to which the Permanent Committee of the 8tate refer in their note; he considers, however, that tbe 8tates only, and therefore not their Per? manent Committee, have the right to impeach the Ministers for breachea of the Constitution; nor does he consider himself officially competent to deal with an ofi'enao of tha magnitude imputed by the Committee to the Ministers. On this account j he must decline compliance wHh the request of that body to Indie'the Minuter* Hsssenpfliig, Hay i AO and Baumbach l>:r abuse of their office*. A telegrtpMo diapatefc of the Cologne QatHte, dstcd Ca?sel, Sept b. announces that while tho Staat? Procurator had declined to undertake ihoim? p*acbm*nt of HasaeDpflug, hii superior, the Ober Staats Procurator had commenced tho process and ordered the apprebecsion of the uiiuistsr. The town council ofHatt-u hss refused to promulgate the un onstilutiotal edict of the government TURKEY. A Femnle Executioner. A Utter from Constantinople stales thtt great ?entation bad been caused by tho wife of Ueho.uoi I Pacha having strsngled one of her eanuens, assist ' ed by a groom and some other servants. Sne has \ beet arrested. She pretended that by Uw she had jl right to Riii him if she pleased. She was form? erly the wire of an Eng'ish phjsician. bat was di j voiced from him. It was believed that in spite of : her high rank she would bo condemned RUSSIA Statistic* ut Kussla. The European Provinces of Russia cover an area of99,489 square miles; Tr?n?c*u:a*ia. 2,835; Si i bfria, 2C0 600; tho St,ppea of Ktrgis, 300,000. the [ Islam**, L100; American Colonies, IV'-'O?luaiVag j a total of 359..524 square miles. Redea. tho geo g'apher, csbulates that the number of inhabitants of these vast countries amount to ti'i GOO 000, and among them 50 000,000 Sclavenians and 4,333,000 Poles. The census of 1763, according to Sc-ozsr and Storch, showed a population of but 20,000 000 ; tl at of 17S2 showed an increase of b',000 000; and tie census of 1S35 reached a figure of 55 000 000. li tre European Fruvioces or Russia tht? popula? tion avornges 0;r;> on a square nuilo The tno<t pop? ulated district are theso cf the central P.-oviaces, where one square mi!o contains about 2,000 inhabi? ts nra The minimum of population exists in the Government of Archangel, where r. .qu-tre mile is inhabited by Id people. OfRufilan subjects thero 50,552,000 (88 per cent, of the population of Russia) b -it.i ging to tho Greek religion, 6,711,145 are Ro? man Catholics, 3,409,330 are Protestant?. 1,604,767 Jo"?*, and 566,320 Mahometans. Too rest cf the inhabitants belong to va-i .us sects, or tney are con? sidered as temporary residents and foreigners 151 periodicals are pub.ished in Russia?iiz : 103 in Russian. '.'0 in tierman, 8 in French. 1 to Italian, 5 in the Polish, am! 3 in the Lettish language. j K? ner Zwltung. GREECE.I Ii tili, ft n ftllnleier. Korsio Tamis, tbe Minister of Kducation and Public Worship was shot at Athens with six balls, on the 3d Sept. A difficulty connected with tho coming electiot.s is supposed to have occasioned h<s assassination. SWITZERLAND Avalaacbe of mock*. Chur, Sopt. 3?Great alarm whs occasioned last night, it SJ o'clock, by the falling o! tho rooks at Felsbortr Neatly the enf.ro population, roused f om their beds by the fearful o.-ash of tho rook* almost an hour previous to their fail, had quitted the village, and stood on tha piain bnyood awaiting tbe awful catastrophe- Tho night war. to;erably light; suddenly a tremendous d-ash wa* succeeded by thick cloud* of dust, and l?.rga masses of rock were precipitated from tho heights, apparently upon tha village beneath. 8o fearful was tbe noise that all concluded that the village was buried, but on rush ii g to the spot the inhabitants found a huge wall of recks piled up at tho very extremity of the vidage. About twenty of the blocks woro as large an a small house, and innumerable others were of rather less dimensions. It is possible that those masses may stand for some time ; but the danger is imminert, as they are piled immediately beneath the precipice. ___________ Tbe Nlalitluaale's Coco. A large number of ladies and gentlemen, yes* turday, had an opportunity, through tho politeness of the host of the Revere House, Col. Stevens, to look at the suite of rooms in that noble establish? ment which have been taken as the " Nightingale's Cage "?in other words, .ienoy Lind's lodgings.? They comprise a range of apartment* including tho famous bridal chamber, and are furnished and or? namented with that genuine elegance and good tnste whicb characterise the general titting-up and adornment of the wholo house. The embellish? ments are rich, neat and showy, but entirely void of tawdrineas or meretricious display of linary.?? Tha general efl'eet upon the eyo is very imposing, and conveys cm l_p-malon of that happy combina? tion of elegance and comfort whicb is the crowning glory of a domestic establishment. Need we say that the Nightingale will liod to her Cago every? thing requisite to moke her feol at homo?except? a'as! a male. It would be impossible to describe the superior grandeur of these apartments. They ombraca four rooms in the western wing of tho house, second floor, and tho furnishing and ornamental work is all new. They comprise a par'or and bedroom for the Nightingale, a bed room for her female companion, a dining and a sitting room. In tho parlor, thero are two splendid mirrors, a thousand dollar piano from Chickering's, a rosewood bookcase, with several copies of Standard works?a present from J. T. Fields to the warblor?a sofa andanotti n;an, in the highest style of Onish and of great cost, end a beautiful csrd table. On the tahleisagold vase, containing flowers, grown at Mr. Stevens'* request, by a Roxbury Horticulturalijt, exprossly for this occasion. There are also two magnificent vine* on the mantel piecu filled with bouquets.? Tho toilet chamber attached to tho parlor is lined 0 Uli a rose colored French cambric, canopied, and fitim tb-cei.ter i? ?mpooded a lantern of utained piaaH. The articles of furniture in the cbnmber are neat, and tbe gold plated napkin stand, made by Mr. Wa'erman, is a choice specimen oPhandiwork. The passago from the parlor to the bridal chamber Is also lined with silk, similar in co'or to that of the dressing-room The bridal chamber itself has b' en furnished anew throughout, and is moat mag 1 die nt without be^Bg gaudy. The other two f.,a tin ents are likewise furnished in an olegsnt n aimer. Tl e I tck of the parlor door is of silver, and on the inner plating is tho following inscription i " To t'e tjuren of Song.'' Prov. 19;h, 17th v.: "He that hath pity on the t.oor londethunto the Lord, and thru which ho hath given will hi pay him r.^ain." The knob on tha door is an objoctof at r-scion. Tho whole deco-atlons of this suite of r on a cost something like 413,000! Jenny is expected lo take possession or her ?.partments about half-past ton o'clock this mirn irg. She will breakfast at Fall River, and come Op in tbe eight o'clock train. From the moment of her arrival until her departure tho Swedish flag till be displayed from the top of the Revere House. Between eight and nine o'clock this even i g there is to be a grand display of (ire-works from the balcony, and the Brigade Band will per? form music from eight to eleven o'clock, at which hour the Musical Fund 8ociety will serenade tbo Nightingale. During the display of flre-works, Teh cleswil! not be permitted to pass through Rnwdoln Square. [Roston Courler, 2G. FiiiKs.?About 2 o'clock yesterday mornlog, a barn attached to the Michigan Railroad House, corner of Griswold street and Michigan Avenue, was set on fire, end tbe public house, owned and knp-. by Wm. Garret, the dwelling house of O. Cook, one dwelling house belonging to O. M. Hyo'e, and two barns, were destroyed. Mr. Garret saved most of his furniture. His house was in? sured in tha Hartford Company for 81,000, and fur? niture and barn in the Go'iesee Mutual Company for $1.100. Tbe other barn and a buggy, sleighs and other property belonging to Wm. Shaw were not insured. Mr Cook's hcuse was insured in the Hart < rd Company for *'?00 The dwelling owned by Mr. Hyde was not insured?loss 51,000. This bouse was occupied by C. H. Ac T. 8 Sprague, who lost everything, amounting to from $2,500 to t'.s.OOO In furniture, clothing, money and 4d00 worth of garden seeds. [Detroit Advertiser. Fire in Westville?The paper mill in Weit vide, in this town, owned by Mr. A. B. MaUory, Bnd situated under West Rock, was destroyed by lire yesterday noon, wbi e the workmen were away to dinner. The fire originated in the lofc among some stock which had been originally packed away in a damp state, and is supposed to r ave been caused by a spontaneous csmbustiou The loss is estimated at about 812,000, on which there wsa an insurance of $7,000. As soon as the fire was made known in the city, engine company No. 2 started for the " ville,'' but was unable to reach tbe scene of conflagration in time to render any assistance. Mr. M. had a mill destroyed by Ore on tbe same spot a few years sinoe. [New Havsn Journal, 26 Firb.?The Delaware Foundry, Machine Shop and Oil Mill of Messrs KiJboum, Bradly At Co. was coosnmed by fire on the morni?g of tbe Hth inst. The fire was discovered about 3 o'clock. The la la estimated at about ?5,000. [Marion (O.) Ksgle.