• REATT4I S P II,O I`,III . ETAII ANII PUBLISIrEIt •. . TERMS OF PUBLVATION. The CAIZI,INLE I,4m.ii.n is Published' weekly on a large sheet, eentalping FORTY COLUMNS, arid ft/MINNA to sub &Tiber,. at the rate of sl..ial if paid strictly in advance: $1.75 if paid within the year', or $2 in all clues when 'g ay delayed until alter the expiration of the val . :- No subscriptions received for a less period than six months. and 110130 filSMlltilll/CCI until all atrrearages ere paid, unless at the option of the publisher. Papers sent to Sul.serihers• living out of Cumberland county must be paid for in advance, or the payment assumed sonic responsible pertem living in Cumberland coun ty. These terms will be rigidly adhered to in all eases. ADVETITISEMENTS. Xavurtisenionts will be charged il.OO per square of t. ,, 11 . 0 linos fur three insertions. and 2t runty 11a. each ea!,4o-inent Insertion. All advertisements 01 less than t , Vltiou lino 9 ronsidered'as a square. Tltelidlowing ratvs " .11,n .. ~,, for Quart..rly, flair Yuarly and Yearly advartiaing: 3 Months. 6 Months. 12 Months I Squire. (12 Ilnes,) s:t.oo $5.00 $B.OO 2 6.00 8.00 . 12.00 1., - ; Col uln n, - - - 8.n012.00 16.00 i.. - 12.00 - 20.00 80.00 i' ,4 -- - 2.00 33.00 96,00 Ad veal semen to inserted ber_av Marriages and Deaths, 8 routs per line for first. Insertion, and cents per line I r subsequent ins.rtions. Communications on subjects of limited or individual interest will be charged 5 cents psi line. Thu Proprietor will not.be responsible in dam n •ea fm. errors In zulverlisements. Obituary notices not o.u•eyding live lines, will be inserted without charge. .1 JOB PRINTING. . The CArti.NLE HERALD 3011 PRINTING ( TICE Is the I.tr_Teat and most complete establishment I the county. Thiel., ga.:d Presses, and a general varlet of material sat tat tor l'iniii and Fancy work of every .ind, tinlibles n e t o do Job Printing at the Fhortest antic and on the i1i . . , 51, reasonable tera/ re rsais in want or Ii I Is, lila nI. s or any thing in tho Jobbing line, will find it their in t,ri-st to give IN a call. Every variety of BLANKS con “antly Am band... . . , An totters ,O 1 business musk, be post-paid to st . attention. Oeiteraf tt Local 3nformation. U. - S. GOVBRtNIVIENT. PreSiderlt NR LIN PlN:her. Vire ProSidellt de Illet0). 11. IL. ATOM:SON. S.lere Lary of St:ILL.-1N M. L. MARCY. tio,. re Lary or I o forior—Rellf:lLT tiecretary uf for re to ry of \‘ar—Jp.FrEit.... , :c F...erotary of Navy —.I k•I. C. D st, It 'St Ma...it el . tit. I leral--.1 lams CAMPBELL. ALL,rney l't Chief Justim of United :qates-11. ft. 'fAxrx ST SIT. 3 G-OVIIRI7IYIENT• flovernor—J \ NIES 1'01,1.4)EE. IS ',flaw . ) . Of State—A'party etuttlN. ..fitrf•eyor tiff:weal—J. P. A It %sic, Traguror—Ef.t Jta.l4thi fft . tki zfuprfralv Court—E. tfrwfs, J. S. 131.Acli %%'. If . Lo,f. (I. 11. Woo: , o Ut.l), J. C. li.soX. 0 Criliirr V OFFICERS. l'rpsiAcit .TudgU—lfon..l.tur.s 11. OutuA3t. Absuciaiu Joh!. tcupp, .7:aniud Wood ) Distri ey—W m. .1. Shearer. Vrotito.otor, Liao lel 1...,,e!1. ,jtoo Min n. lia egg. tiofifstor—o 1011 am Lytle. Sauri, k f—Josella Aienormond; Deputy, Jame: , W Miter. ,1k VII u a Tress dyer—N. W. Wooili. Corouer—Josipli_C. CJulty Coin imsni,mors--o lM lio,.fames Armstrong, tintwuri.' Clod: to Commissioners, %1 Ulna. Maly. Dowtors of the- l'oar—fieorge SimalTer, George Ilrii, aC. 11l o w a. 8 uper,in tontlent Pour At mow— J 05c91.1 L,bach. B33 I OUGH orr.tomas. Chief Burgess—Col. kit.stsvitoNti Nontx. ..Is,ii.tant vzoss—iSain tie) T. , sv ;a tint! taril—,ft. C. %Vinod ward, (President) Ilenry ?Alders, John, U utsball,triAter Motiyer, A. riltealkir, John Thoukoun, David cape. Cioirk 'Wetzel. Conntabies—Anseph Stewart iliBhßobert ' llNt ' 4lAu ii ney,:ut Ward A.:unstable. oa.uacirms. • ! First PresbyteriatiChiwch. northwest....ngle of Centre ne. Re v. hrvwcc P. %VINO, Pastor.—Services ever) 'Lloday morning at II o'clock, A. M., and 1 o'clock, P. M. Second Presbyterian Church,corner of South Hanover nod emnfret streets. No pastor at. present, but pulpit . c,sbyterinl;tppuuttmeuts. Sectires uowuleuce o'clock', A. M., and ; o'clock, P. M. St..lehria Church, ,Prot. Episcopal) northeast. angle of Centre :tquare. Rev. JAcoa it. Moctat, Rector. :Services at It o'clorlc, A.M., and :1 o'clock, P. M. English Lutheran CliarchTlludford between Main and 1. oither streets. Rev. .1 Al.)011 Fur, Pastor. Services . ut I I o'clock, A. M., mat 7!/,' o'clock, P. M. (I,,rman Reformed C/ arch, Loather, between Hanover and Pitt .4reets. tier. A. IL Kunnta, Pastor. Sop - ices at 1 , 1;4 o'clock, A. M., and 03,41 P. M. ?retro/dist N:. Church. Oirst charge) corner of Main and Pitt streets. Rev. S. L. M. Co3.;na, Pastor. Services at 1 I o'clock,A. M., and MI 4„ P. M. Methodst B. Church, (second Charge) Rev. .1. M. os.Ks, Pastor. Services In College Chapel, at IL o'clock. 'A. M., and ft o'clock, P. M. Amnon Catholic Church, Pomfret, near East street.— Servicmby Rev. Mr. hoN.ttioo, every second Sunday. lle'rman Lutheran Church, corner of Pomfret and streets. Rev. I. P. Naschold, Pastor. service at lug_ AOM. a_;}; ILchanges in the above are necessary the pro per persons are requested to notify us. MORtNSON COLLEGE. Rcr. Charles Collins, President and Professor of Moral Rev. M. Johnimni Professor Of PI I IIOF 0 1 ,11 3' ;•:itgll,ll tve3t. tto,. It'. Prnf.•.es•,r of Anciont Langno. , ..res. otis IL. ltdan,y, - P,,,f,,t5.t . of 11:1140111:111l . S. .1111 1 1 , 1411 C. NVllson, Lecful'or on Niitui•ul liclen6olunt Cara it of the blusenin. • Alexondur Sebum, I'ruf•ssor of Ifebrew and "Modern ug utiges. llenjoutin Arbogast, Tutor In Langunges. 1.5,3 , 111,114 1). 11111111811, Principal of the Urammar School. Willhnoi A. Sultely, Agsh;tunt In the tiramtnar School 00aPOR.A.TIONS. Cuuati.e DEPIS IT B OTlC—Prelidont, Richard Parker: Cashier, Win. M. llectent; Clerks, Henry A. Sturgeon, .1 wpik J. II 'der. inrectira, Richard Parker, Ilenry Sax., tou, .1 ohn S. Sterrett, John 'Lug, ' ug, Henry Logan Hubert Mum), tianniel ‘Vherry, John Sandernou, Hugh tituart. t'il) VALLEY RAIL ItOAD COMPANY.—Proddent, Frederick IVatta ; Secretary and 'Treasurer, Edward M. Biddle; Super' iitondant, A, F. Health. Passenger trains twice a day Eastward, leaving 'Carlisle at 7.18 o'clock, and M. 'rwo train's' every day West ward, learing"(larli,de nt D o'clock, A. M and 2.20, P. M. Oil, WATER. COM pxv.-:=Prosltletit, Fred erick Watts; Secretary., tanning ,Todd ; Treasurer, 51.. Beaten': Dinwtors, P. Watts. Richard Parker, Lennie! Todd. Win. M. Ileetttm, Edward, M.Ailddle, Dr. W. 'W. Franklin Gardner,' floury : Wass. . • , It Lt.r.r2;e S or rOsTAar. , I,:arLa v.ii.-0nt:12,! 'on fel4ers .re 6110-bal. ,t)11.06'1,0)11)01t. f)e ender, :1 eentK 1.1 , -palti, : or 5 ceut,; tii!- '1',14,i(,Y4,1)t to t'alif.wrila qua nro centx -1-1);(1 0)1)19 I.) thr • vay, t'‘ , e•int , -; per year: T., pit I.l$P. tta 01 "It•sit . - Iltol.!E 3 f.)unsl.:S in w L .l Olt, I r, , ) 2 eeeta aillanxsiiv; unix ii."Za3ol - • BOOK Sc, JOB PRINTINO e•PFTCE, , IN Tllln P ! . in ov'TilE couirr nout4E. r,-,try riii3ric , tirk or 11 , . A. :0.1 ,1911 Prlnlin!: i.l;:enet..o .I: 0 . 001' 0, M , noti•N rtn.i on roat;onubleterins. . .... „ . „. •-- , . . . .. . . • ... ...f . .. A . ' -. • ' l4 'Fl o r ;: •f , '''..'• 71.5 , ' f J .\ : ' ~, ... , • l'i . • ?:'.'... ' .' -- i 4' . ' ' te ~, ..,.. ~ r .....• -. 5 . , , A VOL. tV. EEERAL - DA,lill EXPOFE' SUMMARY OP NEWS WEDNESDAY, June 27. A coal mine has been discovered near Sa cramentn, California. Passenger cars are to commence running on Tuesday next on the North Pennsylvania Railroad, Gwynned, in Montgomery county, to Philadelphia; a dis tance of nineteen miles. the train will run daily. The recent rains ctruse4 an immense land slide yesterday, on the Sunbury and Erie RI-Intend. about three miles nbiive Milton covering the track to the depth of six feet.— The through train from Niagara ran into it, and the locomotive was thrown into the cans', the baggage car broken, and a baggage mas ter had iris band badly mashed. In the lower !louse of the New ffnmpshire Legislature, a Mr. Tappan has giver -notice of his intention to introduce a 'personal liberty bill.' similar to that passed in Massachusetts. The Ger man Societies of .S.ingers and Gymnasts from nil parts of the Union are holding their Anna a 1 festival in New Yolk. The'use of the British brig nt Helloes' Hole with passengers legally enlisted for the Crimea. is to 'undergo inv:sti; Minn. A warr Int has been issued for the arrest of the Pritish Vice Con sul nt New York, and he has appeared at the Marshal's office and given bail. All the pris oners in the .jail at Easton, Pa., seven in 119111- ber, have escaped. President Pierce and lady I,nvo left the capital on n summer trip. lion. Abbott Law rence is Po ill that he is not expected to live The Connecticut Legislature has elected two Democratic end two Know Nothing Judges of the Supreme Court of that State. There were 4S deaths in New Orleans, last week of chol era The steamship Atlantic, which sailed from New York yesterday for Liverpool, C:lr tied out 1i:797,0001in specie. The Maine State Temperance Convention bas• . nominated Governor Morill for re election and declared that the Portland riot was instigated by de signing politicians, and that experience Lees vindicated the policy of the proltibito . 4 liquor law. .Advices from the Mexican Capital to the Igth inst., say that the Government troops have defeated the rebels in Neveral sinall'engeeements, aid that Santa Anna had returned to the capital. .Another acdount says that A'yarez has defeated the Govern meat troops nenr'the Mescalto, with a loss of 500 Men killed and wounded, and that be, in Conjunction with Comonfort, had taken Sono. re, and were investing Morelia. Communice cation between San Luis and Monterey had been prohibited. An expedition is to be tent to recapture Monterey. John Wilson, Com missioner of tho General Lend office, has-been dismissed by the President. The Broad Top Mountain Railroad is fast approaching com pletion, and the company has advertised for proposals for 'working its mines, several of which are now open and ready. A bricklayer named William Ilegginsm, was dangerously shut in the side in the side yesterday, in Fifth well, Philadelphia, by.a woman named Ann Haney, aged 50 years She discharged at him no less then twenty six buckshot from a horse pistol. Two large breaks have occurr ed in the Champlain Canal, near Waterford, andlhe flood of water has burst through n culvert in the Rensselaer and Saratoga Rail road, carrying away some fifty feet of the track. The French astronomer, ,Leverrier, has discovered another new comet. A salute of one hundred guns was tired nt Chicago, yesterday, to celebrate the defeat of the prohibitory liquor law in Illinois. At midnight, on 'Wednesday, n heavy shock of earthquake occurred at Baltimore, which was felt for many miliiS z arnund the country. Ma ny persona, aroused from their beds in alarm, ran, out into the streets, and verb afraid to return to their houses. President Pierce and Indy are sojourning at Cape May. The Mas saphusetts Slate Council of Know Nothings :met yesterday, in Boston. and resolved to hold its sesSioniwith open doors: Last evening, a ratitiention - ineeting was hell, at which reso lutions 'were passed commending the course of the seceders from the National council. A U. S. Grand Jury 'rt New York oily has indi: eted*slX* pet-Sens for enlisting men for the British service in the Crimea. Atiiicee from Now Mexico soy that on the 29th the U. S. troops under COL•Fauntleroy, attacked the otop turenty.miles north of the Brettelta pass, killed forty men, took pris oners,-- and' co tUred ' their cnnip equipage, horSes,' Sheep tiiitPprovittionit? 'On the: lfit of Moy*6llte sitous comtennd* attached .another comp of; the Utahukilletttwo men, wounded fow, ealt,ired. the chief, and t99lc all their . . korseq, t.rovi.tlonq, The Salt Lahe Mail party has arrived at in• qependynee, ?do , and reports the fwlians very : numerous around the Black awl much alarmed - at the movements of the troops. They profet.s a desire for perice, and nre will in: to give up the Indians who Murdered the It I,)tifte r . , itir 11)e .Ci rt. It. IVEIM.tSDAY,' . JULY. 4, 1855. TurnsnAy .Tune 2 FRIDAY, June 20' TC11.1s:117. ;lime ZIO mail party last fall. 4eport§ . of many persons having been killed 14 the savages, are all fabricated. Theschnlera has broken ott4, in the Mormon settlements. The IVhig State Convention of Maine has nominated Isaac Reed for Governor, and adopted a 'platform opposed to the Nebraska hill , the Know N..0-things, things, and the Prohibitory Ihuer Law. A fire in Toronto, yesterday,. destroyed' four l a rge homes and.hadly injured four others.— The Washington Union denies n nesNlalier stateme•it alleging that the Administrntion is Mmecessmily delaying the settlement of Gen eral Scott's pay, and saYs that the apnea' to the Attorney General was made by General Scott, and was attended to ns soon as the General.wns ready. An election in New' , Or renns for Chief Justice of the Supreme:ipourt, has resulted in the choice of Elgee, Ariti- Know Nothing, by 1200 majority river 'Mer rick, Know Nothing. This is a Know 'Noth ing loss of about WO. SUICIDE OF Two LOVERS IN Bnooto.ts.—A young man named Horatio Gustin and. a female, name unknown, were found dead in the hens() of the young man's parents, in Brooklyn, early on Wednesday morning, and I was evident that they had committed. suicide The tragedy, has been male by the pvple of that cite, the subject mf it most ridiculous ex . eitement. lu consequence Of tin fit hera yonng Gustin sending the body of the female. whose true char.meter was probably known to him, to the dead house to be buried, n morbid synapa I f thy for. the decease I women was created, and large subscription raised to give her a tri mmphant funeral . Cie es-Mayor of Brooklyn furnished a lot tobdry her in, and on Thurs day her funeral took place, with nn astopish ing display. The funerar services were held• in time P. E. church of time Messiah, in pre: sense of about 2100 persons The body, richly dressed, and in a sitlendid coffin, lay in state, and the pastor of the church, the Res. Mr. Walker, preached rt discourse en the oc casion, lamenting and glorifying tht , l.S•oman as a "martyr to the sacred passion of love." The same day-the Coroner's investigation re vealcd the fact that the subject -of all this p trade lair been for five•years a public enorte izan inn Now York citr, . Guslin being her fora. moor. Both 'chit under risOntned names Young Gustin was alms . ° buried on Thursday: and not more than half in dozen persons. be- sides his family, attemlemi his funeral.. This cortege . passed the. Messiah tildic gip:Tuner:lt services of the woman were !hying peufbrmod there. As regards the concourp ; ts church, it nprears that they were moetly ladies! A REmmixAnLE Sulcinn —The dead body of F. C Stainback, Flour Inspector nt Peter-- burg, Vp.,.was found in a large box, in the cellar of his residence, on Wednesday morn ing, horribly mutilated: it was perfectly clear that he came to his end by his own hand, hav ing cut his throat from ear to, ear with a razor, besides emitting open hie :abdomen and pulling out lila bowels! Mr. SAleaves a wife and six children. The Express states that three letters were found upon his person, neither of which furnish time slightest clue to the cause of this transaction. A letter in the Richmond Post says: "the deceased was a man of uncommon talent, tl.o toh wild and extravagant in Lis ideas; of an ardent and exciting temperament. Ills active exertions in the late Gubernatorial contest seems to have unsettled his mind: in fact, upon the subject of politica, he was truly a monomaniac." THE CLAY MONUMENT AT POTTSVILLE.—The colossal iron statue of Henry Clay was raised to its propes position on the top of the monu ment on last Monday afternoon. The difficult task of raising so heavy a mass to so elevated position,was accomplished without accident, and the completion of the work caused much rejoicing among those interested in its pro gress. The inauguration will take place on the 4th of July, and great preparations' arc being made for the event INTE3IPERANCE IN THE CRIMEA.—Some of the letters from the seat of war give frightful accounts of intemperance in the Crimea Ono from Misit Nightingale mentions the scenes of oarnnge, and adds:—'•But to see the stretcher brought •to the gates every hour laden with men foaming in the mouth and block in the face, not,with 'the gore of battle, bUt with the horrible defacement:of a foe more dreadful or deadly than the Russian or the folague, oh!• it htierilble!" I=l Pniattntwitt(TAA.ti t 7 BOSTON. --111(10 the new lignorinw of 31tissnelon3itt8 'there bate been. in-nll, fourte.ewoneen given to the juries; 410 iu every ,enfe ut one there NNA!3 an at: ti the 'exeptioit being. a iliPag.reement:— In meet of the cases-th'e' evidence 118.9 been de• fective, but. in ono tir tsro•enses it was thought by some that the evidence warranted n cun victicn. - . Ilt."Zs' The fear of itifc'etion recently canSed souse Persons at. Aberdeen, Scotland, to horn all the clothing, and even the prayer Inthlt of-a deceased cholera pltient, notes found on his person were religiously pyeserred, The number of persons in nomination for - the Presidency of the United States is aston ishing, in view of the elevated clutracter of the officer. and the heavY , responsibility resting upon the incumbent. ,In former times nay the most eminent statesmen were nominated or run; but now every man who attains,pnblic notice, of a general character, is ptit up for . the office..either seriously or in burlesque. Men arc often strenuously urged for the Presidency in consequence of their own egotistical ambi tion or the folly of unwise friends, who lave scarcely sufficient abilities to discharge pro•, perlyrtho duties of a subordinate administra tive ofTie, much less those of a position which reprres acute penetration, knowledge of hu man character, familiarity with systems of public policy, discrimination and mental iigf , r. In fact, such is now the scrub race for the Presidency, that the dignified statesman, nn ho loofa with disghst upon the pursuit ns n na tionnl degradation, is deserving of nt'nre real honor.at the hands of a discerning public than the political trickster who caters to the low passions of the mob, and trims his sails to every favoring breeze, in hopes that he may thereby reach the desired haven. We hear a great defll about the office seeking the man, and not the man the office; hut, alas! it is a mere abstraction. There is a general scram ble for the office, in which we find ex Presi dens% ex• Cabinet Ministers, ex-Ambassadors, ex-Senators, ex Commodores, and' ex Judges, joining with steamboat speculators, Congress mots, Governors, Justices of the Supreme Court. etc. So inveterate has the Presidential Crania become among the politicians, that even when an eminent public man 'expressly en• flounces, by speech or letter, his desire, under Ist) circumstances, to be a candidate for the office, some friend of a political -rival -affects to perceive a sinister meaning in the dis claimer, in order to deprive him of the credit of disinteiristedness in his.public course there after. Believing, too, in the efficiency of party fealty and party drill in securing for a candidate a support which his personal merits would never be able to obtnin, small men as pire to this high position under cover of party nominations, asking support for principles which ton often aro only-intended to deceive. .w e find such nominations multiplying all over the country. and our readers will recognize the -,casts without difficulty. We even find mep endeavoring to by their way into the, Presideney.:depending on no other strength than their well fillo pope!, nnd•the force of party machinery. "Were one of these det-pica ble ,(harneters to, get:, t nomination of 'a strongly organized national party, as there has been great reason to fear might 1 e the-case, we trust . that there is sufficient public spirit even in thcso days of party serfdom to spurn the aspirant back to his original obscurity. But it must bo evident to all disinterested men that the danger of such a contingency should teach t,is to support no man for office whom we know to be Impropee,Or incon - petent, and to 'discountenance all 'efforts to establish and perpetuate a party organization and dis cipline which might render such a contingency possible. As lolig as the popular mind is left free nnd untrammelled to choose for itself, we do not fear but that its choice will be gerzei , ; - , ally right—that it will rebuke bad candid:Ars, and support good ones; but with n system f blind obedience to party behests, and the oh"- gntion, express or implied, to support the nominations of a particular party, no matter whether they be good or bad, the welfare o the republic demands our most earnest solicit t ude.—.North American. ALMOST AN ELOPF.MENT.-Mr. John H. Stif son, from Philadelphia, but formerly of Illi nois, was arrested last Frida'y evening, at the instigation of Rev. N. Dodge, Principal of the Cedar Hill Seminary of this place, for attempt ing to depy one of the ladies from undtr his charge. Stinson was brought, befereMr, R. La ng, of our borough, and coiiiinit tor by him, in default of bail, to the comity prison. Ile had two separate hearings before Judge Hayes, and was finally released under brads to keep the peace. One of the young ladies, who was to have acted as bridesmaid upon the occasion, highly delighted with the air of romance about the affair, had commenced a letter to a friend, de scribing the whole plot. Being suddenly call ed away, she left the letter lie exposed. The wind carried the letter out of the open window into the yard below. The letter came into possoslion of the principal, who, with his usual promptness and dispatch, put an end to the affair by arresting Mr. Stinson.--11/1. Joy Herald. - A LONDON MADRET HOUSE -4-On the 10th inst. the 'new Metropolitan Cattle Market, in %lace of the ono which has so-long been held in Smithfield, London; wag , opended with. np propriate ceremonies by Prince Albert: Olnyket may be fairly charaetetised na one t the sights of London. It is Situated in th north of the metropolis, near the North Lon don railway, and occupies no less than ill acres of laitti, forming a F4'111:11'0 • even of Sit feet, paved throughout with granite, and we' supplied with water and drainage. On !dile:3 of the quadrangle tire ,roofed sheds It, sheep, caves antl pigs, while the open space fir-the oxen. In the centre is tt:huilding fn banking purposes, with n clucic tot.-,er 150 fet high. The market will hold 86,000 blitep, 6, 400 oxen., 1,400 enives, and 000 pigs. , . • PRESIDFACTIAL. ONE WEEK DATER FROM EUROPE. Further Victories of the Allies! NEW Youx, June 28.—The steamship Baltic, from :Liverpool,. with European dates to tie 16th inst., has just reached her berth. Dm papers furnish the details of / the French capture of the Mamelon and White Works, after a sanguinary conflict, in which 6006 turn were killed and wounded. The French took sisty•two guns and * 6oo prisoners, and their new 'position ennble4 then' to.shell the shipp ing in the harbor of Sebastopol. Simultn ueouly with this gallant action by the French, tlye English stormed and took the riflemen's works in the quarries, but lost five hundred in killed and wounded. Since then the firin g has item slack. NO. 44. The allied fleet have achieved fresh sumps .es in the Sea'(; . f Azoff, and have burned the etores at Taganrog, Mariopol, and tleni,tsck, aud . land . expedition i!,; fitting out against Perekop The Russians are" reported to have evacu ated Anapa.• There is nothing from Tehernaya or the Baltic. The latest telegraphic advices bring nothing of special importance. The flight before the Mamelon wns obst . - nate, but successful. The important point in the action is said to he that the French from their new position can reach ihe•ships in the harbor of Sebastopol. In reference to tnis battle the London Times, June 11, says: Within an houn the,Matnelone was in the possession of our gallaii4 allies, who pursued the Russians to the works or White Tower, some tilt° yards in the rear. The langnsge f the 'despatch does not clearly explain whether the expression "White R'u used by Lord Raglan. appli , s to the Maltikhoff :Tower or to the earthworks beyond it, but there is reason to believe that the tower itself had been de stroyed in great part by the previous hornban'- !tient, and that the .. must impertantF7part of the positon his. been taken and is . 11e.!41 by the French. !laving ca-ried the Nl:firpelon, how ever. General Pelissier expressly states that the French pushed forward until whey reached and occupied two redoubts resting upon the Careening Harbor. This was one of the meet important results of the day, for it completes the investment of the south side of Sehastopo', and brings the works of the besiegers to the sea within the harbo'r, thereby enabling them complete the destruction of the Russian ships, and command the passlige of the great harbor. • •After,the capture of the Mamelon, and the works extending from it to Careening' Bay, that part of Sebastopol which is situated on the east side orthe military harbor, cannot be much lonOr. tenable, Its capture will deprive the Russians of their arsenals and principal barracks; and what is scarcely of less impor tance, it will leave the ships, which still re main in the inlet of Sebastopol, denudell of nil shelter from the shut and shells rf the allies. Already Sebastopol totters to its fal„, Nor is the position-of the Russian Crimen u army in the field much more secure. A situttltnneous advatiec of the allies from Ea pato.ria Ittul IMts . ch would cc mpel it to con.- centraten-Sself ,uyMn §iutpheropol or Seimsto 'col; and for this force to he cooped Tip in the southwestern part of the Crimea Is toloe ca posed to the same famine 041 is olready,tell- Mg so fearfully on the garrittoti of Seba'stopC. The Crimea is lost to Bassin.' A. letter gi.ves an account of the•miserable state Enpatoria. War and !!allied Occupy- , tion" 'despoiled the inhabitants of every thing they posseised; For some time •;past• the citizene have been subsisting ort a,scantyal lowance of flour, riven them by . the Forty or fifty deaths from exhitUstioninmllow fever take place daily,' and around 'the town hew ground bas been broken for Cemeteries. The houses, are mostly in ruins and the air putrid. . THE KEETSCII EXPEDITION RE-CALLED. A. dispatch from Vitrol, dated June 13, save the French troot s have been recalled from Kertsch, probably to assist in-some great blow against Sebastopol. It was thought the foieel under Sir George Browne would return, and land about six miles east of Balakara, and form a junction with the force vu tho Tcher naya. The Brussels Independance Beige intimates iat connected with the recent successes of le allies in the Crimea, the PeSce; Conference will be reopened st Paris.. The British prefs oontrodiot this, but the. Independatmo. bas many times given tbo first intimatio4 of, diplo matic probabilities. ENGLAND-EX PRESIDENT FILLWRE PRESENTED TO TILE QUEEN. Mr Fillmore was presented to Queen Vic toria by the Earl of Clarendonnt nip '"audi ence." and subsequently was nresent at a "draining room." Mr. Buchanan accompanied him. Mr Fillmore afterwards dined with the Queen.' Ho (Mr. F ) is staying 'rit Fekon's Hotel, St. James street, and. Mr. pun Buren at Long's Hotel, New Bond street, London. A now ship,of war, to be called the Howe, is being built of 130 guns, and ariotherls - to be laid down of 160. Miss Nightingale is on her *ay *England on hoard the Cunard steamer Jura. she is convalescent from her attack of fever, but is recommended to recruit her strength of home for a' seasoM • • • . . rnAlwt.-."-itiiri:ii4 Or AN It FAR To TIM Timoriu. A teryrnifieent fete Ives given ern the evening of the 11th, in the ITotel de Ville,kbY the I've feet of the Seine, to the King of Portngal.— ri. Queen Glivititi. ok, the Prinees Mci,thildo,.the Lord Map , A London, tied 6,000 other per sons were ..rosNoi. most intereFting—intolligence refers to lter 'Majosty the Empress. 1)v. I.oc6ek, thv eolobrated acooucher, (who has had consideA.- ble experience in Queen Viotnr nurscryo was summoned by telegraph to Paris, where, lifter consultation Ivith t)rs. Dubois and Can norm, it was formally announced that the. Fm ress is enceinte. ARRIVAL OF THE BALTIC TOE CAPTVIUE OF 711 E MAMMON SAD EFFECTS OF THE WAR TUE PEACE CONFERE2‘CE 13