FOREIGN NEWS. ARRIVAL OF TJIE CANADA. Sfvcu uays Luier News. Telegraph Office, St. Wednesday Oct. The titcamship Canada, Cant John. 3 P. M. Judkins, arrived at Halifax, at"9 o'clock yesterday morning, having made the passage from Liveipool in less than ten days, which is remarkably quick time at this inclement season of the year. The Canada brings dates from Liver- pool to the 22, and from London to the 21st ult. Commercial Summary. The commercial news upon the whole, exhibits no improvement. The produce markets are fairly supplied, but the de mand for most articles is inactive. The cotton trade is languid; but al though sales are limited, prices have not given way. In breadstuffs great firmness is exhibi ted and higher prices have been paid. A moderate amount of business is re ported in cured provisions, at steady pri ces. Advices Irom manufacturing districts are unsatisfactory. At Manchester there is not much business doing in either goods or yarns, but manufacturers are willing to eell at lower prices. The metal trade is in a healthy state, and a fair business is done at fair prices. Tlie Potato Desease, Ect. The unfavorable reports of the progress of the rjotato desease has been the chief fcause of this reaction Indian corn being a little dearer. Up to date no very large supplies of home wheat have found their way to market, but in a week or two the farmers will have more leisure: and it will then be seen whether the lite improvement will be maintained. Every thing depends upon the extent of the injury which may event ually happen to the stock of potatoes The Grape and Hop Crops. The vines in the South of France hav e suffered very seriously. The Hop pick ing in England has proved a disastrous one, and a great effort is now being "made by the growers to procure relief from the Government. The Cholera Abating. A most favorable change has taken place in the mortality from cholera throughout England, and the number of cases has de clined about halt, r rorn tlie commence ment of the epidemic, 12,837 persons have been swept away. The cholera appears to have permanent ly diminished in Paris. IRELAND. The Potato Blight. The Potato desease is, without doubt, extending into several districts in Ireland, and the low prices of potatoes is attributa blc in some degree, to the alarm of the far mers, who are anxious to dispose of their crops; but the disease is very partial, and some kind of potatoes are not at all aflect ca it is oniv in a verv siirnt decree in some parts of the county of ClareT For instance, at Milton and Mulberry the blight has not appeared. Dearth of Political Xcws - Cholera at Trieste. The political news presents no new fea ture and the English journalizers lament the want of anything uponVhich they can write. The cholera is committing serious rava ges at Trieste. Comorn able to Hold out for a Year. Military operations, with the exception of the siege of Comorn, now regularly es tablished, have ceased throughout Europe. Comorn still holds out, and it is said that the besieged can defy the besiegers one year. The Turks refuse to Surrender the Hun garian Chiefs. The influence of Russia and Austria is i : ! i -v uciuy cveneu iu compel me t'orte to sur render the Hungarian chiefs who have taken refuge in Turkey; but letters from Constantinople, to the 5th states that this has been positively refused by the Porte. Progress of the Pope. i he rope has quited Gaeta and has proceeeded to Naples, wHerc he has taken up his abode in Portico Palace. His re ception at Naples was of the most striking and popular character. The Pope cvin ces no intention of returning to Rome at present, and thus far no real progress seems to have been made towards the satisfactory solution of the Italian ques tion. Troubles in Spain. News was daily expected from Moroc co, where the bpanish and French Gen erals seemed likely to produce something mure man a mere demonstration. The Moors were expected to make an attack on Massilla, having already cut off the sup plies. Assembling of the Spanish Ministry The newly appointed ministers were assembling at Madrid, but no notice seems to be taken of the events going on relative to Cuba. FRANCE. The Clergy in Council. A good deal of attention is directed to the metropolitan Council of the Clergy, which has commenced its sitting at Paris. Almost all the bishops and clergyof France arc assembling at the Council. Duties on Oil Seeds. Fresh protective duties have been im posed on the importation of foreign oil eeas, wan a view to protect the culture of wi feccos in Algeria. Successor to M. Lt pr(dour. Romanic Dcsuarl succeeds; M. Le Prc- dour in the command of the French naval forces in Laplattc. Trial of May and June Insurgents. The Moniteur contains an order from M. Dercngen, President of the High Court of Justice, fixing the 19th of October for thfi nneninfr of the trial'at Versailles of the persons implicated in the conspiracy of June 12th 1819; and also of such as are accused of being connected with the affair of May 15, 1848, but who had not made their appearance at the High Court of Justice at Bourges. Reduction of Military Force. It appeared to be suddenly decided that i in a short space of time a reduction will be effected in the French army. Germany. The papers received this morning an nounce the unexpected resignation of the Ministry, en masse, on Monday evening, after a night's deliberation. The King accepted their resignations, and gave in structions ior the formation of another cab inet. The circumstance which led to the result has not transpired. Turkey Refusal to Deliver up the Hun garian Refugees to Austria. Honor to the Sultan Honor to the Turkish Ministry! They have nobly done their duty, and have refused to become panderers to the vindictive blood thirsting of rrancis Joseph and Nicholas. The Russian Ambassadors at Porte demanded the extradition of the Hungarian officers, Ivossuh, Dembinski, PerecelMesmerasses and their companies. A Russian General arrived at Constan tinople on tke 15th, on a special mission The special mission being to bully the Sultan into a compliance with the demands of Austria, a counsel was held, and the I'urkish Government resolved not to sur render the ilungarian refugees to either the Russian or Austrian Government. On the decision being communicated to the Sultan he declared, in the most impressive and determined manner, that the refugees should not be given np, let the consequences be what they might. V e trust that Lord Palmerston will do his duty as well as the Sultan has done his that Russia and Austria will be given to understand that war with Tur key lor such a cause means war with England. We are pleased to learn that Kossuth and his companions are furnished with passports from the English Ambassador, and we trust that every assistance to sup port him will be rendered by England, in gaining the independence ot his country against the attacks of Russia and Austria. London Sun. Austria and Hungary. The latest accounts from Vienna are to the 13th ult. inclusive, and bring intelli gence of the surrender of Peterwardien to the Imperial troops on the 5th ult. Part of the Magyars, headed by the com mander Kess, decided still to hold out,jbut the majority decided to offer no longer resistance. The Berlin Constitutional correspon dent positively affirms that the Austrian government has, on the ground of existing Cartel treaties, the tenor of which is very strict, imperatively required the Turkish Government to close its frontier against the Hungarian insurgents, and to deliver up the insurgents who have already taken refuge in the territories of the Porte in cluding Dembinski, Kossuth, Perczel, and Messaros. The Beshlau Gazette further informs us that the Emperor of Russia had, in conjunction with his allies, and 4in the interest of European tranquility and security,' undertaken to insist, in very categorical terms, on the surrender of the Hungarian refugees by the Turkish gov ernment. J lie news from Hungary confirms the opinion expressed by our correspondent at Vienna, that the Emperor of Austria is disposed to deal severely with the defeated insurgents. Even the fate of Gorgey was very doubtful for a lime. His Imperial luajesiy navmg telt at first strongly inch ned to send him before a court-martial. A remonstrance on the part of the Czar is said to have dissuaded the Government from carrying out this design. Mean while, it is certain that the fugitive leaders of the Ilungarian revolution have no mer cy to expect, and alreadv a long lis! of names is drawn up, to be forwarded to the authorities in all parts of the empire. The list contains sixty personal denunciations, or sieck-uriete, including the names of Hem, Kossuth, Madame Kossuth (born 1 r t . f t . ... .uei-Aieiigi,; rcioiy (described as a poet,) aim jrerczei. According to the calculations of expert ..v,vn i..iSiiici;i, an army ot 7U,0UU men is aDsoiuteiy necessary, if the seige of Comorn is to be carried on with 'any cnance oi success. Fearf ul loss of life must ensue should an attempt be made to take Comorn by force of arms, and even if it should be determined to starve out the garrison, a year would perhaps elapse be fore it could be effected, as thp W;, have such vast stores of provisions. m .. "wuui.i vj nit; eiaie oi Hungary are deplorable. A short time since,' ob serves tne correspondent of the Colorn, Gazette, 'Hungary'succumebd to armed force. It is now on the verge of financial ruin, owing to (he bank note crisis. Ac cording to the Deutsche Reform, 02,000 000 of Kossuth's notes are in circulation, paper money, and the sudden annihilation of this vast currency is already producing its effects. The Deutsche Reform has news fro'm ;,iuiuavia to tne etiect that the corps of iiuugdiiaus irum juuu to 1000 stron", which had crossed the frontier, was en camped at Widin. Bern and Kossuth w ere unaer tne protection of this small ar- my, i iaci wnicn ctiectual v disnnc nr tact which effectually mc rrport tnat the rormer had been captu - red by the Russians. An application on the part of the Austrian authorities to the Pacha of Widin for the extradition of this corps had been refused, until the receipt of further instructions from Constantino ple. The insurgents above mentioned are provided with tents bythe Turks, and live very comfortably. It is said that the Emperor has remitted the fine inflicted upon the Pesthand Buda Jews by Gen. Haynau. Two Hungarian officers had been put to death at Arad and Temesvar, one by hanging; and the estates of two were con fiscated. It is announced that the Turkish Minis try has positively refused to deliver up the Hungarians who have taken refuge m their dominions. The Russian Ambassa dor at the. Porte demanded the extradition of the Ilungarian officers, Kossuth, Dem binski, Perczel, Mesmerasses, and their companions. A Russian general arrived at Constantinople on the 15th, on a spe cial mission that special mission being to bully the Sultan into a compliance with the demands ot Austria. A council was held and the Turkish government resolved not to surrendfir thn Tl -. . . b o I., either the Kussian or Austrian Govern- ment. On this decision being communi- atep to the Sultan, he declared in the most impressive ana determined manner m that the refugees should not be given up, let the consequences be wliat they might. Tl- - T - CT ITT . . i x ue xsunaon oim says: vv e trust tnat Lord Palmerston will do his duty as the Sultan has done his; that Russia and Aus- tria will be given to understand that warlord in rpepint rf ITnvana innrnals to her with Turkey for such a cause means war aay cf saihng. They contain the folio w- TlthvEnsland' We are ieJoiced to find ino- important intelligence, relative to the that Kossuth and his companions are fur- reported intervention of the English in Yu nished with passports from the English r- ih nnmnca f nifltinir thf Ambassador, and we trust that every as- sistance will be rendered by England to auiTu U1C '""epenuence oi nis country against the attacks of Russia and vassal i reparations to Besiege Comorn. supplies ot warlike stores had been for- warueu to me Austrian troops, in order to undertake besieging operations. I .1 1 he garrison of Comorn was said to amount to 15,000 or 20,000 men. to be well supplied with provisions, and in state of complete discipline. rni T i i lie onicers were said to have held a meeting, and to have resolved by a large majority, not to surrender. ine terms onered Dy the Magyars are said to have been an amnesty for the whole garrison; passports for all those who might wish to leave the country; the recognition ot Kossuth s notes to their full value; to give tne soldiers ten days and the onicers a month s pay. According to the V ienna Journal of the the 13th, 80,000 men are to besiege Co- morn, under the orders of Gens. Haynau and Nugent. A bombardment was to commence on that day, when the Aus trians had occupied a great part of the Is land Schutt, without resistance, but part of the insurgents were in a strongly entrench camp before the fortress, and it was expected that a battle would take place there. It was rumored at Vienna, that Bern had fallen into the hands of the Russians in Wallachia. The Insurrection on the Island of Cephalonia. The insurrection on the Island of Ceph alonia has gained ground since the last ac- counts. I he troops sent to quell it have proved sufficient. The Lord High Com- missioner proceeded there in person, and had a narrow escape with his life. A sol dier was shot dead by his side. Martial law is in full rigor, feeven of the insur gents have been sentenced to death and executed. A portion of the English squa- dron stationed at Malta, is under way for Cephalonia, and it is hoped that tranquility will soon be established. A difficulty with the Bey of Tunis. It alt the reported dilhcuiiies ot our government with foreign powers be true. there is enough work for the Secretary of , .... . State before he settles them all. A cor respondent of the Baltimore Sun mentions one with the Bey of 1 unis, as follows A diplomatic dihiculty is pending in relation to a claim of John Howard Payne, formerly Consul at Tunis, upon the Bey Mr. Payne, while our representative at the Tunisian Court, got the Bey, who is landlord of all the consular mansions, to agree to renovate the then falling one of thf United States iust a? Tlis Ilio-hnpss was at that very moment doing for the consulate of Great Britain but, though the work was nerformed. 'and slowlv. enough, too,1 Mr. Payne was obliged to urge it onward by considerable advances towards the payment for it, thinking him- splf sf.frnrn in beinor able to nharae them upon the rent, which conies on that sta tion out of the Consul's own pocket. Mr, Payne's removal, however, (to make way for a political friend of anew adminislra- tion,) occurred before "sufficient rent was due to cover his advances; and the Bey kept on promising, until his creditor was fairly out of Africa, and then His High ness ceased to say anything more upon the subject. The affair being brought before the State Department, President Polk hand somely overlooking his objection on the party score to Mr. Payne, ordered the Bey to be peremptorily applied to for payment; but His Highness still continued silent. President Taylor reiterated the order of his predecessor, until at length the Bey hearing that a squadron was on its way to refresh his royal memory, di rected the advances in question to be re - fnAoA- hut saying at the same time that 'morc having been done to the house than he thought it needed, he, therefore, only agreed to pay the money out of compli ment to his beloved friend, the United States Government, and not because he considered that it ought to have bepn asked by his aforesaid beloved friend. Either subtle intriguing or egregious blundering, has since interposed actively to embarrass this affair, in consequence of which it seems likely that finaljustice can only be obtained after all by some new exertion of diplomatic skill and decision. There is little doubt but all will come right eventually, as it has been thus far con ducted with an address and vigor by Mr Clayton, which promise the most satisfac tory results. Those best instructed con cerning the particulars, think that Mr. Payne has been pretty hardly used by the barbarian chief, and will rejoice to see the handsome efforts of the Department to assert his undeniable rights crowned by tne speedy payment to him of- not only principal, but interest, with a due allow- ance tor maemnincation; ana at tne same time it might not be inexpedient, as a sort oi proiecuon againsi similar annoyances hereafter, to set on foot a little salutary scrutiny into the tricks whereby the set , i i i l ,11., uemeni nas Deen so long aim t uuiu.j From the N. O. Delta. Sept. 25. Later from Yucatan and Central America- Rumored Intervention of the English. TW thp Rriir P. Srmlp. Cant. Williams ,ttVi,V n-rifeH tmctorfl-j r frnm Havana. wilpn.e she sailed on the 16th inst.. we - mint rv. nn rnnflitinn of nortion of that territory being ceded to them. A letter from Campeachy, dated Aug. Uq savs: Much alarm has Drevailed here. 1 111 vUllvU U V- 11VV V VilV ilihWi VUV1UJ1 ht is reported the English have offered, in der to put an end to our war with the in;.. tt n M hrlfr-rtf- U esterday brought a communication from the Mexican minister of relations, and a O package from the English minister in that wno was to forward them to the Governor of Yucatan. A letter from Merida, under date of Sep tember 3, states that from all ;he inforraa tion that could be obtained upon the sub ject, the Government ot lucatan would never consent to the proposed intervention Under any circumstances. The Indians made a desperate attempt to retake Bacalar, on the 29th June, but were repulsed, after several hours' fighting. They then attacked Tihosuco, on the 7th and 8th of Aug., but with no better success. Gov. Barbachano had recently been re- elected, and has received $16,000 to cany on the war. That sum had been promised him monthly, hereafter, by the Mexican minister of war. The Yucatan journals express great indignation at the rumored collection on Round Island, under Colonel White, of persons whom they denounce as"ph-ates" who, they believe, are about to invade ueatan. The Havana Gaceta re-echoes the sen timents of its faithful ally of despotism,Jthe Cromca, of New i ork, in relation to the recent proclamation of Gen. Taylor. Papers from Guatamala ana balvador, to the 2Gth July, have reached Havana. They state that,notwitstandmg thearrange- ment between the President and Carrera, the rebellion in Las Alto, headed by Gen. Guzman, was still progressing, aided by Leon Raimondo, and others. The charge d'Affairs of the United States and Belgium were about to quit the country. An at- tempt to revolt had been lately put down by the President in Amatitlan. In Salvador everything was peaceful and improving. In ISicaragua a civil war had broken out producing the most lamentable effeets on the country. The Government expected to be able to suppress the revolt. A charge d' iffairs had arrived from the United States at San Juan. The President of Honduras opened the Legislative session on the 10th June, and tendered his resignation. It was supposed that it would be accepted- Iu Costa Rica all was tranquil. Presi dent Castro, at the opening of the session of Congress, May 1st, congratulated the country on its regeneration since the chan- Ses m -iarc" I T ! 1848. The Round Islanders. The Washington Republic, of yester day, says: "We understand that the communications received at the Navy De partment from Commander Randolph with regard to the men assembled at Round Island, are conclusive as to their illegal designs. The military organization; the terms of enlistment; the nature of the ser- vice; the disposition of the arms; thechar- acter ot the country to be attacked; are atl clearly proved by the abundant testimony of persons found among the members of the expedition. The Mobile Herald has the following letter from Pascagoula, dated Sept. 20th: "The t estimated number of persons lying at Round Island is 380. Of these some 80 left the island recentTn A about half of them have since retumv.; "It is expected that they will start now pretty soon. The principal leader is look ed for here presently from the north. Who he is, is not known, but I suspect he is the Spanish General Lopez, now or recently residing in New York. "One thing is certain: these adventurers have an abundance of means The steamship Vixen has arrived at N. Y A Chapter on Witches. , Grace Greenwood discourses, in the happiest vein of humor and philosophy combined, upon Witches, in the paragraphs which follow. They are from a recent letter in the National Era, to; which Grace is contributing a scries of most delightful epistles: . "We also visited Salem last week. What a substantial, stationary, self-satisfied aristocratic look there is about this fine old town. How unlike any other place in this changing, hurried, ambitious, advan cing, levelling, new world of ours. But Salem is modern enough to be beautiful and elegant, and evidently rich enough to dispense with the noise and bustle and mad hurry of money-making. After Execution-hill,' had been pointed' out to me, my mind was thronged with sad and awful memories, and I lookeain-' voluntarily about me as I walked the streets, for 4weird sisters,' among the pas sers by. I saw no wrinkle faced, sinister eyed old women, but I saw plenty smiling, blooming young girls, who could not deny their own witching beauty, were they hanged for it. Ah, it would have gone hard with, them in the good old colony times! Neither trial by fire nor trial by water would have saved them, for the name of their victims would have been 'legion. After all, are we wiser in our day and gen eration than our forefathers? They hung such ar were fairly proved to be witches, and condemned as such, but, doubtless, many escaped through cunning or bribery, or the pity of others. But, in our time, all possessing, or suspected of possessing, or thinking they possess dangerous charms, are immediately immured in close ball rooms, concert rooms, school rooms, kitch ens and nurseries: deprived of proper air, exercise, aims and comforts; forbidden to ramble and climb, laugh loud, wear thick shoes; compelled to waltz into the morn ing, and sleep into noon; to subsist on French novels and French cookery; to embroider blue-black brigands and pink! cherubs in worsted; or, even worse, to toil day after day in noisy factories and mili nary shops! Thus are our witches speed ily and effectually deprived of their mighty spells, the wicked enchantments, which, for a brief while, held in their thrall the souls of men. Thus, from bright eyes grown dim, from rosy cheek grown pale, from the plump figure grown spare, from the neat dress grown careless, from the low, sweet voice,' grown sharp and petu lant, goes out the strong mysterious charm forever. Oh, mournful fate of womankind! Ju9t at this moment, a healthy, glowing face was turned toward me from only the other side of the table, and a pair of M?i7cA-hazel eyes met mine, and smiled as in uncon scious defiance ofmy fancy's sad prophe cy. To her, and such as her, I would say, if one has a corps de reserve of mental resources and heart-riches, to step in and fill up the ranks, as the blooms and attrac tions of youth give way, why it is all very well, and shows good generalship in this short struggle with time, which poets have named 'the battle of life,' but which with many of us only amount to a little skir mishing, with no glory and no spoils, and followed with endless marching, till some morning, when reveille awakes us, and there is no answer to our names in the roll call. Jefferson's House, Death, Grave ic. On the summit that commands this en chanting view, the mansion was built by Jefferson when he had wealth to lavish, on his cultiv atcd tastes. The house was one hundred feet long, and of peculiar lorm and proportion. You enter a wide and lofty hall, that was once adorned with works ot art which he had selected with a master's skill, in the high places of the earth; then you pass to the spacious dining room, with polished inlaid floor; then to his library, and study and parlor. Ascend this flight of stairs not wide enough for more than one to ascend at a time, and you will find the chamber where he died on the 4th of July 1826. The bed was in a recess, the end of which contained two cross pieces, on this were thrown the mat- ress on which he laid himself to die. It was the gloomiest place the dead room that I was ever in; there was tha stran gesl gatherings of thoughts, crowded upon each other, and each claiming to be tVe true emotion of the hour and snot I thought of liberty and revolution philos ophy, and of religion and infidelity, and death, and hereafter of the soul of amigh ty man struggling with fetters, and rushing . t . i , i it j away witn mem into xne aarKness ot an untried future, to the presence of the Infi nite, in whom the wisdom of man and an geis is dui a arop mat tails into the ocean before whom the soul of the unholy shrinks away, and finds the rags of human glory and the fig leaves philosophy to be no covering when the eye of the Holy One searches the spirit, buch thoughts as these pressed upon me as I stood in the chamber whence the soul of Jefferson had fled to Judgment. I he mansion now owned by Capt.Levy is falling into decay; it was sold, and al his furniture, Jefferson having died insol vent; and almost the only relic left of a man whose nme is identified wi'h his country's history, as a patriot and distin guished President, is a bust of Voltaire which stands here a tutelar divinity of this deserted, delapidated house. As you ascend the mountain, you pass an enclosure, without a gate that contains the grave of Jefferson, and a more neglec ted wretched burial place, you will seek in vain. If Campbell's last man had been buried here he could not have been less cared for. The wife of Jefferson, torn fiom him by, death ten years after their early mar riage lies here." A granite obelisk, bat tered much by prilgrims, but without oame or epitaph, is doubtless the monu ment cf Jefferson. It was here placed by his executors, and the panel on which is to be inscribed the epitaph ho wrote izx himself, has never been inserted" in th stone. I was told it was lying-, with tho iron gates destined for the enclosure, cn the banks or the river where landed, aod that no man has troubled himself to see that they reached their' destination.-V. Y. Observer. The Desert of Sahara. North of the mountains of the Moon ia Abyssinia, lies the great Desertjof Sahara, stretching 800 miles in width from its southern margin, and 1000 miles in length, between the Atlantic and the Red Sea It is a hideous barren waste, prolonged cast ward into the Atlantic for miles, in the form of sand banks, and interrupted to the west only by a few oases and the valley of the Nile. This desert is alternately scorched by heat and pinching cold. The wind blows from the east nine months in theyear.and at the equinoxes it rushes in a hurricane driving the sand in clouds before it. nro! ducing the darkness of night at midday, and overwhelming caravens of mpn nA animals in common destruction. Then the sand is heaped up in waves ever vary ing with the blast; even the atmosphere it of sand. The desolation of this dreary waste, boundless to the eye as the ocean, is terrific and sublime the dry heated air is like a red vapor, the setting sun seems to be a volcanic fire, and at times the burn ing wind of the desert is the blast of death. There are many salt lakes to the north, and even the springs are ol brine; thick incrustations of dazzling salt cover the ground, and the particles carried aloft by the whirlwinds, flash in the sun like dia monds. Sand is not the only character of the desert, tracks of gravel and low bare rocks occur at times, not less barren and dreary. On these interminable sand and rocks, no animal, no insect, breaks the dread silence, not a tree nor a shrub is to be seen in this land without a shadow. In the glare of noon the air quivers with the heat reflected from the red sand, and in the night it is chilled in a clear sky sparkling under a host of stars. Strangely but beau tifully contrasted with these scorched soli tudes is the narrow valley of the Nile. Threading the desert for 1000 miles ia emerald green, with its blue vraters foam ing in rapids among wild, uncultivated ridges, or quietly spreading in a calm stream amidst fields of corn and the augut monuments of past ages. English Railroads. A late Parliamentary return exhibits the number of passengers, and also the number of casualties on the railroads of the United Kingdom, during the two first quarters of the present year. From this report, it appears out of a gross total num ber of i:b,dJU,4ir passengers, earned on various railways m Great Britain and Ire- and, during the half -ear ending the 30th of June, 184b, 90 persons were killed, and 99 injured by accidents. A careful and minute analysis of these statistics hows tha: of.the 90 persons killed and 99 njured, there were 6 passengers kilUd and 60 injured from causes beyond their own control; o passengers killed and 2 in ured, owing their own misconduct or want of caution; 7 servants of companies or contractors killed; and 14 injured, from causes beyond their own control; 62 ser vants of companies or contractors killed, and IS injured, owing to their own mis conduct or want of caution; 18 trespassers and other persons (neither passengers nor servants) killed and 5 injured, by improp eify crossing or standing on the railway; person run over and killed at a crossing through the misconduct of an engine dri ver, and 1 suicide. The victims of these accidents were either run over, knocked down, crushed to death, entangled in the machinery, scalded or killed by contact with bridges, collisions, dec. Railroads at the Close of the Year 1S4S The Railroad Journal, summing up the extraordinary iufluencesof railroads upon the country and upon the world, says, it may safely be estimated that the entirj ex penditure, within the last twenty-five years, in the projection and construction of railroads, will not fall short of one thou- and millions of dollars! and that their in fluences facilitating business, in reducing the expenses and time of travel, and in opening up new regions of country, bas an increased value to property of ticice that amount!! and yet their iiifluences are only just beginning to be felt. We may add that within a month two hundred and eighty-two miles of new railroad will be added to that already in use in this country. This addition is made up as follows: New York and Erie. 127 miles; New York and New Haven 8fJ do.; Nashau and Worcester 45 do.; Har lem 30 do.; total, 282 miles. Fire on the woodland, last Saturday, at tached to the furnace of Messrs. Roman & Co., in the Clearspring district, Wash ington county, Maryland, the Hagerstown JNews says consumed lrom 800 to luw cords of wood. The corporation of Cincinnati is no expending S200,000 on a new Vork which is intended to improve the quality, and in crease the quantity of the water lor tne use of the inhabitant?. The Anniversary ot the battle of Mon tcry was celebrated at New Orleans on tha 23d in a fine style. v f I