A ' WE GO WHEfiE DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES POINT THE WAY ; WHEN THEY CEASE TO LEAD, WE CEASE TO FOLLOW." rOLBIE VIII. EBEiYSBl'RG, THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1852. NUMBER 25. iitr It l . T i: K 31 s. The "MOUXTAIX&KXTIXEL" is publish ed cverv Thursday morii'wie, nt (hie Dollar and i 'v L'e'ii 'vT milium, if paid in advauce or within three months ; after three mouths Tu o IhHars v. ill be charged. Xo suW-ription will be taken for a shorter period than six months ; and uo apor will be discontinued until all arrearages are paid. A l iilure t notify a discontinuance at the expira tion of the term subscribed for, will be consid-t-oJ a? ft new cimasienu-iit. 'e. AHYKliTISKMEXTS will be inserted at the following rates: "0 cents per square for tlie first insertions o ce-iits for two insertions; il tVr throe insertions ; and i't cents per square lor every subsequent insertion liberal reduc- tion lii.Hue o unu wiu v.n. All uJvLitist'iiients handed in must have the jivi'tr number of insertions marked thereon, or thev will be published until forbiddei, and charsrc J in accordance with tlie above terms. jOAll letters and commw-jueations to insure attention must be pott paid. A. J. Jill El . I)KOKK IJAltBITOX, U'lthr4 I.Mrel-AVrrtU ami Broken Heart. A Scene From Uulircr'x Zanoni. It was the close of day upon the shores Uf beauteous Naples. The low murmuring waves That rose and fell upon the " Siren's sea'' tlieamed like pale rubies in the sunset glow ; The Jim isle, veiled in mists of silver, rose lar through the dim and shadowy atmosphere : The pale, sweet stars shone calm and beautiful In the lilue diadem of night, and shapes (if loveliness and beauty seemed to steal lYrtli from the soft and deepening shades, as Love An 1 star-eyed Hope and pensive Memory Steal from the twilight of the heart. Afar, Like a huge column moving in the heavens, Soared the gray smoke of old Vesuvius, t'nm its broad base of lurid flavie; the shaft, of Maro's tomb alove the beettling cliS' Was drawn against the deep, blue sky, the soft The scattered gardens of the Caprea shone, Like wrecks of Paradise." No human voice l'.roke the deep spell of silence and repose TLat rested like a calm, mysterious dream l''on the landscape, yet the air still seemed All musical and strangely tToque-nt With tin- hushed cadences and pn-Ssion sighs Uf Jeep nii'l burnii'g love. Ah ! raid this ccnc Of loveliness and deep screnitj-. The traces of despair and woe and death Were darkly visible. Tire twilight's last Sweet, rosy smile of gentleness and love Stole softly,' calmly, beautifully through The parted vines that bloomed and clustered o'er The window of an humble cottage home, And fell upon the white brow of the dead, As human love falls vainly on the heart Of cold despair. Alone the minstrel slept In his uubreatbing rest. Upon the floor, lieside him, lay the cherished laurel-wreath, Ilia only wealth, the guerdon of his toils, The one dear boon for which, through weary years Of bitter sorrows, he had patiently Struggled and suffered, pouring forth his wild, I-ep soul of music, while keen agony Was tearing his great besirt. There, there it lay All pale and withering, like the throbless brow Whence it had fallen. There, beside him too, Ihnkea and silent lay his barbiton, Hi own familiar, in whose spirit tones His spirit e'er had found in joy and grief A faithful echo. It had been his friend, True and unfailing, 'mid the darkened wrecks Of human friendship. It had been his love, His child, his life, and his religion. lie H.-id talked to it at twilight's wizard hour, The hour that now closed over it and him, And it had answered him in tones of more Than earthly sympathy. And he hail won, W ith its dear aid, the wreath so fondly deemed The emblem of fame's immortality. Cut now the dust was on its loosened chords ; That, like his own dark tresses, swept the floor, To sound no more, save when perchatioe the wind, Straying at night-fall through that ruined cot, Should gently stir them with its breath of sighs, To one low wail, one melancholy moan, lor him who so had loved them. 'Twas a scene To move the heart to tears. The world around, The air, the earth, the sky, the ocean, seemed Flooded with beauty ; eTcry isle that gleamed la the deep sea, and every sweet star-isle That glittered in the blue sky, seemed a bright Calaypso of the heart ; yet in that lone And silent cottage home, the roinstrel pale T he wreath that he had purchased with the cries, The wild shrieks of the spirit and the lyre, The 6fie companion of his life of toil, His heart's dear idol moldered side by side, Inheeded by the careless race of men. L.01I3VILLE, Feb., 1852. MATTIE. The Yacht America. Some time since, an English paper, envious f the fame of the yacht America, started a re Port that the purchaser of that beautiful craft as disappointed in her, and was .anxious to sell er at & reduced price. This report, which was eagerly seized upon by the English papers, was, hout doubt, unfounded. It will be seen, by he following extract of a letter, dated Malta, eb. 6, that the performance of the yacht, on W Mediterranean voyage has been highly sat Jsfactory : ''The America, the wonder of the day among jacbts, arrived here on the 2nd hist. She came in beautiful style, after laymg-to for hours in a heavy gaie from N N IIcr noWj owncr le Elanquiere, is loud in her praises as a Tssel of remarkable speed and buoyancy. She illbe within four points of the wiud and do fifteen knots an hour with ease. Sine leav lng England she has had a fair share of heavy father, and had there been any truth in the gnostics of her detractors, that Jier masts uld te carried away in bad weather, and other similar follies, there was every possible opportunity of their being realized. But the pretty craft nobly did her duty, doing her 14 knots for a whole night, w hen running with but her jib set, and all bad weather at defiance. During her stay she has been visited by numbers of persons. The America will proceed to-morrow to Alexandria." THOMAS 3IOOKE. The last quarter of the last century will over be a memorable period in the history of litcra- ture, niuileJ as it was by the aiipciinnoc, not of oue g'eat light merely, but by a great galaxy. Wordsworth, Coleridge, Scott, Byron, Moore, Hunt, Shelly, Campbell, "Wilson, Lamb, Southey, Rogers, were all born within period -eighteen years ; they have been going out in -equally rapid succession. Scarcely have we become fa milliar with the fact that Wordsworth no longer lives, when the tidings reach us that the author of " Lalla Rookh," the wit, the gentleman, the poet, the politician, the "bard of all circles, the idol of his own," has also gone the way of all ; earth. There are but three left to follow him j Roger. Hunt and Wilson. j The leading facts in the life of the departed , -ct have already been spread before the world ; in the columns of the daily press, and we need ' not repeat them in ours. Of late years the j world has heard little of Moore, the decay of his J mental powers having anticipated the date of his (physical death. Let us, therefore, look behind ; the curtain of his closing years, and see how ; Thomas Moore appeared to those who saw him in his prime. j 'i'weiity-fivc years ago, Moore visited Sir Wal ter Scott, at Abbotsford, for the first and only time in his life. In Sir Walter's journal we find the following allusion to his visit : " I saw Moore (for the first time, I may say) this season. We had indeed met in public twen ty years ago. There is a manly frankness, with perfect eae and good-breeding, about him which is delightful. Not the least touch of the poet or the pedant. A little very little man. Les, I think, than Lewis, and somewhat like him in person; God knows, not iu conversation, for Matt, though a clever fellow, was a bore of the I first description. Moreover, he looked always 1 like a school-boy. Now Moore has none of this j insignificance. His countenance is plain, but the expression so very animated, especially in speaking or singing, that it is far more interes ting than the finest features could have render ed it. I was aware that Byron had often spoken, both in private society and in his journal, of Moore and myself, in the same breath, and with I the same sort of regard ; so I was curious to see I what there could bo in common betwixt us, ! Moore having lived so much in the gay world, j 1 in the country, and with people of business, and sometimes with politicians ; Moore a scholar, i I none; he a musician and artist, I without j knowledge of a note ; he a democrat, I an oris- ; tocrat with many other points of difference ; j ( besides his being an Irishman, I a Scotchman, ( and both tolerably national. Vet there is a point f Kf lll7iailV. Vj tall'a ( O V Uil UliVi V Csal, K V WAX good-humoured fellows, who rather seek to enjoy what is going forward than to maintain our dig nity as lions ; and we have both seen the world too widely and too well not to contemn in our souls the imaginary consequence of literary peo ple, who walk with their noses in the air, and remind me always of the fellow whom Johnson met in the ale house, and who called himself "lite great Tivalmly inventor of the Jloodyate iron for smoothing linen.'" lie also enjoys the 2Iot pour rire, and so. do I. It was a pity that noth ing save the total destruction of Byron's Me moirs would satisfy his executors. But their was a reason 1'remat Xoz alia. It would be a delightful addition to life, if T. M. had a cottage within two miles of one. We went to the thea tre together, and the house being luckily a good one, received T. M. w ith rapture. I could have hugged them, for it paid back the debt of the kind reception I mer with in Ireland." In his " Pencillhigs by the way," N. V. Willis Esq., Editor of the N. Y. Home Journal, thus describes the bearing of Moore, at a dinner par ty, given by Lady Blessington, with singular fe licity. We copy a passage or two : " I called on Moore, with a letter of introduc tion, and met him at the door of his lodgings. I knew him instantly from the pictures 1 had 6en of him, but was surprised at the diminu tivcaess of his person. He is much below the middle size, and with his white hat and long chocolate frock-coat, was far from prepossessing in his appearance. With this material disadvan tage, however, his address is gentleman-like to a. very marked degree, and I should think no one could see Moore without conceiving a strong liking for him. As I Vas to meet him at dinner, I did not detain him. In the moment's conver sation that passed, he inquired very particularly after Washington Irv ing, expressing for him the warmest friendship, and asked what Cooper was doing. I was at Lady Blessington s at eight. Moore had not arrivod, but the other persons of the party a Russian count, who spoke all the lan guages of Europe as well as his own, a Roman banker, a clever English nobleman, and the " observed of all observers," Count do Orsay, stood in the window upon the park, killing, as they might, the melancholy twilight half how preceeding dinner. " Mr. Moore !" cried the footman at the bot tom of the staircase. " Mr. Moore !" cried the footman at the top. And with his glass at his eye, stumbling over an ottoman, between his near-sightedness and the darkness of the room, enters the poet. Half a glance tells you that he is at home on a carpet. Sliding his little feet up to Lady Blessington, (of whom he was a lover when she was sixteen, and to whom some of the sweetest of his songs wero written,) he made his compliments with a gayty and -an ease, com bined with a kind of worshipping deference, that was worthy of a prime-minister at the court of love. With the gentlemen, all of whm he knew, he had the frank, merry manner of a confident favourite, and he was greeted like one. He went from one to the other, straining back his head to look up at them, (for singularly enough, every gentleman in the room was six feet high and up ward,) and to every one he said something which, from anyone else, would have seemed peculiarly felicitous, but which fell from his lips as if his breath was not more spontaneous. Dinner was announced, the Russian handed down "miladi," and I found myself seated op posite Moore, with ablaieofligbton his Bacchus head, and the mirrors with which the superb octagonal room is pannelled reflecting every nw- tiou. To sec him only at table, you would think him not a small man. His principal length is in his body, and his head and shoulders are those of a much larger person. Consequently he sits tall, and with the peculiar erectness of head and uack, his climimitivenes'S disappears." -ifc " Moore's head is distinctly before me while I write, but I shall find it difficult to descrjbe. His hair, which curled once all over it in long ten drils, uulike any body else's in the world, and w hich probably suggested his nobriquet of "Bac chus," is diminished now to a few curls sprinkled with gray, and scattered in a single ring above his ears. His forehead is wrinkled, with the ex ception of a most prominent development of the organ of gayety, which, singularly enough, shines with the lustre and smooth polish of a pearl, and is surrounded by a semicircle of lines drawn close about it, like entrenchments against Time. His eye3 still sparkle like a champagne bubble, though the invader has drawn his pcncillings about the corners ; and there is a kind of wintry red, of the tinge cf an October leaf, that seems enamelled on his cheek, the eloquent record of the claret his wit has brightened. His mouth is the most characteristic feature of all. The lip are delicately cut, slight, and changeable as an aspen ; but there is a set-up look about the lower lip, a determination of the muscle to a particular expression, and you fancy that you can almost see wit astride upon it. It is written legibly with the imprint of habitual success. It is arch, confident, and half diffident, as if he were disguising his pleasure at applause, while another bright gleam of fancy was breaking on him. The slightly-tossed nose confirms the fun of the expression, and altogether it is a face that sparkles, beams, radiates everything but feds. Fascinating beyond all men as he is, Moore looks like a worldling. This description may be supposed to have oc cupied the hour after Lady Blessington retired from the table ; for with her vanished Moore's excitement, and everybody else seemed to feel that the light had gone out of the room. Her ex cessive beauty is less an inspiration than the wondrous talent with which she draws from ev ery person around his peculiar excellence. Talk ing better than anybody else, and narrating, particularly, with a graphic power that I never saw excelled, this distinguished woman seems striving only to make others unfold themselves ; and never had diffidence a more apprehensive and encouraging listener. But this is a subject with which I should never be done. We went up to coffee, and Moore brightened again over his ehasse.-cafe, and went glittering on with criticisms on Grisi, the delicious songstress now ravishing the world, whom he placed above all but Fasta ; and whom he thought, with th exception that her legs were too short, an in comparable creature. This introduced musio very naturally, and with a great deal of difficul ty he was taken to the piano. My letter is get ting long, and I have no time to describe his singing. It is well known, however, that its effect is only, equalled by the beauty of his own words; and, for one, I ceuld have taken him into my heart with my delight, ne makes no attempt at music. It is a kind of admirable recitative, in which every shade of thought ia sylabled and dwelt upon, and the sentiment of the song goes through your blood, warming you to the very eyelids, and starting your tears, if you have soul or sense in you. I have heard of woman's fain ting at a song of Mrore's ; and if the burden of it answered by chance to a secret in the bosom of the listener, I should think, from its compara tive effect upon so old a stager as myself, that the heart would break with it. We all sat around the piano, and after two or three songs of Lady Blessington's choice, he rambled over the keys awhile, and sang " When first I met thee," with a pathos that beggars description. When the last word had faltered out. he rose and took L.dy Blessington's hand. said good night and was gone before a word was uttered. For a full minute after he had closed the door no one spoke. I could have wished, for t myself, to drop silently asleep where I sat, with the tears in my eyes and the soflness upon my heart," Thus has ono poet drawn for posterity a pic ture of another, more valuable far than any ef fort of the painter's skill. The painter rescues jrim oblivion the lineaments of the countenance, and the contour of the person ; but the picture of which the above is a part, presents to us the wiiote ms, as c k- Lc spoke os Le thought and felt, and a3 he affected to unuJi and feel. We cannot better conclude our notice than by appending the lines of Byron, the last of which Mr Willis quotes in the passage above. They were addressed extempore to Mooro in Italy, just as the two poets were on the eve of a long sep- eration. They show how warm a friendship Moore could inspire even in the . " wayward heart" of Byron My boat is on the shore, And my Lark is on the sea liMt, before I go, Tom Moore. Here's a double health to thee. Here's a sigh to those who love me, And a smile to those who hate ; And whatever tk'g above me, IIere,s a heart for every fate. ITioagh the ocan roar around me, Yet it still &ka!l bear on Though a desert should surround me, It hth springs that may be won. Wert the last drop in the well, And I gaspiuj on the brink, Ere my faioting spirit fell, 'Tis to thee that I would drieg. In that water, a this wine, The libation I would pour Should be Peace to thee and thine. And a health to thee, Tom Moore 1 Mooro died in the fifty-second year of his au thorship, and the seventy second of his age. His death, a happy release from the hopeless darkness of mental imbecility, has ushered him into the unfading light of immortality, Beaco to his aemorv ! WAR'S YOl'R 1IOSS Some years since when the State of Missouri was considered "Far West," there lived on the bank of the river of the same name of the State, a substa.u4ial farmer, vho, by ycura ol toil, had accumulated a tolerably pretty pite of casting, owing, as he said, principally to the fact that he didn't raise much taters and ununs, but rite smart corn. This farmer, hearing that good land was much cheaper further South, concluded to move theve. Accordingly, he provided his eldest son with a good horse, and a sufficiency of the needful to defray his traveling and con tingent expenses, and instructed him to purchase two hundred acres of good land, at the lowest possible price, and return immediately home. The next day Jeems started for Arkansas, and after an absence of some six weeks, returned home. "Well, Jeems," said the oll man, "how'd yo find land in Arkansaw ?" "Tolerably cheap, dad." "You didn't buy aioi' two handred acras, did you, Jeems ?" "No, dad, over two hundred, I reckon." "How much money hevyu got left ?" "N'ory red, dad ; cleaned rite out !" "Why, I had no idee travelin' was 60 'spensiva in them parts, Jeems." "Wal, just you try won'st an' you'll find out, I reckon." "Wal, never mind that ; let's hear 'boat the laud, an' lut war's your hoss ?" "Why, you see, dud, I was a goin' along one day " "But war's your hoss !" "You hole on, dad, and I'll tell you all about it. You see, I was agoin' along, one day, and I met a feller as said he was goin' my way tu." "But war's your hoss ?"' "Dod darn my hide, if you don't shut up, dad I'll never git tu the hoss. Wal, as we was both goin the same way, me an' this feller jined com pany, an' about noon we hitched our critters, and set down aside ut a branch, and went to ea tin' a smack. Arter we'd got through, this fel ler sez to me, 'Try a drap uv this ere red eye, stranger.' 'Wal, I don't mind,' sez I " "But war's your hoss !" "Kumin' tu him bime-by, dad. So me and this feller sot thar, sorter torkin' and drinkin an' he sez, 'Stranger, let's play a little game uv seven up,' a takin' out uv his pocket a greasy roun cornered deck uv cards. 'Don't keer if I du,' sez I. So we sot up sido uv a stump, and cummene'd tu bet a quortcr up, and I was elayin' him orful !" "But war's your hoss ?" "Kumin' tu him, dad. Binieby luck changed, and he got tu winnin', and pretty soon I hadn't nary quarter. Then sez he, 'Stranger, I'll give you a chance to git even, and play you one more game,' Wal, we both played rite tite that game, I eware, an' we was both six an' six, an'" 4 War's your hoss." "Kumin' to him, dad. We was six an' six, an' 'twas his deal " "Will you tell mc var'sour hits ."' said the old man, getting riled. "Yes, we was six an' six, an' he turned the Jack !" "But mart four hot T" "The stranger won him, a tirmn," up that Jark ."' Varletirs. The New York Ticayuno is a funny paper. Prof. Hannibal's lectures arc always to the point. In his last one he describes "G'ografy" thus : "G'ografy, my frens, meens de longertude, lassertude, an' sidewashun ob de earth, or de globe. Dat am, it tells you whar you am, wedder in the temperance zone or de intemp ence zone, or wedder you am near de equin ox tail line, or in de hemisfear. Darefore yon kin see wid your eyes shut de great tilutity ob beiu' posted in de siance." The Professor thinks it a natural disgrace that America was discovered by a "furriner." EpiTArn. The following is a copy of an Epi taph on an old Tombstone in Scotland : Here lies the body of Alexander McPherson, Who was a very extraordinary person ; He was two yards high iu his stocking feet, And kept his accoutrements clean and neat. He was slew At the battle of Waterloo, Plump through The gullet ; it went in at the throat And came out at the back of hit coat. Capital Punishmknt. A report of the Salecl Committee to the Legislature of Pennsylvania, on the Abolition of Capital Puaishment, says, that in fifty-four years seventy persons have been executed in this State for murder. Of one hun- dred and eleven persons who have been charged with murder in Philadelphia county, only ten were capitally convicted, three of these were pardoned, two died befure the sentence, and only five were executed, being one in twenty-two of the indicted. The Committee, after a cartful con sideration of the subject, have come to the con- j cluaiom that the death punishment, as a penalty for crime, out to be abolished. Iron Yksssls or War. Some experiments at the Washington Navy Yard have been male, which would seem to establish the unfitness of iron as a material for the hulls of vessels of war. A condemned iron vessel was procured, an eight inch shell was fired at her from a 56-pounder gun, at a distance of three hundred and fifty yards. The bhaU went clear through both the sides of the vessel, tearing large ragged holes (much larger than the diameter of the shell, and too irregular for plugging, and scattering small and jagged fragments of iron, which in an ac- i tion would be likely to prove more dangerous to her own crew than the -shot from an enemy's battery. Another shell fired at her wooden bul warks made only a clean, round hole. A Costly Auht. The discussion in Congress on the Deficiency Bill, reveals some interesting facts respecting the army. The navy used to be considered the moth that eat up a large share of the public revenue without rendering any adequate equivalent, but the army seems to be putting in its claims to a considerable amount.- The army numbers ten thousand men. Last year Congress made an appropriation of one million of dollars for the simple purpose of transporting men, provisions and military stores from one post to another. By some manage ment of the War Department, it has been made to cost us two millions or thereabouts, at the rate of two hundred dollars to every man in the army. The entire expenses of our army amount ed last year to ten millions, or a thousand dol lars a man. A Tnr Story. A lady from the Far West was, with her husband, awakened on the night of their arrival in the city of Tenn, by an alarm of fire, and the yells of several companies of firemen, as they dashed along the streets. "Husband! husband!" she cried, shaking her worser-half into conscientiousness, "only hear the Injuns ! Why this beats all the scalp-dances I ever heard !" "Nonsense," growled the husband, composing himself to sleep, "There are no Indians in Phi ladelphia." "No Injuns, indeed I As if I didn't know a war whoop when I heard one." Next morning on descending to breakfast, they were saluted with "Did you hear the engines last night ? What a noise they made." Turning to her husband, with an air of tri umph, the lady exclaimed "There, I told you they were Injuns !" What a Cootrt. The Cincinnati Commer cial piles uf the agony, and goes it with a per fect rush, in a shouting paragraph, as follows "We have the longest railway and telegraph lines, the best wives, the fattest children, the biggest rivers, the fastest steamboats, the worst police, the adroitest rascals the sun ever shone on, and can put a chunk of ice in one of Hull's safes, chuck said safe into Mount Vesuvius, haul it out in after years, and cool a lemonade w ith its contents. In short, we are one mighty mass of conglomerated usefulness, each fragment do ing the best for itself, but all making one mighty big circumstance for the whole, as the hunter eaid when he split a fence rail for a ramrod." MovixG. Reader did you ever move ! If so, you can appreciate the following poetic effu sion : "Come, Sally, catch hold here, and give us a lift, let us pull up the carpet and set it adrift ; uncord the bedstead and pack up the quils, be careful the crockery dosen't get Fplit ; let the baby yell murder, the boy go to grass, but be ware how you handle that basket of glass. Take the stove-pipe apart, set the stove on the cart, let the bureau remain till next load, and see that the victuals don't spill in the kettles, or the babies fall off in the road. Never mind about to-day, wife, only furnish us something to eat, for you know 'tis the first of May, wife, and wo want to koop pverything neat. I'm sorry we've moved all the chairs, tor wt no place to sit down to rest, but you may squat down on tho stairs, or floor, or just where you think best. Drive slow Mr. Cartman while steady we go there ! hold up a moment, I knew it would bo so the soap grease has spilt in the flour the vinegar jug is now springing a leak, oh wish they were all in the middle of next week." Thus will the day in noise pass away, and none will be happy on the first of May. Arrival of tlic Steamer Canada Halifax, March SO. The Canada arrived here this morning-, and sailed for Boston at nine o'clock, with 64 passengers and $15,000 in spe cie. The Cambria arrived at Liverpool on the ICth at noon. The Baltic arrived on the morn ing of the l&th. Ebglasd. In the House of Lords, on the 12th iust., the Earl Derby intimated that he should leave the questioa of free trade to be settled at the polls by an election. He implored their Lordships to niodifr the present system, declar ing his own determination to perform his duty unflinchingly. Mr. D'Israeli, in the IIcusc of Commons, announced the determination of ths government to prosecute three measures, vix : the disfranchisement of St. Albans, Chancery Reform, and the Militia bill. The Earl Derby promised to appoint a com mittee to investigate the Irish Education Board, with a view to the mitigation of the opposition of the clergy of the Established church. Mr. Napier, the ew Irish Attorney General, moved for a committee to inquire into the ribbon Fys tein in Ireland. On Friday night Earl Derby, in the House of Lords, and D'Israeli, in the Com mons, declared their intention to dissolve Par liament as soon as tho militia bill and other ne cessary measures were passed. The Protection ists and Free Traders are now actively engaged in preparing for the coming campaign. Owing to the adroit management of the Parliamentary committee of the Catholic Defence Association, as was anticipated, three-fifths of the Irish coun tirs will be controlled at the approaching elec tions by tie priests of that country. Fmaxci. M. Carnot, the opposition candi date for the fourth conscription of Paris, has been elected. The President issued a ucreu for the Ministers of Finance to effect the conver sion of 5 per cents into new bonds at four and a half per cent. The weekly returns of the Baik of France have been discontinued. The govern ment has placed on the retired list a luxge num ber of officers, of various ranks. Spaix. The government intends to rcinfrcJ the garrison of Cuba and Porta Rico, ty an ad dition of from 3000 to 4000 men. General Caredo, who supercedes De Concha as Governor of Cuba, was to sail from Cadix or the 20th March. The cause of Coacka's dismi. sal was not made known. Extensive dismissal and reorganizations were taking place both cival and military service. Pobtvgal. The Portuguese Cabinet Lad bee? completed by the acquisition of Viscount Pclmur da Garrete and M. Labra. A ministry sofavo. ably endowed with talent and oratorical powe had not existed at Libcn for many years. Tr reform of the Charter was likely to be earrie Holland. The Second Chamber had reject one of the most important clauses in the bill f establishing an income tax. The Ministry therefore, withdrew the measure. At stria. Lord Derby's accession to powe in England had given great satisfaction at th Court of Vienna. The government had resolved to abstain from the reprisals upon English trav ellers previously tErcatencd, in consequence of the countenance given iu England to the conti nental refugees. India akp Cui.na. The overland mail had a rived in L ondon. It brings but little additiom news respecting the Burncse war. The Gove nor General is anxious to avoid further bestilitie? The Tcrsians had invaded. Ilerst, and wcr- likely to prove successful. The war continued in the sound of China. A large piratical fleet had arrived off Ningpo. British vessels were on the spot to render such assistance as might be necssary. Seventeen American whalers were in Hong Kong harbor. The fishing season had been un profitable. The emigration of Chinese to California wai greatly increasing. Avstralia. Sydney advices to the lth De cember had been received in Livcri-col. 1 revis ions there wero exceedingly dear, though not scarce The place was comparatively deserted, a creat many of the people having gone to the dic-ings, where gold is still found in great abun dance. Women get ten shillings a day for dis charging vessels.