f I ! 1 4 l 1'3 N 1 : 1 M 8 lit IP 13 9 3 lMMa IK id K in lt. THE BLESSINGS OF GOVKRXiUUiT, L1KLE TEB DBWS O? HBATIX, SnOULD BR TISTRIBUTED ALIJLK CPOX THE niGn AND THE LOW, THE EICI1 AND THE POOR. STSlSr EBEXSBERfl, FRIDAY, MM 17, 18R VoT.l AO. 27. TERMS: Xbe DEMOCRAT & SENTINEL is published every Friday morning, in Ebensburg, Cambria county. Pa., at $1 60 per annum, if paid in advance, if not $2 will be charged. ADVERTISEMENTS -will be conspieuously inser ted at the following rates, vii : 1 square 8 insertions 1 00 Bvery subsequent insertion 25 1 square 3 months 3 00 " 6 " G OO 1 year 8 00 J column 1 year 18 00 u " 80 00 Business Cards with 1 copy of the Democrat $ Sentinel per year 6 00 . Letters must be post paid to secure attention. SMtjits of ltd 33ft. DEATH-BED OF TOM PAINE 1809. "Tell me," was the language of the ancient, "tell meiot how a man lives, but how he dies, before I can judge of him." Believing there is much practical wisdom in this saying, and that a powerful antidote for infidelity may be had in an exhibition of its legitimate fruits, we take from the U. S- Catholic Magazine the following extract from a letter of Bishop Fcnwick to Lis brother at Georgetown College : - A short time before Faine died I was sent for by him. He was prompted to thi3 by a poor Catholic woman, who went to sec . him in his sickness ; and who told him among other things, that, in his wretched condition, if any body oould do him good it would be a Roman Catholic priest. This woman was an American convert, (formerly a Shaking Quakeress) whom I had re ceived into the church but a few weeks before. She was the bearer of the message to me from Paine. I stated this circunis'anoe to F. Kolil tnann, at breakfast, and requested him to accom pany me. After some solicitation cn my part, be agreed to do so ; at which I was greatly re joiced, because I was at that time young and in experienced in the ministry, and was glad to hare his assistance, as I knew, from the great reputa tion of Paine, that T should have to do with one of the most impious as well as infamous of men. We shortly after set out for the house, at Greenwich where Paine lodged, and cn our way agreed upon a mode of proceeding with him. We arrived at the house : a decent looking el derly woman (probably his housekeeper) came to the door, and inquired whether we were Catho lic priests ; "for," said she. "Mr. Paine hns been so much annoyed of late by ministers of other denominations calling upon him, that he has left express orders with me to admit no one to-day bat the clergymen of the Catholic ch.uch." Upon assuring her that we were Catholic Cler gyman, she opened the door and showed us into the parlor, tihe thtn left the room , and shortly after returned to inform us that Paine was asleep, and at the same time expressed a wish that we would not disturb him : "for," said she, "he is always in a bad humor when roused out of his Bleep ; 'tis better to wait a little till he awake." We accordingly sat down, and resolved to await a more favorable moment' "Gentlemen," said the lady, having taken her seat also, "I really wish you may succeed with Mr. Paine, for he is laboring under great distress of mind ever since he was informed by Lis physicians that he can not possibly live, and must die shortly. He sent fbr you to-day, because he was told that if any cue could do him good, you might. Possibly he may think you know of some remedy which hi3 physicians are ignorant of. He is truly to be pitied. His cries, when he is left alone, are heart rending. '0 Lord help me !' he will exclaim du nr;g his paroxysms of distress ; 'God help me! Jesus Christ help me !' repealing the same ex pressions without any, the least variation in a tone of voice that would alarm the house. Some times he will say, 'O God ! what have I done to Buffer so much !' Then shortly after, 'But there is r.o God. And again, a little after 'Yet if there should be, what will become of me hereaf ter V Thus he will continue for sometime, when cn a sudden he will scream as if in terror and sgeny, and call out for me by name. On one of those occasions, which are very frequent, T went to him and inquired what ho wanted 'Stay with me,' he replied, 'for God's sake, fori cannot bear to be alone.' I then observed that I could not tiways be with him, as I had much to attend to ?n the house. 'Then said he, send even a child to stay with me. for it ic hil n ha alone.' 'I never saw,' she concluded, 'a more unhappy, a snore forsaken man ; he Beems he cannot recon cile himself to die." Such was the conversation of the woman who Lad received us, and who probably had been em ployed to nurse and take care of him during his Uinces. She was a protestant, yet seemed very desirous that we should afford him some relief m his Etate of abandonment, bordering on complete despair. Having remained thus some time in the parlor, we at length heard a noise in the adjoin ing room, across the passageway, which induced aa to believe that Mr. Paine, who was sick in that room, had awoke. We accordingly propos ed to proceed thither, which was assented to by the woman ; and she opened the door for us. On entering we found him just getting out of his slumber. A more wretched being in appearance I never before beheld. Ho was lying in a bed, Efficiently decent in itself, but at present be smeared with 61th ; Lis eyes haggard, his coun tenance forbidding, and his whole appearance that f one whose better days had been one continued debauch. His only nourishment at this time we re informed, was nothing more than milk punch in which he indulged to the full extent of hi3 weak state. He had partaken undoubtedly but -ery recently of it, as the sides and corners of lis rarJ2 exhibited very unequivocal traces of it, ts wtUas.ef blood, which had also flowed in hetrark. and left its mark on the pillow. His face, to a certain extent, had also been besmeared with it. The head of his bed was against the side of the room through which the door opened: F. Kohlmann having entered first, took his seat on the side ntar the foot of his bed. I took my seat on the same side nearer the head Thus, in the posture in which Paine lay, his eyes could easily bear on F. Kohlmann, but not on me easi ly, without turning his head. As soon as we had seated ourselves, F. Kohl mann, in a very mild tone of voice, informed him that we were Catholic priests, and were come, on his invitation, to see him. Paine made no reply. After a short pause, F. Kohlmann pro ceeded thus, addressing himself to Paine, in the French language thinking that, as Paine had been to France, he was probably acquitted with that language, (which was not the fact.) and might understand better what he said, as he had at that time a greater facility, and could express hia thoughts in it than in English. "Mons Paine, j'al hi votre l'vre intitule, Umjt de Li liaison, ou vous avez attaquel'eeriture sainte avec nne violence, sans !oraes. etd'autres de vos cerits publies en France : ct jo suis persuade vue." Paine here interrupted him abruptly, and in a sharp tone cf voice ordering him to speak English, thus : "Speak English, man, speak English." F. Kohlmann. without showing tho least embarrassment, resumed his discourse, and expressed himself near as follows, afier his interruption,, in English: -'Mr. Paine. I have read your bok entitled the Age of Reason, as well as all your other writings against the chris tian religion, and am at a loss to imagine how a man of your good sense could Lave employed his talents in attempting to undermine what, to say nothing of its elivir.e establishment, the wisdom of ages lias deemed most conducive to the hap piness of man. The christian religion, sir " ' That's enough sir, that's enough" said Paine, again interrupting him : "I see what you would be about : I wish to hear no more from -ou, sir. My mind is made up on that subject. I look up on the whole Christian Fcaciae to be a tissue of absurdities and lies, and Jesus Christ to 1 noth ing more than a cunning kr.ave or impostor." F. Kohlmann here attempted to speak sgain when Paine with a lowering countenance, order ed him instantly to be quiet, and trouble him no more. "I have to'd ycu already that I wish to hear nothing more from you." "The Bible, sir," said F. Kohlmann, still at tempting to speak, "is a sabred and divine book, which has stood the test and (he criticisms of abler pons than yours ; pens which have made at least some show to argument, and " "l"eur bible," returned Paine, "contains noth ing but fables ; yes fables : and I hae .. p raved it to a demonstration." All this time T looked upon the monster with pity, mingled with indignation at his blasphe mies. I frit a degree of horror at thinking that in a very short time he would be cited to appear before the tribunal of his God whom he so shock ingly blasphemed, with all his sins upon him. Seeing that F. Kohlmann Lad coniplete-1 y failed to make any impression on him, and that Paine would listen to nothing that came from him, nor would even suffer him to speak, I finally conclu ded to try what effect I might have. I accord ingly commenced with observing : "Mr. Taine you will certainly allow that there exists a God, and that this God cannot be indifferent to the conduct and actions, of his creatures." "I wiil allow nothing sir," he hastily replied, "I shall make no confessions." "Well, sir, if you will listen calmly for one moment," said I, "I will prove to you that there is such a being, and I will demonstrate from His very nature that he cannot be an idle spectator of our conduct." "Sir I wish to hear nothing you have to say ; I see your object, gentlemen, is to trouble me: I wish you would leave the room." This he srokc iu an exceedingly angry tone, so much so that he foamed at the mouth. "Mr. Paine," I continued 'I assure that our object in coming hither was to do you good. We had no other motive. We had been given to understand that ycu wished to see us, and we arc come accordingly : because it is a principle with us never to refuse our servi ces to a dying man asking for them. But for this we should not of come in, fbr we never ob trude upon any individual." Paine on hearing this seemed to relax a little ; in a milder tone of voice than he had hitherto used, he replied ; "You can do no good now it is too late I have tried different physicians, and their remedies have all failed. I have n'alilug now to expect," this he spoke with siu but a speedy dissolution. My physicians have indeed J . told me as much." "You have misunderstood me, Ra;.l T immediate!? to him. "We arc not come to proscribe any remedies for your bodily complaints ; we only come to make you an offer of our ministry for the good cf your immortal soul, which is in great danger of being forever cast oft by the Almighty, on account of your A c. 1- f.ir t. rrimn of havinQ" villi- ficdand rejected Ilis Son." Tame on hearing . way mrou-n 1-,- 1 this, was roused into a fury: he gritted his teeth, curtain ; after which they Lnd themselves in a twisted and turned himself several times in his I suite of rooms cf conquerable S1ze bu misera d utterin, all the while the bitterest impreca- j bly furnished. A freshly ht fire of coals bums Uon.s. I firmly believe such was the rage in sulkily in one or two of the grates, and I know which he was at this time, that if he had had a of nothing more dreary and dupir. ung Ihe ptol he would have shot one of us, for he con- rain rattles solemnly .gamut fhe windows , of c ducted himself more like a madman than a ra- palace. The noses of the " tional being. "Begone" says he, "and trouble ! are quite red with cold, and thc.r hane are Was. ine no more I was in peace," he continued, "'till , Let ns coon. ' ' . you came." We know better than that." repli- j The last room of the suite is smaller than the edF. Kohlmann ; we knew that you cannot be rest. It would be used as a refreshment room if in peace-there can be no peace for the wicked. : Strauss or Jullien were to give a ball in the God has said it." "Away with you and your palace. A coal fire bums sluggishly m the grate, God too ; leave the room instantly," he exclaim- and there is a plain sofa without a back, placed ed ; "all that you have uttered are lies-filthy next to the wall at the extreme end. As the m lies and if I had a little more time, I would ternuncio enters with his suit an individual ,s n-ove it.ai Ididaboutvour imposture Jesus seen to rise slowly from this sofa, and he stands Christ " "Monster," exclaimed F. Kohlmann, up to receive the visiters. He is a dark, weaned in a burst of zeal, "vcu will have no more time. ! looking man, in appearance about forty, though Your hour has arrived. Think rather of the awful account you have already to render, and implore pardon of God ; provoke no longer His just indignation upon your head." Paine here ordered us again to retire, in the highest pitch of his voice, and seemed a very maniac with rage and madness. "Let us go said I to F. Kohl mann ; we have nothing more to do. He seems to be entirely abandoned by God : further words are lost upon him. ' Upon this we both withdrew from tho room and left the unfortunate man to his thoughts, I never before or since, beheld a more hardened wretch. This, you may rely upon it, is a faithful and correct accout of the transaction. I remain your affectionate brother. (Signed) II Bkxedict. Bp. of Boston. From Bentley's Miscellanv. VISIT TO THE SULTAN. Let us follow the internuncio and his suite, however, and we shall judge for ourselves. When they arrive at the palace, they are conducted by some stragglers who happen to be about the pal ace, through a little garden formally laid out in the old French style one of those gardens which have nothing but tho name ; a garden with little patches of flower beds cut into triangles and cre s cents, and having hard, dry, pebbly, useless paths bt tween, which nobody ever docs or could walk upon. This garden may, perhaps, cover a quarter of an acre of grounel, not more : and it is soon passed. The internuncio and his train have entered iuto a low stone passage, with many mysterious doors here and there. This passage, too, is very dark, and rather damn, and particu larly bare. It has nothing of oriental magnifi cence in it, yet we are within th? imperii:! palace, and the Sultan is, I dare say, within hearing of us .'omewhtre. Meantime some ha'f dozen strag gling servants and officials appear to be ns busy as orientals ever are, in showing us up slairs in to the state apartments. There is nothing splen did about them, cither. Except for their red caps, they might easily enough be mistaken fu German artisans in their Sunday clothes ; they are quite as heav', as svkwsrj, with as solemn a sense of dignity, and with as baggy trousers. A few guard;, dressed in brown, with dirty gold sashes, and having no arms but sabre?, are also posted about, without order or regularity. The day is wet and drizzly : indeed, nothing can be altogether more commonplace or uncomfortable. Things change a little for th better as we as cend the stairs, in spire of the dir. gin ess which still seems to hang about everything. T'pon the first landing i; posted one of the palace guards of th yultan, and bo is drosved in oMhes which are at least meant for a uniform. The intention is not very successfully carrietl out; bnt it is ob vious that it has existed. We are satisfied: here is at least a commencement. Up the dingy stairs, therefore,' we go with the splendid cortege of tho internuncio, and from the dingy stairs into a dingy room oh! how dingy! dingier, I vow, than a lawyer's office in Lincoln's Inn. It is ill furnished ; anel there arc not chairs enough fr the ambassadors suite ; more are brought in from another apartment: but there arc still not enough, so that a fresh supply must be sent fW. Then the carpet, which is dingier really than anything ever seen except the sofas, does not half cover the room ; but this, perhaps, is merely oriental fashion, so we must not be surprised. At last the grand vizier is brought in, and the grand in terpreter (a high oflicer in Turkey, then the minister of foreign affairs, all dressed in ill-made European clothes ; and they arc followed by the usual pipes anel coflce. The pipes are handsome r they have rich jewel elled mouthpieces of amber, and their value is sometimes as preposterous as an English race horse. The coffee, also, is served in little cups of jewelled f.iligree, of which the host are made at Malta. Neither the coffee nor tobacco is very good, and the former is served without sugar, and unstrained, according to the fashion of the East. There is not much conversation every body feels rery cold and strange. Everybody also is ignorant of the etiquette of the place, and does not like to commit himself. There might perhaps, be plenty to say, for men must l-e elull inde-ed who cannot talk to a minister for foreign affairs : but to make a remark is rather too seri ous a business to be repeated often. Thus, for instance, the internuncio observes, for want of anything else to say, " That it is a cold day." No sooner is the observation out of his excellcn cv's mouth than the head dragum. tv.o " . . ... n' I .1 : r?i.g over his rawing conee, auu u.u,T,fe 1 vi- st a InnAii nuca with n fir- j - - pression oi pan. ne. c..i..B...u. i 1 anguish is in one of his eyes. " It is a cold day," repeats the internuncio, nodding ; fer he is a pleasant, cheery' man. The internuncio looks bored, and the pipes having been changed for others still more magni ficent, the whole rartv rise. They take their in realityfscme ten years younger. He is dres sed in a dark-blue frock coat, with a Russian col lar. The sleeves and the collar of it are embroi dered with gold and diamonds j both his coat and trousers are much too large for him. He wears r.o ornament but the nisham, a large me dal C)f rold set with diamonds, and hung round his neck, and a heavy Turkish sabre, set with diamonds a'so, but elirty. On his head is a red cap, and on his feet black jean French lxots, with varnished tops, but so large it is marvellous how he walks in them. This is Abdul Medjid the Saltan of Turkey. As the ambassador and his suite approach, it is painiul to sec the embarrassment of the mon arch. Tt appears to amount to constitutional nervousness tnd is evidenced in many ways. His eyes wjnJJr"here and there, like those of a schoolbiy failed upon to repeat a lesson he does not know. lie changes his feet continually, and makes spa.'tnodic movements with his hands. I am sure hi$ beard a very fine one is uncom fortable to him, and that he fee's as if he had a hair shirt on. 1 am still more sure that he feels literally an-.bassadorcd to death. One was at him ycs.Vr'lny ; here is another to-day ; and to morrow" not tho amhassadnrs announced, the terrible Sir Hector Stubble ? Oh. fbr alittlc rest ! Oh, for his ride where the "sweet waters flow '"' Oil! for rt.c.e on the one true bosom which waits hi; coming in the harem, and who will soothe ! is aching temples, and lull him softly to sleep withher lute ! The internuncio stands for ward, h:s tuite fall back, and he begins to speak while the cold drops gather upon the Sultan's forehead. ':;d his thumbs are ne ver still a min ute. His excellency, hewever, has not much to say ; a fv of the commonplace civilities which aic always paid to royalty, and a flourishing en comium n the power and glory of his own na tion nothing more. The Sultan replies. What he -ays lobody knows. Not the best oriental scholar ia the room, though he listen with .strain ed ears. cr-.:i make anything of it. Certain dislo cated sifctencfs arc jerked painfully from his Majesty f. lips in gasps that is all. The impe rial interpreter, however, is by no means at a I ss. II. , at least, has get a neat little speech cut and d ; he leainctl it by heart at mosque vesterela-. So he betrins to bob and eluek with great assiduity. He is a fat little man, whose clothes are too tight for him, and he does not ap pear io advantage, but he delivers himself suc cessfully. The Sultan looks hoptles.-ly up at the ceiling, then d;wn at his boots ; and once oh ! !"' lovingly) at the door. Tlierc is silence: you ift hear a pin fall, while every eye is turned upon the changing countenance of the menw Ihrrt comes a bustle : strangers must withdraw ; and the ambasador, with his inter preter, the minister for foreign affairs, and the interpreter ofthe Porte, remain alone. No won der his Majesty looks so bored. He is'safely tied down for an hour's advice against every precon ceived opinion he has in the world against his prejudices, his education, his conscience, and his religion. Russian Cruelty in Turkey. The accounts from Wallachia are most deplo rable. The Russian ' protectors it seems, treat the pro' cried somewhat in the tame fashion as the Spanish conquerors treated the Indians when they refused to work or find gold for their haugh ty masters. It has 1k n already stated that the Wallachians have lieen oblige-d to do the works in which beasts of burden are usually employed, and that crowds of the peasants and farmers have fledttieir homes, have passed into Austria, or crossed the Danul and joined the Turks, rather than submit to the crue-1 c.irvce imposed by their task -masters. My previous letters have inform ed vou that inhabitants of several villages near the "Danube had fled from their houses. The Russian General had ordered that women and yor.r.g girls should do tho work imposed upon thetri by the troops. They refused. Cossacks wet- sent among them. The Cossacks were re sisted by a numerous body of peasants armed on !ywith scythes or clubs. The General, we arc told, sent troops who inflicted upon them " an exemplary- chastisement." If we are to believe the evidence of a Wallachia gentleman, who has just arrived in Paris, who is to have an interview with the Minister of Foreign Affairs, and who I undcestand, was on or near the spot, the " ex emplary chastisement" was nothing less than the massacre ofthe women and chileiren of three villages in the neighlwrhood of Guirgcvo. Faris Horrjispotidcnce oj the Loudon Times. Ferociocs Attack o? a Wild Beast. The New Orleans Crescent, of the 8th instant, gives an account cf an attack upon Mr. Stephen O'Lca ry, the chief cf police of that city, by a leopard iir the menagerie of Mr. Van Antburgh : "Ste phen was leaning with his left arm across the iron railing, when the leopard thrust his long muscular fore legs through the bars, and seized -hrfia by the arm, midway between the wrist and elbow, stripping the flesh clean from the bone and tendons nearly to the hand, and drawing j Captain O'Lcary up almost against the bars. He struck the ferocious Ifast with his fist, but the only reply was a fierce growl and a firmer ! grip of the hharp claws ; his companion was not ! armed to meet such an emergency, but he pluck ed from his head a bran new and shining castor, and dealt the animal a blow between the eyes which utterly blinded and amazed him, and he i relinquished his hold at the very instant when he had the captain completely in his power. "tioxx Cahe a IliT. An Irishman going to i market met a farmer with an owl. I "Sav misther, w hat'll you tak for ycr big eyed Turkev V "It "is an cwl, ye baist," replied the astonished farmer. "Devil a lit da I care whether it is ould or young, pike the bird ye .spalpeen." orricn Itrius. ARRIVAL CF THE ATLAICTIC. FOUR DAYS LATER FROM EUROPE. Napoleon's Peacp Propositions Ejected by taa Crar The U- S. Mail steamship Atlantic, Captain I West, reached Sandy Hock fabout Oi o'clodk on Tuesday evening, and then went ashore. She got off about 3 o'clock and arrived at New York yesterday morning. By this arrival we have news from Liverpool to Wednesday, Feb. 22 four days later than the Alps brought. The Asia, frem New York, and the City of Glasgow, from Philadelphia, arrived at Liverpool on the 20th, the former making tlie passage iu 12 and the latter in 13 days. A violent gale occurred at Livrpoe! atid On the coast on the 17th, which did much damirg to shipping, though American vcsdcls generally es caped. The political news is vory important. THE EASTERN WAR. j The Taris Zlunitvur announces that the Czar's letter from St Petersburg arrived in Paris on the 18th of February, and that the EmpcrT Nicho las does cot accept the proposals fbr arrange ment which was presented to him. The letter from the Czar in auswtr to the au tograph letter cf Napoleon, is said to be lor.g aud argumentative, but il is couched in language so offensive that it is deemed proper not to publish it. The Moniicur adds: "This rer.dy feaves no chance cf a pacific solution." The Russians had bomlArdcd Rustchuk, and having taken the Turks by surprise, gained semic trilling advantage. A letter from Constantinople fctates that a Jewish Legion hadj been formed to assist the Turks. Hon. Carroll Spcnee, U. S. Minister to Con stantinople, arrived thorc on the 2mL He was serenaded by the Hungarian and Italian rtfur goes. Troups were embarking cn the day the At lantic sailed from Liverpool, Dublin and South ampton, and ships were fitting with great rapidi ty at all the ports, f r the Baltic fleet. The num ber embarked ft cm Liverpool was three thous and. An important dtbate in the English Parlia ment had taken place on the Turkish question, and ihe army and navy suj plies had been vo ted. The Queen had issued a proclamation forbid ding the exportation of arms, ammunition and marine engines, or parts thereof. On an expla nation iu Parliament, the government staged that machinery will be allowed to be sent to friendly nations. Great enthusiasm in favor ofthe war was aris ing in Great Britain, and enlistments were going on rapidly. A great number of recruits came from Ireland. The war is said to be very popular in Russia. . A telegraphic despatch says that the Russians are bombarding liutscbuck. There is a very doubtful report current, that the Russians have taken seven Turkish ships of war. It is stated that if Austria eloes not immediate ly declare herself, France will form an army of 100,000 men on the Italian frontier, the same on the Rhine frontier, and send a force io operate ia Italy. This statement is believed to be authen tic. French troops were embarking it largo num bers from Africa for Turkey. There is nothing from the Danube. Oraer Pacha was strengthening his position at Kalefat. " Turkish reserves were advancing to Widdin and Oltenitza, aud the camp at Shumla has been broken up. At Constantinople fortifications were going on. The health ofthe Turkish army and fleet was excellent. Six thousand men and twenty-four ships left Constantinople on the 7th of February, under an escort of eleven British war steamers. It was reported that when the French and English troops should arrive in Turkey, a meas ure will le proposed by the Sultan to the Divan to give the Christians and Mo.lom equal civil rights. The rumor is, however tkmbtful. ENGLAND. TUTE WAR QCK3TIOX IV PARLIAMENT. In the llonse of Commons, on the lotn, tnr following conversation took place: Mr. DTsraeli I wish to make an inquiry c f her Majesty's Government respecting a very im portant diplomatic document which has appear ed in a foreign journal. It affects to be a letter an autograph letter from the Emperor of the French to the Emperor of Russia, and is appa rently written with the saetion e f the Govern- ... - . . v . 1 menl of this countrr. U Lat l wirn io uncw is, . whether the Government can hf rm the Houie that that is a genuine doeumeut ; and if it be so, whether any communications took place between tho Government of France and her Majesty's Government, before that letter was transmitted to the personage to whom it is addressed; and also, whether it wa3 so transmitted witn tr.c cognizance aud sanction or her .Majesty s iv ernmcnt. Lord J. Rusocll In answer to the question of the Right Hon. gentleman, I must say in the first place that I have every reason to believe that the Wmnf-nt to which he aUuelcd as ruuiistiea in ice Shnilcvr, h a genuine one. With regard to the other portion of the Right Hon. gentleman's question, I should say we have had communi cations from the Government of France, 6tating that the Emperor of the French thought it desir- I able that he should rake an effort, by means ale'ter written by himstlt to the Emperor of I Russia, to procure a termiua'icn cf the dispute I which had hern so Ion? roirsr cn. and which tended towards hostilities. The English Got emmciit, when in jesses ion cf the nature cf the letter wh;ch it was proposed to send, observed upon it that thry had no objection tosucha stp. provided the terms were in entire conformity witb. thoc proposed by the Conference of Yienca, and provided that certain modifications which they suggested were adopted. The answer which they received was, that the terms to be propo sed agreed with those proposed by the Confer ence of .Yienna, and that the modifications would be adopted. Generally speaking, the nb stance of these modifications ha been adopted, but her Majesty's Government Lad iiot any op Irtunity cf again seeing the letter before it was transmitted by the Emperor of the French. Therefore, whde I s?y that her Majesty's govern ment hoi 1 themselves entirely responsible for agreeing to the substance of that letter, I will not say that every particular word or phrase u such as we should have adopted. I have no hes itation in faying ih'it ve er.txrtly epprove of tki ttp ichich the Emperor cf Fran-c has taJ.rn ; and that we considered, ard do cT.sidtr, that it ws- laudable to endeavor to prevent the breaking out e f war ; and that we should I very glad if that step effected its object. (CL.ci.rs.) I should sj. in conclusion, that no answer to the proposal of the Yien:;a Cor.ft.rcr.ce had l-en received, when the letter referred to was t-cctfuTin Paris. THE MILITARY AND NAYAL ESTIMATES. (From the Globe.) The Navy and Military estimates Lave been laid before Parliament. Ia the anny the totti number of nitu aked ibr tho current year is 1 12, 9xC, an increase upoa Ust year of 10.C04. Tho total charge cf her Majesty's land forces for ser vice at home and abroad for the year ending on the 31st of .March, 1S55, exclusive of the Aubtra liau colonies aud of the charge trai.sferrtd to lL East India Cuuip auy is i;3,fJ23,J2S. The gross total amount is XiT ,:2o, which will j rovid for 2,710 oflicers, P,C-5(! non-com missioned offi cers. 120,025 rank and file. The naval estimates fcr the yearendirg March 31, 15j, show a total for the elective service of 5,979,800 ; an iiicrca.se upon last year of 1,172, 4 1G. We observe that the chargo for the con veyance cf troops and ordt-ancc ktauds at Z2j,' 050 an increase cf X'2.1Z0. The (.ubsicL'arj payments under the head cf half i ay, ic, are, if anything l.ghtly decreased, the grand total for the year being 7,4 17J4.S the net mcrta&e '.202,455. . The force will consist oi 41,000 sea men, 2,000 boys, lo.oO marines tho total, in cluding 110 aieu tho picked service, 58,018. The principal item cf ir.creaia in the cava! charge comes under the head of wages, which last year stood at Xl,733,23G, and this year at 2,195,071, the latter sum including 18,800 for gratuities to petty officers and gxd conduct pay to able seamen. The estimates for victuals, wages to artificers, naval stores, new works, im provements and repairs, medicines, ic, all show an increase, while the charge on the standing machinery cf the cential department ia very slightly increased, and th'.-thirge frr i.G'.s.b'.ii.h mcuts abroad is reduced. GENERAL NEWS. The Greek insurrection has gained a formida ble headway C.Ot'O men being under arms in Epirus, Macedonia, and Thcssaly. A dreadful colliery explosion had taken piae allncehall, ne-ar Wigan, England. One hundred men wcr? killed. The English Loid Chamberlain has notified Mr. Buchanan that be may ' appear at court in any costume lie likes. The King of Naples was attempting to form a general Ilaiian league Joseph Sturpe end the rst of the peace depu tation were slill at St. Petersburg, but bd wA seen the Czar. THE YERY LATEST. BY TELKGUAPU FROM LONDON' TO LIVEllPOOt Loxdox, Feb. 22. A correspondent of th ! Chronicle telegraphs from icim, on 7 uehi.ay. that advices had been received from St. Peters burg to the 14th, which state that another war like manifesto had been issued levying nine men out of every one thousand until the 15th .f April- The Times lias advics from Si. Petersburg to the lllh, which announce that Sir Hamilton Sey mour, the British Minister, had not yet commu nicated his recall to the Russian Government, and that his instructions to quit the empire had net yet probably reached him. The tVar wc tuffcring from Eryipeai, ar.d was said to be iu a state of great irri'ation, which rendered h.ira inaccessible to th.j; advances of hia oldest ministers. The utmost distress prevailed in every depart ment. AUSTRIA. Accounts from Austria report matters high'.r favorable, and that the government tbcMS : strong resolution to take part in the crisis, csi-c cially fciuce the lost overtures of pece made b the Courts of Yienna ar.d Taris to tnat of St. Pc tersburg. The U. S. steamer Sararac and slocp-of-wa' Levant w ere to proceed shortly on a cruise in tM . c g. j Tne f.rmftn fr the passa of the Bophori! has been already granted. Intelligence has been received in Ivndon the two Russian frigates are cruising off Madira. Ail the Turkish Consuls in Russia have Lee: obliged to givo up the exequaturs granted t them. TurlUh sulyects have been placed unde the protection of Austrian agents. ,i C7"A modern general has sa'ul, that the lw-1 troops would be, an In.bman f alf dnmit, Scotchman half starved, and an Tibshn. off with his belly f.j'l " zzzzzzzz: n