BU l 1 I M THE BLESSINGS OF GOVERNMENT, LIKE THE DEWS OP HEAVEN, SHOULD BE DISTRIBUTED ALIKE UPON THE HIGH AND THE LOW, THE RICH AND THE I COR. EBENSBURG, NOVEMBER 2, 1854. VOL.. 2. NO. 0. F TIHUI8: THE DEMOCRAT & SENTINKL, is pubbsh ed every Thursday morning, in, Ebensburg, ' Cambria Co., Pa:, at $1 50 per annum, if paid , advance, it not $2 will ne cnargeu. ADVERTISEMENTS will be conspicuously in - serted at the following rates, viz: 1 square 3 insertions, . $1 00 Every subsequent insertion,' ,"" ' .25 1 1 square 3 months, 3 00 . 1 o " ' ' 00 " h i year, 12 00 lcol'n I rear - - - - 25 00 j . i 50 00 . Business Cauls with one copy of the Democrat & Skntixel, per year, 5 00 ;HferrlInnroii0.' ! THE FALSE COUNT. t Pierre Coignard was the son' of a vine dresser of Lnngcais, in the department of the Imire-etTLoire, and served as a grenadier under" the Convention. Though a brave eoldier, he was an audacious thief, and was at length apprehended, tried, and condemned to fourteen years of the galleys. Rut he - did not like the seclusion of the Vague; and, chained as he was, like a wild beast, ho con trived, in the fourth year of hid imprison ment to make his escape. His success, how ever, was attended by a circumstance which he had afterwards occasion to refer to as one of the great landmarks of his history. His comrade in the adventure had botui likewise condemned, on the fame day with himself," to fourteen years' fetters; and the two despera does were drawii together, not only by this coincidence in their fortunes, but by a uis eimilarity in character and acquirements which seemed to point them out as fit associates in crime. What the one wanted, the other pos sessed Coignard was tolerably well educated; the other had known no other school than that of the world. Coignard Mas an easy, pliant man of society : the other a character of iron, molten by nature in a mould which 'might be broken, but never l ent - Coignard. in 'fine, -obtained his ends by address, fortified by re wJutiou ;' and the other 1 y implacable stub bcrness of purpose, which was dead to all considerations but the one idea befire it, which it grappled and clung to for life or death The union of two such men would have en riched the annals of guilt ; but it was not to take place. They were detected in the cct of attempting to escape, and only one could fly Had that one been the comrade,, he would at Once hare rejected tho temptation. . And why ? Recausc the object of thir plan had failed, which was the flight of both. Rut Coignard, who never grew sulky, with fate, ho far from abandoning his enterprise, mads use of his unlucky young friend r.s a stepping stone in Lis escape; and, pu ting his foot upon his t-lioulder. spurned hini away as he caught at the wall above, behind which he speedily disappeared, with tho vengeful yeil of his associate rimincr in his ears. ITc changed his name from Coignard to Pontis, fled into Spain, joined anew the French army, became a sergeant under the regime of Marshal Souh and distinguished himself by his bravery uud good conduct. At Saragosfa, in the year 1813, Pontis inadc tho acquaintance of a Spanish girl called Rosa Marcen, whom he afterwards married ; and the two congenial spirits set themselves to work to discover a - way t fortune loss tedious and doubtful than the ranks. An extraordinary coinci.'tnce in names gave them" the first hint ; and, indeed, so strange an in fluence do seeming trifles exercise over, the destinies of men, that it was perhaps to this coincidence was owing the intimacy of two !eings so well calculated to play into each other's hands iu the game of life. Why Pierre Coignard, among all the names in the woi Id, should have chosen the name of Pon tis,, is not known ; but it so happened that it' was even as a household world in the ears of Rosa Marc-en, she having served in some ca pacity or other in an emigrant family, bearing that patronymic. Whether her service was that of a governess or a waiting woman, and whether she retired or was driven from it, are matters beyond the ken of byography ; but it is certain that she beheld .with great interest, an individual bearing a name so in timately associated with her own history. And this interest was not lessened by the fact that Pontis was a young and handsome sol dier, at once polite and daring, and endowed with that cool and gentle self-possession, be fore which all weaker spirits qail like lunatics beneath the voiceless eye of their keeper. But "Pontis!" that was tho name of a titled fa wiily Was this young grenadier a cadet of the noble house whose representatives had fled before the horrors of the Revolution? lie might be so, by his person : and hearing ; and the idea retained hold of the imagination of Rosa, even tftcr she had learned that he had as little to do with the nobility, either of mind or birth, as herself.. An epoch by-and by came, when such an Idea was likely to present itself in a more enticing form than now, when counts were at a discount. Tho French were compelled to evacuate the Pen insula. Zouis le Desire returned to the throne of his ancestors; and' our Pontis and his wife found themselves once more in a country where the husband had worked in chains as a forcat. , . . They proceeded to Soissons, to look after the wrecks which the Revolution might have spared of their ancestral fortune. They found themselves alono in the field No other Pon tis appeared upon the scene ; all had perished in exile ; and owing to the registers or the town havin": been burned in the confusion of the Revolution, the heir of the illustrious house was unable even , to prove his birth ! Thus unluckily situated, Pontis called upon an old lady of his own name, who was wait ing m an agony of impatience to see her family re-citaUUhed in their ancient honors by the blessed restoration. She recognised the handsome young soldier as a Pontis at the first glance ; she knew him hy the hereditary nose ; she could not bo mistaken in the calm, firm, half smiling lip, which gave the world assurance of a Pontis Rut Mho was this young Mife whom ho presented to her? Had the unhappy man tarnished his blood M'ith a mesalliance t Had he brought soue obscure foreigner tho state of - the Countess de Sainte Ilelene ? No. The noble heir of the Pontis assured his aged relation, that even in exile he hal been too proud of their common name to share it with cne meaner than himself. This lady, though their marriage was unsanctioned by her family till his claims should be estab lished, was of tho highest blood 'of Spain she was a daughter of the Viceroy of Mala ga ! This was enough , almost too much . The old lady M'ept with pride and delight and she ended by making the M'holo town weep with her. An act of notoriety, as it is called in French law, was readily obtained, recognising the birth of the returned emigrant ; and this being transferred to the existing registers of Soissons, Pierre Coignard, the escaped felon, found himself transformed, as if by magic, into Pontis, Count de Sainte-lleleue. We have not ascertained that the pecuniary t . t t i i resources oi tne adventurer Mrere uiucn im proved by this recognition of his nobility ; indeed, it would seem from tho context that this was not the case It is far more difficult to obtain an estate than a title; and perhaps the count may have thought it imprudent to refer his claims to the searching abitrement of the courts cf law. Rut his grateful prince would not suffer the scion of the noble house to languish in poverty. and obscurity; and, indeed, the talents of the count offered the fairest opportunities for his advancement, or rather made his advancement a duty on the part of the court. He received successively the knightly decorations of the Legion of Honour and Saint Louis, became a member of the order of Alcantara ;. and rose to be a Lieutenant Colonel in the Legion of the S ine. On his part, he repaid the loyal favor with unbounded devotion ; his locality was .without reproach, and he was esteemed one of the most rising and respectable characters in the French court. ' The expensive manner iu which the count lived, inilit have afforded, but for one cir cumstance, some suspicion that he enjoyed still weightier favors - of government than cros.es and decoration. The pay of a Lien-: tenant Colonel, with any fragments he might ' have recovered of his hereditary possessions, was not eiiCHiru to account for a liberality -as unbounded" lis it was unostentatious. The inexhaustible fund on .which he drew was neither squandered nor .spared; he had money for all legitimate purposes ; and when other men had recourse, on extraordinary emergen cies, to loans and mortgages, the Count de Sainte-II clone had nothing to do but write a check. II is vunriaje accounted for t Li?. His noil 3 wife was the mine, on the produce of which he lived ; and her Spanish gold was daily transmuted in anv quantities into French silver. . It was supposed at tho time, however, that other men had recourse to more disreputable means of supply ; for .the wholesale robberies that Mere committed on all hands had become as alarming as they were inexplicable. No precautions were sufficient for the safeguard of valuable property. . Iu the reecsses of pa- ! laces, thefts were as common as in the shops of the citizens ;" and it was obvious that there had been established a system of brigandage, whoso organization comprehended a much higher class than usual. , Even a nobleman was not safe from suspicion whose habits ex hibited anything of the mysterious; but as for our Count and Countess, they lived so much in public, they belonged so completely to the court and to society, that tho suspicion must have been wild indeed which could at tach itself to them. ; r , One day the Count v.-asat the head cf his regiment in the Place du Carrouzel, assisting at a splendid military parade. , On one side of the square M'ere the garden and palace of the Tulleries ; on the opposite side the Ave nue du Neully, extending as straight as an arrow along the Champs Elysecs, to the verge of the horizon, now terminated by a triumph al arch, on the third the Placs Vendome, with its noble column ; and on the fourth, the Seine, spanned by a bridge, loaded with statues. This magnificent scene was crowded with spectators, ' even to the trees of. the Champs Elysecs; and as the Count deSainte Ilelene felt himself to. be one of the great actors in "the pageant, a Mild throb must have heaved the chest of the escaped forcat. Rut the word ho hardly now considered to apply to him ; for his fourteen years' sentence was expired if not fulfilled. Some days ago he had celebrated in his own mind the fourteenth anniversary of his condemnation, and declar ed himself tf be a free man ! It is no wonder that on this occasion . he should revert exult higly. to his escape from the bagne,; as an event Mhich : had turned the current of his life, and given to him his fortune ; but as his thoughts lost themselves in the recollection, he leaped suddenly "in the saddle, as if trans fixed with a spear. At first he hardly knew M hat it was that had affected him, or knowing it, 'he set it down as a delusion growing out of his waking dream. An eye had rested upon his for a moment, as his face was turned towards the croM'd a phantom eye, doubtless, such as sometimes glares upon us from the abysses of memory, for he never could meet" with it again Yet "the Count' could 'not help re peating" to himself, " nor avoid a sensation of sickness as he did eo, that the comrade he had abandoned to his chains, spurning him with his foot while he did so, ; was now a free maiL like himself, and by a more : legitimate title ! In the case of almcgt any other human heing in .similar circumstances, this would have been of little consequence, for he was now. rich enough to buy silence from r hate, it self But Pontis know his man. ' That night the portress of a common look ing house in the rue Saint Maur was called from her repose by a gentle ring at the bell. "What is your pleasure ?" said she, speak ing through the wicket. "I am alone, and although very poor, do not care to open to " The visiter muttered a word in reply, and the door was opened as instantly as its ponderous bolts permitted. lie follow ed her through a ruinous court, and signify- ing by a silent gesture that he would dispense with, her further services, he knocked- at an other door. Here he Mras again challenged ; but his voice gained him admittance as be fore,; and presently he found himself m a room much more comfortable than mightliave been expected from, tho exterior. - " '.'What! you here?" said tho man M'bo opened the door to him, and Mho was the on ly inmate of the apartment. "Why, Peter, this is an unusual and unexpected honor." "I have reasons, Alexander," replied the visiter, gravely ; and as he opened his cloak and threw his hat upon the table, the striking resemblance between the two men would have enabled a stranger to pronounce them at once to be brothers. ' "Reasons j ou of course have, for you never act without them : but before you open your budget, let me put you in good humor by pre senting you with this handsome sum 01 money, your share of as rich a" spoil as we havo yet taken." "Set it down ; I cannot attend to business at present. I have seen a ghost. . "A ghost! I know a man M"ho would scare even you ; but I was not aware that you stood in special awe of the immaterial Morld. In what form appeared the ghost "In the form of a human eye, which Mas fixed upon mine to-day for an instant in the Place du Carrouzel. Whether it was any thing more than a fragment of a dream I had fallen into at the moment, I cannot tell ; but if it was really in a human head, it be longs to the man yen allude to."- "And what then?'' - "Merely that I am lost." "What nonsense ! "You are too clever, too self-possessed; too far-seeing for that. You are unknown even to your own band I, your lieutenant and your brother, being the sole medium of communication between you. Resides meVyou have no confident in the world .but your own wife, your splendid countess, Mho is the life and soul of the asso ciation, without whose guiding voice we could not stir a stey, and M'ho could not criminate you without destroying herself." . . , - . ' 'All that is true ; but you do not know the man as I do." .'AVe must buy him " . "It is for that I am here. Rut take care you bid high. Strip me of all I possess take the diamond crosses from my breast the jcMels from my Mife's hair- but let him have his price ! You mast do still more than that'! ;., "Not blood V ' 'Not M'ithout necessity. We must employ him. We must steep his hand in crime and that Mill ; be. 3'our easiest task. Till he is again at the mercy of the police till the fourteen years' fetters of Toulon dance again before his vision it is impossible" for me to tleep" ' - ' 'And if all fails ? If he will neither steal gold nor accept of it as a present " "Then we shall talk farther." Among the crowd that day in the Place du Currouzel. there had been a man who attract ed the attention of some of the older members of the police. His was a well-known face ; but it had not been seen for many years and the thief-takers employed themselves in get ting the lineaments again by heart. Rut the man, secure in his innocence, (for the bagne wipes off ;dl scores), strolled carelessly on. He did not meet a single acquaintance four teen years being, in his calling, the outside limits of. a generation; till all on a sudden, as he glanced on a general .officer passing sloM ly on liorseback, an expression of surprise escaped him, his dull eye lightened with joy, and then the brief illumination faded aw'ay into a fixed and lurid glare. : At that moment the officer appeared to sec him ; and shutting his cyxis suddenly, aud ducking under the &houldcrs of the crowd, the old forcat turned away. 7 i' . It was easy for him to ascertain the rank and position of the object of his interest; to learn that, without estates, he possessed pro digious M'calth ; that he had brought a wife with him from Spain, who was supposed to be the source of his riches ; and th .'.t the rec ords of Soisous having been burned, he had established, his birth by an'4 act of notoriety.' "Ah I" said he, " that is so jlike himl He is a clever fellow, and he is now at his old tricks ;.but he has climbed thus far upon the shoulder of his comrade ho must doM'n !" He Ment straight to the office of the prefect, and denounced Lieutenant Colonel Pontis, Count do Sainte-IIelene, as an escaped forcat. The clerks laughed at him, the prefect order ed him to be turned out, and the informer, saying politely that he would call again to morrow, took his leave. The next morning he was met near the pre fecture by a man, who entered into conversa tion with him. , ; ; ; v t ",: You are from Toulon?" said the Strang-, er, abruptly. ..--..-'., : ' " Weii, if so?" : ; '.- r :" - ' r You are going to denouce somebody I" "Well?" ,- ' - ; " He is to strong for you." " ' . " We shall see." . - ' ' "Are you rich ?" ' I-.'.-.; ' " I have still enough - for dinner:- I must shift as I-can for the rest of the day." '-' '"Will a thousand francs do?" . Xo." : ; , '-:,'.' ""Ten thousand?"' ",'." '." ' ' " ' ','.'' "No." ;.. .j . ; ; . " Twenty thousand?" " 'f,r ' No.'r ; "rrTT-'"'"? . - ; '" Come, at' a word :e want to be friends with you: ' What do you want ?' ;'''.V ' ' " Take four from fourteen, and there arc ten: ten years of fetters would satisfy me I will not abate him a month !" - " Ha ! ha ! ha ! ; that is a good joke ! Rut you do not know that he is ' more than a count, more than a knight, more than a lieu tenant colonel ? Can you guess Mhat he is?" " Yes : he is the man M'ho broke his com pact with me in the . bagne of Toulon, -and spurned me aM-ay with his foot a3 he sprang over the wiill I must have him back : jt is only justice. : Good morning;" and the old forcat went into the prefecture. This time he M as apparently but little more successful than on the former occasion ; but tho functionaries were surprised at his perti iraejty; and considered it due to the character bf the count to send some ono to him to hint deliberately at the Qalumnies that were abroad They told the informer, therefore, that inqui ries M'ould be niaile, and directed him to call tho next day, in the idea that by that time they M ould have authority to take him into ;ustody He was pleased, accordingly with his success. .He dined cheerfully ; spent the afternoon in walking about; in the evening felt hungry again, but resisted the temptation to commit a theft, lest .he should be locked up from the business that engrossed him ; aii at night, being perfectly moneyless, he re paired "to one of the bridges to sleep under an arch. '1 Thi3lM asthe most quiet, though by no means the most solitary bed-chamber he could have found ; foi that night every crib in Par is was searched for him by messengers who M-ould have silenced him in one way or other. As it was, he lay undisturbed, except by his ilreains, and the fitful moonbeams glanced liko' spectres upon the M-ater. ; Sometimes he awoke, and fancied himself in the prison of Toulon, till, reassured by the voice of the riv er which murmured in hi3 ear, " It is only justice." Then he felt hungry, and the night air grew chill, and the hard stones piercel hi3 limbs ; and he thought of the thousands and thousands of francs that hadleen offered him, and of the pleasure and dignity of robbing in a great band commanded by a nobleman Rut then he shrugged h;s shoulder, by means of which Coignard had stepped upon the" wall, and, looking forward to the morrow, a grim feeling af satisfaction stole over his heart, the indulgence "of which swrned better than food, money or lionor rAnd then the moon-beaius disappeared on Tihe river, and the wind moan ed along its bosoni, and the waters ansM'ered with a hollow murmur which syllabled in his ear, ' Justice justice !" and he fell into a profound slumber that lasted till in the morn ing: - - - - - Tho prefect in the meantime had employed General 'DespinohJ to wait u&n- the count ; but the latter, instead of meeting the charge with the incredulity, ridicule or indignation that had been expected, made quiet speeches, and entered into long explanations, and the astonished envoy returned to his employers, hardly able to form an opinion. That opin ion was, however, at once come to by the most experienced authorities of the prefecture; and after a minute examination of the inform er, M'ho had planted himself at the office door long before it opened in the morning, it Mas determined to arrest the count on suspicion of being an escaped felon. Rut this was only M hat he had expected, and for some days all Paris -was searched for him in vain. They tracked him at length to the house in the rue St. Maur ; and although he defended himself v.ith the pistols, both of which he discharged at the ffniH d'ncs, he M as overpowered and taken into custody. The revelations made in this , den of thieves identified nim with the mysterious chief of banditti who had eo long kept the city in awe; and, being conducted to the prison of La Force, ho M as tried for va rious distinct robberies, as mvII as for his eva sion from the bagne of Toulon A narrative like this, from its circumstan ces laid only a few years ago, wears an air of improbability; lut many personations quite as extraordinary took place after the confu sion of the Revolution. The peculiar feature in the case of Coignard "is; that the imposture was folloM'ed out to the very last, in spite of the legal exposure. He I M ould not plead by any other name than his fictitious one ; and the president of the court was obliged to call him pimply, "you accused!" When trans ferred to his old quarters at Toulon, under sentence of fetters for life, he preserved the calm sedate dignity of an injured man, and was much respected by the other forcat, m ho always addressed him by his assumed title. This character he continued to enact up to his death ; and perhaps he ended by persuading even, himself that the companion of nobles, and the protege of a king, was m reality the Count de Sainte-Helene. Albion. On. a Printer. ilerclies a form place no imposing stone- - - - To mark the bed m here weary it is l.iin : .'lis niatter dead! its mission all bMng done . To be distributed to dust aain. The body's but the type, at best,- of man, , Whose impress is the spirit's deathless page : Worn out, the type is thrown to pi again, ' ' The impression lives through aa eternal Sf He' who marries a pretty face, only, is like abuyer of cheap furniture the varnish that caught, the eye will not endure the fire side blaze.' :? 5r"Ma, that nice young man, Mr. Rrown, 5a verv fond of kissinc." " Mind your seam, Julia, who told you such nonsense ?" i , "I had it from his own lips, ma." 3T SnookYsays that tho best sewing ma chine in thc-M-orld is one about seventeen years old,- with a short sleeve dress, pretty little foct with gaiter boots on. u , - ir. A "poorT" fellow "having got his skull fractured, 1 was told by the doctor that the brain was .visiblbr on which he remark til : ",-Da .write tor father, for ho always swore I had none." " 5 -.- TIHiEE DAYS LATF.lt FKOM EFJIorE. AUKITAL. OP TII1J IV I IG ARi ! Halifax, Oct. 25. The steamship Niagara arrived early this morning with European dates tothe lJth instant, three days later than by the Wash ington. The sad intelligence of the disaster to the Arctic had been received at Liverpitol by the arrival of. the Cleopatra fcteainship, v.-hich, it M ill be remembered M as at -St. John, N. F., Mhcn the Vesta arrived there in a crippled condition. - The steamship Arabia arrived at Liverpool on Saturday morning the 11th iust. The liabilities of Mr. McIIenry ar; estiuia tl ai lmlf millitrn-- - The last advices from .the Rlack Sea are that Scbastopol was invested by the allied troops on the 60Uth and east, and that the guns of the biege train were plaj-icg upen the walls. - MenschikofF maintains his position on the north, and is expeetiug reinforcements under Gen. Osten Sacken and G ortschakoff. Prussia is reported to have expressed its M-'illinguess to act with Austria. The report thst MenschikofT bid obstructed the harbor cf Sebastopol bv sinking Eevcn ships of the line there, is confirmed. THE M'AIf. English papers by the Niagara are interes ting, but really contain little neM s, except in relation to the Mar. On the 2d the allies had destroyed the aque duct, and cut off the supplies of water from the city, which is now supplied from reser voirs. It Avas expected that an assault Mould be made soon, probably on the 8th. The Russians had erected sand batteries, armed M-ith ship's guns, but the range of the allies' artillery M-as greater. The allied trenches were Mithiu lCUO yards of the Malli, and al ready mounted fifty guns. A private despatch says that two breaches M-ere made iu " Quarantcen" on the Stb, and another, as reliable, states that no bombard ment had occurred oa the 8th. The French and English Generals have officially notified their governments that on September 23J, immediately on the reception of the news of the battle of Alma, Menschi koff sunk five of his line of battle ships and two frigates iu eight or ten fathoms water, thus completely blocking up the entrance to the harbor of Sebastopol, and preventing the possibility of an attack by sea. These ships were sunk with all their guns and stores on board, and rigging standing TheEuglis'u are much incensed at this ex pedient, which has contributed to cause the llcnerals to change their plan of operations, and to attack the south, instead cf the north side of the city. The Russians hold their remaining ships ready to be suuk, and the crews, amounting to 10,000 men, are added to the garrison of Sebastopol. It is said the Russians have likeM ise sunk ships across the straits of Yeniklo - The allied fleets thus being comparatively useless at sea, Admiral Duudas has sent the marines on shore to join the a nny. A letter in the Times suggests that the powerful iron steamer Simoon, which is equiv- -i alent to a force of 4, Out) tons, should be em ployed as a steam battering ram, to force jas ages over the euti! cn s'lij s. This expedient will probably bo tried . - From the pres?nt disposition of tho allied forces between Ralaklava and Cape Cherso nese, it seems that the north side of the har bor, 13 not invested, and that the whole coun try north of Sebastopol is now evacuated by the allied force, which, it is likely, passed through it. The supposition is confirmed by a statement iu despatches from Admiral Dundas, dated September 2?, M here he says that havingsent the steamers All-Ion and Vcsuvias to Alfa, to collect the wounded Russians, and convey them under a flag of trucj to Odessa, theRrit ish hospitals being full, his force Mas threat ened by a force of G00 Russians, and had to re-emiarii unuer cover 01 me snip s guns. Ail tue auiea reserves uaa icii arua tor the Crimea. Two French and one English regiment from Malta will occupy the Pineus. The Russians are reported to have blown up the fortresses of Anappa and Souchouiu Kale," andsent their garrisons of 15,000 men to reinforce MenschikofT. Odessa advices of the 7th state that Mens chikofFs right wing was at Rakchissaria, and his centre at Simperofel, where the reinforce ments from Pertkop will concentrate. Prussia is reported to have expressed its willingness to act with Austria. This declar ation is in consequence of energetic notes from France and England The last advices from the Rlack Sea arc, that Sebastopol was invested by the allied troops on the south and cast, and that the guns of the siege train were playing upon the Malls. ... Menschikoff maintains his jo.sition on the north, and is expecting reinforcements under Generals Osten Sacken and G ortschakoff. The report that Menschikoff had obstructed the harbor of Sebastopol. by sinking seven hhins of the lino there, is confirmed. It is supposed that the wege artillery of the allies had been mounted in a battery around Sebastopol on the 4th. On the 5th the bom bardment is reported, to have commenced. The regular assault M as expected on the 8th inst " The allied trenches were within 1G00 yards of tho walls, and they havo already mounted fiftv pans. . ; " The whole country north of Sebastopol has tnd the allies, and the roscrved UV. V-AV'"- J - m , . . forces have left Varna to jom the siege. Osten Sacken was at Pcrckop, since the 2d inst , and was noCxpected to join Menschikoff- before the 15th -inst" V " : ' The. Parit' Jou.nv.il des Dilat estimates the Russian force? in the Crimea at V5.000. j and the allied troops at 90,000, including the i f-ea men from the fleet. .. M. . z t The two Russian Generals taken at Alma were Goi.ikofT tnd Ichanoff. Roth of them M-ere wounded, arid one hassinre died It is sa id that the Russians had but S500 men at Alma, considering that mnubcr eu2i-r cier.t to defend the position. Menschikoff, though sick at the time, sat on the heights, and directed the buttle. The Turks bin onetted nil the wounded Rnsi eiaris, crying out " Sinope !' Lord Raglan has taken command of the al lied army. Canrobcrt. the new commander of the French army, is considered energetic and adventurous, but doubts are entertained of his ability ss a tactician. FROM THE BALTICl - The Raltic portion of Admiral PlumriJge's squadron, and Admiral' Dcschcne's fleet were at Kiel on the th. The greater part of the fleet under Admiral. Napier M-as at anchor near Revel. . It is almost certain tlrat no operations will now be attempted. . . . .. . j - ' v ASIA. Sehamyl has been defeated by Prince At dronitoff, who again threatens Krs. - ' '' Al iBIA AND PRUSSIA , Notes have been sent by France and Eng land to the Prussian Government, backing that of Austria, and requiring of Prussia a' declaration of her intentions as to the main . tainance of an offensive and defensive alliance . M-ith Austria. The proposition of Mantenffel, by which ho intended to preserve a good understanding, not having been favorably received, he had tendered his resignation and left town, but was recalled and returned. - . The king had arrived and presided at the". Council. All that has traspircd as to the re sult of the deliberations is, that Mantenffel Mithdrew his resignation, cud that conciliato- ry declarations are to be addressed to the Cab inet at Vienna, and that eventually Prussia is to adopt a policy in accordance M ith that of Austria. ' The latest Anglo-French note was very en-1 ergetic. It called on Prussia to decide for or against the Western Powers. The Prince of Prussia, M ho is favorable to an immediate alliance, has been sent on a spe cial mission to Arienna. r ' The expectation new is that Prussia will . declare her policy identical M'ith that of Aus tria. ... - CJREAT BIUTAIX. The London Glvle says' : " A couferenca is noM' assembled on the continent, which is M'ithout a precedent, acting, as it is understood to be, under the directions of the President of the United States. The Ambassadors of that country are assembled to exchange iuforuia tion, consult, and report on the state of affairs . on the Continent. American trade is now carried to every part of the world, and the conference has in view the due protection and . advancement of those interests in eny new ar- , rangement of treaties that may be made iu Europe " Mr Ruchanan left London on Saturday, aud has already been met by the American : Ministers to Pari3 and Madrid. ; - i"fA national subscription" has been set on -foot for the benefit of the wounded in the re cent battles. Sir Gordon Druminond is dead -One thousand pounds have been subscribed iu Australia towards presenting Win Smith . O'Rrien a gold vase FRANCE. The recent mammoth fubricution about tho . fall of Sevastopol has been' traced to the Paris Rourse. ' ... sr.viN - " . .' A despatch dated Madrid, Oct' 10, says that the elections Mere proceeding quietly, with advantage to the Progressistas. The Emperor has ordered a rigid investiga tion into the fraud, and says he will putiudi s with severity those who may ever bo proved . guilty. A corref-jtondeut cf the Journal, in Smyrna, is implicated. The Rritish Ambassador had notified tho French government, officially, of the condo lence of the English government with France, in reference to tho death of Marshal St. Ar naud The Moititeur publishes letters from St. Arnaud, showing that he M as aware of his ap- . preaching end, aud ready to meet it. The malady o! which he died, was disease of tho heart. His remains arrived at 3IarseiHes on the 10th inst., and were received Mith all the honors due to his high position. A The Imperial decree orders that his remains shall be deposited in the Hotel des Invalides. IXDIA AND CHINA The arrival of the overland mail from India is t-jldgraphed, bringing dates from Shanghai to August 7th, aud Cauton to August 21st, The city of Canton continued in a state of siege. Shanghai was still in the hands of tho insurgents.' ' - Ningpo, poo Choo and Amoy M-ere quiet. Mur-li t.a will be exnortod from Foo Cboo. None, however, had yet arrived at Canton, and business M'as quite suspended. ' -, THE LATEST. The following despatch was published at St Petersburg on the 11th inst. . " Nothing fresh had occurred before Seba tor-ol up to'"th Cth iust. Gen Menschikoff retained his old position on tho north Bide. t , rv;,Uv Oct. 13. A private tcle- craphio despatch from Vienna, dated this day, announces that, according to a despatch froirf Lord Rairlan. dated the Gth, the siege work of th allied forces were sufficiently advanced to admit of the opening fire being coiunieucej in a few days, ' - - ' - ' - I i i i - !' i t it 1 ii 1