THE JOURNAL. COMINCT nuNcipLEs-surropTio NY Titurn.] HUNTINGDON, TUESDAY, NOV. 20, 1819. TERMS The "HUNTINCIDON JOIIRNiii." is piibliahednf the following rates, viz : $1,75 a your, if paid in advance ; $2,00 if paid during the year, and $2,50 if not paid until aftei {hO eipiration of the year. The above terms to be adhered to in all cases. No subscription taken for less than six litinths, and no paper discontinued until all arrearrtOs are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. VA LI, 11LE REAL. ESTATE.-We invite atten tion to the advertisement df Wm. B. Lass and SAMTET. MCVITTv. Trdstees of A. Long, deed, offering several valuable tracts of Real Estate fur sale. Wooncomt VALLEY FAILMS.-No. I of these farms, occupied by Major James Porter, has been sold by ex-Gov. Porter for the sum of eleven thousand dollars, being $lO per acre.— The two other forms mentioned in advertise ment are still unsold, as is also the mountain land. CCir .. DAVID 13LAIR5 Esq.f it will be seen by bur adVeitisidg cdlunins, has openeii an "Office for the Purchase and Sale of Real Estate," in this place. Mr. 13. elands Nigh as a member of the legal profession of this county, and is every any worthy of confidence. He represented Huntingdon county in the State Legislature du ring the sessions of 181 G and '47, to the advan tage of his - constituents and credit to himself.— Those, therefore, who desire to avail themselves of his Agency for the purposes set forth, can do so with the utmost confidence that their inter ests will be efficiently, prominly and faithfully attended to. New Mail Arrangement. Arrangements have been completed between the Post Office Department and Wm. Colder, Esq., by which the Eastern mail will hereafter be carried on the Pennsylvania Railroad. This arrangement brings the Eastern mail to Hun tingdon about 5 o'clock, A. M., in place of 3 P. M., as heretofore. The new arrangement brings us the Philadelphia papers the morning after their publication. The western mail now leaves Hollidaysburg at 9 A. M. and arrives in Huntingdon at 3 P. M. County Cohiliiissioners. Our newly elected Commissioner, ISAAC PEIGIITAT., entered upon the duties of his office last week. Mr. P. is a gentleman of fair busi ness qualifications, strong common sense, and unyielding honesty. We predict that he will make a useful, economical, and popular Com missioner. The Board is now composed as fol lows : J. GRSENLAND,W3I. HUTCHISON, and ISAAC PFICTITAL. ROBERT CCMAIINS of Jack son, is the retiring Commissioner. Female Seminary. The farm in the vicinity of this place, re cently sold by the Executor of the late Robert Moore; deed, was purchased by the Rev. ions PIEIIttS, the much respected Pastor of the Hun tingdon Preshyferian Congregation. And it af fords us great pleasure to learn that it is the intention of Mr. P. to erect on this farm a Fe male Seminary, of which he Will be the Prin cipal. The location, and the high and well known character of Mr. Peebles, must insure the success of this institution. Our Borough Again. . • The committees appointed bya recent meeting of the citizens of this place, to solicit subscrip tions to be applied to the purchase of a suitable location, within the limits of this borough, for the erection of a Depot, &c., by the Vennsylva nia Railroad company, reported on Saturday evening last, to an adjourned meeting, held in the Court House. The reports were highly satisfactory—over eleven hundred dollars being already subscribed by our citizens for the pur pose mentioned. This subscription is highly creditable to our citizens, and is the free-will offering of those *hti desire to advance the gen eral prosperity of Huritirlgtibm We are now encouraged to hope that it will be in our power to "meet the company half way," and to secure to our borough the advantages offered to us. We were much pleased with the remarks made on Saturday evening by Messrs. Scott, Williamson and Blair. And we concur in the opinion expressed by those gentlemen, that per severance on the part of those who are now act ing in concert, is all that is necessary to secure success to our undertaking. Huntingdon, as we Lave before remitekdd 3 is looking up, and must not be allowed again to retrograde. We must keep the ball moving. Those who have not already subscribed, and Who desire to tro id; eati haiie art opportunity by editing on either Pettit EiwooCvi F% B. WAL LA., or Jolts SCOTT, Esq., thaiiinen of the silbscription committees. We sincerely hope that all ddr citizen. will feel it to be their duty to aid in the effort net making to advance tho interests tit litintingdon. Cg , At the present term of our Court not a Ingle foot of real estate was offered for sale by 'ie Sheriff. This fact speaks loudly in favor of e solvency of the citizens elf Huntingdon coun ty. 37' Hon. HENRI. CLAY, accompanied by his on, arrived in Philadelphia on Thursday last •om Baltimore, where he had tarried a day or co. He is stopping at the residence of Hon. . 11. Bayard, formerly U. S. Senator from ,elaware, and will remain about ten days. He /ill probably thea'repair to Washington pre votary to the meeting of Con - -U. He seems yell fitted by health and spirits for an ardu us winter campaign. Counterfeits. Counterfeit $lO notes on the Lancaster Coun ty Dank are in circulation in this neighborhood. They are altered from some other Bank by ta king out the original and inserting Lancaster County Bank. The word Lancaster, near the bottom of the note, and Pennsylvania, at the top, hipie also been inserted. At the left end of the note at the top a Word or words hti , id been scratched off: 'the Ailing up is imalji e)t ecuted. These bills can readily be detected by close examination, and especially by holding them up td the tight. • p▪ erson charged with passing bills of the above description was arrested at Jeckstown on Sunday evening last, and lodged in our Jail on yesterday morning. The National Police Gazette states that Coun terfeit $lO notes on the Lancaster Bank are in hirculation. They are dated January Ist or 2d (hduld not distinguish which) 1814, letter B, Signed Christ. Tachmar, Cashier, James Evans, President. Vignette, a naked female sitting with a stall in her right hand, her face turned left, no spots visible on the eye, a spread eagle on her left side. (the right of the vignette,) rest ing on a shield ; a ship, al! sails set, on her right, badly engraved ; the hull or bottom of the ship looks like a floating sow log, square at both ends. Double medallion heads on the right end of the bill?, also badly executed. The oth er figures on the bill are said to be good. The bills are not described in any of the last Detec tors; lrrAs We notice a considerable number of $1 notes on the State Bank of Ohio in circula tion here, we give the following description of a counterfeit upon them, which we copy from the Ohio Repoutory CC/I,TE:: rEm—Counterfeit Ones on the State Brink of Ohio are in circulation—the engraving and signatures of which are so perfect as to de ceive even good judges. The engraving is hard ly as highly finished as the genuine, and the pa per and printing a shade lighter. The red im pression on the back of the counterfeit is also lighter than the genuine, and the best, if pot the only distinguishing iHark is, that in the counterfeit, the star or areola at the end of the bar enclosing the words 'State Bank of also on the back is set in the centre of a square block, which is not the case with the genuine ; and the plate of the counterfeit is shorter than the genuine. Gen. Scott at Richmond. The reception of the veteran commander-and chief of the army, on his visit to Richmond, Va. last Tuesday, was truly gratifying. From the Times of that city we obtain some particulars of the events of the day. The Gen. was received at the Exchange Hotel by a large array of the citizen soldiery of Richmond, and in company with Gov. Floyd, was escorted in processide to the Capitol square, where in the presence of a great concourse of citizens, Mr. Macfarland welcomed Gen. Scott on behalf of the city in a very appropriate address, to which the Gerieral responded with deep feeling, recounting the many obligations by which he was attached to Virginia, and declaring the high gratification which her kind approbation of the services he had been able to perform had ever afforded him. The General then reviewed the troops,visited the Governor's mansion, and was escorted to Lafayette Hall, where under the order of the city council a handsome collation had been pro vided. He gave an interesting little narative of the incidents which attended his first enlist ment as a soldier. It was on the occasion when, in consequence of the attack of the Chesapeak, President Jefferson called upon the Governor of Virginia for volunteers, to march to Lynhaven Bay to prevent the British from coming into our waters. Two companies, he said, one of horse and foot, the Blues marched from Rich mond—the horse being under the command of his old friend Capt. Sheppard, who now stood by his side. He hirriself hastened over id Pe tersburg, and enlisted in the company of horse, which marched from that town, as "high pri vate"—for he was the tallest man in the com pany, and rode the tallest horse. That cam paign, he said, was one without bloodshed, but it was his first essay in military life. He clo sed by giving " the health of the volunteers of Richmond"—and here three hearty cheers were given for " Winfield Scott." Susquehanna County Bank. The failure of this institution, and the outra geous conduct of th 6 Cashier, hiid greatly exas perated the reople of the iegiOn Of country where it is located. The committee of Direc tors appointed to investigate the affairs of the institution, report that the bank has at least $200,000 afloat, of which probably $150,000 has recently been put in circulation in the west, through a certain agent in Cincinnati, who was in .Montrose but a week before the institution exploded. The Cashier, T. P. St. John, has been arrested and committed in default of $lO,- 000 bail. He had assured the directors that there were but $lO,OOO in circulation, and every dollar could be redeemed. So infuriated were the citizens that they attempted to do violence to his person, and after his incarceration, they took the signs from the Bank, and placed them with an effigy over the jail door. 137 - Attempts have recently been made to in jure the character and standing of the Haftls burg Telegraph. We regard the Telegraph as one of the ablest papers in the State, and as a correct and faithful exponent of Whig prin ciples. It has been of signal service to the Whig party, and both deserves and receives the sustaining patronage of its members. Forti fied as it is in the affections and confidence of the great body of the Whigs of the State, any attempts to destroy its influence and respecta bility must recoil upon its atithort. So says the Erie Gazette, and we heartily concur. 07" We have received a copy of Palmers4l3u sines. Men's Almanac' for 1850. It is a vain hie publication, abounding in useful information, of great interest and practical value to business men. Price 12i cents for a single copy—sl,oo per dozen—sl,oo per hundred. We would ad vise our Merchants to supply themselves with some of these valuable Almanacs. Calhoun and California. The Washington correspondent of the Jour nal of Commerce understands that Mr. CAL HOUN will resist the admission of California as a State into the Union, with a restriction of slavery as a part of its organic law, but the correspondent does not think he will obtain the vote of all the Southern Senators in the course which he has marked out. fie takes the ground that Califor nia has no right to exclude slaves, and thereby exchide slave-holders from her soil, the sover eignty dyer which belonged to every citizen of the United States, and must be exercised by their representatives in Congress. He antends that the people in California have no more right to exclude slavery than Congress has. After California shall become a State, then she may regulate her domestic policy as she pleases ; but the South is bound, according to Mr. CAL HOUN, to resist her admission as a State, and her assumption of the right, in her present position to form a Sate Government. There is no ob jection, as he thinks, to her forming a Provi sional Government, for the security of her in habitants; but she has no right to form a State Government without the assent of Congress, nor to enforce any law which may be inconsistent with the rights and interests of the slave hold ing portion of the Union. These, it is believed are the opinions not only of Mr. Calhoun, but of many Southern Senators, both Whigs and Democrats. The same correspondent thinks ere long there will-he an assault from a combined Southern force, upon the present Administration, on ac count of ass alleged improper interference, by its order, through its agents, with the affairs of California. He saYs= ,, To Gen. Ilittt the Ad ministration gage such instructions as were cal culated tb Seetire the early formation of a State COVertinient, and with a Constitution prohibit ing Slavery.—This was in my opinion, a wise and patriotic measure on the part of the Admin istration, and it was completely successful. But I am informed, and have good reasons to believe, that a portion of the Southern members of Con gress, and other Southern politicians, intend to bring some railing accusations against the Ad ministration, on account of what they allege to be the extraordinary and unwarantalile instruc tions to Gen. RILEY. It is intended to allege that these instructions exceed any power that belongs to the Federal Executive, in the premi ses. I have much more apprehension from an agitation of this and kindred questions in Con gress at this session, than from any question re lating to foreign nations that may arise in a cen tury. I fear that Mr. CALHOUN is about to make a final and potent effort, tinder sonic 'Mal impulse, to throw a portion of the Southern States out of the Union. Whether he may suc ceed or not, this will probably be his last ses sion here. I still trust, that Mr. CALHOUN may be deterred from pursuing the course ho has marked out for himself, for it is quite certain that the people of the South will not sustain him id it. lam aware that Mr. Cato°ur thinks that a bold and united stand by the Smith in re senting the admission of California; or any in terference with slavery in the District of Col umbia, will save the Union ; and that nothing short of such a course will do it. But I think that Mr. C. is under a fatal error. If the Mis sissippi resolutions, which Mr. C,!.r.'ituox Orinc- Honed, or perhaps diem , up him Self, shciald be acted on by any one State, or by all the South ern Stares, it would destroy the harmony and in tegrity of the Unmet." The import of this loiter ttirriishes much mater for reflection. The advocates for Slave ry would peril the Union to perpetuate its curse ! HORRIBLE STEAMBOAT DISASTER. Explosion on Board the Louisiana. Upwards of MO Lives Lost ! NEW ORLEANS, NOV. 16, A. M. One of the most disastrous steamboat acci dents that ever took place at this port, occurred about five o'clock last evening. The magnifi cent, first class boat Louisiana, was putting out from the levee, bound to St. Loins, just as the steamers Storm and Boston were coming in from above. The boats were side and side, the &e]. of all three crowded with passengers, at the moment when a tremendous explosion took place on board the Louisiana—both boilers having bursted, severing the boat literally to atoms— , . ripping and tearing the other two boats, and carrying upwards of one hundred and fifty hu man beings to their last accounts, without a mo ments warning. Simultaneous with the tern ble exPlgsion came a wild shriek, which sent a thrill Of horror to the stoutest hearts. As the smoke and steam cleared away, a scene was pre -1 sented t o the eye, of which I can scarcely form a conception. The shattered boats, the shrieks of the ,wounded, the struggles of the drowning, the eroans, of ihe (lyin g , appalled, and for a mo paralyzed ail who witnessed it. Human ,snits, legs and heads were scantier, iii evry direction, and the levee was strewn with the dead and dying! In a short time thousands of persons were cdllected the vicinity of the melancholy scene, and ndthing was left undone to afford re lief to the unfortunate sufferers. This morning the levee is crowded with our citizens, and every effort is being made to re , cover the bodies of those blown into the river. Already fifty dead bodies have been recov cred. It is supposed that at least oneltien deed and fifty lives wore lost by this dreadful disaster ! A large number are mangled and scalded in a most horrible manner. I have not beers able, amidst the confusion which prevails, to obtain anything like a reliable list of the names of the killed and wounded, but will en deavor to send yeit n despatch containing more full particulars, this afternoon or in the morn ing. The Louisiana sunk a few minutes after the disaster. It is unknown what led to the ex plosion. It is supposed that the engineers and firemen were killed, as they hive not been seen since the accident. SECQND DESPATCH, NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 17-A. M Captain Kennon, of the steamer Lou isiana, has been arreEted, and held to bail in the sum of $B,OOO. The explo sion having been attributed to careless ness, a searching investigation will shortly take place. Many more dead bodies have been found. The number of killed it is believed will reach 200, besides many dreadfully wounded. The flags of the shipping are all at half mast. THE ELECTIONS. Virginia. - - WHIG CONGRESS:HAN GAINED.-At the spe cial election in the Wheeling (Va.) district, last week, Col. Raymond, Whig, was elected to Congress, being a gain. This district gave Gen. Cass a majority of 556. Massachusgtts. Returns from the entire State, with the ex• ception of a few towns, show the following re• suit for bovernor : Bfiggs, (Whig,) 49,092 Boutweß, (Loco,) 28,069 Philips, (Free Soiler,) , 23,250 _ . _ Palfrey, Free Soiler, for Congress, lacks 3000 of being elected. There is no choice in his dis trict. The Whigs gain in the House, having a majority of about 100 members, and a large ma jority in the Senate. New York; The coalition of Barnburners, Hunkers, &c., failed to secure the spoils. As far as known, a majority of the State officers are Whig. In the Senate, the Whigs have a majority of 2, and the House is reported to be a tie. Michigan. The election in this State has resulted in fa vor of the Locofocos as usual. Louisiana and itississippi. The vote for Governor of Louisiana is very close. Walker, the Democratic candidate, is supposed to have been elected by a small ma jority. The Congressional delegation remains unchanged. In the Legislature the Whigs will have a small majority on joint ballot. Gen. Witt-nailis elected Governor of Missis sippi by a large majority. The Democrats claim the election of four Congressmen. Editorial Convention. Agreeably to Peevious notice a number of the country editors of Pennsylvania met at Bueh ler's Eagle Hotel, on Friday Bth inst., and or ganized by appointing the Ilon. NIMROD STRICKLAND, editor of the West Chester Republican, President, M. D. Homutoos, Esq. editor of the Lancasterian & Col. A. McCr.utiE, editor of the Juniata Sentinel, Vice Presidents; GEORGE FRYSINER, Esq., Editor of the Lew istown Gazette, and J. M. liciointit, editor of the Valley Spirit, Secretaries. On moticiri, Messrs. TIIEO. FENN, of the Pa. telegraph ; P. S. DECHERT, of the Valley Spir it, Wm. P. COOPER, of the Juniata Register, HENRY S. EVANS, of the Village Record, Join B. Baarroy, of the Carlisle Volunteer, Was. M. Bricsr.ix, of the Lebanon Advertiser, were ap pointed to report a course of action to the Con vention. After consultation by the Committee; they made the following report to the Cdnvention which was adopted - - Re.colverl, that an adjourned convention of the editors and publishers of newspapers within the State of Pennsylvania be held in the borough of Harrisburg on TUESDAY the first day of Jan uary next, (1850,) to memorialize Congress on the subject of such analteration of the postage laws an will allow newspapers to be sent in the mails, within the counties 414 Zongressional districts in which they are published, FREE OF POSTAGE; also to memorallze the Legislti ture of Pennsylvania on the subject of having the laws of a public natura published in the n4WseaPers of the Commonwealth ; and to adopt such other measures as will be calculated to protect and advance the interests of the pub lic and of the publishers of newspapers of the interior, as they may deem proper and import ant. Resolved, That editors and publishers of news papers in Pennsylvania without digtitietidn of party, are requested and expected to attend said Convention. Resolved, That the above proceedings be signed by the officers, and published by all the papers of the Commonwealth; and that this Convention adjourn to meet on said day. NIMROD STRICKLAND, Pres't. M. D. HOLBROOK, A. K. MCCLURE. /*Vice rreetS. George Frysinger, J. ecrearies. 111. Cooper. Court of Quarter Sessions--Nov. Term. The following indictments were disposed of in our Court of Quarter Sessions last week. It is a melancholy fact that the criminal business of our county is on the increase. We suppose however, that this may be attributed to the construction of the Railroad through our county. Commonwealth vs. Charles Cortin.—lndict meat, assault and battery. Defendant pleads guilty and submits. Sentence—fine of $5lOO, costs of prosecution, and 10 days' imprison ment in the county jail. Commonwealth vs. Jacob Anspach. Indict ment, assault and battery. Verdict—not guilty. County to pay costa: Commonwealth vs. Wm.Sturtzmatt. Indict ment, riot add assault and buttery. Defendant submits to Court. Sentenced to pay a fine of $5,00; costs of prosecution, and undergo im prisonment in the county jail for six weeks. Commonwealth vs. Dorsey Silknitter. In dictment, fornication and bastardy. Verdict guilty. Counsel for defence moved for a new trial, which motion is still pending before Court. Commonwealth ye. G. W. Ocat hart. Indict ment, assatiit and battery. "Not a true bill," and Jacob Anapach, prosecutor, sentenced to pay colts. Commonwealth vs. Abraham Marrels. Two indictments for larceny. Verdict, guilty on each. Sentence, in the two cases, three years and three months imprisonment in the Western Penitentiaty at hard labor, line of $2,0, and costs of prosecution. ca, C mnionwealth vs. Wm. Illelllonigal. dlctment, assault and battery. Verdict guilty. Senfence, a line of $lO and costs of prosecution, Commonwealth vs. Henry Stine: Two in dictments for horse stealing. Guilty on each, and sentenced to pay a tine of $l, costs, and un dergo an irriprisonment offive years, at hard la bor, in the Western Penitentiary. Several cases were made up, and two or three continued to January term. U 7 - Hon. WALTISR FORWARD, of Pittsburgh, has been appointed Charge to Denmark. This is a good appointment. Speech of Mr. Webster, At a recent festival of the Sons of New Hamp shire, held in Boston, Hon. DANIEL. WEBSTER, the greatest statesman in America, was pres ent, and favored the company with a Speech.— We copy that portion which relates to the events transpiring in Europe. The sentiments ex pressed ‘fill find a hearty response in every Re publican heart. After spedking of the rise and progress and government of our own happy country, Mr. WEBSTER said : Gentlemen, the events of the past year are many ; they seem to result frbrh an indefinite purpose of those who wish to ameliorate the condition of things in Europe.—They had no distant ideas. There may be incidental benefiti aftstng from it. These *are nfay gomeivhtit as suage the imperial away 6f degpdts.--'-- They may serve to convince those who hold despotic power that they may shake their own thrones if they do not yield something to popular demands. In that sense some good may come of it. Then, gentlemen, there is another as pect. We have all had our sympathies much enlisted in the Hungarian effort 'for liberty. We have all 'Wept at its failure. We thought we saw a more rational hope of establishing indepen dence in Hungary than in any other part of Europe where the question has been in agitation within the last twelve months. But despotic power from a broad intervented to suppress it. And, gentlemen what will come of it Ido not know. For my part, at this moment I feel more indignant at recent events connected with Huagary than at all those Which passed in her struggle for liberty. [Tremendous cheeringd- I see that the Emperor of RusSid de mands of Turkey that the noble Kossuth and his companions shall be gii'en up. [Shame! shame !!] And I see that this demand is made in derision of the estab lished law of nations. Gentlemen, there is something oh earth greater than arbi trary or despotic power. The lightning has its power, and the whirlwind has its poWer, and the earthquake has its power. But there is something among men more capable of shaking, despotic power than lightning whirl Wind, or earthquake [Overpowering outburst of applause]—that is the threatened indig nation of the whole civilized world.— [Renewed cheers.] Gentlemen the Em peror of Russia holds himself to be bound by the laws of natidns from the fact that he forms alliances, he professes in fact to live in a civilized age and to govern an enlightened nation. I say that if under these circumstances he shall perpetrate so great a *iolation of natural law, as to Seize these Hungdri ans and to execute them, he will stand as a criminal and malefactor in the view of the law. [Loud huzzas continued for several minutes.] The whole world will be the tribunal to try him, and he must apperlr before it and hold up his hands and pletid and abide its judgement. [Rditerdted Cheers.] The Emperor of Russia is the su preme lawgiver in his own country and for aught I know, the executor of the national law, and every offence against that is an offence against the rights of the civilized world, [hear ! hear ! l] and if he breaks that law in the Case of Tur key, or itt arty other case, the whole world has a right to call him out and to demand punishment: [Right !] Our rights as a nation are held under the sanction of national law—a law which becomes more iMportant front day to day—a law which none who profess to agree to it, are at liberty to violate. Nor let him imagine, nor let any one im agine, that mere force can subdue the general sentiment of mankind. It is much more likely to extend that senti ment and to destroy that power *filch he most desires to establish and secure. Gentlemen, the bones of .ro; -Wick liffe were dug out of his grave seventy years after his death, and burnt, for his heresy, and his ashes, were thrown upon a river in Warwiekshire. Soine prophet of that day said : "The Avon to the Severn runs, The Severn to the sea, And Wickliffe's dust shall spread abroad, Wide as the waters be." Gentlemen, if the blood'of Kossuth is taken by an absolute, unqualified unjus tified violation of natural law, what will it appease—what will it pacify?— It will mingle with the earth—it will mix with the waters of the ocean—the whole civilized world will snuff it in the air s and it Will return with the awful retribution on the heads of those viola tors of national law and universal jus tice,— [Great enthusiasm.] I cannot say when, or in what form; but depend upon it, that if such an act take place, the thrones and principalities and poWer must look out for the consequence.— (Overpowering applause.) And now gentlemen, let us do our part —let us understand the position in which we stand as the great republic of the world at the most interesting era of the world. Let us Consider the mission and the destiny which Providence seems to have designed us for, and let us so take care of Our own conduct, that with ir reproachable hands and with hearts void of offence ive May stand up whenever and whereever called upon, and with a voice not to be disregarded, say this shall not be done—at least not without our protest. CONTINUED. -The trial of the tw•o persons lodged in the Jail of this couniy on the charge of attempting to kidnap a free negro, has been continued to January term. FOREIGN NEWS, The Steamship Cambria arrived at Boston on the 16th inst. The news which she brings froo` Europe is not of general importance. We con• dense the more interesting items as follows : The fears of a general European war growing out of the demands of Russia upon the Sultan of Turkey, appeared to hate greatly subsided. It is stated in letters from Paris of the 25th ult., that the French Ambassador, at St. Peters: burgh had forwarded despatches to his Government, intimating a change in the hostile determinations of Russia in its disagreement with Turkey, upon the• subject of the extradition. So far froni forcing matters to extremities, Russia expressed its& anxious to settle the differences quietly, provided no warlike interference was threatened on the part of England. The same tuintir was pre valent at Vienna on the 2ist inst. It is. more than probable that the appearance of the French and English fleets in the vicin;ty of the Dardanelles has causes the Autocrat of Russia to alter hill deter minattoni • Hon. Abaft bawrence• ' Envey Extra ordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary from the United States, obtained an au= dience with the Queen of England nt Windsor tastie tin the 20th ult., and des livered bas Credentials. He was intro.: duced to the Queen by Ltfid Palmers , : ton. We extract the subjoined as the most important of Cambria 's news in regar4 to turkey; The change of creed of Beni, Kinely and other Officers ? is conArined. The following details concerning Bern, Kos suth and Dembinski; are very interes ting: Bem, as soon as he was inform ed of the determination of the Sultan to resist the demands of Russia and Aus-i tria, declared that his country was his first religion, the Sultan having the same enemies and the same friends as it, he was determined to become a subject of the Sultan, and, to serve under his col ors and that he would embrace Islamism ; that on quitting Hungary his resolution was already taken,,but that he had not made his profession of faith sooner it was because he did not wish to have the appearance of yielding to fear. He added that he did not ask anyone to fol low his example, Nevertheless, Gen erals Kmelz and Slaen and about thirty officers would not separate from him, and have made their declaration in fa vor of Islamism. Kossuth, who was greatly irritated against Bern, went iiiimediately to the Hungarian camp, and informed the men the Porte resisted the demands of Rus sia and Austria, and that England and France appeared decided to assist the Porte, and he supplicated them not to imprint a stain on the flag of Christian Hungary, which they hnd always served with honor. Some Words from Kossuth having given rise to the opinion that Bent and his companions had yielded to the promises 'of the Forte, a great agi tation showed itself in the Hungarian camp, and it was at one time feared that a disturbance Would take place. Dem binski has not become a AI ussleman; but he has openly acknowledged that the Porte had nothing whatever to do with the abjuration of Bem. Later Foreign News. By the arrival of the Steamship America at Halifax, on Thursday last, the eastern papers furnish us with one weeks later intelligence from Europe. We give the most important. Flour and corn are exceedingly dull, and pri ces a shade lower: No new feature in the money market. Con sols receded on Friday froM 93i to 921; United States 6s 106 a 1085. The French Ministry has resigned .or been dis missed. Cause-.-disinclinatiiin to sustain the views embodied in the President's letter rela ting to Rome. Great citement existed in Paris, but the Presidents firm, apd has written a letter to the Assembly, which the London Times character izes as impudent, but spirited. A tie* Cabinet had been formed, which wholly represents the views of the President and a majority of the Assembly. Nothing from Russia. AUSTRIA AND HUNGARY. The fiends, who are nicknamed Ru lers in Austria, not satisfied with the human gore they have already shed, stilt continue their sanguinary career. S3v eral additional murders have been add , ed to their already fearful acts. Their victims who have been sttan+ gled in Pesth, or shot are all Men of rank, and *hen it is stated the wretch Haynan has been appointed CiVil Cad Military Governor of Hungary, ctimes at which humanity shudders, at once arise before the mind at the mention of his name. TURKEY. The only• allusion in the papers at hand, of the difficulty bettbeen Turkey and Russia, is given in a single para graph. - Measures have been taken by the Pot. to for the location of the Polish and Hungarian refugees ; the former had been conveyed to Shmulk, while the lat ter were lodged in good quarters at Nil astega and Rubehick. Kossuth and the other leaders are to remain for a while at Widdin, until measures were taken for their removal and ultimate liberation. No loss than 300 ` of the Hungarian refugees had become converts to Islam ism, and many of their friends are about: to follow their example. Sir Stratford Canning has sent Pass