- ; -' r '---mm'"'"'111' If PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY, . WATSON fyMA CEJTy J. ri-L .-.LWiiif' navable in advance At 5'P" aim'"" LATE FROM ENGLAiND. TKe packet ship Pacific, at NeW York i Yr0'm Liverpool, sailed on the 3d August, to which datehe Wrings advices. An express'arrived in London on the 3 1st July in. an unusually short passage (torn Rotterdarn. It was sent off for the purpose of informing the mercantile, in merest In L6ndon of a considerable rise in Xke value of colonial produce, in order that corresponding-purchases might be effected there. Money was so abundant thai it could be obtameq on oniy pcrt cent, on good bills, and every thing wore a cheerful aspect. The letter mentioned that more had been doing lately in sugar .and coffee at Amsterdam thaa i for 2 ? or three years past, and much of this change is attributed to the facility - given by tne Bank of England in discounting paper. Brazil and Bueno Ayrt84 It seems certain that the British government have received despatches from Brazil respec ting the signature of the pieliminaries of peace "between Braziland Buenos Ayr's, and it is asserted with confidence on this authority, that besides the payment of a considerable sum by Buenos Ayres to Brazil, it has been determined by the treaty that Monte Video; and a considera ble portionf what is called the Banda Oriental; U.to be formed ! into an inde pendent government under the protection of Great Britain ; as to I the particular form of government nothing has transpii red, but it is cpnsidered that it will be like ' aft ' , ' ' I--- Buenos Ayres repuDlican. j The Emperor Nicholas of Russia, was invested with the ipsignia of the noble order of the Garter, at St. Petersburg, on the lOtli of July, with great pomp and 'parade. ' ' "r ;t Private letters from Madrid, dated the 17th July, state that they are organizing, with the. greatest activity, regiment, which is to be called Sendentaire de Ha vana and to be composed of 2500 men, chosen troops as well as officers be ta- j ken from the. royalists J ne transports vt hich are to take these troops to the' Isl and of Cuba are ready to set sail, escor hvih Sovereign man-of-war. The j- ....... p.noan. riimmander in chief of the Royal Guard, has been charged with a secret mission, by the King, to the imv nf Observation. It is asserted this ! mission has for its object to take a survey of the armv as well as the complaints of the soldiers and officers, &c. and give an account of eveiy trivial complaint to the x roro v lenoa, n ioi r- I tant orders bad been despatched from - . mr ' . t 7- .tntail tkal : tmnnr. Petersburg to Mohilow and luiexio, ine bead quarters of the armies of the south and west; No unusual movement, howe ver, had yet taken place among the ' troops, who remained in their respective cantonments. It was .-reported that the Emperor Nicholas would shortly visit the .rps d'armee; n Bessarabia. - The ru Bior was considered as well founded, and as an indication that j great events were preparing' 111 that quarter ri,- l Lrlnn Time ol the 1st August, - a-vs . u Letters from Berlin state tnara irrtat number of supvior officers of the un&Aot;t'imfi the eo- rrussian-uiMiy t1-"""" j vcrnmm f r leave to serve as volunteer U ihr Russian army, in case 01 a war oe stweea 'jH'Wwjnd Turkey. i f Ww Harmonv. had ar- 1 ..,100 , He denies that his . SilCU I ft f : , , . 1 r . proiecu had faile J . I : , , ! . . ihe Sarduaian ship" Ffif tuna, arrived at lfiih JulV m 14 ujr ram. Algol's, fio bmdrance was urr cu he )7 Hie Captavn on coming out. A snip. 01 tlve line and two. frigates were crutfing at a distance. An AJgerine frigaiejand five Aorsnirfi.had sailed on a cruize. This Austrian governnjent has become alarmed at the great increase of students in its dominions ; and in . order to set jbounds to the increase, they have direc jted that the" young "men who pass from xtne" principal school to another must un dergo a strict examination. No youth can be admitted into a gramrnical"; class who" has'passed hil4ih year. No more than 80 pupils to be received in any one,classv Orie of the largest commercial houses L) Madrid, the house ot Urionagoena, has Just become bankrupt for 12,000,000 of reals., -. AJ:,'J. t. .V"'--;rU.::;K Oo the 25th of July two line ships, two frigates and a corvette sailed Irom .Brest. Thn'vprv'. larffe French naval force of 30 ships in' the Mediterranean is to be ilivi ded into three parts the Levant squad ton of 23 ships, under : RtgnyV'. that which blockades Algiers, 12 ships, and the crui ;zers for pirates. f t?i4:'i The Paris Moniteur doubts whether Don Pedro wil: risk his American pos sessions, and make a voyage to Portugal The European Sovereigns are suspec ted by some to have promised the Pacha rif Egypt their countenance in his rebel lion. :'' ''ih:::y iW :'y i'rUi',:: ' The accounts from Spain state that the insurrection in Catalonia was daily ex- J tending. It was even reported that l or tosa had been occupied, or rather taken by the Carlists ; but this intelligence was considered as unfounded: The reported evacuaiion ' of al most every part ol" the Peninsula by" the French army is confir med ' It Is even said that orders have been issued to raise seven additional re giments in Spain, in -order to garrison the places now in . the . possession of the French. X--??-- :vjr;.'' " v!- Letters from Cadiz to the 4th instant, complain bitterly of the injury done to Spanish commerce by the Colombian pri vateers cruizing in the neighbourhood, which they state have utterly destroyed the trade of Cadiz. The conduct of the Governor of Gibraltar in not suffering the privateers to enter thebav, does not ap pear to have satisfied the merchants pf Cadiz, although it is evident it was all Governor Don had in bis power to en force' These letters contain nothing fur ther of moment. . Despatches have reached London from Lieut. General Sir H. VV. Cliqton, to the 7th, of July. . The army remained at Le ria, Thomer, Torres Novas, Torres Ved ras, and Lisbon, and' Were in excellent health' Accounts had been received at Lisbon that an-insurrectionary movement had taken - place in , the' northern part of the province of Tras os-Montes, but the result was not known. The insurgents were headed by Brigadier General Ordaz. The Moniteur of Saturday contains an article, dated Ancona, the4lh inst. which stated that a steam packet from the Ioni an Islands had arrived on the preceding uay wun important aespaicnes irom vor fu for London, and that private letters, brought by the same .. conveyance, an nounce that Gens. Church, and Coloco- troni, and the other Greek chiefs have ta- ken ud several Dositions in the Isthmus of Corinth to oppose the march of Ibrahim Pacha It adds ,a : report, that Lord Cochrane had dispersed the r Egyptian fleet of Candia, - - r ... v. , . ...... . - , . . . ' - . . . . I :it.:ajjpars: oy advices fr6m:Constantt Dople, that the Sultan is greatly alarmed at the intiination which he has received that the Allied Powers would interfere in behalf of Greece, and that he has ordered .voVv nnrt nfliU Hri. . .r e . j:-i:-::JL r-i::--. miulOnS, ' WlluuUl Ulalltlviiuii vii 1 ciigiwii, , . . . .. - ' a measure hitherto unheard of in the Ot- toman Empire, in order to meet the per- ilrof the approaching crisis. He has al- s4 issued orders toRedschild and lbiahim fiacha to use thetr best exertions to put l .. .1 t u..r .u. stances should occur .which would sup port thus evidently alluding to the in terference of the European Sovereigns. Letters from SmyinaJ received at Par is, confirm the report we have "already published, of the Paeha of Egypt having declared s dimself independent of - the Porte. The reports which have been in circulation resoectinc the real cause of I lie Pacha's discontent, as also relating to the cause which has induced him to throw iff the yoke of the Gr. Seignorj are very numerous. The most credited isl that in me coraraeHcemeiii ui hic ujuhhi wi av. tne rone sem ageuis i ie i.Mi ) making him splendid offers if he would ; send the stron force under his son Jbra -17. , ri him, to the Pelopponesus, among which nflkri the nutting him in nossession offers was the putting him in possession of the Island of Candia as soon as the war terminated. Since which time Ma- hnmmed. in finding that the Porte was inclined to its ptomises, sent secret hi trnrtinn to Ibrahim to arrange as well as he could with the Porte for the evacua tion of the Morea arid 'return to Egypt In doing this the crafty Pacha had a dou- ble object in view y first, that of defeating the equi v oca ting pol icy of the Porte, al ways inclined,' like all weak powers, to augment or withdraw its. pretensions ac- tfiirdinfir to , circumstances : and seconaiy that pf seizing the island ot ianaia. 10- .a;m nn. his return, beine ordered to land a strong detachment of his army and artillery on that island. -This is craft a- gainst Crail, all a Greeks. - ' .' " ' - r. tt is 9 onnri tmn Inr inf? Advices have been received by lartars from. Persia at . Uonstantioopie, wnicu cmrp that th discomfiture of the Russian armv was of such a nature that it was tat - - ...... . v m ing back in every, uireciion iuwiu, i in other words 'e vacuating the Peisiad ter- rnory, aud re-einteiing Georgia 'f 0 . ' Prt.mnnth .dated Tues- day states that the Russian force expected in"that oort consists of Inine sail of the liiand u nine frigates besides smaller vessels The inhabitants were very much mi0A -i.W .k- entrust ofVthe Enelish and Russian sailors 5 - the latter came on .1 .l onH marrhfd xiiui r 11 11 111 ri 1 iiKa. ine ucbwii liore, formed on the beach, and roarcn ke well traced soldiers; through, the ireets within erect ait and orderly be li streets i : - u ' -. . : , ' . ; A : , . . ' . ? - ' " " ' ....... .J ...... . ..... -jj ... . . --..1 1- .. ' haviour. The roll of the English sailors requires no description. ' , ; ' . ' . ,: Letters 'from Aleppo, dated 22d of May, state.that for three "weeks? previous the plague had carried off from four to five hundred "persons daily, ann4 that the City was in the greatest consternation i in con sequence. - I : . Late letters from. Bombay announce several mercantile failures at Cilcutta. V Accounts from Corfu, oKtle, 26th of June, says that the Seraskier, soon.atter the surrender of the Acropolis, had marched to Western Greece, and arrived arThebeS iri the middle jof thatf rnohth. He was expected at Missolonghi. Part of .his troops are'said to have already ar rived at Salona and Archova, (where: the severe actions took place in the winter between Omer Pacha and Karaiskaki.) According to the same accounts, Ibrahim Pacha had sent part of his Arabs tp Trip- olizza, and the remainder against Mr tmh in h.ionA iha rnrUl ( Arm Hor-! inth.) The districts of PatrbsVGastonni,f Calavrita, and Vostizza., and many other towns and villages in the Morea are said j to have submitted to Ibrahim. Since the capitulation of the Citadel of Athens, the Porte has received no further ormnnt. f iko An.r!i.on. r ih Kpraski. ' RprffichlH Prha . Ihraliinri Pacha is said to be on the march with part of his trnnns towards Horinih. t I i A.t. ' t. i.. m- rri, ' Constantinonle of the first of this month announce that the Sultan is at length preparing for the moslserious' measures, The firman which we Spoke of for weeks, has been sent to the provinces, and the Pachas are ordered to arm also, in defence of the empire the rayas who: do not recognize Islaroisnj. Every thing ' indicates that the Sultan will ho more k... .nK nrnni u. r-L-o i The arinaments continue here nd at i ICQ I OUT piuuu'ai bUIIVCI III II K nc I Nicolaieff. London. July 31 A German mail j this afternoon has brought very late tet ters, from Vienna, to the .24ln instant. They contain the important information .t . . .f ri . . . e i.i t . .1: a - J mat tne racna 01 r-gypt naa aeterminea not to act in concerts with Turkey. VVe Nay now therefore conclude with tolera- ble certainty that he statemp At of kflS, uay regarojng ..nJ;r!,,V,M w!.. U7Q t..'o o chart latfo'r frnm IVlarSHilips. of the 21st ult. One of them from a house that .are agents of the Pacha of Egypt, to a merchant of the first respec taDllltV in L.0 tability in London-, in which no allusion is mad to his havmer declared himself i . .7 , s,; I: I Ua Vnrta anrl allhmioll IUUCFCHU'1 Vi. it commercial letter, yet, as the prd- ui x-gjrH . t.-.uvu,-1,u,......u, and the danger incurreo irom tne oreei. cru.zers, we tnins, 11 sucn aarcamuu: had been known there, it would nave been commumcateu. ; The Allgemine Zeitunf;, to the 18th inst; has been received. Under date of Odessa, mention is made of the extraor- dinary activity used in fitting out the Black Sea f leet. I he following is an extract v.;-v-:' :. u -' - yrJx-..-H--''i- Odessa, July 2. In consequence of orders received from St. f etersburg, the Black -Sea Fleet is to be immediately got ready, to put to sea. : since tne receipt 01 these orders, workmen have been em ployed day and night in fitting out three ships of the line and several frigates' and . i j l:n "u-t . it is expectea mai tuny wm .uc uuc rea dy in a few days. These measures have revived the hopes of . the ureeRs. Ac- cording to a notice from Constantinople of the 26th of -June," the passage of the Dardanelles is granted to the Swedish Hag. ' English houses are laying up large quantities of corn. -. From the BaLimore American, of Sept. 4. The letter from Liverpool to the edit or of the Richmond , Enquirer which we have given below at length, may deserve I iome 1 thought from politicians' in thj country, and from none mure-than those who have been fond to lay the loss of the British Colonial Trade at the door Of our own - diplomatists. VVe have more than once expressed our firm conviction that the sudden suspension of the negotiations ( on this subject, arose out of nothing but a change of poHcy in the British Cabinet ; 1 nuu uiai uvv4 v ciuuiac me I offered touditions, was but an excuse for I ik.t nii. s lniifl ttnUir nmtir.ua tho doing what would have been done at any 1 rate, ine trutn is now tea King out irora other Quarters. It is admitted that' the - 1 nunistiy had reasons good or bad for re . .-... .i tracing tneir, reciprocity system in pan j and the writer of the letter inquestion repeats what has been said t in otlieif fet- ters from, that country, " and what was guessed here long since, that the clamours of the ship owners were at the bottom of the matter j and that, in the words of the letter, having determined to change her policy.:' -England aWpuW f riae,.fqunl 1 means to evade an arrangement, (had it - - mm i been made. 1 as she aia 10 set over pet-ao,, s " stipulated plighted engagement otiate on the ..modi might have been guessed from the flip; pant tone of Mr. Canning, wha spoke, to bur apprehension, very much like a man who, having an awkward matter on hand, determines to face it out with the most effrontery he can, ! The editor of the Enquirer thinks it no consolation, however, to be told, that had we acceded to her offers, England would, haye, found means , to evade he spirit of her act. - Now to ouf minds, it is lotb a consolation to us, and an excuse for our diplomatists ; a'consolation, because it is some satisfaction to know that ou loss if any,Y is an inevitable injury from a rival, and not a consequence of what might hive been avoided V by ourselves ; an excuse, because it would have , been diflScult for the most politic government on earth to bind by enactments of its own, the policy of any other people. Nay, it is something more than an excuse it is matter of praise to the foresight of Anierican diplo- macv, that, aware of the fluctuations or policy, it should have sought, to bind them by the only means known between independent nations, , a solemn and well digested treaty.. Otherwise, the collec- tors of Great Bnain might at any time have received as unexpected orders to suspend the legislative acts in force, as those :to the collector of Liverpool, just announced; to ; suspend tlie admission of Indian Corn, for consumption. The ad- minktmttnn.' says the Lnouirer, cannot claim any benefit from these concessions; 4t they could not foresee, this, change ot policy. Yet ir required no extraord.na- ry sagacny iu hiiu, ... a. .-.....-.v on the permanent basis of a treaty, was not liable to tne cnanges wnicn are nrr- nally in progressi and will necessarily ne so, as long as one great ; commercial na- Uon nas aovantages iu gr.F . .... over a rival. That part of the . letter ; ; ... - . which relates to tors suoieci, this subject, is not tess worthy of aur attention than the other. VVe shall keep or gain nothing from England,- jn the way of commercial benefit, but what we retain by our prudence and foresight, or by the lorce" of superior in trinsic advantages. , To the Editors of the En for twelve' months laying .the foundation of a commercial war with the United States, which can be terminated on just terms only by a united and energetic re istance, and a prompt"; adoption and a faithful enforcement of countervailing measures : whatever neglect or oversight the President of the U. States may ha ire been guilty of on the West India Ques tion, and whether he has, or has not, been guilty of neglect, I have not the means here to determine ; but be this as it may, bur country's honor and her interest re quires that we should rally round our go vernment, and oresent n united front to England, upon this subject. ! The con test has been shrouded with too thin a veil by Mr. Canning, in his correspondence Wltn lir . VXallairii, w vi'i.tw i.vu. view of any unprejudiced man bis real object. : When England, in 1B15. opened her West India islands, on certain xonaK tions. to. the whole world, she was sin cere, and if we had accepted her condi- tiohs, we would havepiacea nerinratner an awkward dilemma, as, in 1826, she! determined to change her poll -y, buljshe would have found means to evade the ar rangement, as she did to get over a stipu lated and plighted engagement to riegoti- '- '' i .: OL - I i ate upon the subject, one roaue a pusi- tive engagement to seme tne roauer oy negociation in 1824; and, in i20 sne as positively declined to negociaiejii ait res pecting it, and that; too, without giving any other reason than is contained in Mr. Canning's flippant and impertinent re mark, that M Ae would not allow, himself Ki drawn into the discussion of a sub ject that had alieady been exhausted." To which ne suosequenuy auwu . t House of Commons, the erpty and fro thy boast, that he had had the last word. After this, let no man in America suppose that England was, in 1826, disposed to arrange the trade with us upon equitable terms, and that its non-arrangement grew out of our non-acceptance of the terms offered by their act of 1815. ( The truth is, in i826, they found that their recipro city system of commerce did not work as well as they expected and they determin ed to retrace their steps, as far as they could, with deceocy.To this, ministers were the more; promptly forced by the clamours of the shippin interestcla mors to be sure unfounded but stdl riot the less loud on that accountr; ;V They ascribed all the depreciation in the value of their shipping and their pro fits to Mr. Hosklnson's, reciprocity sys-f tern, instead of ascribing it to overtrading in eighteen hundred' and twent five, y tkW building of a stipeifluous number ot vessels, abd the general derangement of trade n 18ZO. , out to return iu me t tOuestiohThis Government has .just passed i ttra. rM which authorises the inland introductioa from the United States into Canada, free1' -bf dutyy ashesj staves and lumber of eve , ry description, horses,' fresh provisions, , &C&C. and tl)atv the articles so admit- . ted into Canada shall, be deemed to ber Canadian produce, and shall be admitted into England and the West Indies at such. The operation of this bill will be, ' if we ' allow the intercourse to continue , between Canada and into lh U. States to give to British shipping the entire car . rying trade of such American articles a they may be able to receive througti Ca nada. Board staves from the United States received through that channel, wilt ' " pay a duty here bf only I, per 1 200 but if imported direct from the. United . States they ill have to pay ll I I6sthe duty before this-bill passed was3 16 8d on American staves coming direct- Uni ted States ashes coming through Canada, arej admitted here free of duty ; if they come direct they pay a duty of rJs per cwt. : wheat from the United States is entirely prohibited, from Canada it is ad- ' milted at a duty of 5s. per quarter ; thus the Canadians may ship all their own grain, and supply themselves with cheap bread from the United States. By. these regulations this government expects to cripple the navigation of the United States, of . which it feels great jealousy, and at the same time improve its own, a ' policy which Mrs Hurkinson has in debate admitted to be the policy f England, and in this policy we find the tiue secret connected with the West India question. ; He argues, I mean Mr. Hus kinson, that if the trade be opened to us on equal terms, from our commercial ac tivity and contiguity, we will secure the whole of it, and hereby much' increase bur commercial marine. ' , 1 1 ' There, is now scarcely any article with the exception of , cotton produced in the" United States, that coming direct to this country is not taxed to almost a prohi bitory amount., The value of Tobacco . is about 4d and the duty on, it is 3s. per lb. ; the value of Rice is 18i. and the duty n American Rjce is 15s per cwt, whilst it is admitted from the East Indies ; people in this section of England, that it pays a duty of only 6 per cwt. but their, dependence upon us for this article begins to alarm them ; out b a consumption of about 600,000 bales, which is the present estimated consumption of this country, they use about 400,000 bales of U. States growth ; they are however, now looking round to nscertain in what way they can, upon good terras, obtain this supply from other countries, so as to make them less dependent upon us for an articletbatisof such, vital, importance , to thtrm. v If we were now suddenly to cut of'the supply of cotton' from our country, it would create a rebellion in theirs. We cannot blame them for attempting to avert such an evil an evil that I confess I would, in com mon with themselves, deplore.' But if it should take place it will be of their own "' creating. We disclaim monopoly of eve ry description j but whilst we . do so, we do not disclaim a resistanceto an attempt to monopolize the commerce of the world. The cultivation of tobacco has, here- , tofore, been prohibited in this country. A removal of .the prohibition was sug-, gested the other night In the" House of Lords I and if they do cemove it, I . think they will be able to cultivate it with considerable'success. The greatest pro duce of Tobaccco to the acre that I ever aw in my life was in Holland, a climate. I think, by no means better aaaptea is its growth than this is. ; v -K J 'l- When 1 commenced t oia not mean iv trouble you with so, long a letter, but & hope you will excuse it, as well as the Scrawl, if yuu can read it, and be asu red of the regard with which 1 remain. Your most obd7t servt; 7 The temporary Corn Bill which wai passed, admitting ell grain new . in bond to entry upon tne payment 01 tne duty, as established in tne scale or the first bill, will not interlere with inaiaa mi a ' ' . . Mil. ,corn. inis article is sun, as- receuu admitted, as a non enumerated article, at a duty of 10 per cent ; but this is a oversight, St will be no doubt put a su p to next Parliament V ; REMOVAL, , , . e BRADFORD, Co. have remo-' ved W the Store lately occupied by Ste venson & Cook, next door 10 Mr. Prim-. rose; Pollok Street, where they fiVr ;for -sale, at a small advance from the New . York c.ist, a general assortment of. , ; i Foreign and Domestic selected bygone of t1ie.i6rm,r residing ia . New-York. They have alsd for sale, 50... Barrels Superfine Canal Flour, received . this week, per. SchrJ Triumph" ; v ' A 1 I It' . .f. , i it V ' V." . r. I.1 1 4 ! ( 'Hi 1 t. r