P» the ilomyo ‘Jamaica, and the other half‘ to the other ‘ deavor to recover freedom, their birthright? That . more than the Poles, who had’ so nobly stood for- . do_aCouiier_of the 30th states that it has broken out ‘ment of the disease, 13,825; deaths, 5,141.- , verpeeln .. gain, new cases 49.. ,, _deatbu.12. 538 AMERICAN RAILROAD JOURNAL. FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. LATER anon Eunoru.-——-By the Hibernia, Captain Maxwell, and the Ontario, Captain Sebor, we have in Ireland 12,121 ; deaths 4056. our files to 30th June inclusive; Sir lVaI,ter Scott-g-—,-A-'1‘he_ latest notice we find 0 Sir W'alter’s health is from the London Courier of A the 29th, that he had passed rather a tranquil night, and remained in the same state as the day before. ‘ Lennon, dune ,30.——We regret ‘to state that Sir James Macdonald (who bad Just been appointed to theg‘o’vernment of the Ionian Islands, in the room of Sir Frederick Adaiu,) died yesterday morn- ing at his apartments in Spring Garden. . Lounon, June 30.-At the date of the last ac- counts from Vienna, the death of ,Youn g Napoleon, (Due do Ileichata,dt)_ was hourly expected. The Talave,ra,,shi_p‘of the line, at Portsmouth, was ordered to the Scheldt. Lord Durham, who is on a special mission in fsfvor of the Poles, takes pas- sage in this ship. ' ‘ crease in that city. It has extended its ruvap;es to papers inform us that the cholera is still on the in- the comfortable and afliuent classes." Total cases ’I‘he cholera has been formally announced as ex. isting. in Manchester. Two or three fatal cases have occurred at Stockport. Lennon, June 30.~——A Dutch mail arrived this day with papers to 27th inst. also Hamburg]: Journals to 22d, and the N uromburgh Correspondent to the same date. From the Hague, the 241th, it is stated I . portion were sent to distant parts of the Russian BMPIN3. and 111' the whole number only four had re- turned to Poland. Common soldiers also, who were included in the amnesty, were marched by llJ0US8.nda_ to Siberia ; the last accounts which had ~ been received pictured these brave Poles as march were. met, day by day, in parties of 10, linked to- getlner by the wrists to a bar of iron, and this was the. mode in which the Emperor Nicholas fulfilled the amnesty under which they had surrendered.-—— that the Cabinet Council had been long deliberating on the (irtth, 65th, and 661.11 Protocols; the result was not known, but the report was that the evacua. tion ofthc citadel of Antwerp was to be still delayed. The simultaneous departure of the Dutch Minis. tor from this country, with the oflicial meal of Six- Chorlcs Bagot, the British ‘Ambassador at the Hague, has given rise to many warlike rumors at the West endof the town. ‘~4= It was said last. night that the Talavera line of battle ihip,_ whose. sudden The Nobles of Poland were treated in the same ‘way. -- One anecdote had come to his knowledge, which he would state. The Prince Simonslra, who was a_r- Ljayed in the rank of his countrymen against the rlespot’s power, was sentenced to banishment into Siberia. his.Saint’s festival, and the Emperor. Nicholas wrote on the sentence, in his own hand, the aggravating soldiers. The »Kin;: of England has knighted Edward Thomason, Esq. of Birmingham. Parliament is expected to rise the first week in August; but the dissolution, under the new order of’ things, cannot take place before the beginning of Ivlovsuiber. . _ Orrthe evening of the 29th, in the House of Com. mo'ng,'1‘.h’e Chancellor of the Exchequer proposed a loan of7a31,000,0O0 to those of the British ‘W'est India. Islands who have recently suffered from hurri— canes and servile insurrections. He stated that the lossessustained-inrconsequenco of these calamities ,,,,,.,-‘-.r,,,...ro11ow.;‘ Jamaica £838,170; Barbadoes £1,i51,ooo.; Asa. Lucia, .;€81,000_; St. Vincent, £290,271. He‘ proposed to appropriate one half of Islands.‘ e Dr.'Lusl1in’gto.n was ready to advance 500,000l. tined for the Scheldt. Baron Stoclrwatcr, the friend and privfnte Secre- tary of King Leopold, has had several interviews lately with Lord Palmerston, for the purpose of urging his Lordship to take active me:isn.ros to com. pol the King of Holland to comply wiuh the con. ditions laid down by the Conference, and on the 14th inst. an ofiicial note was sent 1.01 Lord Pal. merston, by order of Leopold, to a similar effect. ‘ The Belgian King is quite ready for hostilities, either offensive or defensive. He has organised a numerous and good army, and is deficient only in experienced general ofliccrs; but, in the event of a war, he would probably employ French Generals.»- [Court Join-nal.] Lennon. June 30, evening.--Up to the hour of our going‘ o press the oflicialanswer of the King‘ of Holland to the last Protocol of the Conference, to those who had sufl'ered by the dispensation of Providence, but he could not consent to revive the fortunes of those who had long been ~‘iiBP0S8d if P81‘- severs in'—'a course of .lD_]l1fll.ltl8 and cruelty. Fhey had‘ produced that insurrection which led to the destractidri of their property. ‘He did not mean to say it was ‘ their intention to excite a rebellion for the destruction oftheir property. but by 2» contumw had not, we understand, been received by Lord Pal. merston. The last communication from our Minis. tor at the Hague, and to which we alluded the other day, leaves no doubt, however, we believe, that the answer will be in the negative as to the evacua- tion of Antwerp. ‘Loninbn, Juno 30.-—Thc Paris papers of Wednes- day« and Thursday‘ have been received, but their cious resistance to the liberal views of the Govern- ment, .they- had brou{g.ht.’ealam1t1es‘on their own bandit V361,“; -,notw~_re_ady to“ embark the ,pub._lie mom}-""ufron‘*soch'prete”nees. ~ Suppose another in. surrection should take place. W89 the P1151!“ PUTS” to be again opened for the relief of the sufferers ? It liadbeen said the slaves were guilty of wicked. ness and-‘iniquity. »Had they done more than on- unf_'ommato. mge.of_individuals could not be charged \vithjv'ickedness in the assertion of their liberty ward in defence of their natural rights. ' He enter.‘ ed his protes£'ag_ai'nst p’a_rt_of the vote. . _ _‘ After some further debate, the appropriation was carried [in committee of the whele.] - contents are unimportant. The New Ministry is not settled, and all is, as yet, but speculation and uneertaintyas to its final arrangement." The onl thing stated ‘without misgiving is tl1'e"decided as. termination of Prince Tallcyrand not to become a member oftho Cabinet under any circumstances. The great decision ofthe Court efCassation was not expected to be given till Friday or Saturday, and public opinion seemed now to lead to the con- clusion that the award of this tribunal would be un- favorable to the legality ofthe state of siege’. N 0 executionhad yet taken place under the sentence of these Councils of War. The Messager dos Cham- bres aflirms that the King moans toiproclaim a ge- neral amnesty upon "the occasion of his daughter's marriage with King Leopold. ' " ‘ r ‘ Dennis Collins, who throw stones ‘at the King, had hislfinal, examination on the 27th; after -whichho was eeommittedifor trial one charge ofhigh. treason. Advance in _Wogés of 17__'lannel Weaocrs.’—So great has ‘-rséo'tmy,beoh "tho de_ma'n,d, for flannel .g_oods, which are the principal manufacture ‘of the village of Milnrbw, near Rocbdale, and whence large quan- tities are sent for exportation. that lastweek, we un- derstand; anadvance in the prices of weaving these goods {was made, to the amount of 2d. in thc‘shil- ling." ‘This advance has not been effected by any The Duke of Orleans was expected to return shortly to Paris, buthis mission to the west and south is thought-"to be any thing but satisfactory. [From the lllessager dos Cluzmbres] , Panrs, June 28:-The formation of a Cabinet ac- cording to arcurrent report :———M. M. Dupin, Presi- dent, Minister of Justice, and for the affairs of Reli- gion ; Barthe, Minister of Public Instruction, Pro- sident of the Council of State ; Thiers, Minister of Public Works and of Commerce; D’Argout, Mi. nister of Finance. M. Girod (do l’Ain,) and Baron Louis quit the order to Sheerness has already been noticcsd. in des. Y . =.Thev:hon...and--learr.re'd"m ed, for the document was in existence. Princess, his mother, urged by her natural feelings, sought to moderate the rigor of his sentence. The Emperor so far relented as to allow the substitution ofa milder punishment, on condition that the No- A. bleman would acknowledge he had been driven into ‘ the rebellion, by the loss of reason’, whichhad be— fallen him 'in consequence of affliction at the death He nobly refused to comply with the tyrannical and ~ base suggestion, urging as a reason for; his refusal. the feelings wliiclirxnust agitate the minds of his - fellow countrymen on seeing him disavow the part he had taken in their common cause. On his re- fusal, no further application on his behalf would be ‘ listened to, and he was at that moment in exile, his . mother disconsolate and wretched, ignorant of, what . corner of Siberia his footsteps were directed to. But this was not all. He left a daughter behind him eight years old. The order of the Russian Go. , vernmont was, that female infants of the Nobility . should be taken away from Poland, and carried into .‘ Russia. Her only protector was an old soldier of ., 70, who had been the companion in arms of Kosci. usko. When the Russian soldiers were abo,u_t,_;to enforce their orders to convey the infant away, he; seized her in his arms, and declared he would _not ,, give. her up but with his life. _ His noble,di_s_dain of life soterrified the Russians that they ro‘tir‘ed,”and .. left him in possession of his infant charge. ' ' , ' » Gym‘ hub,‘ - ~ ' °lde.ds,...t”6—’~<» observe upon that article of the uka so which related‘ to the abstraction of the children of Poles; and con- tended that it was with a. view towards finally ren- dering that nation more complete slaves than they have ever yet been, and also that it was in complete 7 accordance with the proceedings of the old Musco. vite rulers, who stopped at nothing to consolidate their power, and who cemented the component parts . of their empire with blood. All the European pow V care who were partieslto the treaty of Vienna, had ‘a. , right to exclaim againstthe proceedings ofRus'sia.é’}'-, The object of those proceedings was to den'ational;“ ize and to exterminate Poland ; and this formed only _ part of the ultimate views of universal monarc_hy in Europe, which Russia, iheiwns. tonvinced, secretly ciher-ished. His lehrncd friend might’ smile, and urge mentally as a reason for discreditingthat asser." tion, the fact, that the.Rus'sian empire was already so large that it might fall to pieces . of its own weight; but let him recal to-recollection the imw mouse size of the Roman empire, wvhichlhad gone on in an uninterrupted career. of-foreign. conquest Eton gy which had existed between the two. cases. was...‘ quite sufiicient to warrant him in entertaining in be. ’ intlmidill-i0" (Which 011 ‘h9.°°““'aTY_“S"“1U’ “feats Coun¢j1,__.M, M;sou1;, .13 Montalivot, do Rigny, lief that many of the European states might fall “W °b.l°Ct S°“ght=) but was V°lu1“3“IY m*'1d° by the and sebasmmi, retain their stations. Thus there victims to the insatiable thirst of aggrandizement by . manufacturers of that place. The cholera was increasing in Paris. The Lon. w6‘ii’fiT§c'f§;t’zqisleIis¢. in;the.House. of C0rrection.Co1d Bathi‘-Fields." Seventeen prisoners died on the 28th. Lennon, ‘June 36, even‘i'ag;-,—Che1_er'ait1'theco\an- try;-‘—~New cases,;,229_; deaths 82; _recoverod,1107 ; remaining. 645. Total cases from the commence- ~Ir'eland—-New cases, 219;;deatl1s, 88 ; recoveries,’ 134‘. I V, - _ i i *1 V d t b rather abnting in Li- Thg choléaerdr I:3If)1g:1l“e()l1 (ihee 27th, 58, deaths 19 ; deaths 19 ; 29th, new cases 44. would be two new Ministers, and two changes. ' POLAND. An interesting debate occurred on the 28th June, in the ‘House of Commons, upon the affairs of this much injured country. We make such. extracts from it asour columns will admit of. It was intro, duced by'a.speecl1 from Mr. Ferguson, who»review- ed thehistoryof Poland's ‘wrongs antecedent to her late desperate struggle for independence, and then passed to the cruelties and violations of, faith which had been practiced upon her since that war was ter- minated. He Said :—-- A ' , ’ ’ ‘ Of 22 ' Polish Generals, who then became in a serum! P3242! 2uu..39t2z we :1 for pair» lmaaagrrriasaris under the ammo» the stem: l which Russia. was actuated, era that empire utterly fell into ruins. He hoped that England would never suffer an attempt to denationalise Poland, without interfering, with the other , European states,’ to prevent it ; and the first step towards this was to put forth a solemn protest against an act so atrocious in l its nature. He would not occupy the time of the: House any longer--(hear! hear 1) He felt aware that he had very imperfectly urged the claims [hear] » which Poland had to the interference of England, and he should therefore conclude by moving that an '- humble address bepresonted to his Majesty, praying ' that he would be pleased to-order to be laid, on the table copies of the manifesto of the Emperor of. Russia, of the 26th February5la‘st,and of the organic ' statute to which itvrefbrs, and ralsolfor a 00py.‘0l'.T ertractfrorn the deapawh of the British Ambassador f: ing in. columns towards their place of exile ; they ~ The sentence was enforced on the day of; punishment that the must be sent into, Siberia . e_n.—'foot, chained to‘ the bar‘ of‘ the‘ "common g, If this was doubted‘ it would be‘ prov‘-" The _ of his wife. ‘ The alternative was proposed to him. » which even Britain had succumbed; andvthe,analo.i<_ ,