HASZARD’S GAZETTE, FEBRUARY 6. Latest News! THE PEACE QUES'l'l0.\l. Le \lord of vestertltiy contains the text of :1 tlespulcll ' from Count Buol to count Valentine Esterliazy, accoinpanying the propositions ivliicli that tliploinutist l::is taken to St. l’eteis'niir;_- l!) the iiaine of Austria. In this tlCn‘l)Ill(.‘il it is stat: tl that his Imperial lkIlljt}.sl_\' :in.l the l'iinpt.-ror ol Ausiri l. tlioir.-li llil1llll‘{lllk’ Allietl l’o\\’erS u.m!:.-i-rililu, res-olvi:i.: not to lake the in- itiative in put-iiic overtures, llt:\'t3l'lli(.‘lL‘.~'S belit:\’<'.-‘ i'illnS“llljltsllllttl in c\'prt-ssiiig the the hopt-. ilcit lllL‘.*«l.‘ l’o\'.'ci's continue to llOllI tne |ll'l:it,‘.it)lL‘S whicli eiiitlctl them at the outset an l have no object of ne,grau- dig.-mczit in rietv. The luipei'ialCabiiiet is tltcrc-fore eneoiiitigetl to endeavour to procure a st:ttleiuent,taliiiig the four prin- ciples already accepted by Russia as the best starting point. The propositions ul- I'Ciltl\' ltiiown are then given, and it is ad- detl that the 54‘-_;":llllg of these by the bel- ligcrents will be ininiediitely followed by a general armistice and definite negocia- tions. Count Buol adds if the proposi- tions are flt'.(‘t".l\l('(l, Austria will not hesi- late to warmly recouum-nd their accept- tlttcc to the courts of Paris and London, an-l that he is persiiadetl the special con- ditions will he no serious obstacle. \Ve will not, <:i_v~.~ (‘ount Buol, in conclusion, enter upon the ;:rave consequence which ltussia will t'llliIIl upon llt‘l'SCll by refusing to enter upon the paths we at second time open to her for arriving at an honorable rt:coit~ili.itioii, ti refusal which would bring upon li--r the weight of an iuirnense re- spon.~ihilit_\j. We prefer relying tipoii her wis~loni to it't~i_,«,vli all inc chances. (.‘.i.-ri~i=i:o \V.\lt l‘iii:r.trt.i'rio.~:s. We l?i“.ll‘ that the autlioritics of the “lat l):-p-irt'iii-itt are not abating their efforts. M the Tower the coibarkatioii of 0l'tltilllil'C and (‘tt.'llllll,~:.~':tIllll. stores is cnrilrtl on with the .-‘unit: energy and de- spiit-li us lnen-tol'orc; the operations in the snail arins department provintz this establisliuient is rather on the increase. lustructions were forwarded yestcrilay morning to the commanding officers of eiiiboiictl regiineiits of militia notifying that volunteers from these corps will be accepted in light cavalry regiments, with the exception of the ltlth Hussars and 12th Lancers, which regiments are com- plete to the war establishment, namely, 700 rank and file each. THE EAST. The Ganges arrived at Marseilles this morning with advices from Constantino- ple of the 7th, and from the Crimea of the 5th instant. A ship called the Sub- erb has gone down in the Black Sea with the whole crew, the captain excepted. The transport Talavera has also gone down in the Sea of Marmora ; the crew were saved. At Kertch an attack was expected from the Russians. l Russia.-—Advicas from St. Petersburg state that General Luders will take the supreme command in the Crimea, and Prince Gortrchaliotf will aucced Pinkie- witach as Stadtholder (Viceroy) of Poland. Kotzebue, hitherto head of the stall‘ in the Crimea, is appointed to the command of the 5th infantry corpa. Intelligence from Naples of the 16th announces the refusal of tho Neapolitan Government to permit the exportation of corn. No political interests had been granted, as was anticipated. _ News dated Tricatc, tho I6th, contains intelligence from Constantinople to the effect that the geneiiarltuimo wnaAconE¢::eit- t 1' his troops at nnagetti. n ng- _ _ . _ :.I:h-ilifar -steamer had received tbtbauing rocowod btmappointmoltl item “I0 let), proidB‘8d‘frtltri‘8inopa to Sottchouni to convey Omar Pacha to Constantinople. (From the Second Edition of the London TIII“-5 )' \'ii:\'_\'A, \Vcdncsday, 10 p. In- Ilussia. li-is iiiteoiitlition:illy aiuxspted the {I-1- »ositions of the Alli.-s. '1 his is aiiitaclitlc We have r-t-eivetl the f.>llo\\‘l".'! l-"l".’§"“i"- "' I dur;-:iteli from our Paris c.irrc~;~-ni.leiit :— l l).\ltl.<,'l‘i|llI"?tl.1V.Jill). l'i'.—-' ~ iiill nvi".'r ~ “ "'.ll'liII.‘ ti -1‘ tl.x:'li \v:\s reccivetl l“-re at 121"? 1-. '< l.l‘)l'!llll':. and was iiiiiiie;liutt~i_\' it W!-‘l It \ .‘ 1’i.tII_)ii1'.~e, liy uh.‘-.t'|‘ bl‘ l.lS l‘iXcellctti‘:.' {lie l iini-etc-r of the Interior; “ VIENNA, J.tn. 16, 1115 of Fraiiee to tire Minister of l~'oroi;:ii Affairs. *' Count. l*lstcrlni'.:y writes to-tlaty froin St. l’c-l tershurgli that M.da Nesselrodo hns_i_iistiiotitied' to him the nceeptiitiou, ‘ pure and ttiiibsiniplo,’ of the propositions contained in the ultiinaittipi, which propositions are to serve as preliuiiiiaries -5 ofpeace; We have received the following telegraphic dcspatcli from our Berlin correspondent :- Bt:i»i.ix, Tliiirsdaiy, Jan. 17.—llussia has ac- cept-stl the Austrian proposals. Ollicial men attriliuta this to the urgency of I’russiu's re- presoiitations and remonstrances." The Paris corrsspondcnt of the ' ‘into: reports that at a reception at the Court of Vienni, on the 9th instant, the Emperor Francis Joseph declared to a. member of the Diplomatic Corps. that the moment had at last arrived to get out of the situation they were in one way or an- other ; and to the Swedish Minister he observed that the treaty of his Government with France and England had produced the greatest effect at St. Pctcrsburgli, and would be powerful in hastening the termination of the crisis. p.i-i.—-'l‘ho ‘tlinister. LATER FROM AUSTRALIA. Messrs. Pilkington and Wilson's “ White Star " clipper lion Nevis, Captain llaron, ur- I'l\'\‘l.I in the Mersey on Tliuraday, the 17th inst. with 80 passengers, 50,006 ounces of gold, and it gCn(‘l’:Il cargo, including 560 bales of wool, sou bundles ofriigs, -.2300 liitles,46U0 Ii0t‘nS, &c. The papers contain no news of iinportance. .\ll lC',“‘l>'l;ttl\'t} busincs in Victoaia had been sus- pended till the new coiistitiition. which arrived out in the Slialiui-.ir, h-.i.d been discussed and proelniincd. ! The price ofgold was 75s. 9d. the oz. 30,000 ldi',:,_;~.-rs were at the I-‘iery Creek diggings, and ' lt.ttI partly brought. down from 8000 oz. The ' _Vlt.‘l*I l. fi-oin quartz has greatly increcascd at 3t-ntlir,:o. During the week ending the 12th October the escorts from Mount Alexander, liallarat, and lleechworth brought 04,181 oz. down to Melbourne. .\Ii=.i:'ri.vo or I,AK[.lA}lIEN r.———An otiicial announceinent that Parlianient will meet on 'l‘liursday, the 31st instant, and that -‘ public business of great importance will be brou in forward without delay,” has been orwarded to the minsterial members of the House of Commons. Tm: Suez CANAL.—Tlle commission for the piercing of the isthmus of Suez has arrived at Alexandria from its explor- ing journey. The results hitherto ascer- tained are favourable. The commission considers that it will be easy to ierce the Isthmus from Suez to Peluse irect. Tn: Ausrimi. Coivcoiun'r.—It was expected that the convention with Rome would give internal peace to the empire, but there has seldom or never been such a general ferment in the countr as now. In Bohemia the indignation o the Ca- tholic population is so great that the authortites are astounded and at a. loss how to act. A person whose words deserve full credit assures me that if the police were to undertake to arrest all those in- dividuals who in Bohemia openly rail against the concordat they would have to incarcerate half the population of the province. In the Italian provinces the state of public feeling is quite as bad. and the disaffected have now a new grievance. Until now the Hungarian bishops have remained quiet, but you may be sure that they will soon be up and doing.-— Timer Correspondent. Loan Srrwrronu DE RIDCLIFPI AND rm: FALL or Kuts.—-Tlic Times says the blame of the fall ‘of Kara feats u’pon'~Lord Stratford do Radcliffe, tho Britiab Ambassador at Constantinople, and attributaa tho ambas- sador‘! uttogbd dillikc, to Genoral Williams Fortilgn-oillcl, and-'not through the repre- sentations of Lord Stratford. w.ut AND 'l‘AXl-LS. The Ediiibtirg/t R€l‘ltlL‘, iii an article of l.‘~.7.’.l), on “Altl(‘.l‘lcZ1,” after counselling us :.:=! to siiii‘t:i- (illl'.~It‘.l‘.'(ts to he iiispired " with {l'.l_‘.' -tlicr lore of mu‘ than that wliieh is .3. l'.l'l-‘ll upon at detei-niiiiatioii not to submit to .~.“ltillS lll.<llll and lll_.;lll"\',” adils the fol- lo“ 1:-—“\\'c can lllli)l'lll .l.~it:itlian wliat at . toe iiic'.'it::hle coii.-tcqizenccs of being too ,fo:..l ol ;;loi'y:——'1'.irts up=..:t every article Willcll Clll(.'l'S into the ni<.titii or covers the ibacli, or is plaeul under the ft.ot——-ta.\<-s upon every thing whicli it is pltrmsaiit to sec, hear, fct l, smell, or tzistt-~—taxcs upon wavintli, liglit, and locoiiitzlioii—t:i.\es on every thing on curtli, and the waters under tlic cartli~on every thing that comes from abroad or is grown at liome—taxes on the raw materinl—-taxes on every fresh value that is added to it by the iiidnsti-y of inaii— taxes on the sauce which pzimpt-rs nian’s appetite and the drug that restoi-t-s him to liealth—on the ermine which decorates the judge and the rope which hangs the crimi- ital--on the poor man’s salt and the rich ni:in's spice—on the brass nails ofthe collin and the ribands oi the bridc—at bed oi- hoard, coucliant or levant, we must pay. The schoolboy whips his taxed top; the beurdlcss youth iiianagcs his taxed horse, with it taxed bridle, on it taxed road; and the dying Eiiglisliiiiaii, pouring his medi- cine, which has paid seven per cent., into a spoon, which has paid fifteen per cent. ,llings liinselfhack upon his cliinlz lied, \\'lllt'll has paid twenty-two per ceut., and expires in the arms of an apotliecary who has paid it license ofa lititidred pounds for the privilege of putting hint to death. His v.".tolo pro- perty is then imiiietliately ta.\'cd from two to ten per cent. Besides the probate, large fees are demanded for burying him in the chancel.‘ his virtues are handed down to osterity on taxed marble; and he is then gathered to his father-s—!a be taxed nomorc. l.\lI’0R'I‘A.\'CE or A co.\i:.i.i. In the priory of Raincssa there tlwt-lt a prior who was very liberal, and who caused these lines to be written over his door: ‘- Be open cverinore, O thou my door. To none be shut, to honest or to poor.” But after his death, there succeeded him another, whose name was Raynliard, as greedy and covetous as the other was boun- tiful and liberal, who kept the same lines there still, changing nothing therein but one point, which made them run alter this man- 5 O -r “ Be open overinore, 0 thou my door, To none, be shut to honest or to poor.“ Afterward being driven from thence for his extreme niggardlincss, it grow into a pro- verb, that for one point Raynhard lost his priory. A MADMAN.—-A workman at a lunatic assylum in England, left a chisel more than three feet long, on a recent occasion, in one oftbe wards. A furious patient seized it, and threatened to kill with it, any one who approached him. Every one then in the ward immediately departed from it. At longtli the attendant opened the door, and balancing tho key of the ward on his hand, walked slowly toward the dangerous mad- man, looking intently at it. His attention, said the attendant, was immediately attracted. He came toward me, and asked: “ What are you doing with that?” “I am trying to balance this key on in hand,” said I, “and I can do it: but you cannot balance that chisel in that way on the back ofy.our hand.” “ Yes, I can,” said he, balancing it care- fully, and extending it towards me. I took it off very quietly, and without making any comment upon it. He seemed a little chagrined at having lost his weapon, but made no atompt to regain it, and in a short time all irritation passed away. Emu Risirio.—The New York Christi- an Jldoocale has a letter from its London correspondent, under date of December 7th, giving an interresting account of the visit of the King of Sardinia. In speaking of the departure of the King, the writer in-' troduces the, foolliving extract from« the Court Circular of the 6th:--" At half-past 4~o'cloclt this morning, the Queen, the King of Sardinia, Prince Al at \Vindsor Castle.” The writer tlieu eon- trasts the present iiiodo of family enjoyment with that oftieorge the 1"ourtli. Then the hour of breziltfaz-it olt tiincs ran into the af- t_c.rnooii. “ Noiv, ive liiid the Quecii sitting (lawn to lii'eukfast, with her liusbaiitl and ll'.‘l' _![ll(‘SlS, three liours before daylight, on a wild l.‘cceinber iiioi'itiiig, with the wintry winds liowliiig round the turrets of \Vind- stir, and the Sllti'.T lying llllcli on purl: and terrace.” The writer adinitstiiat this hour is earlier than that at which the royal family usu:ill_v bi'califastctl, and was tixeil to allow of the dcpartiirc of Victor Eiiiaitiiol, the traiti stat-tin_«_: a live o’clocli. Yet the hu- hits of the Queeii and Prince Albert are systeiiiatically so early and regular, that in the spring and siuiinier her Majesty and children are geiicrally seen driving three or four miles from Bucltingliain palace, as early as eight o’t:|ock, having brenkfasted and tiiiited in domestic worship, with the llollsclltiltl, before leaving home. Si.vciri.Ait AN'l‘lI‘A'I‘lllES.-Tim antipa- thius of the human iiiiud are very e.titi-iior- diii:iry, and their effects are involuntary, irrcsi.<tible, and uncontrolablc. Ont. oftlic almost iunuincrable cases of this affection oftlie nerves on record, we here subjoin a few oftlic inost reinnrltable. Thus, for ex- ample, Uladaslaus,Kiitg of Polaiid, became alinr.-st frantic if apples were put in his sight. Henry Ill. of France could not stay in a room wlierc there was a cat; yet this king was at the suinc time so absurdly fond of dogs, that he would often walk about his palace with It basket of young puppies dangling by it piece of blue ribbon from his neck. Scziligcr could not look at velvet witliout a violent shaking of the uhole lit!(l_\'. lllarslial d’Albeit could not bear the presence of either it wild bear or a sitcliiiig pig. lloyle used to fall into con- Vttlsioiis on hearing uatt-.i- running from it tap. ill. la Motto do Vaycr, though be (‘mild not hear music, was delighted with the rnaroftliunilcr. James I. could not bear the sight of a drnwii sword; and Sir Knowlcs Digby relates that his majesty shook so violently in knigliting him, that he would have run the sword into the eyes oftlie knight elect, had not the Duke of Buckingham guided it across his shoulder. AN ORIGINAL Srnncu.—At a demonstra- tion in Bantl‘, in honor of the Birthday of the Earl of Fife, the following singular speech (says a contemporary) was deliver- ed by Captain McDonald:—“ It is now the eleventh hour with me, I am now seventy- tivo years of age, and the oldest man in the room. I came here to live and die amongst you. I had sailed for and wide, and labor- ed hard to acquire some means. I have sailed four times round the globe. I have been in all the climate: of the known world -—and I may tell you my youn friends here that, for fifty years, I have runk nothing stronger than tea and coffee, and I always stood the cold better than any man in my crew. I liavd made nine voyages around Cape I-Ior-n—and I always stood the cold better than any of my seamen, so you will ace that it’: only ‘ Dutch courage’ that drink given. I never had the bappines to get a classical education, but] could al- ways conduct myself in company. Perhaps it's not generally known that I was no less than three weeks living at the Mansion- House with the Lord Mayor of London. Whilo there, I once had my la a under the table with the whole of Her ajeaty’a Mi- motors, and once with no lcu pcrsonagcs than Prince Albert and the Queen Dowa- ger-—and once, too, while thcre,I dined with forty-five clergymen; and upon ano- ther occasion with no fewer than sixteen bishops. I feel grateful for the kindness you have shown me, and I must any I no- var wish to atand higher in Band‘ than I do at this moment in your good opinion.” The moat prevalent diaordora to the hui: frame is lubject are, perhaps. sick headache and bile, by both sexes and all ages, and which are the ground work, my. a very foundation of some of the worst of diaordoru. Amongst the many toraodioa brought betoro the public, there in nothing which can equal Hulloway’a Pills for the cure of tlicae ng aomploiato,iliair ofiacta on prompt and curtain, andan .tlroy atrilio atthe very root of I tliosaa, tboyxlcavdtho an t . ruonrot‘. bolllb.-Iftttilvoly other ruoaaorhuo fpilod. t Then Pillmrlllnqloo , _ rt, and the Duke of Cambridge, bl-liakfa‘ ml together‘ ouIl~‘IlI' «liiar and stomach coiiiplainta.