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immediate wants of our city, until trade is opened throughout the Southwest. We are obliged for your kind tender of services, but really we have no occasion to trouble our New York friends at this time. A waiting your further orders, we remain. Miscellaneous. Capt. H. L. Sturgis has been appointed Collector of the Port of New Orleans, and Messrs, J. L. Merritt and Thomas Hanners his deputies. Four hundred barrels double extra flour were offered for sale in New Orleans on the 13th, at the rate of $21 per barrel. On the 12th instant families were supplied by the following distribution: 2,000 lbs of bacon, 248 bushels corn meal, 13 barrels rice, 2,043 loaves of bread, 11 barrels molasses, 850 cabbages, 14 bushels peas, 2½ barrels mess beef. Dr. Samuel Harby, the editor of the New Orleans Bee, died on the 11th instant. He was a native of Charleston, but for twenty years connected with the Bee. Robert R. Sherman, for eighteen or twenty years attached to th
Intervention. The foreign news published this morning assumes a very deep interest, because of its reference to the question of mediation by France and England for the restoration of peace on this continent. Some of the statements of the press given assume a very positive shape relative to the intention of those Governments to interfere. Yet the British Ministers, in their replies in Parliament on the 13th inst., to inquiries propounded, stated that there was no purpose on the part of the Governments to offer mediation in American affairs at the present time; and it was further stated, that the Government of France had made no communication to Her Majesty's Government on the subject. Nevertheless, the very phraseology of the British Premier, and the Minister for Foreign Affairs, shows that they meditate mediation at some future day. The temper and character of the editorials of leading journals in Paris and London, as well as the speeches of leading men, justify the concl
English sentiment upon Butler's Proclamamation. We have late foreign news, through the New York Herald of the 25th Copious extracts have been made from it, which will be found in our columns this morning. It will be seen that Butler's proclamation was the subject of a debate in both Houses of Parliament on the 12th and 13th inst. The expressions of feeling in both Houses were such as were to be expected, and very natural to any civilized community. What must indeed be the character of that proclamation of a Major General which is denounced as "infamous" by a Minister of the British Government — an officer whose position requires of him so much circumspection, and whose habit is to weigh deliberately every word he utters? Both Lord Palmerston and Earl Russell denounced the proclamation of Butler, and they but reflected the undivided sentiment of the British public — may the civilized world. Both of them thought it incumbent upon the Federal Government to disavow the act of But