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estion. She consequently regards the act of Captain Wilkes as unwarranted by international law, but does not, of course, officially express her opinion. France, like England, is too ready to regard the present war for the Union as a commercial struggle between the tariff men of the North and the Southern free traders; and now, the sufferings at Lyons and Manchester combine in urging the execution of the "higher law of necessity," to open Southern ports. A Paris letter of the 9th of December to the New York Tribune, says: "Your correspondent must guess that, in the supposed case of an Anglo-American war, France would begin with, and hold as long as she could with polite advantage, the position of an armed neutral, ready to act as mediator. As mediator between England and the United States in the first instance. And then with England, perhaps, as mediator between the U. S. A. and the C. S. A. "It is worse than falsehood to deny, what I know it is worse than patr