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Latest from Europe. the question of Intervention — the Queen's speech, &c. The steamer Glasgow, from Liverpool on the 7th inst., has arrived at Boston. The new Confederate steamer bed made good here escape from Liverpool. The U. S. gunboat Tuscarora left Liverpool on the 7th, in search of her. The London Times says, editorially, that if England wishes to give the Federal a new impulse she has but to take some step which can be represented as interference, and Lincoln will soon get his 300,000 men, and the chances of peace will be indefinitely postponed. The Daily News anticipates that if the cotton dearth lasts till Christmas, the parliamentary scheme for the relief of the distress will not suffice to meet the exigencies. The Jaurnat de St. Petersburg denies the rumors that Russia had joined France in the proposition from England for a recognition of the South. In the House of Lords, Lord Stratheden moved for the correspondence with Mason relative to a
Extending the Conscription. The recommendation of the Secretary of War and the measures proposed in Congress to extend the term of the Conscription from thirty-five to forty-five years, will give the Confederacy an army large enough to meet the emergencies of the country without sacrificing other interests, which are as important as a large and unwieldy mass of men. The six hundred thousand called for by Lincoln will be only a Persian army, which will be overbalanced by its own weight. We rejoice to see the blended energy and discretion which govern our own councils.
the steamer George Peabody, Capt. Travers, and sank in ten minutes. Seventy-three lives were lost, including the wives of Major Dort, Lieut. Col. Scott and Capt. Cummings, of the 6th N. H. regiment. The negro brigade of General Hunter, at Belton Head. S. C., has been disbanded, as "the negroes could not be made soldiers." A large number of Yankees are going over the Canada line and taking the oath of allegiance to the British Government, to avoid being drafted. In Washington, on the 14th Lincoln addressed a delegation of "colored men," who waited on him by invitation, to "talk over" the subject of emancipation. His address is reported in two columns of the New York Herald, and includes two verses of poetry! Gen. Pope in his official report of the battle of Cedar Run, says that his loss was 1,500 killed and wounded, and that Monday night the Confederates fled from the field, leaving their dead untitled and wounded lying along the road. The Quincy Herald, says twenty-one Confedera