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— es nder (be au- | tinaation of hostilities with France ani Exglacd or te prefer our own to . and that we merit thts confidence, and until we shall | meat is thought to be strong enough to cary out | in their or are the conditions q eve ourselves th mo epee for We formed hospitals in ¢his town they will be treated . which fe oy = ounces of hostilities with Austris may to betiove ive 4 dovcion: fi as alate in iis town aes ita polioy. opmnows OF Fam fee to some day eo — cause raga bait ty Rais to the Ghacus- These forms] engagements being pow before hs 4 bod ae nt.. “i eens ey ~ empires, which are now at war, and to-morrow may be {From the London Kzaminer.} improvencit sea and way of think: T come now.to that pera- | World, and having been contracts; subsequently 3, beg ft tibes thect, | 4¢ perce, chould mutually each cthereveninthe | ‘The stroggle m Madrid du-ing the Yast week b.4 punishment of death ia rijo thet pera; | the announcement that the principalities would be | for sught we know. ‘coutrary, Bhe-Ameri- | tints of war. Such are our wishes nnd in cosforming to to bees been between Masia Christin and | Poutical msttera, evacuated by Russia, the great question now dader | cans, of course, he evtirely as. He more | them the Wallachians will prove their loyalty and obeui- | freon 16 whom tre revolution bas elven ‘every | THE FOREIGN POLI the Kuselan | diseussion is at once relieved from the obs urity | than understands them, says thé enraptured Doctor. | ence to thelr all powerful aus. of ph tas rat nas given pever, every STATES_NEGOT CY OF THE _UNITED h that bas hitherto prevailed on two essential points:— He dotes on them. He knows everything about | Buchgress, July 27. weap gent ec eery ee erine sear protien eons omg TATIONS FOR guBs “ What are the detinile objects of the we and a peed ew ion —_ ang op the lead! aM one Cholera sa coaeldecabay dections Varna and tolet her pov even at the risk of having her once The gaand_ political speculation “of a t terms can peace be concluded ? hat wi | every . thorougbly ‘‘post- | Sbumia, siso st Constantinople. a is, 2 head ‘ pears i eaptoraed of ‘Austria with reference to the ulterior | «ad up” in the history of the different tes! He | been fearfully Grstractive among the French, Bat ae be gion’ 4 ~ lo, Bhar mo fale earl "is is pretig’ ties that oe — chs protecto: | Con tions that the Western Powers had already | treats every American who eaters with the | Iutest accounts was beginning to abste. |r pe ype Ee anche of policy ip aiid the pissed eee en if it wee based upon s peoa guarantee, | 1nd themselves by treaty to obtain’ The answer | greatest hospitality; he gives them letters of intro- The Fiench goveramert bas made *ontracts at Ouvitine beveelt ce — “Toth to de. ae Po of the nited 1 Pores ~ Papers Baer be ‘comontible with the indepenience abd ove} 1° 1).’se questions is now plain. Peace may be cou- | duction, and employs them in ail sorts of ways, and | Dantei» for water supplies to the French fleet. 7 She (ware of the profound. differences misfortunes, and recover its faiting hold ae tebe of ye Forte Coded on the bases laid down in these rotes, aud | offer» n0 end of inducements, Indeed, by way of | ‘This indicates the expe tation of a protracted cam. | PAT Par t bornosn the varkoammmenion | ad itloasanse tnttadedtoractherrdanee ok Ue ee ee teditneant to ten areaiinaa Austria, a8 well as France and England, takes upon | proving bis entire confidence in the whole nation, he | paign. $ aie Sa NiO between the vasiouagantien | af etons: (oem Shp am of negotia- os in Turke: . ¥ hey self the engagement to treat on no others. Copies | actually intrusts a Louisiana Doctor with an impor- A telegraph wagon ia in use im the army in Tar- posed ihe woateh its explosion, and ex- | Afr. Moule’ pnsoonen may as wid formic : as ght to take the | of these documents were at ofice forwarded to St. | tant miss'on to Washing'on, of which more anon. key. It is formed of a large coil cf gutta percha ettem thos in teva eg ry aie S folleueta sree MESS son. rnish, and yab populatic Petersburg, pot for discussion, but for the avcept { it is not upon Russian institutions that D:. Cott | covered copper wire attached to a self-actiog Lough, apory ux and reflax lat instant cent on Cuba, or an attack understanding »» to the best m ance or reje tion of the Emperor Nicholas: bat we | man returns ali these com ite. These institu. | which buries the wire a few inches below fhe sur. of the generous intentions of the Christian subjec»; but at the s conrinced that the reforms which Tae agg heme year etapa mest seemea ban red able cea wee pot yet acquainted with the effect produced by | tions may be well enough Bussians, Turks, Bri- | face of the ground. On changing quarters the wire ‘culated. ave recourse to ci C8: ve . Public opinion was them onthe 1th sian cabinet, Substantially, thongt | tstcrs, and Diggers, but the Doctor evidentiy pre- | i dag up aed again used, a ° gape she objected, not ouly from the danger and | greatly excited by the news of O'Donaell's reralt, not as jet in complete diplomatic form, the exchange | fers for bimself the whip end of the social system, | Hale, he “Kossuth rocket” man, is not dead at | Sin", p because aa ea pparen' an yp hapryg ence: of these notesis the basis of a treaty of offensive | and would not like to be invuted or sent to Siberia | Constantinople as was reported. carry aes oy rong to which abe is | bly general feeling that the’ a tolera- Se ieee asreneemcatmersaase mee | iepetal commento tue taf pepe ‘of op APRET cetaeera me Cae. Vision, 26 She inetenes | peckiiaray 4. 4 to have a ficger’in the pickings Accord: ebalf of t ortan' ions conti ose | imper condescensions, familtari e Bri ta r, is organiziag a plan to + conditions Ao terms of oes te on which | tha Archduke and. the affability of tne Arch: | enfianchiso all‘ Raysha” and place thoneony tum, | it 1s well remembered that when she was first 2 iy, & collusive motion was made in Congress for ‘wnitios in the Ot- bensficially toman empire can only be e! carried out by the Porte te gard to them, a 6 that if such eforms are . ted by any foreign influence, it can only be b, u compelled to leave Soamendluns theses ok ae A ee arene fae ‘tri nsel ava advice, and aot by en tnterference | past dissensions might be healed and peace sestored, | duchess, with sympathy in everything that re- | plete equality with the Mabomedan population. ghter, she car- the recent course lomat - grounded upoo vveaty fot dng al iened mato Ent: they efdk Caetahe fe tas Tecate Tact | (cient the preset gans” He uaceratce’ © te oe | Cee sii! ried away to France everything that was moveable | ing with the Court of Madrid, and the President could ent: , ; and valauble in the immediate!, Seer Majesty's corormment that | @bolich “all those stipulations which Russia has | imperial champion against all aspersions as to his THE GERMANIC CONFEDERATION. oon @ pet pee Papen ba responded by repeating an ex | to Caba, svuations of the diferent P in | extorted from Turkey by former defeats: they | conduct and motives, and, by the same rule, he re- 17th b- Ing "hanged they” are og’ more eeaety | Would establish & new state of things in the Prinet | peats with affectionate fdeity all the ststerints of | ated te the bund’ the Muster kaneis the Anes | oe ego aeehagared, and every necessary of | last memage, and. asking, In express terms, for a ¥ - Eng- | palities, onthe Danube, and in the Black Sea; and | the Rurstan journals, the most impudent forgeries | trian summons, as well as the correspondence with | likely that Ctristina would attempt such another | Neither the demand nor the re: for it land and France must therefore continue in the attitude | they would place the Turkish government ona new | of the Russian 38, and whatever has dropped | ine Western Powers, containing the guarantees of | act ot aweeping a ton, still oA Duetohaee | sont hae rx fan pant oh atl] of belligeranta os the other band, asthe principalities Bas in if aes ie Europe. ta they vot | pag = i S be pe rane Her Rape pet pecce required by the latter. ta tra. oe " . are | SW taken — an a aon pay te Php ig a now be accey yy Russia is more then we aatisi- | so far from wing any nt long render even ‘ashington organ ‘abinet beem Aastria and Prune will, no doubt, consider that the | Pete, but that they do include and dispose of the | of Sir Hamulton Seymour's goods, actually pald their | F*s8ia was arming all her ports. Sree imonenible, and tacts —— tar Ro it barring Be meatinon the expediency ot strength obtigaons of tb- teeaty of the 3oth of April strength- | Ccoontial parts of this immense and overwhelm! carriage home, which, of course, will be gratifying SS er President's hands by & ened, so far ag Au tria is concerned, by her separate en- | © pi 6! 5 7 Of ’ J Within the last tew days, however, they are Ko. | voter sd 60 hos thesmcal rye ‘ y i u juestion, we confidently affirm. The vaguenessand news to Sir Hamilton, “Tue zar ssys he will with SP. REVOLULION. i said mise! sense 3 oor the! spesitbin qustven tie thats AS rete Nooeriattey, which haye thus far enshrouded our di- | Graw his troops only when the Sultan agrees to THE SPANISH c have become more exigent. The talk now is not | can politicians beem @ebau shed by the need of oon 1 bave thus fudl: plained to you the views of her | plomatic proceedings, and even our military opera- | guarantee the rights of all Obristians in his domi- 1 rm Majesty's goverument, which ate eatitely shared by the Samy are ny giviog way to definite objects and | nious;” and the Doctor adda with delight that the | AFFAIRS IN MADRID, Sica Be BGS paras government of the Emperor of the French, whom | precise engagements; and the whole course of poll- | Czar is confident of ultimate success, though what | QUIRT BESTORED—KsPABTERO, O'DONNELL, AND THE speculators in evel cles of fi her Majesty's gevernment have been in commurication | ey which we have steadily advocated in the course | the success is to be—whether the rights of ali Chris- | CITY PRESS—GENERAL CONCHA AND THE SoL- | SPC : TY sper es merely to deprive the Queen Mother of move- | sulting the popular craving fur territorial aggre. 2 Ine ish to Vege oo ofthe moneved duement, st i in Cees te 5 oe ident lanoz, hardy | conveys nest 18 regarded by as 30 ands, may already: muecn Reduces ont upon this subjert, aud T have to instruct your lordship | of these transactions is reduced to a tangible shape. | tians, or the expulsion of all Turks--the Doctor has | DIRS OF DARCELONA—THE DIPLOMATIC coRrs | PAVE amasred. To force this from her, h»rtrial has | Evropean spectator may feef hie cheeks burn whee. to deliver a cupy af this despatelito Count Bool” | We know ipansiona, ia Tene 210.8 tena pri id gotten to seneare Hat taaaiiacicetar takes | ANDTHE EDITORIAL DINNAR—PLENTY OF NEWS: pes cement, and of course her preliminary im- a ele ot enmdendiy a is complained of on the VRE RARL OF WESTMORELAND TO pan EARL OF ing, ami we believe that these ohjects are withia | ae Les bs ct onl 8 dir | (Mudrid (Ang 18) Correspondence of Lantoa Tame) And these Espartero is said to have assented to. | 1uveded by the fellow-countrymen of ee end iplain- or CLARENDON.—(RECETVED ava, 18 », be aa re ot in the course of events it must, in we va. Standing at the i eerial elbow cate KA A large number of pergons, all of the lower or- tifa cat be foe ee wrnome of seerifying bas, Paris ee eg eare coauel co have the hovor to report to yous Lordship that 1 | faimess, be remarked, that the diplomatic proceed. | vhe very cur] of the imperial lips, aud jotting in hfs | ders, weld arrésted ay. Be making dichar- ; ¥ fn government by one who was raised to me a “ ta general | effecting it; for a solemn of the queen mother, : Po hs Count Buol, by appointment, | ings of the British goverument have been crowned | note book the sweet accents of imperial scorn, he | #2ces and endea i to bring about ‘called authority of hersel! tacit updertaking to 7 Med nigh the, note, {No 1) and received ih exchange With entire success, except in one instance, Less | enumerates the nameless places in the Gulf of Fin: | pric are pinot ay oa ven na poi Baie a creer +! Ufa sf joe — pensions a Bea Speci, h peo) le of a the note (No. 2) signed by Count Buol, copies of which I | than a year has elapsed since Austria stood in close | land we have attacked, instead ot the granité batte- pave td 4, however, with the excpution of | tera. Uticians of America have talked this language til! ove the honor berewith to transmit to your lordship. isd Ee borane Paes with sgn at ed se Commas which, De ae on what CA | at Hae they met little ‘maseraud tastier tars Tf his gorernment, however, be thus even temoo- | tsoucds in their ears much as “No Popery” or Vimswa, Augast 8, 1854. imutz, ber army reduces her finances embarrass. thority is Now! im, our navy bl i ‘ “7 h 4 The undersigned &e., has the honor to aBnounce to | ed, and ber position in "Europe undefined. fo | proclaimed its intention to destroy; and then, erreith tas Mh ia oes ae bey Dagger gh to ben ae any naan.” Ts inmoraley ia velod Wy ia hd Count, Buol, & that Be bag: received trams bis goveree restore the anc! cegnerinere! the court of Vienna | on the anthority of a letter by a sOppos: | ok. To. day the -teme is perfectly quiet, but taings | aster of the provinces as would be desirable for | tion, and President Pierce would almost cértaialy falta bk n'ai ng |Z ph intr in ees hed beams | Ue Behe tee them Pee Be | camel be aed anit vry need ae, | de aba vty. Jars Cae aprng rey | bas gt iter line, ther, had een che Courts of ‘Vienna, of Paris and of London, in confor- | and impaired bye multitude of untoward events, | ships paying landed in some quiet part of Finland, Sopa ph however, has reoelved assurances of | where, and he has compelled to sanction them. | jection to es Bee; srr an ty’ and cae Toned Leer, Ed amt fap re tig Shee Anh and by 4 policy to which we migat apply a harsher | destroyed ail the hones, and finishéd by violating all | the complete and unreserved adhesion and support Whilst such exist, and wield an authority which will | emptiness of his imputations on i a engage’ themselves, togetbor with Prussia, to seek the | name. Nevertheless, the co-operation of Austria | the women and girls in the district—a feat, we caa | (for be pligperdr yee mmig eye wer pe ee ey erie debated came the tidings of the ure tied tioant of again countcting the existence of the Ottoman | W4s the most importaut condition of success, and | only say, most discreditable to the Russian com: | tad of Sie Sec oat Macnee oe one Minieeey) tite idle for mevlerados and liberals to dispute at | by Captain Hollins at Greytown. It te poseloie that empire with the general equilibrium of Europe, that the | that co-operation has mainly been obtained by the | mandants and the Finnish peasantry, who, we are the Corporation, etjoul Guard, and the pro- | te arid as to the nature of the law ander whign elec. | the inmmense effect which tie intelligence has Lon three Powers are equally of opinion that the relations of | patience, the forbearance, and the uniform good | assured by the Czar and his journals, are able to beat | Vincial deputation. tions should take place; far the mocerado mode of | upon the people of the United States would not the Sublime Porte with the Imperial Court of Russia cau- | faith and good will shown .to her by the Western | avy numberof British and French, in the petphation | This is satisfactory, and, for the port 8 piace; ‘ne 1 be re-established on solid and durable bases i fader ish | guarantee of public ‘order. Yesterday and elections would at once be scouted by the provincial | have been produced at all, if the cruelty of the pe Ir the protectorate hither‘o exere! a ‘ay the Impe- vote onitewr of Sunday announces that on the | publ, the Doctor’ informs his tedden rea ce, nig one petrol rabies Guards yore to be papulstions of thetr cies Serene tighter in degree one ‘Peaneatlantion end, to be rial Coort of Kussia over the prinoipalities of Walla: | 18th the first Austrian corps had been ordered by | are all this time under the most egregious mistake | a chia pies h ne rd duty | Pop SAyei aoeeatonies that it bas been decided Rg must add the cis-Atiantic_-Anglo Saxom ts tare; and if the priviloges accorded by the Sultans to | telegraph to enter Wallachia by the Rotuenthurm | as to the Progress of the war. They think they are | tee Ts at disturbance, which would now'oniy | tO summon a constituent cortes, elected expressly | apt to be but little ashamed of havin; indalged in these, provinees, Jepeniencios of thelr empire, be not Lia ieee eerns pane cd Piece Eee! com sentees iceronmne,, copeuTins panen of ENS en | pont por haat ‘llintentioned. persons and from re. | for the Purpose of modifying and Topulating the con- mere bullying of a foreigner. Tas often been u collecti f the Pe be a bases Virtus of en arrangemedt to'be concluded with the Sab: | of peace for which she ia prepared to. contend, in courte, fosters the delusion’ "| getionary machinations. The civil Governor of | stitution. But a constituent cortes is a threatto the | noticed as a characteristic of the race—perhaps as Lime Porte, and the stipulations of h should at th juncti y 4 Madrid, Senor Sagasti, is, fortunately, a man of | Queen as well as a satistaction to the liberals; for | @ Consequence of its intense national and perso- se ea ess ye | Habment of this powetful allance"aguian Nusa, | are soled onthe one aie for" gumblos’ al te SDEY, acvty Sed iodgrent, an 6 no General | ooh a, ately hat its atirtion to aes the | sal pale t colonel Dube f navigation « an) 3 : r y | vernor. - Serva: freed from af obstaciog, and. submitted to the appl. | With such elements to deal with as the French gov- | small results and fei prams atthe. yar, and | doubted ‘liberal politics and taey are Popalat with | ture of the constitution; so that the effect isto | sibilities of other communities, it will look ee in them. at on of the principles estatlisued by the acts of the pM aa ap ge er gy oa fered paieatl s tia" peogreae: | the Madrilenos, who place full confident throw everything into doubt, and open scope and | on with indifference, {and even with app:o- Prospect for any resolute ambition. bation, to whatever ‘ewatne of moral heartlessress i. If the tres'y of the 18th gf July, 1641, be not re- | achievements of the diplomacy of this country, and | But now for the business part of the affair. Two | The following gre the most important passages | Preps i 1 | th ‘ Soe nyeical suffering vised in concert by the high ‘acting parties in the : the Foreign Minister who has condacted this nego- | such good fellows as the Ozar and the Doctor could ¢ Lie phage PB siacpi lB Sag oh by Senor | iin yer aa Gia wien te pater in Rowen tnd soeaeee! Reso publi be interest of the balance of power in Europe. tiation deserves the highest praise; and at the same | no more part withouta transaction than Haley and | Sagasti, to which I referred in my last letter:— central authority is broken. Each province seta | be roused too pitch of indignation which few other __4: If Russia do not give up the claim to exercise an of- | time he has been most ably supported by M. Drouyn | Legree. The Doctor made over to the Czar Turkey | Art 1. Domiciliary visits are prohibited, excopt in the for itself aan tes the right of discuss! societies can compass. Captain Hollins might have Scist protectorate over the subjects of the Sublime Porte, | de Lhuys and by Count Buol; and the joint efforts | and whatever else he could lay his hands on in the | cases provided for by ol advisiog and ce aha diture, and this tg, ot | frightened the unfortunate population of Groytowm Ce i Peony pelong, apd, if France, Aus- | of these ministers have brought about & vast and | Old World. In return for this the Czar gave the | | Art. 2. Any person w domiciis of a ction thal be | merely for local pusposes, bat for the general business | out of their wits with the most perfect impunity, 0 ret ar abt Britain, Prussia, and Russia do not lead thelr | salutary change in the public relations of Europe. | Yankees Cuba, which he considers to be theirs by | Pretext or motive, the aioe tah But if fEparte . mutual assistance to obtain as an initiative from the Ot- , 4 placed at the disposal of the tribunals. The respect. | of State. ‘0 is only able to exert due |: long as his weapons of offence consisted in és But, if the expectations we have so long enter- | right cf her phical position, and which ac- i + z . — he hengee roe con rmintion aril the observance tained’ and defended as to the ultimate policy of | cordingly he advises Dr. Cottm ‘d his fellow- ale eee ‘apd ~ ee cata Diya ive control in this dir , he may greatly strengthen | menaces; but he went several steps too far. le de- munities, and totarn to account, in the eommon inte. | Austria are thus confirmed, so also are the suspi- | citizens to take, whether the Spaniah government | viclence. goverrment. No permanent or satisfac atroyed a whole town with shot and shell. The Amerk- his ret of their co reliiovists, the generous intentions ma- | clone with which we habitually regerd the conduct | is willing or not. The two potentates, having;thus Art. 8. The use of all kinds of arms is prohibited to Gornst bare aa Slay te Tocal itkerties ir fe come to efleet on many” things besides ihaess ifested by bis Majesty the Sultan, at th ti of the King of Prussia and the Cabinet of Berlin. ommodated one another two objects rather | whcmsoever does not belong to the ar ‘the National that the victii _ avoiding say aggrossion on his dignity ani the indepen: | Wo learn fom Lord Clarendon'a deapatah that Ii | near tothelr: hearts same tomas Gontuien, | Guard, cr who does net hotl¢ perisetie freemen Pepa eg sherry ey DLN mall ac pl Beg creed erm lame ont ofan dence of his crown i was Prussia who declined to attend the conference | The Czar commissions the Doctor to offer Sitka, ,, Art. 4. The printed papers and periodical publications | {m! x have been esaively ridiculous ito It recolle :ta that the see erect ne hen iaiaa ne per red to declare | which Count Buol proposed to summon for ths pur | and we supocee all the Russian fe | See iia aie Penne eee, . gplortonatel Logis: |sexqemively icionias Postar. revciieae tana iae that e er at of Majesty, the ¢ ie ry 7 ry, 7 io} ex. we backed ‘tha in Britain, qpoile reserving to themvelves thktient ty mauve pone of communicating the answer of Russia to the | in North Amorica, for sale to the United States, “O's "Pen dd a or ‘neriodfesls ‘aad. fytog epitd iteelf, was to rowate local liberties | free port create the most delical obligations in its know whenever it may be urofal, the particular con- t Austrian demands. In consequence of this re- | and it appears the bargain is jikely to be made. | aynounce their titles and-the news they contain, ab- ther, and to works mock constitutional sys- | favor on the honor of the United sheets will the peninsula "y : ry all ditions Which they may put forward in {he conclusion | fusal, which was, in fact, a withdrawal from the | These possessions have only one value, and staining from expressions offensive to moralit, hav- ‘admin! * i iz rravagant essness of poace with Rustia, aod to introduce in the general | conference, the furtner communications of the three | that can only be realized in American hands. ‘hey | ing a tcadency te disturb public order. is balk acetals the ar eae Decne ees mee Ae uniprincied tence the a its guarantees above specified such modification as the con- | Powers were carried on ina confidential manner | may be made the ground of some imaginary claim, | 7¢ appears that the Patriarch ofthe Indies has been | and also co-operate with the provinces and provin- | 07; is breeding in the servants of the State, both naation of hostilities may render necessary, are decided | between Loudon, Vienna and Paris; and Prussia, | some hunting or fishery right, or some boundary | intriguing in a reactionary sense with the King, who | cial depatations as to ceserve'a due share of autho. itary and civil, This latter consideration bad not to Bo ncnaed ard not to take into consideration any | as we stated at the time, dropped out of the posi- | question with the British government, and we have is o great bigot, and to whom was owing tke re- | rity-~enough, and rio more—to the central govern- | probably very great weight with the committee seepentien | Lage ine Seca tgs Bt Peters arg ser | tion she had filled in the councils of Sarge. ‘hen | to doubt that Dr. Cottman would be enly too hap- | establishmext of the Geronimite monkeatthe Es- | ment. As go! diers are the leading auibers of the | of the te which was deliberating on the Presi- bream h Beas white they nee alt rie saci the | we say that the diplomacy of this country and its | py to assist the Czar’s views upon Europe by get- curial. The Patriarch is a relative of the notorious | administration, their inclination robably be | dent’s propcsal. Composed of persons exce goreromenta cf His Majesty the Emperor er Austen and | allies has been successful, except in one ‘instance, | ting up a little difficulty between the British and | gor Patrocinio, whose five wounds, it appears, have | to recur to the sword far'a recovery of Sewer ire ly to the ‘as the terms of i of His Mojesty the Emperor of the Fencl.. ‘The under. | We mean that it has failed to rouse inthe heart | Americen governments inthe New World. That broken out again, stimulated, doubtless, by the same | the sword does by halves, ‘and to employ it ee Saat siumaats § willingiy trusted Mr. signed, &c., WESTMORELAND, of the King of Prussia one spark of honor or in- | tke American government would think it part of | irritants she was formerly proved to have used. | can but end in tyranny and dictatorship. P PRoe indi ; but it doubticss saw that, Viens, Avgust §, 1884. dependence, and that the Prussian nation, which | their natural and traditional policy to buy any part | jmpestcr, her confescor, Father Fal 0. while mili and naval men, consuls ambaa- 8 E This arch impestcr, her confescor, Fai iigencio, This is a forebodidg which Espartero may yet tary men, and The undersigned Minister of Foreign Ailairs of his Im- | does not share the infatuated devotion of that | of their.continent offered to them on reasonable | gn several other pereons of her intimacy, are also | have it in his power oh, Peper dupe G to excel each other ii ani Apostolic Majesty, ha stens to acknowl- | sovereign to Russian idols, has as yet given no | terms, we can easily understand; but we do hope extraor' resent strep; odontk y, the fuel added thet zeal the t oO acknowl. el ? re 4 \ue receipt of the note which his Excellency, the | sign of its ability or determination. to shake off | and trust that Dr. Cottman is not the fairest pos- ghey pie Barcelona continue to be favor- Teele oes aria juntas, it is head tion mig : eons this onthe Sin of thtsmonth, aod vo declare fabs | this pusllanfcas abancontent of aterestsex | Of Foctack and Tepubliean gordeameut, cfappro, | 20, thanks to the energy, courage and jadicious | able not to be anxious and feurfal as to the spent | "at by ‘most maphatic > him on of onth, to in 1 sillanimons abandormen' ry oO sack and repul of appro- K i turn that it appears from the confidential conversations dercany and of Furopo will be found in the in- priation, of “the nat of ‘geographical F on,” i several fetes ofthe 1 Qitunmense ee | et ae comean gov | oe “4 "ihe ge ome osetia mid hel cen tl te of Vil , of Paris and of Lon- ey ‘usti sed | ernment at Madrid. dis mate was ingly recom: = eacmeane ‘with the ‘pnge ‘of the Protocel of creamed ae naan 94 oa ~ aie ws Be — ae eg ns, Lab cateasem with be isd Avid | Scldiers—The cause of liberty can suifer no stain on {From the Paris Siecle, Aug. 21] manten to decline President Pierce's tion. the’ Oth of april last, by which y Erance and | (Very part-of Germany. where the intalligenca and | tat a Caar ond a Tankee arepaledhe moe thing | {¢ bonners that defend it, On the éthinst: the battal- | | For the moment we desire to cail the attention | All the courtesy of Nes tasgnaae ie the te et i raged ei ether wi ayy 2, Py *, | i Prussia, to seok the means of agnia comuecttrg the ex. | National feolings of that people are unsubdued. | uncer somewhat different circumstances. pan ge Songs er pean pret re ego Bl rons Fey i Batt ou lattenees 7’ ccaumiend SHON te Couctied Saino sake ane tosis, is‘aace of the Ottowan empire with the brium of Europe, thatzthe three Power: n that the relations of the Sublime Pc {al Court of Kussia caunot be J aM 7 to one of the most delicate incidents | :eriousnezs,as a blow to the policyon which he ° Sbould Prussia be induced to still further, and \ fe : S 4 Jecd hereelt more openly to the designs of Ttawsia, | DETAILS OF THE {CAPTURE OF MOMSR- Uz ders were, given for ite, cerimation: bat the | of the Spanieh revolation—we allude to the situa. | seems to have staked his chance of re-lection. Tt ted itself, : she will find that she has lost her honor without ob- Begging to be allowed to lay dows its betes ‘saplors tion into which events have thrown Maria Christi- | was a remarkable stretch of boldness to press such taining security, avd, indeed, the Pigparations she | THE TRENCH CLAIM THE HONOR OF THE vioToRy— | pardon, desided me, interpreting the generous enti, Ba, {Ono of onr Madrid correspondents writes us | @ measure op the Senate; and the very confideace ic ithe protectorate hitherto ¢ Cate the, MapTeheenions Slecndly cacleed. by ake | ag SLuuED AND WOUNDED--CALLANT FIOUT OF | CHK coustiitional Queen, t0 aimiakh the caustic’ | on the question of fixing the indemnity, or rather | muccess isthe measure of the hmilition which 1¢ vial court of Russia over the Princ’ tence br tee athe . y, “epi yened ments. Impunity was impossible, and discipline impe. | the reimbursement, which Christina is to | must be suffering from discomfiture. Moldavia, and Servia be not disconti eee eRe At Vreant: SOC ee | reer ne capture of Bomarmund te G00: Frau an expistion, ‘Tinis has been made, | make to the treasury, and will have to decide on | ‘The sharp lesson which Gongress has read to the } iecontl i ie Casntices DeMesragone hae boon “le. lace of residence administration, and subo: who 7 aoe ee et fronds be not placed | ezough that she be passed over in silence; that | On Saturday, the 29th ul'., the English steamer | 13¢,battalion of h- | Se Mecoct’ to be to Ferdinand’s on, and to the host of subordinat tes solved; its standard, covered with black veil, is de- | widow. Is she to be proscribed, with the faculty of | are to outstrip it ia giving proofs of their the collective guarantee of the powers, in virtuo | these important engagements have been contracted | Basilisk, and the French steamer Reine Hortense, | posited in the citadel. A corporal and two soldiers, hereelf choosing her place of xile? Or will % zeal, vill ‘afford the of rangement to be luded with Sublime | without her; that, asthe matter now stands, the | arrived at Dantzic with the intelligence that at | chicf authors of the scandal ime, have been shot, ir ‘the a Hocte, and the stipulations of whieh, slouid, at the same | Eastern question thay be ecttled without her; and | 1250P.M.on the 10h. of August the fortress | and S0 soldiers and non-commissioned oficers he 3d | Spanish nation, fearing for its own security the in- | government of Spain. Eapartero, when he has once is ‘questions of detail. e | , Which took rt in the i . | tignes of the Queen Mother, assign her one of the | consolidated his power, will renew negotiations “g'\ fe navigation of the Danube at its mocths be not | SAL SUE I6 deprived, Of he. power to betray the | of Bomarsand capitalated, and the garrison, Um | cored) el reccumence a the coemien toclcvierks ot | Spanish colonies for her residence, where ‘she may | with Mr. Soulé om a footing fur superior to that {reed from all obstacles, and submitted to the application penal the Allied fleet. ‘There was litte loss of ‘life on | S¢*Tiet. Selciert—I Lave assured. the Dute de la Vie- | live at full liberty, and be ith every re. | which was Pye Ay et to which he sno of the principles estabiisned by the acts of the Congress | THE CZAR—THE YANKEES—AND DOCTOR cither side, the French having lost 120 in killed, | Pr mgeg eye he pert Nage arndhrelng ae Speck, tat bp TM iM as niga agora — a it that ae — by STE the treaty of July 18, 2641, be not revised in con. | COTIMAN, and the British only three or four. Pound to ssythis t your Nohor, and Tihany you Tor | tien ton ores now troubles faking | wil beve modersted Hi polling aetna " ting parties in the interest of [From the London Times, Aug. 21.] ‘The round towers bebind Bomarsund, named res- | hav to secure it. Your General-in Urban leg AP a taking | w' moderat tone and pretensions of the eee cin Busope ents > ‘heinterestof | Bay not this is not tke age of poetry, and that pectively forts Tzee and Nottich, hed been mts ams ogee MANOUE, enera to cost, | Place inthe country. If Queen Christina has im- | American Plenipotentiary; and itis not quite im: 4. Tf Rusela do ot gite up her claim to axezeige an off- | the material for the drama is extinct. The | Yicusly seduced, not avery difficult task, ‘ns they | Paid laid bands cial protectorate over the subjects of the Sublime Porte, | American papers bring us a sweet little eclogue, The subscriptions opened for the widows a pas of the Somaationsts the office of the C! think hands on considerable sums that the liberal and almost democratic ng Ke Spanish Cp ape aretha yen Pieston to whatever rite they may belong; andif Austria, Great | that tor naiveté and simplicity will match anything | Inot nssian pon ee yen each. fue” hand | certainly the right to proceed sae her, as it | Bei France, and Russia do not lend thelr | in Uncle Tom. The per: , indeed, ot | ; | co alone, amounts, up to this day, to £1,700. I might any other $ Cortes will | However immoral be the cause in which their manned rictaves te alain oa’ an initistive fom the | pastoral, ner are ley. Titgrus and Melibeus, Pace) a A and only thirty-five taken | Tomitted to mention that Lord Howden, who Satots fake the ynost minute 6 care that a just resti- passions are enlisted, the Americans can neve nite Ottoman Government the confirmation and the observ- | the recent acquirer of bis freedom and the expa. | U2hurt. Nottich was carried without loss. Both | is ever forward and when collections are fution sheald not assume the character of a spolia- | do without samae eaten Of decency to coreg heir ance of the religtova privileges of the diferent Christian | trated hush. : on the contrary—start not, | £%t#, when captured, were blown up, and the main | made for charitable o in Spain, gave £50to the tion or of a confiscation. Then comes the still more | aggressions; and thongh the filibusters havé never conmeaities ant tortura Yo acaouat, {2 the common | ate feades—they. are the Csar Nicholas ears cen eee ere on the f of Bomar: | fund. Don Francisco Murrieta, the wealthy and delicate qusstion of ment. Every one, even | been at very great pains to disguise the true charac- interest of their co-religionists, the generous intentions | 47 reowner—0 1 ary ¢ sund itself, of which the walls were badly well known Spanish merchant in London, has sent those who are quite unconnected with politics, ter of their conspiracy, have ly manifested by His Majesty the Soltan, at the same time | Vankve slaveqwner—no imaginary characters, NO | before the garrison consented to surrender. Nv | the princely donation of £200, This cenvleman alc | toi acon rhich Christina it worth while to set it. off with fi ‘ngelet avoiding any aggression on his dignity au‘ the indepen- | men in buckram got up by Charles Mathews, | cther result could have been expected, for it was | thodeh ses; Sead, Lan tre. | e part which Queen as ves f his Crown. | with the assistance of Mr. Nathan, but the very | , | though resident far from his native land, has fre- | played in Spain for the last 20 whether as | the corruptions of the Spanish home government, “WEks catectinped ta saorecrve anthacispd: to dockace | miei: and Tron tinal thay ‘tec fit, heard Saline, pe aoe eras apples pong ne Bg gba a ed cae ita ake Seba bere Repent or sa Queen mollen, Wat ie sad omer | beso of the court, and the op) of the Chat Oi ores ena "eg poten nak i seaaieceimr | Samant tm Shale wonaton’ and saree ta Caer a7ee | Ststed We wes Hess the poorand the support of hoapltala Among other | sfuenee, whlck ‘we wil amt Gaacosrie tare te | Row the Amerann il areal eta ea tio 4 e1 | » It's ¥ * ss arrangemest with the Iniperiat Court of Tussia whigh | Patty’ it's the realest shing’ we've seen in'® long | " the hom ‘the | 4 ‘that, in they are cartel while. The two have been at a dinner table, whey to the French tad fhevetore: a | donations made by him and his brother was one of | 20th, of order not to irritate our adversaries, but which the despolling not once, but a dozen times, exchanging remarks, the Invalides announced to the fates, thelr nafive near Bilboa oll , » may not imply on the part of the said court a full and | nation has a perfect right to appreciate or to fear. entire adhesion to the four principles here above enome- | : it ace itself th °% advice, and gossip, with a confidence worthy of | Citize " : a 5 | If, for instance, it was de! that the agi- | ing her of Cuba, they are depriving her ef a to treat cxeovt. on these bases, always reserving to | Haley and Legree, Peachum and Lockitt, and other | “iivensof Faris the fist victory ofthe war, | | To-day's Gazette great many removal | tatlons which have so profoundly ravaged Spain dur- | in which her government, 90 long aa {continues 4 jgues of Maria tina, cae ol wt eee. ta negotiating, theretore, with the liberati the conditions which it may | celebrated associates. Dr. Thomas Cottman, who say and appointments in wate “fomtard. Tor the reestaviahient of peacer it | was raised in Maryland, but who haa occasionally | Per of Prisoners does not exceed 1,500, and that ; i i m4 Fi aici 4 they have been sent to id. It was reported Caballero as Under ‘oreign ti Espartero enjoys advantages peculiar war The unsersignal, 6." * *hcGh.™* | Elantation and a large ‘matnbe! of saves, tolls | tAt,a censiderable proportion of ‘the iti ‘fares Don Joo de Piso y Holga appoatsd | royalists ‘nave vo affon remarked suet’ adver present stunt. On the other hao wil hare am ren owt tar an, alg Re nd gina | ERO rape ae | COPA eae | fe, Rewari f aves | Sanya eae AUSTRIA PRAISED BY THE ALLIES, AND PRUSSIA CON: | —as, indeed, he informs us all Americans aro—with.| pojr, carried into effect. An overwhelmin ¢ Tol ich have it. It must, DEMNED. the Czar, As there is something in the Hoglish aisle, sf fonda MEAAMIED Cok toacente oF The ailing | 2ople, Don Antonio Riquelme; Dom Rafael however, be remarked that such a course is a great | of national r or prodigal of national honor. amie BAT TCC nnn | Rees Sree Rens | Memoria coe a ae | Seneca teenage cs omnia | ene ame es Sle tha £24 of Tals, Go toe last cuntzonsicetion webs to | Uo bomieen Lanod the’ searen te) cop eke tale ire Weranaes eikteounee c? the Exon eae {{Amtires to Costs Rica and, Nicaragua, in place of | of death in poitizal matters, bas some reason to | whic will neithcr Joo keenly disappornt the appetite seam Geter termiraan ia Rita cal wie, a As i | allem ove eal etn pow | spp cited Eee” cana) eMC ASS | A Scere ced nr tish, Freneh and Anstrian Ministers, were inid before | haps we ehould call him, is a capital fellow, quite | Gonto®, mounted and Gistounted. Ove aorregpon: fior Sagasti has published another proclama: | scaffold. Have we not seen, since 1848, 12 mile [From the Paris Débate, Aug. 21.] Parliament on the last day of the session, but have , ready to put off state with anybody who cando a on the fortress, but from the cireumatance thet ee’ | ome neny Its ipal points biel eer the great and generous example given the | We know of only one way of the white only been delivered to members of the Legislature | transaction for mutual advantage. So are all the | English papers have a list of casualties incurred by | cut, ‘hat the government has provided funds for | French revolution, gibbets raised in Italy and Ger. PoRDlation of Cuba from thelr inclination tojoin the within the last few hours. These im; t doca- | Romanofls. Constantine, in partizalar, though not glish pay the continuation of the canal of Isabella II., and | many by the order of the kings who were victort- | United States, and to amongst themselves one os ‘ats will be found in another part of our columns | so tall aa the others, is “iaite zo abiead. tee boke the shige Heuolopo, Hedi, Temangany oniaee that = Corporation, on its part, ‘aided by Re gov oust’ The Spanish nation is more mous; it | or several distinct States. We cannot if this (his morning, and since the commencement of these | quite like a Yankee, and in many points of his char- they dia. 7 | ernment, found means to give occu; it é i : nF rape Soe beer It | persons protracted negociations, no ~ have yet been | scter there isa great similarity. Indeed, though | “"Y) y, Jarge number of laborers. produced which throw so srtoe aos clear @ light | Dr. Cottman maintains a little prudent reserve as to } Spshotn aaa, ane gai og ome H uae Miiear) peaereny, tel who are ee 7 ou tere be | aseegmants of ot ret | Sedat mellem Rs is tae ite te Aan the port of Riga before tho loth of August, it wae | veirment by resuming it, and to give employment powers of Europe. Loi rendon’s de: | in; e IY, 5 ch A of July is, with some trifling eavepiicns, Identival | one can earily perceive that the doctorand Constan- Se ee soley eee ane te | E [Sayre ete ete ir pl Ronni with that ‘of ML Dronyn de Lhuysof the same date,and | tine have been a gcod deal together, going the round | Stoeknolm, 20th of Aug., mentions that a bombard: | risks Wh ile Fapartero is at the head of affairs and indeed the two Governments previously concer- | of tbe bars at St. Petersburg and Cronstadt, drink- | ment was Kept up from five o'clock on the morning of | {ho Xs tic 1 Ga Fy him. ted oe Sastre In which te should Geel with pt Pel ag Nn In gee ares ee | the 10th nitimo til two o'clcel afternoon of the tah; | Qt 9 dinner aiven by Thoreditors of Madrid, all the c 98 overtare. e Cl ferense ween | men, an jetting out teely abow OBE ir ion } Fs ay: ~ s the Eoglish and Pench communication is, that M. de | cowardly Britishers. - In the family group we must oe that [aban 1 ecensthe neh A td | winistry were present—a most unusual oconrrence. in consequence respects it, It demands from Maria | pears to ns Chris asettlement of her accounts, and in order | will not, some day or to protect iteelf against the recurrence of intestine | nexed to their noarest neighbors. Their contests, it wants to remove from its territory the e them forcibly in that way. When once meat active cause of theze deplorable sins eibe Un they form there a aneacle Without doubt, the idea of oxiling the crowned they wi whom events snd the fate of revolutions ipitate | would havein the federal government a frcm the throne, is an improvement on scaffold | whom no one would venture to brave, and proscriptions. But every progress calls fora new | wou!d be relieved from the enormows tri one, and we pray niost heartily that the day may | they every year pay into the co! la. For thatr products of e form es. thinks that human life oP ins to alone, and | tendency exists—we bove it does not; bat other, i s z B fl it a ffors of the Deninens Drouyn de Lhuys introduced the four points which | not omit the Grand Dachess Marie, who isa mon- | P Att pele. ¥ ‘to France on board Roglish abips. } the toast of “ Liberty,” to | come when revolutions and counter-reyolutions, very Kind are reqereod } by bee Sorpenments ¢. the Lge of | strons fine woman, and made hersell very agreeable ‘. G eae Baragnay @'Hilliers bade nairow escape, be T rah ror Aaron am rt pane Race th BM es bry a pce a Late Bc mt hare be petied to Wealtioclaaitin a ausantin tee atau, | ae Me nen llyfready to administer ‘soft | &cannen bail having parsed between him and the | gtr. Souls was invited, but sent at apology. wards the vanquished; tbat will always be the surest | Revlared” that the agitations in Spain, should Tue terms themselves :ze, however, identical, and | sawder’ andto takeltorwuich of them shall we | *dele-camp, with whom ho was conversing, Newspapers begin. to abound vere. wo new | means of consolidatin the yositionof the conyueror. | they be prolonged, sannot, fall 2er> accordingly on the sth of Anguat, the British minis- | begin with’ Persaps we sould prouomnce Nichns rere | cnesLa Union Liberal and El Sligo XIX--have | We desire most heals ty ase the day when the | the minds of the inhabitants of Cubaidess of annex- ter waited upon Count Buol by appointment, and las Romano tacet ig Aug with 5 country, the i | THE BLACK SEA, g | Just appeared. Scnor Iglesias, the editor of the | heads of nations will comprehend that the surest tion, supposing thet they have remetned fe from the notes to which reference has so frequently been | stitutions, and the politics of his new friend. At all | 7% CRUISE OF THE VLADIMIR- “YL Ast THROWN | Aurcpa, also of recent appearance, is appointed | means of preventing internal agitations ix to respect | them the present time, But how is that car. made were exchaoged. The substance of these | events, he comes out the loudest. “ He is exceed: | pg RL Aad civil Governor of T.ogrono, ote se fr Tavesind comnental coer: | ney cero ny the Demon to crate the | eter, spose ir be the Vladimir, was crvising | Mores te bo Semened fm his pone ald néon, riendsbis country, of ‘wi wa : ri y . 0 4 Courts are of opinion the existence of the Otto- | speaks in the highest terms of praise.” Then comes at lacge in tie Black Ses, and caus ng great con- | that Don Mariano Carei will replace him. acquired rights, to administer honestly and pater- t to be stru, againet, if not in at nal Fy the publ fortune, and to lay oy asthe base Cuba, by eosges ' of all social institutions the amelioration of the phy- | mother-country, civil, commercial and political fran- sical, intellectual and moral condition of the most | chises 7 pataene we havo not spoked of the blacks vi | nethi i i = | stermation among merchantmen. It is now said ‘The few provincial Juntas who continued to act | numerous classes. A government - | t. We will Sulla of rope, sed the rationa et ‘Hr-at | "Tire ager" atest at wt geveromerts | iat meatier anon ber way em the afted | adepentesly "of te Gentalgorerumen; have Ht tim proce ond’ Gey at quran. ee ea he pert emancipate and the Porte cannot Le re-established on solid and | in the world- thore of Rossin and America : and | Seates to Sebastopol. The other day se called | gesiated from so doing. Upon the whole, things might withont fear behold crowned pertarbators or | be pleasing white popu! ube, or to 2 arable bases. for the latter, | boldly at the coaling station at Kosloo, coaled, | today are looking satisfactory, There was some Be Unless the Russian protectorate of the princi gry eg Be my Be Le gegen | Sestroyed two Turkish Jigs, and made of safely | slight rumor this morning fs ministerial crisis. palities of Wallachia, Moldavia, and Servia be dis. countsy.”” Now, that is rather too bad. Iti os the open sea. . ts | There was not the slightest foundation forit. The continued, and the privileges secured to those pro- | saying of Napoleon, which the Czar has ilched, with ; Pom the allied Rect we have no report. The | Conneil of Ministers is, as I write, holding its usaal vinces by the Saltan placed under the collective | his usual indiffirence to the right of pro. | “'atementis, that the expedition to the Crimea is | afterncon sitting. The affair of the preamble seems jr gag bay othe ae +e Why did vee the creole or native populetion nistina, when she was far {vom her country, find | contrary agents ready to serve ber interests, and pra} the | oles of all the colonies have shown Gestinicsof Spain’ Because che lavished golditissaid. | thy for the ‘Smpgecion H fi f What does that mean? {t means that the sources of uarant . . “In balf vy,” said Nay | culy temporarily deferred until the abatement of | to bave blown over. The Union Club has lost many | national labor being dried up or still Intent, ‘of. | acter to say that the whites of Cuba would not pre- “a Unless 5 te sorigntion of the Dannbe, at its Eaters will be ay two sorrasene th neeper | cholera and fever among the tro of its most important members. The firmer atti. | fered a point d’appui, a powerful lever, to im | fer the maintenance af clave fare mouths, be freed from ali obstacles. | Republican and Cossack; and could he have read | cp Ra Bg coh gre yap air ; , | tede of the suthorities and National Guard has hag | trignes, Jf all who, for the sake of « certain remunera government4 cannc’ forget angle “4 3, Unless the treaty of the 19th of July, Stl, be | the article before us, he would have thought nis | “'AT! OF APFAIRS IN THD ARMY OF THE | 9 good efivet. - © + Gon, had possessed a regular occupation, the produce | eee tes Roma no 4 oc revised in the interest of the balance of power of | prediotion very nigh at hand. Bat we will proceed, Pe ivdie iss Ratu Daan ees Oe vices ob news te i pest dey of fi apd pide a siden or hel wants ir colonies. wah government wae re: i d kas d by epublica, | 7"! ROGKESS ¢ artis Patrie:— sth, * ; i een n Rarepee ‘less the Rassian claim to the official protec- Win Gs Ceca ns: Fencing oo i 4 AMWy wrxrer serrbies | cf the leaders of the barricades and of the clubs, | so oosily lit up civil war? There is another canse, | respecting the mack , nd such a sradition ¢ torate of the Christian subjects of the lVorte be he added, “for the people of the United States, be- ; RANOWIRES. waited on Espartero, to request bim to suppress the and that is the profound ignorance in which the | be placed aol tie € nineteenth century, when given up. | canse they are enlightened and intelligent; bat with ge had occurred in the situation of affairs. article in the decree convoking the Cortes, which Spanish monarchy and clergy have 80 long allowed | tion of blacks is being a o The citlsh and French governments declare, as tossia It Ig entirely diferent, and the government | })'°)4)Cst was quiet in the oocupation of the Turks. — joy down that the dynastic question cannot bo dis-- tho people to grovel, Had ¢ people been entight. | « . beiligerents, that are decided not to discuss or she has is the only one entirely suited to her coadi | (2 ‘hing possession of the city Halim Pacb@ is- ; yesed by the rew Constituent Aesembly. Esparteroat «neil as to its real interest, had not the most simple } Spanish government cannot, without. expe. take into ct any proposition fromthe tion.” They say, “It’s an {ll bird that fouls its owa ‘Vd the following proclamation: inst replied to the deputation that they ought either notiors of common sense been dulled, Queon Ghris- | riencing sooner or later a great injury, oe teen cabinet of Bt. Petersburg which il net Lmply on nest,’’ but as the Czar must know a good deal more the armas of yout Sovereign have enter od this tore to share fhe hap! hing Poh ge bet ye a + tina Would bere io ne i egy a sbi vrl td \ Shp casey ac we he » = fyi no ere 1 j st permi er the purport of maintaining tranquillity and goc or elge govern in 0e. long and warm dis- tions calculate end jnevita’ } 's commands wee tes Go onan a delta cop hanaas | Sete an eae tek een ead fo metiane order, vores) tet the ontatliaued governivent. Catil ‘ vselgnensned, in wich Espartero, in taking leave privations of every kind. Respect for this and | it: The best meang, indeed an 0: . cabinet, taking cognizance to inform the world that they are good t of this declaration, accepts for itself the engage- | bnt to be slaves. It is rather hard, how ment vot to treat except upon these bases; all par- the Czar rhovld claim to be © sjea reserving to themselves a free deliberationon tte reat of the werd. For ox greb farther conditions or guarantees as the con ard his friend Cottman mag i 7a toalter existing arrangements, let no |, ty wn, recommended them to address — jrincip| h ought hence to be | of raising, as it by enchantment, » barior botweer 2.01 turbaenty Geman any EMRE, | tole beitten the Council of Ministers.” ‘The Ge: | icunced every goverament tat wants ta Tive, de: | the istand of Cuba and the Atmetira Ynvasionists, is aw Severely punished. In setiving | 1 toe withdrew great ex itempnt, Notwitl clopument ot national labor and of prbtic wealth, | to cet the black there free. On the: instant, tho ia- Sn axe se geet. warding tutae dangerous aymptgns, th cover , Une prbediorablgn of the position of yeas who euler ( tention to annex Caba to Wyo american Uotog, t, that | o «