The New York Herald Newspaper, July 29, 1855, Page 2

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cal se . - * wo aR a 2 ' NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, JULY 29, 1855. Sirasboary, St. Qaentia, Roven, Nantes and Char- " fonera! Czar i short time, f hich ste has epoloen: Be ‘gore the Herald. tives the gencral fear. Is ke a conservative? inno- AFFAIRS IN EUROPE. tres, are n0w ‘ativing tn Peria, with con- ara eda rarteier by: Sy -rfhredd jaan. ress Nae ST the. fencen wie eaaver- (Frem Le Progris, (Bt ae Red Republican organ,) canly sek cer‘giv persons. Is hes revolationis:? eae veis, to eee the |, Where the scene no ine leas of him, or of the country he repre | strained economy thas Austria hes refuced her a0” | mye genary ot A802) 4 te | Stk the tremb ing Kivge of each othem And the Our London Correspondence. esente its formar dearth of spectators, Y. vents at ths: trilhant Conrt. One of the inte at- | To thcse who know the heavy task whieh it impo’) | Loctontew ao fouor A eeroay Contains sa article | rognlt of this is that every one is nncasy; and this Loxwon, July 13, 1855. e could not have been teas than six'y thousand | tachis to the Legation at St. Posteraburg left that | on tre Finance Minister of this Empire to re a explains bis curation. Itisin this war that his e igmatic srtifices above all have assisted him. Austria and Prussia st first feareihe wots nay & revolutionsry card; it was their weak ‘ Mrnisterial Crisis in England—Lord John in a} YP FA ied Pix—The Vienna Conferenees—Lord Dethousi¢ | tively impulse they have bitherto experisnosd. eo and material the sources of prosperity after the grast trials of | | The Grst Papel sg gaine? al his f the rev lutionary each efter the coleseal reiora {2 perre "rd. The second hi the syetem ef territorial property, after the creation “ arte of diplomacy, The city only fou: weeks ago. Last evening he received Payee ann naelne hie the bombardmeut of Cronstadt wee daily exoected to begin. Nothing —Ausiria and Prancg--The Hyde Park Rows. Busicers has besn unusually ratricted ia the Paris | wae eaid about when and how it would end. of & new administration in provinces which b2fr¢ | rains wit? 9 his lietine.” The noeond ‘Theretare: they have Sempariees vee ee ee Yitical atmosphere is again cloudy. Lord | corm market, and present but an insignifivas: | Senstor James, of Rhode Isiard, has, 1 am told, | administered theircwn affeica, whether well of i, | an unsu? stamtial nud prece: = made negotiations, Certain people have hoped ap ase just arrived in Paris from St, Petersburg. Governor | and all tais in the midet of. Baropean wsr,of Wich | as we ean see into futurite, it relde arta if thet circumsteuces would force Bs eats ‘Those Job Rersell bas got into a mess, The miniatry is decline, the wot gin Le pe po esha in Prance wilt atim: “OWE satiefactory. bot snanimeus, a break up is imminent, and the | The commissioners appointed to award prizcs to tion ia bringing all is heavy guns to bear | the most moral dramatic pieces brougat ont dori bites Join, who is a regular Malakoff in bis the yous 1964, and which, it will be rememb:red, way, in the hopes that If they got him oat the rest | Hons tendeaey oy ree tier aahe ae reent Hosa: A y of the French stage, has just de must go. The fact is, st the Present moment Lord | cided that none of the works sent in respouded Joha is very urpopular. Your readers will remem: | ‘uly to the conditions required, though three hono- how be and M. Drouyn de I’'Hays went to Vi- | !#ble mentions should be made. The firat, with o ber how A prize of 3,000f., to Mr. Ernest . ‘enna to attend tho ostebrated Conference which led | ‘Que Dira le Moade,” p at the Odeon; the se: foaeieg sak ten SOiean. de, role,” repreneuied at the Ott tad by Count Buol with aa Austria iseau de ” repre ait; an eee ey ce, and. supported, an nau | ‘he third, with 1.000%, to M. Dumanoir, for his view 1 , Ppo! comedy of “L’ Ecole des Agneaux,” brought out at ‘xian proposal which was immedistely declar- | the Gy mpase. ed inadmissible by the French and English go- The Monsteur of thin morning, after mantioning fl the fact of @ shatp fire ha: been kept up vernments. Louis Napoleon, who fs ® min ot | thronpnout the morning of the 10.b of July, ay the energy, st once dismissed Daouyn de l’Huys, as not |} Enpiivn, against the great Redan, which it appears being up to ths mark, and sppointed Count Walew- | to have silenced, and that the English works, tasre- shi in his stead. Lord John reeumed his offic? as ublinihous eauet Conant ne chem anna Recretary for the Colonies, the conferences at Vien- | grq Russian admirals, respecting flags of wa53, mawere declared over, and the war went on in the | which, by the decision of the latter, are restricted @rimea. in the Baltic to three ports—Cronatadt, S veaborg The very doubtful position of Austria has, how. ae Ravel. Gach s deciuoa, tt 1a felt, mass ineviia- ly sensibly Uggravate the miseries of war; but a ever, led to demands for explanation. She hasre- | member of the French goverament, who has this Gveed her army; abe is in possession of the Dana. psig coe ie ye “pane (noted ae sovin Diam Principalities; she refuses to go to war With | treet ie SS ee : i, invention and /, ofthe Eagliah Rossia; and: by tae withdrawal of her troops from | press, aud that many far see Jorsonn batlegs it the Pejish frontisr, has positively enabled Roseia | will be De ergs to carry on the warat all uader to send large reinforcements to the Crimea. Te ae i fort ‘ a Lge In his speech on the opesing of the Corps Logis- | \nole of the centre of the Crimea commanicsti a, latif, the other day, you will have observed that | by two routes with tha continen'— the one being the Louis Napoleon iu « few words c’early defined tha Puekep ee ra the Laat per coe Cy Pesition of Austria. The spesch made a great sea: | 1) "CoP. See eeasiny: thant Bieeeh Beet K Acagplae topol—t 5 al sation st Vienna; in faci, a heavy fall took plac? i2 | the other makinga "reane (Pein ol of Bsbastopor public securities, avd the opinion was that a ruptare These linea of communication are almost anassaila- was imminent between the Western Powers aad | ble. In the south they are defended. against an in: Austris. This opinion was somewhat modified by Rach th oars by en muuntan delies, fortified 4 wv @ utmost att, and in the no are pro- the sriicle in the Moniteur of the following day. | tected by the want of water and the dinouoas exe ‘Whe Austrian goverment had, however, heen accus- boars! oe maneune both is D — ne ed by the Frexch Emperor of not having fuldited its | 970tee ¢! the Eee ee on a creme P : eatest activity prevails—thry a e@ crowisd wit engagements, and the opposition in London took ap Senatag troop BDA. CORYOyS of ammuuition ‘ond the endgela on tho occasion. Broviias.. The Pica eere of sainre ia tae eup- ji plies do not appear at presen; to be realized. . 5 aL te OpB Bre animal wit 3 m38 the formation of a new ministry as soon ag he arzives | fanatical courage. The allies have an army “of jw England. The appointment af Lord Canning, as | 200,000 men encamped npon an unhealshy plateau. his succensor ag Governor-General of India, has b2en abet ei aa ene Fein pee Ny i 38 lost Gener le la Marmora, Enzitsh Lord confirmed by the Queen. The Duke of Newoastie.| Raglan; the French are s9 little contented with whe expected to got it, has sailed for the Crimea. any of their generale that we really doa’t knov de I observed above, the Austrian govarnment ia | Where to turn; and as if these difficulties were not sore at the speech of Loula Napzleos. The officia; | fatiotn’ and artul Les blowa: Into Se, Povershuy ‘el eotemns of the Vienna Gazette haye published a through the preas of Hoglacd every tweuty-foar veply in the shape of a justification of the policy of | houre. Mon Dieu! il y aura une revslution. Bah!” ‘Austria. whe eapialeh pata are a ope enlive! Kak tie appearance of Eoglish aud Frescd solaicrs walk There was auother row in Hyde Park on Sanday. hig in arm. They have bzea oa i in the Che ‘Brough Lord Grosvenor’s bill hae been withdrawn, | mes and wounded, and the paces soldier now in the public excitement on the eubject had not absted, Tecoma veittl Ge Bek Ma ‘There were very few carriages in the park, so the aidering how m art ths meb, consisting chiefly of boys, went to Belgrava one niet Seine ere square and smashed al) the fine plate glass windowa x avery ey the renerts nae pope Lave eine: im that aristocratic neighborhood. J dare say | Pn SvoreD® vnericter, fhe tren) Boveromen| i ful difficalty ; enether attempt at a row will be made on Sunday of te war there is iitle doubt it woutt be rate oe mext, but it may blow over, . glad to interfere, and do in Spain what it is nov doing in Rome—garrison the capital with Freach Our Paris Correspondence, troops. J} dreads s sucoessfal Carlist inaurcection. Panis, July 12, 1855. It would like Spain to join in active assie‘aace t» Military and Political Gioom—Crisis of Napoleon rl woo Donen it aoe roaming as —Countess Walewski’s Fete--The English Al | future; the peninsula of the West, in tac’, invising Antbony, of the same State, is also here. po one can yet foreree cither the direction or the | mor, epiuring vit Figaro. Our Vienna Correspondence. Viern,, July 9, 1855. Napoleon's Late Legislative Speech—Austria’s Re- ply—The Allied Outrages at Kerteh—A High Priest Said to be Torturet—Feeling in Odessa-- Position of Sweden— Turkey and Montenegro— Canals and Railroads in Egyupt—Trade ct Trieste, &e. The speech which was made by the Emperor of France, om the opening of the Legislative Chambor, ia the gveat political event of the week. Its war like charactor,the demand for a lean of seve2 bun- dred and fifty millions, and the calliug ont of fresh bedies of troops, have somewhat surprised the peo- ple of Vienna, who have hardly yet awakened to the resiity of the war which convulsesKarope. No hopee are to be entertained that Austria will joia her arias to the allies, at lsast for the present, aad reports are cnrrent to the effect that the spesch jus made by the Emperor of France, and the hope he expressed of ageiatance from Austria, will be suortly answered by @ further reduction iu the Imperial army. What zort of effeos such a meaeure will pro- duce upon England and France is yet to be seen. Several reports have been received bere from Rassian quarters respecting crueltiesalleged to have been committed by the English and Turkish troops at Kertch aud Teganrog. The following letter ap- pears in the Military Journal:— Opxssa, June 26, 1855. The capture of Kertch and the bombardment of Taganrog, with the cruelties committed by the Eag- snd furkish soldiers, bave grestly alarm2d the unarmed inhabitants of Odeses. The citizens of our town have firmly rea*ived sooner to die with armzin their hands tuan suffer such atrocities as were com mitted inthe towns of the Sea of Azoft. Offisial intellivence bas been received that the Greek High Priest of Kertch has beeo tortured to deat by the English aoldiery, bis wife haeked into twenty pieces, and hie dvughter brataliy outraged. A deputation of the mest inflaential merchants of Taganrog Wit ed uron Sir Edmund Lyons, begging nim ‘ore the town, which tad supplied daring a period of msny yearsa great portion of Europe wita bread, and adding tost most of the proprietors of corn weresnbjesta of the Austrianempire. “ Zunt pis pour vous,” replied the Admiral; and two hours later the town was in flames, aud many of tie richest inhabitants reduced to utter beggary. How far these reports have been jus'‘fied by facts, Tam unable at present to tell you. If such crimes have been committed by the Exglish troop2, asthe’ above letier lays to their charge, it is the daty of the Russian government to make @ torma! notification of the fact to the commander of ‘the English army, in order that the offenders may be pun isbed. In the absence of this we can only b2- lieve that the reports sre altogether false, aad have bsen spread to excite the population of Russia ngaiset the Western Powers. The preseat war is considered by the Russian people sa & war in defence of their religion, and nothing could be better devised, the more to confirm such a notion, than tho statement that one of their priests bad been shamefully and brutally murdered, As to the business of Tagenrog, it cannot be sup- poeed that the English admiral couid allow, consist— ently with hia duty, large supplies of corn to rem:.2 alts. 6 creation of the frat was | hopes have given uwteasiness to the governments, duration; to those, we sey, who take evan a sppet | 87, effort of sudden powerful energy, not only on the | The light cams little by littl. However, the ficial view cf such s task, it wil! be easy to see that | part or th but of the people. The crestion | ple have found that they could uot ts fhatent must be put to progt in order to bring | of the second hes bert s work of subtie policy in which ma Wf. Bonaparte, and that the ot a salutary diminution in the expenses of the | the sword bar plaved ttle or no part, Tue oneencona- | by him in case they should te al ahnost every tate amd ao: in Btate. pee pes vir ny vereign in | ssnistance. Tre kings have thus become caim ae is sonupled is Sante to ck petal Malad oe al pechadions’ cre eee papa tresa have reeolved to persevere in their ur guarantees wi indispensad!, ing down the throne of tne ‘t Emperor, N, oy. mocesanny' to the durable reeatabliskment of ontar 4 Sangh sapests to ke slomiyiling up. the raaterials of England and France, then, are to b2 alone i1 the ry East. sidering the a & structure of solid power and influence, which indee- | war against Russia, and what is worse, they are pat of Beer fotaeternane fern ee iSea tined to cast into the shade all tast the fertile miadand | now obiiged to make it » war of equilibrium, and country, the equivocal attitude of Prnasia, her most | sxeat creative gexius of that wonderful man hai ac:om- | not of principles, Do you know what wuld reasonable desire wes & peace bared on wiat pra- | Pushes. ss m if they were now to undertake & war dence required, aad uot the moral influence waica After having thus costructed the foumlatisms > | for the last-named purpose? If this were pya- she might have gaine’ by @ war brillieat!y couduc:- | @ metaphorical edifice for the second Napoleon, the | sible the veutral powers, all more or jess abs0- ed. Har ales have other wants, other objects, | Hxxarpenters it with satoaisnment sad respecs | lute, would put fitteen hundred thvoasand men which outweigh hers, War itsel?, and the mora) in: | itfinds nothiog there which is not to bs adm‘red; | at the disposition of the Czar, who would fluence which will result from its issue, not only de | it remembers the début of Louis Bapcieey) efi then | become sgato, without hesitation, the chef of the c‘aive, bat brilliant also, is, above al! things, seces | the expedition to Rome, when the woperial tenden- ,aaic order in Farope, and # migx’ po tast the nary to her allies, independently of the grand views | cies of the President of the republic were batcayed, | English fleet in the Baitic, which Admira! Napier of Engiend upon Asia. Austria did not engage to | oud operated a3 @ check to Austria. inflasncs in | was so careful with last year, and which, t2i» year. follow them upon that groand. She remzin3 firm | /taly, saya this paper ect mentioning the coup | Admiral Dundas seems inclined not to risk, for good uvon the Ime of herenzagements, little disposed to | d'etat of the 2d of December—on which, however, | cause we suppose—wonld be employed to convey go beyond it, but determined not to take astes | dejends the foundations of this, eo called, prodi- | the Russian troops to tue coast of Fran e. it would backward. * = empire. The Hsga.p presenta the war inthe | then be seen whether Louls Nepoloon, who ia still The governments of tae Western Povers them- t o8 the second great stroke of this man,t> | more criminal towards the revolatioa than hie. wolves acknowledge the reci:inde of the Austrian | whom it attributes genins. |t wae through his am- | uncle, would find in his pretended genius the ne- policy. Lord Clarendon, aa we learn by @ telegra- baseadcr, Levalette, that ity first complications | cessary resources to triumph over ga invasion. If phic espst h of the 27th, repellsd the aftacks made | were cet in movement 3! Constantinople; aud ite | the revoiuticn did not intervene ia time and did not in thé dionse of Peera against Austria, aad took up | object acdoubtedly was to stroagthen bis position | opersés for a favorab‘e diversion by tue uorising of her defence. st bome by terrifying England in‘o an a'liauce with | all the people, the second Hmpire wuld ead like France sud England have justice enough to con- | bis goverpwent, py rendaring her political iater | the first, by the occupation of France, which is only cede.that it is for chem slone t2 ter niaste the war | ests inseparable from his. Here the Haxatp uses inviolable when she is free. But baing reduced to in the Crimea, which they undertook got only with- | the diplomatis correspondonce which took pluc2 | a war of equilibsium, tho war loves ail interest for out Austria, bat against her advice. Woult it bs | im the time of Luis the Six*eenty, and reveat- | the nations, It will not be ehorter for that. On the very ugefu! to them for Austria now to enter Po- fa) pabished by fe Moriteur, to show | contrary, the people not having an, es’ in the lscd? The Rossian army, the large streams, tie t the reavons for the c:usade against Russia are | triumph of a particolar idea, will e part in it coloseal fortresses in thai country are enough to | noxewthinge. But wuat l..uis XVi.and the graat | ax food forcaonou. {his war will continue to be holdin check for along time ao invading army | Napoleon were unable to accompliah, hai been lett | sigvalized ball tae ravages of a national struggle double that of Austrie. itia not in that way that | forthe sctual Emperor of the Hench to realiza; | by the people of tbe country where it takes place. asy important changes are to be effected on the | that is to ray, an alliance with England to opposs sia Will be surrounded by iron and tire wherever fisid of battle in the Taurie Caersonesus. Were | the alwsys incressing preponderance of Ruszia. | she ia accessible to her enemies, but will not ascept there disporable but the balf of the allied forcee in | Thia fact establishes, without dint, the suyerio-ity | the humiliation of limiting her flee’ to the number the Crimes, the opening a campaign other | of Louis Bonaparte. of ships designated by the allivs, for from the point woud be attend:d wich ieportaW® conse. Bat, as says the Herarp— rank of a first clas; power, she would then quences. To sum up the more solid advantages be degraded, and this nultimatam qill sever In the present situation of thinga a cam jaign peer, we have cay to poiat to be accepted unti! sll her cities aud vileges are de- in Poland would resolé not only in a new and | France now exercises in almost every quarter of tae | serted and burned. It will, then, b2 uscesary in grest effusion of b.ood, but in wesksuing Austria, | Vora Under Charles X. and Louis Philippe she wa? | the present war to accomplish what Bonaparte had even under the most favorable supposition, ; | #o trammetied by dynastic interests and re'stions, tha: | failed in. It ig a great enterprise, which cannot be out preducing the slightest effsc: in batveriug | %he wen teduced tp » position of comparative volitics! | conducted from a cabiuet, by the aid of the tele- C insignificance. Under Louls Nepoleon she agsia holds 4 q the cozdition of things in the Crimea. I rr inie i Ps 3 graphic wires. I¢is necessary t» bave that genius 8 the Cestinies ef the world im her hands. England, her erin springs fromthe eyes, end. influances the aol the interest of Freoce ard England tiat they | former rival and oitterest opponent, i should have in reserve, iu Austria, an ally in all ber | chariot wheels of her policy. Austri y diers, and breaks down the walls. Wal Louis strength ; for the lest word bas mot yet een pro- | trewbling for their existence in presence of the sined | Napoleon, then, deserve all the good things the nounced, and the basie of the four guarantess, even | power which she wields, Spain and Portugal, for the | HananD haseaid ofbim? Wil he be asabie te lesd shonld the oa Fowers come ack to My Ans. sean en of nven She erst Davee miMe i rae his sraies in ioe fad of bast a8 he [et tem to trian sition, 1s not the leas solidly gaint The a i 2 form p’oblewmatical alliances? Intact, wha ere fourti ‘pant, not leas perilous, and patsy more ditii- jorbo —o Ly — asin tee races old | in the Hife of this man that justifies tho dithyram- cult ‘han he question of the Biack Sea, has not yet | fantic empire, whone aggressions formed auch. aa objsct ica sung in a bis honer! ; Wass as he done! Heh has been touched. ft brium, 1s for the ent chain-bound within | Upset @ government w aywor! in- summer. During that time it would have be e rnost wonderful feature of all these events ia, tha: rjory ao |. He has bro - ry useless waste of tillions, for ‘Ausra to beep an they have been brought about by the tkillof an uupras+ nerkeys but has not given satisfaction by it; this the whole effective forcs of her large but superfiuona | tise! diplomatist, who, curious to say, (it ia the Heratp | is not arolution. He has entered into a special army, Nothing \s mere natural than iba sg should | euatepesksl Lapesined, instead of losing, oheracur by ontrack with England; but peliher one or the other wish to busi ir reeources, al it had been i . e contractants saw e bsar‘ngd by tt rer! 80 careps. 8 a press will receive with passionate outbursts the enthusiastic Peeeption in Eogiag d proves that the feel. | she has tumed her beck. He has mede ad- news that Austria has reduced her army... Ag to the mniertained towards bim int¥atcountry arefounded | vances to Austria; abe heard them, and that goverpment of Engiand, aa well as that of France, | 03 8 have aea Lt or adha and Ech ‘ tr is a tae are 4 Got ay about it, the measure has been for a loug time no novelty to | °° one e Spanish government an we give pain, Por 7 sedmoat, pow- i deiinence from all iaterference in its affairs sbow that senate 2 Ie ua tascam mae | secede So mv cal: | Sule SY meee “Pe of the army is only a halt, not a chang? in Austria. clas vacrhd att diad Saget Ube ater ‘nat are the other nary doings of M. : ave bigher moial purposes than we in gentra‘y given | Bateparte? Init hie home government waich does The Victims of Panl and Strahan tn London | “i0it for. Whickever of these arsumptions be cocract, | Rot allow & free voi e nor dignity ot character! ates, took piace at the Bankruptey Court. Tne | ana opinions of his cannot be of the common double Isvies ot men? hisbilities are £680,600, and the assets about £160,- hich bis de een ent Tats Reteaes we Gnd sho 00. ‘The amount of deb's proved on the occasion peels Sore ihheer ph araninpany at last at the foot ot the wal, is it hie war ee £295,000. The sitting occupied two hous and This is nearly word for word the article of ths | Which commenceson the day of his feast in the abalf, and ard the bankrupt were ramoved in bey empatins Ce Aredan oathads SReLREAOR) peetienttel menies ot eu job:udsc 7a, to be con- Now, w any o1 nowledge of the ued, an jr] the cemetery - tody. The following was given iu as a facts of the caas it it Je permitted that tae circam: | bastopolt Pr oPe is ae 9 r ing—; | another Napoleon, whilst tost of the East gives hin. pei oat ee sce od vie eet! 7, | sltendy at Malas dare Vg The present | in secusity on the store of the Seaof Azoff, He | LieT OF THE PARTIES WHOSE SECURITIES HAVE BEEN | mtances and appearances shall be thus misrapreaza- Ta truth, the moment is adm'rabiy chosen to enlo- Exgli ig of Truce Question a siuasion is eminently ‘a tix.”? Banrre, knew full well the means of communication by SOLD:— ted in order to weave a double wreath of oxk and | gise Louis Napoleon, when everything suffers, English Press— Opinions of a Frenchman—Trade . Lady Carparvon.......... 500 Exchequer Bills. laurel for Louis Napoleon Bonsparte? What do. everything is astounded, everything va: and ri “f Ye #8 which the Russians would avail themselves of such | admiral Aylmer (H.& Co.) 500 rr 14 Report—British Soldiers in Paris—Noapoleon’s P yaiead. isbo 4 3 A y! they amount to as testimony to ability aad the | everything falls dead from his powerless hand, be- icy in & ‘aKr3, Joly 12, 1855, resources, and the toolieh affair of Odessa was moat | Capt. Frederick (H.& Co.) 800 s atrength cf his empire? His talent coneisted first | cause itis criminal. If the Henatp had not so uni- Policy in Spein. Dulaess Out of Doors— Theatres and International | probably fresh in his memory. Duke of Rutland (Militia in erecting bimeelf by the expedition to Rome | versal a circulation—if we were not persuaded that ‘The formidable defeat suftered by the allies on the Receptions—Amcrican Machinery at the Exhibi- You aréaleady aware that some months staca | np Account)..-- ses: + 200 “ aesn instroment of French reaction outaide; bu | ite resources are aufficient—it would be pessible to 38th of June, ‘more precise details of which are tien. Se + ah hh Okan ah Court Cdall fe - 600 be bis expedition far from being a check to Aaitclan | raise some blewsed hypothesis on whic to found a ® ie mow aa oP ye great preparations for war were making in Stock- 300 a influence in Italy, has, on the contrary, consolidated | doubt as to the lil and morality of the writer; daily dropping in—the ew losn and increased | © 7yiumph for Anserican Diplomatic Costume, holm, and it was geverslly thought that no long 000 * ‘ it there by dividing ic, and has coeproniised the | but we prefer to nee init nothing bye an evidence, taxation--the death of Lord Rsglan--the ex‘raor Clouds have again darkened the sunny weather in | time would elapse before her flag would wava ia the 2,000 ¥ French nation among the other popaletiozs. At | of levity of mind, and regret sincerely the publica- “Trewin vo tho views of haat the rokeny | Tekh Framce wae beginning to rece, Pace ¢ | Bice ae doe of the Vienne Confercncas mitisn io 300 ty gocemplian when man ony gocemary to rds" | hare bo permiteadn se scpestiarycrguas of wil of 9 mS, eviews a-—the rickstty | gay only within doors, and even its indoor gaiety 12,000 Brazilian 4 per ots. | i, because in France, unfortunetely, the exsout ve overdn Ate thay ft the government, so re; ant are they to trath sem tog ogra We call upon the Has to re- member the duty which it owes to its sixty thou pare, assumed a different appearauce, and abe seams state of the Euglish administration, and its probable | j» pot sbared by the international bazaars, th> sbandored all intention of engaging in the i e z 7,700 Brazilian 5 cts. er hee at ite order an of 400,000 soldiers aoup de grace by the motion of Mr. Roebuck, 02 the | Americen buffets, nor the coffse houses and eating “600 one ine e 8 present. The truth of the matter is, that alwsys ready to obey blind)y the orders of their sa- wi neither Austria uor Sweden can afford to run y 17th instant- the aspect of the war generally, wita | houses which have aprung up)'ke ma:hroons under J. Tregonwell 2,400 @ periore. Ju fact, we cheerfully accord to him thia | nd aubscribera and its two millions of readers. It Ba daily Dalletins of the deaths of principal persov. | the trees of the Champs Elyscea, near the Palace of ne nose ne oP rie) ie errone Ese oe LY ale : 2,500 iM poor glory, if his tiiends have the courage tv claim | hes charge of souls. sges—the hourly prospect ofa political explosion in | Industry. Most of these new establishments look | rantee that they are in # position to easist them. | R. K. Neville. + 10,400 Indian Bonde. Butif be hes by this nefarious act gained the PPE alone Teaned. Spain, and the uneasy state of Italy, com dined | diemally wet ard desolate. Last evening I notised The shores of Eugiand snd France are disteat from | Mrs, Suricklend + _ 300 e friendship of those powers who have form:r!y b2en Pe 6, amoar Jeg hs the Sareea wih many inferior cauces, which taken together, | tcur or five waiters stending disconsolate and idle | vite ‘acmy coud be eely” throten coe Loe | Se AcCinttG. yo r, heatile, itis hecanse he shas deserted the forelga | each bearing that dite: baci nes make a formideble faggot of grievances, all tend at | near one of the most p2lyglot'ical and c2smzolitan | Sweden. ‘ "| Wynn, Tyler, Brown,& } 6,000 © r ta, | Pledge iver to. deapotiom by the coup d'etat in Oephes 2 plebee, ot Lyndon, Vt, tor improve- tbe present moment to cast an air of gloom over sc. | of these mangers for the nations. Exch waiter had |, Reperta ace rife respecting approaching hostili | | Kiewan. »000 Canada 5 per centa. | Fotrey jim with confidence tosay at Bordeaux, with Sorter! erg bey fete siety such as has been rarely witnessed since the | shrouded his shoulders in a napkin to protest his | ‘*# between the Tyrke ani the people of Montene | Dr. Griffith. + 10,000 Danish 3 per cents, | hiseyes turned toward Russia, that famous mot | for improvement in macbines for eulting boos and saislng of the curtain on that fearful drama now o0- | jacket from the rain, Goodyear shoul supply these gro, in eddition to which it is generally satd tnat | Do. 5,000 Danish 5 per certs. | which was 80 soon to receive an emyhatic denial: Tadtie rapber. contention of eo violent nature has lately broken shoe u) }, soles, &c., from sheets of [ out between Prince Daniels and bia wife, that asepa- as id Batiey, of Blue Rock, Ohio, sad Daniel “130,000 fla. Data 'spercts. | ‘The Empire—it is: pace.” The same cierical 3 L. Allard, of Rokebay, Ohio, ter improved whipple- acting in the old world. neighbors of his with napkinyof caoutcuou:—almout gene ‘and reaction which forced him to un- If, an waseaid by Prinze Albert, in his speech at | the cnly thi ‘ ration is most likely toensae. The Princess, a lady » 42,000 = the Reman expedition, have also led hig ‘Poti hy Hotingw Yow wank; ‘oorhitbets tna} cau ee which he has no: yet made | cr trieste, has been the mesne of dismissing Pope 34,000 “ him to interfere in favor of the Latin Charea in | 8 poy oe ony ee oni ja rubber. Stephen ‘from the Senate, thus depriving . 39°00 “ Jerusslem. But bere the “ inexperienced” diplo- “psa eopee, Mass., for ‘np:ovement government is now undergoing # severe trial, there | Among the indoor attcactions,thces of the operae | Piince of bis dearzet friend, acd the Btale of ita + 36,000 “ matiat met the Russisn influence, whose pretensions, | 1% feeding water to steam boilers, by suxillary are other persons and things which are not leas ex: | and theatres ate infinitely more agreeable, of coarse, | most useful and influential member. - 11,000 Ns excited by the oiber, the Suitan was soon obliged ng B of All N. pored to an ordeal of fire. Louis Napoleon, siace | than the ministertal receptions, which soem tobe hela From the Crimea we have no news of any great 30,000 ‘ to check. The had commenced. Tae cir | 4; obn A. Barnap, , N. Y., for double re- he cleared the deck of the lof state of the old " b imp:rtance; the position of affairs remains nearly 7,000 “ cumatences and the press did the rest. England | “/#focating split piston rod for pumps, &2. vessel of state of the old | almost every night. The guests are glad to | the same as on the date of my last letter. ). 76,000 “ and France found themselves allied almost wicaout |, Prank Ubase, of South Baton, N. H., for im- erew, and himself seized the helm, had never ® | hurry away early, to uaite with provincial and | _ The loss of the allies is estimated by the Military . 106,800 “ knowiag it. Infa‘uation and pablis opinion pre | Proved window blird. more difficalt tack before him than now. Hels | foreigu vieiters to the capita, ia applanding | Z-\tng at 85,000 during the past week, and that of ~~ 9,000 " vented them fromre‘racing their steps, and England, Lye ae 8 of Plainfeld, N. J., for ma- alone amid the breakers, the sky is threatening, | its old stage favorites! How t the Rassions at 10,000 less. The allies are ssid to ©. 28,000 “ woch against her will, and Louis Napoleon simply | “hive for bein fs inders of wood, & °. ic wind = ° ge favorites! How traly msy some | be awaitirg frech reinforcements from Warseilles + 19,000 “ to give satisfaction to the army--this is = histori- F. O. Degener, of New York, N. Y., for improved Preesges a terrible atorm. God holp him, | of the latter be called old favorites, M’ile Georges, | before recommencing active operations. These may » 66-000 i cal fact, acknowledged by one of his great axcom: | P*gin# machine. and keep him a stont heart and clear brain, fo. he | .who wi'l sppear tomorrow might at the Odeon as | be expected to reach there aout the 10:h of tae ~ 19,000 “ plices—went to the Crimes to attempt the adven- + H. Elliot, of Plattaburg, N. Y., for hydro- will need them both. Agrippina, in “Brittanicas,” may thank her sevan- a oe Be og _ » 24/000 “ sure against Bebast spol. ear machine for exhausting and sealing q 4 hs 3 The Countess de Walewaki, wife of the Ist» | ty years for being “a ater’ of the second, ss sho likely to give rise terconaicerable difficulties snd to 57,000 if papper prety a! dlemnepir Saget Hegde Phineas Emmons, of New York, N.Y., for im- French ambagaador to the court of St. James, who | was cf the first Empire. Yon would scircyly gus. | add no litle complexity to the present entangled . 40,000 “ is slo possible to cig up the old papers of M. ds | Provement in machines for nizing bat bodies. has returned to Paris, followed by the loudly ex- | pect, while applauding M'lle Dejazat ay Frederick pete ee. aioe Mees . eaciend, yntis dott ae Pavel: . ited “ Ma Ge a V3 astounded France that the Besianin Fulghass, of Richmond, Icd., for saw- a f “ ‘, ved per: ion to construct a railway from Cairo | George is 98 . 12,000 4% sumptive heir o! leon fs only contiauin; "Cy preted regrets of the London beau monde, a hun: | the Great, at tne Gaieié, that abe also is ver? uoatly | t> the boast of the Red Sea, and thie clreatetancs | Madawe Cbosritte,, |. 4a'900 Dasoh 34 per cents. ite polley of the eon of aint Louis, Uatil naa ingeton Godder, of Philadelphia, Pa., for im- dred laties of which have jass sont after her a mag: | seventy years of age, and you absolutely forget, | ia put forward as one of the grounds agalast the | Colonel Peacocke, 20,000 fl. Dateh 4 per cts, | however, not even as much as necessity demanded rorenensin napie reo. nificent bracelet as a tender souvenir, a few even- | when yousce Bouflé ag the Gamin de Paris,’ the | project of cutting a canal. The matter will, probi- | Mrs. Bosd............. 13,000 “ haa been doze; toings have gone on day after da; Uhauncey A. Guard, of Browasville, N. Y., sesign- fuga since, gave one of those splendid entertain. Nastinies) Guak G4 6s toords dan Tall 6. Aside oti | bly, shotly be decided, and I sbali ba toon ab'e i» | Mise Meyrick... 12,000 “« in the same way, tad tne moet pressing enaee £ pe bbe le of New Cast » and C. mente which, from their extraordinary tuste aud | Rachel is no longer young, but the success of Ris’ a ths poets pan as renee “59 ganic pa Marre epson ‘i eetlcye ene tanh er NY ve been, wad mortisis se bubs thes groper agg , oy ap weve! , wrrivalled charm, have attracted so much attention | tori bas piqued ber, and she hea resolved to show | _ But little activity has been diaplayed at Triects, | oss cod'ae Daten de por cents, Poppisearn: 48 Bot then been mstored. a beagle Joseph Harris, Jr., and Elbridge Harris, of Bos- 4 percents. Peppe + £28,0 Moje than this—we cau re : “Bio tesco ® | remember that wien Lonis Napoleon was s hae Mass., for improved hand stsmp._ Ditto 10/500 0 | pretender, he supported in Paris a newspaper obn Harria, ot North Hoosick, N. Y., forimprove- Sold. 6,137 10 | which, a the very moment when Louis Puil- | mentia machinery for making rope. Dito .. 7487 10 | lippe made bimsel? unpopular by his advances Horace Hotchkiss, ot Waterbary, Conn., for im- to the Eoglish allies, was extolling the poli- provements in machires for cutting files. during the past week, in colonial warce; coffie is lower and sugar higher; cotton goods exhibit a sligh! fall; corn maintsined its price. Much business has been done iu the shares of the Northern Railway, which at one time were quoted a the cther side the channel. Prince Napoleon, | the Parisians once more, before her departure for Prince Lucieu, and Charles Bonaparte, the great | America, that her prodigious powers have nat di- Giguitaries of State, the Ministers, the Dake ani | minished. Recently appointed Professor of Dec!a- Duchess of Hamilton, and others, wore present. | mation at the Conservatoire, sho hae Protracted still 14 000 India bond 10,590 Exche. 120,000 Dateb el pe per 160,000 Dutch 2 10,000 Nanieh ‘The beauty of the weather pormilted the company | longer thelong delay before her departure, in order | ®# high as 205}, and finally closed at 2043. darearal | ticel and commercial benefits to be derived by an | »_,°n6 Moore and D. tlre ren Se te escape from the gorgezus scene within, blazing | to given last, or atleast one more of her “last” The P Of Austria. 4 2. ral me a iors ie on re ee she he piven ina amt - eee with light and gilding, and dezzling the eye with } series of reprerentationa, Tonight sho plays ta [From the Vignna Oat Deuteche Post, Juns 29.) | thore ‘aglicion preltten, unas the Sediagaon te F the J, N. Lenox, of Pa, and Isa? H. Hanyan, of gittering uniforms an@ brilliant tolletter—serv | “Horace,” at the Theatre Frangais, while Ristoci, | ay inilitary decree of the mperor commands that Barnard order of the Prince. We regret that we are ror | Chester, N.Y. for balance water gate. img men in sumptuoun liveries, and flowers | on ber pert, aj 8 with Roesi, in “dais 3t 1) | ail the meu of the reserve of the armies unde: the we cto. 4 20,000 0 them at hand to show tuem to the Monitenr Moss G. Hubbard, of New York, N. ¥., for im- and silk drapery, obsiructing ome’s movements | at tho theatre Ftaliene Nanna eT Teen NORE Teneo 4,500 Indie bunds. .....""., Sold. They would show how much faith cau be placed tu Pe he Werteaion if Brook: N. Y., i Last night, the Emperor was present at 23 Grand wl AR Ra fe 0 ST | the poor monarch (triste sire) who is now in the ry R. Worthington, of Brooklyn, N. Y., for everywhere— into the garden, where the stare | .J.tet Mgt te bi perdr was present at tas Grand var so! wie auy ates Fee! ices! veges Totdlceeeeccvecsrescecceecesteerseees £119,825 | fuileries. But it would be an oczasion for him zo | WSter metre. Oa Wednesday Sir John Dean Paul and Messrs. wrap himeelt in his borrowed dignity, and t> say,iu rage ar eon beg Wes nie He the (74 a of an ancieat king of France, “Isisnxt | 2 2 ice, OD ‘mn “ ember y 7 orgie aid they Bin ol am eer Tyenu to remembzr the policy of the pre: mont i shale guides for looms, Foaph ge ; ? le prowcation) | His alliance with England is more than unprofi!- | Pee Wbrrny ~ he ssid, it having beam arranged that no farther pro. | sbie to France--it is “ocerons, and will bs fatal, | Sot in WeRons. rose ahculd be made with the case on the prevent | When the false tumors of the capture of Sebaxopol | ancderemic hiton iat eee Dee for by: oceasion, he had merely, as 8 matter of form, toap- | grri Pi i 7 ved here, ® Frenchman by heart and spirit ex~ py tohis worship to remand toe prisoners again | oj “We have just won a violory for ths Eag- | protnate mPvens OF Bast Trenton, Pa. for im Mr, Tarde’ tall ‘A Weald fe de a, th lied.” ‘This is, im fact, all the profit. except a litue Pierpoint Seymour, of Esat Bloomfield, N. Y., for there aaa eer ereico Yoru | vain glory, paid for too desrly, that will resuit from | improvement in eeed planters. 4 ad prisoner remap cdnceday | a contest prosecuted at thin hour. Lonis Napokeon Ritred B. Smith, of East Bronxville, N. ¥., for were shedding their soft, silver light, and p!ants | ginary representation for the rentr a their delicious odsr; and all was still, cave | and of Me Itoger—the 174th "ot “the Propieie? the voice of the nightingale and the murmuring ae poly UE Atboni on the same evening | scons of tone who tad thougnla to brethe and | (MLE aaron atarion fhe Ati, i tales to tell, too burning for the ear of more than | Annex the motive power has been applied to tie one. Amongst the many wio availed themeelyss of | marvellous tage of machines collectad there, aad this welcome retreat trom the glare withia were | *Mong which such specimens of American mecha- Diva} genius as the reaping machine, the rota: nome of the ministers, and members of auch politi- | Cutting machine, the fimoer hendiag and bas: and cal coteries ax habitually enjoy their society; and I | cameo turning machines, the sewing machines, know, from a source whish has never yet doceived | &c., Xc., compensate for the emall number of ooa- Jos. Pieger,of Birmingham fe ovement piration of this period they remain two years longer hinges.» ra sroipaps a8 a reserve, at the disposition of the government. Horace T. Robbins, of Lowell, Mass., for improve- The mex of the reserve cousequently form a fifth part of the army when put upon a war footiog. Let us estimate the ¢ fective force of the third and fourth armies s¢ 300,000 men; 60,000 men, then, will be the amount of the quota discharged by the imperial T. ‘This reduction, we cannot to often repeat, is not & demonstration; it is simp!y an alleviation, quite ratural, of the heavy bardeas imposed more than a year ago upon the finances of the State, It is, a5 ; Tot \ xt, a¢ the same hour. me, that the tous of 1 k ombre in | {fibutions of the United Siates to the universal ex- | the moment when the harvests are com: emp were sordingly taken back to priso kncws it, perhaps, having spoken, in bis laat ape=sh, washers for axle: she highest degree. The iniparedibasio wiéace ofthe ne crmmpe on nivlife last Renta, vam oe ieealen kawes ti . the ie aan pe reper the cig ys < hc " Be canes to bep fs rs hg nae haien A. Wis, af Newp ory K 'y foe ianpeove- , » iy or elds ip a > SSS | , Or a Emperor was #trong)y animadverted on, with a belief gered in patting & bard upon tie iron cusiag | which Satatn ‘provinces of the Sapte ee ARRESTED roR OFFERING A ForoxD Daarr.— | SPithet of shopmen, with which Napo'eoa siigma- poe dik a i valves and for pumping however, that something—during the absonos ofths | Machine. This sad socident was quite unjastiy | completely drained. Yesterday P.M. a man giving his name ag k. w, | “2d the Epgisb, nbs: be disavowed. Witham Mootry, of New York, N. Y., for improve- attributed by the Presse, to the tant of Y Empress— would be proved to bs “’ the wind.” The | San exhibitor. “The latter with the President ut growing and hourly augmenting distaste to the wa‘ | the central committee of Amerisan commissioners, ‘among the more responsfble classes of Frence—th» | at once beaded a liborai mbscription, in which our positive hatred to it by the logitimists, la waning | countrymen have oct! , in behalf of the popularity in England, &c., &c.—the need, in fact, | wife and three children of the uafortunae victim. of @ pilot to weather the storm—all were fertils | An American reaping machine was yesterday ike health of the Express has, it is anid, already | pete Venton a ry ‘director of this exer 4, said, already | near Vers: |. Bella, director of this ex»el- a roved since her residences at Esux Bonnes. Tas | lent school, (which has seven protessors, seventy A Btate which is at war, which has necd of a'l its military ulation upoa flelds of battle, which finds itself carr'ed away by the passions of a grost stanggle, must necessarily subuit to ere-ifice after po joe, and suffer the wounds received in ita cultural interests to bleed until the time shall coms when it apoly iteeif to close them. Sach is the cate in which Rassis flads herself. She is nog ex- piativg her folly in Puasing the Prath by the neces- sity shs is under t> call her atsndard, not only Hart offered a draft of $15,000 at the banking of The Hrravp extole the extraordinary pover of | ment in refrii 4 of Brewster & Co.,and asked them to cash 12 The | France. We wish that it told the troth. Bat the | "Jesse Cimp of Wilmington, Del., for improve draft was drawn on the American Exohange Bank | *™¢ unwittingly, without douyt—contra: | mente in grain ard grass Darvesters. inJavor of R. W. Hart, by J.D. Adams, Jr., casrior | Ucts this statement, It tells us that Prussia and |“ Angnstns Sanborn, of St. Johnsbury, Vt., assigner of the Pittefield Bank, Mass. Hart ‘represented | Austria trembie for their future. Now, ono is the | tb. & T. Fairbavks & Co., of same place, for im hierselt a8 & wool buyer, for 1. Pomeroy’s Sons, of | °S¢™y of that which he fears. Now, whatever may | provement in the Union platform ooales. Pittatield, and brought s letter to “Hl. A. and H. P. | be fad or done, Prussia und Austria have nothing | " Samuel T, dcnes, of New York, N. Y., for im- Brewster,” signed ‘Robert and Theodore Pomoroy, | tO. te cor thre ae The holy alliance is not | provement in furnaces for treating zinc ores. by Wm. ," and commending him to the good | Drcken for them. These three countriee repose on | | Ardrew Campbell, of Newark, N. J., for machine offices of the former. Mr. H. P. Browater requested | 26, *8me principles; and what is more, they are for feeding paper to print lis Humiston, o! tants have the good sense and delicacy not t> | pupils, about one thousand one hundred acres, and | her militia, bot ber ban and b t yn nilty of & common crime--the partition of Poland. improvement mob her footsteps el short time since & villag) | all the sppurtenaaces of a complete institation of | of the empire capable of bearing arms’ rae, tee ae rep ie alg ree 3,800 . 7 still act in concert, and understand each | tn candle mould ap) fur ‘ilpeabelany 4 hh pi one a (spate eoslved tte kind.) Bere setl og hol 4 ra Seite wel ey even yeast, ca regard to their funds, _— bo sag ea ony on the Bink oe ond Bertie cha prea te a ere ao pen es ot i Hees Aes aT New York, New York, for im afore co / joes : fi 1 r / . 4 y i he dances. She conversed wits | of thismaobine. Among the Americans prerent on | or harvest. ‘Frauee end England stand invane Union Bank. "Meantime the nea Wor ipl Gatien, are on the eve a shrowing themselves ato Prigngustia Dubooe, of Brooklyn, N. Y., for i g manner, which bigh ard | this occasion ware Mr. Valentine, President of tre | advantageous position. Their strength is suit ints | wrecure the meave ef identifying ‘himself Me, | ‘be embrace of France. But in what point, under | provement ia propellers. i ting, and spread b- | Central Committee; Mr. Flalschman, whose f4- | vigor; the war which they have waderfaken is far | Brewster exemined the dratt again, and euapsctiog | bese circumstances, can Spain and Hanes | yg Gores BR. Comvtock, of Manheim, N. Y., for im- sent away inec: | miliarity with scientific amd practical sgricaltare | from thelr own borders, and the effrie y Fravce? Upon what, principles will thei: alliance | provement in cheese presses. Xe tality. ised bas ditingaished his name ge Europe as well as | bave hitherto made are n:t to bo ‘conpenst wa errotiee and so telegrapited to Pittateld vo eacn repose? Insure, 907 Coa and Portagal, order fur | John ANender, of New London, Oonn., for im ore sancesat he "alanis Royal an | America, and eminently qa him for the rank | those which they might meke in & case of real dan- | the truth of the matter. fais telegraph would have | 0% aud we om H.7ou soldiers for your wat | provement in boitie fastenings, ; il manner of rude and Cubes was paral Which he holds amovg the jarors of tho Universa' | ger. The finances of England have been thus fur | to go from Albany by & messenger, and no answer | *aainst Rossis. Should France be very powerful, it | “James Moni; ot Baltimore, Mi., fer im. former, however, thare hee po no Benin nd your pegabor fhe Tribune, yery litle affected by the war against Rassia,andin | can be received till to day. fart returned tna Taal Bem or 1820. which hee the expekins at Provement in wrought iron shaft. bagel . ; 7 Steeler. ei aon ) 5 lenry © jersey fetantiyy, eetion re the mor brags things of | Switzerland wey dape ago, tn Orde to attond! 10 | labor haa not been raed for eat of bande fo grove | taken in custody by the Spolige,” The ditt is "ove ee ey ocak caine etek te tase ment ntarea making 7 77” Sr imperre been som resto have boon tre ae 4th, | than @ penny; and, what is more, the p>pular asso. | dently 8 forgery, 0 far as relstes to the amzant. Thien, (815,) when France had much more solid | J%¢: Williams, of Hactford, Coun., tor improve- ration of the a regime. The Princess Ma- ofthe ES ton oom ay ome maton Baaeites ea oe gy ete ayes ip aaisegan eat Grae | meg at An ict Pt din, Mr. Pendleton and Mrs. Burr, Mr. (iroeley, bo- | of Gov. Seymour in Sinerviog tae diplomatic drews sides many other Americans, are frequently seen | instructions of Mr. Marcy and there. Governor did not even think ft t to oa his a fall of workmen, from Marseilles, | colonel’s uniform, which he bas Lyons, Chulohe, Amiens, Lilie, Malhauren, | trunk, going in a plain black suit, ke cnet hie ciations and outbreaks among the workmen, which have so often happeved in England, have dipped od, aa if by enchantment, for more than a year. Very different is the situation of Austria. She jut her army on a war footing only to be prepared Peforeband a possible iene, She has taken no ST ie en ee the better re advantage ¢f the occasion to give relief to her m , Since the networkof her military roadeand Tailways will enable her to concentrate anew, and , at the top of the draft, mettin ca’enda) pbets sre added, aod alver the word “Altcan' ia alliances than those of which M. Bonaparte can | ““Arbert Waloolt, of Datrolt, Michigan, for ma- the Ling Miphee eng st wt “thousand” is written «| | chines for dressiug lgmber from the log.’ ly in another hand. It is genuine for fifteen A country is erfal when united with Elias A. Swan, of peecxiye, N. Y.,and Dewitt C. Rd Had the alterer been less fennyeas | ge! or Pid pevples by ie ame , of isco ae +, for improvement in possi ’ Ly ery for dreaain; , Tike aot all the people doubt, ond reason, |" Re Jesh. Hichand Garaed, of ana, age cance 4 Rasne gee | Rabat pe Gn eis amubteracd | mprorcor irae ean eet a 8. an . N Rechater Union, July 2. siete leaves bis fortune $0 cireotcstences. From this | Ist. ns oer 8, 1849, ve-iaaaed July 24,

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