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oe meee ~ = nie ne adenine — hatha a 2 NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1855. 1,000,000 earth the United States Minister, but a fecling of justice | lock at a few columpsof figares—say as little as pos- | of Calaix and ite environs are close treading upon the i 60,000 rascines, and ay es sheared bags. The Epidemto at Norfolk and Portsmouth. OUR NORFOLK CORRESPONDENCE. ‘ sible—and go home,’? heels of ite foreranner, ig still pre-emivent in n compels me to make the most distinct contradiction Sorc ‘at once replied, that if this were all | cheapness, and in this case ‘ottiagham sdlls« third laea | atiamed to mare dan 0 tenth ¢ of these extreord:nary peo, ah Nonpoux, October 8, 1855, 40 the slanderous reports as to his failing faculties, | the object of the Congrosa it was Hardly worth while t¢ | thetcontenet whieh the fnglish mneautscvurer shows fr | army lees extraordinary. The. final combined aseault | battle. | We have, « Bimpee of general of divigos, bat | 00 looking cut this morning, the first, gad sight that tent ealintion mas the special wel. | designe, for which the Calaia manufacturer spares no | cost the French army no less than 7,551 men killed, | it is ovly ae bewildered and irresolute, and telling bis | grected my eyes was a fine white frost. A few more such which, for some unworthy parpose, have been clr | iti that the culated here, and waich, for aught I know, may be once of the statesman; that mere groups of figures were | expense. Everywhere it is the same. While Manchoster wounded, and missing; the British loss on Ve ane ter 2 Sih tself, ashamed | Of nouse, except as furnishing the mean» of knowing | and Bradford earry all before them in the woollen myuu- | was 2,447, eo that the total loss of the al od armies instigated by the Washington organ iisell, ast what war to be reformed, and what was to be main- | facture of alpaca, the beauty of the French dengus is | smounts to not less than 10,000 men on this dreadiul that all the rest of the Pierce personnel being 80 | Yainea—what institutions were useful, and what perni- } such that, though dearer by a third, the woulthy prefer | casion, | But if to this number-of victims be added the scabby d sheep should by accident have slose=-thas the'callecton of fgnres might not always see | purchasing them. The French jon takes heart of | large Jouaes sactained te sg Snes, Oe, ee PD Fee. Porn, meer their bearing, but it was ible that a congress | grace at these indications, and. as'no stone is left un- | lava, at Inkermann, at attack eh érept among them. It is bard enough to bear the mich, like the present, was to lnaicate the pecs} snb- sie a by the Reperer, A the. Journal des Deals, 10 or er pee egy tile, ot athe: fehamnaye,. | ie : ae 45 “ it i i hy is i jon afflictions that human flesh is heir to, but it is stil, | jects le to have os poner = ae bing ead men! nour 5 indy saajemneiae et one amen ee Sasbteiy 100" shan any, we subordinate that, ‘if they were of , he might fake the Royalse” But ee will enter? no farthes tate | (07 the blessing of the Almighty) and allyellow fever will this shi ey mig Exam of hecslinn were not | beat an end, at least for this season. All day yesterday wanting, may have reward we ear- | it was quite cold for October; every thing around looked iy ope But to Gen. by ye bright and beautiful; not a hearse or physician's carriage of couree, be unable suttclently to express hit approba. | visible; the people beginning to walk abroad and look a tion of all generals of division, while his warmest thanks | little cheerful; afew churches open snd pretty well at- will be due to every member of his own staf. But the | tended, considering the population, our resident citizens harder when men would rob us of what the Al- | ill the aid political scien Mtricted commerce, the Faria Kxhibition, though a com- | conceive that the losses sustained by the besieging frees | men ho 0 aed on that | fatal day, or EWA Setae! BOG | nice aot reretargte, after sperchag the tow, tor mighty hae thought fit to spare ns. Through the | “if net,” continued Mr, Sumner, ‘if we are morely | mercial feature in a limited sense, may prove the starting | under Bre sonnel be lege anaes SOND mem, toes PRobaaty | Met be honored by their country through iaformation | news, I find there have been but two deaths since writing chastenings of the body the mind is sometimes puri- | t® adept, without discussion, reports prepared before. | point of a lasting commercial prosperity. BER’ Moleunhapry victitas of disease and privations, who | from other eourees. on Gatuaday ; thake.dce s(ills fiw Ucgectng cabin ial Aitet band for us, we shall resewhle the ancient Parliament of aeatcat swept away rapidly than by the fied, enlightened and elevated, and a gentleman of | Paris, convoked to register in silence the deorees of the } peculiar discernment, who last night was engaged | King.” \MPORTANT MOVEMENT IN EUROPE. word of the ey: We are ronanly fa: bolow ibe im a close conversation of two hours with Mr. Ma- Wigs nt ara eu ciempimentd hy te Parisian The Contempiated Change I the Italian | which would raise our total loss to 50,000, and, only as- i j i have son on the Dillon affair, assured me hi 1s as having surprised the ess by the fluency astyAiterIng the Pp of Burope= | suming the Russians not to have lost more than we sabia beet ya | it precin wih wich they ypoke Seach Nec | Ktuly aitehanged by Atrtsta for he Bamar | done, Though they at they Raye lt ty men or Ba i bra vy a et oaane on am see {erminate one way or theother ina few days, Tbe deaths lost all confidence fa their ehie’, and the only difference | lre(er to are Mr#. James Cornick, wife of Captain James is, that the private proclaims his opinion with more | Cornick, President of Dismal Swamp Canal Company, and . The incapable commander who has | * Small son of Thomas Gilbert. My mossenger sen Nt Kngland this lace disaster cannot Yorce his | Proepects brightering in the principal businew parts of I soldiers to look with envy on those gallant deeds of their | the city, and if the weather continues fa that that Minister's faculties never in bis best days | {3 i d every one i ly surprised his hearers by the boldness with which | Bian Princlpalitics. : H not less than | soldier hich thelr own’ defeat serves as a foil, but ho | Will be nodanger in returning after a week or two. were so sound, healthy and acute as at present. he ullered what he had to cay. Tt must be difficult for THE STATE OF ITALY. ie oo han og etre bread can oppress them ‘with feelings of deep hamilton, of | presume pb sane ink tha ‘ere is, nothing more te I enclose you Marshal Pelissier's and General | ¥ teaders in the United States to conceive of the restric- [London ctereepenaeaice oF be Mas chester Bescainer.) ; : : | tions which are here imposed on liberty of speech, if, indee Niel's despatches, published in this morning’s Moni: | we can properly speak of restrictions on what has ceave In the meantime, some politicians are directing ther The Levigaincrexps of this pees Gicantee Sores 4 ee eur. They have much greater interest than the | to exist. Otherwise they would more fully understand | attention to Germany, particularly Austria; and it seems | Coertonts mt Srecrecae By ie rovers sf bumen why the remarks of Mr. Sumner are described a having | to be the univereal opinion that, whilst negotiations will | nature, is in itself @ blessing no lor. ‘to the saccosa despatch sent by General Simpson, who has a good | fallen like « bomb-ahell upon the fcials, The more | probably be resumed, at the end of the campaign, the | ¥e Sey ae oe ener tients iiss oben chance of being recalled. effec. ive from the quic ity with which they were de- | allies will still find Austria but a slippery npaign, in yeas reir _ next ee pity Giver of a ‘The order for the attack lakoff livered, they were received with delight by all the foreiga | fact, not a soul out of Downing street (eels any coni- Poe ap though Lepse mcrae pra Dros ub ¢ order for the attack on Malakoff was given at | {clogaten prevent-—exvept, of cuurse, the Austrian—and | Yence in “Austrin’s policy or ‘Austria's engagements, | BeSrt over the comending emotions of th “bought noon, and 80 enthusiastic was the movement of the | ulsoby all the unoflicial Frenchmen, and the object of | Others ore turning their thonghts to Italy, which, in- | ‘Tiumph, Pp eacrrg aise rti ge bare French soldiers, that in he after the F: h enlarged discussion was secured, at least for one day, deed, is gradually coming to the front @ way that | ert of th reat | ral 4 ns \ pa er bowers hangars dey My German informant added to his account of this incl- | Pyomises'1o make that pesinsuls. exceedingly prominent jrshal Plisier’s report gives us afull and acura! eagles floated from three different points at the | dent—\ How much good an pees sine rey ab in the events of the age. “The Italian qu "is by pier x jas eet 2 Miwon eee) aa same moment. Malakoff being the grand resource | BY * single word, to fo! oe we ni te cawion, to defend | scerees superseding the Eastern question, in popalar iy- | og on the left had been advanced to within 30 ort in every respect except the operations of the war. yards of the Russians was defended with great courage | liberty of speech.” neste mn carly “drifting? towards a crisis, in spite of | of the Flagstaf’ and Central Bastions, and to within 25 and their loss must have been eaormous. After the |. ,!t was rumored last ovening, 1 Goud, y one af ine Italy fa cl aay ored last evening, thet the eorts ofa she powers ta avolt it" One symptom of ‘ards of the salient of the Malakoff Redoubt and the Little Wwounc y, She it 3 ‘Malakoff had fallen, the attack on the Flag Staff and | Hundred ‘Gunrde—the Cent Gardes,” The Mandir rade MT eteen” bate Gite tha tam, Maanenbaatiae, athe French artillery had constructed 109 butters, por. Central Basti made. it ing no allusion to this rumor; but nm eo ie servi esen' 1 Bastions was made. These, however, were | Tit Meet itte extensively to-day, and a considerable | PouDg in thelr windows muPE ion ‘clearly isdicaten | oD! eight a ; The ng ugincers had been not taken at the time, but were afterwards abandoned | fii at the Bourse has been attributed to it. Pnich way the wind le. blowing with respect to the tuis- unable, from the rocky nature of the ridge on which the by the Russians, as being no longer tenable after the } The Messager de Bayonne says that ‘it has been assured Rovarhad Gia sea: ‘of Naples. “The brochure is by some | Great Redan was planted, to advance nearer than 200 ; i the marshal’s staff will mot be the only recompense of | Sronymoua writer, evidently a inan of position, whose | Y8rds from that work, Harry Jones had, however, Joes of Malakoff. On entering the place, all the . Pelission, The intention of the Emperor to confer | Ghject is to turn the Bourbons cut of Naples,’ and to | Prought no less than 200 English guns to bear on this houses in the faubourg were found to be in complete | titles of nobility on his most faithful servants, has al- | make Italy too hot for them to remain in it. Its title is, | Point of the fortifications only. peg Ex oie coparuneos rains the effect of our shot and shell. ‘The ground | Tey been often spoken of. The title of Duke of Sebas. | \ The Italian Question, or Murat and the Bourbons.” | of the advantageous proximity of the French to the works = topol should complete the recompense due to the head of | After having saida good deal about Italy, liberty, inde- | they were about to storm was that explosion of ee rgrs pitta tile thers there willbe foo conviction that the | Zexidents, with f je nurses, have left, and some of our day of battle is likely tobe anything but the day of vic- } OW" who were compelled to leave to recruit their shatter- ion Now, t60, ee Spproadlling tacnt operations in | €4 health, have returned with their familes. the field which are the test of generalship. Will the Ni man who could not attack with common @ position fORFOLK, Oct. 8, 1855. with which he had been for months acquainted be capa: It is with a lighter heart than for many a week that I ble of combinations and manuvres on on new and ever- | now write to you, this morning. I arose earlier than 1, hanging ground? oTine chaslurion is not dificult, It is the duty of gov- | #m accustomed to, and throwing my window open, I ernment to make sangeet Ps relating Genpeoh gazed upon the surrounding roofs, when a glorious vision Simpeon of the post he eaere ly unders burst upon my view. Frost had, during the night, that the present under- lef acce his ap- HO eT oa a ere aat inlced, excuse | gethered to e considerable extent upon the surrounding im from all responsibility for subsequent failure, for no | housetops; the white winged messenger had come si- solicitations of @ Minister ought, to overcome the restst- | ently, and was waiting to be witnoased by man ere he: ance wi ia honest on & sense of pacity. But the knowledge that his was only the minor fault of | tok bis fight. How like the dove Nosh sent from his an irresolate must soften judgment of the | ark, when it had re-appeared to the lovely occupants ot country. Any honor or reward which his services may | the earth, bearing a green leaf, that spoke more ¢lo- ee eee naa, epee cerea =, | auasdy than it could had it the gift of speech! longer command our troops in wre ‘A French Comman- Iwas in Portsmouth yesterday, and the appearanee der-in-Chief, under somewhat similar circumstances, has | presented by the streets was truly distressing; the rank been in this very campaign superseded, and he returned | grass had grown over them to such an extent ae to hide with true devotion and an admirable spirit to the com- | even a beat path, 89 fow po walk them. 1 mand of bis division. the new cases in that town | am pained to cite the i iteeply, ref? FIG. ¥ e1 oi om- | mines which gave the si of the attack blew in a part We will not suggest auy course t» General Simpson or | of Mr. George Bailey, four of which aredown. There re bie od pe iat ie rt vat nal was ol le ‘ais, Sept y joachim Murat, and the Neapolitan government under | ‘0 fear from the Russian counter-mines, hice atic peal Flap Re the ccestnek peat ta HATS to eae EB Menees M Le Bee or a ine the: bottom of the ravine are a small ditch and the boule- | pretic sentiment with Regard to the Full of Sebastopol | the Bourbons, with respect to legislative administration, | &t which the head of the English sap was still placed no vard, and then the regular wall built rendezvous | as Bvilenced by the Paris Bourse—Death of a Memler | finance, the army, public works, the c ergy, the magis- by effect could be produced. : : ; y : ¢ French left attack against the Central and Fl begins, The Green House, which has been go far | of Louis the Sixteeth’s Parliamen!—The Dificuly be | "acy, We enluiwalion of sclence and the aris, commerce | Pastions, under General de Salles, was organized with as generally spoken of in the camp, is a very pretty tween Denmark and the United Staies—Afairs in Spain— } that the reign of Murat was a reign of progress, while | Much care and with forces as large as any other part of chapel. By the side of it is the Bourse, a building The French Industrial Exkibition—Magnificent Present | that of the Be arbors ia ane of zenction. Under Beat Pe rere ae CMa Basra Cd de had % speter | eve t ; under the Bourbons ever, , ‘ i y a cien Murat, who is now residing in Paris, as hol ex: 3 P Sipaed Ppa ae a ca pou toitert A report that the Russian troops were retreating from | actly the rane sentiments anita, father 12 favor of Taly a reserve on this point only, so that the left attack must ’ 4 i have been made by 10,000’ men. supported by 10,090 Bakehiserai and $i 1 to Perekop, —as a partivan of liberty and democracy, and an eneny ene all the osscateare, once “acd Goon cen shiserai and Simpheropo! to Perekop, which came pe ‘tain it, Fourth ward—so that persons who have left friends in It cannot be too often repeated that our army requires | that part of the city may learn whether or not any are ayounger man. A statesman in either house, a lawyer | among the victims. In Norfolk, yesterday, there were on the bench, even an admiral in his comfortable first | no undertakers open, which is as cheering as rate, may preserve his efficiency until an advanced age, | could possibly be of the decline of the fever. 7! the. for he is not under the necessity of bodily bs . t ] first Sabbath for nearly three months they haye been the commander of an army in the field mast ah closed, sical strength not only for sedentary toil, but for » | lam hoppy to be adle to inform you that Drs. Willimar walking, bearing wind; rain and cold, ther with all | and Wright, who have been sick with fever, are to-day the personal discomforts of the camp and the march. much better, The former is convalescent. These qualities are not possessed by men of the age of | I have frequently warned my fellow citizens to have the British commander-in-chief, who sits in a ditch muf | their houses opened. The danger of keeping them closed fled up ina cloak when a whole army rushes to the as- | will be apparent from the following:—One of our most sault. Marshal Pelissier wants, we believe, one or two | respectable citizens last week opened the house of one of yearé of 60, and yet his activity is looked upon as extra- | his relatives, and though he had himself been sick, yet ordinary by his countrymen. He brought up the reserves | the stench coming from the house was so strong as to in person when General Bosquet was wounded, The | cause another atiack. He was unwell two or three days. great body of the French generals are far below this age. | The day the house was opened was quite warm, and this, -anrobert is 46, Bosquet is 42 years old, about the age of robably acting with the impure air, caused the sickness, Fyre and Markham. What is there to prevent the aop- | fouces shouldbe ‘opened on cold days, tion ofasimilar system in England? Nothing but the | Supplies came yesterday to the Howard Association, via. timidity of the government, the sympathy of cer! Paitimore, They were much needed. The Howard In- military authorities at home for old acquaintances, a firmary is now without a patient. The only officer re- the superstitious reverence for those who have served | maining is Dr. H. L. ‘Van Cleve, of Philadelphia. The. during youth in the campaigns of a past generation. | following have died since my last:—Mrs. Capt. James If the ‘nation is to preserve its rank in Europe there | Cornick, Mr. John Gibon, a nurse from New York, slave must be no delay in giving greater effictency to the army | of Mr. Whitfield, slave of Miss Drummond, slave of Josiah: by placing over it men ot edequate capacity. mgs Hill's entate, Mrs. Dray, child of Mr. Jakeman, Miss men hardly appreciate how much their ry reputa- | Coo . F, Brurlie, ie ticn has suffered in the eyes of the world even in this | Buling. Se oe. MRE ey ee ence acl fontlnay tho oniy coc. | fresh troops, Nevertheless, this attack failed, from ree a A L from the Mime? correspondent at Vienna, though having | hmastet ortho ticlian quodion: umd the menghier | causes somewhat similar to thore which led to the defeat was left in all. Several Rassian soldiers who had | q certain influence in England, had none here, On the | winds up allwith the iollowing letter frum the Prince | of the Britieh attack on the Redan. The Kussians re- fetch ‘ ; Seni ; , : treated behind traverses within the work and behind the remained in the batteries were taken prison- | contrary, a strong opinion prevails in the best informed | bimself:— " : % 6 oP! ' My Duan Nersew—Since it appears to me, as to you, | Mmette, trom which they kept upa fire of grape ani ers, and, on being interrogated, said they | circles thet the evacuation of the South side of Sebasto- that 1am the only possible solution, I fecl myself inter. | ™muskettry, which baffled the assailants and at last drove had been paid to set fire t e mines. - | pol was aaa % cted fi initiative in it. 7h is ish who | them back to their tranches. paid to set fire to the mines. A cor- ] pol was simply a part of a premeditated scheme, show- | dicted from all initiative in it. That man isyoolish who See Poieke tant Geveear: igaerven the Aower'ct Poral of the Foreign Legion took a man whorahe re | ing that tbe Russian commander-in-chief has no imme- } smalers thal he has only ia ue Lav upon th sine Wt) ane French army for the attack on the Malakhoff, unde: ognized as having belonged to his company, but | diate intention of abandoning the Crimea, and that ac- | jrertlage of a whole people his own propersp, just as he would | the command of General MeMehon and General Bosquet; who had deserted some time before. While the | cordingly much strategical kill and renewed examples | the inheriance y a.flock of sheep. Lely call me, ant 1 Tenet eo cepa peed teed 5 lee: aie French were marching on Malakoff, the English at- | of determination and courage will be nocessary ere the | {bait Uc prond Oo teres her Y ll ere dy, Mier tan | were Drought into the trenches by instalments of onc- tacked the Great Redan. You know, says this | {vite of this victory will be fairly gathered. myself, Her enemies are my enemies; and there isa | third ata time to act against the Malakhoil and the Lit- Marwsirtline fociulint se Biden acm ry dis. | Read the state of the money market of to-day at four terrible account to settle be:ween us, ut it Italy should | He Ravan, These toons Ware saresally. pedyided eh ls ¢ Ms a aa a wi aed e ‘a Fats is ae 1, | o'clock, P. ML, and gee how exactly it tallies with this | make another choice, 1 shall not the less be devoted to | everything they could require in their desperate ente:- uished—that cool, impassable bravery whic! ‘i prise—trenching tools, spikes, and materials to complete Ae RIALS statement, remembering that the banners which com- ter, ond ln ores to belp hor tosnucona 1 will give to her | the occupation of the great work, or rathec eltadel, they maakes them advance against the fire of an enemy | jemorate the late victory still flutter on the public | the elect of Italy. His mission will be very easy. Ro- | Were about to attack. The hill of Leona steer with the same steadiness as at a review. Nothing | juildings, and that the clergy are everywhere exhorting | member, and also vemini me of this truth, which, though | rounded by works which liad assumed the form and ines n trat strength of a regular pentagonal fortress, of about the | triumphant campaign, Their fame for personal courage | ‘There have been. nine cases of feve . Bree’ can he care astonishing Gay. ta frsines meat the faithful to # general thanksgiving. ae tellin etl SME Moons oroh Reh Gp DURE fae een ine te adel ‘f Antwerp, intersected by | isan, high a1 ever, but how thelr iirorument should farm, known as ‘Lilliput? aio, ane on | Thorntans produ 8) le sensation to see so mucl ‘The Emperor left Paris yesterday for Rambouillet; | “ It is to be observed that the writer makes no reference y , and g: y , fires cEniuith apeosin Par ene in ea caen, | cee Dr Wort, of New Yok who a winning g physi calmness in the midst of a tempest of grape and | ’rince Jerome has gone to the Palace at Mendon, his son, | whatever to Piedmont, or to the house of Savoy. Butin | OF ay surrounding it was eighteen feet deop, the any scheme for the redemption and regeneration of Italy are the wonder ot foreigners. The Russians, say | celf mavy laurels among us. shot. The English soon had the advantage over the | Prince Napoleon has returned to Paris to resume his { the alli i Y scarp eighteen feet high, so that the defences to be scaled | we we are an army of lions led on by asses. If the x ¢ alliance of Serdinia would be indispensable, Nor rp eighteen feet high, £ the defences to be scales E i] The weather is quite cool, NORFOLK. enemy; but numerous reserves coming up, anda | duties as President of the Universal Exhibition, Baron | does the writer seem to have contemplated the possiblli- | were thirty-six fect trom Pa potas fab olin mats ine — faery ig debe re nessiene —. heavy fire of artillery being directed against them, | Sentler de Chaygené, the last member of the Parliament | ty of any obstecles to hls purpore arising out of what is | were repecied mith the Sen chats, Mate Meereatate | ot Aor captains and leutenanta, or the mubborn memneiy Ook 8, 3008, called the revolutionary ‘We, mp9 THE FATE OF THE PRINCIPALITIES. {¥rom the Lopdon Chronicle, Sept, 10.) * * courage of the Highlands and Counaugh. We have no | ©, Blorlous sight! Another white frost, fine, bracing wish to ye | Sprkchesererry caine their b ebeg 4 morning, and every prospect of favorable weather. The are content to it joint operations ir re ceenn tata art, citiet el Uaioe mat ve, Oe DASE A TE US eee es Oe eee ater. But what the British army has to do it should | ave been for more than two months; people are rousing e enabled to do well. Little is gained by placing an | up and atirring abroad somewhat as they used to before aged officer of high standing over our troops, and keep- | the appearance of the fever; those who left tows. ing up an affectation of perfect equality, if the French ; from superior numbers! do nearly all’ the work of the | ®© Veginning to return; the hospitars, both at Julapi seige, while the small part allotted to the English | and on Maine street, are broken up; nearly all the is marred by the incapacity of their commander. | non-resident physicians have left for their homes, and We know not whether, after appealing to | things generally begin to assume something of ‘their the public by their duty to their country, | former aspect; not a hearse, except one, visible all day, it may fiot he a descent to ask them to consider the pri- | and’that was to carry to the grave the corpse of one whe vate ties which unite individual families to the brave men whose lives depend on a general’s judgment. But it | selves that the fever has at last been removed from among is an appeal to which human nature will give, perhaps, 3 and we earnestly pray that Almighty God may never even a readier answer. By all that they owa to Tne again find cause to visit us with sush an awful scourge. army, which has fought so long and so well, by their | Fvery family, 1 believe, without an exception, has pnpathy for those left bereaved and destitute through } been called upon to mourn some dear departed the recent slaughter, as well as by their love of country | ones. Many whole families have been swept off at a sin- and honor, we conjure Englishmen to brook no delay in | gle blow. ‘ty orphans are collected in one House of placing at the head of their small but chivalrous army | Refuge, with none to claim them, besides those who have aman who can make its valor productive of something | beem provided for in families in this city, in Richmond, tremendous obstacies, overpowered the garrison, and orenn i under Louis XVI. has just died at the age of 89. they were compelled to abandon it, as we were the then held the work for four houre against the repeated had the pleasure of Mis friendship, have often spent Little Redan, (adiag yarn AUN Ang bel anAbiicha 34 efforts of the Russians to recover the position, No great- F hours in endeavoring to extract from him anecdotes of With respect to negotiations, I have good author- 4 But the political interests which cl 4 th er or more difficult exploit is recorded in the annals of su for tahinghiizis thasneopeaisimaienloniten O9 hie life and times, but his memory was too defective and ut the poubical Interosts which cluster round these | war, and the immense loss sustained by our brave allies a fine provinces are even more important than those of a b : is intelligence probably never of that high order which | military nature. Our readers cannot fait to have noticed | Proves by what desperate eflorts this advantage was Austria to the Western-cabinets were so manifestly | penetrates into the core of events to enable us to glean | the clicumstances mentioned by cur Faris correspondent | FRiBed. | Marshal Pelissier relates the action in the most im favor of Russia that they were unanimously | much from him. There {s a kind of haziness in the per- | the other day, that the Cousiuséonnd had received an agguceiito, pnd hie waltee-ob. a, man -Impresber wid the scouted. The semi Constitutionne! has accordingly | ception of some persons which prevents the most startling | neg Caution, {on jpkerting 2 letter, the substance of | solemnity of the contest. he bad jast witnessed, come out with an article, which terminates thus:— | events from making greoter impression upon them than | Wallachian provinces, which the {ortuos{tfes of diplomacy | ¢, Roehl athe og pote] ee Say rd “But its necessary, in order that such proposi- | the ordinary ocecurrences of every day life. Tt is por- | handed over to thelr’ protection, Not conteat with this | frit end ie igo! the honor of that atemn chief of the Yions may lead to negotiations, that they br | tectly withering for one who has gloated over the record | fy hap one further-vit bas invertel an artisie in whic, | French army that, in committing the remains of these presented’ : under the form of preliminaries ot | of the last sixty years, whose imagination has filled | it is stated, from authoritative sources, that the ill blood PES MD al SOK 9 ged pie A RN aba peace, already consented to and signed by | up ail the blank parts of the canvass, and who car- | between the inhabitants and the Austrian garrison has | the deepest emotion at the great and deplorable losses “ P par @ canvass, and who car- i Th 1 it of Abe Russian government, and offering almost a cer- ) “P." aoe : % been great!y craggerated, and that the county is fast re. | SuStained by his troops. The final assault of Sebastopol tainty of a definitive and Satisfactory result, France | Ti" about with Lim a miniature tablean which he | (eyning: unler Austrian ‘rule, to peace-and prosperity, | Bas cost the allied armies 10,000 men, but its success hus and England, in fact, must not expose themselves | is never weary of examining in light or in shudow, | Other articles, evidently from official inspiration, appear fae ae _ of Fe buld bn ood a operate tan eae to recommence the trial of the abortive efforts of the | to mble upon a living actor of the sceae | from time to tine both in English and Frene’ organs, all | "1 inte auaing Moniaiuidonhediakiael expoeed the Conference of Vienna, That attemptat negotiation | who simply wonders at your curiosity, and has no- | (! Which would indicate that the state of these provinces | 11° armies to the tolls and losses feom which it 1s now must recall recollections which must warn the public | thing to give you in gratification of it. To have beea a ida iti serlounly to engage the attention of states: | Rapptty relieved, ‘inet anything which may either distantly ne movements, or intended movements, of the allied mind agai . Pig " ‘tat member of Louis the Sixteenth’s Parliament—to have Wide apart as ihe two countries lie geographically, Se ney i — cleely erent fan imitation of that conference, ) NT tay stormy days of the Bod of Justice—to be | ‘bere does certainly appear to be some ewes politic.) | forces, since the oocupation of Sebastop 1 till remala ex- | more than an honorable disaster, and other places, ibe name of which has become so unpopular with rs : Beds : pkgs connection between the Moldo-Wellachian Principalities | Temely obscure, and several incidents have occurre hs mercer es, Norroux, Oct. 10, 1855. the English people that the British government | inParis at his surveillance, his flight, his imprison- | and italy. The affairs of both fill up every lelsare mo- | Which we areunable to explain. It is positively stated The Tarf. % We continue to have white frosts every morning, and Ue wise ones predict this favorable omen, For the first time in more than two months, we yesterday walked echemuhiomsting ean rly se ahorath wae own Main street, and both there and on Market square the mare after five heats, she winning the two first and | “ve! sesguterppemiyrs. enema pel 2d the fifth heats. The third heat was given to Jack on ac- | "tr" Pe aed iycursl iced of tie Celtis bounet Sayeue count of the mare gaining by breaking. The betting | “vt the city were also thrown open for cleansing, ventila, tion, &c., and a general purification of the whole was be- previous to starting was 100 to 40 on the mare. Both | |.) Ott a eee ann anna wall te surprised to horses looked to be in capital condition. The Belle is a | cofppare this state of things with the former, fhe dal better breaker than Jack. When she leaves her feet she | warkets have tly increased, which is another rd does not lose by the break, but with a jump or two she | {lence of returning activity in our community. There could no longer lend itself to resume fresh negotia- | ment, his execution, and all the horrors which preceded nt wich the minds of Jers ha’ fe by some of the Eastern journals that upon Princ» Goxt- 5 eution, " preceded } ment which the minds of our rulers have to spare {cox 2k I tions for peace under the same form and in the same | ana followed that event—to have stood by at the resasei- | Ue more pressing demands of the war; and thei inte- | *¢bakoMs hoisting a whe flag from Fort Constantine, place. We therefore think that the mission of the eis ae, rests are, somehow, always brought up together. When. | &cCmmunication took placo with the enemy, and that conference of Vienna is finished, and that if fature | ‘on ofa country drunk with the stimulant of revolu- | ever we see an article upon the aifaire of italy in cer Captain Crummond was afterwards sent to confer per- hegotiations for peace are to be opeted, they will do | tiet—to lave heard its thunder at every gate in Euzope, | four contemporaries, we may be sure that a second ar Ne ar sep an ittenetne Lteeenreaveohneneee £0 at least in another manner and in another place.” | and seen an empire like that of Charlemagn> spring. | HOSP ne au may be et Fe ee sexalatata thi, | bodies of French troops have been sent to Eupato- Another body of English workmen, to the num- | ‘ng from its vitals, and not be a very treasure-house for | sequence in accordance with the natural course of things; | T!#; which would appear to indicate the expec- ts historical research, seems almost incomprehensible; but | buta reference to the past and now almost forgotten | tation of operations on the rear of the Russian ber of 350, passed through Paris yesterday, en route | och instances are not unfrequent, apd it is certain that | «x ‘sof the revolutiovary period ot 1848 ma: eciape = peathetemene cece fas - — Ne t0 Marseilles, to embark for Sebastopol. Their mis- | eyents which stir the life blood to read of in the page of alod lueito hs ccanegtan. At that perl wha roreed Fs Pisces hg borers a tan, sion, ’ i history, from the rapidity with which they appear to suc- | Austria was driven to extremities, and had lost almost ; 3 , and that of those who preceded them, is to | Mistery, from the rapidity, ‘always equally sect the co. | altegether her grasp on Italy, she. listened with mach | the Generals now occupying the town doubtless referred baild and repair the houses in that town, in order | temporary. . The striking features of a yearare compress- | moze calmness toa proposal for parting with her Lombard | t¢ ree ashe gar Tt ewer rgd in UNION COURSE, L. I.—TROTTING. A match for $1,000, mile heats, best three in five, in fe f ; a into a single chapter—the mind 4 never suffered to | possessions, which it seemed then impossible she cou! - : have been some few cases of fever in the country, a few 2 AP oe ee eee pated grein inierashe-atinien ath, personages cep, than she has ever done before orsince. Atthat tims | Hom of the harbor of Sebastopel aa a ilhaw ea again. The attendance was lasing a tea | miles from where the families have had no commu: Barrie. march regularly to their climax with an unwavering | itis well known a plan was under consideration, towhicu | Ponder the entrance of our vessels dangerous; ut this 1a First Heat.—Belle of Saratoga won the pole, and led | nication for the last three months. J heard yesterday of J ck all around the upper turn and a couple of lengths | two ladies who have not been to Norfolk in that time who tothe quarter pole, in thirty-aix ghda half seconds, | pave peen extremely ily but, are now recovering. | There Jack broke going down the backstretch, and it was ot deaths wince Saturday; the few that are now lingering dis 5 to th w ability recover. It is terrible to ai ite thought that he would be distanced. Time healt | wil Se all gecpeaity ze aig states Pode Pams, Sept. 21, 1856 step; there is nothing to evol one's ardor or curiosity | Austria gave a half consent, for transferring Lomba: h Sept 9), 806 oacillation—no special pleading to bewilder the under- | dy to the Sardinian crown, secking a recompe> yess cl Bell of Sctastopel and Slocke—Rise of Bread Prices—Mar- | Moainge wor alt ercomplote, satistectory and logical as | i81be Fant for tbe loss which she would thus sustain i> etre tha lige aad coeny, flaeien con tinasemst eet at usrt—Diplomaticts at the Te Deum—The Arcidishop anc | a perfectly distributed syllogism, Hence it isa consola- | the West. The revolutionary mania spent itaelf, th | ru. site hoger’ many Deigetee Sn Ses the Emperoi’s Untorn Heir--An American Voice for | tion to know, that on the whole, the generation which | weakness of Austria passed away, and with it passed ti | rendered practicable or secure. On all these points, e bona h follows has quite as much enjoyment in the record | consideration of those proposals which up to that tiw | i cvever, we must wait for more recent information, for not the greatest obstacle. The harbor now contaias the mile pole, 1:13. Jack made a brush on the lower turn Liberty of Speech at the Statistical Congres: Fourth AC | of excitable times as their fathers in being eye | were, to say the least, not rejected. Now, the course « b Aseociation’’ continue in operation, Many widows and pty is Baperoncsitbelecl @f Witten of Wok | iineanee of. them, and Wat cites hantottore Who: | hue wat’ gpa beiign ie GastTabianeen or ‘Uiees chang the intelligence we have received only brings us down to | and up the homestretch, and was three lengths behind | o; phans are left destitute, many of ‘whont have just to Ulity—The Duke of Schastopot , shall read of the life and times of Louis Napo- | under consideration. The state of Italy excites seri: conitanedatindeteierrinab in fall pes: 1 when the mare came to the stand. Time, begin stra, for existence and scarcely know what to a baggie leon—how he ventured again and agnin—how he | uneasiness, and no State is more aware than Austria , | **#sien o! apse gp Second Heat.—They were head and head when the word | ‘0 (0 cbiain a livelthood—even mow they are suffering, The illumination by which the Parisians celebrated the | failed, was mocked and laughed at—how he rose again, | that the whole arrangements in that Peninsula resem: Deftat of the Wualiah at th Th . the ugh they are willing to work, yet for the present there eapture of South Sebastopol, was so general, without dis- | swept tothe surface by the irresistible tide of events—how | @ house of cards—ff one be touched alll fall into confusi: The a ee a he Redan—The | was given, but the mare soon shot away and led to the | jx nothing them to dc—and many stout men who live tinetion of party (the house of M.Thiers, tor example, being | he grappled with difficulties, and finally outrode the hur- | Ia revolution were to break out in Naples, therefore Recall of Gen. Aa manded. quarter pole a length and a half—time, thirty-eight | Ly their daily labor and at other times are able to sup- of party ( Ss 7 ble, being | ricane, seizing by the throat the power that had been | and the existing monarch seems bent ia his madness « [From the London Times, Sept. 29.) seco Jack closed on the mare going down the back- | port their families in comfort, are thrown on public cha- as brightly lit up as that of his neighbor, M.Millaud), a8 to | canted the ie windlng-ebeet™ of his progenitor, will derive | forcing his people into rebeilion—it would extead oy The honor of England must be preserved at any cost to | stret: he broke at the half mile pole, but did not lose | sity. It will be a long time yet before all these matters much—time, 1:133;. On the lower turn Jack reached sib ted. the Balle’s wheel, but beoke up swinging-on the lome- | "> roy vensene Ee ao Romo, Oe 10, 165. caught first and got clear . She broke again a : the travente, ne ‘again Jack lapped her. He, hwives Another great man has fallen among us. Yesterday I broke at the distance stand, and the Belle won the heat. | was informed, by a gentleman from Portsmouth, that the Time, 2:32. Rey. F, Develin, of the Catholic church, breathed his last, Third Heat.—Good start, the mare took the lead and p opened @ Lap of a lenpth ania half to the quarter pole, | ter the second attack. From both he recovered. Chrix- jenraitety seve et Las snare Lay. Dir Fee = tians of all denominations, and politicians of all political ‘ing down the backstretch, and ea reeds, unite to do honor to the memory of ruly fhe freaks, and went to the half mile pole in 15. Jack | Teegy We gl xy arn fie nad earry the memory back to the féles of the republic of 1848. | as much pleasure from the recital as ourselves, who have | the whole country, and Austria, whose hold on Lombaruy | Perfonal feelings. The safety of the brave men she has Oddly enough, i first gia however, the Bourse ful | taken nee of every cog as the wondrous wheel turacd | was compared by Prince Metternich to be, in the best ‘c- | sent out must be a consideration paige) to all notions 5 8 . , bonoal limes, aa insecure ay a man who holds a wolf by ti: | of delicacy. Why should we not speck plainly what has when the fall of Sebastopol was announced. The Bourse ‘Anieh journal states that in comteyuenee of the mis. | et; “would be involved in all the dangers which | been passing in the minds of men of all classes during Fore, you remember, when the result of the battle of | understanding which hasariven between the United States furrounied, her in 1848 while ahe could m a Oot Sckemapol newede posi amt and Denmark, the latter has judged it expedient to send | expect Ru come a second ti e rescue, It iy pol, k ‘Waterloo was made known st Paris—but this was easily | O00 Deri stnforccments to the ‘gerrisons of the Dan- | suproted therefore, thal Austria would Listen complacenity | the Redan did not succeed” prepared the public for som: explicable then, And the fall of the Bourse the other | {{p’colonies in the haat Indica, to any plan which would honorably relieve her of the burd. . | ‘nisfortune, and mingled « gloom with its rejoicing. day, on receipt of news ofa victory, may be accounted ‘The Madrid journals of the 15th have arrived. The | of governing a country so turbulent, while she would find « } '* con more — known ome ot te ba great as for without difficulty by the fact that every broker had | Apoca again insists on the opportuneness of Spain making | « mpensalion in the extension and consolidation of Ber ‘pow: | ®t Inkermann, and many a househol’ mourn @ an alliance with the Western Powers against Russia. The | (wards the Kast and down the course of the Danube, an member struck down in a conflict which it anew Jat Jong held orders—especially orders from the provinces— | (amor Publico confirms the statement already made that | which would at the same time atford an opportunity t- | “Victory. Then, for a long fortnight the nation 3 good man. Mr. Develin 0 sell out as soon as such news should arrive, the proposed alliance will be the first question submitted | reward the Kiug of Piedmont for the promptitude wit. | Wil: deep anxiety the arrival of details. troke on the lower turn and lost a length; he lapped the | reat and good man. Mr. ‘bad not fally eosoveres aa Sika tation)? avery boipiail Viisialivtiges [1 the Cortes by the government, on their re-sssembling. | which he has espoused and the fidelity with which heh “The official despatch came at Inst, brought by an officc | mare ewinging cn the homestretch. mare broke at | from bis first attack, when, unabie to resist the call made Sebastopol i Wade, that terthe hect of tatgrvention belng resotved | maintained the bause of the Allon of the Staff, as if such a narrative as it contained must ir | the drawgate and again at the distance stand, and yet | upon him by suffering humanity, he left his room to once Just week, adding—“ but stocks have fallen also, and | [the expedition to be sent aguinet the Russigas will be | We are far from affirming that these are the scheme. | sure the bearer’s reward. It will be seen by last night’. | with all these drawbucks came in a neck ahead. The do his Master’s work; a second time did the archer judges, however, thought that was too much of a good | ™Te i thine, and gave the tase Jack, Time, 2:32. bend his bow, but the arrow flew wide of its mark, Fourth Heat.—Jack took the lead, but broke before he | Again he left his home to minis’er to the wants of the ot around the upper turn and came to a atand still. | fick and dying. Many a bruised heart did he bind up; to The mare was a d ahead on the backstretch. On exon spirt werds @ nd up the homestretch Jack made a tre- mare broke at the score, and Jack Dread has risen |” The fall at the Bourse was but tempo" | under General Zarald or General Prim. Thechangesmade | which at the present moment occupy the cabinets of E2 le that Major Curson has received the reward for rary. But the price of bread has in effect been raised; | in the personnel of the royal household, in virtue of the | )ope. But we do say they are schemes not unfamiliar to | Job's ae. Feit Me pec '¢ is yet fo come, and, if Te that the highest teh, | ZE™ regulations, had not been so important as had | the minds of politicians, ‘and that there are not wanting | Mt @7¢ correctly informed. the govwrnment are in come per- and although it in quite probable that the highest notch | tern “expected :’ the Duke de Baylen being retained | persons to urge that the priaciples on which they ar. | Parity as to is nature, We cain tell them. He desereed re- ‘thas not yet Leen reached, yet the public have murmured | as first major domo, and having been nominated keeper en should be ocr. into practical effect. Great ya te yey cme pe cele was, wil hat v . of Her Majesty's privy seal; the Duchess de Alba - | di ties are no in the way, The first and most . Bat containe’ eel eng igen A Matra Mar aha Bo bye ne camaresa-mayor; M. Martin de los Heros, | obvious is that the transfer of the Danubian provinces to | 404 what it omiited led to the same conclusion, Tu the lower turn mendous brush will see by the Moniteur, has again bad to announce it tint t ‘Austria would bea violation of the princi British army had teen beaten, and eaten, it was reasona- | won the heat by a neck and shonlders. Time, 2:38. a does not neglect the old food question—te gouwrnement se | "AL the Universal Exhibition gradually approaches the | the Allies took arms. ‘The ostensible mative: for wench | ble to teppasr, Mhrowh the tnenpactty of th Generat who |" FYth Heal.—The ware took the loud and kept jt to the the inged is préoccupe @ juste titre d la question toujours si grave des aub- | term of ite dissolution its attraction seems daily to in- | the sword was drawn was to prevent the dismembe. | will send home such a despatch on such an . {| sud. Jade wane couple of hngthe baling we Ge qene. | cnures fo’ Euly £ the | bossen of the great victim, crease. The swarms of foreigners, of English especially, | ment of the Turkish ¢mpire, and it would be difficult.» ]| TW° days more elapsed, and the fall truth was told. | ter pole in thirty-eight seconds, and to the half mile pole | and he fell. by this time his corse has bepn laid beneath in 1:18. Jack trotted finely all the way. The mare won | the cold siatances, Well it may. ‘This bustness of hungering,” | itt" trong its oorridors’ and ‘long withdrawing | reconcile that profession with any act which should wits. {«The celamty was deeper, darker, more humiliating, thar Ad as Jean Pau) called it, is @ serious business, and rulers | gictes,” are prodigious, and we hear but one expres | draw from the rule of the Sul-an two of his fairest pro. | €¥en the most desponding had feared. The story of that | the heat by balf a length. Time, 2:32. notes will ring on through time. everywhere must take account of it. sfon of tnquali admiration. It is impossible, 4 , | Yinces. It is argued, indeed, that the integrity of fur- | terrible day, related at such length, and with such The following fs a summary -— ‘ On Cane! evening eh Se Moeae of Mr. Davids was di i ntatives ofeevern, | for any description to do justice to the perfection | key cannot be understoed in the same sense ax the | Power, in tnese columns, has been read in every corner | Tumspat, (ct, 9—Match, $1,000, mile heats, best three burglariou iy opened, ri ita most valuable con- ‘The absence of the diplomatic repress 1 | which after d its ‘slow length along” this won- | phrase would be interpreted of any other Europecn | Of the British Islands, and, translated into many lan- | in five, in harness, see a ie ne Btates—Belgium, Sweden, Denmark, Bavaria, and War- |-Jerful museum af industrial art has at length attained. Hagia: Veeuans, Turkey is an agglomeration of roses, | Guages, is now before out friends and fors all over Europe. | 1). Véifer named br. m. Belle of Saratoga, 1 1 2 2 1 | eld lacy next door, sick with the fever, and alone; their temburg—from the 7+ Deum, is explained simply enough | And to the last the work of improvement goes on; fresh | differing from each other in blood, in religion, in law, at has bern the feeling of the uublic durfog the last | W. Peabod: named b. g- © Jack 22112 et een aa ae not be thwarted. from town, It really had no more poll. | fiowers are brought to bind the Dorns of the vietion ga tte | and in the bonds which attach them’to the fuckteh rule, | TWO days, let rach a a i firme, 2:39 94 =2:32—2:32—2738-—2:82, Leap | a Point,’ one of the most ba: Tat signitioanee riers the presence ‘of the Mintsters of | sacrifice draws nigh, and the holder of a wane ticket ey the erg mare ge ot Faynt, whose subjection (5 =< Pri it i Syrnted oof r. ee Ke ~ - , me: above horses trot again on Tuesday next under the st As our q {Meckanes a ie bs fog Peace Austria, and the United States of America. ‘The | cannot be absent three or four days without finding, on | his suzerain in tter than a name, to the Hospo. | * + Stanpeory py te eg nt teptnnidt Hoe gil epidemic. “It was a sad to p whole ‘duit is ‘considered by diplomatists as a mere | his return, fresh objects of interest. A disposition is | dars of the Principalities, whose wway is dependent on given by our correspondent will sho the com CENTREVILLE COURSE, L. I.—PACING. Saou . oa ely ecikn tee lated by one evincing itself on the part of seme of the French expo- | the pleasure of the Sultan, but i: practically supreme | ™ander-in-chiet was informed of what actually took place, aan ereeme Pemravery themes cook” cand Austria | cints tedevote their articles for the benetit of the wound. | while it lasts. Ttis maid that the resolution to guaran, | It may be that eens enaunte teat aoe a ee reaE uy celebrated at Paris the | ed soldiers of the Fast. Among the foremost of them | tee the in lence of an empice ro lovely Enit to. | “BAdorned style, at a general's despatch is 0 be perros g Mec Hn is Malame Erard, widow of the celebrated piano- | gether as this must be interpreted only ina large ani | cousilered analagoas to ® royal speech. The full an Tenepar, Oct, 0.—Match, $2,000, mile heats, in harness. | “"N Rony to inform you thet De, Williman hae ful George Spicer named g. ¢. Hero. 1 1 | recovered, ta that Dr, Wright still if H. Woodruff named r. g. Pet., 2 2 | of the former is now on her way to Norfolk, to join success of the allies, ‘Hurrah for the victors!’ is sarrafives of Marabal Pelisster and General Time, 2:82:20, husband, who intends to make Norfolk’ his home maker of that name, whose husband has latel iberal sense. We are not casuists enough to resolve | i! J ; always and everswhere thelr ery. «om the country, to | died. The reader will, perhaps, remember, that ‘we | the dificulty; but we are sure that the people of this | Niel #how, however, that ie a gal mag SUFFOLK COURSE, L. L—TROTTING. Toe mortality, from fever, | to fs much leas ae. may fg | Mak an Yee ieebors’t . | drew bis attention some time , to a piano ex- | country will insist on that interpretation which is | Tived at this ow. 2 ueste ; a 7 the ‘Tuurspay, Oct. 4.—Purse, $25, one mile and repeat, in in it has yet been; but three have since last even- ‘oMiciate in person at the 7 evn nt Limielf tothe Con. | hibited by M. Erard, the value Of which was estima. | most in accordance with honor and guod faith. There js | Horse Guards must admit that hgeenetal’s brevity | areas. ing’s sunset up to the time T write, about 12 o'clock—a ity gfe of his discourse in which he congratu- | ted at 25,000 francs. It was constructed after another reason against a premature arrangement of | Ought not to excuse important sions, and .that | ¢. Carti’s ¢, m. Miller's Damsel 1 1 | Weman of Mr, ‘d's, Mr. Cully, and John Colley, som * 2 2 | ofthe late Jobn G. Colley, master ahip builder in our city, ‘ar. ud very well known. The weather continues cool. NORFOLK, From St. Joux, N. B—We have St John 1 1 2 1 | of October &. In relation to the fishery commer tae 2 2 1 2 | St. Jobm Courier says:— “We understand fhat the commissioners have made considerable progress in their labors on this coast the rorll’s w. m. Lady Sontag the fashion of the clavicle used in the time of Louis the | these grave matters. The partitions of State; trom mere- | @ despatch may be dignifiea without being wninvelligible. |), ‘cid Doll J. Vails bom. Holl... Fifteenth, and ornamented with the most beautiful de- | ly political considerations seldom prove lasting. Unless | The British General Ted every ome to believe tha: only he 7 ‘ “ condition” . | signs copied from the works of Watteau. Twelve thou- | the will of the people be consulted—and nothing is more | 1,600 were engaged a a pes ede aati Sgn | ech hinge a | ene spate teint | Sad nt al ere Mg lh re ot vthece 36 me TemnGasormiippes the ar Hig fo the Oidboralions of tein rere the lar } return and interview with sir Rdward Codrin, i F o 0 fested " | loring ot the work, there ia no reason to suppose the ar- | according to the deliberations of foreign rulers—the im. aay 9 Payee é titude to the Archbtaeny: for Se renelane ametae) tist had been overpaid, These beautiful Rableaux re | mediate effect may be symmetrical and rae bat, | tn, of his permission to take the Royals, and of the au ify wi t which made thi sistance too late ‘ lations. The passage in question was published in th painted in medallions over the lid and sides of the piano, wanting all cohesion, the ar ents will spend fall papry. od aaipen Phong | seed seb lated the Emperor in quite poetical style, op the prospec ‘of domestic eye, wale b, inthe midst of public trium ime, 2:63-3:48. Save Day.—Match, $50, mile heats, best three in five, in harnese—owners to drive. (, Raynor's b. m. Katy Darling... 5C. Bandign’a g. m. Mary Jane... Time, 3:11—3:00—3:03— ‘Conatitutionnel the body of which is pale green, profusely gilded. The } into confusion and decay. While we cheerfall it i chumenee iaial denial of tos temeest reguanepe Beery oe cramee ia that at an’ ieecrument the case of | that it ia the pert ofa great etatesman to guilethemere, | word... The assertion hat the assaulting party wah st | raay corrae, CHL 9 miotting purse, | [ieettacatom, netwithrlanding the time let, awing to Set eigua viora nerves Char re aeeenneY © | hich is oF Sevres porcelain, ‘The mechanical part is in | meata which he seams to follow, we are also satsided that to the wimort we know to beat variance with the | | Rucnmow Corner, Cuicaao, Oct. 9—Trotting purse | Un, Caahiman’s delay in re Haller, "where. the The Internatianal Statistical Congress terminated their | the highest style of Frardian manufacture, and its tones, | itis empiricism, and not statesrmanshi; net The umber of, men m engaged it not stated cles eo z " Bite Gomminsioner and his staff awaited tor early a ‘abors on Monday last by a visit to the Emperor in the | #8 elicited occasionally by some brilliant performer, sent | events which are not ripe. The affal; por is ap appr g! Rew J A 4 1 ‘mo jeneral’ ery 4 ley proceeds westward ‘morning, Furie We tes detaa ti Ue temnian am ton ela to ter wi 0 Ir ready jon of the contest th 1 morning, and to the Minis' ‘ho bad officiated as ity | to theexhibition for the purpose, have brought down ‘dy complicated enough. The conduct of the war re- | of the by he i S af a whan A ine : dis. | the United States, commencing with the harbor of New President, evening. rapturous applause from the crowds assembled round it, | quires allour attention, Im managing +) z . 7 on exstviint Paris the delegates to this Congress Well, this becutiful instrument has been presented to | men will find that they have en ‘We learn ae Co eonmnpencant - Sremnpraersl tes- nal ews “ 3 ee Sound a programme for the discussions already prepare | Prince Napoleon, President of tho Universal Exhibition, | concerns of the Principalities can afiord wo wait, timony that it last bap hem sre eas Ais eezange ime, 2: one. ee 2: ibid lk ha: 0: iltl ee in the ‘ireaax of the French ministry. is wasan | with the following touching letter from Madame Krard, —_—— that a Commander-in. fw ae ia advantages, WISCONSIN. 7 Jeutena t Governo ton. of excellent means of restricting debate, but was not at all | given in the Monadecur of this mo — ‘The Great Assault on Sebastopol. should be in oe ae pA Pees oA otwil- ning Couns®, Oct, 4.—Puree, $50, two mile bod nsw a, poe Sn 3) be nee agreeable to the Ri lish, and most of the ‘Monseigneur—In_ order to contribute to the soulaye- {From the London Times, Sept. 29.) jans could bea on os iad Ree mee me —, n harness, w creer Taree ees hed Pomp de ‘eit of foreign — who had counted on something like | "nt of the army of the Kast. I request bd acceptance In order to form a correct military ertimate of the gi- o Beene tara Paneer’ ve oat Bus of gtiagabe: 11 coe 1 ; ed ‘aot on wien st, oi of Loa SY gear ane | Sa erSouctpa etars”nuveGua tae a | sna ea Sa te Central Rose Uns wi shh econ, ae fe vn Oo he Congress was divided into sestions, which were | with paintings and gilded bronze, which among other crer Whom tay bad Goatrol. i. allow. But, if the aseistant mil'ta: Secretary had an a | opportunity of learning the true fistory fYbat fatet nominally to preseut reports that, like the prog-amme, | #ticles of my exhibition, is placed in the transept of the | report of General Niel, who bas commanded the The Polymer ‘ation of. 8h, Joba hove had been, it is said, worked out im advance. Valais de Industrie, However beautiful this instrament | neering department of the French army since the deat i; oo J Coun SrRixa Covnss, 0 From one of the continental delegates I have heard of | may be, Monseigneur, the last regret of my husband | of General Bizot, and to the second report of Marchal | Sghty we doabt not tbat LB aad iT convince the | yours, best three in five, in barn crrengments eee We ees an interesting scene in one of these sections, where an | Ws, that it should not be more worthy of the noble pur- | Velissier, which resumes in a very complete aud lucid | Secretary of WA vt ature of the doen: 21211 Nl fon of the tribe im the costume of di attempt being made by an Austrian delegate to snuff out | pore for which he destined it,* manner the incilents of the combined assault and the | ment he wrought. ria ‘ 1 drawn, | ‘ian procession ep tage oo dteerees ea the light of inquiry, on American voico—that of George ‘The Exhibition is, b peing turned to great practi extraordinary siege, To borrow Why fs hme ee te enna Crvemmens: tn os 5 | ee , ba cage ‘ a 4 Sumner—was raised to vindicate the liberty of discussion h government. Comparisons wage of this report : his communica ' Ds pgp Rag answer—ho was bm — qpecancianitnemetilintns and the rights of sclence ection and the most esrefal re- al, “terminated thix memora-| | ignorant of what passed, wr Gesirous VINGINTA Law Inteltgence. In the early part of the on & member anggeste | being: tween the products of England | ble siege, during whi Velieve the Lagny P ae should he | aga SY ows Antop hain! coneeou RON Ol rr 4 nea le the propriety of enlargi ground of debate, so as to | and France, gene ‘ulling In a feeling of self-satis- | beaten in the open fied scenes enacted ia 1 faa ‘ He sat in a t Broan aan oP ga da jockey Cia! A 0. SL Moserved. for Octobe 78 bring in as much inform as poarible bearing upon | faction that the time has when, with amore en- | attack of which had tions, The | his nose and eyes | 14 nite the cord gorse, $500, iy grey slg ee Re ST FGs, “comand Cosi otnneh the subject. He was stop ne presiding oifieial, | lightened policy, France bas 1'til from her former | besieging army had in | 800 guns | his cloak drawn ap over his head to prove ane Ay Ho. dam Betsey White: ” 9 11] th Ba'clock Monday morning. Oct. 8th, 1864 —Mornl and the Austrian delege med as much as his | tival. this ‘morning's Monite a most elaborate | mounted, which fired more than 1,000,00 Qa, and | both. He makes arrangements wi Mie thor. Doaweli's br. ta. Seine, 8 yeare'cld, bay Sats Toncletel, No tee i Soomeanet French eoll hae Poa: comparison of the lace inade by mactinery at No‘tingham | our approaches, dug dosing 396 days, of earlatm, * This is another J Mryelion, dom Bais, bylaviatua. se 1 2 8 | te for Oct. M1. Nos. 158, 158, ot a take the great Yat Calais, by which it is shown that, notwith«tanding | throogh @ rocky ground, to am ex‘c serauiting solemn irom the se vr TR Hall's g. g: Rattle, 6yeere cli, by Reg. — | ach . Hicks, counsel. No, 50” tatistion the secret of this fabric was only cnginnd | (54 English mitles,) w for * ; mer, dame Lally, by Tiehiow oie 88 ORs Mr. John Van Baren fo mii of pe | fu 2610, when that countey, bed ysse | the place and wth in ’ i vate 7 Neblovs. 3 ef ani : us ” wie e le an’! ali its applia x “tt ae During the siege we