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NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1856. ‘The Neapolitan Question. country. Not onty therefore are these the troope of | half-civilized, ignorant, and full of s jealous fear, ve whisky. Whoever imagines that the s¢- . THE CANADA’S MAILS prrentectaaicaes Otte a 96) different the garrison may be onwnposed whieh we cannot say to be unfounded, of the hard- Phat the Merrimac was a trump muy resembles our Irisd and Sopt: diatila . nannnnnnnnne ‘We are anabie to estimate the truth of a report which | of variovs Letioualitios—italians, Croats, Bo. headed strangers who are so ruthlessly edvanciog pay ge ge ym selected trom this noisy group tions sold under that name, will err nots little. The 4 Sema aie he last. tow beers; she ots bemians and Poles, may all atthe same time be under } ¢q put their portion of the world in order. If we an old salt, wi sppearance | liked, und who com: | is, that American whisky very mich resembles p2 ° THE FINANCIAL CONDITION CF EUROPE. ‘an cficlat rupture between the Westera Powers | arms 1@@ the defence of the fortress of the German con OF alwavenaceid besuchen of the peice: leading | Mczded himeelt to my goot graces by seking & less | Drandy th color and fn taste. although made {rom ©>¢>, *| and Naples may yet be averted. It would certainly | federation. Thoarmy of the Grand Duchy of Badea ie Pee rele ore 28 0) Peace, i exorbitant sum for ime o8 on board than s7me of | it is purified from the tuselo! and other accessories of our wi be @ strange sequel to the incredible course of | not consi ered quite a match for her neighbor om tne other bloodshed, in old communities of set | bis ynbors. be wus the sharpest practitioner of core oplrk, nee by pomabining it apparently, with conan folly which King Ferdtoand hes run, if, coa- | side of the Rbive, end Rastadt is sialleriy garrisoned tled law and wellama/gamated population, it is | the lot I co not duubt; and that the moderation of passage | thic , the odor and flavor of brandy are imparted. AFFAIRS IN SPAIN- tamactously reject'ug every form of felendly warning, | Tbe question of the lathmue certainly 1s likely to prove | certainly rather a stronger effurtin the way of iu-| money for tbo outward cruise was built upon and | it was now growing #0 dark tha: pu furtner ex, 's he sboals be burried into concessions by the first de- | difficult and delicate, Even Mr. for whose | ference to the authorities of Panama, or any | expectations, of realizing the difference very 1y ethnological. or explosive, could be - monstration of that dis ure which be has! election grown vp people, who have never been | part of them, with connivance at a popular out! Detween his spparent moderasion and toe higher Sgure | profitably carried’ op; { responded, therefore, to # palita kpowingly pro: 8 weakness ver,can- | in @ lunatic asylum, affirm we have on vhat uneasy soil. of hie brethren, by driving s fresh bargain with metor | invitauon from the commarding officer, aud adjourned to THE NEAPOLITAN QUESTION, | aot bo thovgnt ‘a Power | ed five millions of’ money—though biy we | No politician can dispute the substantial | te Teturn voyage, 80 soon.us wo two should bo ance which shelters imsignificauce, | most favorable to the oid country the | interest of U! ey al t afloat, ardlathis mercy. He was, however, s wary and relies for ‘of tts an: | three, might, it elected, rind it convenient to raise thas | 7 Gar) fy Inited States establishment | gipiomatist, and did not venture all at ouce to broach THE SCANDAL OF PARIS. tagonists. the truth, the aouracy of this ra- | clamor against England which seems to have a sort of | Of sate and easy conditions of between the | that imrorfant topic. ever been in Foglaud before— c ‘mor does not seem to us to be a question temse poli- | morbid popularity witn the vo in the State. We | Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. tion tor My Charon was talkative and intelligent. Am old | which, indeed, applico to most of the officers, I wae powennreerern coed Meal importance. Wa cann>t persuade ourselves that it | cannot, however, anticipate events, or compel the coming | them vitally cepcerne the of the re- | man-o’ war’s-man, bo had been everywhere, and | pleased to learn that their impres:ions of the old country matters greatly breach of diplomatic | stru; to show its band. Few elections of any sort | ayarees of which they are legit im poases- | therefore to the’ States. He was an enthusiastic | were favorable; and tha: beiween ledios and gentlemen ‘The American Frigate Merrimac Still the Ob= | intercourse, the affairs of the intervention be patched up have been #0 momentous as that tick ls now not mavy | sion. We may’ well understand their fully of the pew and the old coustry. national characteristion ro land 80 ag to escape wounding the amour propre of any A days dias, Tt may lead toa lly internal contict, | glive to its importance, without necessarily Ject of Carlesity ln England, of whether the demonstration be suffered to proceed is | followed by & dissolution of the Union, violent aad tratri: | impatin p jut to them a fresh access, of their old coa- Q ‘the spirit authoritatively aeniyaes, to it. Reverting to | eldal. It may lead to a general war, which may involve int r le acquaintance &, &, & that view of the French note In tho Monivur which we | all Europe, or it may show, as we sincerely hope it will, arage for new dominion, Atthe same | became Mrs. Charon in due course of time; how he | rants me in calling them so) as characteristic of Eoglaud. expressed yesterday, we must repeat that we have | that the elasticity of the constitution chosen by our kin: @, they do not stand alone in the world with re- | set her up in ® chandler’s shop whilst he went to | are the greenness of our fields the florid complexion of Dut the jeeblest hope of any practical benefit to | dred aciocs the Atlantio is equal to the emergency, Sad to beeping an efficient police on the Isthmus | the West Indies: how, on coming back from the Weat In- | cur people, and the heedleesness of weather which cha- ‘The Cunard steamship Canada, Capt. Lang, arrived at | Italy from an Anglo-French Interference which seta of Panama. itis a proper and lawful object on | dies, he found the shoptabut up, and the loadstone It racterizes the Engiith Indies This latwer bad, indeed, been a subject of convereation between one of the young par yes myself at an carlier lod of the day, arrived here early thia morning. We received afew | sible. The band that strikes off the and I liked her the better for't ’” A certain conversational interregnum now ensued. tims of bids her stand erect rr After our narrow escape from a war in- English papers by the New Haven train yesterday after- | times of aly, aud bigs Nor state band i | United States on the subject of Central America, it pm od ED yD ger la trade pothetc recital 10 mo of, bis mortal Iondstone's charm + Room, should be, if the blow is to be dealt effectually and for- | is rather tantalizing to see another difficulty ‘“ loom- Ty ne echenal simp and Australie. on im the bosom of my ola galt some of those turbu- A lotier from ft. Petersburg, of the 14th ultimo, in tho | ever; but’ fom wheresoever the daliverance comes it } ing” in the distance, Our readers have probably eericess ence from the scene off-action is of 80 | ‘leat emotious agaizss the throaging of which Genstitutionnel, of Paris, nays that the Emporor was in | ™U*™ be aimed at the destruction of foreign rule from } not fi en an attack, attended by a serious loss of | | » if the paths of our legitimate men are wont to fortify themselves by alcohol, opium and the Alps to every shore of the sea. A me of | jife property, which was made some time since intersect each other at the point under consideration. | the weed. My man adopted the latter. A certain little great danger on the 12th, at Cronstact, in consequence of sympathetic intervention which admits the pretensions | on the passengers of the Panama Rail In that | The strange and offensive element of the os: on | box cameforth out of some mysterious recess, and out pore pies a review, at which his Majesty was: Rapreee reste panes with h her “a8 sine and aon of attack ‘Ameriean eltizens were the principal euffer- wulen the Oahines of Drotea deli- ¢ Spe for peed pe amie gd and lastly out of the preseat, ofa squadron which t# to cruise in tho i The United States it immediate): rg wolves of the hich’ obtain ot interennédit ers. vernment y 1 Mr. Charon’s was a sailin d the wind not North Sea, brig from some mismanagement, ran into | finer countries, Ta ie bona Oe eee Oh ncaa ne’ | despatched a special commrlenioue , Mr. Corwine, fact that the Ciayton Bulwer treaty, and all the ne- | uppropitiour, though involving a cmsiderable amount of out with @ profession of concurrence and readiness their part to seek to bind ther their young pos- | with her frien ‘The shop didn’t do, sir, J tell ‘ee, Boston, at right o'clock yesterday morning. Her mails | to cooperate with Austria. The thing is impos. The New Central American Difficulty. sessions on the Pacific with their t ‘of | that’s all abo: but she had psid every’ fardin’ owin’, shackles from tho (From the Manchester Examiner and Times, eH 4 capital and labor in the Ni it is fo warlike.” T'was struck wih e circumstance Unusual as @ poychological reflection in the braim ani im) Of one so thoughtless pulsive as a ia all services he is wout to be. T‘camated the fostce of his inference, and told him he would not fail to demon- i ‘otiations and compacts by which it has been rein- the Imperiah steamer with considerable violence. Seve- | vailing advantages, inquire into the circumstances of the outrage. Tais yer crogs-sailicg. Luffing about on the larboard tack, our | strate the truth of it when grown to the years of maturity ‘ are based on the admission that this great | eyes again alighted on the Yankee frigate. This ‘rie \d— spliced. : Tal persons of tho Emperor's suite who wore standing | | [From the London Post, Oot. 22.) Re a ete ie eoryod, are { channel should be preserved from the paramount in- | a¥oused ‘Gharen's tind to another bet cfperceptions,”” | “Wor sll wrafal purposes, my narrative ls aan ead. close to bim om the deck of the verscl, and some of tho | ,, Worincersly congratulate (be governments of Eaglend | how deliberatiog upon the stops which may require | Sueuice of .ny single nation. “Pine crafl that, sir,’’ he remarked—‘‘very.”” ‘How my kind hosts, having previously ascertained that = sam, wong pened by (he enpnensien. tho Two Sillies. "We consider this act aa highly imap. Corwine states ‘tion’ I nodded assent by 'a sort of intuition, for, trutn to | four-poster and feathers were by no means essential to ‘ o Two . We consider this actas highly impor | to betaken. Mr. states his conviction that | Settlement of the Sound Duce—Policy of the | say, my nautical knowleege is of the slerderest. | my nocturnal happiness or rest, put at my disposal a Four Russian men-of-war bave arrived at Kiel. They | tent, and involving great Kuropean {nterosts. {t will bo | the attack on the railway depot and the general at- United States xowards Denmark, True, at an earlier period of my ilfe 1 bad spent | cot—how I slept, anp dreamed, and woke at the rewillec, are the Vidorg, Poikan, Castor and Philoctete. Their non Set the pater, is (ek then meee oy eer tack on the railway were the result of a plan previ- (From the London Post, Oct. 18.] o Guatelite ime ee hark aw man of-war, | and returned whence I came, after having bidden adieu destination is the Mediterranean. Piication at Naples, ae ‘two Great Powers Whicn ously formed. 1n his opinion, the police were parties ot ‘at last tolerably certain that the vexed ques: | bnt she was a mere guardship, tenanted by my host, | for eye and ever—as it most like,y will chance to be—to ‘The French Miuistor of State has dirocted cortificates | represent the civifisation of the world openly prosiaim | % #, and the military not merely failed to perform of the Bound dues is about to reach a definite solution, | » certain admi.al, bie wife, telr babies, and s pro- | the Merrimac and b am] Cr paptage ‘are things 60 > their duties, but were guilty of direct connivance. } 904 t is fortunate thai {t should beso. The dues aro out | per number of fema'e domestics, There wore also tobe distributed to all tne familie navirg etudren born | {Bet they, will no longer countenance » foveraing ey», | TVOE thot uirles he bas instituied ho is Ted vo | éalenow, Wovgh ikely ax old a the oldest of Euro | Four pout beds In tat man-of war, 20 1 leave the om the 16tb March last, anc therefore godchildren of their | not remember any period when such noble | believe that the government of New Granada, in | Meu im the depn of the Vintegs, eee ace eie Oly | Tender to imagine how strangely she must have been tory Majesties. Ascistance has already been"granted by the | inspirations have dictated such a jual, disinterested, and outrage was committed, is | sition was real property, they were first levied. | and the Sitee witen Terdie ire fully eauigped, von whose tervidggg the @vil List to the poorest among them, which is to be con. | ¢ levated policy on the of united England aad | utterly incompetent to ‘d protection to life | The narrow strait, irom either shore of which they could going, Sighting war ship. fioved annually; and in case the parents should die, tho | |Sonetts sri doa oe inateiad eatin ee property oa the Iechimne. I He yn upon the gor. Pounce upon their prey, was too much for the cael Vers good port of Yankee, ti, tm tbat ore feign; he btainn “3 they proba! took there’ ood and bad on ‘om, as there other peo- orphans are to be provided for at the charge of the Civil | be any immediate reason which is at all selfish in the Zoe pM leg Bg of New Granada, as well as | West biack mail they ‘could get from every vessel | ple.’ jon. [Paris Correspondence (Oct. 14) of tne London Post. A very important event for the musical world taken place week in Paris. M. Calzado, the proprie- tor of italian Opera, had announced the representa. ‘Mist. conduct of England and France towards Naples, itia of when they fonnd entangled 4 tion of three of Verdi’s last and most popular operas. vaarantees for the future safety of n- y im those difficult waters. Too Whereupon I expressed my gratification. The ‘‘Trovatere’”’ ‘when io! Sho detest accounts faoee Madrid say teat the nccouche-| the mest Rameene charade niece Oey sens Si ‘= lent gnee thie por cart ‘suet eoenttte Sound nee ta he a emia preserve of the “The old Yankee game, 4 built ships o? the line and oaien Prohibits “h' proauaon pod da 4 Calzado re rent of the Infuata Dacheas of Montpensicr is officially | lorming = government tho executive abaset ot whisn | be recommends that the forces of the United States [cen eg ilar pr beara Bon geo A an Tea cee LTT Pena | Laman t8 tag Se SASU, Conn fan, peceslanian 0 omen which have long since become the declared to have taken place sooner than wasanticipated, | silenate the people from the throne, and prepare revolu. | should occupy the Isthmus from sea to sea. The | Neustria asd Silly. The Baltic, bowover, wasone of the | Gout Know, sin whatio. make of ihe van, why, sure | ¢heveerla cud playa ta evcey ony na Europe wrbece Ital. tion with the same certainty as certain seeds of | New York Sun, in adverting to the subject, remarks Hest seats of map: lows, ‘consequence, « h gran % , , carl commerce. When London did 4 : trex tegn Ore wo at brn dere raved | snes nag Sralte'tuce ue draaccas | the the Unie Sates, goverment has x daicae ) Se ead ezen Gr pecans 00 ente, | lone nia e Paakoge genre rnd Thr | wine ara who ace ang ha mune teem ea of foreign oer a aa ter 6 ar ety a duty to perform. Ita citizens must,be protected, at 7a an Ne eaeentek Ny S55 wild fol -whencets dertven continued he, as he neared the vessel, ‘look at ‘om | remarkable that such an obvious abuse of law, or rather tebe prosent wers unable to get to Seville in time, ‘The | Mow Py watt Tie or othe Kitig to Mmecit wire | Whatever hazard. If the occupation of the Isthmus name, the Hanse Towns were ® powerful confedera | grinning out; how thin at the muzzle, but thick astarn.”’ | such astrange attempt to create a special law for M. @ucen in a decree published on the 18th had hastened 10 | fig own conscience, his Swiss troops, and nis’ peo. | i# essential to secure their safety the government See Indeed, 1s was very much A few more remarks on the Merrimac, her arma‘ should have been contended in the law courts. But eo ib confer on the young Infanta the Cordon of the Noble La- | ple’s batred, to reflect on the future. He will probably | must not shrink from this measure. protfotion of commerce against the piratical chie | and her intentions, made the time speed fast, A. was, The author of the “Trovatore”’ bas which shut bim: ‘at Gaeta, and in the of hie Thus, at the very moment: we were hoping tains of the Scandinavian seas, as well as the robber | other things my informant told me he did not believe never entered into the head of Rossini, or orany eet eee foul be compelled to feed on bis own falee pride.” In tuo | that the Central American ty was finally ig ogg tm ana enn tr Gece rk Ra ME out of the water, | other modern master. ‘They were content with the pay The Liverpool Times of October 26th, haa the follow- } past there ie nothing leit for him but regret, ‘and in the | rid of, up starts this new coma tion, which wae oe ue goer Ay ta = penne food aotffra lek a pete concurrenes,_ thal ment they received om production of thele sew < f 5 A iv E e most wg: future nothing but fear. | He has not broken up | threatens us with the same dan; another form. | Italy,’ which st lime amounted to ‘seven, | Yankee frigate, ‘rowed stealthy to 'Portamouth, and pe eg oy one Trustworthy accounts from Madrid are to the effect seelene -_ ith his two mont = hbors, f The permanent occupation of the Isthmas, from au; -two in number, and for coi commanded } { din; . wound Temind. po nag my pas ge Ng red nen ko eed toanut. bis eyes ena drt ara he ful Baas Long cause whatever, by United States tes governmen . the and detea the power of Rng t Avcatindy, tenia Sekai teil aaahin "eer peed gs 4 coming Pepretented bp in sal ferent auc Goen | Sim, Mouth 0 er Sovereign fSorpe rout | Giayton-Dulrer treaty, de stject of which wants | fury Sed ths Dun chim whe Sound Dos anol upon | ily darn to hat mtn mht ot De me ros Saypdy titution to the clergy of the na. | Were addressed by Yngland and France after ihe | secure the entire neutrality of the territory be- y. my rerum. Sowover, w is Tene, » since bas been legally bought » governmen: |, bad ‘ol the coaste on buth sides of the 3oand chief object of visit it a and sold by thousands of Spaniards. The King, it ap- ge ae consideration plane for amelioration, whilet Bos just consented to the restoration of the Bay } until about two hundred years age—for the province of ammonel Danlgres gems, and ss hanlioeed er prods one peared, was her sole adviser in this care. Nareaes on | (he motives of France are thoroughly appreciated | Islands to the republic of Honduras. Not only would | Scania was not ceded to Sw deavored to persuade ber, but in vain Ho them lost pe amen” pia ae sueaeu ie tae S the United States be brought by this measure into | by the treaty of Roeskeld, it werer tm ofered. ts Zoggnai, 2 gpicntia Game | il, oor ot cacsarege wows aad reratosasry | oolision with the Brtsh goverament, but the lavw | seed peer Wy ott L the Marquis of Villuma was sent for, but, royalist ag ho | press, and at the same time seeks to maintain frien‘ly re sion of New Granda lace them in s tion for keepin; ta. Tho right lations service he declined becoming Minister under tbe reaponsivility | 'stiove with Framce. The court aad goverament of | tion of quasi host! Towards the other ics of Desmoart to levy thi soe esc re to _ Bere pha Tone Test Geaeee” on @ mareng ‘such a decree as the ono in question, Thore | “reece, whatever may be their tnward leanings, are | of Central America. Already # band of filibusters is | been contested. It was recognised in a treaty with | A cannon on Dablgron’s principle really bears out very wes some fear that the Queen would appoint the Arch. | S4lous not to oftend openly the powerful countries who | established in Nicaragua. It was to defend thecom: | the Hanse towns in 1863; with England in 1490, wnen | strikingly the comparison to a pair of bellows; only, as the when called upon to do so. There is no copyright law, it eppears, wi! preven's even iv Italy, a manager from vomg te gpere originally given io 8 neighboring State. Whether this is just or not is another question; but cer- tain it 1s that bitherto the great modern masters of have been content with the fame which accom anies the reproduction of their works after pay ment at one theatre. ‘M. Ballot, the advocate of Verdi. sought to prove in cours that whereas the French law gives authors the right to prevent the production of their wurks, and tho law of 1852 places strangers on the same footing as French- mep, Verdi could prevent the production of hie works, writien for Italy, in Paris. M_ Calzodo’s lawyer did not take the rome reading of the law. and found strong argu ments in the fact of no such claim baving been yet ac- knowle<ged. To support his argument he hed interrogated Rossini, an author whose works have been more fre- eden until 1068, and thea, | of them. Permission was most readily granted; indeed, was stipulated that Sweden | information was freely given on all the topics tnat I had the Sound Dues in virtue | occassion to ask about. Some fow interesting matters { j- | of this cession, though she was to receive s compeoss did not explore, knowing that |: would not comport with Diehop of Toledo Prime Miaister. Servano is to retain seek to emancipate the He! from foreign intrigue, | mon soil of Central America that the Costa Ricans | Henry VII. not only acknowledged the justice’ of tne | boatman said, the gun is round; whereas the bellows are ‘ian than the embassy at Paris, tnd protect tho nationality and independence of the tate: | took up arms, Butif a portion of the terrivory of New | claim, but forbrde his own subjecia o evade. h by pece- | fat. Tt, in point of fsck. a pair of Bellows bo supposed to | Composel, Ho replica: svem seulenond, je m'irat amas demander de Vargent au Thedre ltalien, mais je voudrais pouvoir lui en donner.”’ Indeed, we have been accustom- ‘eq to find such generosity in allgreat artiste. Asa rule, they care less for money than aay other class of society; they are content, generally, to draw ou the imagioa- Y anx of Fame, aod think t)omecives very rich woen their bills are honored. No: oo signor Verdi, it would appear, who eceks to {nfitaa injury on the theatres which first made him known ip Paris. These events will form an ungrateful passage in the biography of ihe com- poser. Had bis claima been 4 ctatea by necessity there would bave been some excuse for these proceedings; but Tuck is not the case, But oven under oaisting circum stapces Verdi would bave gsiued. af. Calzado had, as an cnormous cost, engage! Mario, Sorsi, M’lie Piccolom'- Bi, and other eminent arists, to execute the operas of M. Verdi, ard bad covsenwd wo allow him to superintend the preperstion of them, having impradentiy agreed to pay him 2COtr. for each repre eutatior ‘Verdi's mind appears t. be wandering from musical notes to bak rotes, and his pext work for augat we know, may be “la Borsa.’’ However, for tne momen! Verdi bas not gained much by his upgeverous conduct, for the tribunal has rejected Preteasions and a:sorded M. Calzado 1,00¢f damages. This will eoable tne mavacer to suillll bis promise 10 produce the ‘frovatore,"’ ‘Tra. viata,” and “Rigoletto,” although I bear Verdi has ap- pealed against the judgment. He is not likely to succeed, for be has the law agains: him, anda strongly pronoanocd ri who can oaly hold " Aletter from Geneva ssys:—A trial for fraud has re- Granada is taken forcil ion of by the United } ing the Great Beit, except in case of absolute necessity, | rotate on an axis coincident with its nozzle, the solid of ro- Fi eS toch Pda as, Becesan eels. ro restore by Sotivnen wate = = tot ae opal States, \eovernmant, Costa tee will be placed between | i which case they were to pay the same dues at Nyborg | tation would be an exaggerated form of « Dahlgren gan— om " ; Maan lire Tertreet ee ook ae eae teste | two tires, and can hardly expect toescape the disinte. | 4 bey would bave done at Risinore; with the Emperor | that ws to say, ite posterior, or breach part, is greatly ox catise deacomple was some time since established for the | res 0 8 lime i wiht ro Ay acon gral influence of immigration flowing from both | Charles V. in 1644, and with the united provinces of the | parded, and ita mouth, and, iadeed, all anterior to the purpose of assisting the commercia! classe of the canton | Giere in bis own dominions che wno abdicates bis rove. oe It is anid that the majority of the Cabi. | Netberlands in 1648, whee, for tho first time, a taruf of | trunoions, much contracted. th their besiness trancsctiovs. it appears, however, that | reignty, and becomes the Lieutenant Governor of Austria, | net at Washington incline to adopt Mr. Corwine’a re. | geecit© duties therein, enumerated was annexed to tho | | Ihus the general contour of « Dehigren gun differs F; 4 and treaty, aud it was stipulated that goods not mertion much from that of any other gun, though the principie the real object of the establishment which had been ss treats oy lige = with comemp commendation. Considering the near approach ofthe | e4 in’ the list should pay according to murcantile | adopted is only an extension and amplification of that re- founded by & political party, was to increase the insuence PP To ne apd] a fe ay re poy <edylng expiration of Mr. Pierce’s lease of the Presidency, and and what bad been practised from ancient times | commended and partially carried into execution by Paix- atte b ft " \ The « ‘te alee, pars oa the certainty that, whatever measures may be taken, ban, and subsequently tn our own service by Monk. letter by means of opprriune loans. The aise | ir vjomatie agents beve teen esecuied ‘sloely ant wan | they will be without any political influence on the Bvery person who reflects on the nataro of the power @escomple bad for director M. Drotn, who after a time re- | UoPicmane Sseme Mave pre Say “4 pt oa ae great contest which is now approaching, it is hardiy resulting from ‘he discharge of ganpowder must be ratis- Signed his post aod took the direction of another credit | given between each move for the King to obviate the ne robable that any very decisive step will be taken Vienna yy pa ated ee lat veeeer’ed, gut Se pre fled that, in all ordipary cannon, the disproportion be- eetapiahment. During bis management successive cre- | cessity of e=posing himself to tho huaitition which vow | by the present Cabinet. ‘The pelley of the United | S"so0d as that anjoped 00 any privilees bs aay slate It | Woran the loveth vers mean Timsuyh the sceasnre ol bad been opened to an extensive tanner named Res- | *Wits him. But inetead of moeting our representations , in foreign as well as in domestic questions, ‘4 cS dius pe 1 Europe. the blast of gunpowder raoldly dimimiebes, the thick aess ire. The advanced exceeded a milion offrance, | With the fr endly spirit they really embodied, he rejected | bangs on the result of the Presidential election. |” ‘The United States paid those duties without any treaty | of the metal entering into the coostruction of an ordi- ee San ieeneee aocangunaneerane tyres : om ee diplomacy, and eventually made him- | Still, this occurrence, however it may terminate, | nti! 1826, when» treaty was signed at Washiogton, by 'y cannon does not, hence much weight is imparted, @m leaving tbe direction, M. Droin proposed as his suc. tos y moving about bis guns and marching bis | shows the great probability there is of perpetually | which it was provided that neither the vensels of the tbout apy corresponding etrength at the place where d cossor M. Rosseguiere, who, being approved of, entered | \TCopess ithe wore the leteRuss'an Emperor,to whom,wiib | recurring difficulties with the United States in con- | United States nor their cargoes should, when they passed | sivength is an object 1 be deniderated. Formerly, when qn bin Penetion. Mo comsnunend by eretiting biesbelt on Sete sk eas eae Meso mee ere i | nesion with the States of Central america, and | te Sound or the Pelus, Pay hither Gr other davies than | sold shot were alone projected trom cannon, and when vwith £00,000t,, part of the aum he was indebted to the | tempated by the British lon or the imperial eagle | Points out the importance of our being provided Geek TA PaSaaRE TD Gdvivlon, ihe Coma ek Wane. | cpaen come rca ow bare oe meme tak eae establishment, but as the payment of that *um was not who are conscious of their o | bse Fo ap _—— —_ a, ss ingen ington never attempted to dispute the right of Denmark } metal of a cannon’ was distributed according to the iadi- made, ® confusion ensued, whieh terminated in mach > SENS OF CRIENRE WeaSen, Uses seNey ter W: to exact the tolls; and so recentjy as 1842 Mr. Webster | dications of theory; bat when the shell system of Paix- » u and | ever contingencies may happen. The only May sar wrote to the Davish Minister at Wasbington, that | ban came into vogue, cannon had to be made of larger eandal, and finally in a trial. M. Rossegueire was ® | which it is really important for us to secure is a | instructions would be forwarded to we United | ciameter than heretofore, and this increased ‘liameter in charged with forgery and fraud, and the accusation hav- ga tly safe and free transit over the Isthmus for | States Consal et Elsinore, ‘ requiring him, in | volved increase of strength and @ proportionate addition ang been proved, he has been sentenced ‘o five years’ | the vermicelli of polttical corruption. The Allied squad- tmprisoament. M. Droin, who was accused of having 7 ae de cb ee Throne of the ir i e. 2. 5 £ 8 g $ 3 citizens and commerce of all nations. The | case of need, to ‘with the Board of Customs of | of metal. the Sound én masmiaining inviolate the rules aad reals ‘The gunner of the Merrimac is a pupil of Dahlgren, and only trust that tne | Hons of the M peveng, fraud upon the | was engaged to many of the experiments wbich eventuat- : E g 2 E s e & z EH Q been privy to the offence, was acquitted. uv revenue.” Our rs are liar with the rocentre | ed in the ordip . He wola that a ravenna apa mye the ents Nato, | ante MY tt omanemad fo Tout taele game Good cone of both nations wil nterpone to prevent | Fa af he Unk Sinies op thane Sifien end we | pordnsely inthe chs ani macoc fthe ow sa | Pend ie ta"y® Veit conus Ss {i} leave ine fow days tor Rome, where she bas the in- J deal tm the Peninsula; is le not those who too | The wally interomed. ia the hot onter into that part of the question, further than | nance appeared o be, nevertheless the effective thickness | the Consuutionnel supposes the spirit of M. Calzado vist- w ve ina day » upg turoses in fnaly—tt te nos the people who have loon y are eq! ol to remark that the American contribution to the Sound | as deduced by theory from experimental data, had been | ing the mstro, and in a ghost kke voice thus re- tention of passing the winter. ee Eye aS imm of traf across the Isthmus from all | dues was one forty-sixth of the whole, and one thirteenth | considerably exceeded. The Merrimac is armd exclu. bim:—*" Thou forced me last to en- We learn from the Kuafitle of Madrid, that a misua- | Of Nopiee fer the allied squadron, it we Pome ¥ | peril, and this is an object which may surely be | of that paid by:the commerce of this country, sively witb sbell She bas not one solid shot on Jeu squadron; it isa Power, but wih leasant lousies estion, ‘howeve: been raised, hook " and to pl aseyou I have also this eu derstanding bas arisen between the French consular body | ou! generostty—selfish, and, we short rightod—a | Tedlized without unpl jedlonsies oS:2a appeal} csuk very’ ‘Weer clired to, covet 8. Compee par deck’ 148 tagh brondalde gune, and two 10 iagh Mario, at the fabulous price of 75,000f. for tour \ ‘ ” ‘ fm Spain and the Spanish government. M. Niboyet, coa- eoner aah Cae bine ate iecneat ns eh [From the Masebester Guardian, Oct. 11.] sation once all, and abolish the duce alto | pivot guns; in adcition to which are a few brass howitzers | generally cay sags treguoaite of ere me sul at Seville, having been appealed to by some French ‘and can ety metenss by aid of « If the government of the United States persuades gs. We say very wisely, for independent of | for boat service. She is committed, thes, to tho Palzban for, ‘of the di pira, at thie tababitants of that place in the case of a disputed will—« loretgh soldiery,° often itaelf depends for existence | itself that it would find a tem convenience in complication to arise from the quar. | or incendiary system with and ours aod all be @ curious calculation for Sig. V who ‘sn ssvidenta rather then force.” The’ Tialian question is | ing up a hubbab with Great Britain, interchang- i San Aan, Sn, Eek, Case Sve Eaaia cat 5 ciber sovel Fowwe chow feel cate cenget t te pon M. Calzedo and the public. case accompanied by many suspicious circumstances— int, rn g 8 reproofs for J and alt Prussia a pretext for embroiling themselves with Den- [ americans for trying out the question cf adopting or re- really seems no limit to sume which artista demand who represented to the Captain General the necessity of a ine cherie called in thematic Tanguage a oi ents eres See ree 8 60 se—tames yee ce lag gence pre om en pe coneee bave made name. For this the poblic alone are at rigid inquiry into the affair. The right of Monsieur Ni- * tall talk” on the subject of manifest and | diplomacy to make a very mpeg uavre oul ofan oh thas be should not be afrakd to fie solid sect from elther nail, Se hey tenlotes aging for Weed eased pees ot 8 Doyet o interfere in the affairs of his couatrymen was Sos soe et Powe 0, may, be ous Hed Doel struction to the entrance to the ; and as Russm ad | of the Dadi guns; bat the general expediency of not not denied. The whole consular body is cn moi, and the never have been obliged to east about long for an | mits no vessel into her ports without « certificate that it | a guns to that severe test seems indicated by there misut derstanding threatens to become serious. excase to begin upon. One cause removed, another | Pes Pant the Goat Duce, gives Me Balu, feast | Tar Danses” gomse,t aula thot are onboard hel 1 It is announced, says the Paris Qynstitutionnel, that ves tt Sa eae oe hein eee be remembered that'it is not eo much tte amount of the | weight and allbrs, are chambered. ‘The form of cham. whife waiting for the definitive sotution of the establish. | wey ges dues that copatitutes the grievance as the annoyance, the | ber is a truncated cone; nut the Gome chamber, former. need Aw was settled judament declared it to be, | detention, the obstruction, the chance of iosing a wind, | ly adopted in the service. Tho sponge (shaped, ment of the electric telegraph between France and Africa, pe By Ra the cumbersome formality, the eocasional neoesst for | of course, eotbat it may ft the chamber,) has 8s . the Daim steamer has been ordered to take a iine of Anxious inquiry and the most studious forbearance | the master ‘ashore ‘connected with the | of bristles; 1s te, in poixt of tet. @ thes affording poring, conan bara tee en Agee, toes Bias Saseacste | MaDe necctesclatiedeet it wet | Sor ear at Ne SS Sanne "be | Socmar oninrecs ieulaiantast ey nce : ‘A despatch from Portsmouth, Eng., dated on 2ist of Se oe | reat’ Tt is to us. the: | there's some lle eifictlty txpertenocd. tu tanking ep oe pe a a a i the Colossus, 81, screwship, Capt. Thompson, gna; a the Cwsar, 91, serewanip, Gap Robb, to join Kamsas—the free y the Ni ble. The rather a large one when the Ly charge, The mountings and carriages of \q thera the slave institutions forced tallow, and the many articles of raw material n's aro ler. ee Dundas, in the neighborhood Eeltasenery by we Invasive Missourians. "In the bne | friendly relations of and America threaten | we derive from that source. to the most acca cad oopreiaes Be pe nd thetr ; i been received from C jo to | cage: the whole Soeth, compact, determined. unbridled, to be freely again, and 2% } rate caloulation that can be made, the burden imposed by | carriages are deprived of tho afer trucks. Tho conse- a InteUigence has Ived from Constantinop! ‘ever ready to resort to aad having something | sured themeelves that danger from this sonrce | this toll upon British commerce ie about £72,200 an | evepoe of this removal of tae after irucks is increased tagiie di Le yi the 12% of October. The difficulties arising out of the | of the character of a at rest. arene mig Muga pg Fey ing | friction against tho by which means the recoil of | 1849; + Luisa Miller,”’ Napten, 1849, the ° 4 Gog: im arms a: | was for a long time laid questiaps of Bolgrad and the Isle of Serpents had become J on0e. In the other, the strong, , sober feelin: | that the polical greund was at clear Theatre de |’ Academie Imyrrisie de L. 6S. woe Western x ge ne forking of LY EA ocean, payment for a ca) sum of £1,130, attopced with the seeming disadvantage of impeding the tore,” ‘nomse,'1065/°" Tn travian - ™ A lotfar from St. Poteraburg, of the 16th ultimo, gives | ing , will probably make iteelf heard more eS ene Fag poo which, irrreanec ive of other considerations, <a rupping out of the gun Real disadvantage, however, | Vepres sicilienpen,’? ~ 1866. aos the follewing authentic explanation of what has beca Toedly' end. more peremptorily than it has yet oon- | Dog seckenell otiheat as ae leave 'am annual saving of pearly £40,000. Rus | there is none, « sort of bandspike, with truck attachel, | operas baa been published by eeadier 1 siderea necessary. The ipherent Anglo Saxon love we it our Settling 2 | sia, which pays annually nearly tho samo {oll as | enabling the whole to be brought pertectiy y, mertioned of @ Russian squlldron being about to proceed question that we have im our hands is like decapr- |G: y need h wrt tees oe ¢ of order and respect for authority has up to we 4 reat Britain, aed whose stap'e export are peca | under cobtrol. | Dardly indicate that the effi ‘The event of the week at the Itahan Opera nas been the to the Mediterranean :—There is no question ofasquadron, | presept time Kept the free soil states in @ state oi | tating a king whom we have taken ; his | larly barrassed by the Sound dues, is jready to | ciency of shel practice matniy depends oa the | production of “ leatrice di Tends.” that but only of some few vessels which are about to leave | quiescence, which bas, Rowover ite limits, and may | heir succeeds to his with the considera: | assent to this plan for the redemption ofthe duow, and | perfiction uf tho fuer, and the riapufactare of fuses | Production of, Destrice di Tena.” hes charming eraa, the port of Crorutadt and proceed in diflerent direc. | possibly be approsehing them. Qutanmberine their ble advantage of free. At this moment tre | feveral other nations are equally willing. The whole | belongs to the arcana of governments, Infle | melody, Macame Freazo'tnl ue Pn fons) "These vessels are the screw ‘rigato l'clkan, which | Opponewts by more than two to one, they are yet tof the United States profess to be deli. | sheme, whon carried into effect, will have « mos: beno- | rent nations have cach ftx own variety of sbell fuss, | pang an ahe always dose, te ihe alwet accom platen te to ‘ake up ber station, as beforo tho war, at the Pirmus, | bardly a match for the unity of action and heartiness Glicting on a suggestion made to them with an ap ficial effect upon the commerce’ of the Thltic. Tho #s | and the pattern adopted by the United States is | tats Time “4? wo seuned ber pt renee & Oe ncnine Misister the ‘brig | of cobcurrance which throws ‘such weicht into « . loanaet ieleon P| crifiee of revenue to Denmark will appear serious at frst, | spoken very confidently of. From what I could learn it toon selon eet power a hy Eg ‘by the South. Yet they do not shut their | Pearance seriousness 2 commie ag much as $250,000 out of a total revenuc of | in uot @ time fone, intended to cause the iguition of the Ferman int shui rn, wan send | ee a ta, race ientns"| Hall ascapy toe whole eesti of Puan | SACs ibd Se Waly cad as a’ | int Sse net ecu fe ul janeas quustion. hi : mi 7, ep tae object of ex; the shei say gE ay Fp a 3 that % Y | To be sare, we know that wothing of the sort will be be litle Goubt tant, ou the whole, the arrange | when the latter a'rkoa it marg, “we errevqesirn, atthe gia! cat vic tor | ree ri iy, andi ey , | can assure you thetr population is cat off, which, several ad . there ie nothing of the kind. ay AE REE ioe Weret tats easvenneed Uantery, of annse eta oui mm 3 ‘The Persian government will, {t is said, address France | 4aq Ee enoom eae eure, it will dismount guns and & THE POLIFICAL ASPRCT OF THE KINGDOM, ‘witha view of inducing that Power to prevent the con- | ded form of government has but against strong stone walls shells aro but ittie worth ram signee Up ©. dete Bcseere:Oe enamine we templated English expedition from taking piece. The | many of the evils Peer ee cee ae ay Cate Tonngentera s ship ead | composition of the new Cabinet iu Matrit we are led <> M. Pacheoo had his first audience of the Queen Victoria, | ot the Sou. it keer for vothing; If subsequent to leavin the ahi oh the eve of revival. We hnow ino well the cove on the fist ult., and delivered his crodentials as Minister | men from «purpose be mere then a move reaad ait, nd the men to bo eanily deceived on \his point. Tt ie from hor Catholie Majesty the Quese of Spain. oon 90 tavet pot i Sar oe a iypou | ROLFIMpIy ae a qvertion of reactien. more OF legs limited, ‘Te London Star of October 24 nays — routed. The comparative calm the gun be greater than it ovatd safely bear, but the mu pusition of efits te tay Set 5-4 — un favor oz. Peabety U7 tee tobe, | Sumer ot (be bolipsrenes Makes & snove, ‘Semmame powder Wot uhe tenet amongst ie reason wich bare | *ROIDE toa restoration pure and complete, <n ane ne a ena ts ianily a long report cope, | move ie alec in ltsolt, “Both partion are’ waking to are | 00 the observation of this trath, Mr. Amos Corwin } oat of pince to add that the exact amount of burden upon Pofloenced the English iu their'non edoption of ebell guns | jp me ygeroemtos Of the law of | desamorticacion ‘of that part of the proceedings wi reference | how the oat jumps, and the cat must weap in the da \: | proposes that they should take it, he simply shows J the commerce of the United States, With its £60,000,000 | for broadside armement is the decreased chance of biting lean nan the sbeviute ne 5 between ‘England and smerica, ‘Our | for 0 man can ioresce the consequences of aay line Tow well he is up to a sense of what is required of « of importa and $80,000,000 of export, to evade tho pay. | an object, proportionsie to the ‘necemarily decreased P Nig FH, HH friends on the other side of the sea have a peculiar zeal | conduct the new President may pursue, or woo ap PY ment of which Pierce and Marcy were ready to | number of gune, if they are made #0 heavy, as necessa toot Te ie the iret ea tm the extollation of their distirguished fellow citizens, | the President may be. Mr. Buchanan isa profer-ed i. gentleman who affords this promise of fature ‘wrap the Baltic ta and risk @ general war al! over ee oes aoe ractice. ry the ancient regime To Ad Kis somewhat remarkable that oo much exciiemest | poster. and, may endeavor divert tbe Pugoe'y «| eminence in public life is the agent who has een | ste roel a at the samuel sum of £5,106 ] | Having tniehed my skeich, gave, my inguirie anew | sitio oi the Cnpetietion 0 i8t6, counlerigned by as, J . ie end gy Fer vieages S le. dang! b= «ghd ware charged to uire into the causes of Hot, et dante ana Sommers by Whten on ameriona ten of Sur's Grew, 0 Donnell « few wesks slacn, i already a stretch of sove- fence character, and this tem as might naturally ners Bm set off (for the present | teended with a Property © | § The Frigate Merrimac at Southampton. | wag aisingvished trom an fngliah one. Oa this point ia 00 Se cna. -s whe eanoctated wilh mest ‘auer- | Kansas. Mr. Fillmore is closely =. ‘win | American citizens, which oc.urred at iv | Viger OF A SCIENTIFIC ENGLISHMAN TO SHE E+ | it ment be confessed my anticlpations were not bur u ordinances made to day sad cancel!- —_- ‘the people of England Mr. Attorney General Cushing, of foreign enlistment no:o. | the middie of last April. He comes to the conclu SEL—RIS OPINION OF HER ARMAMENT—REMARKS | out. ‘Ihe Milesian element was here strongly ropre- oe ae oa SF ‘ord. age wend Tus riety, and may possibly think Mr. Corwine’s prepost sion that the massacre aod plunder were the resnli- OF AN ENGLISH “JACK TAR"—COMPOSITION OF | #ented, My carn being greeted by as rich # brogae as can Greater extreme chan ever? For, if the are Oo wow of Bagh semana. 40x toama te coca ae commen graplo question addr Erperee i 8S seattes Taferseas, tons \s ee tier plains of it to separate t om wo wal was hing tho from the . » the Ui ‘States Ha’ Mons ” Rain! , ym tbe code. In the fate, and who put themsclves in communication with | necemarly bring tbe, Ualted Stas Ph Ae pt an Tah og LP teh tela wo’ cannet encersigned wha te the revolutionary chiefs, thereby encouraging agitation. the great maritime of were eaoh & sample of two respectively fovern constitutional! iat ss Omens Seas ‘A bronze statue of Joan of Arc, by M. Paul, has been iia question, oven ‘agsuming the miler kinds. Then thero ware others ican, tin tbe law by wrbvch the vations! #l wapetuneocn provisionally erected in the Champs Klysées, Paris, 11: | om all sides, is one that will boon Roglishmen from any part you like: ent | tofm of govervimant ; the service Of all’ eomatita: destivation is the important and seriously embarrassing. 1 Ruaprcions that the bostawain is Stentor re i+ "nate ‘ti ultimate village of Domremy. wie net to see Gat © polee = for such « vols I never heard. (Of the conventiv.at | 164, POmeN Ui uot eer” Bat gine, cnonet ‘The Pope gave a grand banquet to the ecclesiastics | to be eotablished by & Central y 1% 1 ‘ami ashes cigment |eould devess bet tite, alts asise our principles, let But for amomens een cok come Demo eNO Aten | ela aden i Soot, ; rs cia" | wera emeatine Target sogetal ange | steerage ea ighway wor! mean 7 morn! clement inown—Poles, Hungarians ‘mans, and corn and pupile of the Seminario Pio, md of depute ‘arth the growth ot 5 por oe Bnd Bon ‘That is a point | tbat kind; so away lsped. For once (it ) my | vthere, to whom tbe see must be 4 grew abyss of oxeg waeak his wo sie (dons from the other seminaries met, including Cardinals to pase over it, but which unfortunately at» | on which we have no means of ju Woknow | Teather wisdom |. The day proved to be mae EE ach onaie bans ee ae reams oun coneent of both Proje and Antonelli, and Monsignear Beir sent neitber presents ‘security for the passengers nor | Ybum Hany We aby i nial which | S€icent, notwikhatanding an Ominous thickness oj tog, | which rock the eradie barque of a ren-born tar. Nearly | and. to go further, if ot ‘ , TQ, | tranquillity for the inbabitants, It matters little whether | Very except that imal Which | ont the mon got well aloft, and a maddy slushinos: »' | *ll the marines on board I found to be of lage; moO | right, and aivee shop of Puebla. At two P. M. the company proceeded ina drunken passenger v- a | Condemns had made up its mind before the cour | Jrovnd, which mattered little to mo, considering that ms rah a core err} to the dining-room and sat down to the table, the Pope | riotous mob. The natives are not all rioters, nor n'= 'n: | was opened. It seems, However, not very didical «| ‘Torbty Seen meltered Se, a cher eabagen (A saying grace bimecit. The Pope was complimentot in | PUNerdtre all dishonest of dranken, but ares | find a rational explanation for the explosion of such | Arrived at |. my first care was to obtain a relgn is engaged by ‘Neen so cient of both on that road and that strip of courtry ¢ ormbuatible materials as are assembled at Panam: | hoat and get on board the Merrimac with as ltit'« delay {De peantly apes - fifteen languages, including Chinese, Hindostanee, Eng. | make very stringent toms necessary; em! |’ is without resorting to hypothesis of a Sta | os peraib . ih my secret mind | determined to ma\- pleseure, and your (Mong lish, German &c , anda chorus was sung bY the pais | doubtful whether any of the five na'tons are 6qn\ to “hs | cousplracy. We have only to consider the comm | *!one rt; not merely pacing the decks rapi tly au’ nistorieal Geanbes crew Present, wiehing him a long and happy 2 can eaeerend et Toewy waren +e yen of ths who use the railway, passiv | s*87, ' mcet other casual wiaiiors, but T resolved ov But Marabal Narvaec, tn ‘alte $ — , ve them Cle ee i itted, mrt 0; thi Toe Ca a eae ie Tarttomence. "| between alifornia and. the me | Sed ee eee ree Coen soe cerganin dered by the dang to veer in of couree’ not to be of for a moment; bu: Vion, In the Irisn quorter of one of our lar: | Sgouchi and explntve, but pleanipg as, eany:prrticnars not at all impossible that at no very distant date ..y | towns, ifevery a | were the anniversary of the bi ve called on to consider the question of @ joint oor). a | tle of the Boyne, it would be hard to find materials of the line of route by the United States and some uf the | more dinbolically assorted for a row. A tide o ot tat | therayal prekegutive, Manbet Rer ould of the epvit of Yankeoism, aa istin gnishes ‘piece of wood, whether in the form of chair or table, y eretiow at inthe ‘ os Limegined it deald be tor thak eeh be iepanset with on board of asbip of war should. is Cosuieonh Aseenens rg uae ais to fooalise ther. | Not only does every plank and par encroach on valuable | reignty without benefiting die power of the trvn «large trie | spece, bot they a'e aubjeet t0 De eplnerel Uy sbot aad | in advelng the Orown to sanedl cos day, hae Cy ey J Law gd Rs Vy S Revove” | reckless, violent, inter adventurers, habtte. ye in the oh 08 macribed space ul lor it should be removed. incipie that where » | itd ta tient) ¥ Jin san, and wihovt sarding @ visitor sho mignt monget ),'and thos to furnish an additional chance of accident " Stato ie too weak to enforoe ite own rieats, clbere may ) "cl tO Hpaolehy pwcnage. 4 a ted doe | hers with ibe ini tention of Atesing’ Ge | ane a the day berore, i# to oanvict it of slagramt the federal fortron icking ladie- and gentlemen " do it for \t. ie aiready rocogn| re: * eye Open are is care om the git rtm va stort h realty dors not geoee avfigalt for tate monte the aieer et oo 5p caeettthirash % off ibe of Germany. The power of the Hoare of Hesse ie juss, CHE: CFhS aid Hows alan | the orate | riage of that arver Communw eallD of Atelo b nto eat off the deck, 1 opty > bendy par considered’ unequat i holding the. Imyuraac te” | sate cuntamiontirg the reaident —popnls | sougen aid swagenared wih wMer reece, whee aly | Maree et aie ia Oe on inerehy ma XS 4 bot thie tiae «.Baite erm It ie bab am ak tress of Mayence sgeinet ali comert, aod w ju tion by te exateple. oat keeving aliv. he rea American fetaral repent'y the pieces of Wood WORK which they have to keap con wwe 4 returping, 7 wm have to foros of Avatrians and ordingly garrie 4 continnal feeling of ter fF aa! reeeotnent The Wandering from the vailany torminow te he tewets | petead of the rom which eonetitntes such an imoortant Shick i eve teal, tepagh bes the ov . the placa, commewe! aieroaely oy gensrals o ea. | poor erectnres whom thes ride. rmgbw), wre Uf the Gaby OF, i ees SMU Made aware, by theme fy. Te geet weet the SB Iek Tie Yanken pop. Foreigners ble. chub lt way: oe