The New York Herald Newspaper, May 21, 1859, Page 3

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. NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, MAY 21. 1850.—TRIPLE SHEET. LC RN se tt THE WAR IN ITALY. ‘ ‘yepeated occasior ern: nce of ttenty a land where he leaves tha P' i to officially inform our govern- | dence of vtenty years, (rem a } Duke (Angorleor,, temporizo rn peh earn by t0 i te moasen: whea Sastri, te pare: of tha otuer Os >iaaty, t20¥ vho renointion Of altreasing an 2 Frassin ‘to, close to Cusale, a fortress capable of soma Ment of his perfect acquiescence in the American | VeBera‘ed tombs of Charles X 1 ekki recta o= : , anotuer body of Austrians seems to bavo “ and herols daughter of ‘Louis XVI. , a4 'n aBxadoa: d@armée }: Dr paraion for war, ends person #>o we!) } ultimatum to Sardinia to the effect chat if it was not agreed ? ‘after cannonade doctrine of epposition to the right of search, joey without hesitadon, Wonlce and Frobsdorf, tao Prince | The Repulse of the Austrians—Movements of the | knows woe » passing io Behn, states ee = bara Toube would have recou fo to arma, Tho government or the irs ‘iastod fifveen Sooatees were ropulaed with, = ne abeys the invincible imgaise of national feeling. His Austrian, Sardinian and French Armice— been iseu ¢ to suppty ali the fortressce with provisioza, peror did pot wish Ausiia to rema'n iguoraptof the } some lees. What can be the object of these opera- q 2 French heart canvot ‘sear the idea of inhabiting a country smmunitp, tc. A Berman sray of 282,000 raat at'war with Francs, It ia quite enough to be in exile: the Ybrown polvly imto Pranee wou'd, donbilesz, bring NEWS FROM EUROPE, Count do Chamtora will never allow tho dignity of his the Fre ch ‘0 ‘their senses at ‘once, but, cnfor tunately, Prusia ie by no meaus likely to take canard the Sela’ unle++ Austria should bo aignally defeated by tho ie a Frevch. fon. ver yesterday proposed to the Bund to act ip accordance with directions comtained fn article 47 of tha ‘act of Confederation, but the watior was—probably at the request of Prussia—reserrad to Lae committee. Ths pith of the article 3 i tion is, thas if the committee of the Bund ore Rath) decides by’ a majority of yoten that an attack on the non Federal ‘possessions of a mau ver of the Confederation is attenled with Jaage! Federal territory, the Bund is oan? to take proper ma ‘view it shonid take of snck ap eventuality, and bie Majesty ’s Obirge d’affalres a% Vienne, on the of last month, noildes to ibe Austria government that if ite troops Piedmoteee froptiers, Praace would be ovliged to regard euch an invas.on SF: Cel guar dead gb ibs level count elaration of war, The Courtof Austria having persia . The bak Tiver are said to hav ip emp'oy ing tores, and its troopa having entered the Sar- | fled, and it was thought that tine lines. here en ee diu.an territory onthe 29th, the Emperor has ordered me | as the battle fleld on which France and Sardinia, profiting to brs g to the cognizance of the Senate thie fact, whic ‘by the sloggishnees of the Austrian, had determined to constitutes Austria in @ state of war with F draw together and fight a battle for’ Turin, By crossing Thi rag recelped with ea vute af “ Vive | tbe Po the invading division, whoee advance we are pow 'E teacing, bas turned that position altogether; for they are ue President then rose aril gald:—~ now on the fouth bank, and the Dora comes down’ into T take rote a. tha nica of the Minister of | the Yo from the porth, The object of aitack, howaver, is State. If 1 may be allowed so edd afew words to inter. quite doobiful, They may be either proceeding fowarda pret Le senge of the acclamations we ave justueard, 1} Turin by the most direct route, or they will say, while our iMustrions colleegues the marshals | may bo about, ¥y the simple manwuvre of and generale entrusted with comuiands, will main- | ‘right eboulder forward,” to turn to the tain the giory of the French nam» opposite the ene. | eit, and advance upon Alessandria. If it be true that my, the Senators who remain here will not shrink | an Austrian capponade was commenced at Valenza, it tops? Ifthe Austrian had k orn bagk Tiver it wool have taken humo teria Bub. to, proooed by this route the Austrian must cross the Doras lit river which comes down from t wing through the level county io Trot‘ot Tem? ae iat ae Speeches in the French Senate—The Po. licy of Russia—Condition of Tuscany— Immense Decline in the Value of Public Securities, he, bc, &C. Fl ition, oF tae fusseptibilities of Ris patriotiam, to be eub- Jeoted to the slightest attaint. . _ : General Sir W, Codrington’s appointment as Governor Arrival of the Vigo and Edinburg at | of civraiter is gazetted, He was the last Zngieh Com- i 4 mauder in Oblef in the Crimea, thie Port, Canada at Boston, and Lord Oveuiston has been summoned to the Bouse of City of Baltimoa off Cape Race. Peera by the title of Birgu Ossulston. The Bwpress Ecgente completed her 38d year on Wed- MOVEMENTS OF THE AUSTRIANS, LOSS 10 THE AUSTRIANS IN ATTEMPTING TO CROSS THE PO—LENGTHENBD CANNONADE. ‘Vinywa, May 4, 1859. Yesterday evening s cannonade was commanced from b fe the direction of Waleeee Dat without eflect. The enomy | euree Sor its defence, [tis still stayed in tho ¢ aovanced from Cambio towards Sala, on the left vank of | Pere that the Prince Rogent of Pruasis ia to bake tho the Po, Another advance was nico made towards the | prem command of ail the Federal armica, bat Tam ‘Ticino. An ineffectual astempt"was made by the Aua- chned to dout ay ho ctness of the report. trians to cross the Po below Praseinette. Twenty men | There i# euch a dearth of smell ooius here that the pso were killed and wounded. r ple bave again bad recourse to the expedient of divid.ag "4 the florin note into four parts. Tho lower classes are by: ° nesday, May 4. FIVE DAYS LAL BR. | _ Wilhreterence to the market for Amorican seourities, Megara, D. Bell Som, & Co, report as follows:— Tee ursrkes fOr American sovurities during the pzst fortuight bas bevu somewhat influensed by the panic Mat Weparture of Napoleon for the | 7° that for other foreign secaritive, and Ome fo, i : s ‘Tormy, May 5, 1859. a {OU BLY avr of civil courage or devotion to the Empe- | would appear, perbaps, more probable that the fortresses fog ‘about tue hiveiet te eee ee es An official bulletic states that the attempt Hf ‘the Aue- | sipping to board agai, and ins few daye there yor, There wil) bee rivalry of pxtriotism between them | are the object of attack; for Valenza is within a fow milea Seat of War. eee ocdt Soca ae ay eka ea ea oa seis | trisue to force the passage et ths ro ut Fragsinetio com, | ap ierue of notes for 10 and @ krentzsra, Money wwe | and ut-—¢opplaues)—ior this ls x just war; Jt ie amply a | of Alevrandria, and the Austrian reserves, which are said at considerably lower quotatic meiced on the 34. The cannunaze lasted Aiteen hours, and | Scusce ‘hat the discounton frat rate paper i6 10 and evea | reply tou chailenge and au aggrension. li is the conse- | to be in great force at Pavia and Piacenza, aro well placed 12 per cent. Tne Hereditary Grand Duke of Tuscany arrived hore quence of a secular policy, which bas always been moved for taking part in a concerte:! attuck upon Alessandria, or by the crises in lly at if thoy were evants in France. 3 re “a yesterday alternaoa, and lastod for the peree a Ln ae ase even for deecending upon Genoa, Thus have we traced United States 6 per cents, 1868 DO a ia Dee CbasE, ABTA, 923 a 9334 | Tmainder of the day. Tao Pledmonvena only hed & few | ib ne. No privawe despatches can now be forwardos | (Yea, yen,” aad appaire,) The Hmeror cannot allow | the progress of one division, walsh took tho plain coun: O BATTLE YE | Aistame s por cents... 5 ® 80 | Sine sudenaue hare peaierday ab Comlomove Sorivia, from this city to Italy, a3 tbe twlegraph is vars, which 48 the key of the Alps, no mwre than Rome, | try, and was at the Jast adv'ces cropelg the Po at a point Kentucty 6 per cents, 1868-72. . 2 a OF r mr a working for goverunent. Great mumbers of volan’ which hotds the keys of the Church, by the hands of @ holy ve ten miles distant from the great fortress of Ales- ae powrntrn pv el ae cat sige ok Pas ie.» ; eA 3 A ‘eu ‘irene: aid RF cesta toa Y cambio passed bave already presented themselves here, and venevaled Ponti) (great acnsation)—to fal under the | tendria. There is, how Masenct P ing bo Werte Psat yh ylovanline Phase ge myc usurping yoke of an influence hostile lo France. (Great ap- | vacing army which, fusiead of crossing the Ticino, went up north to the jake whence the Ticino flows, and crossing that lake penctrated into the nort their vanguard rect o ‘8 OF THE a plaute.) Maly, then, will be restored to her national trang on tho right hank still threaten the pargage af tue Po BRR, aint oid Lats he ataht <p conta Khe wild not be revilutimised—(- Excellent )—but ps forts of the / Austrians | "2 suo ane yivania 5 per cént avock. 83 av¥rassinette; but the 1: \y mm by raing, | fs Br rer trey rated—(great epplause)—avd that beautitul country and Alpine districts of the kingdom they in- to Cross t he P Peensylvania 6 por cents, 87+. 86 | am sus fulibg, ad low grounds covered with water. — } pou Turin, no Saran government Beene: only ime | threatened with a Taster, will find nliberator "Vive | vated. "Distant from. raliroads end telegragh wires, ie 0. Tennessee 6 per cents, divers... 85 Tern, May 7, 1859, brkiges and interrupted the tommunieation by VEmpereur.”” All the members rose and joined in the | the movements of this force ure as yet obscure. We Yerginin 6 per cents, 1886, ..... 38 Toere are troops sent to capture way material trans- | eokhos at distances of 100 metres irom each acclamation. pected to find them coming down into the level country f ~ ~ Jegei fy os serliog ‘vonds, 1888 fo ported by the Austrians to the western wide of the Susia for | ocr ogs the road. ‘3 ae ny ee somewhere about the line ofthe Dora, and for: per cemts, divare.... Candia, and Terronoca, 5 8: P m 2 RUSSO-FRENCH ALLIANCE. a junction there with the force advancing directly aportant Lett ey from Our | 2nd’, Per oBk serine Ronis... = Dustriana withdrawn fro Trino and Poblotte to Vor- |p, Tne Sulive MALS; Que, Private, acaonnts inform, 8 tus | The Landon ‘Nmvs of May 6, in s leader, remarks upon | through tho plain; Dut, ag them have now crossed € Wontreai 6 per cents, 1866-—."805, 82 trians from establisbing themselves too pre in the | the change of policy of the Emperor of the French since | the Po, and trend to the South, we must expect Turin Cory dent. Minote Central 7 per conte, 2575, 72 mountainous part of tho districtof Norvara, A bauwry of | the full of Sebastopol, and recalis the various incidents, | that the junetion will be attempted at some o:her point, sespon ent. Do, = do. . 6 Per cents, 1875. 2 at : artillery and some troops have ‘arrived at Homo d’Osania; | £2owidg that there existed for several years a good On the whole it would seem that the Austrians have gained atti ee ee ee ee §3 | Cracow, 2 r wtted with the National Guart, Which in wtrougiy or: | Uudersianding belween France, Russia and Sardinia, | nothing t present by their choice of the moment, and by their ~ 41} the Austrian frontiors. ganized, they will offer a suilicient resistance to any | WDich bas always taken the form of thwarting the designs | sudden initiative, exceyt the power of ers contri. HE W ‘AY THE 3s coe Riis Canale) bablitiag tae sano, proclamation | Coup dé main. Garibaldi, moreover, is expected wo 0c- eS Sogn i ‘Austria whenever Soe saws, ict cae Pomsed Ba — enemy's bey? petits te HM r ym the Av! in General, Cowwt Gyulal:— re - object. Russia, u: she bave renounced al r ambi- e . Alessandria ,fCasale, Genoa WAR ‘OBIGINATED. 10 THE PROPLE OF LOMEAKDY ANP VENETIA, ayy ae, nae sa overall BAtAALIONS Of FO | eee aa ee esnjeebest iaverest in | im her bands, and all tho positions. abe bolde are coonect. found 8 ‘The provocstions given to tho imperlal govorament b Tho various bulletins that have reached ue from Turin | volving Austria in » war with France ed by lines of rail with each other, and with the sea, and witb the Alpine into France. It as yet seems as thovgh Austria ‘staked heavily for an opportunity, ‘Won it, and now thrown it aw: wi would ‘2 bold faction in the Sardiwian States, an enomy to leave Russia free to foment @ revol) of the Christian Order end right, and its obstinacy ia rajecting alt over. | Sate thet the Ausuisne have augmented the sir starua | population in Turkey, aud perhaps to obtain for her- turca of peace ad moderation, have exhausted the gone. aden Self some of the more remots and leagt contented pro- 2 | rovs patience of our august Hmperor and master, and | With twenty en Annes othe Seecge ae k 5 . Do. do, shares... New York and Erie 7 per ct. , 0 he Secret T’ seaties of Austria with i863 80 st mtge, oe 88 ‘at Piacenza have left, ” vivecs of the Austrian empire. During the first tour the Pralian State Re eather tee 20 | made bim resolve to protact the cause of justice ant | Reve preciaimed too sais ot siege, ‘The arrival and ae. | wont of the present year tue conduch of Rusma, has OPERATIONS OF THE ARMIES. no ; 5 conv. LA 862, u 7 right, and make it triumph by the force of arms, Ea- parture of French troops at Turin and Genoa continue, deen dark, ambiguous and recervel. Is jthere wang mr BERN -s see bn ane = trusted, by the sovereign will, with the caief com- | dridst the enthusiastic acclamations of tb: . The | inthe antecedent probabilities of the case to render be sinking fond, 1876. 4 mand of the army, the powers of the civil and mili unlike)y that there should exist between Russiaand France | which, it will be obscrved, are from the Sardinian head- he Revo) mtion of 1848 andthe 0 tary government of the Lombardo-Venetiza kingdom a seorct understanding boatile to Austria and toEogland, | quarters, and one from the Chief of the French staff, a yog || $8,,DF, order, of his Majesyr, concentrated in my | The wansing in the event of a European war? Tho Times says, in addi- | presage 'a serious engagement in Piedmont at an early War of 2859, Do. fo. Ist; not conv., 1865, “e2 a M4 ouiee cores iene Gattart 0 ee teen tae porary absence aggieneral La Marmora, Count Cavour will Lgl. sthanaheat from Sortin and ans a reareceng date. Our last detail scoounts from Turin, dared ithe Pennsyi varie’ Central 6 ‘per cent, lst mort- 4} Piedmontere territory. The readiness with which your control the Depart its of War and Maring. pga 2 fly ws Bp Naubontes ry aan at liberty 2d, showed that Ly of She arian, ihn cee noe Ee, conrsrttoe wir dn, 2680,“ 8 a 90] Young amen bave left Your fosrahing fetes Wo baste an. | {Torin (May 3) correspondence ofthe Toadon News.) | (9 pote to give sme details.” From ine dela of | meline and the strc of toe’ Lower Novara, bare ROVEM der the i “em colors, the Jes z i with hig yoo bere, ‘Mey bave done toting in Arons beyond b . a. Fitagerald and Mr. Disraeli it appears a written agree- | pad halted somewhat inexplicably, after the passage of IN. &: ie 2 provided for the wants of our brave army, the uat. reak- | pent does exist, and the question is—Have we got the } the Ticino, one of its celumus crossing the Sesia and oc- THE Ww? IN ITALY—ITS SECRDT ORIGIN. | versal feeling of personal duty, ali assnre me that tran- | idg tho telegraphic wires. I was assured the party wi whole of it? Nobody supposes Russia to be animated by | cnpying Vercelli, while another coiumo, which had en- RR eee gaa OUR IPALCAN CORRESPONDENCE. Gnillity and pablie order will bé maintained, notwithstand- | bad crossed ehe Lake Maggiore were no more than 300. | any burning eymyarby for the Ttaliana, Among the despotic | tefcd Piedmont ‘at Vigevano, was at Mortara. At the Teary, May 3,1859, | i0g the pertisious suggestions of the tubversive party, | Another large column bas occupied Novara, and is ad- | Powors of Europe the Emperor of tho French, the most re- | game time a corps much stronger than these was report. F ‘the DECL = 3 In order to protect you in-vase it were disturbed by some | ‘vancisg upon Vercelli. Nothing is seid about the greatest | preestye in his internal government, alone makes 5 ‘movi Stradi JSE IN BREADSTUFFS, Tho War'Was Projested in 1856—Who tho Leaders of the | madmen, TP youalenyttvee seill reesei ‘among you to | mase which is supposed to be directing ite course towards Tone of Yheral ‘aympeltics. Russie at any ratois free cies on Ey pone ty gris Pee & Mavement Are—A Scores Society and ts Oficers—One | maintain the public peace, and he shati have causeto re-'| Alesgandria, There wasa general report this morning | from thie bypocrigy. She gives nothing for nothing; and | nion prevailing there was that tho enemy mediated an bh &., &. of then: from the Dungeons of Speilberg—Fraternizetion | pent who, by any meane whatsoover, may attempt te || that s skirmish had taken place at the advanced post at | had any one been icund to assert that ahe did otherwise, | attack on Nevi, an important military point commanding Maal Pena sch 2 digturb it’and to increase the exfferings of his country. lo, opposite to Abbiate-gracso. ft has been anen- | ip this case we candidly confers that we should not be- | the communication between Genoa, which has now become ST Tin Cait, MoGtean ie g meres: with Count eaieeate a cad of Justice, rempect for the jews, obedience to the authorities, “counter of light cavalry in which rumor said the Austrians | jjeve him. Stl! less can we beliove that Russia has com- | the chief base of operations for the French, and Alessan~ ol aN ject to A such has alway otto. . 4 | Ours 5 > Sertinia. Double Odject to Overthrow the'Party of | wu Serra -¥ hooper some g pieamontere officer, Captain Colli,has drawn | Tilted herself to an act of declied hostility to Austria | dria. The despatches of the last twenty-four hours favor storday noon from Belfast and Queenstown, | 2#a##ini and the Austrians—Ramification of Ce Plt | 956 came officer lane issued the following:— tbo tiret blood from the eneniy By a sabre cht acrose the | Wepoot providing for further contingencies haat, Focal |, Sete tas taatnctres niae spat oc august tocenees ae ¢ former port on the 4th, and the latter on Pars, London; Hungary and Germany—The Secret oF | to rue Paorny OF SARDINIA: x Austrian commanding officer's fuce. It waa a sort of | tnd states do not conspire by halves. Rusia would not ross tho Pot several points, from Trino oa the eat to 0 i the: fuscan' Revolution—The Milanese Have their Arms In crossmg your frontiers, itis not against you, peopte chivalrous encounter between those two, however, for | go go far as she has gope without being prepared for war; | Cambio on the east. The result of their advance on Triao, ® She brings 440 passengers, “The Vigo ar- Burted— Kosta: Op-rating Amongst the Hungarian | of Sardinia, that we direct our arms, uetaes ‘@amall | both deachments retired. and the first preparation for war would naturally be & | which is about ten miles west of the fortress of Casale, is 2 staat 3 destructive’ party, powerful by its boldness, which: The French are pouring in both from the Alps to | treaty alliance, convention, engagement, understanding— | unknown. Below Frassinetto, about midway between A gif Sandy Hook at 5 P.M. onThursday, and roops—Clanilés'ine Dissemination of Seditious Papers— | oppresses you by its violence,” rejects all offers of Peacoy pgs Hie bostaan we apm pen ant Pew King —_ “ cal! itwhat you will—between herself and France. Candia and Valenza, the Po is studded with islands, ‘ A: Propayamdt:! Newspaper at Turin, and Ho it We attacks the rights of the: other Italian States, meade ‘stem #bliged to anchor in consequence of the dense Oirculated—Loxuis ‘Napoleon and Prince ‘Napoteon in a feven shone ot Austra, The Imperial eagle, if you salute porated eames, mee and Casale, close to ihe INTERESTING FROM TUSCANY. Lad ae oe fo gem by ‘the "Sul tiene, them on their ‘arrival without anger and without re- | railway betwoen ihe two fortresses, and almost opposite | sy. s6i/owing ure further doiallareceived from theother | ®t & loss’ to. the lauer of twenty men killed All the newspapers brought by the Vigo were Secret of the Oonspisacy—Caribaldi and Other Republican . sisti ), will Ddrin, ou order, tranquillity, medera- J at'Cape Race. Caadere Promoted to Ofjices of Honor and Frustby the King ton; and iho pencenbie cite pata in Pest If the <avatriane have bat 120,000men - the field, ae we raty off taly fie cee a ag erage of ee “Sardine—ngland ty, bonor, the laws and property, shall be reepected | 4Fe told, no dou' ‘ranco Sardinians (or Italo Frans noti bas ap- She-ecrew steamer Edinburg, Ceptain Cumming, pi Stripped of her Mask of Bypocrisy— 1, ) * * ¥ has that ay hit apd protested as inviolable and sacred thin; The | as they are hore called), are net inferior in numbers. The | PoiBted M. Giorgio Manin, son of the late Venitian Dic- bates, The Reason wy She Would Not #i2 Sardinia—The English | Sonetant. disoipline, which in the Tcperial tecpe ie | Austrians have, however, unreasonably extended their | 'tor, to the post of aid-de-camp to Goneaal Ulloa, siveG at half-post six o'clock last evening from an aly Detstedyand in Danger of Violence—Grave | equal to their valor, is a guarantee for my word. Inter- Jive ce pperations, te ahey Toanto sttack both Verooll ABO aNSEa Wien tee ieaeadn tencinontion: moran, negow, whence she sailed at half-past nine o'clock | Zinder ofthe British Goverment, to. Breting to you thé generous sentiments of tay august ale, On one side the Montfei ,and Novi and ales. yaa and wounded. This is the first authentic acvount we have had of actual bloodshed in the present war. Lower down, at Valenza, a cannopate was commenced by the enemy on Tueeday pight, but up to Wednesday evening it had Deen ineffectual. "At Cambio, about thirteen miles north- « east of Alessandria, however, the Austrians exfected a with the grade of Lieutenant of the staff. Sue provision- 3 é ang the greatest tranquillity under the present | Pafsage on Monday or Tucaday, deecending, as appears ¢ Empei 4 master, 1, while treading your soil, -pr. gandria op the other side. My opinion is that the ocoupa- | ™eD i babi the fore! ‘the evening ofthe 7th inst. Now thatthe die is cast end the war is fairly com. | Suyperor amy Manors ig intended’ delther against the | tion of Novara is butafeioty and that the real attack | ciTeumstances. The Monilore Toscano states that the | Probavie, fiom Mortara, as Force at ercteices menced, Iam enabled go give you what! contd not before— | people nor against ‘the nation, but against a subversive | Will be made upon the fortreeses. Austria will thus Tuscans had presented an address to the English resi- Whe mail steamship Canada, Captain Stone, | reliable information of te reel origin, which, notwith. | Party, whicb, under the specious mask of liberty, would | take the bull by the horns; but it was very evident pee goog ges gh oma nate eee. Se > ft lpbeaeritt ret “ 7 . deprive the-whole world of it, if the God of armies was | that she could neither advance upon Turin, without expo- | #Potbor aldress, tn whi Fi meee 3h. ond jved.at-Boston at half-past eight o'clock yester- 6 all you hav’ reed in Frerich, Eogligh or Austrian | not niso-the God of nations. When your adversary and | siDg her flank tober foes at Casale, nor yet attack Novi, | the British government has to encounter in its rela- | Cio %i 0 coe vanoing by Stradella and Voghers, If they M a ’ Papers, lt a3 yet a profound soars. This war ~was planned | ours shell havo been vanyuisuod, whea order and peace | WiWOUE running tho Tek ot an atidck from Alessandria: | Hoos with fOrelgn States, but declare Uat Weir sooti- | Wanton casos 2 oauces tothe Sot of Macoom, by moruing. She left Liverpool on Saturday | three years ago, a ed tho-movements which have re. | shall’have been restored, you, who may now call us your | Novi is, berides, within reach of constant, rapid and al- | Pens are in favor 4 “Bologna. "The Tus. | only ten miles distant on thetr right, and they would not . Duke of Tuscany has left Ferrare for Bologna, pon, the 7th inst. We received her mails at 12 | salted in the revolu tiomary element of Italy, now uniting | Shemlet, will soon consider us as your liberators and | ter Oe ee ont bere evings | cam exmy is actively engaged at present in feid practice. | Probably be required to wait for thé 14th of June; or, if The column which has just oflected this operation will come upona road leading directly to Tortona. It will pro- bably endeavor togain this town, and there effect «junction . ‘ ~e Novi is their aim, the road is equally direct, it is at Tor- clock las with thé King of Sar imia, were projected im 1056 by Count | "The Vieuna Gazelle publishes the text of the Emperor's | Pg any uneasiness or apprehension with respect to | Partof the gendarmerie of Como, who had received Minié , owever, that the cholos of the Austrians “a ee ie “Ba F Cavour, bie Prime Minister, who establisned the Ita. letter, ich relieves the Archduke Ferdiuend Maximilian | 16, coming struggle. ‘ite Seraiian army, already ries from the Austrian government with orders to repair | {on\, however, that tbe choice of he Austrians will have ¢ steam ity of Baltimore, i v I of functions of Governor Genet 6 Lombardo- spoRe as been raised he e iden dash at Novi * steamship City more, from Liverpool | lian National Societ y, for ‘tha double purpose of checiting | Yonetian kingdom. The following iss translation pitch of enthusiasm by tho sight, of tho first French | {ians bave formed a military line frem Bologna to Ancona, ficted Indnite incor vontouse on; the iustceenene iow ‘th inst., via‘Queenstown the 12th, passed Cape.| the echemes of Maz sini’s party and redeeming Italy from | Dear Drotker ‘Archduke Ferdinand Maxieailian:—The | troops. Unquestionably there will be great emula- | 2d comprising Folios. ode, ra Pe’ austrian dominion. Thi society formed -e-committes in | cali attitide preserved by the population of my kingdom } tion between two mations which look akin outwardly far | reat scary Telgue the Aresnele, 4 avy is in pro e on Tharsday. Tari of Lombardd-Yenetia, in tho midst of the excitement pro- | more than they aro similar in nature or disposition, Tho | £Fess,, and bec 7 inks ster: 3 ANB in, the preside: et of which was Coont Pallavicino, | Yoxed by foreign inih The neal und deccunewhics | rapid marching in of the French forces basalready removed | ment to d four companies to the Abruzzi. The Duke ler news-was obtained by the news yacht of the | from Mulan, a gent feman of great wealth, wo suiforod an | they bave displayed, even in those lateat times, in | All chances of an unequal combat; for the rest the Tialiane | Si boueun Ras sent te Men Against Massa and Carrara, . : " - ko hances of fn uneaue! combat; for the rest the Italian’ | “A Piedmontese detachment with two guns had been sent Psocinted Press and carried to St. Johns, N. F., | ‘mprisonment of t\ ronty years in the Austrian dungoons | obeying Pate Fee a Ey evermenoes | what seems an cartest nlisck of iho Avetrians lise been | {Tom La Spezia to oppose them. a thence telegraphed to New York yesterday. however, the French have had time toarrive in large nom- ders, 20 that there can hardly be fewer than from eighty Sag Peels setieieen oes tee ever: iminithes ve by an* attack on Novi. We are, however, simply calling atten. tion to the probability of an important action to be fought of Spollverg, reude wad.ao famoua tay the history of Silvio | PO4, 2 satisfying | domaine Norn induces a conf. | received with « burst of universaljoy. ——. Cie : Pellico, and the m ore circumstantial and unsparing narra- | dence that, in presence of grave eventualities, there will | A very different sensation hag been excited by the | ‘THE EFFECT OF THE WAR ON THE FUNDS. ‘From the London Giobe, Fr he political advices are not specially important. | tive of that log tr ugedy given to the worldzy Andryane, | maintein law and order, and will not allow thelr fidelity | arrival ‘of some of the English newspapers, and {From Tait’s Magazine, Lreenthe Tandem Cute, Sridapovening, Iy6) the companion of. \the iustelous 0) + | towards thelr Sovereign to be shaken by the inflammatory | especially of the Times of the 23th of last month. It | since the 1st of January consols have fallen in value by | ,,7b0Fe who lod the public to expect @ swift advance of here had-been as yet nobattle between the Aus: | % lous C.vunt Confclonieri. The | and perfdious arsuments of fomentors of ditorder. At | Seems now almost impossible to resist the conviction | the sum of seventy millions sterling; sharcs of public | the Austrians upon Turin in the earliest days of the a:rug- PSR vice-president was General Garibaldi, who, afver the de | the samo time I perceivo in this attitude of the Tombardo- | that ther is a party, and a strong party, in Eng. | companies in this country, and other securities, have | &!¢, are Dow astonished at the slowness of their move- 4 ns and tke allies, i feat of 1849, took refuge in your hospitetie city, ana | Veiuian provinces a proof tat you have fulfiled to my | land, implacably hostile to the Tialian cause. Tae report | fallen by a similar sum. ‘The two classes are worth now | Menus | It was ouly by overlooking the immense ditfex’ ,. © movements of the former were inexplicable, ] since that time abandoned the Mazen, | $omPiete satisfaction the mission with which I charged | of an offensive and defensive alliance between France and | one hundred and ay ‘millions less than at same period | Mes i0 the'r way that apy ove could have arrived at tt iq a 5 , je party of Mazzini. | you, in calting you, as Governor-General, to tho bead of | Russia, ill-grounded as it now seems, was suificient to | duritg the year. They continue to produce the same re- | Couclusion that the Austrians would rush up the grr at » tit wae betieved they:were waiting for favorable | Te secrery was Is Farina, Prine Ministor of | the administration ofthat country. But we circumstances | enlist 'ngland, and with hor Prussia and all Garmany, | turn, or nearly the sume, for the revenue of many public | Piedmentese valley thas lies.on the left or northern De nie aitiay. “ Ricily in 1848. This committee fora red sub-committees all | eet fect Lae ig BA prim Pweg supporters of Austria. od if Russia takes | companies is unaffected; but ths reduction ia the mone ani ore a oo = es ela ‘on = er, est easures for fending the r: of my throne anc ly be when England affords . f wu - th over Italy, from the Alps toficily, and somo, too, beyond | maintaining internal repose and security, and, to thia end, for it. Toat a secret understanding Paplie conan iD Brat atehitty, "Dut who have conned be made in a day, or in threedays. Torun head ee The Exoperor and Prince Napoleon had quitted | the Alps. Manin, the Dictator of Venice in 1848, was at | of placing ina single hand the civil and military powers 3 the head of the commitvee in Paris, and Louis Napoleon | i8 the Lombardo-Venetian kingdom, have determined { Jste—English Cabinet, seems to me very evident, from 8 for Genoa. Sil Coiese, Nagalaeeugen tutinate si serch Keuistacazse. ie) mepmy dear. brother, to relieve ou, ail further orders, - foe that a sends oe ae to strengthen 2 . *, “ the of rernor Geueral, which you have till rigon. pcona. wi pose shoul he steamship Burops errived at Liverpool.cn | yonjon, too, anothor sud-committ: 19 was formed, under | alled with prudence and devotodnees, cad to Confer oy | Austria, who ie utterly Helpless by sony wpud’ ee lon 9g etal? upen Turin without making very ample provisions for a § ssloretrest in a fefeeietiyhenes bave been tota} iethe a ws ™ roa ruip. @ Auitri nerals mast have , THE TARDINESS OF THE AUSTRIANS. that the Pledmontess commanders would not, like‘ aret From the London Times, schikoff in the Crimea, take a front position, wher , = i }» May 6.) Anstria appcars willing to let the world believe that if | bad a far superior position.in point of streogth beb ind the Se headqui wa . | Feldzougmestre Comte Gyulai, Commander-in Chief of the | force to a seaport which does not belong to her, and which ? Sthrinat. be ao J ad eat ree Foe caamipeia Army of Lombardy, the functions of Governor-General for | Mex about 200 miles far from the centro of her military | $h° Was Precipitate in her diplomacy he will make amends | Po and bebind their fortresses, and ono which ? yi the ‘onsods were quoted on Wednesday noon at gig | *°4 even to Hungary and toGermar iy. entral Com- | the civil administration of the country operations? Surely Aucona is intended as an English na. | fo" Such unaccustomed promptitude by being very delibe- | immense advantage of lying along the whole flan “or the z , i * | mitteo atthe capital of Sardintediss minatedall over Tly | View's, April 90, 286. pRANCIS JosEra. | val and military station the moment Fugland has broken iDockad brave, eee pag ae eer eae decks | quutzian line Of march. | Turin was far betier co ered by or: money and account, 5 3 ‘ibe s ‘A lever from Vienna of the 24 says: rough her thin veil of neutrality; and the fiect satli — men - | thie flank position than b; front positt Hi y through moans of the sub-eommitte #, eeoret publications, |g ieler {rom Vienna of the 24 ays ss again beon | frome British harbor, wiih sealed orders, but salt vo ee | S¥eaction, at ' moment when she was thought tobe | offered, Bencral La, Martooran theretore, ne gecuneey In the Livorpool marketthere had been a con- | advising the people of their duties t: 0 the country, andex- | agioumed, It is eaid, however, iaat in’a few days his | splended for the Adriatic, is a movement in keeping with ) Witiog patiently the peaceful solution of all her diffioul- | General Gyulai to move with caution. The Auer qupelled : horting them to bide their time and not break out in use. | Majesty. will accompaby the Empress to Munica and Pos- | the Austrian reinforcements sent to strengthen Ancona, | fic; when she appeared with that sudden menace, that | not only to deal with the enemy bebind rable advence in the price of cotton—-quoted | oe stive attomy pts at rerolation, which wocld be only | Se0kofep, and will then proceod to Laiy; but according to Soch are the surmisea of the Italians, and they are of a | tH pommeead that prompt act of war, we all be- | but to take ample meagurcs for frustrating ar, aban ; :. . 5 another version the Empe.or wili go to Berlin, and | suificiently painful character. Backed b; reaolved to seize. quickly passing | of cree] round big right he citreulars at three-sixteenths of @ penny a | extinguished in blood by tho-tustris m government. Hae eee Bete to Tone ree ehate banat; | Russia, they have no reagan (9 dread the caaisror Preae | oPPortunity for striking a decisive blow. Sho bad 100,000 | and so" reaching the. Yausling thee: oat patio four th of a penny, ‘The sales of the three | Some of tho Central Committoo « leo issuod at Turin an | meet tho Empress, aud from Iunspruck will proceed to | Sia, Germany, or oven Wagiand; but its painful for thom | Me in Lombardy and Venice, whereof 120,000 were } of insurrection—which might nave been ent: sriained by 4 open publication, in the form of asn 1all newspaper, which | Verona to join the army. to have to rumuber free Haglan amongat the foes to thetr | ‘cin, “Pus general of thar armyr an he ioctl eve | oa ee Partiaan, Garibaldi, “They bad + Meo ta! con 12 wei °@ 27,000 bales. Ini edlksd “Ghonuta weiikseas an: 7 ellbectadianan, tb [Vienna (May 3) correspondence or the London Times.) | {reedom: they did not expect it; they thought they bad general of that army, as he looked scross | struct secure bridges) on the Ticino and thr » Po below. was abiy edited, though wi ' ecame; ft waa | {Vienne (May: 8)_correrpondence x: the Landon, Tis deserved betior of the Qucen of ‘the Beas, “But, ag cay 4 Me little river, could almost survey the scene of bis | ‘alceeandria, and decte whether they would prche breadstutis market flour was very dull, and} calied It Picolo Corriere 'llatia (the “Littie Courier of | thar inesuole arose loliomed the etvenven grind worocy | fates if the war in taly assumes general Europead dimen. | fwt2re operations. Oa his right, rolling away in the | their centre’ columns or with their left wing ing d bwnwards; some. authorities quote ade-s| italy”). In this wore promulgated the views of'tke nation- | the Ticino on the 3oth of April. On that date the Austrian | Sone, they think England will have to thank Lord Derby ia on! the eth tae aaa ete and Pennine | They had to overcome the difticalties pre:« ps; on the left the lesser altitudes of Moatferrat and ct - if Senlthagiare wees ak:Girk ra ‘ °¢ and bis colleagues far more than either the ancient na- 4 ‘ rrat and | flooding of the country , difficulties enhanced t TWioat kdl soathcialle JAsctined, and, cond © party, repudating the extrerne ultraism of Maz=ini, pa | eens er neete midway between | tural enemy o England, or the colossal empire, her new the summits of Moot Apennine mark the nighland che- | rain that fell early in the week. Moreover { ; 44 advocating those moderate, constitutional principlos which © Viena public aecuses Count Gyulla of having un- | M¥a), im the Fast, Taree OF me couniry into witich he was about to ad. | tion of our government, which stayed the ‘a .also © wnsiderably lower. alone could redeem ‘Ktaly. ‘This journal was .secretly in- sarily dolayed the passage of tas army across the ance. Bui botweau these two northern and southern | vance for three or four days, told in favor of the al 9 ; a d y . " . af MOVEMENTS OF THE FRENCH: Uneven distzicts, siretching straight before him, like | for the French, who bad fod Pi t owed pe pro vision market was quiet and nominal. “|: irotuced into every village arid hamlet in tho Sand, not | Ficina, Dot it wrongs ‘him. grievously. The Anatrian } one correspondent of the Glue wayati movements | SR T°R0'ar bay which spreads isripoling marfaco’doep | Qutb, cntered Uy" thousande daly the mom set Seite excepting Lombardy and Nag'es. Ite eloquent appesis | tween the 2600 and 27th of April, but at oy very last | Bd relative position of the allied armies of iadependence intoe rocky region, extends a long vista of flat coun- | days’ grace expired. As there Was direct oaeunication spoke to the heart, told the rcador that Sardinic was at | moment the British governnient made ® proposi. | ™MUst necessarily bo Kept from telegraghic ken, and the | {Z¥,, Through tho middle of it winds the Po, #0 renowaed | along the whole live oceupied by the Pie Imontese from sork for the redemption of Ite!y, and couneclied the peo. | tion, wnich was Teniily accopted by Atatfia “and riers of surategetio articles fn London. journate—amach fiom HED Alba os COS Tighe, MAGE bal Goce ee ts | a sae Trance wace Te. Deal ig aan Fire Coli 3 ‘on in a hand-to- : ‘ y 7 \ is = ring on the arc of war for benefit ‘ 2 pen: ten, Jn” Casale, A rie and probal BS r iss “a Jalled the Austrian commander in ehand-to- ) 1. sgaiggt promature insurrections, which werc.so much | SOM Hfioowd WY tance, Te government | of Tanoibal—mey wait patiently, aud put, meanwhile, | 226 ange on the Teft band, and from tore distant | as good as the Austrians bad shown the B ent aes igh desired by Austria. the British Cabinet had recetved tne reply of rane to | {Deir trust in McMahon, Canrobert, Randon, Vaillant and Shee Gl that close the vista and shut out France, | plains of Piedment. This may serve to xcount for the Pape b as protested against his States being made ® | ““Tyus thie nationai-sovicty wrecght all over alg oravo- | its proposal, and telegraphic instructions were therefore | £&Marmora. Some youngor oftcers, particularly Bour. | Geevend lite rivers, cach bringing its tribute from is | slowness of the Austrians. They have lost the firat throw. b fies 4. Motiow of opinion, notenly atnong the people, Buteven among | forwarded to Count Gyulal not to crogs the Ticino until he | MA’ are believed by the troops, who watchod him inthe | 9W.% Mountain—litle shining ribe that articulate to | The Avstrian column that entered by N' svera appears to Yitans fo Madi i ‘Phd peaceful revolucion which tsk piace re | received orders from Vienoa to doso, Tne military ax, | Crimea, likely to cmoerge out of this campaign topmost of | [RO Packbone of Piedmont. | In those mountainous | have passed Vercelli and turned off sout bwards towards nearer Tesldent in Madrid are returning | Son.) y im Tuscany jean evidenoae”thin—not adrop of bond | thoritiee-compiuined bitterly of the seonseless meddling”? | te whole staff in barditood aud wiso daring. Gonerai | CjSwcl wo the Jelt lie tbe tastnersoa of the Sardi. | tho Po, in the direction of Trino. The {¢ goo assembled in . was “ahed, the soldiory actually lending in the movement. | of the dipiamutigte, and iretully dcdlared that the two or | BFuat, who led the fret division over Mount cents, isa | Dans. The great iortrers of ‘lessandria stands almost | tho neighborhood ef Mortara algo timed to the south, and | now loan docupted solely.the attention of epecula- | Look at Massa, Carrara and Paras, where thesoldisrsand | three davi gained by France and Sardinia wocld cost | 1088. "His death at the top of the Ains was simply owing | fi,4° omiramce to the Mont/‘srrat country, and over | it isprobably this body which has be ea fruittesaly at. ra rhe Pari #Bourse on the 6th inatant, Routes com. | iizens quietly, audwithout the ‘slightest disturbance, | Austria thevsands cf men and millions of lorine, agit | 10 Bio ot adding to ruck professional ability @ very | Tho Ril to the rable -thoco ula gis whi sacleena eae | wemmBting to cross | the Fo at Frassinetio, noar Mcvrtin letter, in the Vord of Brussels, reports ‘ai ski: tithes between the outposts, In cne.the ‘a oy Abrew off the yoko ef their oppreseors and proclaimed | is ponitiveiy knows here that the Russian Blight «Knowledge of the laws regulating animal Jif. ills to the right—those uplands which swell away to | Casale, and opposite Valenza, near! od at, 60,00, and ot 11:50,.A.2¢. went to6t. 22:27 P. | Yistor Emanuel dictator of Italy Look out Corn aimilar peeve. A certain battalions have recaved orders | Headed with the work of climbing tho hewghts of glory Soret Ee Cera & \he Seaplon, Rinat Raa ceutre’ of the Pletmontese lige. tn? the miles he Fhruree “pend inavimate; rontes 60.95, 3:31 P, | moveiwent in Naples. to return toGalicia, and a corps of obesrvation wit soon | SPG marcboling the vanguard, he would guip down a | fussibs art, acd cleciht tay pele Laaet Park unde | of their operations they met with resit inmoe not only from ex: close 10:95 both for monoy and account, Lit: | ut what mero, in ho Austrisr provinces ofLombar'y | be posted inthe neighborhood of Cracow, giese of siow Wola, and felVabut stricken By a shot Het” sitoyial plain our Ausrtan Genavaal can pen 2G plone supe: | free (ait eee eee oe ane. and Venice, the revokition bass ramilcatione, and the | | The newa.of the aillence betwoen Tussin gad Franco: is 8 ae ; ble of un honr’s defence. The Teer fade abe, | for the rains swelled the waters of the Po, and'on Wednes- king. Auctriens know that. Hence their hesitation te come on | said to have produced an exceedingly paint! impracsion | , GeberalZrochy, it is said, will be named to replace the ad reat river winds about; | day evening they were still on the left bank. In the Lomdan Twn ves ef the 7th instant, alluding to the | and leave a necret enemy, goon to be revealed ae an o on the Emperor.Francis Joseph. On the lst inst. late Genexn: Dovat, whose siden death at Suga hae been | $e tF!butarics stream down inte {tf ;om right andfrom loft. | meantime a body of Anatrians had or seed the 4 Nom at spectie speymenis by Russia, Austria and | foe in their rear, The Uilanoge have been Gisarmod ty | in the #0 celled Kaigor-garten, in the Prater, aud pertoge | Mentioued. , : There are little indefensible towns like Novara, Mortara, | bio, and Thad prahod on to Bala, a 130 Fomemh ane sponee- ’ Veat, seat tnoal the Austrian government, but they; only parted with afew] who saw him aa ho was driving home in the evening wore | _, The Marseitics journais of Wednesday aanoas and Vercelli, the thres points of @ triangle; but there is | ed to threaten Totona and Novi. ‘They had also shown ie, exp sins 2 suspension! specie pagmoxts— | of qhoir weapons—anticigating the stroke of Austria, they | rouah struck thy the obange in his persanal appearance. | TiVal in that oy or the French Generals of Division Camou, | BOthing, Serious between him and 1 ‘arin, which lics away | themselves at Caste ‘nuovo, on tine &rivia; but the latest , by alm vst e¥ery.one on the Continent, and by not | have buried them in the earth in cno spot, whither tcy | The Fmperor and Empress were loudiy cheered by the | Gault aud Auger, and of General of Brigade Hose, ou theit | GP wh tue 0p of this desp lowiat id level. All Earope | intelligence from Paris’ 18 ‘that the Austrians.on the left n Englaa \d,'8 Coneidered a very natural and. pro- waa a hoe proper Ro and jein in the stesggle to people, and — 2 vpusual sign of kindly feeling ap- bar Pag Pnni FE Rr ages pe at ees Paes — coat heeties in her bank oe ¢ the Po had ren ved from Sale, and: had. recrossed oppresacrs. peare roduce 2n agree: i towing @ ap- > e be ver. stepay 1 he tegiuning of awar—is bat acantriv- | "Tix'vo etl moro secret and important intelligence to | Viennese, who arom geodmatired ince, wow ctomie mane] Pointments 10, 0 medical aul” of the army of Italy -- | SMY mask the fortresses of Alessand rinand Casale,andali | What may be the wraje ‘8 of General Gyulai it ie ime or extort, 0g fade from the poopie in a partial, | commzmicate to you, Kossgth, of whem nobody has heard | tain that it is entirely the fant of the “entourage” of tn on Larrcy, surgeon-in-chief ;; M. Champou! that routhern mountain district whiich they command, | possible to divine. - Whothe *_ B® intends to attract the at- A yninot 8 mancer, and for raising forced loans in | '0 England for some time, or even here, ls secretly at | sovereign that tho iktcrnal affairs of the empire are in’ 8000 Of the ist corps; M. Boudin, of the 24 cor; Baile. |] 224 that ehe would, with the remaim der of the force, rush | tention of the allies by de T@strations in their front, Ltn fed .ot thas. credit ys work in Sardinia, where ka Ie incogako, and holding com. | snch an wneatiefectory state. Ton, of the 8d corps; and M. Fenin of the 4th corps. Mv, | £t7#ight forward—hever stopping till she reached the | while a force strong ensogn #68 along tho slopes of the utterly des \ructtve bon vpon the maia- | mupication by means of amissaries with the Hungarian Yrom the Polish trontiors we learn that Rugzian troops | *8ouest, Berthberand and Cazalas, are atteched to head Royal Palace at Turin. There would be some prestige of | Alps and appears on the lett ti ‘WX Of the line or the Dore, 9 of which | the powor of raising losns with economy g porticu@f the Austrian ermy—one-third of the whole, aud | are now marching towards Gelicia, and at Warsaw it y'} <uarters, and Nf. Mery and Napoleon Perrier to the am. | “18 in occupying the enemy’s capital at the outset of the | Baitea, or whether he intends 1 © make @ movement from Miopente, fi cannot affect Ruglish fuance, bocanse, J the very troops which formerly dofested the Austrians | stated that two corpeare to bo placed on thoaouthwest | Vulances of the guard. War,and there would be obviously somie strategic advan. | Pavia and Piacenza upon Novi, o ° When tho waters have ceil aire anything from England it > 4 under his authority, and which have. been removed to: } frontiers of Russia. Each of thom will consist,.on papor. ‘At three o'cwck yesterday, during a rainstorm, esol. | ‘sin being in a position to destroy tha:t network of rail- | subsided to attack in front, no, @ CaM say. But hig nations req dire anything and it must be 4 Italy in.erder to keep them ag far as possible from their | of about 60,000 men, and the one will be placed on the | @#2F of the Seventeenth regiment of the linc was seen to | WAYS Wulcn now pute the French who land at Genoa | chances of success lessen daily, 1 €08Use tho force op- in gold or ; ite equivalent, ative land. Here they have beon fraternizing with tho.| Galician und the other on the Beasurabian frontier. The | unt the Pont deConoord parapet, and, accoutred as he | in direct and immediate railway commuuisation with the | posed to bim increases daly, and Ccuples the heat rondon Herola ' of the 7th inst. ‘sayethe question of] Italians through tho instrumentality of Kossuth, and pro-|{ order{or raising recraits in the kingdom of Poland has | We, Plunge head foremost, knapsack and all, into the French who cross Mont Cenis and attain the Piedmontase | ground. 4 See ee MEANS gy baoly will rovolt in a body,.ot last. Already there is di-'| not yet Seen Issued, but tue lsta of thie year’s cousaripta | SeiBe- Bostinen pat-off 10 the rescue, and after ginking | S40 of the Alpe at Scan. Master of Turim and of the rail- (From the London Sun, May 6, P. 3} sat Lloyd’a h ad lont ite attraction, atd there was | .yision andtissension betwean the Austrian and Hnngariat | have ben made out. A Pole writes to'® friend in thie | tice, be was fisbod up 2 long way down, at x washer wo- | /Ay8 that contra at Turin, the Austrian General would | Austria is ‘Tatlers very easily, 's, ¥6 haa invaded: position to com plete arrangements at inst rates, commanders, and that is another reason svhich accounts | city that Russia will be able to effect ker purpose without | man’s bulk, near La Terzagse. When hg camo to ontn, | Bave divided the two French armiey, and would Sardinia, but beyond levying contributions the peace. Paris Moniteur , of the 7b inst. conteins a decree ||: SF the tardy movements of tae Austrian troops. any grea: exertion. ‘She ,will wait,” says he,’ unul | terrogetory itturned out that he had been inthe pro. } Dave been In scoure possession of all Sardinia, | ful population of the country, abe bas made but Wtue pro- tit aed’ Coant Wilewaki As soon a€ war was declared, this sociaty, desming ite | the whole world is at loggetheade, aud thero is'a gene- | Vincenn furlouch, asd hed reached Paris to learn that { CXcept only, that | mountanious | Montfivrrat region, | gress. Much valuable time has been Sa ing Marshal Va {la runt Waiewraki mem- | mission fulaiied, dissolved Wwasif, an Cocct Cavour, in | rat Insuresction In Karhean “Tistoy, and. ‘theck ay | is balielion bad left for Fy one throe dase befors. Shame | VCR we, have supposed him to survey, a8 lying | od. More than a fortalgbt since the ultamazem. wan at. Wrivy Council ; R ‘over tobe First Vice resident of prea eoenee of the high sercioes rendered by these na- | will renewcher quarrel with the Porte.” it appears as if Pars hi reason. ae Hepesor has ordered him tobe | th, = og) = oreo ORS td iiross | pounced, bat ultimatum an- aster of Jratice; Dal lonal men, appointed la is chiof gacretary, and | France bag .sccepted th rgiven and for ware ‘nee. That soldier was not - rast thong! not until’ three days I D sianglo to be fh iter ofSratico; Dako of Padour | SSicaea i Gavibuldl tho command of 15000 mex. To | age acenaed Trad that te diene ot eae ome ears | bora to besrowned. to be an object ao material to the successful opening of | of war by crossing the icing a wea eee at got Inia ter of the Inter oF ; Gengral Randon to be Min- | prove how national, how Italian, Pr place. Contmon prudence requires that a vi apm bons books of the tyons Rail. | %e game before her that Austria was believed tohare | adversary pay the expenses cf the wer eee ing Waa *, Marabal Vaills wnt to be Major General of the | dinisp government have appointod ali tho camminders of | watchful eyechould be kept on the movements of the Rus. | Wy gave & of 97,000 mon.as the weekly traffic of | Sc¥«d wisely even in incurring some moral odtum while | It may be supposed that Francis Joseph medit ated a Teal, ¥- 3 Sant” Messaemmo, Masi, Mand ctaare—eby kad ait | ee me mtekey | Burcpe, and on those of the French in | tn "On ihe lat of ibe tame talon ori cee panaremomecition # which is probably i fle E Tery decided coup, that Turin would have been oe: upled » Maat, A iatin- and 8. e traiie taker of the Cham- . - | and plundered. 2 onite, ur denies that France intends to placoan | guished themselycs in the ravelutionary movements of Tae Wisden pera the day before yesterday annoznced } Dery station had seut on over 20,000, nearly es many | ‘#7 Reason, but which lessons our idea of tho n.2veeeity kind The old neat Se ee te nthe Rhine, If the Fi nperor bas given the title of red ~~ cate mot boo ae frat srtiligrists aa Be the departure of M. de Banneville, tue French Charge a? | more Doing, serpased Seige ee ry, Greaable ‘and va Ir Age gg rere Austria bas taken x ed: | in Viennes and. Genersi let ate ee ie Inder of the Army of (\worvation to the Duke o! | oe’winice in 1849, after havin; tzsky respected at the fli | Aflaircs; but it wos not until yeatorday evening that he | Briancom a] stroeta rons wed | ricrity In point of Sb. 0 ipe- | with proper respect before they come to cross perveas * i " “ 8 been appointed on the stat | quitted:Vienna. M. Dezair hia way, apd was clamorous to bo shown the station de y in point of force. She moved her army forwa 8d in ‘It may be fit was to indicate that in case the Freach fron: | of Victor’ manuel,.tras despatched to takecammand o! | Dasey,, ia atil Here, Dut hole Gaegernzcd eat, | Vienne.’ On belng told that the branch dowa the Ruone | "9 Fe por ne tars ron Ug ell Ber cent moderation would obtain grea fad a be th "eatened the g.trrigons would form on» | the Tuscan.army when it declared indavor of Sardinia. subject, and, as such, nt liberty to romain. At tis | 0 Vienne tn Dauphiné did not lend to Ohambery, «Tis to | {6 Neate he ee upon that alluvial plan—that flat | gence for ‘when obliged to strike their eolors, at \d sthe. tha Di, On contineall, ¢ English goverment is de:etted herealmostac much | very lakh moment M. de Banpovilie sent the archivos ox | Vienne en Autriche wast to gol Where's the’ road by | DAY of land—which lay before them. Gradually and w.'th | ask for favorable consideration. This is, however, & gre: ? trewnen: asthe Auscian. Itean no longer pisy the double game it | the Embassy to the Spanish Legation, and placed th much deliberation tnis division occupied the two litt‘e | mistake. The more energetically, we might almost bay" probable finaa cial requir te of tee Britiah gov- | played in Italy in 1848.2nd 1849, when it.sent Lord Minto | French gosiding in Austria under the’ protection of rn in Paria seem to have sub. | toW08 of Novara and Mortara—one on the right wing and virulentiy, nations enter on hostilities, the mere wn It were daily 6. *citing moro sttention. to Sicily and Rome. The mask is now: ped off, and | Torre Ayilon, the reprozentative of Spaic at this Court. Marshal Vaillant, Minister or | thoother on the left—and then advanced afew miles further } be ‘and the beteer terms they will oj x Teapect i spy. | the professiqns.ef Engiaod in favor of libers! government | The Avstrians d spoken of in consequenes of thie incor to, Veroell, where thoy halted, surveyed and reconnol Ae, cope bert patie! Porvian, belong: | on the continent e¢ Europe, ut more particularly in favor | that the & panise Gebinet wit nid Latte ‘Npneom, ia tne pleteness Of | tred, while every hour was bringing laden transports iabo {nibers, “ad should ‘fo only 70° ‘command ihe aes boxe Pio Grazio. ty On the 28h ult. His Holiness, | of Italian froodom, are Waderstood in thelr true ligut | ofere wae mee nee, making to establish what the harbors of Genoa and long lines of French infantry | jverson, as currently reported, the question will he de- laiking over the g, “nds, prooseacd along the sea | Her bypoorisy can no longer serve to blind the credulou | the Germans call ® secundogeniture in = t isl decroos, | Were awarming over the Cenis, Per! the rains that | \ded, and the Hapebu: pall will be numbered with Tar Paterno, whor, * HO entered s colfeo house end | ‘0,ler relih viows. Ms nelne for Maly, the Italian poo 0 < HIliere ad From Bie eae | eee eae ae Pe ame. the roads; per. | he pest. | Three monde will dispose of the question, and regard ber 5 sisted i ‘Genoa, ena, ‘Francis’ Joseph bevodiction toe nin, 2Uer of dahermon, while tho | fean to ight for the Turks against Rosaia, but abe hes a Fae ee tbe A Oh Te OFUOF Of the | ccunsclied caution Or created Iresolation: periere ans | CJenuers of his conduc, be convinced of the of the fort colebratea his arrival withasalute, | nothing but bypocritical sympathy for the Sardiaiens, | house of Hapsburg- Tho memory "Joldiers!—in 1700 and 1800 the ‘army, under the | Avétrians wore impressed conviction that it | ‘ie is dimoutt to understand what has occasioned Btockhelm journals ann Once the dostruction of | Hagsiing for their independents against greater tyran | the great public is remarkably short, and it may | ofders of General Bonaparte, obtained in italy glorious frould be, lees Grea) to let the German disizclination to fight. " There ie no douktueg f the ia "gest and flaest vy Ruesia; though Sardinia, in the late war fa tho | theroiore be as well to recapitulate tha ‘principat Ta: victories over the same enemies whom we are anout to ps, they are brave ok men, who would unhesitatingly 0 houses by fire, of the ia Part of | Cri abed her best blood for her ungratefal British | Napoloniennes. They are—the overthrow of the th: combat. Several demi brigades then acquired the desig- to enter into the ‘against equal opponents. Bat n of Uudevalla. all am ina ato tell You & secret which | that.nre, by preaching the independence of Italy in Pi nation of terrible or invincible, which each of you, by his | ‘i hither side, as in a cockpit, from which there waa.no { although “straining om the slips,” and sotuated by = abilities of Arnog\ein & Bekcc\ 28, of Vienna, are ro. | He® at the bottom of the policy of England. She would | mont; ty agitating im favor of « union between Sardinia, | Cour firmness and discipline, will endeavor to give to | sare. We are not in & ition to divine motives or to the 0 age, strong fe of animosity against Me have gladiy co-operated with Louis Napoleon and Count { Parm: ena and Tuscany; * bis standard, Soldiers!—have confidence i criticise strategy, for the despatches are not very explana- } hold back. woather has undoubtedly pressed hes at £2,000,000 storli Tais; however, eee to Cavour bed they been wildng to shere with her the | rity of’ ‘th,’ Bourbons ia Paina Coe wea e aera in you, Letus show ourselves worthy of Fricoruorer tory, and the knowledge vouchsafed to us by ‘he military { against them. tillery: Ld conjecture, The firm ware of very old vtanding, | sous of victory. | What she coveted ani demanded as her | ing Mentea ¢gro, Sorvia, &c., to rige againnt the Porte: by | the Emperor; and let us 20 act that one day iighali be said | Sutborities is not very parfect; but we can sco that, after | verge, and thero are same reasons to believe that if LS extonsive character of their sp20ul ; hs was Siclly—the gem of the Mediterranean. Bat-| reminding &1e Poles of the flagrant wrong done to their a8 said of our fathers, us exprossiog all titles being seven days on the Sardinian goil, the invadora bave | have not rotraced their }, they have not 7 7 ‘be bh, ct Was sejected, because, rather thaa become | native county, and by talking to tho Danes of the | siory—"‘ He belonged to the army of italy!”’ not yet advanced more than $6 miles from the fron- | up the daring course on which ‘ventured, or attempted = - cause of anxiety for gome years past. In ere tho Siciliaos would prefer to continue | encroachmente of the Germans, Tho Belgians —- Wer river. Of the division which. crossed the Ticin9, and | to pass the » and thus find ao uncontested way to tbe of 1846 thay wero assietea with an ad Under the odious vale of the Bourbon, Tue Bagiisn arc | aro’ altornately cajoted’ sai meuacod by tho “eae | IMPORTANT MEETING OF THE FRENCH | NUd,appesred to be intended to march up wae lovel | Pledmontane capital, rumont, They corresponded with sev nom fo much hated in ttaly thet they have pws fr | peror of ie Franch, and the Germans SHN i upon Turin, we can trace the movements with somo cor. } There is something In the composition of the army that rt order £0 save them from violence. Yet | contiavally assured by bim that he cutertai ‘Tho Monsteur’ of Me a = tainty. They have diverged rather southwards of their | may account or this extended inaction. It contains men anting in Rogient, alot whom sro baieved to | ant #40 he fall of the Hogiak peopio fz ith the | boatla atntione” towards! them. RogVsh Travellers | of the aiog of tte French Senate oe ae eRe | Sieek routes that is to say, they aro Lending owards the | of different raogs and different blood, many of whom ed, or neatly #9, 7 2 deporit of e2ourit! ral the Coburg interest and the arisiosrasy pro- th 111 Seople fa Grast Beliata wh> ‘dent Troplong, Price Napoicom atrarcd rere tee | {ot of the Moniferrat range, rather than towards the foot | sympathise with the insurgents, who hil tho foliowing {2 the Caio Fa oer be nosy tewBation, |The day will came when paleo, at tho” cowl tance of cho darmace | SM Focld, Misstar of Stato, tore Bie were ae aes | of the Alpine hill. Ta this advance thoy, dnd one of th | there was » similar chanoo of treedom at home fee the Front de Chambord quite the soll of Austria to take | orPiePa ue for ber tit cigs esate, couree, . Thare ina orig iw entirely destrowed. The South Gar. | formation, and addressed the fSounte ta foliar sce | zaines of the Po ia thelr path, and on Woineulay even | Hungarians and Gallicians. | Poles would, bo exosediogly. Seen fe ree ae eens ty of blag om ane apmetta2 of Suanee et J mane aro tall beeite themta'ven wich minglel four and J ment Navaied the hoaor of laying before te Seas | fF dee peesage maw aout toe fewa of Sal reat ctouea | gratiled af the intelligence of alien bert? ene Seses \ moritg, i= rpm: ! mide, “* the Pr Adina’ “4 men, I'S 4 ore t % or thi e t wi oir Own; rege, an cssigng 6 1s WM Del Be safe tp ptatement ‘9f Whe negotiations fouls ve: dy the Powers up to indicater ax attack ou A’essauscla, Eigher up vag every they way Bot bp - ee ‘etengar under Wale »

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