The New York Herald Newspaper, July 6, 1860, Page 5

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: YORK HERALD FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1860.—TRIPLE SHEET. 5 Baxony attended mass. The Exoperor attended mass at | Do you think that those solemn fetes, that popular emo- | pier than we are, thanks to the benignant had them translated into ‘French by a sworn translator, | resulting from the final act of Vienna referring to the neu- | provement, which was chevked by the pressure for @leven. The Emperor, accompanied by a numerous suite, 4 tion, and orerflowing with poetry and eloquence, was & Teen roaene. and to the blissful ny eae 4 Oy reves ” | tralized districts of Paucigny aad Chablais. M. Thouvenel, | money. Console cloved at 9334 a 5 Bor account, ex-dtvi- and escorted by gendarmes, went to on foot. The | simple homage to the memory of the poet/ | mentary institutions. That the Prussian police excited the London commitiee } in conclusion, distinctly hints that France will notgcon- | dend. Tho weekly Bank statement shows an increase in Rugener bes ‘expreased ‘at being greeted | No, it was above and before all the outbreak of nation It is true that the Emperor Napoleon labors to to send into the Grand Duchy of Posen incendiary pro- | sent e+ J of Savoyard territory im favor of | bullion of £303,982. cries of “Vive !Empereur,” be was allowed to pass, whieh, di vided for centuries, seized the first it, a | the greatness and the ity of France with almost | clamations; that they paid for the printing of them in | Swi 5 she accepts tbe European Confe- It was authoritatively announced that the new Russian. the crowd ki respectful silence. The Protestant | remembrance, a glory, @ name, to become again united. | unlimited power. But t power it is the nation that ; that caused them to be distributed to sus. | rence on the question. Joan would be introduced in afew days by Messrs. wevercigns att divine service in the Latheraa Iv. has entrusted him with. Is there Germany a persons, in order to afterwards seize them, and ‘A grand agri exhibition was ‘ing in Pa. | ing Bros. It was expected to amount to £8,000,000 ster. " . Then let Germany be reunited; France has no more ar- | single prince who can be looked upon as the representa- | sbow the ardor of its seal to the detriment of some sub. | ris, and a rumor was current that the peror would ting, § & 4) percent, stock. Grand Duke of Darmstadt arrived wt Baden'on Fri- | dent or dearer wish, for she loves the German nation with | tive of the pation, elected, as Napoleon Ii., by universal | jects of the King of Prussia. make a pacifie speech on the oocasion of the distribution Stock Committee had resolved 10 expango day, and alighted at Use Hotel d’Europe, which brings the | disinterested leve. If we were posscesed with that vulgar | suffrage? by pe yore Rpaan y aha d and their accomplices, | of the prizes, the official list of securities the shares of the Bue- umber of sovereigns bled bere up to eleven. The | ambition of which its princes accuse us we should not in- It is true that the majority of Frenchmen aad dipt of solicitations aud ‘tunities, obtained from The Paris four market had slightly declined, notwith- | nos Ayres and San Fernando Railway, owing to irreguiar)- @rand of Darmstadt, who lunched at old cas! luce the Germans to enter on the path of unity. States | even with a certain degree of empressement, of committee in London the sending of an emissury | standing the continuance of unfavorable weather. A fall | ties in the issuing of shares, &c. e Concern was intro- fnmediately after his arrival, is the ouly sovereign who | divided among themselves are more to invade than | the Emperor Napoleon. But that obedience is equal for | named Rewitt; that they themselves gave passport to | was also reported in several of the provincial markets. | duced into the London market under American wuspioes. ‘appeared to-day in uniform, wearing his helmet. uni- | when united, and déviser pour regnor w' Sys remain | all, as obedience to the law and the payment of taxes. It | this unfortunate man: that they allowed him to move | The anxiety in regard to the eS seers of | Baring Bros. & Co. quote bar silver at 5. 1%¢d; doliare, 5. form suits bis colossal figure much better than plain | the maxim of conquerors. May Germany united; | is a democratic obedience, because all the world has, about freely, in order that he might compromise as many | France was such that the Bishop of had ordered | 2344; eagles, 76. 234d. lotnes. may she form a body so that the idea of en- | it bef » and because no Frenchman has @ wo a8 possible; that they at leugth arrested him | the rs of the church in his diocess for fair weather. Liverroor, June 23, 1860. ‘Between three and four to-day eaten. a Conference | croaching upon it will never present itself. France, | refuse it. Is the case similar in Prussia? Do the pro- had him condemned to two years’ imprisonment. The Nationale and the Courier de Paris had Corrox.—The Brokers’ Circular says:—'‘The preasure to was held at the Hotel d’ Angletere, in the King of Bavaria’s | which sees without apprehension an Italy of 26,000,006 vinees subjected to the Prussian monarchy — this fine exploit, M. De Socmrarete; Se saviour | recei ae (the second in each case) for publish. | realize has continued unabated during the week, al- rooms, at which were present the four kings, the Grand | constituted in the south, would not fear to see 32,000,000 | rights? Is the Grand Duchy of Posen in the | of the order whom he had himself disturbed, and the | ing a speech of Victor Hugo's. by the extent of demand has shown more confidenve Duke of Darmstadt, and the Duke of Nassau, that is to say | of Germans form a great nation on her eastern frontier. same liberties as the Margravate of burg? Is the | conquerer of the agitation which he had himself excited, A ne with the title ‘‘MacMahom, King of Ire- | on the part of buyers than has Sani pAee Sear imnced, the sovercigns of the States who wore represented at the v. vate of Brandenburg ruled by laws as equitable ag | offered himself as candidate to the deputation, and was | land,” had made its a th Paris, more especially, however, from the export buyors: famous Wurzburg Conference in November last. What German sovereign shall have the honor of found- provinces? In the same province are nobles | not clected. He did not the less continue his correspond. ‘The death of Prince was expected at any mo- | Prices American have made further ress down= ‘When the Emperor paid his visit w the three kings’ in eyes of the tax gatherer? pres tg lh pemgf ors yg€ swear to Mazzini ward, and a general decline of 4. per bas been the ish ing this union? Two great States enter the lists—Prussia | and bi ual » ment. Reigns es Sie seed ehaginteres, the King of Hanover | and Austria, A ee Raizaged by the Poliah nobility It was said that M. Thouvenel was about to issue a | submitted to, with occasional irregular sales at even & oat At four P, M. he drove up to the hotel ina | Austria represents the doctrine of Divine right, in its | not to be met with as great territorial magnates who pay [Meoe bgt tf La Food many of the nobles be- wes di circular, divulging, 10 a certain extent, the re- | greater reduction.” The quotations for fair qualities ara pbeton and pair, and, without announcing himself, wag | most absolute rigor. Political and religious despotism, ab- | taxes in an inverse ratio with their fortune? of July 19, 1869). It of the meeting at Baden. Rot altered from last news. The sales of the week foot @onducted by a waiter to the King of Hanoycr’s apart. | negation of all the rights of the people, the most enormous It is true that the French army is sincerely devoted to xvu. ‘The Paris Bourse was dull, and rentes closed on the 221 | up @2,200 bales, including 2,000 on speculation and 17,000 ments. As the Emperor entered, the King, leaning on | concessions to clare caine \6 Vind wceanty of the the chief of the State; nevertheless, it does not belong to ‘These functionaries Jeagued against public peace, de- | at 68.65. for export. ‘The business to-day waa about 10,000 hhie valet’s arm, came out of his siccping apartment past and an obsti hatred of all progress; these are t19 | the Emperor, but to the nation. Does the Prussian army | Dounce to the London committee at one time the nobility Pants, June 21, 1860. bales—3,000 on speculation and for export—at unchanged (Me King of ig blind.) The , Bot recog- | worm-eaten bases of the Austrian iy im belong to the King or to Prussia’. ‘It belongs to the | and theclergy (Feb. 16,1860), at another tho nobility alone ‘The Constifutionnel, in an article signed by its chief | prices, Nhe slowing are the autborined quotations :— Rising the Emperor, asked how any could be ad- | these foundations, on whieh a disjointed empire is totter- | King,” said a Minister of one of the afew | who, say, are and ready toseil | editor, M. (et strongly refutes the opiuion that Fair. Middling. mitted without being announced. waiter then an- ing eal mo ley to belle ep the great Germanic edifice? | days gince, ‘ the deputies of the nation have ca the ; at another of Posen; ince } the entitled “Prussia in 1660” emanated from } Orleans. Ord. ‘The pac ind pane} muh bis the rend Gorden weed peck Ariegtl SP y et se is Thay held uy ph At Comins | 8 (o i} of Ministers, held evllidion. | Urets 4 wi It is true that amongst us the liberty of the press 5 wo emigrants ail the it a counci » he’ ary, ntaine- | Up oe @f the login of Honor, which the King wore at five ‘This artificial empire, a patchwork of the most different | placed under severe restrictions, but the it of fret anne th sant, ire poly. diseuss the di- | bleau, under the presidency of the Emperor, ML Thouvenel, ‘The stock is estimated at is @elock at dinner. nations, formed by and family compacts, with- } anything or everything is not confiscated, it is vision of their estates, and ask how many acres will bo | Minister for Foreign Afiairs, read the circular note which } 1,114,188 American, @n \eavi A cles hs wan arg = ef pan ec out the consent of the it |, preserved in its | poned.+ ‘nation consents to remain silent for awhile | neceseary for each peasant, for each custom house officer, the French government is about to addreas to the Powers At Manchester there has been @ fair business doing, em foot to call upon the Duke of Nassau, lodged in a house | integrity by the severity of the police or the sanguinary | around a prince who is achieving ‘things, just as | and for each soldier. They excite hatred in order that } who signed the faal act of Vienna, in order to demand } particularly in yarns, and the general tone of ‘tbe market Delonging to the Hotel d’, Qe di the soldiery, inspires but little to | friends assembled in the closet of a ora citizens may be to cut cash other’s throats. When | their recognition of the new setilement of the French | is rather better. A little irregularity still wailed , ‘One word respecting the of Hanover. He arrived | the German nation. ng the hegemony of the | favor him with their silence. for the right. we read these excitations we are reminded } frontiers, resultingfrom the accomplished fact of the an- } owing to the position of producers with thelr presoat @addenly at Berlin on the in strict incognito, and | German States remained in hands of the Hapsburgs | mains intact, and the age ep ‘with terror of the events of Gallicia and of that revolu- | nexation of Savoy and Nice to France. This note sum- | contracts. aeked the Prince Regent if he would allow him to attend | they governed the affairs of a nation ina dynastic inte- | right of petition, will always be sie toca it nian dp ecrny sd drowned by the ts in tho | marily recalls the circumstances under which the annexa- Breabervrrs.—The weather continued and un- he Gonference at Baden. The Prinen Repens replied bas rest, endeavoring to procure the igement of Aus- Cie and place. (the Emperor shouldtforget Oe blood of the nobles, thanks to the t of the Aus. | tion was accom; A ceasion of | favorable for the crops, buton the whole it been Ihe bad neither power to allow nor decline—the moe | triaat the of Germany. the day when the | tothem. Public writers at Berlin aro . trian police. We ask ourselves whether the police of | those provinces by the King of Sardinia and the free ex- | rather better. Flour inactive and nominally unchanged... ‘was a free one. The King of Hanover at once notified his | Germanic spirit, liberal in its essence, entered on the | more free just now than we are in Paris, thanks to thenew pnp rapes sisters, like the Grecian muses. We | presal the of the inhabitants by universal | Quotations range from 272. 64. a 30s. 61. “Wheat very Matention of attending, and the Prince at on Ae , Austria placed herself at the | born toleration of the Prince Royal of Prussia, not because | feel that the Germanic nation would find but slight ad- | suffrage. M. Thouvenel expresses his confidence that } dull at Thosday’s decline of 1d. a 21. per cental. Sales ‘thought it right to communicate the fact to the King of of the ultramontane reaction. Sigismund and Fer- thayarasetieveteet the stamp duty, or exonerated from im uniting with the kingdom of Prussia if it | such an act, accomplished in conformity with the gene- |, quite un! it. Red Western, 10s. 10d. a lls.; white, Saxony. inand I. rivalled the zeal of Philip Il. of Spain; Tilly and | caution money or surveillance; nevertheless, have | were to fall into the hands of Puttkammer, Boxrensprung, | rally admitted principles of public right and internation J’ 11s. 6d. a 125. 10d. Indian corn, casiery and scafcoly in= ‘The Emperor has conferred the Grand Cordon of his Or- served the Court of as a8 the | more freedom than public writers in Paris. what | and Post. al law, will obtain the adhesion of moro | quired for, Mixed, 328.; yellow, 328. a 32s. 94.; white, @er on the Prince of Hobenzollern-Sigmaringen. of Parma and Alva. How could possibly | guarantee have they tha: that privilege will last? What xvii. 80 because France is ready to renew before the European Sas. a 358. = ae lam assured that the Emperor, in his conversation these rigors when the Em Francis » bY | plea could they bring forward to claim it if the hand that It is not only in the Polish provinces of Prussia that the asqurance she intends to assume the PROVISIONS: arrives freely and is pressed for sale, ‘with the kings and other German igns, renew: a concerdat, breaks with the Germanic we it chose to take 1t away? The difference that exists | this terrible bureaucracy sought to sow discord; it looked | obligations resulting from article 92 of the final act of icularly the lower qualities. Pork quiet but steady. ‘the pacific assurances he gave to the Prince it, di spirit, 204 places the palloy of Austria under. the demina- Eetwoen them and cured is that welend oar iberty vo hi gust and aapiced 10 nothing ete Unan sot the whole | Vienna, referring to the neutralized districts of Faucigny ig firmly held for full rates. Lard in more demand at saat twee Spon any other questions of geoeral policy, not Napoleon IIl., whilst they borrow theirs from the of ina blaze. Doubtless it is sure for ita strength, | and Chablais. fully previous rates; sales 350 tons at 673. a 60s., the lat- ‘even upon of . Nevertheless, Austria has friends in the German nation. | of and if it does not fear to light a vast fire it is that it ‘The note then proceeds thus:—‘The good faith of the | ter for choice qualities. Tallow, 6d. dearer for foreign; ‘Before dinner, took place with the game ceremo- | On what si could she reckon if the annexation Efforts are made to persuade the Germans that we have | under }its hands tho means of extinguishing it. It is, | policy of France, and the friendly interest which she has | Butchers’ Association, 598. a 538. 6d. my as yesterday, at five o'clock, totake | were ever to be put to the vote? I look everywhere, but | ‘allowed ourselves to be cheated out of iamentary in- | however, im t to unchain violent passions, even | always shown in regard to Switgerland, offer the best Propuce.—Ashes quict at 286. 6d. a 20s. 3d. for pots, Seove of the Ernoe und Frimoese of Dysesis, bas it spesre can only find a few princes and the sacred battalion of the | stitutions. ih & tetas tee ier ein y | when sure of ‘able to check them again. guarantees for the faithful accomplishment of such an en- | and 30s. 6d. a 31s. for pearls. Sugars quiet but frm. ‘Cof= ‘hey were out. Between seven and eight o'clock the Prince be aristocratic Party. bas ie reasons for | changed since 1848. It is no longer a coterie of from Whenever the central committee in London appeared } gagement.’” fee in limited demand. more quiet; salea t, the kings of Hanover, of Bavaria, and of Sax loving Austria, ee find a more rapid ad- | 400,000 to 500,000 ; it is the whole nation that | slumbering or fatigued the trio awoke them up, and ex- |. Thouvenel, in conclusion, distinctly hints that the | of Carolina at 238. a 26s. Fish oils dull successively at Stephanienbad to take leave. I vapncement in her service than in that of the other Ger. sends deputies to the Corps rislatif. That assembd! cited them to enterprise. They wrote on the 25th April, } Court of the Tuileries will not consent to any lessenin; nothing worth reporting; sperm sells at £04. Lin- mot observe the of Wurtemberg, who, as you are | man States wi the competition of talent is greater. It | elected by universal . the Em , | 1859, “We are astonished to see the Democratic Commit- | of Savoyard territory in favor of Switzerland, although seed oil quiet an Pig 2 barely su . aware, is a very old man. The Emperor we of the | is on thisaccount that the German nobility, and particu- | no longer enjoys the ri tvilege of interrupting tee show #0 little activity.” You will not find ton letters hay empl seh conference on the question. | Rosin st ‘at 4s. Sd. 9 46. for common. of cuversees at 9 peivsie party at the of Hamil- | larly that of the Catholic sout ‘States, tarns to Austria | every moment the dispatch af wanton, of replacing | Outof the twenty-four in which the same dangerous ‘The circular note of M. Thouvenel will be despatched | turpentine lined to 33. 6d. a 33s., closing at ton’s eight o'clock. The German sovereigns were ‘the to the One single figure will Fre deeds by union by coalition, public in- | theme is teodbed om tm different terms. this evening to London, and to-morrow to Vienna, Berlin | figure. Tea inactive and rather easier. Quercitrom ‘Where unattended. the ratio of that ity:—Wurtemberg numbered, in | terests by private vanity, the corloun of a great xix. and St. Peteraburg, for communication by the repro- | bark dull. ‘Small sales of Baltimore at Te. 6d. At ten o’clock the Beperen, wines the Grand Duke of }, more in the Austrian g by few puny oratorical am- mf what actions could the democrats satisfy | sentatives of France to the different Ministers for Foreiga Loxpoy Manxsrs.—Mesars. Baring Bros. & Oo. report ‘Baden, the members of the French Legation at » the ty so called, the indus- | ditions, but it the unquestionable rignt of voting | Pu Desreneprang, and Post? We had ar- } Affhirs. wheat dull and prices barely supported. Foreign quick ‘and the municipal authorities had accompanied to the | trivus, culighted, 1 Bet no store by Aus- alt ths tenes oood Al the lanes St tee eonpire rived at the 27th of , 1850. It was fore- Thia note will also be communicated to the Cabinets of | and white American 56s. red. Shen station, left by express train for Strasburg and Paris. See in her a latent power, in # religious point x. seen that the Emperor of the’ French was about to | Stockholm, Madrid and Lisbon. 586, Flour 80s.'a 328, dull . & £5 108. The German sovereigns at Baden were Hot accompanied of view; a Sclavonic, Nan power, mixed This being ought we to be jealous of the | make # generous effort in favor of Italian inde- for bars active, 6d. by their Ministers. King of Hanover alone, owing to | and doubtful, as far as nationality is concerned. They | Prussian constitution? Ta the principle of miniaterial re- | pendence.” The bureaucratic triumvirate recom- | _M. Prevost Paradol, author of the pamp! . bya. hice blindness, was scoompanied by i. de HelmBruch, bis know that in accepting ery crh Mae they ibility applied in Prussis? . Haye the | mended the committee to take precedence of him. They | Partis, has been sentenced by the police correctionnelle frm Bovoy at Frankfort. M. de Bulow, Envoy of the Duke of } Must renounce even a of progress ; they eco | Ohumbors the scknow' right of Telusing the taxes? | wished that Mazzini should hasten and get, big country | to one month's imprisonment and 3,000f. Ane. at full prices. Tallow 628. 6d. the spot. Meckienburg-Schwerin, was also it, but not in any | Austria closed to German manufactures (for she obsti- | No, And what are the ian Chambers? The lower | to rise before the arrival of the French army. In order ‘The editor is fined 3,000f. and the publisher 500f. Linseed cakes in demand ; barrels £10 gaicial capacity. Moreover, the {8 nothere. The | nately remains out of the customs union); they | Chamber, which with our Legislatif, is | 0 content these three Prussian functionaries, it was ne- Panis, June 38—12:20 P. M. 158.; Boston bags £9 Linseed oil 288. 6d., on tho Duke of Saxe- Mein |, who seems recently to haye | hear it said that German ideas severely denied en- | recruited by a mechanism far more ingen’ ‘than it is that tbe Italians should hoist the red before The Bourse is firm to-day. Rentes are at 68f. 80c. spot. Fish oils quiet. 5 drawn closer to ‘pent one of his Court. trance at all the gates of Austria; they know that a | democratic. No universal ‘not even. bee had interfered in the affairs of Italy.” what LATEST MARKETS. pare es 2 re oe So the depar. | German, arriving at the German frontier, is as much a | at the first of the proceed: Given a ‘circle or | in fi ’ Austria. 1, June 23, 1860. ‘ture of the German sovereigns. The Duke of ya will } Stranger as & phe yon of a paying 300,000 francs direct taxes, for in- | What profit did ba sys Soden it for Italy, ‘The statement that Austria is about to reinforce her flo- Cotton : sales to-day 10, bales. Bread- leave probably to-day or to-morrow. The kings a almost as much diff- | stance, the rate are divided into uneq: for France, or even No one knows. tilla in the Ne litan waters is without foundation. stuffs quiet and Corn declining for floating car- Saxony and Hanover will leave in a few The ings culty in making himself understood. They think that } squads. The fifteen or twenty great landholders who pay On the 2ist of May they thanked the committee for Rear A Fanta will only sail for the Adriatio sea “provisions steady. @f Bavaria and of Wuriemberg will hore te take | the natural allies of the Emperor Francis Joseph are at | the first 100,000 francs between them form the first class | having sent them—guess what—the process for making } in order to exercise the crow of the newly built ship oe Y Loxpom, June 23, 1860. the waters. The Grand Duke of Weimar will probably | Rome and at Naples, ratber than at Dresden or Berlin, } of electors; the se2ond oonsist of the two or three hundred } Orsini bombs. We shall not ask what use they Kaiser. was closed to-day in consequer fein the Grand Duchess of Geneva. ‘and that the imperial throne roe eee be better | persons who pay the next 100,000 francs. All the other | make of them, and why ‘wished to have them sent. ‘The Austrian Petrallo bas been | of the great voluntoer review. P.8—The Grand Dukes of Baden and of Weimar, and } Placed at the foot of the Appennines on the banks of } citizens paying the direct tax—that is to say, from 2,000 Ree 2 oes were not conspirators | summoned to Naples in order to carry out “ the Duke of ‘and Gotha, wh» were not it | the Danube. to 3,000 persons—form the third. Each of theso three | but police officers. Doubtless their intentions were pure; | which existing circumstances have rendered neecssary. meee. ‘at the Conference of four Kings, and of the of If it were requisite to prove by facts the indifference of sera ny nies nea f apes meagan ym te semretiy title ents Has, ‘was to warn the Emperor Na- | jt is said that he has declared himeclf ‘to use all THE NEWS BY THE PARANA AND ETNA, ‘Nageau and of Darmstadt, beld a conference of their own to the destinies of Austria, we might be content | electors—aix, for instance, in ‘class—and the eighteen | poleon of any danger, and it was in that it that they | his effort for the realization of this object, without, bow. . at whe Castle di the day. The kings secm to have had | to look at the of 1850. Austria was fight- electors meet in their turn to proceed to the election of a | added to their letter this postecript:—“Will not tbe } ever, accepting any particular post in the ee 5 co Seo 2, Bar enen the Cit wales Ppa peepee iy apg lay tn epeoe H depaty. Fiastn # dceidirb Gia Sse Cay ee werkng eases French democrats soon make an attempt against Na- 7 Sr. Jouns, N. F., July 5, 1860. King ‘artemberg made 1e heroic efforts to retain under sceptre ve DO being represented in Parliament poleon?’ ena anh: pein. at, Sn: Kinga, wets Cae gion Beta . Assurediy the Germans would | the third c Nor os preceaer’ of the Durgher clans, But if they felt s0 warm an interest in the Emperor of itzerland. The steamship Parana, from Galway 27th ult., arrived one ¥ Rave sequice” bo pressing € our veltiors had invaded the will always be in a great minority in the electoral body, | French, why did they say in the same postscript, ‘We A telegraphic from Berne says :—‘ In view of | at this port at seven o’clock this morning. This was, consequently, the second con’erence held . They would have poured down as | and will never send a member to the Chamber. This ex: | are much astonished that the revolutionary party in Italy on the annexation of Savoy, | ane new steamship Connaught was to sail on the 20tb, during the day. torrent to repel the inian invaders. But as it | plains bow it happens that M. de Vincke, who sat on tho | take the site of ” ‘The thing was not surpris- | the Federal i has confidentially proposed a? id Bapex, June 19, 1860. was mere! ‘Austrian that was in peril they | right (¢. ¢., the conservative side) in tho Frankfort Par- | ing, and all the universe there was only this trio who eee ee eee, ot eat for }| but when about starting blew out the bottom part of her In yesterday's conference of the 80" is to look curi upon the » Pre- Tidmment io at present without having changed his opinions | would feel this astonishment. stipulations of article ninety-two of the final act of } cyiinder. The Parana accordingly took her place, sailing at Baden, the King of Wurtemberg, in against any emergency with - | the most advanced democrat throughout the Prussian | | When we Peruse this correspondence we are | Vienna. The Meions of te Connell Gommaence ly bi federal government, returned thanks’ pple pom Roms Ge Eo Chamber. tempted to believe ‘the authors entangle themselves } stating that afver,the annexation of Savoy to France, the | °0 the following day. tation of the interests of Germany VI liberal set any store by s body thus com. | in the meshes of their own nets, and that German since- neutralization of Fauc and Chablais would be of no ‘The steamship Golden Fleece from Galway, June 23d, Kejeety also expressed a desire that an Austria represents by her population a heap } "Unquestionably no. “And yet the Prussian depu. | rity shows iwself under the skin of the fox. After Villa. } practical use whatever for the maintenance of the Deu | grrived at thie port at three o'clock yesterday aflernoon ‘hould be brought about between Prussia and nationalities; by her , the despotism of Divine | Tier have occassionally shown some leaning towards franca, for instance, when good German ought to | trality of Switzerland. In order to obtain this ob- se 4 Me vovercigns odbred thelr’ gova ofices ight; by her the oppression over conteiences put the Chamber of Lords was there 10 keep them | have beon satisfied at peace reestablished and | ject, Switzerland claims toch a portion of territory } and sailed at twelve o'clock same night for New York, peso by her customs laws, the of bition. Prussia order. This latter ia composed, first, of noble - | Venice preserved, Puttkammer, Borensprung and Post | a8 might be traversed in & two march, and which, | Mr. Darly,the electrician of the Atlantic Telegraph Oom- ‘The of Wurtemberg informed the personifies German 5 reform, commer- , who have a seat in virtue of their birth ; , | showed themselves more than Mazzini. They Greets Me oe eee eres bulwark pany came passenger in her. His errand i# to raise the that a ee Gial progress, constitutional liberalism; ahe is the greateat m members Wed by the King out of « ist of i that “revolution would break out in Italy, in | between "land and France. The Swiss diplomatic ne ‘a military convention, which adopts as nearly as of really Germanic monarchies; consciences are there | dates presented to him by the ty, the universities ,in Germany, in Prussia, perhaps even ia Fraiicc, | agente abroad are charged to recommend s similar comb/- end of the§Atiantic Cable ; and remove its landing place. Bible the Praasian views on more free, enlightenment more widely |, political | and the towns. ‘upper: has never been | andasfaras in Poland. The treason of Napoleon has prelate avg great Powers, and more espe- | As also to romedy any defects found in the Cable iteclf. reforms. His nen tenes aa, States. ‘sources—on the one hand birth, on | opened the eyes of all the world, and there are no op. | cially by England, who has already taken the initiative in ‘The steamship Etna, from Liverpool 26th, wisPnat the federal on. the! 1 ig she who, by founding the Zalverein, paved the way | the other the monarch’s choice. Therefore does it’ en- | Pressed nations but soon look for their deliverance similar proposal {but which demanded a far more con- nailer nest Sih, vinGuyme- Shot Prussia would take conciliatory for free trade People of Germany love Frus- | tertains premeditated hostility against any demoeraticor | | We, know pot how 1, interpeet such language; one | siderable erritrial ceegion” town Sth wi ,pesned Cage Rasneh alt poe cuvnaigiects German ¥ sia. bebold her progress with admi- | even liberal measure? It rejected by a ‘might think it sincere and in faith. If it were per- —_— this morning. She was boarded by the news boat of tha ‘The Grand of Baden then said ration and afial 3 it is to ‘would ap- | majority the principle of civil marriages. Tealeaoet broke mitted to suspect Prussian we should say Turkey. ‘and a summary of her news obtained. of hia Majesty the King of Wurtemberg could not be made on pt er gs op i is to ber | out in open insurrection ‘= ministerial bill which | that the buresuerati: trio wished death to the Emperor Mansmnsxs, Jane 21, 1860. | PS 7 t fm the name of all the government ‘they would entrust, in preference, task of na- to make tbe nobis pay taxes like other classes , and endeavored to render him an object of sus- | The following advices from Constantinople to the 13th | _ The steamship Etna reports, Juno 26, passed sbip portant governments had not part in ‘ional unity. Were she to make up ber mind to play the | of citizens. ‘oppressed nations, and to excite the democrats | inst. have becn received here, and are forwarded under | Fidelia, bound in. The steamship City of Baltimore relative to the said Pome Bare edie rane nae gran 1 with the excep- ‘That constitution is not ; it will be wise to modi- | against the empire. reserve:— ‘ived at sown June 27. Jul: give ber adberence to the proposals. of the and squirearchy, would hasten to re- | fy itif itis desired that the Germans should throw ibem- | But if this hypothesis had a shadow of truth we should | "“Sanguinary disturbances had taken place in Albania, | ST!Ved st Queenstown June 27, July 1 passed Amoricam — move the in her way. Selves into the arms of Prassia. ot dare to quote the following phrase, for it would bes | The dragoman of the Austrian Consulate had been assassi- | *hip Mediator, bound east. ‘The Last French Imperial Manifesto. | dom, His Royal Highnesy the Prince of Prussia, meee b 3 ona mite Albenions booths. po ul dsp ge re ucthastthwer mma e seems to is on in France? Will there not be a se- % ie iocrsvanrmusrenvattaas | Sina’ Srp ae tic: | as in aS ca "A% Seu" peut ct acs | names, Cet ag | eck ie mera, she repr eprincg ar7 L ‘The granting of a few , the manifestation of a | are pr carpe ery prenng wes the taxes or to contribute to the conscription both of | Westerly gales on the pasrage. France and the Emperor have no other feelings than | few good intentions, a certain resistance opposed to the } Court of Berlin responsible for God forbid that we should carry up the responsibility of | which the Christians refused to bear alone.” ‘The following despatch is made up from the summaries ‘that of friendship towards the German nation. After the | squirearchy; nothing more was wanting, the national im- It is not we wi ‘those imprudences too far. The police itself hus been It was rumored that a despatch had been received an- [ore Nong doef re mg yy ey gt pulse contributing its aid to place this Prince on s | ea of more ae eo mej dng gd ree nouncing the outbreak of an insurrection at Smyrna, and by both steamers. i rere having Pedestal. conceal its most secret papers from the vigilance: est aBsaK8 blic functionaries > tants wad eatiaed, they gave each other the hand with. | "We are happy to discover that German unity haa foand | Watiohale expreancd Sony ad ts PRUREATeeseemaes EL tia TRdly 0 O01. teeter eee eee hionarien; Dut thie correct THE SICILIAN REVOLUTION. ut rancour. ‘the of Germany had | its centre, its rallying point, and nothing be more | toa sovereign not at war with us, the Moniteur of the | rect their functionaries not to continue in such tortuous ‘The Grard Vizier had arrived at Schumla. On bis jour- All was quiet in Sicily. covered themselves with Se fag, 6 Francs had agreeable to us than Oy 8 empire, crt least. the. sern-ofcial ‘would has- which are not without thither he dismissed or imprisoned several Turkish | It ted that Garibaldi femered no humiliation. ‘ras not surpacned by | sround.e frm and upright mind. If ‘ocours to | ten to repair the mischief by severely ‘We delin- ‘one now knows that f Orsini bad succeeded in ome Greek functionaries for abuse of their autho. bat b SES' ROE 8 Goel, ob Letpaic, and the battles of 1833, 18i4 end did not Plaga dd pt of this reece ep hag quents. i attempt he would havo assassinated the f rity. which it was determined to march on Messina as soon aa our |, Carri eftane frome Rislory aleaeane ae Gearon So lipuptpeuh ch tie wena yy try ott BA se 00 cannes Oat | one ~ 4 tol in Prussia type inf ef pow A wy score vane nape 5 ee the plans were fully organized. It was expected that the manners and the work of time would have sufficed to ex- | ing spirit of Prussia, and that tho unity of Germany will | @iroetly eddreased to France. Whea M. de Vincke talks | mer, De Uerenapring and Poet, without any bad inten- | “'Nainick Pasha had beon appointed ‘commander tot | March would commence on the 28th of June, tingniah in all hearts the last spark of national hatrod. | be ‘without the shedding of a single drop of in the of of from us Aisa. | tion, and from unintelligent zeal, had raised up a second | the forces in the Lebanon, to winch district two ateamera | Jt Was said that tbe Neapolitan government bad de- ‘We must even acknowledge having felt a sympathy | Diplomacy can raise no objection against this internal re- | tia and Lorraine, the nation roused by this sepliear noni have deprived Praatis cf 0 very useful | were to have ted troops, but want of mouey | termined to restore the two captured American veesels, for the Germans in proportion as we have better known | form. An Austrian Germany, by uniting within the same | indiscretion to the extent of to war; but it notes | ally, who is perhaps called on to render her very g001 | caused the project ne b6 abanouaea: . them. German philosophy reigne in our echools. Kant, | rin ovum ef Puree and alarsood tne’ poweearmed tho | with satisfaction that ‘cock improdent ‘gauifestations | service, provided ae lend hersel! to it. The army was exasperated at not having received | PUt the American Minister demanded reparation for the Seen ere seaieans ‘cn Goeey tetinnn ef alertciee) Germany, with 83,000,000 of ‘citimeas, cas caume | BVO? MnO RINGO ot home, Rome. {is arrears of pay, and © military revolt was appre- | ‘mault to the American Sag. Jn literature and poetry we both admire and love Gocthe, | alarm Since the accession of Napoleon 111., and cepeciall General Lamoriciere is said to have issued an order of | “The ambasendors had concerted and sent identical ) re® Nite Of Naples was ill. , Lessing, Hoffmann, Henri Heine, Hackisendar, vil since the annexation of Savoy, German publicists, per- | the day,announcing that the moment for marching against | instructions to the different consuls in Syria, in order to | _ 1t Wa# asserted that the Neapolitan Council bad resolved and not long since a work by Gustave Freytag | | Bat his Royal Highness the Prince of Prussia would ‘oven princes themselves, ave loudly expressed’ an | the was . prevent fresh disasters, ? to grant © constitution, © general amnesty, » total in the Moniteur of tho French empire. Dr. | make a dangerous ‘were he to that the na- | unpust distrust against the policy of France. “They will | According to oficial intelligence, addreesed trom Naples | P'T Zon niece had ‘teen burst in the Turkish quarters singh of tlaideg athe | }, translated by M. Littré; Kreutzer, elucidated by Rest ern Covers omnes ispense with an) have it that we harbor the design of annexing the Rhe- te the Holy Father, no infraction of public order bas yet 5 ya press,and to enter into an al- ‘M. Guignant, have taken their playes Amczg French may- Bowever strong may be the impulsion San Bovinnes and encroaching upon the soil of Germa- | wkea in Calabria. liance with Piedmont, &c., but the King’s assent waa ter epirits. Our learned men are honored in correspond. | leads the mass of Germans towards a Prossian monarchy, | ny. This ill founded apprehension is 80 noisily manifest. The Chronicle, of June 23, says:— THE LATEST NEWS BY THE PERSIA, | ¥*"*¢¢- ing with Liebig, Vogt, Graefe, Diffenbacb; our sculptors | al) well regulated minds (tous les bons eaprits) will resint cledee obetinstely that it might have ‘The French troops at Rome will not, as was asserted bs ° ‘and painters have rendered full justice to the talent of | the current, and throw themselves back if the Court of evil theughts to Pig wo wore less Squitable. fs by several journals some time since, leave that city dur. BY THURGRAPH VIA QUEENSTOWN, SARDINIA. Heud, of, Keaivacl ant’ of Cornea; whit) Kroon and Berlin does not meet them half way. Democratic Germa- (Peers toes address in the public street the } ig next month. will remain to defend the city AUSTRIA. 1t was ted that the Rusa! wintthalicr ny is wise and patriotic to ralig round a king, but | meekest and most harmless. individual in the world, and | sgainet any attacks that may be made. 5 li aan and plat Lagmiens +] abe will require guarantees the Prussian constitu- | say to him, “Sir, wish to give me a alap in the face; France will gurantee to Pius IX. Rome as his resi Tenis, June 23, 1960. had threatened to withdraw unless Sardinia stopped ex- tion does not a8 Yet present is % Gent attempt to'deny it. Tknow that you wrish to give | dence; beyond that the French goverument cannot inter- | Advices from Ravenna to the 224 state that at Rola the | peditions to Socily. First it we necessary Prussia shou! a im the face. swear; woulda't belfeve fere. 7 pelied a Sardi merchan' a make a choice between the two principles which divide younsatte Yon vane tengmsieael in.seedan bet f All the appeais made to the Roman government, urging se eo aeteliaes ae oo | GREAT BRITAIN. Europe at the prosent day. right popular than in the leaat ‘afraid retrieve yy well consi reforms, 2 right are in presence. Whilat a number of princes obst'- of yen Welsta dah pcb tine Seen cunacare- yee baving been met with no attention, France can no longer At Fuime the Harbormaster refused the steamer Raven- ‘The House of Lords had debated the slave trade ques- ee on 9 She really legitimate em- | to give me that ‘of the face.” The meckest and most Interpese in behalf of the Pontit, should his own eubjects na the papers necessary for departure, because it had tion, and adopted a resolution in favor of the reappoint- pires are being upon the democratic . basia [imave ion world would in the end find excel- (ys oma pee eee aren me 7 ’ ment of a consulate at Mozambique as check to the of upiversal suffrage. The King of Naples stout- | jent reasons for giving what he in asked for, and hishaad | mercenaries that form the gendarmerie in the Papal hoisted the tri color flag. vated wedi ya ‘that Re > eshlons are 7M Property, | would spontaneously fall on the cheek of the man who minions. THE SICILIAN REVOLUTION. no rr ee a ing the opposition of the go- Gent” "Tos Banperer of the Prenel ait the King ofanr- | Pat Brovowed him. xm Great Britain. Pana, Dune GD, ND. It was reported that the Chancellor of the Exchequer @inia declare, ia conformity with tbe twanete of modera } Bul no amount of provocation can tum France from the | The proceedings in Parliament were generally unimpor- | The Patric of wo-day states that Garibaldi held a coun- | - Cisstone, had determived vo resign on sa philosophy, that a people only belongs to itself, and two } path abe has chosen for herself. Whatever satisfaction | ‘nt. cilof war on the eveuing of the Zist,at which it was e uv cosa ‘Bations, by a nearly unanimous vote, eléct them ‘may feel in self ‘and in protect In the House of Lords, Farl Granville, in reply to the the lame report adopted by the committee of the Com fier his” Blot the Prince of Prin ms th Divine re ea ie See ae Marquis of Normanby, lntimated that, ment bad prow ser anaes pho romana anti mona on the Lords? rejection of the bill repealing the with King Naples, or with it, much think juering confirm report oom collect Recessary mil forces, shoul ia Mano hin Sd the pera be Freeh Tecmo ate te mationailty, Would to ewes oman ry Ty Sicilian Uerritory bad | serch on Messina, The volunteers brought by Colonel Or és toe choice must be made. thos the evans Cootederatien were animates Wi been Sorene, ann : troduced Romian boom Ite the more necessary as the King of Prussia haa | gemespirit! she woull neiher maye conquered the Grand | , 18 the ‘of Commons, after considerable debate, | Medici bad been With great care; amongst them | 4° «i944 millions sterling im London. It bears interest ot chosen, and very badiy chosen, in 1849. A national as- | Duchy of Posen Tor attacked Northern seleewig nor de- | leave had been given to bring in s bill providing for the | were officers of engineers. Jt was believed that the pony eyty nde ge ye ey Glares thas Trieste is 0 Gorman town. ‘As for us, wo fear- = aa the European troops into | rch on Messina would commence on the 28th inst. 434 per cent, and was quoted at 92. ores ‘for rine right ag yn a Hie - Ce ey et ye Lord Jobn Russell, in reply to an inquiry as to whether Great preparations are being made at Toulon for an ex- FRANCE. Seared at "be ould Sly So ‘crown if it were | selves. We keep what belongs to us; we ask nothing | the Neapolitan LK. two prizes by | periment to be made with the steel plated frigate Gloire. | prince Jerome Bonaparte i dead. Hioehed thincnth copmenaile stveleiion, aaa laste? bio | martiotea hs tamoncas arweran fee tas ped =| toto tke truth Sf this Aoport; but it it'wan trne it-wana | 728 vessel is to be impelied by all the power of steam to | the Emperor Napoleon will visit Savoy in Joly, recorded the formula by which they expressed their our tear! © Be ae Scares’ tad Souk cananeurs most unwarrantable act, and notice would be taken ef it | strike against a ship of the line, and endeayor to cut ber Since the Emperor's return from Baden, the troops assent. “ We do not (they said) want a crown which de- | with ‘payenets. Sir Robert Peel denounced the conduct of the French | in two with her bronze prow. concentrated on the eastern frontier of France have bees Iocracy bas spit upon” xIV. a Ne ee Ning lee | The steam engines of tho Gloire are enveloped with Not content the , the King of | Let us be permitted to add to these friendly reflections | tacked the Ministry for its humiliating withdrawn. Prunsia creelly persecuted ‘and one last picce of advice—it will prove to what Lord John Cy ong OE the | mattresses to protect them from being too mach shaken | 11 ig reported that the new French loan wil) be twenty Soon whe bad emnret Rim. Bt! we feel an interest in German unity and in the future of sere Se Sa eae et torey, Lee by the force of the shock. The experiment is to be tried | or thirty millions sterling. sabe Serge ar oie eaires: | Pree a mane of Promia and her constitation,such | the Beutrality of hove districts bvsccured,eliber through | S#Al0Ht the ship ofthe line Montebello, which is now old; | Tye Bourse was depressed. The rentee clowed at 6B eu if sian armies invaded in the name of the “Divine right”"the | as jt is, and the person of her august regent, excite sym. ‘the instrumentality eb nk ow or the ex- } ehould it succeed, several large steamships will be built | 45. to be accomplizhed, and a nation of 26,000,000 of inhabi- | Kingdom of Saxony and the Grand Duchy of Baden. The Germany, it is equalled by the repulsion, inspired py notes, France all fences www on the of the Gloire. tants 8 ized at our gates, France will take no of- pn ge By his throne by the Prus- | by her burcauracy’ tot only to the Germanic nation, voy | Sardinia; or lastly, that the matier be ed between | 315. M.—The Bourse has been inactive. Rentes AUSTRIA. fence. ‘vo her generous traditions, she wil! sacri. | sian forces. Grand Duke of Baden waa restored in | 46 honest men of all countr Array of light fell, on the | France and Switeerland. Lord John Raseell complained closed st 68f, Yée., oF a fraction higher than yesterday. che atawnas tee eahied Ge wa foe her private susceptibilities to the general welfare anc | his turn, in virtue of the same right,and by the same | 12:h of May, 1860, on the manceuyres of Prussian po- | Of the conduct of France in the whole transactiou, and . The. ing tary preparations for a peaceful futare; for Buropean order will not bs | power. But more than this was done. When the battle | jice, and the world then beheld the t mixture of | #4 It could not be as satisfactory by England. ‘The Emperor has visited Prince Jerome. in Venetia. firmly established until the day ia which there shail be | was won, and the campaign closed-—whon the democratic tiene immoralty of sal ad pres, Pa Bay repent oy at BY TELEGRAPH FROM LONDON TO LAVERPOOL, aden retired terri volunteer riflemen, ‘ either nationalities oppressed nor kings insupportable vo } Army 210 0s sircee, ek ory, incendiary provocation and, clumey Machia sma, Ce eeeey lives pale, Leadon. ts won expected thas Lowpoy, June 26, 1860, CHINA. mm. Divine right was overpowered—the Prussian army shot, | The following are the fact#, aa stated at the tribune © to 30, wolunteera would be under arms,and 4 GREAT BRITAIN, The China mail was telegraphed. Germany, like Ttaly, is impelled forwards by a leciti. | im the period of three months, in the midst of the silence | Berlin by yf x honorable deputy of tho | PFilliant demonstration was anticipated. Business was | a, cojuntocr roview passed off with the greatest éola’, | The steamer Malabar, having on board Lord Figin and mate ampiration in the path of progress and unity. Anciout | of peace, twenty-six German ‘Their bones rest in | Grand Duchy of ‘Three a Mi. | Suspended for the day on the Stock Exchange, and in Raron Gros, was wrecked in the harbor of Galle, No Seudalem and modern }, and the gelfiahness aad | the church yards of Fri Radastadt, and Mannheim; ttkammer, President of ‘of Po. | Many branches of trade a general ony A was observed. | amidat the wildcst enthusiasm of the immeuse multitude. 5 | Diinaness of a swarm of ny Fa Duy and soll | their namés are almost all forgotten, yet Germany | sen ‘M. De. Baw President of Folie, and vi. } it was announced that the Queen would further encourage | No accident is reported. lives were lost, The bullion in the ship was lost, and thew Ser flocks, has divided this er ce re a St case, Post, interpreter, sought together fore goo! cor ae er aneny Cerny es Be ore ‘The tendency of the funda would probably have been | both ambassadors lost their credentials and all their coey = ron Ny fog CR Tivador Joly The competition was to commence by | towafls improvement to-day, the weather being more | PAPer#,and would be delayed at Galle until the @th of , much ‘than a prefect, and a little less me & rife from a fized mechanical rest. promising, but that the delivery of the large amount of } June. Fhan e midieter: Borrensprang is an important mac me Shan tar tee Lonten tomeoea qeoreen government stock recently gold cause! considerable pree- Advices from Canton are to May 6. The reply from the eset tae, berre oe ot bis cut pect nthe Sonate, ad geen ‘ap. | sure for money in the Stock xchange. As much as 4) | Chinese to the last communication from the Britieh Min~ writes. A Ry oe F in their ba- | Proval of eS ee per cont was paid readily for short loans. ister is to the effect that the Chinese are preparing to re- reaucratic think to excite a rising fn the Grand AY Queen e fon of June, Mr, restrained, sist. cpr BERS honor of io | Dallas ted the Hon. Robert ©, Winthrop, of Boston, | ‘The upward tendency was thus , aad the Cte hari of eaeting ahich won clwey | and 7G. arnard, of the Corps of ‘Enginesrs, | closing quotation of consols was scarcely better than that | D6 allies had occupied Chusan without resistance, ovetaion of Video, does act taapire. them With a27 wom ‘on wat Potter, | of yetterday. In the share market a deckled firmness ‘Trade was improving at Canton. SOMERS THT samuine the dinguise of Poles discon | oy New vor. accupied n promieni reer among wis | Was manifested, aunough business was languid, Beitigh | At Shanghae considerable apprehension was fol, owing cfcee « flan demoeratic committes, they put ther om | yeiod jactiaed im the number, who | raliway stocks rélaia sn upward tendency, to the alarm ing movements of the rebels, selves in relation wit central ‘London, honorary en of D. was Mr. The discount market is now under the Wtlvence of the iD CoM} “Send ue,” write, emissaries Lothrop Mottley, the American wr! A the other LL AND COMMERCL 1 ue,’ they write, “proclamations, ant recipient of te honor were Lord Brougham und Captain | Seual quarterly pressure, occasioned by Whe inflax of mo. Cena ae! NOE Lane = “ey on their side, send to London pa mone; wUlmaeiy of tos halantey aie ney to the Bank; the supply in af quarters was very eas. a for the taxed, The treasurer of the | line) bag Bean bei, for the purge ch aactcning th pear hendmnsinyrieentonhs amraghcwag too coe iso wae M. of Police. All capital, but some explanations | toluding many from the dipcoeet brokers. LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET. speaks Nothing appears letters were to be to wife of a Ja had been given it was rescived to eljourn sine die, with: | The terms for the best bills in the open market were Livmeroo., June nas bigmiae The of Germa- | unlikely; but nothing can be more true. Since the popa- | at the superior , t0 speak German, Mde, ut coming to decision. four per cont and upwards. ‘The sales of cotton Sore byes tater of wee bie honor and FeroiNing ab tbe Kien of mud- | lar “emotions!” (oi) in IB, all Buropean princes, not | Canseiiere Roch. Th is wumounoed that to’ Prinos of Wales, attended by | /0Ur Per he md ES jection, effected miracles. Lapa ath: F even excepting the have granted amnesiies. Tne ‘The Leadon committee is slow in ing; Ie healtatos ‘the Bari of ®. Germans and a large retinue, wii! embark ‘The London Times city article of Friday evening gays:— ket closed duil and irregular, but unebanged. ‘gion, but one heart; she rose as one and the Proseian amnoaty is still due. it mistruste, and it might be said itemelt reon, | {0% Camada en the 11th of July on board the serem steam | The English funds opewed this morning at an improve. of our incomparable armies showed of what united Ger- | If the Prince Regent entertains the noble ambition of | Bet the bureaucratic trio suppiicated ao bumnty, it be. Of X, but owing to some realizations om the part of eS Se Se ew ne many was capable. Since that glorious epoch all Ger- | reigning legitimately over the whole of Germany let him | sought ingueh a mellifuous tore for the alms cl @ few weather in England was occasioning some anxiety. | Ment of X, but owing . There has been no market at Manchester since mans worthy of the name have ‘their dream | begin by recalling those exiles whose only crime was to | letters and a few Jittle circulars. Tt apeaka nb ¢ ch } Tt conttiued very showery and unseigled; But oo the the public, and a conseqaent increase in the demand for | ing of the Persia. fen. ‘They have created the |, OF & Com- | have proclaimed the will of the nation at dictation of | adm ration of General Maszini ‘with oo mech emetion of ‘whele ‘+ bad been rather more fa for the crops. money, there was rather less Ormnvss at the close. LIVERPOOL PROVISION MARKRT. sue Se meaan is WEEE Gale Date atom waivers oitace » Let bin 60 ota botsee 5 ie be | the prose of Felix Pyat, that the revolution\ate of London ‘The Prince of Wales. attended by the Bar! of St, Ger. ‘The provision market is very dull, but rules steady. executor amen 849, an | and Mazvioi himeeif entered ‘corr Franc “ SIVERPOOR. ; astance {rom tbe ot Prominent the patriotic | the Nepoleous are tbe testamentary executors of ihe | them. This perSdione gues area rT ene I th notated Uaat 0 0ir eee semmanding the reeogni. | mane, the Lard Goward of the Queen's Hovsehold, ands | the weather has been unsettled Be ee aver pA wa a pres fing: Freneb revolution. * Sar dave Sil pese es if M Niegulo mans bad wot stop fon of the cession of Savoy and Nice to France, was | large retinue, will leave on the 11th of July for Canada. | able for the crops. The market i* quiet. Mitely Frederick William, ot 8 find and | Here we make a pause to refute an otyoetion which cer. | "+ °7 * Hunter clap. Serer cy the veciuniberetian Deane tn commas | Tee Trees Ones Sunt Wis GL. Cieegey SE Cheme tent Under the influence of the Queen, feared to alienate the | tain ill-informed Germans will not fail to make. The The eloqgent Posoanian orator dev meg ty Ma to chick they are reapes. | ship, Captain the Hon, Francie Rgerton ‘of the Confederation. He failed in energy | fancy on the faitn of rome feudal prints tbat tbe Freach | the origical’ wert et Twentp toes Lenae! on tae weitaae | tively esoroaned’ "tu tate sete 1S. reviews the Bebe decays moment and feudalism remained master | nation in reduced to lavery. They bave been permuaded | Port, dictated by M. De Bosreup: ra taopired as circumstapess of te ones, ‘and expresses: \d Markets. {Of the fold of battle. Bot notwithstandiag hi deception | that the Imperial Yigane bad gages’ the ssterance of | Te Pottkammer. The Bret ie are ie ered OM: | GNihe reengn Clon cf the act which haa been accomplish. | LOMON Moxey Manxer.—The domand for money was SS e lane sea Sih at hesral wousin'g | winter fate ibetic Rewarneat es | Meenetee one" Jen Noceta curind | Cm cake Sic"ihe gtr ge ct Soe agian in, we a i i wal ety of the “ onal ia cout. wy was scanty. rag! is were olebrated only the oiber day the Schiller jobiiwe | jhrocghowt Germany, that tbe Promace ure toch Tap: | Miehter v? the ioterier, co" er donumenta not aera the | jnvereaticual law. wot poaiee Praecaoe tbe solgatces | Gull; butce ihe dod there wan e wcdency towards im SO 8 0 ee eee

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