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2 New YORK BFRALD, Aroericaa house could compete with the eul f AFFAIRS IN EUROPE. + 64 TLS#8 B60 pound »Verfiag , wil , 3 ” ~~. SUNDAY, JOLY 8, 1800. - ET rue ME Cem ss eter bay | Se cceemeer imretactead rial emi ef + od because be was not equal with another. My ‘ ; ex peaidity than Palorm Scoupation of, the throne, and it ‘ whole series of specebes was in consonance with the i498 | Francs and Pngiand, or in fact any uber comracrolal . expectations « army dan 400,000 [Palermo ( = he necessary, I will appear before tho Cor ’ Samm steers eases es tie or on Hover, Mefavorcdelisensof ose nations B44 | A Gewman View of the Hngiteh Mtistary | "yin irate mn ben Uist im arm | viva at the perp comes ont like ie exces of | my righ abd tho atHty wel an pcnuiy of expeling others becai ey are not our & nil © themacives, 60 Lbeir gover ACuLs preeed tay wy Be oven that, H r : ‘ i that Because & er payee Sarena and intel: "are to make treaties for their re er wuio thes (Weisueded bs bee m isi win ene jt a3 pala E vem -fhe peaition of Eogiend is deny be stremnpipe. ae vy one sein nae s ee alae 28 {10m He Shrnne Loteela cee aera er faanlly, Sectually, 1 owe bim a duty to betrieud him in ali the rights | the United States, by some strange oversight, bad o why » fro P cote prAe, ADE that ber aystern cf roeruiting more re : have been closed for | tojudge a question so momen yy yom eyo whieh I claim for myself ounce the idea that aay | tod to protect ite citizens. 2 ord peo ooRF Weuilicign, While the ma ijuoe etecugth of | this tenvency. The shove, which have been clo J . ; countey , | beg can wrong a py ART fan account. I felt it ‘The ae Envoy found the juteres's of bis coun bd shitary @ amblished ¢ SBE cf | 5 0 Was 80 great Cat wo other lye er cod)! approach , Ube last two mentas, are all oven now; gunmakers, nd Pe fo declare ihe eat of the convocation of Ooa- unkind to me w hold me up before a Massachusetts aadi- | tryimen in a strange state of neglect and doproanl ae pes peda Engliva army, of whieh we give | 1 it littfo'y was fetestury (9 Loom emy | ale 1, ta Hore, an b i andl np yop pnd tone pate _ Joan be vi ce as uncer the d op of men that I'm not accustom | he had the good fortune to meet with a cordial Reception oliow FR summary — . “it F auotiey | all the demande they ge we ® & , ‘ , 1500, 2 BOURBON, Sato neovive diotation tens, Eeory vote of nine, every | and the beet dlepusiiion ca the part of tale gewerament, | I tex ¥-thet Fuglend nee bad o-poresnneni-se--5 moa etconeth with | year trun sicly with iM Gral. trait; lob those ve wat - — word, I ubpow open to criticism, All I ask is that J atvall 6 embarrassment after avotber haghare sakes ap | @ ‘a th apes pel Ps Fe ter - ; rs en, the vority io | to one Seaaets Win ll tes peng wth ed England's Protest Ag inst Sumner's ve meted what I mete out t you—exrct jut ettlod, until ali the commercial relations ef the two | ae, ty of the se ne entry it had no m, What | Fae out meskets . vl % " hs Siosethat ieall Tem rary T believed in the equality uubbes are in the nest sntlelaaore position. prc ~ Te began with a guard ef 6.000 mou under Joffe tothe de | gree, 6h omers, sadclery, ammunition pouches, red fiz [From the London Times, Jéne 18.] ‘of ail men before the law—that is my doctrine. fie re ‘All special restrictions aod disabilities aremow removed harks the Fecond. Although Willian 11. was threaten~ | |. aad army? On tho Laguab suere there | wel, lesther, and they will ind @ ready market. Arming, Although the great ovonia which are now Gocurring i Publican pagty believes slavery to be a moral, political | from ican shippiig, nd in every respect the pro |“! ¥ “se Hench invarion, and bad to suporees i co tk oe cffcacioms ore. | arming and artning t@ the only thought which has eee Bur ope suneire gna tosen") AU Aneonennt alten tate Boba nd Social evil. Tt has provounced against humau slavery | auctions aud trade of Ce United States are placed ou an ¢ 1 dan any, heb Yat the ad Pp coeseion of every ope, and overy kind ot eaten ow impossible not from time to time to turn our eyes to the everywhere, It reeogaiges slavery a8 a local institu. | equal footing with those of the most favored nations. , ing fe Gtoges ef her isolated Position, and she is pow, | ever old, is repaired in the wosence of 4 better, ever | New World, where problems are wv be silved that tion; which Congress may not toueh tn the States where | This is the sixth and sealing lnk of the circle of re irst, the army was increased 1 ‘hoo every State of Cousimentarurape, ol god to keep on | sball be first in the race will win thousands, Astor uy | pearly affect ourselves. It in & part of the destiny of it exists, but claims the power to keep slavery oat of th» | formed. policy Little trom this aggregate curing the y dole + fooleieh Gp komy ag Willoffor sorteu’ rosictance to those | fear of cruisers, there are nowe; all tho Neapolitan vessels | ¢)is country that, from its world wide dominion and uni Territories, knowing that in time it will give us such ‘The upiversal Yankee peopie have now a new field and | CPt) century. cOcther great military powers. ‘That which ahe now hag { ‘can de is to their own, ‘In a few duyseveryehip | yorsal interesta, the conceens of no State are indilferest an oyerwholming power as to enable us to check slavery | a clear road before them, tnd Iam glad to congratulate ‘The wack with Napoloon, the ncense'ty ots fa mesure Of her ability, sod hor ayste a of | will be offand the cont clear. to it. A Frenchman or a German may concsntrate all hie over al) the continent If it fails in 1860 it will be be | them upon Ht, isch for the numerous fortified points that ¥ rocrvating 18 meapabie of fuplehaig race nn cong ad aha Cheering bas somewhat rubsided, except when Garibal- | aticution on what is ‘at Palermo, for be haa cause the country is uot ripe enough for it If it suc acquired turing these wars, revolutionary Wiens J ects TiC should ever Pring themecestary sumber of | di eppeart, and then the thing ia worse than ever. Peo- | gny relations with the world beyond the Atlantic or ‘ceeds, it wil overthrow the influence of slavery iu) the Our Nashville Correspondence. eh ee Tees — ved ne | cifectiven, the expenses therby cutaited are 60 enor Je secrm never to pare snort of in. | Toe commana d, sho equator; however, are contwually reminded government. I leave siavery in the South to > dea Nasgviux, Tena, June 7, 1860. , D mabe rou» Hint (be country would no) aiwags be willing to.) 48 ¢ given up walkitig about the strosta, except we are and | ‘with by the ‘of the South whenever we can change 5 * ’ . army bitherto unheard of. And since the fal) of No yocci them. The dislike of the Pugtieh for all compul- | Gawn, when be is net likely te be too much molested The | must sometimes forget. gues The beartaod juigmert and conscience of the people of | The Bary Settlement of Nashville—College Commence. | polcon the Englieh army has uly continued ty more, roliments known, aint vothieg byp ckbife ather | trong two kiss bis bands has been such that he has issues | or ‘aabee 4 ‘those States. “This is the str mgest puritina. Place APre- | ments—Account of the Academics—their Cost—Military a th gene ny tho protestations of partimaus, of wi | ¢ probably sonquer this Butia | @ geversl order to stop this; while every one who calls | in newly settled of Sident in the-chair opposed to siavery anywhere mad | pia, wasnt Springs—A Large Hotel—Abundance | ya 'hag ace. Im ABS the regular army lad’ lreootne nw ncul army, Teeraited by conseriptiea, ts of vival im- | him “ Exccilepee” ts in danger of being arrenied Is was | the most important question for England is everywhere, but recognizing the righ they 9 826 men, of which 43,232 were in Enginnd wud Leeinad, | | © © England. chiefly with a view to escape all this worehip he left | of avery. Tolations with the United carry the government, change the Scoate, the Supreme Of Firtflics— How Southerners Live, dc,, de. $4,614 m the colonies, not including India, ant 17.490 Soe understands that her arvy i no tonger sufficient to | the Palazzo Pretorio, where the presence of the Ministers b ity of origi, aro me Court, aud put the federal government against Duman This town was originally occupied by a tribe of Shawnee | lueia. 1a 1663 this force bad Mereuod 9 | 6 fond ber agningt a French invasion, and e simultane. | Of the Municipality was always a pretext for hundrede'to | cicse that it is im) le tl moral condition should: Slavery and slave iufluevoe io America| We leave it } pains in 1714 Mr. Charleville, © French trader from | 29940. nen. of which $2065 were in Grea! Britain, | oe dekoeot Upon many points of her const would be equi- pepetrate tolBis room. 1 ave stem ‘at times numbere of | not affect our own. The rivalry which exiats betwova the theo y the states shorn of tts political power. . 4 eville, a Fre ‘20 214 io Ireland, 38,202 in the colonies, sud 26.464 in | ot to & conquest, French woult not be able al- eggars tilling the apte-room and asking for relief. Now | two countries make it difliouit to discuse any internation Politicians will no loager slavery, because it | Crozort’s Coluny, at New Orleans, came to Nashville and | Indm Last year Purhament fixed the stauting force a! | ways w hol! England, but they might forever ruin her | the strictest orders, aud the moans too, bave been given | al gubject without tne chance of gts uunbrage, and yet does pot give them control of country. Leave it | opened a trade with the Indians, In 1730 the French | 190,19 nen, which the same Parliament reduced aaow | power, With» truly ations! army, raised by consorip- 10 ull the parish pricets to relieve those who are in want | the fecling of lahmen regarcl: g slavery is such ‘open to the influence of Christianity; leave it to be press | counies in ik & unite Leill pag a 122 655 men for the year 1850. Every year one of (oo | tia gud ita neeeRRary Concomitanl—a military ape » their by that | even whea in the Southern States, where free ed upon by every good influence. How long do dseerion eadertaoks in Gret Cubes of Parliament is to vute the appropriation for | pow io England, which opens a career w taleut ia all Ng eed 10 get In | dom of epeech dangerous, they cannot forbear im- _ you suppose it will tive when you take the ne of | Canada. They planted their settlements at Pittsburg, | the support of the army and to ro cuact the Muiiy “Ace, | gradcr—Crvat Britain can be eaved. But the intradue- | the beginning , car gave | veighing against the ‘domestic institution.’ Wo have FE: ‘nis goveroment trom tt, and Rave it to tho legitimate | the mooth of the Camberland and Tenaeasee rivers, on | Pithout which the crown could wot keep ihe military | {ion of much & system would bo equivalent to a great wo- | cirect orders for thors wie applied soon | the greatest interest in the decay of this mighty evil. influenoes of its owmexistence. All { ask is that when foree during tho year, The expense of the army arnounts | cg) rovolution, and the governing classus are hardly pre- | 10 give up this plan, for his become worse | The reputation of this country for wisdom is a: stako; far You uncertake t arraign men who, in the balis of Coa- | %¢ Obio; at Kaskassia, in Llinols, St. Louis, Detroit, | ordinarily to from seven to nine millions ster lay por vox; | fared tor bo great & concession. than that of the simple ispo- | the of the West India culonies wore emancipated é' Rree8, before dominating majorities, when public senti- | Niagura, and other places, and until: 2760, when | but this year it has been fixed at £11,668,06) eierting. Fition to give to one, und ix immodiately assailed b: the © pot only on the ground of humaulty, buf on the calculation During the last year a special commission was wpyganted | t meet te agalaee thea, when the snecr and profane words’! General Wolf conquered Quebec, the French wore | io it tie iniy the oondithm of the army “hor te Kussian Serf Emancipation, ry tor the last two mouths ; there were few earning, or | ‘These islands still have houses, ep i i 5 ' f i i it i E fF meet at every ep in the streets, are true to the | = preme wost of the mountans, In 1763 they coded | make areport, The report has been mado, bul noe yet “ . | bone at all; numbers van republic, and if the stars and .t:ipes shall evor feat iy TOGBapenae fasten tah Laks ‘wridey Lace teas peel’ | Loplaléha. 190° Spain, © le: Seay: -qnenter. menabieniod | eubeivied to meinen, ad Hw nan Ua i oct LOFEED OF AAPM MOTEL JAANE APS. aUhTs Sihol families Lave low de ite they had, and ot un’ | over (ee wali of Mexico turd Havauon’ the British Auten And wourced 8 most favorable. In relation to actual . | frequent a0 ly. Besides wi exponed finence of a ‘wee! very, make. Tolotakees it thoy de ao “ag | {2 Teunessoe was in ATT, and made by the Legislature of | ann of defeuce of England, in case of ir unexpected. at- | ,, The Rusvian territory im rap i inhabited audi gor | So auasaY Me Silla asivameged y rather thaa | ganda, How important, when, is it for us that befure these men who io." the cause of freedom, do not mis. | North Carolina, and was called Washington, aad taken off | tack, Colone! Herbert, in Parliament, on the 6th of August Cloaar himeclt ae p pcny (sortie to achieve. | Bot, thinking it the it means of people de- | great territorial accessions which seem inevitable interpret them. T agree with you in one thing— | of Wilkes aud Burke counties, in North Carolina, It was | lst, made some well consitered remarks, wines exited | Fi) can take away Hite oad tibet, ‘Dut he cannot institute | Pebuent monasteries and convents, which relieved | take piace the system of slavery shail have been mod: ip a deep and profound love of liberty, aud a hatred of | situated in the north and east ‘of the State, but. it | (2, deumes, but were mov refuted, He entimaies the | Fie orn MK Mma Ae sad bers “properly 80, eatled. | @& much ag they could, are most of them so reduced in That it will come toan end {a cur time is, indeed, not te human slavery. For « quarter of a century, when [could | trprwend a taree tertiary Beaeediog an foe tis, | MMitary force notually im Growt Britain mac Treaads ide 1 aiver gre nobles, eich aud peor bat ey ao not gnnsti. | their means that they have searcely enough for them: | be hoped; but that boul. be induced to do ro, Thave attended your mectings and have never ut- | Subraced ® large territory, Bextending west 4o the Mis | cluding te militia, at 110,000 men, vr 86,000 within! the | 2Mere are DObeR, Heb and peor put ties oo nok eubetl | golves. For instance, that of the Gancia, which was | esce in the princi ig an evil, and te tered’one word of unkiiiness against you, aithough you Situated, waa entablishod' ia 1789" ‘The fret eottienoute ee et at ita in nrecmiag | Tey Bave'no history, no tiberties, “amt woarcely aay | Plandered by ee — a ee | pean, Soa eomr See Ot binge te Know that I differ with you vougerning the Union, the | wero made in this state, in the extreme upper uorth aan tf age air ureces rights. A hundred years ago thoy were subject wo apply for assistance 2 - | desire: » Sou r ution and the mode . How u . He—the force, fur example, i 1863, wm Gee si Brite y fity-pine in number, were kept in prison for weeks | gome preparation for a gradual change, are not Sart gonsiue of Congrens’ “John Orows_ had Just booe exe. | cageera U€rt Of M4, at a place called Watanga, Hore was | fuving bee, 62,006 men, and in ireiand 40,ai4 aren, | fit Knows of the Cara pleagure, A. geaivine. arimworsay tlarved. Oo couiugeast they found everything gone, | the hepea even, of ig have boda oy . cuted. There was great hostility manifested on all bands | FLA sean us carly us 1768, aud forme. pt . Herbert, by cule i | Glwuien it beieugs, by ils eympathy oilh eltber the | Sered vessels as well a8 every other ‘moveable property. | the receut legislation of and the bald. * : : rincipally by are opposed to slavery. The org Grst | bupters and explorers from’ Virginia aud North Garcline, put on trial bet tbe puoty, ‘| ro big] ‘The settlement was in the upper and east part of Ten- that the great objec bessee, near a ¢ now called Elizabethtown, on the man of the these 86,000 important Lave served ely one y to all men day they we apbraiced as truiters. 0 - o " Tt was principelly with a view of keeping off the | ness with which the most fies! Teper tree Titilteat etlonY Botte Tasan | throng that Garibaidt his quarters, and went to | are avowed by the Suit Tf guch a cl wore val 4 ihiyghey’ , the most out-of the-way of the royal’ ralace. The | promised, we should soe ‘the hobies aye ne custmen Rect ment among cher. | i et at ee ccc by “General Lanza. had’ beea A ees tat tae 1, 11,00 beiup recrei our opponents was to create a panic in the country. * i viata oN hs ne What “oF lovalty, Ue the, bioten ahd bel We suid gohily air vaimiy, and beard their deauneia. | tru ‘Tavidsou county began th aeitiegonte iu 177 Tus | SeCOentnie mad 4.500 absent” (Kron thst appre | Fh 'or™gmueenion. withthe poopie, keane at Re ee ee olay. chivwny weiatag towards: toee::| (c, en ane 50e Dean advices a We knew inet, sy hae) ie. and A Sor, Vane town Was uamed in honor of Colonel Francis Nash, why we mye eh tary “ . , ~ oe - Cwoers of the chief part of the twhoring class Next, pas ’ eo ae 5 a - a a of pantie’ cane as hoa ot ap tneet Fae ye would come in, oot time. it come. For the last : ‘ ane p "000 dni resent, niigemente conse. | CMDCFS Of FMS Fai Mert of tho! *Ebtring Clan. Next, b, shore there ail 7 ‘ited it eiialliaa four iru the aggresive steps of slavery have been re | fy utyeld SabLINE fer the independence of bis Country, | qrpntiy have: been miove brisk shiriig the vatac toace of | fo LAA ACES Cee Rimes Core, nares, | tll round. ‘There he w perched with bis staff beyond the | which rages between North and. south we begia to sisted by the republican party. We have seen the chief | guiding the First regiment of North Caroling Coutinental | MM Shab orcinartly bappens. | t the samme progres 6° 91) /> wre a certain number of sellers of a small num: | Teach of the crowd for some good in this matter. ‘The freedom Lonbara: of siavery quail, We have seen the haughty flag of de troops. tinnes, OF the Army 18 Maimtained with «yeu bor Bam bor of commodities; but there ik + mt Class, and Music has taken the piace of the cheers ali over the | or Sicilians may be worked out by the sword,and Wore x t ma moocracy +hivered to fragments, and there never was a9 | *"Tiriog the past week this cit Proportion of annual enbistme nts, it tnay | tae toatl ‘a spich of Umlerprien, and extentting viviltsa, 1» ‘These or four benas, attired in the indispensable | js no fuer spectacle than that of the bold man who makes ‘ 4 ly bas been Billed with the | Prviyrtion i. - as prise, Palazzo | wy hour in the history of the country when anti slavery [ jarcute and friends of the pupils attending the different pep raving oe won eed pared wrevey they operate, a'larze wuumber of traders | Tet ebirts,wo ubont the town, stopping at the | ee oe the tyraany which crashes his conntrymon. ihe will never be saved by such means. unufueturers are serfs; aid re Of kfealote gha corrupt The taboring | BY Seles them . low to rise up as his own deliverer, ner Clas are giaves, Eveb the crown peasants, who are de | "@ertoire is not large, but they make the mest of it; there | would honey gain by the substitution of claicd to be emineipdted. are living ander A more eraet | i*beve allan air with the refrain of Viva la Tricolore, | anarcby for ut * social institutions of then ever, from the pressure of the spootal juris: | Fie le Libera, which sooms to electrify the autience. | Southern States. white min must raise him by the Coton ape the onerous taxes aud penaities imposed upon | They begin and end with it, and the people never have | aid of white men, and, above all, by the aid of aie mas- ‘st Live nader the | Reale, the Pretorie and wherever else the spirit of harmo- men bad go much to hope for. | We have organized a pat- 1 ycai mies end colleges for which this ywn 1s 60 eclehrat. before cafés and ice shops. Their | He ist ty tonaie tt Toment oat of the hands of the slave | od. Ji is commencement week, Amodg many simitar iD- power eft the country open to truth and jas- | stitutions probably not one bas been more: prosperous — tice and. right—and Tsay to meo that cherish loony | gud sucveeful than the Female Academy. Fur ths last | 80% the 36,000 Fate nits Haglan sign ihe Conbi « pow above all hours is the hour of hope for | iweutyaycars the Rev. C. D. Kiliott has bad charge of the | hime it bees umidered that these 35,000) cclye are the country. The anti-slavery movement was began | gcauciny, ang it has gone on increasing in the number of + 7 ‘ hove al ki be wpon th wotely boat it we y for th mee Ol Lontiedt ) dey ots, wid AL twenty five yoars ago amid opposition and persecution, 7 i scattered mm Bogund, Seotlaie mud roku, 1 1s 0b dl Fie eolohine to cus of the reapectiee Fvery part of the town resounds | tor, The politician who eudeavors to set hatred betwoom by a deapieed few. “To-day the country is torn by the tr: | ih? Weietae tf phadcates Gh Sie the Mae aa hay tad | Cult te Beheve thet this small regular foes oul dod it | tous ot ALF tice cat Vee’ eanteted’ 1k meteean’ Wales the eveiiing, and every bor in the street | different ciusses Of Americans ou this subject, who ea: repressible conflict, and men beyond Mason and Dixon's | ight has the chapel been filled with the frieuds of the | MmPosslble te eave their capital from wn alyeriyi | Pet: soctety there cows ats oi thirteen milous, while the | 1° All —— and ane ot | | courage the negro to look to violent means for bis delt- ine are coming to wid the cause.“ It takes time to acoom- | graduates of the academy, from this and the adjacent mt wen, iodo. | Sort ave forty-four miiiions. Of these no lead than half cot ae < nar taen ae — Verance, and fille the owner with increased dread ef Plish the vobiest objects. The sentiments of a great | rain The raduating Clase showed a very bigh prof hen, erly io the present ny ai Nape'caa 1. ¢ | com Crown peasepte—the fanded proprictore being | § the streets, whit —— a j, weit — bloody repricalé by his bondamen, is an enemy to the i nation are pet to be changed in a day nor | ciency in their studies, and the essays read by the Stty- senena ata anne 100,000 Freneiy trovys p~ v se } ally in debt, and opt to obtain relief by mortgaging orders. ogtapay ong yom a eee cause in which be pours forth his acrimonious eloquepos. an dour. The cause is going onward, and | eight young ladies wert of grvat morit, and were marked | Cm mbark upon the shores wl Exex, Kent ant Suaeox, ~ sorf to theerown, rarely or wever fuding themselves | RMS, except for & few mouths on And theecaa- | Joum Brown bimsel! has nob done taco harm to the thromgh and over parties. We are marching on to cet: | with & superior ‘degree of iutellectual culture and ta- and march ob London; 20,000 were to ascend tbe Hum redeem the merignge. ty ot} lamps would ened give —— it pi ad cause of abolition in Virginia than a mu like Mr, Sam- tain success, (Appiause). Even what our frieud who | jent. ‘If she same school, with the same uumber of pe. ber and 80.000 land in Ireland weualogs had prepared ‘appear, at first igbt, that the dileulty ineman- | Ver the ruing and barr on wary ae war | Of, when be drives the Southern Sevators to fury by such epoke here this morning called the black code of Milinois pils, was located in one of’ our Northern cities, it would 2.243 nina’) vessels of ee xe How RMEPCTIA” 1 i mevet relate only to the tweuty-two miitions of | Summer a re uear ane real jolent and uncailed for philippic a8 our American oer- will yet crumble before this march ef progress. The bat- bettor known through the modium of the press to the ws by steamboats we bg me fort: WhO belong to private owners; bul tue fatal obeta | he da; been mer ion oy ee - Poh pengrend respondent notices to-day. Ue Is fought by the republican party ou the truest and | cieizcug of the South and of this S than it is now | TAPkt; am: it it be sappused that Napoleon UL Co Which prevents emaneipatien renders the case of the | people paturally fall tuto their old ways. “ 1t wus some years since Mr. Sumner had raised his volee strongest groubd, on egal and constitutional grounds. | Kuown, alt Lough casentialy TUT e ptitation. Thheee | 122 tbe plone of bis uncle, what Kugiishefor Wi peasants cue of extreare difhenity also, That fata | “ared to go out after auuset—now midnight is the limit; | in the agsembly to which he belougs. The results which, ‘When it wine against ery extension it wins against | y/o very iow. female acadeinien any whore that can out, 4 oi bief is the thorough misrule of everety, and the bad | aud when ine Moaatiians are gone I dare say people will | followed bis last onslaught on slavery are still in the re- everything When the slave power gocs down in the n& | yumber in their list of graduates tbls female academy. rept oe Chclacter of the effeial body, While all-over the eoun- | Keep it op tiildawn. The eastern element in the Sicilians | membrance of every one. In 1866, when the Union Ree rent ray ae oe ® (Great. ap. Mi, Taliott, the Priveipal forthe last tweuty years, has HSC. ust resiguea, and from report it ap ‘that Mrs. Anny Kyity Foster desired to know what was the | 4).6 ac, ia of difference between the platform of the whig party from | Pare ur the oe stakeenty natiaoas i estore try there iano law, ne n tation—al never comes Out go stroug as in this night life. Thanam | agitated by the contest betwoen Buchanaa and Ee a tah ing between the pebyie aod thee ereopoaarbte | ber of cafés and jee choy wide open and iuminated, the | gud party spirit was at ite highest, Mr, Sumucr del im the same ictionaries who have an unccatrotied license to make a | #tir and noise, the russ and offensive smells, all remind | an antisiavery specch almost’ as Btrong As cae of war | po cLotof themethe erowa peasant has mo chance for | one foreibly of Saracens and Greeks, Norman, Spanish | of tho other day. fA. Brooks, a member of the i ii ‘am convinced that h p REEHE of It . we might bring into the feild about 260,000 2 - in “Geo, Wynsoa captain to tne aissuction ofthe an. | mudiou, and couventenl, containing a, hundred and | Thin eat auaeiee the muginunt Csi iiroert git | Sct Cvaiem, Where camecwatioy dang eke lon } aoe We! Dae sce aa language the triniive clnaea mae, a ert div nce, showing the difference between the whigs of Mas J fet, ana the exercise ball one hundred and tweuty Dy | Vic of'm military maueure feeeed, we DOQW rie cies, | {iu EBWEh AK wHy“Mman of his order oa & private eatate, | Fe still the must prominen chair, inflicted nig Aid Uov eult Bre, of bn a with gas! Forticos, corridors and covered pavements | \ hich is note 1 hope, less that, 60.000 tai, thon toe moe | Ore tairteen mi iiout em the one baud to forty four mil- non, ious abd wns informed that the whig platform of Massa seinen On families. dai aatiitie ia, ail cbusetts was anti-lavery till 1848 they offered the ton ic eeathite ‘There has been $60,000 of ie forenne doctrine to the national party, and it was rejectet,and | or ine school spent in improvements, besides some 1 (From the Faris correrpondeace Vb on the other rs Pin form Freedom: can he given as a consequence of the tia, which ® fixed ai 120,000 men ; and if tix noustin bo pamphict La Question r'p Cetuamaud, there aust be some legieiation to | SES'D rte, ich nw Lous Of the Well reereited, a& Would happen witheas doudt te the theu he and many more left the party. republi- hia i event of war, 1 may count as 100,000 We he © als fe the te ‘aud hake Cie thiws coder Wiel his weer we kbow, can party was formed of men who left the democratic | {we O0n mors gained, from bequest atom ee 9 | 18 em vexmatirs 12.000 t 14.000 Fetes go (uve. 42 | ft ie te to hve. There mint be an excevive woane: | Mob awarded tothe Batre, hag a neque ta 8 aud whig parties on anti-slavery grounds. (Applause.) |“ qy¢ closing exercises of the ccLoginte department of bmg Shear cme ye eng aegedtat tj ry ont those laws and arrangements — There must be a | Peony, Called eR that the the regular arty i 6D. one ' property. There | the the University bere have been going on at the same time. {mi change in the tenure of Ia ust be adi bis +, tem mite of Col Herbert is even growter, ont tation of each clags | “mix up rome malignity with Interesting from St. Domingo. About five years ago the Western Military Institute, thea ot feetrw hee » Diet be more or less gewutne repre “i ‘OUn ST. DOMINGO COMRESPONDENGS: located in Kentucky by articles of upiok, was lucorpo- eS taadibonraias iant aby | O180Cety. Tu Rhort, there must be sort of cousti- | Paver; the Fixteen pages of which Sr. Dowco, May 11, 1860, | Tated into the collegiate department of this Cuiversity, | mutitia. they exist ouly on paper, When, in 1852. 1c, ce which time the military rule and organtaatioo ha’ . . pee Reformation and Liberalisation of the Dominican Gommer- | eon a part of the course of tasiruction, proving au eifec. et eee Pee eine Chal Pobicy—The Statesmen of he Country at Work—Be- | tual wid tn moral, mental aud physical cultare."“The Unt- | fy “Bae five ae te ny “ - . tenet Versity growus are situated upon Ww! known us Coi- Cot a, eeit of Ah ligious Thieratvon—Eilucation and the Press— Emigration uo of the moet cotpaaadagctineuoes stowed | qp(ik@el Herwert alana the seta) aedegll of thie to be Encouragd—The Products of the Soil, and the Man area of Seventecn acres. From | nents that be praises highly, yet these troops wl la no ner of their Caldratim—Bnlerprve of a Now York | the Duitinys we lave a view of the eutirecity ada ¥ery | truer rmayare with the Laaiwene af Prise Ch ta ferchant— Harber = merican Repre. ge sec ten jurrounding cout a vd lege Hitia ® Composed Of young neo volunteers, #h am SPtiter Ingrecmnent— the 4 . grounds are four large buildings, of which the priuctpa | tour wocksof each year, for five ders, pat th sentatives in St. Domingo, de. edifice, the Medical College, "is built of stove, aod | unitorm to go and play eoldicr Instead of sending you bloody tales of war and revolu. | cust seme $40,000 ‘The college library contains 14,000. | gio a! men te Judge al con wats. fae tion—the staple information from most of the Spanish | ¥@lumes, and they have @ fund amounting to $600,000. | exercise by men whe have never served tu & permanent tution; @ body of Inwa and open courts of jastice; a get. | 02 the puble cousiet are purely and unredcemaably stu- tomert of tue rights of the citizens, cow and ol; aud | Pid example 0’ set to ee prowimen of meene for the sert owners to be ena- eae Wh tes reached the lowest biew to obey the imuperial mandate, Some of these easen , tial condiuivas are sot within the Bipperur’® power, and acMancn, Bex 4) lands i, Hike ite prodeceasors, oibere are bo Little te bis taste that be refuses them, and | SLODytmons, and as tt hos, at ail events, one merit, the work is consequently at a stand. being shart, 1 give you the following passages of the con. With sueb an offiial hierarchy as that or Russia, no- | Clren thing eau be got done but what it sulis the interests of fowetionaries te do. The Finperor, at the ouwet, ap: pOlbted central committess—one to devise a scheme ‘of Cruapeipation, in concert wits provioeial comm: tees, ane the other te undertake the practies! part of the The settuon to the graduates was preached on Suday ~ S| busier. After two youre and a balf, not only tx American Statee—I can communicate the interesting in- | py the Rev. N. J. Breckiuriige, of Keutucky. On Mouday | tru’ suuster tiie elite, thea jar hos ihe seat part oly Sonne duos bes cee Begerer Spe. geeetad Heme + uta . tolligence that the Dominican republic has reformed and | @ military review was held at the Gullege, tm the Cuilege corps, and not even a froe corps where cach tuan has Pil! Ground, abd bag pat hineett oot of the reach of | “Tee that mean that we pretend that it is to J campus, by Generals Harding aud Audervon. The Rock | more or les education, but & corps composed of the noum | Bd Course hee ht a ihe Czar tro wis | destroy their power? On tne contrary, we desire that it beralized her whole commercial policy, and is Uxely | City Guard, the military company ‘of this lace, joiwel | o¢ Kayland. The officers of this militia, excepting the ova, |‘ Tepreseatation, evidently to (rightew the Caxe from tie | vayrt? Thee Powerr te ane Couarys we tend soon to make her mark and take high rank among the | (he cadets by iuvitation, forming @ battaiion of four fut! ica, aon Gl ciel or lawyers, for whom it | POrieee; aud the oe ee ) -- ios up edna ene anoth#; she English Power, most enlightened and prosperous American States. companies. The excel ehey of thols discipline calted forth | Yew bolklay teaport a ve uniform for a month drag each Py ices exes neal torbladen ee Gsueute erith tae Centon [> sve a8 fo, cannes Gov lupe itself or even subsist & pave A ‘The Deminicane wasted sixteen years in supplicating | ¥¢l merited praise from the large assembly of the beauty | year, but whe absolutely are in no wise soldiers TE bave 4 their individual ity, | DY CpPreRsiog, while in a of comtederation it We ons well i z aud f shion of the surrounding cyuutry. The commence | myself seen for three yoars this militia manguyre under ‘aba! Of then offertor eax’ | fins in itseif a natural counter 20ise io case she should per- heme the notice and protection of Spain, France and England, | ment exercises took place in the Hall’ of Represeutatives | my windows, aud I cab affirm that tbe German citizens of « iietan citer | ist i continning ber s ‘of iniquities; in place of Pr = during which time those Powers did nothing for them, | &. the Stare Capitol, which, by the way; is cousidered the | 1848 were not worse soldiers, The 108,000 men of the which, by remaining on the defensive, she might, without Pond but managed to control the action of their government ‘and | finest, certainly one of the most beautitul, specimens of | militia, 1 por whem Lord Palmerston reckons, would no! causing Unbrage to other States, think of extending ber. arebitectural buildings in the United Stat 6 The week | be at hand in case of an al attack, and if, was 0 ished by « grand ball, given by the cadets to thvir | ip baste, the great mass only be counted on as ca. friends, Upen entering the culloge we found | pale of Airing ee sue saute of houses, and re them iu uiuated by Chinese lauterns, from gate we | would be worthless open when oppesed tom ur Bion. had been devoted toTerpaichore f reform the whole administration of ‘the empire belure be q to prevent i from establishing profitable relations with the United States and the country staguated into poverty ‘and ruin under thetr upas shade. ‘The misery of the country had become so extreme that self indet itely, and, for example, occupy herself aivan. ; te Semeews with F ance, Russia aud Germany, bought zens ye United States liv. | the building, which for | Freneh army, . 4 Here we are, then, logically led to this conclusion. So a ea i eet chat was fue thetn aud teva { the eveulug, “Whe bait was s complete success. ‘The suits |" ‘The 14,000 Fcomanry are worth but {ttle more. ‘These Tene the Eanboece “Clezeit Tae reooded oe tor ca trian |, The Writanate ‘Couleeeration ts pence, What te to be a9 well as these tnd WOuntry while they bad anything lef to go with, | of rooms were festooned with wreaths, and decorated | are moutited militia, competed largely of farmers, for tne | Yee the Ea ization,” instead of the “emangips, | done tw obtain itt by slave-growe The consi ent ministers of the “great allied Powers" | with the swords and guns of the ¢ ets, arranged i stars | most part married, whomancuvre four weeks in the year, tion” of the serfs; and of granting them the ‘“usufruct,” horself bas taken the pains to teach it to us. dollars are were the real lords of the Dowimican repablic, and their | nnd circies upon the walls of the ball roms, of wich | and are in no wike assinuilated Lo regular cavalry. Ne ee haan cee ae ie ee | tndet, by making toe vote in spite of their baa ae teary dictation was as fatal t@ the best interests of | there were four. The elite and the fashion of the city were ¥ of thetm come each year to the feld of exercise | Sit Por tom the.‘ pomeasion” of Lau _ sovereign; by protest ly, if ct officially, the up by any thin oer’ ¥ a8 we See it in Mexico and our Ceutral Ameri | there, The ladies were more guly dressed, wi with a vew horae, because in “he interval the olt one be. Ih the prow the cial body ts ‘nat the | &Xpedition of Seity the bas deciared to a! Fp fe} can neighbors. beuliant colors, and were more #howy, than I ever saw in | longing to thew bus been sold, or perhajys not being tha | ety ce gimert to® mae If tree indurtry Rat may pout |. PeOble® Who ure bay Kowerved have the right to with abolition will be f ‘All this bad to end im absolute subjection to the ne- | any Northern assembly, and the general efect upou a per | selves farmers, they have been ebiiged to borrow another Cilimepsbip ar@ allowed to any portion society, there | 27 themselves from the laws which govera them by of Hayti or in an absolute chaage of policy. Lacki- fun entering the ball room was more vivid, every ous | (rom anew neighbor. The twelve thousand or fourtoen y for the Dwminican people, they have a statesman oF om « vot sand even insu looked eo gay, and aparkling, and Brilliaut, ‘Phe fostivi veterans are for the mest part beyout the age | Will be an end tq the monop»iy of «fice, and even Uy ‘the rection. buses by wisich officials live. As to the land owners, Well, then. Let us place Ireland in presence of the Switzerland and the Savoy Frontier. wo oir Cebinet and Se , and they have pat their | ties were Kept op until a tate hour. and could strietly opty be employed in garrt Romagna and of Svetl) ‘Vow Swiss journals lish the fuliow! ireular, - Pee aie simet they have lightened ther siak ing | The strangers wbo are here, to wee the commencement | son. Further, there ie not pon the. fng'lah ‘coast | peeerty Ture are, Renny cacepticas, bot the sont ar | Certainly we are far from approving the manner in | dressed by dhe elvetie governmeat tats diplotaatie ship of the overload of shackles aud dead weights whien | are daily teaving. Were it not for the great deficiency in | a single strong place, except, , York, and that i® | nen whoare on the best terms with the officials, and which these two countries have boon treates: but there is | agents abroad: — they bad inherited from Old Spain, aud now, for the first | hotel accommodations this city would be quite a place of | not a fortress ih the true sense of the Word. As for these strong in their alliance, are precisely these who have no | 20C4 Man wiewe judgment merits any consideration who Brnye, May 23, 1868. time, the Dominican repab ord and deed a really | resort asa watering place. Nashville is surrounded by », after ten years’ service in the a) hav Jatent on of freemg their serfs. As fur the serfs them. | 208 Bot fing their condition eaviabie ix Comparison with ‘We learn from certain authority that the Freoch sulpbur and halybeate springs. The water is the pla | civil lite, they attach themsctves, if with m: felver, there is no doubt that they will take their case | te fret. vernment, taking no account of tie position assumed santest and most palatable sulphur water 1 tay and not too old, to the militia, amd must net + | inte their own bands if they are tastalized much longer | _ What more natural, therefore, than to see Catholic and | Switzerland in the question of Savoy, is endeavoring te n the principle of the mostcom- | tasted. ‘The water ig impregnated with a good be separately counted. That there may be fund, however, | by empty promims; but of ihewe thore it «large propor. | Persecuted Ireind mauifest her impatience of Protestant | get the high Powers to agree to ther expedionts, with plete civil and religious liberty. The government proved | iron and salt, but ly apy one visiting here know in Ragland , hon vn a creates’ great difficully. Some serf seo so | SH! tyraumic Kngland? regard to which it is pretonded that they are as much ja ite sincere spirit of religious toleration by presemting the | the fact except the immediate neighborhood. The; ed by lowe of country, will stand resay to Opoos: a French: M > J Let her manifest i, then, and Rugland, who advises | the interest of Europe as in that of Switz rland, aad Protectant emigrante with ground for @ cemetery aud a | not take the pains to show up these aivantages ¢ descent, is Dot lo be doubted; but that thee t eu i. ai Ace tele oe pay Suecly peades Austria to cove Venice for a shm of money will bave to | natare tw offer sufficieut compensation for te ight good building for a church. The Protestants will reqaire | stranger. They do not seem to think of it, and yet there | thousand men woukl be bie of checking for aa in fF Mancipation Would eubject them, ax me mand wot chattels, ratify the vote under penalty of saying to Barope, “My | claimed by the coufedoration, which were ome help to At Itup for divine service, but the Cariatiaa | is prubably one of the Guest white sulphur’ Spridgs in the | stant & regular army, no othoce tn Kngland Belioves. sa | 4 Myciayan Wad @anuvel neta. ne mee mi mat chatteles | ThE any Seg eam. to them. Dew propvltions are eeseatially as fol- public of the North, who don't mind speuding tens of | world within two miles of the city. Many efits tave | nation when invaded rarely wants men, but it too often ror! ignorance of the meaning and uses of property Tu thes cane, then, there is wanting at this moment in | lows:— thousands ov the turmese pagans—who refuse tv be oun. | been mage to obtain subscriptions, charter og & new | wants soldiers,” aaid Napoleon. Ant that Eogland dome | jc iaid Aw they have always belonged to the land, ther | [eland but ane man, and this man Providence seems to 1. A cession to Switzeriand ofa tine of mountain from verted at any price—wiil not refure a few hundred toward | betel At tast vue of Nashville's eitizens Mr. John Over. | oot want soldies Lard Palmerston has uot at all |}, Wid, An thoy have always below ngs to them, The | DAYe Specially marked oot Meillerie to Col-e Ferret sustaining regular worship tu the English tongue for their | ton, has undertaken to build a hotel oo his tot, corner of | proved. whole set of ideas relating to the pussession of prope: ‘This man’ bas valiontly gaioed his spars in Algeria, at 2. The ‘unert on the part of France to establish ne own mariners and other sajourners here who used the | Church and Cherry streets, tu cost about $235,000, exclu ‘The greatent diffoulty that the English government bA® | Xn the purebase und payment of Labor has te ee eeeeiay | the Malakhe beettons t the plains of Lombardy, | armed flotilla on the lake of Geneva, the Swiss observing 4, if boom and would be so thaakful for tt. sive of the valve of his grounds, which are probab.y worth | to combat im questions of national defence ts foand in the u be would not be ‘ty cut out | in thin a5 . The woound step wan Wo establiah @ system of primary | £250,000, provided ome of our citizcus would Ted at itary eulistment. If iw now often aim | I theW minds, Why they shouli py fr bouse and | oeerown for hisuscit on the dammsine of greeo Bein. 3. Frauce will pn nie g soln 0ol8, om the American plan of free instructioa, for bet! peace for Eoglaod to procere men fo ne. Ow Ler Must of course be pai. for kuch laut as is for This man Ws $100,000, poting altogether the cost of the bouse and of the b tain of ss npeoene Lael, “ae “ ome whom a areal@ays | Gone on a ver ou Of toeriter which «ill be Haalt- which has been arranged, aud the | creary numbers, what herculean efforts must be required | the sertioment of twenty-two inillions of laborers. Where | DOPY to meet, and whom k willingly salute with | ¢¢@ by the moun! «f Vuaebe, of Sion, aud of kes and all couditions. Parallel wit) the emancipated press is budding out in fae promise | hotel now Wreaing. fo time of war to mao ber forts an! ArMirS. | the serf undersiaud the matter beticr it is doubtfal | te title of brothor—this man is MacMabon, We bave the bovor of inform . ot The foller yb lullier’s Paris do pet at all Witte Burnett House, Cnciunattl; the Orcrton | up aud down the ‘Thames, baring on beart satire | Whether they can be expected to estimate nd discharge tb Am hg EI i hd spall Gs Dave tem of an early literary harvest. The third measure favors emigration, and is intended to been choten architect, the same one | Some monthe since steamers were seen wheties the w persuade farmers aud mechanics to come in and develope | Hotel at Memphis, and others. The butldi'g will have a | abe marines, which, stopping before all merchant ships, , r Corres distributed in toe French departments:— | nature wo tranquilize Swilzeriand, wore than th Sve tie ok nkinee Seniineeeet) 2 ‘pecet mite hy “Pricer Abert bas’ tea received | an compensate fur Uhe rights abd" adlvantages that were The wonderfully rich resources of St. Deming), amd is | front on Cherry street of 175 foet, and on Church street of | the enrious satiors had to read to them the inducements from Louden — This apetch wal delivered of tae | Sol monly awarded and guaranieed to Lhe Coufederation already producing great results. Fuesiguers are en. | 100 feet, covering au area of about 28,000 square | offered by government Wo the crows uf merchantmen. to rage womenly bon | rank of Uninet of the trenatieroards, to the | 1615 by the neutralisation stip tated by Butope for’ the couraged w bay, aud are protected ia the enjoyment uf| feet lor balf an sere, KM will be a paraticlogram. | enter the royal navy, &c. Ten ds sterling was the ip them to beoome good | Busdand of the Queen Tt would not be rasy to be more juterests of all. every class of 1 J and persoun, estate, and a namber of | The beight from the pavement to the top of the estab. | beunty offered to each sailor. it onl, py ‘upek/ifal OF more im rodent than the Prince was Mf you look map wil maguificeat sugar, cotlee ant tobacco ebtatce, which have | lature i to be seventy-cight fect. Iwill baves rand | which cap draw the calle lef aorchunt hive to the rage gar pe Meo i oa, Nw -beuns “ef Prumee, and the Arenphect fess that uns ta ne Orde been left waste a third of a century, are to be immstiate- | emtrance a a three teet wile by | royal navy. It ls the seme thing, or perhaps worse, for | tisuce ie in uch a condition that the Emperor | Edeland were ¢ jo it with an osteptation of the & ly, pat ia cultivation by Ge:mans and Americans, who | thirty feet high, composed of cight iron Cormthian | the army. A tailor or shotmaker makes ordinarily four | te icinices im the matter of Canis to cacy out ine | Wormt taste ante wut ld be of no conseqnence if ach take thom, ready stocked, on what is called bere en | columns, detached several fect from the wall, wit shillings @ day: ship carpenters have from seven wonine | Mycih "in short, the real Plate of the ease tenths chew were not calculated toexcite ancient hatreds enitad, oF balve heavy entabiatore crowning it. At each end of dollars per week. Resides.from Ave o'clock im tho evening | <0+¢ cmaneipation might take place, t the iucetimable | Detween the two bropleyond vo prepare ev nta of which ‘All ihe cap: tal required of the settler who takes those | are wings about thirty fect wide. All the eolunus, winter and from six o'clock in summer, the workinen ‘ the sagacious men of the (wo countries would previ + re their own masters. What is there then to caise them | S2vantage of ail classes in the empire; but Is must be | the Mite * - “i | } | fine estates on a ease ts a few baatred doliars ia tablateres, &e., will be of iron. It will contain two bh veated in fartning implements. No one bere knows auy- | dred and forty rooms, exclusive of the main and public | to subject themeclyer to the rigorous discipline ot | 2° Y & Soe, NS ee Sai sdnineetes, thing about eveu euch common implements as the plough, | halle, corridors, parle ond thi cipire, and g eu euch con - ‘. fee. “Hach hall and roma, line the aldior, who receives ® shilling 9 aagyer hae ae: thority Gabe hem 4 Spain. barrow or scythe, and the men who are preparing to use | cross draoghts of air at command; all connecting with the | mains of it after dedwetion made fur isteneg Ae ~ ’ itede ‘The Jowrnal des Debats without vouching and the Beet of tabor aaving machines of all clusd#, outer air and e\ring ales plonty of light. The ventilation | tbe ivevituble glass of beer. Tho rovruiting officer Was | dectared tee won, ibe Tauyeror ake tame 8S | ay Pret oe {tlow ng Mak bes tore gomesent” ge fortants out of Uhoee fertile ue | shaft is ton feet square and one bandred and twenty foot | ordinacily on): visit taverns, where he AON ision for carrying out he Tacet. He cal ‘tas the nanifeate Juan to the Cortens— giectod lands. Their proper cultivation wil! at millious | high, for the purpose of vontilating the whole building | dr fod , ail sorts of people. brats tact ‘no OC Ube extoot Of potitiont et he epirit of reform and the sat experience which Spain to Ppt bee on may oceaawns bad of the inconveniences eaaged URL BeCOMPAHY eTaNCipArion, and the idea te Jon of Wonren to the throne trodneed to the wealth of the uative proprietors, as will ae for | ‘The diming hall i# fifty feet wide by ene hundred and eigat | with beer or whiskey, and ts to thoir heated I~ tunes to the enterprising foreiguers who take them to ] feet tong, und twenty res feet hich. The floor of tho | bation the beauties of a soldier’s lit, The ‘ne hall is supported by iron girders, which rest on iron | two to five sovereigns offered as a bounty fluiahes the a late act all doties are remitted on machinery and | colamns sunk into the brick work, And not resting on the | work. They pocket the bounty in presence of witnasaer; labor aaving implements of every desoription, and thie | bricks along, for fear of their ® wing. The bod chambers | their ames are enrolled, and Our acu cannot withdraw, act is also producing ita effect 0B the prospects of the « furnished with water an cu, vod There are, however, net a few, who, upon awakening, are ‘country, nished with bath reoma, water cluscts, & frightened pon being informed that thay are Directly On ita passage a Now York firm mate arrange | will be eupplied by large reservoirs on the r room, | irrevotebly for tem years’ service, Such ato in general ments to open au exteative depot for stean engia 1 | alt of them, have plenty of fight, from a | wtiuthe | the queeas need in England for recruiting the labor saving Machines suited to this cowtry. Ip this, ofthe buikiing or from the street, Whon this hocet } reyal army; the bounty only varies according to circum. aioAn goverament acted vory handsomely | is hnmshed theeity may well be proud; but until thon—eony | tances Ti. Ireland, were misery drives go many porwns ‘the firm the use of a large stone edifice, and itis | wee Sagres Visitors will be obliged to pat up with the ¢ te cespalr or expatriauon, the recruiting oifcars have the one best acapted fora machine depot that Told hotel accommodations. We are having quite cool { Much low trowble As ths numbers enlisted in this wi can be found ta St. Domingo, Ther: was considerable op- | weather here for the last woek, and blankets are stilt | murt a! Ob a crowd of elroameatances, the mili ition ty these reforma by the king and priost riddea | comfortable tax Tae boen institutes to awaken @ military taste in ards of the obi reboot, but the work ts dowe, The On warm evenings: fire flies or er bage abound Fe Loon hand jeg them jute the regular army. it my soll, the mines aud the foresta of St, Domingo mast yield | in the greatest profusion at this time a€ tho year They | Belg boped that, aiter they have fur some time paradist 'm to steam and stect, and give up their treasures to moderu in the open air as ordinary flies are in dome when presented. He is Dureaueracy and acamariiia whieh clings to seriage ws Fuccess) under as | Philip ¥. a charge in the manner of kuscession, On the © their only chance Ff power and pell, Meantime, the denth of Ferdinavd VII. the viclence of political pasiong of society te very severe; (xe Emperor coold bronght on the dynasty quertion. ie Wi party, wv pt war, bappen whet may; anda total overthrow while inveking reforms, ait with one chief reforin, only hie government Bul the whole steacuare of | het which frhado that the dretinien of the country id Mociety ip absolutely inevitable, #ibin no long time, should be at the merey and caprice of a woman. The serf emarcipation does not take place from which | Cortes of 1834 Cusregarding logaiity, in obedience to what — ek oak they veemed the political exigencies of the epoch. de ree tea pon CEOe i Sad may tomy eputved ofthe: eighs of sacaoesing to | | | | seen | thy crown, and proseribed from the Kingdom. Te mamat be ecnfissod that the aspiration of the Cortes have beew a vd, aud twonty seven years of experienc: bave shown ibat political exaggerations and bor Lune have bot beck able to exjablish in Spain the prive of am eulightened poly, and have not ] Rome, THE PAPAL BNLISTWENT. Dunr ‘The Papal recruiting wiil not sto, Rows, fila Holinsss wants goot ices noetcan excited tn favor of re. od trae Crom ire. volform and bad their | red the developments whieh were to be tod enterprise of, it will be dilloslt for them tO Wilkiyaw and he sbaii Lave them, wheter he witl orn. Ia : ; atane eh oaene The fifth measure was to open Samana ant Maoranifs, ences. Although gaagy militia ld Jd like Lover's pervorae herons, fem accmty cme pe gi~ dep) docile, the two most available harbors on the islaod—or | may jow Hight, but when it is dark it is a | Rave im this manner heen” incorporated in the rega. . ‘tw stop tho more they will go.” +] ad brave as it gemorous Reforma are merely ominal | The Lanerick Heporter gives the Hiloring bit of a greater parrot oi! Preservet, shout the Mabmlor reeruits:—Turco iucrcred of tho rtam | poaifireprere in cccamiacce with thee m age bas fay tw the Antilies—for the sale and cuvbarkation of the products of the wew movement The liberaix het a ‘The grass, trove, shrubs, and the waole face And meaiows in the ereuing appear to clow eer army, yet military voi in Parhamant Dave ralsed doubt = ne tothe = utility «= of a i Sand Ses fr tbe covomaion, bat HHiets of small r the miitie n= a preparation for tae rtanding army. Ag. | Telunteers, eluding the last Latch of (he Limerick eon. | taker Papeete iid ncnoe Sata aa! tow, and J have fount some geod cove of coe and some very | Cniy aniive born sulyeuts can serve ti the Britiel a-nm Ungent to the Papal army, were n Viewsa on Sunday. Tho Corte of 1894, incompétent to deprive me of my poe yb toned nn Keo ose we me nice Lome made erver at tow tables, What isthe | tho government bas the greatest troable in the w b anf resehed that erty on the evening previous. sad were | right. hat to peu! ean to open the door to reforms : ale dopotn re oat 7 cause 1 cannot tell, but coffee instead of tea ia almost | Whea war come to procure tha necessary gambe No B00Der Was the port qowetion settled thar two chuinct gnliversaily drank at brook fast, (inner and sumer thoe ia | folers. For some ass they he ify Ree eroce. bl) why we Dey eu the Southern couvtry. Tflud that people ria at alnoet of soidiers 1 o—came with pe iene to cetablich «tara | every meal quantities of oar milk, of butte eoreling to Colonel Herbert, d of Creat Brite Lines on the principal rivers (fat disombogue at ant pear Sik as they oat 1. ‘One’ b Ghuoke tnch tthe other ese ties tor yeotag thewe At thie present writrog there is cote o “ el 'y Genera’ | ith vertholess flattered the people. ‘Loe fallecy of that nation more clearly appears (rom & Ie of the Emperor of Austria some y ee ve | Wappears es ify se wished t manifest tn at Gos: Mm moit which was presented on the 24th of Ootybery fal otber officers of the Austrian erty. They were ao | wkeabie 1 + the error wiieh the Cortes of the Esta | 1814, by M. Guillaume de Humboldt, member of tue com- Ghmpanied by some Irish clergymen, anv were 19 tue | toto commiltio: in wisuing to alter the laws which regu- | mittee for Swiss affaire, of which we shali soon forward highest epirits. ates th Be colin “OG precise ® manner the succession to | you several copics. wed by Count O'Deunel), Who saved the | with the hep: of 4 25.600 men wes than t Yy yearr of azo, ] Atevery meal; more te drank than water, At tomor we wrtol ordinarily employed 9 ease of war, to ob. THE PAPAL TRIBUTE OF LIMRUCE, the hrome, Tt is. lelenr te imagine what sort ofa pic- | In this important document it was clear bag ban be ak We aa ber pe fre always banded pitehers of milk and piteaere of « v he ineuficieney Of two tecrniting system, is the On Sundey last nccincion, Wy ender of the Romer Ma | ture the nate < present f the ind; ‘who da foots the concession of @ good military Ironttar oe peed Se and eeteen om te wa Butter in ibis clinate is soft, like the hot vir m. tea | Coombion of foreign legions. Hnglund has never bees able | tholic Piahop, was made ia al the chapels in the dtooaes | occupier thy throne to «ie this day. there Asin. | would be ae much for the general interests of = bp wun oxaunive an a “J Yes I it aimoet oi! It is not goneraliy Wo broad as ir the | Woarry On greet ware without the aid of foreigvers, | of Limerick, when a sum of pearly £2,000 wae collected | gic respectable Speniac’. even amoung the bumblost clase | for that of the Confederation. paso et liberals on, Sas Ok ie 1 North. There arene penaice or three cent pisces hore | The organisation of such legions ie, however, | The whole collection in the diocegs ie (according to the | of the pepe, or aa Seuator or deputy to the Cortes ‘The most suitable frootier i# pointed out in tae memote ri bs pe ros of Yar ae end Yan they Are ouriositics, evermously expensive, aud the wars of Kngiand ) expected to rench £6000. The starving of | who weals co »vereign the son of Isabella o thet follows:—The course of the Valserine to the — are, therefore, 89 excessively costly, that, notwit s prepare their », ee LSet ation in Wilmer & Smith's Puropean Timee of who 231 thet. | standing ber great riches, wo § ia more Dardeesoms ‘to ipa, to ys oy s r. rrp) floor, pr | Says We eather from Bell's Life that Heenan is abort | her (ban to any other Power, The ware agus machinery mint irop B) Oh win ew rk of | te return to America, “ ieaving the hoaor of contending | low the First leaded the State witha debt of nine hew Evie must be rejsiced to bear of the liborality of their | Dowrbonf Tc © rehigioniats and neighborw in the cvase of the busery | and disorders etm lor to those of another epoch full of aad people of the Vatican, memories for Costile ath of that laiy would produce wars | the Rhone t@ the Fier; both banks of the course of to its source 'at Mount Charvin; and ys oe iges of the chain that bounds Faacigny a Recent tnt , - > Wes totes ee Ligeuce from Rene etter that the Pope hae tee wore na fhe from serving their country as | the Vaiai®, Switzerland would ao acquire an impenetrabie oalee cee Saran ae a ‘tle we a. th nt benedt of | for the olf belt to other " It G0 seeme pro ponds sterliag, for the | got ke mony irienwen as he weate The fret We oftcta frote aotity Weotly, and as in deereeing the de | frontier, and to return wonld undertake ‘he veosbip Garon cette ben ‘earcocl bable that the championship of Kugtand and the poraene ye en tntcrent of more than thirty-one Million | gottiied th Dr. Cutica’s organ: <"'Soch « number of Position and exoulsion of my thmity they bad neither toga | of the of Great St. Hernard and tbe Amprovement cmap, and that was to remove tb b of M the bolt HL abortiy be foegbht for oy Hovet, | of pomnds sterling. The people are aszessed en foc rants have already reached Italy that po more shytid | authority, vor heard my fh Fy oue In my tame, | most important of all, and the safeuy of whi QRERREERA TERIcictions on Araericaa Commerce # Ms Stalybridge I and Tom Paddock. Boil’s Life | th of Pe¥en pence por pomnd on all incomes of more Uh think of preceeding there for the present.’ There i¢ | snd since those Cortes vent the countey, | provides for in the best possible way, by their betug co nearly Atives American merchant’ aed me pees S So wane Forward in ard Sxty ponds eteriing. The Crimean war bee stilt moore | every reason to believe that the Iris leview are found to | rnd coneequentty we y tbe question whic! | Aided to the county that hag the ‘greatest taterest i Out of the Dominican tra s 4 nea | the Uy Proseniod to Sayers | increemed ihe national debt, ad it ie abowe nil things to | be rather troublesome. The Retina correapondent of che | choy treated writ euch protemt, in the most | them Bofors the arr va 7 ' m, wedere it, ) thelr ayrten erating that thie eraqgeraced cost of | Landon Merwing Post eponks of the fonted epi 7 eevee manner, ip the (ace of (he pation, agsingt the do Jo that remurkabic historical etpore it is deolarod, ba Aefend United Staten ( 7 oe n e Prgieb 1 Whee compared with the expense of | ulsrady”’ ed hy them, and ow veer ree of the aah! Copter ow t position of my | aides, th 1 a good frontier Geunwa igh #0 MANY Couric ¢ ote / ¢ ther Europ rmire, meet Ne attribeted The « » | of Dobiin Morin, ral ‘ ee nt an wal to | mise a he reat of Switgortand in tiew - 7 cooks be We fue bis was 1) tw a ny ot 122605 > wi oor [ts gtuat Mey tne righ ening ali the mivantages would be logt which the