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WHOLE NOQ, 8738. MORNING EDITION-SATURDAY, AUGUST Hl, 1860. PRICE TWO CENTS. Pros- | about with a youth some thirteen years o age. It waa | waiting, like Mr. Macawber, for semethiug to turn up, wesoela or fag ngin ts set Sa hon teins wen decks call cf Bharke’ Wik tere eta ae irs fia, wuatria and Turkey, Here are 48 good a8, eight, or the Prince of Wales, who is now en roule o the United | they would run the risk of letting the last moment pa88 | the intervention of the y ee Sessnnesh, to Spent lly GA perabe Gee oT see | tee toons nd whem ino, Prone t,theh gpd |. when Ung sles in xvas} to att the fren a | eee mo Lena OO eee cena ae ee | eee cere ne a One Ara cain of fe meeting, Raving “ > y » vr’ \. was | won a , rece offers were ur London, Paris, Berlin and Gcfoa ; but probably antes might be a succes friend” of Victoria, ia preparing to receive, \iko thereturn | co-operation of their powerful rival, ution once | thai Americans camo forward and offured thelr vessels for | to take ten to one about Bweetaauce for the Sk. Leger, in 2 THE EUROPEA MAILS. FPr'.¢ would be in one league Sot Plein, Bae bo might bo geen on tho lawn below, sauntering | was no longer time to stand upon etiquette, and that by | port. The King, although he could give him pony ond The betting at the close was remarkable for the great wp. a rd were | race was won ten lengths by Sweeteance, who has t faithful secre’ “Cromwell, I charge The capture w: fi jas 60 clearly illegal that the ont | Mr. R. Phe American Slissions Broken Up | awy amb tien, that “sin fell the angels.” | speak of, bad a cricket ball, which as the former sportive- Tefuge a request couched in arms of such urgent entreaty, Tete Meee Ca icles, aia eee |: ery ene Oras a . ly flung in the air the latter cau; and having just left Baden-Baden to return to his , T st. Sib. Why ght nd tossed back again. to Trapani to purchase a cargo of salt for ber homeward | Mr. Capel’s Hi: : 1 and Abandoned. the advice? He bad no need of it. Ho was a patriot, and by way of Coblentz, he signified his Fair met Toyage/and agreed to take for the Garibaldi Committoe Capt. Christie’ Hore inva tie, rebellion ‘opportunities | of the prodigal, George the Third, comingt ring pecavi | taken, it was carried out with that promptitude whish | his use, riskin, and imprisonment. men Goodwood sovereigns, the Correspondence as coagiahnes teat oer Louis Napoleon | in the aioe of his greatgrandsva, od poh, has ‘Austria has #0 frequently displayed in diplomacy and so | were transported. and Garibaldi was carried Mk pd out of tho stakes. may seize the present hour to ‘in history along- aes: tn pryen ‘Who | rarely in war; the @mperor immediately despatchyd an 1y over the difictity. This example has been followed by Two miles and « halt Forty-two subs:— Siorrdpnnnnnnnno ns ide of his Mlustrious uncle, Darius, Haenibal, | taken place 2 lapse of those five years, Tetocraph lotder to the'Prince Regeat, inviting +1 aignt | ‘English and French. Now there are four lines of | Lord Anneeley's Sweetsauce, by Swoctmest, 3 yoare, Julius Cwear, Peter the Great, Frederick and Charles XI. | thought of America then? It was England an France who, almost say imploring—his Royal Hi to grant Seamer, nama baeins, js AL nine vessels, plying daily be- Tst. TI. ‘TATE OF THINGS IN SYRIA There is alo lst of them and no two alike in mind, ca | unived like the Sameee twins, wore to bold she world a8 | Bim 's ont sera Baden aden, ‘Brosien, toon tip and Palermo, and displaying he French, Exg- | Baron Rot ' Meee ee Fr op tonya Bs ec Wola nia | & football beneath their fee. [As if emblematic of the tact, | oF ay eth toes Ee proper i? | _ You have learned Hag since that one American ship | Count F. de $ fing the Emperor and his young visitor, on the occasion I even if he had been inclined—which wag not the ¢ase— | W# captured by the Neapolitans—the Charles & Jane. years, 8st. TI... By not Cromwell’ a successful one, A I modern writer—(Dr. James | Now it would be Napoleon who missed the catch, now the Emperor at Toplitz ‘26th 3 , Ae Jehneon)—sums it all Gp thus a0 the career of esibitions outhful Prince; then huriing it aloft again, and Tt will be seta from this statement that interview | #0me¢ 800 men and munitions of war as far as Cagliari, ia Mr. R. Ten Broeck's (ptimist’ (bred im’ America), ‘3 | men: ‘The hero of Macedon found the reward of his am- | laughing till” their Uresth® was spent. "They | is mat the result of concessions made by Prussia to Aus. | ‘0 island of Sardinia. Cagliari was at that time, being | years, 6 st. Tb... PE aot aCTIVE INTERVENTION OF FRANCE, | ditica ‘0 the Granicus, Caesar in the Senate, Sidney on the over the green sward like two recreant school- | trie; but that, on the cootrary, It involves moral defeat | Very Bear to Sicily, made a kind of depot where th: etting—2 to one ‘against Horror, 6 to 2 against Starke, scaffold, Sweden's mad mopareh touched the goal of his Should this notice of the circumstance perchance | of the laiter and the sacrifice of her pride, and possibly of | Yolumeers were Kept until a safe opportunity occurred to | 7 to 2 againet Batterty,§ Ao] against Swoetsauce, ; ambition at Pultowa, Wolsey in disgrace, in under id Jand’s heir appareat le ‘necees! ~ them across q 5 passing the stand Zouave \ ity.” One as ambitious as any of them 1 lives. ode raghea Mantis he oung peat may cee a waite er neuen ‘" poten it id note captared nonone da: ond, £0 tbe Saland of Fabe.,ne. Ree the Fupping, with Gustave, Optimist, and By .\FHE SICELIAN REVOLUTION. Parliamentary autre the nation’s busiuecs gets along | Zo read this light record of thoso leet resyonsiblo days. ead’ to consequences which will more Pitta a eg dons. and eaptatGn TRS enieece | pranhing Lee oe SaTKO being the last two, | Oa ap. slowly. Nearly great measures of the session have | Forsan et hoc olim meminisse jurabit. Many of us a demnify Austria for the momentary humiliation sho within tis kingdom, and captured in Sardinian waters, porane the turn out of the straight atarke went ‘ Drennan anna nena been laid by or overthrown, excep! the laying on of taxes. | stood gazing on from the window, watching that inecra. | Cammy Austria f quite another affair. If, in | ‘ecapture was clearly illegal, So the Neapolitan go horse and forced the pace because his stable companion are fore in | 200 Youn money. The bankruptcy bill is laid by, not to | table little eye of Napoleon’s, as {: sparkled in glosful | return for her compliance with the demands of the Prus. | Verpment gave her up [mg elas ble of acromplighing the tak, and tustria, Bessia and Prossia to Interfere in be resuieir sed the paper repeal was lost in the'tords, | interest we asanttont bed tarative ine Han goverumest, ‘a reference tom few subordinate points | ¢,1%2"e, NAs an incident on board the caries & Jane | Wing second and third, wore Gants at Sueehdon rene’ treaty bas been a wofu) failure, and only this charming picture of the lion and the lamb German N ‘here . , jowever, Behalf of Naples, Brough vy Viectraea Lord Palmerston ie a \rinier: feet, and wits wes is real inion a an Omen of the | fal\arimy: nbd tis reveal of sac eo the fede | that snowed mighty, Yankee jin is strongest | when Zouave bore hie golors i the van, and soon pik sets his ails for those we future? Sor then to use ish 2 < | NERUAMAA B hasiileddontar Gffice and keep him in. ‘The Tory party and conservatives | tate ent sono ia » be phage gh i) iy korg Pg Creare jneations | harbor the Neapolitan officials thronged along. | pursuers; Gustave going ou sooond: Starko, High wayman, } led by Derby and DisraeN, ‘have been going down with clouds?” and ithe majority ‘were sanguine to of the in; and’ ag it is tous that in the “keen | %4¢ exultingly to board the prize, when Watson, ror and Optimist lyirg up at bis heels, and Butterfly , THE GOODWOOD CUP. | hil, dd ony shown thelr pluck by the | hope all things, the curtain is now withdrawn from thelr | encounter a their wite’ the Trost dats Kect | the chief mate, who command (ine caplain having | dropping into the extreme rear. As they néared the clump Sty rept" bil Tan country i dinguted with ot Ma: | iy inaaast Shcleamater aoe, ceking tse | IMvAFADly macumbod tothe Ansriaa, Tabould not be at | Su iy reraey a ale Bat Se tebe | cfabeet adouni of ineiber a donuts fea ae at x jaty repea) bi comes ‘no doubt whens | 2s indignant exclamation, is now seeking alliances | gi) gurprised if Bia pproaciting conference, a held | jtalian he could muster that he would shoot the first | diminish. Horror was, however, at the side of Gustave : ty’s present Parliament, and J have & | elsewhere. hopes is cross; - . Visit ef the Primce of Wales to | fivhution comes very many of the members will bo seat | tint ay hE Norkhy Americus “possrestnan, | Under auspices most favorable to Prussia, should entan- | Tan'that mounted the sides that prmoner thoagh we was | on rounding’ the tora? but. did’ not, keen thet pesiuon Gustave, j posse: , | gle her in complications from which she has hitherto kept thong lon ‘Star! ‘soon, off about their business, but in reality to seek the friendship and iM "1 bis ship was American soil, and would allow nobody 1g, dropping behind ‘ke, who passed America, "The massacre in Syria ie going to be avenged by a Bri- | who inhabit the possessions of hie ancesors.” “Brot is | Moo and ‘ata Ay Tate go Lea eae gainers: | but bis consul to board ‘ber; nd nobody did board her. | headed Zouave, and in a few atrides took "vp the running. } } t | i ey on psa put a stop to the murders. &e. &e. je feet and a French land force. Turkey has not yet than water,” the D; ‘England, Although he was under the guns of the fortress no Neapo- | attended by Zovave and Gustave, the others, with the &., * acceded to the proposition to have the French step ta.sod | spcnse, eee anpetiverttioweelee erie kee on cine ay ae Saey Wg a aol ta the 4 istan ever put his foot upon the eet aad Wetaan wth tse. | axneption o¢]Badloree ait timist, who were in the The fact is the entire Turkish | her eye towards those who are “bone of her bone”? and | gnion of the German ‘governments will offer additional place without allowing even his papers to be examined. rear, going on side by sido. Horror was in difficulty on ‘The reception of the Europa’s mails, which arrived | nation, from the Mosiem soldiers clear up to Pashas aud | the welcome preparing for the Prince of Wales in the of peace by opposing an insuperable barrier to Garibaldi was 80 pleased with the determination of | descending the hill, and Sweetsauce went up to Starke, ‘ Sultan, are alt implicated and guilty of being accessories | United States is a that ehe will not look in yain. mop a Foe, ‘Watson, as well as with the strict discipline and complete | who was beaten at the distance, Gustave becoming #e- | ere met evening from Boston, enables us to furnish de- | bien iefore and after the facts 2 why tbe Salen | Bun ia May the Kindred nations of great America | thes metious designs of Frauce:on the other, it is feared | controt he exercised over the er volunteors, that | cond. The race from that point was over, for Swoet. ails of European intelligence to the 28th ult, — hesitates. a. i age ey Rd _ fol ‘5 Ady is- | and Great Britain henceforth have no other vita Figen to anos s crusee for the restoration Fey corte ga wens acta he was offered a post Sore conten, sway Eons hs commen without Cea | clos itterl; ow, sucl i sepul- ” navy, w! Le * bs ™ lengths, ve wo According to advices received at Genoa the loss of the | close something so utterly YMorkieh fet or that of who ehall be greatest in upholding the dignity, the « legitimacy, rom ich he has only been withheld wontons beard thet the pete of Naples, at the | lengths in pnt of toni, ee Muine maiehea of ; cbre in everything connected with renown and the moral worth, of the it Anglo-Saxon ; aribaidiang ab Melaazo was 780. The Neapolitans had | ors neh humanity and Turkish nance, that well one Wane tw noms ant these apprehensions, | instance of Louis Napoleon, haa sent two ambaseadors to | Starke. Butterly was fvh, and Highwayman, Horror | 203 willed. ‘There were many wounded on both sides. | jnay thePorte heeltate, The two goad, slanple Christian’? OOP vob Ailes. Ww repdahed. Webeiente tha Bretne wiconny, 23 the jubilant tone of the Kivns Zeitung, | Turin to negotiate a treaty with Picdmont, the chief fea- | and Optimist did not pass the post. 7 ¥ trines | ‘Wtore bad assumed the Dictatorship during the short | pations of France and England have been defending a wolf | and the Maronites will not affect the urgent pre- ture of which is ion from Garibaldi. They have | . ‘the Miasion. As ye}, however, the exulta- | hbeezce of Garibaldi. pA ag pene hy Roe A ey er trtinn ete ee Le the feail peat iy raihey prema) to aneet ol ‘The Massacres in Syria. “ cee pushed the Of the meeting between the ‘or and * u (From the London Times, July 25 | Im the negotiations between the Neapolitan Envoys and | deapctism by Christian As. All the American mis- | with an energy which finds no remission night or day, | {he Prince there ia hot ihe least nigh of Change in Pras. | ey bave had no interview with the King. 8 sn a5 | qccorging wo the last wows fre Bocik, as De Jount Cavour, the latter depanded that the future desti- | sionaries are about returning home, as might be expected. | and row:that there ia an ostensible cause every available | sian policy, while Austria, on theeoutrary, appeare ohare | ¢ Neapolitans arrived Victor Emanvel was seized with | yaropites lave come to an agreement, which we Ccenng } lay of Sicily should be considered as a distinct and re- hand e bromed into service, and the inoessaat labor if } sbandgned ber aystem of immutability and io be approxi | & hunting fever and has been on the move ever since. Tt | by the namie of « treaty of yeuoe. in other words, tuo | Served question, and that to this effect the Neapolitan bso rince aurea on sens 98, 1900. tod Chevbonrg and VOries!.. Th semma'a point with the pan a ey pon ee Tom , they are catching at, straws. | He can make cpus ‘of Berepesn‘varsete on he ‘oneat “and on i} should be withdrawn from Sicily, Itwagon the | yi i ae, ? French that while they are to furnish the 1848. The Prince t left the castle of Stolzenfels yoa sere with Naples. It would be worse than the peace | scious that their deeds would bring on them a speedy 1 ecepta of that condition by the King of Naples that | *”9li* Onposition to the Syrian Bxpedition—Movements of Sey Soe dy hia chief , General Alven wane ‘vengeance from the Christian nations, have refrained for i itt itches from N: t aftkirs thore to be in Iwate secretary, M Mlalre, ‘and proceed. | , DesPs Naples represen! or the present from the extermination of their opponents. ‘and Dresden to Toplitz, where he will be | teperate condition. The soldiers of the King march | soqRre willing that ther own crimes, shoold bo ramen ‘aribaldi— | - | wo Nish | (ging Victor Bmanuel consented to address a letter ioGa- | © ‘The Engerial Conference of Rigitis—Fire me through the streets shooting men and women, abusing | ten, Such a conclusion of this hi would, no doubt, 7, ‘the Constitutionnel, ribald, requesting him not to effect a landing on the main | 9! of Napoleon J1L.—Movemenis of the French Troops | ‘that’ the Alexandre and the Foo 2 < J { _ at Rome, @e, this week, for Admi foreign consule and ministers, and force the people at the fu the Druses, ‘Tork W pple osttet. ye Since mailing my last letter 1 have ascertained that | sels in order not to be infer Point of the bay onct to about for the King. Such aastate | Smanders, and eveu io the Sublime Porte veal : Garibaldi has received an accession of two fine steamers Der of vessels on the coast of affairs cannot last. It wants but the torch of Garl- | but it ip not likely that the Western Powors wild Fogland, or at least Lord Palmerston, had done all in his power to frustrate the French expedition to Syria. The Morning Post, Lord Palmerston’s organ, did not hesitate = important to publish false news, with the hopes of obtaining delay. | of Damascus bave But all this intriguing is uscless. The Porte, although | Mussulman popniat Pressed by England not to give his asseat to the interven. Jon, will do 80, a8 Iam assured on good authority, and the French preparations go on with the greatest rapidity. ‘Twenty-five thousand men are in readiness to embark. Five thousand will sail at once, and the remainder ag they may be needed. Englaud will send ships. baldi to lode the rotten and combustible throne. Bary few aye herent Canget tay oi | RE, MEY, oe etbement oe anu from none. The officers of the army and navy aro takii that a savage and pagan tribe should suddenly their dismissions in numbers, and ships of war with | arm, gather round it all the wild and mischievous #pirite their whole crews are going over to the rovolutionisis. | of region, fife and sword through peacable villages Such is the beginning of the end. fov'a sroeth, and then, augmented toa army, attack the first city in Syria and siaughter every Christian they The Tarf. eould find, But {t would be even more provoking if these THE GOODWOOD RACES IN ENGLAND—RUNNING OF | bands of ruflians, when their bloody work has been done, AMERICAN BRED HORSES THERE—ILL SUCCESS OF | could, by Jo see the make peace with their victims, ME. TRN BROECK—THE RACE FOR THE GOODWOOD | BYert any effectual interference, and leave the way open CUP—UMPIRE AND THE ST. LEGER, ETC. toa renewal of the massacres next year, or even next month. ‘The Goodwood races in England have this year pos What the pecsning of A treaty of peace between Druses ‘yom England, one called the British Vulcan, and a con- | »derable sum of money. Kossuth’s staff bai arrived. ‘The American missien stations are all abandoned in the | Kebanon. The schools are broken up; the followers ha: swher been killed or are now destitute, and several of the Diesionaries are pow leaying for America, ‘‘as there is no Geld for their labors.” Letters from Constantinople announce that {fresh vio- ences bave been perpetrated at Aleppo, Orfa, and otber places in Asia. It bas again been confirmed that the z g » Es Hi = bSred a5 ie eeie3 ie} if ef i 3 5 i 2 5 3 have had before by tele. ‘Turkish soldiers took part in the massacres. graph, bat the formal publication ¢f the inte! just than to the lor and Maronites may be we canuot pretend to anderetand; Tee Christian Ouimacan of the Lebanon, his coumey, | Tni* '8 decided upon, although the Premier was mush | EOPIS ine Smcial jnurnal is siguitcant, It 1 quite evi } cg lan baa ao brgpedwanegpehstaaesebon wee Teast, inay ‘be said, that it cau give Do ser a { the principal inhabitants, bed 01 a de. | *4verse to any such action. To revenge himself upon dent that the French t will not to oe of turf sports in this country, in consequence of the num- y to Syria, and ought not for a moment to check the rembavanfiry a Palea the Emperor Napo'con for the constraint laid upon him, make ‘political capltal® of am event bo well calculated spring and the early part of the summer, although not | ber of American bred horses engaged in the various | action of the Christian Powers. ‘The war which bas brokem plaration of pesos In which, however, the reaunciatiog | 104 ratmerstoa made'a panic apecch in Parllament, as to carry with 10 the sympathies of homantty. quite #0 dad as it is reported to have been in Cogland, | races, and the high poblic eatimaticn in which they were | out is no lopger confined to the hills lubabited by of any claim for indemnity was not mentioned. Aftér 7 The iperor bas remitted the Cross of the Legion of ce and even in the southern parte of Germany , where. ” = these tribes. @ scene of the firet massacres in the ‘waving discussed this act, they went, by the order of the | 7°t Wil! tee by your Biles of English journals. All this Honor to Abdel Kader, in acknowledgement of his exer- | for metance, Wt wus 80 cold at Vicona that snow fell in woe | B2d Previous to the races, as evidenced by their position | Lebanon, the villages at the foot of Hermon, is but a tbo 4 og means nothing, or at least was the mere result of anger; | tions in the Christian canse. Deginn: the present month. In consequence of the | in the betting market. We therefore give a synopsis of | small part of the region which is now in a fame. No Mochir of Saida and of the Turkish authorities, to confer But we have great news since } last wrote of Garibaldi. it} Btate of the are it was feared the " which the | doubt, the Druses were guilty of the first outbreak, and it the noble lord may be vexed when he is calmer to see upprop! tomperat the meeting, comprising the various races in ‘th qwith the chiefs of thg Druses. No news, however, had ann jouren te Jens, Sian ear gee ne pe hy — eee wing crops sutior such damage as could not be | American horses took part. - be hoped hy = heed will yet bn iting eaeenee, satin how angry words done. q ever he dors or says, er v clrenmstances "4 4 matters are long since ou cir han = been reoetvert of the thousands of Christians who were | we rave po positive information regarding Garivatdi,ous | vacquished, charming away Iogious of Atstrias by the | for "ecncuce athe Toutes tone place ee ea, | It is now four yeare since Mr. Ten Broeck, Southern | tiated ntti thomoe es aca hands They sato- porvenntes Se Tam sesured that he has lauded on the Neapolitan terri. Mere sha’ ow of his prevenoo, or passing throngh hostile | assumed « gevial warmth, and we had somo severe than- | gentleman of large fortune and a devoted patron of the | ‘rst outbreak, and though they, perbaps, wore willing to Paria Cbnetituitonne aha ands sown with dragon's teeth, ‘anneut ‘chowen. fine the slaugh vals, their alli 5 soc epethan wand rameshanaaes tor | S47 Tm inkned Yo place implicit retanee upon thin aro‘ ve a poeiry all over=-aeh m og ore faficleah aietion to. injure the ordper on mhak tie reine | ttf, Get tock, over to Bogland three highly bred Ameri- | Toned \t to Conetians in general noe the Desese wget oat Ure dape with marvellous despateh til, ea mat, | formation, owing to the source trom whence I obtain | #aic a js found vpon him. Nxt since the walis of Jeri. | this ricinity sould be cat, nd «good part Las been cared | can raceborses—Prior, Prioress and Lecomte—to practi- | in all that was done Can auy ave believe they m peace ‘ . 4 “ “ } . e 7 Py between the two races inhabiting a mountan Tange can fer of necessity, be carried out. The early departure of | it. The Neapolitan provinees of Reggio and Rasilicate magic vietories as Bicily now furnishes to this and housed jn fair condition. Hy the last accounts fromthe | cally test the position laid down by Fug?ish sporting men, Roveangolest ta the belie a , AAR a 7 ee Necve Si Beer oe ee aces | to eotel ae ey pe he J¥¢ Are | mantic ebief. ‘The land is clean swept aud garnigbed: not | pe ebnoring marines he ma poe Lue ier 1 | that American orod racehorses were far inferior in speed | on the disporition of rome. bale doom rasee. ateenes mg ey By 't to Francis {1. an armistice of six mouths. fue oaly , % Neapolitan just now troade the soit, but each a8 aid | foil harvest the appearance of the car boing ner than it | andendurance to horses bred on the other side of the | from the Mediterranean to tho banks of the Loptirates, growing disorders whic would sufullibly ceauit in tae | trouble is to Und Garibeldi, or rather to overtake icy, co | MERE ANd main the mission of the cr-vveror, ANA DOW | has boed for Yearw, although who atem will be short. ‘The ‘Atlantic. His first casay was in the race for the Good- | 824 we fear that th» whole Mussniman population is ee ne a Ge doko ccocen nah | Win pavemieloneaen seals ae his oouceptiors are bok, | BE 18 about to exorcise the witebery uf bis presence ia | same tx sald of barley, cets und peas, nobwithaanding pia Se y ‘ . about to commence the work of persecution, At sprcacnt sande: doer no! appear to pe maeptioie’ot ai. | When Teaches by the memonger of Victor femacvel the | Naples 1 sald in tay iat that It was aay to”) the iter ban sutered from mildew, “Ths wheat growing | Wood Cup, in the your 1867, for which he started both | Demaccus the help of the Musvaimans kort tin geathy Ae present stands, ot appear to pe pt y “ ” perevive, trom portions of private letiers eubmitted | districts are likely to have abundant crops ag tne fine | Prior and Priorees. He was not successful, as they could | the Turkish officials did more than the fury of the Druses 5 8 ag Duro} r wuiui Aberalor will have gone too far to stop operations. "De- i ieretian Fonmntalies defence of i seaste wud Prine’ hidediy, Brancte i, a gues Bourbon, en again pe pol ext ‘ned tbo pubic intlligence which the a continnes, and thns harvest ‘bein full | oviy atta the positions of fifth and ¢ixth, although | i codene ay tee rations, A ope 1s tates 0 _a i 7 “ > . ened, his thr ave fallen, and yet there 5 coropw c mmumatant cheat cig Tp de got Re de teeetiod mail will out with thio will #how you what a panic rhe, elt ena capent & foartskgag Meds aia. \ many of the Koglish sporting joaruals sllego that | sre there Druses bor Marovites.’ Tho hristiabs prdmnssg “ ‘cert that an alliance hag been ‘upon. . Of poy ‘ali | the Courtand its appendages are in. Down, down oa its | shipment of wheat to Ragland, where there will undouvt- | Priorees could bave won bad not the incompetence of her | of tho whole region east of Syria arc Specting @ like Engiand, aithough insisting on the froe accession of the | thts IRAN ph yb one a ee Kncea before Sardivin, roady 19 sign away Sicily forever, | odly be a great del in the the last alvices | ioccoy ruined ber chance of so doing. The mare sibse- | 2% from the hands of Mahomedans amoug whoa they Sultan to the Convention for regulating the collective in- | ~ Abd-ol kader, the former prisoner of Francs, is taking agree to give it Naples. “Fer the love of God,” | showing a rise of one to shillings fo the prices. in Y live; the Druses have no powor in these districts, bat, writes Ferdinand the Second to Victor Emanuel, ‘bold }-a fow weeks we ‘shall probably have detailed reports of | (ently won the Ceasariwitoh slakes the same year, ina | having begun the war, |! im likely to extaud to places ‘terveution in Syria of the Powers who signed the treaty | * prominont part in the afftirs of Syria. At the bead Of | ona prother king this once.” “ Well, I will write to Ga- | the harcee intwcihe remoteat provin: gdom, e . tow where their names are tinknown or detested. ‘of 1656, bus neverthelees 0 intention of abandoning the | 3,200 men, he is repressing the marderoas Druses. The | ribaids,” amawors the Sardinian prince, “andask Bim to | “p.s'’the Tirana, feted een the Kin eee donee Saray ey Sheeitas, nd Beewed np her eneeeel'y “UES Seah kaa ie aay bappunel deem “oie » Emperor Napoleon has sent bim the Grand Cordon of the ” nce, w! generally | by winning the Great Yorkshire Handicap, at Doncaster, e ‘ fi te Christians in Syria. She claims an exempla- | } ef Boner a8 ward tor his ‘notion. j | delay his po ened od roonthe.’” Mothinks it would | thought to be well it ‘on di tic subjects, as- y ; > | Lebanon tribes a reason for dissuading | e and Fog pagers: eC were MT Ye oe {itfak that the Emir will; cre the atairt of Syrinaro set. | Be Worth a Jow's eve to.eo Garibsdi's amilo as he routs | seria that Austria, Russia and Pruceia have potiied'the | the following year, a& well as ronning second tor | aud. from making thelr appearance’ in tyre meat. Fy puniebment of the principal authors of the late magea- ted, beonete a the petition, & weasel aslop and tickle his ear! pment that they have coucluded not to allow | tho Ceerariwiteh stakes. Still, the great object | (mf &% beavy vengeance for what has been dooe, ; ill depend upon France, , ; ' cvem, aus’ that the administration of Syrin should be re- | >. Will moet eds dass eee ieee Mk iy fat white {write Ferdiaand '+ | the rovolutica to progress any farther in Hialy, and bavo ‘ , i bear him. to Vienvs. | jms ited the Cablace of t of Mr. ‘Tem Broeck's ambition was the Good- | Crime. Thess massacre Lave “bi ope ‘aedthe organised, in @teer that we Maroaties might obtain tbe | gous. He pn. gy ty Pic ecca thes Teive | What i now enacting in the capital of Moathern Raz ro: | concerting fant og ey oogeed te Kr nee woot Cop, and in 2858 he sont over trom | thing periaious aad enh. "There ay be. “Voce most eflioacous guarantees for the fatare, these guaran- freecte. the mts of to day. Bach day we sec more | M/NdS one forcibly of the abortive efforts of Lort | same time, that they are determined to give effect to their here the celebrated horse Charleston to do bat- | Who think thy y arose oniy from the jeuds of two rees to be placed under the collective protectorate of the Tine ant * the +f Laity of Louie Ne North to patch up matters with America, when | resolution whether Brance acvode to it or not. tribes, both equally auvage and obstinate, although one oued Towers; If ie on that ground that, | lon. ee Ee annO CAPAGNY OF Louis Napo- Aiscovered the interesting fact that a British | As fur as regards Pragsiasi am ina position tostatethat | %¢ for him. This horse bal broken down here | of thom a @ Coctrines of Christianity aro payee Eee i > 4 liament was not justified in imposing taxation upon | there iy not the slightest foundatioa for euch a report, | before starting, and consequently be had no chance of compelled 10 iseent from (his view, "We do not say tbat aveiting the anewer of the Sultan relative to bis adhesion Only Igt America acknowledge ber subordination. | The Prussian Minister at Turin, M. Rrvesier “te St. Simou, | competing with the flower of Engtish and French horses | the Pruses were instraments in the hands o* some Machi- the said convention, pegotiatiqns are being continued The bill to carry out bis pevavt had seareely passed the | has, indeed, been insirncted to reuionatrate with Count avellian Pasha, and that they were prevailed upon to at to 1 begor pon and taking precautkns agoipst a repetition of the 23: consent of the Porte has at length been granted to a latare, when, two cays after, the French Amassa- | ¢ on the encouragement given by Sardinia to engaged in the race, and he lost. In 1859, Mr. Tet | tack their neighbors in orcer that the Muesulmang t between the great Powers. France “wos more thay a mates fOr that cf Sugland, To, | 20F informed him bat France bed already acknowielged | operations of the revolvtionary rarty, ead to urge himie. | Broeck tried and although he could only obtain | be excited to a general massacre; but we do aay: thats corow 8008 Feeach sail fOr Beyrout’ The ves. | AB@EFIGaN ‘Rdependence. Or, Inter still—ia 18ld—when | the strongest manner to coms to-an agreement with third piace, yet he won the far richer prize, the Good- | COTéing to all that has traspired ‘concerning these evente, Our Lendon Correspondence. nove Se myn Napoleon, eseaping from Aiba, was en route for Paris, ob! | Nupieg: but it ie positively unirue thet acy tureats of | ‘4 Wace.) a thefe has been #0 much complicity between the non-Chris Lome, iy 8, 1008, | Se mente hen Tins oui wot the Bourboos’ have given thes a cape | arined intervention hare tome both ouhe wood stakes, with Starke, besides carrying off the Bon- | tian races that the Drus ought not t» be held sulely Fe. . i aS al " nt x . - danger? m the ¥! ‘aterloo. ri ° ts oa with the © horse, t te sponsible, and the Musan! squitted. Te Revolviion én Sicily—The King of Naples’ Appeal to ae enw the ——— troops yt etal bo | over Abe dioulty it was found eaventey bad tougke —, PS a he eae wg geo a pve re ge gat tan sey a4 pK | eerie mee cone spirit Frome ote nepeg py adel tans bait war vertakeu at sea by s steamer sagt after him Senah toeck cienth boa anche tpathaprenent Bropest ” Gaxoa Jaly 24 1890. on awe ‘porses eusied for he nod viz Umnptre, Wen tine tas a wei tee Pot = k on Naples—A Crimean ’ e , i a § which have & Turkey, and te weil tig bee dadoiher thie o TEE Fata Ape cnbaey pdewrdione poet we confysion is thereby to be made more ena‘vsed at! Sickan Mowenent-—Gardaldi Triumphant—Endhesiam of | Starke, Savalite and Optimist; and as will Be seon from | Againet. the Christians. Tus Mumulrsins have Bese Joplits—The Plot to Defeat ‘Napoleon's Plane--Complica. | sina, but leh that place again suddenly, and is now, ait | OF Poni Get our Srtiticinl machisery. 90 determisative | the Peoplp—Amertoans in Ilaly-The Charles < Jane | the report of the race below, he only started Starke and pay a ey ca ie “Afairs—Affairs in (he British Parlia. | % S¥0t*6d, bere on the main land. bs eae gong Me 4 | stil) left for individual character, With al hisadvan- | and Mate Watson—The Ambawators and (he King— | Optimist, rererving Umpire for the fur more impor. | The war is casentially one between the two great ph noel it The “Sick Man,” de. hooe sagas a ’ieake thes eliy with his | tageous family entecedents, noone ean doubt that Napoleon | Dreadful Stale of Affairs in Naples, dc. tant race, the Doncaster St. Lager. Starke at one time | Which divide mankind, and unless the Mussyimane now rvent— "he Marsacre in Syria— fan,” de. eagtiys Rome, by yh we troops. | the Third made his way from a serubby lodging im X08 | We are here in the midetot toate $6 looked very promising in the race; but he could not live | Feceive «lesson the marsncres of 8} rin will soon recom- Bope deferred maketh the heart sick. The friends of | This aay no Fy Gartbailt's oo the | Street, St. James, to the empire throne of France great even greater, the pace, hav ing boen iged, in Consequence of the ina mance, and follow the Fame course as those which baye italy avd freedom have been #0 tantalized by hopes | General will remain in van Gucon trent the native force of his character and that he holds jt it may be, in their ultimate consequences. Do not attri- bility of his o e companion, Optimist, to make his own | Stained with blood other portions of the empire. delayed and expectations held back that the suspense | RA Tae 3 facie tens dates een jravlee | bute the Sicilian movement to the echeming of Louis Na- | running. 1 will thus be soen’ that Mr. Ten Rroosk was sane eres of the Western Towore is therefore : ly unfortunate ranning second for ‘Stewards’ » or do we regret to see France enter became painful. A gloam of light, however, breaks in, Pans, July 27,1560, | Joachim ‘dural had he but posseanad tke heed aad Poleon, or to the ambition of Victor Emanuel. It is the boty iasd Maen and’ o ewespeisiion ona Touste | the enterprine with ber uous categy.” Sarkey tan eee and J have the information from such a quarter that I be- | Fifret of Lord Palmersion’s Speech in Parie—Political Re- | heart. aa = yp py Work of the poople themselves, who are at last left free | for ine Goodwood cup. a pan Fy vines, from which feeling bounded. - © u Hieve it entirely reliable. The royal troops have evacu- dations Baween England and France—The French Expe- ison every lip, abd men are never tired of speak: from the gn ae ae to work ig Pager beni’ The following is a summary bel, yar at fnew ‘a0. The whe ny yo % Aled Messina, Syracuse, and the rest of Sicily, King Bom- dition to Syria—Reportea Massacre at Damaseus—Pro- of his deeds. r demption. vench peror folds bands The Seward Guy, wae 30 verges (aadica), by 840, and those also which took a in the balino fuding more than be can well manags under | grees of Garibaldi—Mow ments @f Napoleon IIL., de., dc. Fmperor is perpetuaily ea troops. | waite the progress of eventa, and Victor Emanuel lends subscription of 10 sovereigas each, th 1 » added from | Yeates cue tae yoy Se voll bag the crater of Vesuvius. He has sppealed to both ‘The speech of Lord Palmerston, as Oirst Minister of Eag- i] the cause secret agsistance; but the power at work is the | tha race s the si to be pal winner in former they fund; ;for three year oldeand upwards. (Seventy nine twanrferred to Turkish authority, and which four power of an united people determined to be free—deter- tebe mined to choose their own rulers—the same power that i France and England for aid im this his Inet extre. | land, has produced a very profound impression on | mity, bot France dare not and England will not furnish | French society generally. Such a resumé of the real poli- ‘ago they agreed to gnarantee to the Sultan, together w! the rest of his dominions. When Christians were put 2 se “# Sweotaauce, by Sweetmeat, 3 yrs., ns pil > wo " his iets ont Gennet as: | TR on ants Yes Th | death under the eves of the Turkish Kal , and when & “red,” nor pnt im one protest. The Neapolitan | tical relations of England aad France, notwithstanding | Yeiergay rid bn mando of maoatsoons, | Pieced Napoleon III. upon his hg Surtees ven corconiet im Ambscredor here tn London is jimping about ikon de- | the ostensible entente cordéals in China, and now in Syria, | Xerose the deine ia eres, Th exporeseat | Bout of Branewick n Hugand. oat te peopl bays the BA Pe Pree Saeee, 8 Fen OO: Eh. Gon Ce, it igh Mine to ier” Taney ba mach tos ite y letters tothe Timer and making | is beld to be unmistakeable. It places the two nations, in | rapid! right to choose their rulers become an axiom fami Count F. de Zovave, 6 yrs. S#t. Gib. 3 , an 80 slow movements, pesca rs = bes ’ ‘ne | he to al) classes in Northern Italy, and it is the exercise of | Sir J. Hawley 's Catawba, 3 y ats kat. (car. Gat. 13” { Sith the best inteations she would be unable to do much. ? every k.od of effort with that energy of despair which | the most authoritative manner, in bold relief before the y characterises the drowning man. ‘Tis no go. There | universe, and whateror the phraseology employed, there sre none so poor as to do him reverence. The Briti#h go. | they are, like two tigers, each biding, with cat-like cau- | ‘ernment very reasonably says: ‘No, your royal master | tion, the other's spring. bar been deaf to every appeal of humanity and every in military circles every word of this famocs statement, , vowe of reason; the remonstrances of the civilized | as to the defenceless state of “‘perfidions Albion,’ is | world have bad po effect; the porjured tyrant has scanned over and gloated on with # satanic satisfaction. | scoffed at all law®, human and Divine, till now he Gods | Why will not the Emperor strike at once, is loudly asked, | b meelf macorner, and he does mot deserve the aid of | ere a) ingle stone of the contemplated fortifications can be | is accordingly about to send « body of troops to coast, and will 60 operate by sea. It that the knowlecge of these ticts wil! stir op tbe Torte to more than usual energy, and that Fuad Pasha will en- deavor to bring things into order before the combined fqundrons commence operations. The news of peace being established between the two tribes & move in this direction, rope is not I to be imposed upen by avy such shallow artifices. It w! be the dnty of Christin nations to occupy #uch pointe of the coast ae wil! compel the Museviman rases of the coun- try to recognise the necessity of keeping their fanaticiam within bounds. It will also be their daty to igeist that z this right which i# being worked out in the South. i2 Preece eaeen | It may be, after all is accomplished—attor Naploe shail | ite king ofthe evest, Toe lover, Montebetls, kufeld, have been freed, a# Sicily is—that diplomacy may | Zitella, , Seclusion, Allegra, Ethiopian, King of intervene t tear from the lips 07 the people the fruits of | Diamonds, Oliver, Conjuror, Nicholas, Reynard, General Hesse, Man at-Arms, Gibraltar, aa Spicebox, La- their struggles, as in 1949—butI do not believe it. Itis , Cecilia, Chére Amie, apollost by Pyrrbus the First; the policy of Eogland to build up a great Italian oaspire, Ser, Ter’ Highness, 1. ji 2arweey. Su- aaa counterpoise to France; aad the French Emperor | burban. Virofiay, Narcissus and Provision, Wou by ; | looks forward to the time when the progress of the peopic Sweepstakes of 10 coveeeee ee for 2 year olds, Ost. in Italy will afford him @ lever with which to lift the Ger- | 31b.; aren, fat; Fopr, bat Np; five, Oat. zib.; eix and that he was bringing aretribu- | carried? Why, ob why, will be delay the day of Gallic u ho advised bi! ‘ uns ogee vengeance? Yes, let us march on Loadon, ae the Allies | man princes from their thrones, When thieves tail out, | A€°d,0eb Mand f allowed 310, The winner to be wold | ii. Porte shail punigh the ‘chisty and ‘their accomplice, ‘You can scarcely get bead or tail of the state of things | marched on Paris, Let af tear to tatters every rag honest folks get their own, and amid the opposing poli- Mr. Payne's f. by Kingston, er by Covt-—Laneroest, PA then = pe * Se eieeaia nt BY at Neplee. Two things, however, are evitent, the King’s | of the foul treaties of Vienna, and fulfil, while we | _— cies of courts the people will achieve their rights. , tea D ra Eerune ~ Ged By STS g | these ends are to be attained appear to us of inferior itn- government @ without authority, and everything indi- | are sure of the power, the giatit destiny God bas Our Berlin Correspondence. iymacy bas not materially interfered with Mr. Mundy'e Malta, 2 years,” itn. ete hte at pt ND crn el po od NS a the Parte as cates a state bordering upon anarchy. by Prepared for France. The biood of our fathers cries | Benris, July 25,1860, | Garibaldi, Uotrammelied, he goes bravely on. Thefor- | sr. F. Aming's Chelmsford, 2 years, Get. dib conve @ tceoeeps tee country only wader Beckevines oak'tan Bot to the mews, Ihave it from a gentieman just | alowd for vengeance, and perish the Frenchman, what- | yhe Jnlereicw Bedween the Prince Riyent and Oe Raperor tress of Mizz was stormed fast week. Tho rumor has | pg pet yee we bt Mesicigus Ghee, arrived from Genoa and Turin, where he bas been } ever his political creed, who will not cast his lot ina | of Austria— Francie Joseph Becoming Alarmed at Louis | Vee current for sovera days, ands genorally believed | 15 srteys, and ouly 6 if declared, &c.; the necond to re wee with Uke team tila, | otnse so roblimely patricto. 1 do wot exaggerate when | Napglem's Designs—Change in the Austrian Mote of Go- | thit morbing, that the royalists have evaccated Metsina. | ceive 100 sovercighs from the stakes. Two miles aud a b eubseribers, 44 of whom declared that Garibaldi is about to start for (be main land—proba- | eay that this i¢ but a faint representation of the language rernment—Personal IntelNigence and Court News—Cool | The whole island is now in the hands of Garibaldi. pd = + Malesia, , r . .) bly at ean ata Power: but, if such an arrangement cannot be made, then in the name of humanity let us disregard atiquette, ‘and put an end at once to these horrors, _—— ‘The Visit of the Prince of Wales to Ames Tica. From the London Chronicle, July 28!) It was haroly to be uy that the Prince of Wales ‘wonid confine bis tour in North America to the dom aions of bis royal mother, and, alre: atthe borders of the gteat republic whore citizens 80 cordial a welcome, have denied himeelf the profit and to be gnined by A visit to ite great centres of industry and gence: but it is most satisiaetory to have so gratifying } | some point between Calabria (at Reggio) and | at present being employed in the most opposite shades of | and Rainy Weather—The Crope and Harvesting Pros } ‘Thé transportation of troops aad munitions of war goes * . - Sapice, and alldhe time he is \seuing proclamations and | society. At tne same time, this impatience to strike is pete Austria, Prussia and Russia Determined to Put a ons energetically ag ever, Nightly from ae em- | belding ovt that be is Jost going to march on Messina. | mapifcetly tempered by a degree of confidence in the pre- Stop lo the Ralian Revolution Ragardiass of Fran, de. | bark from five hundred to ove thousand men for Sicily. | ae. aah ‘wtor Emanuel is evidently trying to hold Garibaldi by | siding spirit of Framce—the gening that bas already The interview botween the Prince Regent and the Fm. | It is estimated that the General has now a force of over | “the following aleo rau —Blue Jacket, Gaspard, Mage the tall, hile Louis Napoleon has his hands on Vic- | raierd ber (o 80 high ® pinnacle that her ancient foe | peror of Austria is the commencement of a uew phasis, | thirty thousand men upon the island, He left Palermo on | Royal Sovereign, Avalanche, Cire, Checercak “4 Neem? tor Freanvel, but Vieter and Cavour cannot bold Gari- | seems to cower winder Let glaace—which camnot but be | perhaps of s new era, in German politics. The differences | the 16th instant, with @ force of cight thousand, no | Homan ee Tere " bei act, (hinge will wot stand still, A small Gotills | satisfactory to the partieans of the existing dynasty. He | between the two governmetite bad, infact; arrived at a | one knows whither—expeotation pointe to Calabria. This Belling—b to Dagainet Satetiive, 3 to 1 against Tooher, men w!)) be landed on the Neapolitan shore withia lees | more. He that raised the nation from an abyss, from | complete rupture Or & frank and sincere attempt at re- | ai that coast, with the mountaine Of Abragz\, will be in optolemns and Gridiron, 25 w Leach against Royal So ban two weeks, ‘The cactle of St. fim ie an ugly place | the Jowest depths of deepondency, to be alrendy the frst | conciliation. The former would have boon ruinous to | fail blaze hy Ty be Naples. teeliend te hn ie a4 Magnum, bx Ly ne — mg «by wo rower ni ‘Never in my fe have J ween a man #0 r 1 against Peodorowns, 40 to 1 against Gaspard wot Powrr in he wniv@rse, eball he not be trusted yota while Austria, and must ive beon followed by rapprochement of They almost Jrorahip him; not im tet away at the first attempt, Gridiron rushing to the {reat as ia looger? A)\ eee to what point his efforte tend, and if any Prussia to France, which, under the present ciroum- | whieh he has freed, but ly he is take by aesaulit; but the ground arovad Naples is to occvle.cons amd irregular, that with any siege (rain at ©. (be berieger can shell the whole place, and be entirely # 3° | Boon ad the flag Was dropped, and fuliowiog bis past the fire blind tne English Prime Minister hos opencd their | stances, would have been equally repugnant to the foel- , lore of the people. And no wonder; he seems to have no | stand were Fliteb, Pitmaa aud Feo torowna, the lust two being Wallace and Philomela. The lot took close order on 3 Pe § i 35 | H opt of poin 18 t& fearfel to think of a city | amie ambition to gratit ‘Ro lust of riches to gorge, | vali a lage as York, acd abounding with rien | 7% Let France, woo, open her's and be propared for the | ings) of ‘the nation and. to those of ita | Pertumnl cmon ph ~ LFS the freedom of | making the turn out of the straight, Gridiron sili going | colonies, and typily the umam which works Of architec\are, pata’ r) glorious {ut ire the heir of ber Great Captain is preparing | rulers; the latter ould only be effected vy one | the , wi with biame, | on with the rubning, with Tocher and Fiiich wel) laid ap, | harmoniourly the wilely differing and scattered races being a eS a bow for ber. of the partion aseuming the ‘nitiatire, and consenting contained CN = eee im ory truth seems to pong = FO at + heels " ts who make up the vast te ey ag ") lage. t, bh rer, - ” " | be the te of Li ' clump PF in took reoond place, and Gritirop in- | his visit to the Upited bas a higher import. te ot Naples atmos: “OS'S, fe yO, | Men marvel, too, when they bebolt the mutability of | to egential modifications of po'lay in favor of the other, ; ‘The question here is, not where they wiil a dozen lengths Pit. | the heir to the British orown visite, amidst the eter. bo do ym thick | saw on bi | ai politica! friendship. Bat a few years sgo,and the | For along time the traditional pride of Austria revolted | ae with us during the war, SS rds chauged places. Oa | bation of both peoples, the President of the Sate Portoed ir to rar tv Wao bit the cation | writer of thie letter eat at table in the Palace of the from the idea of taking euch @ step, in epite of the inter. } any eaonices ot pee ER en making = pan “. rept ees aiken, by Se Oe gp fy off the yoke of bis great ton, BO *O among “ te 1 oe | ree, rumning rather wide 00 ¢ tellive then | grandfother, neal to cordial recone}! LN, New Fork—the young Crimean Bera, was pot | ESL © The most luscious (ruite, thie daintiest meats aod | nal end foreign difcuities whe hee to contond with, ber | They wirh Italians to free themselves; but ave | Look Up tho rosving with Noyal toverciga, Fritch, Chasse. | Sonat which’ has teen gredealty, Pony hn may tg " 5 horge at the Of the Light Brigets, the | the Fcormt wines of France invited the guests; but ont- | gtatermen still entertained the hope, that by showing « | found it impossible to refose many Americans, ish | cake, 4, Feodorewna and Wallace in atveadance. | since ihe recognition of their tadependence. famous © ox hundred,” at Balakiava—t)y ‘ide the windows of the palace was a sight that had | bold fromt they would induce Proseia to make the first | and Frenchmen, who have their generous aid. | At the baif distance Wallace deprived sutell te of Indeed, & te no paradoxicn conerit to vay that a ngiisiman, why Roe into the war fo. hmanity’s sake, . Abin. 1 | | Americans are arriving day or two en route for Si. | lead, and cantered in the winner by six lengths. bh for ower vmiom submits betwen ghe Unied Slates and who, ke Lafayette, will insist on p uring all bis ows | @teater charms than the gorgeous banquet within. 16 | advances, and the arrival of M. Arenswaid at Vienna con. p—gloriout fellows, serving without money and with- | length between the recond and thir’, a length betw ‘and Froland mmo than been mw Riry amd ereonal capone 8. Ho has - ~ ten aye ngs, Was on the occasion of the Queen of England's visit to ber,| firmed them in the belief that (heir steadiness had tel. oat pice, eine fu enantio ie rane — the third and fourth. “ io durin colonies at Ce oe anterior to the ae " o be with mir ¢ ube foe ” Emperor phod ‘that Cabinet are acl debt of gratitude weowe for THE GOODWoOD CLP, rL¥ claraiivn dnd ries 4 ba fot) ue kings and emp at Topitte haeae. | “PP wertel pad iMestiees lly’? the | on thee oa rege sony fan trae bets aod strong arms that lent us help in ovr The Cup race was appointed to take place ata quarter | munity "et Farag at 4 pondae forded considerable taik for 1b Tne plan | French, who bad just now placed at her Majesiy’s sorvice | of giving way. When, bowever, it was found that, far struggle for liberty. to four, and punctually to the time appointed ¢! that colonial history. ‘The interests tadeod, evicenuy is 00 BI louis \ . aud I have | Dis private palnce for the purpose of holding « cocrt for | from being entrufled with conciliatory “purposes on the Two or three daye ago Le od | gy poritore Fre ig Meet wee post. amongst the sarang Sasumed to be antagoniatio, The mother country vo douli they have done it — \* | ner eubjects then sojourning in the French capital. The | part of bie government, the Prussian Minister dec! ned to | hearted young \iegiaian—De Warwick, feom Richmond. | were the French a oe eo Colonies as #0 many outlying Napoleon ponted ou the faintess re. 1 He Her! to che committee for an appointment as eur. | Baron Rothechild, and Zouare, the property of Coant F. | profit was to be dra % ated their commerce ac_ wkRince'te moat chert, Now. theres video’) spa) | Presentations Were ¥ery fer, and principally confined to | enter into any poiitionl discussione, andeontented himesir | He Ppl |” tne Committes for an appointment se eur | Bu By the way,e ‘belie’ ie general armongst | Gording to the aaeummed nterete of tas tome’ merthcoee; retan py timong all we fo a a” ©) that | those copneeted with the Britieh embassy, and when we with observing that Prussia saw no reason to deviate fron | by pie ; we a vie col taka any where. = nee a —— me yh or a | Rt mac uniate wore alouye content agninst (bese Napa hostile otent vn . , b - Hot, | will get me a rifle ton my own +} ioe ot's wame belong to the Emperor Napoleoa, who, | unjust lawe, trary prosmed Jor Sipe Tadic, cr toe Dapboror, be Wil bad Risase Gor Qeoen’s hand, Mie Sajestg of Fyanee pro. | the cuurde When She Bad adopted, tnd which shecomeiter. | £2 N's |, arate tm ante wae | am auterenioed?! ite eald, etilPetaine Ube partiality tor, tho tart he we: | pristery gotermers, “therr ake com mtenirers” bor, tite miiltary people from the @ gh'snds of So vided ys with a sumptoous dijewné. ie Bimeelf was not od to be in Gouformity not ovly with her own intereste but |” “tye Americace have given Garibaldi very valuable aid. | quired daring bie suourn in Hogiaed.. Starke and Opti. Urade, anc, from tite ten long voyage, bet |/te genera) Fof Sowa, alt ready 0 renles bs preteosons © pregent, but from the witdows of the banqueting ball | with these of Germany at large, the Austelans felt chit 4 fomeii'ng over @teonlh ago be helo moans of iraDe mist Were (bo reprecenialives oF the Mmovionn horses, intercourse. The colonise were dependants, compelled