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2 : NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, AUGUST 26, 1860. ae bh shonid be taught agrioutture aud vat APOLEON AND SYR: know whether eo attack ou Croustatt would have suc- | used to excite their brains. It was not on account of the | Wich youag mon wi" ae ADDITIONAL BY THE ARABIA. | N D TA. ceeded, in boty wee pot aiicmpied, WDADks, we ‘mountains of Syria, as it might be » Uhat the Old | cus wicchanical are Sof tele mises Ghdinat wer ~ Lave reason to believe, to the opposition of France. Man, or Prince of the Mountain (Sheykh el-Djedel), was ne onmen Le Athee, weir fatherland Syria ana Russian Alliance—The ‘The writer then adverts to the Italtan campaign, aad . by poo wll Remy ‘mind in the Gvltivation of ‘taeton of nce—The Question of | fer eulogizing Villafranca as a masterpiece, root (fay of them had peed used to euch Geld lavor, BLES OF THE GREAT EASTERN, Anncration—Posttion of ‘the’ Grene | WatFrauce mht bare obtaned’ che slianee O€ Austria fas, lang of them, bad bert siog to Altea, Una tay THE TROU ‘ Powes—The Moderation of France— | 0 very cheap terms, but would not have it. The Pras- Lt darcy with them the blessings of civilization aad The Peaceful Subjugation of Syria— | #40 wliance was considsred rable ap. | bin; it 2 4, cotton ad Sugar were much want- Abd-el-Kader to be the Medium—Forty | Pear to bave been yet achieved, but the writer, with | ceuluries, extended their power over a part of Syria Py Io a re +100 cnawn that cotton could be itive SI s in Canada Centuries are Looking Down on Napos | ‘bat modesty which characterizes him, does not doubt The other nations of that region of the Turkey of Asia (hear, beer sunt of Africa et eas expanse (haa aay Thirty Thousand Fugitive Slaves i Ponouste that in the end Prugsia wil! joa the Frauco Russian alli- | are chiefly of Arabian origin, aad the Arabian tongiie 8 Ne ig oe ip Appealing to England for Aid {From the Baris qorreepentonse to the-tavien Seesid.} ance. SS Predominant, There are but @ few Turks. eset tb of thats (eto Atrios. to explore - ‘Ris, July 3L—i? i and to peint out where a Christian setti: A 4 by y 4 But w attach the Cabiact of Berlin our policy it The Pope and the Syrian Christians. o . H ~ pte ex'1800” bas bd re a TE aU Dastse, | must be withdrawn from the iviluence of England. flow | the Nope hes widressed te the Maronite Patcercs, of xt heme, be paged, with 9 vas © Sees one eee, Public income of the Cait, The Pope’s Letter to the Chris- the government publisher. “La Syrio et HAlliaace bg tals be broagh Bt about Be 90 ponte eg ee Antloch fad bis eulfragans the following communication, | (Ge wan never oarried on with more vigor than duriag | canted as art Mad ste She . te, 3H | as, UU y it 4 : ine ae ; bel D ; a bo Pry ar Piet sah orerninent | Promising toeupport her legitimate preteusinas to pre- | “To oo Vewanamue Bawtuaey, &c.—By your letters, 60 pape pease erick hed sone med pe img en Be iors a = Durtonas, £94 ri || tiams im Syria. work bsp where such productions are manufacturea, it | Pouderance in Germany. In oxchange of their Rhenish | fy) of sadness, which reached us on the 26th of this ae eg ered rary tom ome BE ET stamps, $8,151,267 44% | | thas Lanta produced great sensation, It candidly Provicete aa Baars end Brusls ake a = eosih, we areas with rent boetew Cong - pomiees pany could be emp oyed; but plaat misaiona oe onmey SE 237 ae, Oge? | ‘ - | avows that the two great empires of the Coatiacat—that | Peuaatious fromAustria’** The Eagtish alliance orrible atrocities committed ou the faithful of your | Fie “and especially mative missionaries, on the coast, | mis: wus, £1.874,372 1s. Lid. Ths | A Semi-Official Freneh View of the Syrian of Frauce and Russia—ave, amoug mauy other poiata of | Secure, to Prussia the satus quo—the Freaci alliance country by ne dotestable euemics of the Caristian sime, | fon he Meaiverranoan to. the Oape of Good Hope, and miscellaneous, £1 rasdtz ss Ud. The Question, | Suevob tee stm of te tienen: eee ot plers CONSEQUENCES OF THISi LITTLE ARRANGEMRSTS, days given us the terrible dais. To 0 inany other | {eP® would oon be raised « moral bari wnat woul! fr | gu’ fnorease of income over @xpenditaro¢ | abd it proceeds to make out that this ‘wan; of | _ The alliance between France, Russia and Uruasia loyally | sorrows with which we areaillicted has there been aided | Cpe Paya pag © tule Mhuman trac. Appimuse, | 1) Td. The balance ie the SxnegEeS th] be, ee, &, | expansion”? can bo legitimately satisled by suudry | Coucludid, us we have reagon to bope it will be, the co. | the heartrending spectacle of numerous convents aud | roving of the benevolent etorts of the aneccianion in | 100: "as £6.008,771 68. £4. | compensationa to the Powers concerned, with two | quences that flow from it are most natural. * * * * We | churches consumed by flames, of villages completely ra- pceike acknowledging the success which hai attended | Toe whale county of Armagh, Ireland, b exceptions—Austria and England. Russia is to be | ave demonustrated above what 1300 years ago Strabo ee Sword and fire, of many sacred objects shame. | fhomia, Sots mae y.e deputation aad, their object to | wader the provisions of the Peace Preser Our Paris Correspondence, bribed, by the offer of Constantinople, to assist Fraace | bad laid down, as beyond questioa, that the Rhine was the | fy , Aud an infumerable multitude of people of | therdi'coumenance and eupport, aad appolntinga com. | Heneeforth all unlicensed pefsqus found Paria, August 10, 1360. jy the’ revendioation of the Rhino frontier. Prussia is | Patural frontier of uorthera Fraace. Now Prussia is the | gil ‘ages, ali conditions and beth sexes, either borribly tould by advice and sasistance the obtaining of | of Gangerous weapons will be liabis to imp ther ih Fre 5 ve q > . greaeest sullerer from this extension of territory. For | massacred or compelled to take to flight ia order to | mittee ‘a ing a tas The Weather ih France—The Fetes of the Vth of August— to receive a portion of Austria by way of compensation, he Rhine as the ~ contributions in Manchester. The Russians have the isla: , ‘ and Syria is to be turned intoa fief for Abd-cl Kader. | the last forty-five years she has kept t escape death; while you yourselves, to the great grief of ‘The Rev. Mr. Davipson seconded the motion. Koulou, in the Caspian where their Movements of Garibaldi—the Syrian Expeticion—A \ T's sind should object, Malta, Gibraltar and the Toaias | Stagon used to keep watch over the gardea of the Hes | our heart, have been exposed, as well az many other | Zhe Rev. Mr. Davinsow seconded the moti pinion en to 4-aereediiee- anoueeee an. Seteilie ouene Question of Commercial Importance—Napoleon's Policy [giants are to be laced from Kor as securities for her | perides. Let this eause of hostility between France aud | bishops, to the constant peril of death on account of the eR ener rer cad belies tank ee tee eee cmc wave: Troarde Nagles, dc. good Schaviner, ene then, the legitimate “wants of ex aw Povey cpoed) poner ep a - tenets cea of these Indole, whose ary lias CS) dob ee Gees Get coe dl tae reat ‘wale yed = wee the a pe 4,” Ei ed & ‘A Seat Powe) ts would result trained it beiu ba Uciess a great change in the temperature speedily oc. Pension being satalled, tone aw words, ie thosas, | Sia Would fad a compensation iu Avsiria~mthat Power | the” Ottoman. Erapire ‘receatly put forth 60. often for clg racrclgeomrcmgrecienmnpeinry ( hedlgy ghee d curs we bid fair to have a repetition on the 16h of this stance of this impudeut manifesto, which will ia ao email | Would be punished for her bad faith and clumsiness. Let} in the , and whose rage has 60 suddenly directed | Sank to Marlee Wowie Oe Att their country, grow cotton, | AMMIVersary of West India I des Ombrelles, which, some few years @egree contirm the impression of distrust which prevails | @ll be organized for a durabie peace. Lt the populations | itself to the eunihilation of the Christiaa uation. Alas! - on tp me nna ge He gy iG een tion. ment of Che 78 case anape eat throughout Furope of the Emperor of te Breaoa. ‘Tue | BE coasuited, so that no violent annexation abould take | {tig very aad aud deplorable that tn our timo more sym, | SUEAT and fifty other ia getting cotton from |THE CELEBRATION AT ABINGTOK) uM. ‘ago, established iteelf as one of the most remarkable, if Fore Subatamcs, however, fails tocoayey au ifea of the | Place. With Russia at Coustaatinople, Fraace oa the | pathy and more help are accorded to the promoters of | Dering his Gree yents oparetions i gensieg Coton tin | LEVTRRS FROM CHARLM® SUMNER, Of” ‘ot the most brilliant, of the festivals of Paris, The rain peculiar insslence aud sophistry of tis last goveramoat | Rhine, Austria diminished, aad Prussia prepouderating it | qigorder and sedition than to the Christiaa people who | I2ESb. bo: g19,016 pounds, and he saw from ae of the | CI§ ADAMS AND witucaM LeoYD Os has been literally incossapt now for thirty days, an4 the | effusion, I therefore subjoin copions extracts from it, Germany, where can any cause of disturbaace Of Fevold+ groan beneath the yoke of the Turks wad other barbarous | eeeesariies deg teas bok toes thas 2,467 jatdiyle pagers : which will, perbaps, prove serviceable as a seasoning to | tion be found in Europe? ations, people for whose emancipation, in other days, | Pate oPatz oar pounds, were received from ths West | To 1x Fomor or mux Naowat. Aon gear tights are as cold as the nights of October. The instruc th, s.vory’ epiastle whic has had such a wonderfull PRRDIOUS ALDION. a geningt | Eutope undertook such formidable wars; 6o that in the | Cost stat teeoPomis rapid increase, ja the early bis: | "The triends of the nave mbornere aot.” ite! @ quot as a ve. iJ is were mea vat re a Bt place on the 16th, have appeared ia the Moniteur, and, as | ardly Say that tbe headings of the quotations T append | thing if, however, Mt did bappou—i¢ Great Britain should | 24"ine* od justice, is trying everywhere to overthrow | that could gré en anee mean, Icky cattaated’| ae ee ee Bee teen {f despairing of sunshine, are more than usually tame With in the original: venture to commit’such au inprudeace, se might receive | religion and public society. * thas wenow fequired 1,000 malllign, pounds of cotten for canopy of interlacing boughs, and yet th It is the old story of a salvo of artillery at six o'clock in | THE MASSACRES—ANOTHER REVRNDICAT! DY. asevere lessou. Gibraltar, Malta, the loniaa Islands, Tt is in this perverse mauaer persons think and act | uv Pee robe Ottide eetimates, varying tu-amount, {(dellewcuy cool, i . her amusements on | As at the time of the Crusades, Curtstiau Europe is | af¢ a security for her keeping quiet, those are the weak then they reject and conden the Ostholic religion, which | S¥uled the total’ to 1,250 million pounis;-and wheu we.| A'more Atting spot. than “Island Grove the morning, rejoicings, gamss and other a moved by the Lorrible crimes of which syria laa just | poluts of ber arwor. But though 'sue will be reduced | is the only one that leads us to the truth, theonly one | Spelled the total. to 1,250 milion pounis: aad when we.) A more Bthing spot than “lsland Grove the espiauade of the Hotel des Tavalides, and at the Place tyecn the sceue. Seven hundred thousand Christiaas are | to @ sterile agitation in her islaud, and ge compelled to | which teaches it, the ouly oue that can heal the wounds | Daron a nimselt ridden a horse which drove some | of that crowning achievement of British du Tome; divine service at Notre Dame, gratuitous re- dolivered up to the meroiiess fanaticism of two millions | be @ Passive spectator of what takes place on the Gonti- | of a disordered ‘society and sustain it when it is weary | Oris father's machinery, and that he was present in a | liberation of the acgrs slaves. in ber domi Of Mussulmaus, and tue Turkish goverament, by ita iuex- | Ueat, &he will barely be permitied to offer her opivion, | and about to fall. How much it is to be wished that consultation with his eldest brother, bit father's over: | temple of uature the abolitionists have pregeutations at the different theatres, illuminations in Oe i actin, appears to avow itsell therr accom. | thanks to the @veor six thousaad men she will send t0 | those who are the most interested should kuow that if ee soe ch heen, is nen doidet tan Cor | em ee eT ee the aveaue of the Champs Elysees, the electric light in | Picts "amuredis Bronce would bave forgottea all her | Syris. ; human society runs any peril itcoues not from the church pot cowa paother Savdlng eugiie and aro throstien, hey | joice” i tile tains of the’ eakiibal to kee the Champs de Mars, and a grand display of dreworks to | traditions had she not immediately revendiqued the bo- ‘TAK MIBSION OF AND-Fi-KADER. inthe of God, but from the enemies of that church, hat Y | would certainly overstock the market, (laughter ‘a minde of the people an event which, whi | por of protecting the lives and properti those who The moment has arrived when our policy must be | are favored, if they are sanctioued, if they are aided, are | Thee ‘were remembered, it would be sccu that it | ecif asthe means of giving freedom to § Wind op all, But there is none of the ordinary stir and fi 0) Pivdaye, wersthe soldiers of Peter te Hermit and | Clearly dotined. It is in Syria that 'rance must pacidcal | jp the habit of turning their arma against their authors eee eeeaeti ellie mite Cam pibeoan L cacmeonee sae TT es bustle on uch occasions. The streets repose in their | fiji) Augustus, =" It is, therefore, high, time to | 1¥ conquer the (rontie of the Rhine, by menting her | themselves, for the purpose of utterly destroying all civil | Oouiy require ton years hence. (Hear, boar ) Tasre contemplate ita issues, aud regard it as a usual sfafue quo, and are not embowelled,as heretofore, to think of a remedy for a situation which could not last | Siliance with Russia. But we must take care not aE or | 80d religions power. God aiding, that | W8S no part of Africa of which be had heard, where cot | tration of the feasibility of breaking the any loager without leading to a great calamity, the total | Russia an unlimited extensioa Provinces. north o husres, vancrente beotiaan. goheee, ing» ton did not grow wild; there was uo part of the world, | very, as it were. io “the twinkling of an & make way for extempore water pipea or impromptu gas | Oot ititlon of the Christian subjects of the Porte, | the Bosphorus must suf abition, Asia Minor | very shortly the inaugaration of a more favorable era for | o-oo: radia, perhaps, in which cation was cultivated, | ing iu the Jace of all opposition, the com conductors, Preparations forthe tMuminations are this The expedition which tae Turkish government talks so | Must remain neutral grout ce its wadood, poaaibic | the Christians of your country will take place, since the | Vhere it was not sougit to obtain Africans as cultivators, | immediate emancipation, time conficed to @ line of wires festooning along the ave- | much about is totally insufficient to restore order. Tho | to look ata practi ject in a poetical and practical | generous French nation and Senate ee Patine | Wild African cotton was worth from 13d. to 24d. a] — Though we regretted the absence of ma: Powers who bave co rejigionists in Syria, aad who are | light we would kay our choice |s mado; a man has just | a fleet tosend aasistance to your country, whi ‘oret | pound more than the wild produce of India; cultivated | with us ou euch cocasions—men whom w= ‘uo from tree to tree,and all the attempts at prodeter: (ATT Nemed for their safety, must be prepared bodily | Come forward who seems the iucarnatioa of tho ttea we | mations bave already despatched armed vessels to defead | Pound more oat tee mak Plodaee, of mua, cullivatad (pel © daceninaaniamentendsores’ls 4 mined jollity have a melancholy tinge about them. The {) interfere. If tuey tarried it would uo louger be time | Should wish to see represented ia Syria— Xbd el Kader. | their countrymen, and, as it were, to rescue them much as New Orleans, and it could be produced for very | pecially the absence of his “ tolic thing to do with all this, but | to protect vietims, their ouly duty would ba toaveage | He is euficiently orthodox a Moale:m to couciliate the | the grasp of wild beasts. Wo have ‘not been strangers to much less than New Orleans possibly could be. (Hear, | whose voice comes echoing from the White kg eeaeip cage eaget ying eel ape Y martyrs. : “ Mussalman population: he is suificieatly civilized, to dis- | this it movement; we excited {+ aa much as We | bige) “He would undertake that good Africaa cotton | wes of hope aad egcouragement—yet Yhe political aspect of the times is not less overcast, and Ty" ations are especially interested in deteudiug whe | tribute justice equally to all; he te aitackal to France by | gould by our exhortations, compelled as we were by our | DOT.) He Miown free in Liverpoolat 4'4. per pound; | etauces conspired to make the occasion ot men seem not ‘i’ the mood”’ for fun. Cross on those distant shores—France and Russia What | the ties of gratitude: he would protect the Christians a paternal solicitude; and we do uot doubt that it will be- that it should be equal to New Orleans. aad at this mo’ | terest. There was uo noisy ‘burlesqe « The private ts from Naples are of the most cx would be the probable consediience of the union of their | reduce to obedionce the turbulun! trubes ever ready to disturd | come still greater for the defence of your safety and your | 101,’ ch cotton was worth probably 6d. per pound. | spread eagle demonstrations, but the fair ¢ private account P| arms, and the result for the ulterior organization of | the repose of Avia Minor T) make of Abd-el Kader the | common salvation. Be persuaded that for our part we (Bear, bear.) He looked this question as aifecting | dom smiled Serenely upoa ber votaries, br citing character. Everything that purso or speoch can fi0H. ANG, ths ee et se about to investigate Syrian Emir would be a nobie reward for our prigouer’s | phare your sorrow for the disasters which have fale ras ieee ve ch cn betas atiecting alep She | by.ahe magpotians Ghee protaen do has bean placed in requisition to secure the fidelity of THE MISSION OF FRANCE. Bervices. you; and, whilst we hasten to send 0 ee eternal welfare of the Africans and the temporal welfare ‘The Presipgyt, wfter remarks pertinent t the army, and, as regards appearances, it would seem not At certain periods of history we find that under the im- aren money—all which our own misery permits u be awe of our own people. The chairman concluded by giving | introduced Mr. Hxvwooo as the first sp i coigue ti \ pulse of certain laws of attraction and agglomeration The Syrian Question, of—in order to give Some relief to your misforiunes, We | somo details as to the proficiency of young Africans, who, | read letters addressed to the meeting {cor without effect. But the people look to the coming of ies form political combinations unknowa to the past. INE MARONITES AND THE DRU: F and covjure the Father of Mercy to deign to ragart | being seat here to be under his care, had studied tredes, | Mr. C. F, Adams, Mr. Andrew aud Mr, Garr Garibaldi as to a species of miraculous advent, We'are “‘ansisting’’ at one of these critical moments ia | (Translated from the Paris Patrie, July 23, for the New a his throne of glory this poor tend gt A led chemistry, &¢ , and he exhibited various African produc’ | faced the letter of the last named geatlem aud persons well capable of forming a correct the life of mankind, The Syrian question is but one of York Huratn | the 14rd, and to restore and comfort yong tions. mh: proceedings (after acollection in aid of the | lusion to him as eminently a scriptural ms the knots of @ very complicated situation. Tae whole of The deplorable eveuta of which Syria is the theatre | bisolemeuty. : ae expenses of the meeting), terminate? with thaaks to Mr, 1 inthe of the Rev. Mr. Stow, that Judgment declare that the instant the Dictator | Purope is in a state of expectation and anxiety, waiting | toed us to give & geographical and ethmograpical sxetch | | May immortal God, in whose hands are the beiris 6S | Clegg for presiding. called an , but that there was wore effects a landing there will be such @ general for a vast solution which may settle the basis of a lasting | of the country 6! with the blood of 60 maay victims. than in any other man whom he knew. peace both in Berepe aisen ‘the fe ea A a oe. & h | oo ‘and the Eas'. Now, that can ‘The traveller who lands on coast of Syria ‘preas int 5 y strive more 9 of the Great Eastern. riaiog en masse of the population that the army will be | ESN? SNS Reed “wammmeon an the erppaisation cf ove, | Z1ipoli, uakeil, Rexacet or, Selde perpeives at-0, sugall: \iawd ahereaher ‘the Buln ef the Certs tous. May ous THO Rreabsine OF ttre emit it compelled to fraternize with it. History offers 20 pre | Con timon’ a! ‘ve im conformity with the wishes and re- | distance the majestic a md the «aban those game princes comprobead hah grave, oy, nee juaat cedeut of an arm, tecting a people that were impa- | quirements of the t; questions of nationalities | (Libnan in Arabian) ruaving parallet (rom uorth to sou! extreme threatens society, un! ey uni e . teat bre ie rater ie ops of tee | Ruane enter, ase ener | RRR ES Migr io nce | mien eracimernmece, severe erras | aera yr ea, Ae i ‘ili; Y - el-Kebir (Bleu i Kas. . party are centred in the chance of some lucky shot re. | ("omnes ‘teeach oun, Keep ep fa eettat Exropean | mich, which is the lower couree of the Litant (Leoetes), | men who, as theagh asimatel byra see nectuess sock | The directors arc searcely out of onc aauger before. they moviag Garibaldi from the scene. From the reckless | States an undercurrent of agitation which prevents the | This latter river, which is quite large, ruas at iret from | only'to extinguish all religious sentiment in the soul, tc | are plunged into another. a fatal!ty’ eg} the com = manner in which the chief exposes his person, this may | restoration of confidence and hinders the progress of civi- {| north to south, and then, leuly, from peat to | confound all laws human, and, in sweeping | at ¢ stage em Lrg Me it soe a Ko 4 ligation. Peace, that ultimate term of the ambition of all | west. Its upper valley borders the eastern foot of La- | away all ideas of the just and the unjust, to make human | difficulties are to traced to indecision at the Board, {airly be reckoned amoug the probabilities, and there is | governments, can only be permanently scoured whea tho | banon, and, with the upper valley of the Aasi (Oronte), | society lice a den of wild beasts. springing from difference of opinion as to the equipment ‘ho doubt that it might give a strange tarn to eveuts. A Permanent exuse of dhrtanees we have just indicated ¥ entirely Loree ig ae —_ Dateeis Hod Syria. ms pide of tee incredible contaaion tai ctvit things, be praia neeilhen Posen Bane ate alr eneral 4 ‘hall have disappeared. We, therafore, wis to one penetri ° Ie jt: midst 60 great im come, these prevai resent qoaerel belie provaiie in Fazig.shint Gupitent Bas aiready | So See eee re, wish toarriveat | tint caloerous mountains, be” is castonished ai | single tdee eouaviee ese-netely, thet the faithtal apreed {then the late Board of Directors: but there usforteostely It is known that he is master of the Straits, | 4 Wherever such a thing is possible to favor the for- | every step with the freshness of the lamdacape, | all over the earth offer LETTER FROM WON. CHAR. os apy md Mr Duar Sin:—Ii i forego the or) offer me of uniting with the earnest abolit:c chusetts in celebrating the auniversary of cipation, | pray de band a pd ins. magnanimous. teac! re ameces aan eeem more among the ‘y: Nothing shows the mendacity c of slavery more than the unfounded which they call this act ‘‘a failure.’ then is virtue @ failure; then is justice put to Bra. " to the eof Grace fervent and | is not entire froedom from dissension. Io the manage- | humanity a failure; then is God himself a fe aud that be bag 17,000 men concentrated at Messina, His | mation of a homogeneous and rational state, the mission | the everlasting verdure of the valleys, and the courses of | assiduous prayers which will move our moreifal God to | ment of such rhe emanhpo, well matured glans, can, Jentios, humanity and God bimse!f are: Geet consists of $00 barks, of all sizes, Desides 700 trading | of which would be to absorb and concentrate ina mignty | limpid water which apout out on all sides and furrow | give us, at Hisown good time, tbe tranquility we wish jane! ‘iesion a ee aan) aoe ae ee unity populations having ideas or tendencies ia common. | deep ravines. Groves of cottou, olive and mulberry ; 80 that one day we may congratulate ives on mie. eee ty pital or; ye ab ‘oll the Penn oocvemg facts t myer =e craft, on which he bas placed bis embargo. There wasa| 9°q) try and carry out that principle without having | trees are scattered among steep rocks, vines are | happy and brilliant result of our common wishes, and | Public. Want of cap! y very probably upset e ene Be ype were comn report recou! hanging from the sides of jountaing, and bear bu for 80 great a benefit just thanks to the Supreme | Calculations of the managers; but in the instance of the | simplest rulesof morality. All testimony, ‘sd des Gochins, ta. tie Reeletontion] Mla eat uct | ‘omeaeliea Dances of grapes, ta going to the upper’ dates one dats | foderator of 0 things, he guardian and avenger at the | claim put forward by the Gorporation of Portland. change rn s , RESEMLANCK BETWEEN DESPOTIC RUSHA AND D55P91 yanches o| ¢ upper : 5 Sabo A Gin Sheth, tm Cie Kvelenteation! Miaiey, nt Bad PRasce, pratined petual ssow, which t stf bordéced witha number of | church. Belolcing iw'this ope, veuerable brethren, we. Of wa, and not monetary tightaees, as led to the proe- | question, that om all thate islands the con been repulsed by General Lamoriciere. 10 Calabria 16,000 At first sight France and Rugeia aj to hare realized Rowers, particularly erauthemas; but the everlsating | accord with all our heart, to ‘you and your flocks, our 7 pect of lit! ‘ ie et men are concentrated to resist any attack from Sicily. the idea! of monarchies. Tuough j2agues divide them, | 8D0¥ does not cover the very summits of the mountains. | spostolical benediction as s presage of a better future on A rs a + el bey ie eens — ‘1 i . | those two Powers have arrived by the most different Among all the trees which ornament Lebanon. the | earth, and the of a blemed eternity. ‘we publisbed in a back number, been done, Napoleon has been visiting the camp of Chalons-sur \ Or was dolug, in anticipation of the arrival of the Great roads at that unity which alone is able to create durable | most celebrated are the cedars, located ia the northern Given at Rome 29th July, 1860, in the fifteenth qi in the United Statea.”” The tor Maine, where, together with the Grand Duke of Baden, he | empires, not ephemeral circumscriptions, the limits of | part; they forme small wood of about 400 trees,ou a | year of our pontificate. PIUSIX, Pops. | Eastern at Portland, jhe c => ated ‘reviewed the troops as well as the stormy state of | which may bechanged any day by the fortune of war. ** | table land of 2,000 metres in altitude, towards the source ———— quite meta: te pal Lage att . | The Czars meditating for the last 135 years over the will | of the Nahr-Kadichat, (the Tripoii river,) westward of ves in Canad: commenced + class the weather woul permit, - Hs chief taOia' Was fo dis-'| “CT Acer tue sesh baaye Bot Ghenel to Coch gevetinn | fie MOLTEML ROME” eiee, tee eee ot tee tae py ry roemenn ae oo ye ye Rd miss the Syrian contingent, the small number of which | giances on Tork Must France continue to | and is 2,850 metres high. This wood is at a distance of a meng ao oe by Ly unfinishe: = — a = Was 4 gource of great disappointment. However, his Ma. | protest against the pretensions of the Czars to the decay. | three leagues from the village of Eden, a delightful spot, | gtternoon, for the purpose of addresses from the | we hem po rs ine inecaaes pAtow Sesty’s parting observation, that wherever the fag of | 8 font te OH cession: a dt Rus: Paradies, “Asaang tnege codate, ous se seen “poeeci : Winiam King (che Clayton of Mrs. Stowe's “Dre1.”) | rokérs and others, intereated in the new trade that was France floats in the Dreeze, it indicates a great cause,and | tion of tke Rhine tier, it appears wus | ones, which may be contemporancous with Solo. | formerly a slave owner in Louipiana, ar slavery in the ROU a Senanian Tekad tale Ce heey ae 4 great people behind, is thought to hold out a hope that | that a kingdom would not be too high @ price for her | mon, and consequently are almost three thou- | Cnited poration of Portland raised money to improve oa. ee, P 4 a States, aud the social and moral improvement of ‘All the visions of wealth and in more Sghting men will be wanted ere long. Pee nee nat, Mimi as ceestice, France might | sand years old; they are hage, and two of them | tne fugitive slaves ia Canada.” Theve reverend gentle. | (Ronee. All the wislous of weal amd. prosperity the meagure thirteen metres in circut Former!; ‘come ada as a tation to urge the Tuc Sprig expedition, shorn asi ofits original pro- | Strabo eighteen centres ago. (Here (oulows & quotation | when peace reygnod in that. beautiful coustry, tae codara | Sen,bave come from Canada ax a deputation to urgo the at Portland were blighted by the diseetors of | the Portions, bas, notwithstanding, produced some excitement | from Strabo enumeratirg advantages of Gaul as the | were placed under the protection of tue patriarch of the | which is devoted to aiding fugitive slaves. The attend fg ee tints, Saeed anal aes state- among that class of writers who indemnify themselves | 8¢at Of & powerful empire.) it can be easly understood | Maronites, who, every year, or Transfiguration ance at the meeting was not numerous. Io the wnavoid: | ments circulated as to the ship's final port of that France should desire to re-construct that divine | to celebrate Divine service ou aa altar of ce: + | able absence of the Mayor, Mr. Thomas Clegg was called q . ‘Ener m4 the Pr 2 oy ws for tbe rigid consorahip of the newspaper press by pam | work (I premuie the froutiers of Gaul), thwarted for 9o | erected at tho foot ofthe largest of thewo venerable trees. | on to preside; aad the proceedings wore commenced | MT'Y3! i Americ, cause the Purtianiers tochristen ber phieteering. One of the most remarkable of these bro. | many Seuturiea by the fraud of man, and that is so much Mount Sannin (the Sinai of the Scriptures), 2,995 metres | with prayer by the Rev. J. C. Paterson. fede aimee tenses nn By ship, the lunes teourres chures, eutitled “The Maronites and France,” boldly ad. in the nature of that at a period when we were not | high, and situated in the middie part of Lbanoa, towards The Rev. Dr. Buxss delivered a long and interesting | by. those who speculated on her making Portland the har ay ~ | thinking of territorial aggrandizemeut, Germany wag | the parallel of Beyrout, contains iroa and coal mines. | gqdregs. He said that he and tho Rey. Mr. Kine had hex ot anseatnn tate ban Garten Chae ae “ vocates the expulsion of the Turks, root and branch, | nevertheless sulject to periodical ts of’ unsesiness, and | Tue Nab el Kelb, which rises there, dows but ashort | eon appoluted to seek the countenance and support of | DoF of departure have beea cer pg ny teh into Asia, while Turkey itself shall be peopled | upg at us,as a pledge of deflance, Becker's patrigtic | distance before reaching the sea. 4 Little farther to the the British public, ia order that the Buxton mission to arise by the ship's presence, and who invested their th a mixed lation from all European countrice at | $008. ©" .*, Weknow that we aro uot alone in by. | north the Nalir Ibrahim runs in the same direction might be carried oa more successfully, and, it might | cash without cuaranter. are victims without redress at with a mixed popul pean ie {ug (plane of aggrandizement. Now, if Rusia rogards | Auti Lebanoa, which the Arabs call Djebel ech Cherk! | ye, that similar efforts might be made’ in other | {eel Without cuarantes. are victims without redress at Preseat laboring under a surplus, that the Pope aud M'a- | Constantinople in the same way as we look at the Rhine, | (the mountains of the Kast), rises eastward of Lebauon, parts of Cinada. They camo not with a mere | AW. How fur the Corporation of Portland ars bee Pacy shall find its seat at Constantinople; while Rome ve- | Can que not turn these analogous pretensions to seme ac: | sad extends aiso from north to south: the former i8 sketched out plaa, vor with @ proposal that had | (0 Sustain thelr cl poached ship company Ir it waa ae tm. pre ital of Central Itsly, with Vister ; | Count. and force upon Europe the acceptanoe of a combi- | higber, aud hes for its apex the Debeiech Chevkh, which | been only agitated; for it had been in operation now plied or © sed condition of agreement that a pier Comes the capital of Central Ituy ‘ator Emanuel | nation, which would allot Turkey to Russia, to France | crowns the sources of the Jordan, an4 is 9,085 metras ten years, ‘with & cousiderable measure of success. yah seri. ae pie Nearly the affairs cannot be charged upon emancipatio Supencenemer aes ie 5 iy the sions of the slave masters. Two different this rd — assured me that, with all ence there, they looked upon emancipatior img.’ Thus it is shown that ene) is found im justice. Nothing is truer than besit wep wickedness, is folly als: man is a fool. Ouly recentiy important testimony oo tl found a place, where it would be hardly ex; columns of the New York Times—and sim: occurs in other quarters, both in England and yet, with the truth dashing im their fa masters misrepresent this sublime aud bea oo This, however, is of a pieee wit conduct. = : r 5 ide w dreat Kastern for Its King: the land to be subdivided among European | that Mine froatier, which Napoleon I. eoosidered in 1814 | high; itis the Great Hermon of olden times, ° Tue valley | Nearly twelve years azo attention was called, in Canada, | SM0uld be carried out, alongside which the Great Kastern | comduet. Powers. | AS a cine gud mon condition ef bis existence as asovereign. | of extends between these two great Chala wict } Wo the state ‘of the fugitive slaves, mainly throagh the pany Waban rane or ne es wae Boneh . oe for the good Be A question of some commercial interest bas just eome | MOPEMATE CHATACTER OF Th TEBTRSONS OF FRANCE AXD | Soush ae) oops ra era tne °e Coe At | exertions of Mr. King, gro ad arrived ia the proviuge | Hon will have clear case for dames; bit if there | you cheer tes, aud alieve te, tay dear | a . about wae from yaad ‘i 0 9 etiot e before the Imperial Court relating to the American bank- | | There are only two millions of Turks in Europs, whereas | Two principal nations inhabit Lebaaoa—the Maroaites | for seven years, been an owier of slaves i’ Louisiana’ poy bene a oy een Oe ara i ees ieee Gunn ARLI er, MoM. Munroe, in the Rue de la Paix | there are thirteea millions of Greeks, whoa» spiritual | and the Druses—whose hostility has been the principal | ft was Wiat, a8 a prelimiaary, it was necessary to a4 pany : , LETTER FROM BOW. CHARCES FRANCIS A Qewcy, J W. L. Garrison, Boston —Duar Sim—[ a1 to the managers of the Marsachusetts Anti-S) for their kind invitation to be present at the! ; , , 4 cot! free. From the particulars of the case MM. Pignien & Co., Freuch bankers, broke off an ar- | head Is the Czar.***The Greek iasurrection, which lasted | cause of the dreadful catastrophes which have just oc- | give to fugitives « loca! habitation; that all the sar. ane rill rangement which, in 1856, they had made with an Ameri. | nine years, was but the prelude of the movement whic | curred. Each of them nu:bers about 300,000: but their | Syading circeustances | prevented their being effectually leauste ook ees Soak Bellver ee t oe can (the Galveston) railroad company, to make certaia | is preparing in those regions, and which the massacres in | numerical strength and their habits are quite diferent. encourage! io habits adustry So long as they were 7 P Seveeeen ane tan tentgtay sstenonk' cs tetatn Gores | Syria may act upon a8 a sigual to break out. The Greek | The Maronites. located between the Nahrcl Kebir and | geattered, and were subjected to the prejulices against | the Srst ingtance, Toe Corporation o° Portland, it i anid , ‘ } ‘ 1 Ki “ advanced $60,000, or £12,000, to the Grand Trunk Rail. acceptances. Notwithstanding this, a bill of exchange ‘istians are only waiting for au order from their chief | the Nabr-c! Kelb, and mainly in the Kesravuaa, are calti- | them, which at that time existed very geuerally The ,000,, b at three months’ date for 32.340f., drawn on them from | at St. Petersburg, or their patriarch at Coustantinople, to | vators of the ground, of aifable and pleasant disposition, | attention of the public and some of the y Serres ot Cane pad Company senoues Bremen oe nag ho nd Sones my yoomn wontons amok el s New York by the chairman, bearing their acceptance, aud | rise against the infidels; and there are but few far-sighted | and strongly attached to the Catholic fait, da having been called to the subject, it was resolved to — iy Fag ong om a é cer: passed by endorsement to M.M. Rothschilds & Co., was | politicians who do not anticjpatea solution of the East The Druses, who are located more southward, are | attempt the object in two ways—the trst being the pur side. Pi ‘ofore, an ae aeuston 0 peavety Subsequently presented. M.M. Pignien refused to pay, | erm question ina sense favorable to Russia, and that at | prond, dull ; loomy aul very warlike. The MM. Munroe then took the bill out of MM. Rothschild’s | n0 distant time. It is not, therefore, Surprising that at | headquarte: ‘ Railway Company, an eligiogs | chase of land, to be divided erate sized farms, 2 f the Maronites are ane whan be Bh ong im Portiand barbor! and bin, (ia Latin, | upon which colored families should be located. After failure. 1 have heard it so described.on que House of Representatives. The only reasoa bands, first paying them the amount. On the bill, how. | the call of their co-religioniats, aad encouraged by the | Commobiam,) a monastery cut into the rock aud founded | Qhasiderabie dicculty, Wee was obtained for Poem peony ever, ihe Rotuachilds wrote —" fransterred the present | predictions of Stalezanew, the ‘Russiasa soca. be’ pro: | by Theodosius the Great’ It ia the ordiewry residesse ot $15,000, with which 10’ purclase 9,000 acres of land from Gua" oe ee — pocegerpn op oly es ony Soper bill to MM. Munroe, who paid it after protest. The | pared to cross the Pruth at tig firat alert ir patriarch. Their political capital is Bekfaja, tae | the government; for, in addition to the general prejadice, % pe ‘out of the bones and muncles of slaves trausfer is made without any guarantee on vur part, and THE RBASON WHY FRANCE 81100 SNBX BRLGICM. residence of the Emir, who is a vassal of the Porte. there was strong opposition manifested by the residents | the action in realits It was Sismondi, I think, who first te without giving any right to aoy proceedings acainst us If we cast an eye on our own froatiers, the considera | This small Christian uation bas organizat littl in that part of Canada in which {t was pro to locate | tbe action, ie iy, the fallnay of ail British writers oa pout Afterwards, M.M. Munroe recovered of MM Pigaien | tions which justify our tendencies appear to be quite as | tie, by the immigration of exiles who, at the time the fugitive blacks, Bat Me. King baldiy persevered; | Pee ae ae es he , fy hme & Co the amount before the civil tribanal. Against that | importaat as those which actuate Russia. Let us set | Heraclius lost Syria, sought shelter against the cruelty of | Lord Figin, the abie Governor General st the ume, | ‘Be B te Mow wart. Semone cf ie abet eoohons nore decision an was mate yesterday beforo tho Im- | aside all historical recollections, aud al! geographical mo- | Ohosroos in the mountains of Lebanoa. It took its game | geye hig couptesance and support, as did other perasos pone naan 4 . € ks Portland rial Court, which quashed it, ou the ground that Roths- | tives, take one by one the provinces enclosed by tue | from an anchorite by the name of Maroa, who camefrom | $f intuence. and the purchase was ellacted. Ten years Corporation of eotid's transfer was not ‘‘a regular endorsement or a | Rhine, and exam‘ne tbe reasons that militate ia favor of | the borders of the Oronte to be Bishop of Botrys (be | was allowed’ for the Vayment for government etsy ss at £60,000 transfer of @ credit’ according to article 1,236 of the | their annexation. tween Tripoli and Byblos); be rendered great service to | and the $18,000 were now to a great extent cleared off. L Gote Napoleon. Firat, we meet with Belgium. [n good faith it is dit. | the church of Syria, rose ‘to the rauk of patriarch, ana | (Applause.) The land was divided into 260 farms of any Ppt mage on General de Beaufort d’Hantpoul has embarked from | Cult to question the strikiag analogy which has induced | selected Kanobin for his residence. Maron bad, bow. | acres each, and was sold to the colored heads of families small, ion wi A novel one Marseilles with 1,300 troops, 900 tons of stores anda mi!- | some historians to call the elgiaus the French of the | ever, @ taint of heresy, which* the Marouites re- | at $250 an acre. It was now estimated that there wore tion of specie. The English steam liners Reaowa and | North. In fact, throughout the country the educated | nounced afterwards to join the Roman church. They 12,000 colured persons settied on the land: they bed ° James Wall have already joined Admiral Martio at Bey. | classes use no language but Freuch, and the Flemish dia. | lave o Preserved the custom of celebrating mass ac ported themselves, making good progress in clear! rout. Abd-el-Kader bids fair to be once more the lion of | lect is only understood by the lower classes of the popu- | cording to their rite and in their own dialect, which cultivat: the land; their industry ani porseverance ed the desert in French estimation. A Sister of Charly, | ation tn some few localities. Moreover, Belgium is | mixture of Syriac and Arabic, and they mainiain the were markedly i:aproviog from year to year; their con- wes a . t wigs phn of St. Vincent de Paul, has written to taat when | throuzhout attached to Catholiciem, aud it is to France, | institution of the marriage of the priests. Their for- | duct was decigediy good, and they were 29 temperate | WB Of remuneration _ at Damascus, her companions and herself had | her sister by origin, idiom and roligion, that she is ia: | vency and piety recall to mind the centuries of tue pri- | that drunken:ess was in fact unknown at this settlement, we host whose friends, Given themselves up for lost, when the African | debted for her independence. We will not recall the fact | mitive church. Two hundred monasteries, which rigor- | (Appiause.) He was got aware thst such « plan hed declined Chief came to their relief, declaring that be would defead | that Begium, conquered by our aries in 1796, formed | ously keep the tule of St. Antonius, are scattered through tried any where else; for Canada was the oaly place them, if necessary, with is life Struck, it seems, when | uive French departments until 1814. Nevertheless, it | the valleys aud upon the picturesque rocks, aad a great | on the North Amer san eoatinent where the fagitive save At Paris, with the energetic labors of those ministering | would appear that our yoke was not so very Leavy, cumber of bermite have found retreats ia the | could Gad refuge. But those who had associated them- ike. Spirits, the Emir had said that if the day should overcome | 1581, Belgium baviog been unable to obtain trom the | Caves and caverus: but what Las become of them | selves and guaranteed the $18,000 could not rest after im- wheo servants of Christ and humanity should | Great Powers the permission of being aucexed to France, | since the cruel attacks of the Deuses’ What has ving cal the social condition of the escaped slaves. have to the loss with the best heed his aid, they should never do $0 in vain. And thus | offered, by a vote of the two Caammbers, the Belgium | become of those ingenious husbaudries supported by | Phe vety tact of this location gave an opportumty tor thal we No bee ‘ho has kept bis word. | crown to the Duke de Nemours, the son of the King of | walls erected as terraces on the sides of the mountsins’ which, tried epoo a smal! scale, had always failed while Nea boasts of the fnert ia the The munic roy Ay Paris be here aa cage mers that the French. The refusal het ad iaduced them sub =e and ae hose rustic roof al : these Gafortuoates and othors of their clas" were scattered and 1h open all the year atmos a ‘States, « loam Of 139,000,000 will be effected for Uae further im- sequently to offer it to the Duke of Saxe Coburg, since Leo- | offered a table shelter to the Christian travel les long and 300 miles broad—their — Montreal Ocean ‘ovement of the capital. Twenty six millioas of dollars, | po : over a country 1,000 mi i line bave ‘been compelled to make Portinnd their part of and | tia 1 at the precedent we rofer to appears tous highly | those graceful Cheykh women, whose faces were excir lewatic orally and religiously. (Appiause.) — It “upwards of five millions sterling really vot exactiy important, and it leads to the presumption that if Bel- | cled ina white and light voll, fastened on tua lead at the | fost’ ve “uuderstoot thet” when «fuer a Set- a elcane Tae et nae By, as Bet; doa bite under existing c} wamstagcor. Dat it ig evident, siuu were couaulted sue would not prove less generous | end of a brass or silver tube, strangely Dent (a the sbape | tloment’” was spoken of, the words were used with | Sada commodious pier, with « braach line 'o it, must ‘rom the long apologetic article in the Consfifactomnel, that | thaa § nd would prove opca more the attractioa, | of a horn? reference to the land’ part of the plan; “ The | o! on er See something is felt t be necessary in extenuation. Paris i¢ the prestige which the greatness of France causes ber to The Druses inbabit the southern part of Lebanon. | Baxton Mission” was the term under which the second undoubtedly undergoing a sweeping reaovation, such as feel. The opposition of 4 (ew members of the upper cias- | Deir cl-Kamer (the house of the moob), a large fortified | part of the pian was included. Ar. King was appointed ‘Was never produced on so large a scale before. Of course, ses Would be very sooa etuled by popular acclamations, village at the southeast of Beyrout, is considered their pastor of the settlement, with power to promote schools, no one doubts the improvement ju appearance and com- MODERATION OF FRANCK IY NOT ANNTXiNG Ta wots oF | Capital, and it was the residence of their Emir, or Hakem, and, in any way that he and the committee might think fort; the only question is whether even these blessings HOLLAND a, to 1845, whea the Ottoman goverament forced | best, to forward the education and religious progress of vy & price Do they pay? Do | Before falling into the sea the Rhine divides {tselC into | that chief to give up his office to a Turkish governor | the people. Then the Buxton Mission was emtablished; oh sabstitute the tenements three branches, two of whick run ia rather northerly di —eene district is called Chouf, and produces | and it had proved just as successful as the jand scheme. remove find tenants at the enormous increase of rent? | rections, the Yssel, which flows into the Zupderzee. and | good ailk. The greater part of the fugitives were in connection with Foreign Miscellany. The answer is, that at this moment there are 13,000 apart- | the Wabai, a confluent of the Meuse. if France bad once | The people are not of the Mahometan faith, as is geno: | religious agencies; about one hundbed children were at- fous ceibtans’e enurttia tam teen. teeoe hy the Steitane meatt on band. It is true they are under @ protective | more to trace her limits, might she not take the lige of | rally believed; they have their own peculiar religion; trafing an excellent day school, where Latin and Greek | god'he was found te be the bearer of the following lett law, which gives them immunity from rates nnd taxes, | the Rhine, properly #o called, tostead of thai of the Wa. | they believe ia a single God, who, according to their tra’ | wore taught, as weil ish—maoy of the chilires | fom Colonel Boro to Marshal Clary “My. poattion is while vacant, but it is equally irae that the tenant mar- | hal or the \ssel 80_as to slice oi! as little as possible of | dition, manifested bi aself in human shape in the person | being very proticient; was also a well attended | most omba: ‘and with such cowardly and undis- The g = i A g i = ry 2 Ket is as populous as ever. but still the fact that 13,000 fa- | Southern Holland, That is what she would assurediy do of Hakem, Caliph of Egypt, about the year 1030. Their L Toronto bad received stu- milles—representing, perhaps, a Gfeenth of the’ whole | Moreover, it ie not on the side of Holland that 1 is iadis: | Feligion isk Kio? ot delam, in, which doc. | Semeetcumool, The college ott school, who were gene. | Ciplited soldiers | daetias ootendl 4 pe we ch coe aot cae Of the capital—submit to any iacouvenience Py to rectify oar frontier by taking the line of the | trines of the highest antiquity ate mingled, rally equal to the white students in intellectual attain. | tender you mi resignation. Endeavor to send immedi. | than enough to rather than pay the evormous reats required, is very ine asa basis. Belgium, with hor prossat (conkers, | such ae the metempayohosi# and the worship of | mente, and in some respects superior to them. Five of | leader you my r ‘away the detachmest of the 8th } with little unger Striking; and when {t turns out that the funds are ex. | would be enough to satisfy the waat of exteasioa which | the call. fhe Druses do not ise circumeision, | the scholars were vow pupil teachers ia other parts of | Chalet emi ig Lace, tag wake the whole garrison | to labor. And bausted, and fresh loans must be instituted to carry out | of late hag been so loudly claimed by public opiaion. The | Bor fasting, nor prayers: they driak wine, eat pork, marry | Canada West (to which the fugitives almoat exc jusively | cvutinous.”” t trom tbete form further improvements, it does look very like going ahead | line of the Scheldt was, moreover, the (routier couceted | between brother Gnd sister, and are allowed to take seve. | confined themselves); one bad been sent to Africa, partly } The Leeds ™ ‘6 informed by a correspondent | bear of an; with» | to France by the Treaty of 1 ile, ia 1901, tel wives. They have ao pisces of worship, bot hold se as a school teacher, partly a8 a lay missionary; and seve- | “sy ~ Men say fost it is only a part of that feverish excite. | __ Here follows a short passa, that the Society of Friends have resolved not only no meat which ly pertains to a J longer to enforce peculiarit Jemonstratiag by similar | cret meetings e thirtieta night. It is Deleved that ral ications bad been made from missionary agmocia- Darai, one of the feet epos- | tions the ‘provinceas tor youn tect whe’ Taiget’ be thal the inne Kinhinve in nto omekgnt thonsemeeed ype which must | arguments, the necessity of aunexing the Gracd duchy of | their name comes from that of move or . The it is, hey @ay, which kept the | Luxembourg, “which formed, under the empire the dé. tles of Hakem. According to another opiaion, it indicates | fitted to go to Africa as missionaries. At present, the | been ra Exaperor averiasting!y ou thé jark—now a pacitie speecli— | partement dev forées.” The pamplletecr thou peoceods to | acct which studien mysterien, and originates (rom the ghurch” “ihe schools dhe post eiion (bites Lee | Some ponmecn may coutlous ts commasion, Wot telr ow a Sistmese alliaace—now & war for an ides, and now | show the accossity for the verb darass, meaning to study. Finally according to a fow Higia cetabliehed), ahd other public buildings on the | Eh, —- saris letter fall Of vows of constancy and gool faith. Here ANNEXATION OF RARNISE PRUA®\ others, that'name is merely a corruption of the ancient se bata gestive iulement, were merely log built, and ia we are, they say, with our collera breaking dowa with Belgium and Laxembourg once in our power, our task | Iturce) or Iturs, an invincible nation siready in the time very primitive; and the main object of u money, aud our funds at 68, and whatever the Emperor | is not over. * * * To complete our froutiers we must take | of the Romans, and who jahabited the couatry between Great Britain was for fundm to enable permanen does, or whatever be says, there they stick. In fact, no- | not jess than two thirds of Rhenish Prussia, the whole of ‘ta and Damas. Of brick to be erected, especially for the eharch snd body believes anything but that a universal con/iagration | Rhenish Ravaria, aod about one-third of the Grand Dachy ¢ Druses are very vindictive; reveage for bloot by | schools, #o that (nteHectual and religious teach! bt is Pe a | i -y ra ot ee | of _— of i R.. Lae J merge formed, under the empire, | tdood is ee Their jealousy i@ extreme begs be carried on more comfortably and efficiently. There F tart bai 1 t to Rnow the 1 0 the wall. sick man irkey must die, | the Departwents of Root, of the Rhine joselie, of the ii covers f! f thei , Who are sald t itive al pay anny ibe Es Bagh - if, of the Raine and Moselie, of th: Veil co face of their women Bald to be aera agian thee fog! in it a 4 having studied orin- Ny Thera in and Russia, France and England, with Sardinia, must Sarre, of Mout-Tonnere, and the Grand Duchy of Berg. | very handsome. West. He bad men that im Canada alone, Hight. They will ght for Constaatinoples they will ght io 1815 they were distriouted among several possessors, | The Metoualiser, who chiolly inhabit the valley of Bkax, North America, could they find refage: and there were | thology, and Killed and eaten olf, my life, He for lnghan” Hepedy tas ong faith ye | else. \o render pat recovery by © mire dificalt, A re | between Lebanon and Ant on, are vey exalted three causes which had led to the ieee om. | further makes mention of a whale as aa “ornithologienl y conirms markable fact is, that thease ,rovinces annexed to | Chutes Mahonetans conseyuently enemies of the Turks | 1. The natural lore of freedom inherent beman | specimen.” ympathize mor grin of idleness to the iaborer, if it be bia pier idle, sad no sofiering follow from it to luimaelf c ly. Nobody admires iudustry more thaa I must be of that sort which js not wrung from 1 by force and without compensation. vheo | atdown, idid not intend to gr discussion. My objest only was ¥ of the standard which has been set the value of emancipation, When will men ce} found liverty with money? With many thanks for the kind estimate In 1868 England imported from the United States £34,258,000, and exported British to the value of , oe enaoaue— ry recent discussion in the Firld, the Son. Grant Everything I have since seen or heard on the account I gave you in my last of French opinion on the French mouarchy, were but a tow rs (a | whoare Sunaite. They worship tlie Caliph All almost as | breast, and strongly operative in ‘that of the slave, despite eatimate of the sum required under the contrac? the letter to “Mon cher Persigny.”” Reports are preva. direct intercourse with us, and, aevertheless, oor | much as God, and thee came hen caprie ¢ it vene- | the glowing pon A which some supporters of siavery acum conveyance of mails between Galway and ports in - 7 steer ipt of any public service | may font of the Emperor's intention to reduce the army; but temporary stay among them has jeit the mast enduring | ration fer tat son-in.law of Mahomet. Theirinanners gave of the comforts of the blacks as slaves. 2. | America amounts to £80,000. The subsidy is at the rate of | Pu gabe, truly, your friend the minds of men hare come t thet point that no marks. As 1d the sympathy which is lavish oa the | are roughaud inboepitabie operation of the Fayitive Slave law, eaacted In 183 1pee-t boing We | fang, | ns TP WNW Gry Delipves that the action of today has any bearing Fren reller in those parts we willingly appeal to thors The Ansarieh, Nossarieh, of Nosairieh, live to | which required even free States to give up fugitives, and Journal says: —Our : another letvech | what may bappen to morrow. Who have travelied there. For the last forty fire years | the north of the Merotes, ta the mModatains, | whigh caused a great Tush from those States t Canaim y of the Gai. | M®. Harmson then said that ‘was alwad | Tt haa pot observation that the Emperor, when not a single French soldier has garrisoned those towas on | to which they have given their nam, and which | those who had long settled, and in freedom had acquired the intelligence | Tec#ived, from one yy thia. + | at the Camp Was acoompanicd by Prince the banks of the Rhive, and yet it is marvellous to see | can be upon as a northern continuation of the . 8. The Dred Scott decision of the italists of high he ‘of the im oft \ Jonchim Murat, and that this is the frat time ech pub. | the touching on’ our ‘Uniform. ments with there. | Livan. They sees to have drawa ¢heir game trem s | Goort iu 1980, whieh decided Wat @ negre was a chattel a. Tacitus sald of the abeenee Sie, ta elf the lic notice had been taken of that Prinee. With that sin- | Catholics Ke ue—like us they are Frouchmen. Was {t | certain Nawar, who. inthe sepeath contury, founded bi dei Fighta which the laws of | “the total number of men belonging to the European Geday. 1 need not nam: Patiouce so eminently fruitfat ia his own fortunes, | not at Alx-la-Chapelle that our Emperor Charlomagae hell their sect, a strange ‘mixture of Paganiam, ‘atianism boum! to protect. Hence the India who have taken their dischaage sin oe won ee pance shines so bri is Majesty bas always said to the Murata, “Ony bide | bigcourt? * * Contiguous to France the Rhenish | and Mahometanism. They number abdout 40,009. made from Canada, to which he trusted and juesee of being refused bounty, and whe ‘the White Mountains your time,” and has openly discountenancet the slightest | Provinces must become the political, as they are the na- Tt waa in that of Syria that the,Crusaders met the | British puble would generous respond. e United Ki » Was 10,106 ” The totad ate movement, direct or indirest,on their part. Comiag | tural dependencies of France. famoas nation nibjected{to the Old Man of Rev. Wa. Krvo di upon the emoraliaing effects of & | Oimnber of suoh men re-enlisted since thew retarn $0 us greeting :— weowt wrutas thorp canseos. events scem to promise a change of tactics, and while the The wrifer then returns to Russia, And after showing ‘ingen account of the bind | system of Cosy 4 alfce upon the white lation and the wD, N 7 world has Victor Emanuel on ite lips as the only sola- | that the Crimean war is no bar to the alliance between zeal of hit subjects: for the iattor went at his command to | slaves, and the difficulties which surroun. pamed Francisco Riso, was killed at | My pean Barwooo—Absent from hong, a tion of the Neapolitan difficulty, there are those who say | France and Russia, as they bad not then come to an un. | Kili those whom he had pon i :thename | owners (a small number, unfortunately) who desired young patriot, 7 that the Emperor hae determined, If the throne be va | derstanding, gives the following piece of information as | of Assassin (Hachiehia) Comes trom that of heoh ieb (insh- | to emancipate, or eren to instruct ‘nel? siaves, Ono | Palermo on April 4, during afpopular demonstration which | vigoration of body ant mind among ty, wo cant, to see it occupied by Jonchiin Marat If., or, as the one of the claims of Frace to tho gratitude of Russia — | cosh), « voretabie preparation, whtet ia intoxicating, and | of the ‘of the 4 appeal had not been men. } took place before Garibaidi's arrival, On April 90 bis man of that name is the grandson of the famous | It must be kept in mind that France did not land her. | , by Joachim It. Sel to the plans of Bngiand io tho Baits. We do aot | moans of which those wretehed fanatics of murder wore | gcaool buildings, but to establish @ mechanion’ achool—in | Bourbon soldiers, witl Now tpepenire eet tsa e of ae cannat we 31 father, Giovanni Riso, #ixt: ore old, wae jolpatiog in the First of August Colso ration Das'sa kind of hemp (cannabis indie), and by | tioned. Tt was sought not only to get good church and ‘ out wp chach as the form of «teil, | fos: but the day aad the occasion wilt Got. be