The New York Herald Newspaper, September 12, 1860, Page 2

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NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 42, 1860.—TRIPLE SHEET. fermperature got rather more agreeable, and the sun gra. | as Se mine ‘demribed it, ‘quite “ag the water at fifteen knots am hour, | The American ADDITIONAL FROM EUROPE. | S00) cppeates jan tag ant ioe axen,”andinen | Sita” ayer te pak ie ay | "Dang sheervathas —$—— Rot 0: y conquered our enemies, the aristocratic oliga r obits, ® their absence ions 2, were . M 4 seoarn ae £8 Aisappeared for the reat of the day, At noon the latitude | {fey ed, them ¢ iy log tothe elon angen poy Ke phere AE ho Fyn erp was 46 deg. north, longitude 65 deg. 63 min. west, Dis’ dent knows not, for the intense di depicind on 6 Tun the ship has yet performed. pent, do not appear to be ARRIVAL OF THE CITY OF WASHINGTON, | tance made since starting yentersay, 340 knots Itt ele wa t would bes yudy and overcast, orton | tase ste sommments ea It may be as well to observe that the distance | «sore’’ subject " * 90, had yet | steamer could legally nee made and the distance run by the ship are | peaceable tit. sreanig; three Ente tasenies Nebora miliag, our ne So encuraen wig. The Hi wd Trip of. the | {107 arnt. Se ae ely leaden sky, | dle boxes discerned the Smalls lighthouse standing iso. | safe, and duly attsd ie Homewa' P ebortest line which can be drawn betweem the two | that ‘only Wareatened, rain, By nine A. | lated ona dangerous rock which, but for ite friendly | act of Parliament, ~ tern points on the earth’s surface at which the ship was on two | M., bo’ wind got round | gleam, would be fatal to @ noble Soon after- | tion of the law, because Great Eastern. S aoe ae eo to ihe and broucht up wards a still larger group rocks, to northward, | ern, on the occasion diferent days, at noon; while the other is the sigzag OF | the rain ‘The maintop-uil was | oalled by the name of the Bishop and his Clerks, | land to Holyhead, advertised oe ke en jo 5 pean acs, ps Sense ee Fon) tes senor holme, and lastly by eee ned snd: pros of Se iy de cemereleneen Sateeritine ‘Whether the directors ved it will only be through us, the Armenians, from first the rest of , ry crags ‘6a » WED ITALIAN IMBROGLIO, | °° sicred, or from being carried out of her course Hj Welsh'coast jutting out to the north, into | were mot desirous to the fines for such |” When we come together Iz by & current, or belng driven to leeward by a strong ee weld ee ceed to card aenike eat astniating ta. the divcation af Miloed Breach of the law, or whether, from ‘the loss of life ino Our Grst care, I seppene, wills aninhaninecnd wind. half a gale, but the starboard quarter | Haven, that had taken place a short time , they were | be the mental elevation of our people; for, having a0 long: gn morn! kept idly. TAKING A PILOR. urged to by the dread of we | been subjected to despotic sway and fanatical persecu-— Sucech ef Count Tais ng some of our athletes ferreted out the | Kept seamen 'N., | By five P, M we were in full view of that noble bay as | koow Ma, but. the money was returned to those who tions, the inhabitants of the provinces, as you kaow, Ina portant pe skittles, which were immortalized during the passage lopgitude b .; distance made | we aoe od -“ a 8 pilot from « i cut- | had tickets, and the — ee ae Siva bet iittle of mental ‘The my. out, The abilit; ed. i Rot ba’ - to our port. | ter irectly our track, with tuck | looked upon as an ill-considered precipitate , chance culture. comesious- serosal titled the pla; a be gocher ee tibe ie es ul aay beng mdaned mouratelly’ tarough | of her matneal hauled wp sad her foreaoet ag Na es gag al ON OS p. to |. Semel thie Bie at NE ee Sane ee i Ae = y amongst am and the rain ti yon ‘This important event ‘the lottery. The ticket | directors have since carried out in’ the United States. | 7 association. uarter is still ab Seayuk. London taproom; but much fun was elicited from the | gec\, L or snug in the | from five P. M. to tweaty minutes past tive was the win- | The Merchant Shipping Committee, Yeni-Khan, where our reading room and library are well’ @ar Milford Haven, Galway and Constan- } performance. One mild looking gentleman, whose eyes seclusion of our cabins, Passengere, foGnid means of killing ner, for the foot of the welcome visiter we i : dence, Deamed benignantly on the unclassio “nine” through a | time ope Dy Dag Maco tinople Corresp pair of spectacles, became suddealy inspired wish the | (ithe yooman'seervice he was doing. In the evening ae, &e., &. ambition to distinguish himself at this athletic game. | ‘he rain ceased, the A fell light lng Be aanek mare — Grasping the heavy ball with a determined air he took de- | stern, tint still helped the ships way during ‘wo ecrew steamship City of Washington, Captain Jef- | liberate aim, ran three steps forward to impart velocity, On Friday, Avgust26, at six A. while running tory, which sailed from Liverpool at five P.M. oa the 20th | and—fellon his nose. The ball, which should have gone | ahead through drt threatening “61 ‘and from Queenstown on the 90th ultimo, arrived here | forty feet forward, went a er further me seers, tab 7 Waein ibe cont yesterday afternoon. much to the dismay of a surly old quartermaster, who, | ward. stad. 'A portion of her news has already been given. while performing a complicated operation with a marlin” | ding sails below and aloft and royals and rolling through A despatch from Trieste, dated the 28th, states that in | spike and a piece of ropo, received a visitation on the | pinccuisr gi Ss ee ame Garibaldi should stiempt a disembarkation on the | shins that in no wise tended to sweeten his temper. The | asian, which, left New ann a, | cagsenttin Cuecmmaiinri Awirian itoral, the Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian, as ] mild looking gentleman picked himself erage ny | and blow ‘quite freably, th the big ship, ‘again the fashion, She lowered = boat and two | force, the managers of the Great Eastern—or the mis- | _ As tothe actual state of the country, cannot give cemmender-in-chief of the Austrian army, would assume | red face, a black, greasy looking spot on the end ol the Australasian bad to clow down until | individuals came on board, one of whom, in navy uniform, | managers, as it turned out—advertised to take passong’rs Very encouraging scooaat. Wo are is tho mide of 6 ‘the personal and direct command of the naval forces des- | amiablo nose, and a bump om bis forehead. The old | scarce a reg was left exposed. The ‘arca of canvass | we were informed, was the ’8 pilot, who had on @ coasting voyage, from one in the United States to Lm eke 7, ad. marveien as fag ee, tho» uartermaster disappeared in search of a quieter com- | carried by the smaller vessel in to her displace: | to assist his less practiced another, at $10 per head. About 1,600 persons availed ue ree cron ee: ‘timed to repel tho attack. a ment had enabled her to hold ber own pretey well witha | A few minutes saw us St. Ann’s Head and | themselves of this novel excarsion. The Great Eastern | Pe! cause financial cmbarrassments of the Gordeto and Poteuza, in Calabria, are already in the | partment, muttering as be ascended the ladder something | favoring wind, but now that it was a question of steam- | standivg up a fine looking bay, strongly fortified at every | left New York on the 80th July for Cape May, and return. | ment. Owing to the reckleas Prodigaity and general pe- bands of the Garibaldians. about “sogers and Jubbers,” that we fear had reference | ing che ow rapidly overhauled, and goon lost in the fog ble point with defpnatve works still in progress. | ed to te Budsoe on the of Anecat.. He ship vas Sevens tocletete ye a hie — ris mo peer cinn F ‘opens seq again ; » ‘At Potenza there wil! be installed a provisional govern- | to the mild looking gentleman. The roars of laughter on our 1 enn anaes tharight baat Shin te hitard avon Saal ps po te pret idketioa of the inbebttante of Hahiaore, Thea, | those of he Sultan—even the army bas not received ip meat, which will pronounce the annexation to Italy un- | that greeted this little epizode were too much for the mild | gcarcely bad we got fairly past her when tho screw | fairly into this a noble sight presented itself. On the were two voyages slong the seaboard of the United ; | pay for more than eight months. 4s there is s na- er the tre of Victor Emanuel, the whole with the \ooking gentleman; he took the earliest opportunity to | stopped working. On inquiry and inspection we found | right of the entrance # large circular bay was filled with | and the New Yorx Mmxaxp thereupon raises the question we b remner onl between _ <— of people, q oe cana er ten, ane \'yamove the ranche,” and skittles know him uo more | i8t, large ron plate, oarrying one of the bearings of | a Seat of collier at eachor, forthe sbips-of war bad been | aslo whether abe could legally make auch, tripe without | Doo? therefore suffering from this non paymest, | Tbe agreem: ; screw shaft loose, This 2 . Outaide of these bark, proba selzure. a registered fall heavily A despatch dated Salerno, August 20, says:—An ex- } for the rest of the passage. shored up and Wredged tight, to prevent injury to the bly a store ship, for she was light as if she hed just | and io eapatas inthe onseting icone of toe Daitod the Rees cl a sm. ny guild of the preas bas arrived announcing @ demonstration st Foggia | Though Gull andelondy, the afternoon was suficientiy | ec enery, Tait ey eon mosh tothe disgust ot | longing vo dalean, manele i itisenatip ig bot dich amor. about a forepight ago all the operasives, vi of people and soldiers, who cried “Long live Victor | clear to enable us to sight Cape St. Mary, on tho Island of | (1, chil eonlones, heSak Ioithe anna entbed od the ne ‘A BRITISH FLEET. Oe te apahedl te the eee af tae Mites by | the diamond setters, buraishers, framers, ebamelers, £0.» Mmanvel! Long live Italian unity! Long live Garibaldi!” Newfoundland, about haif-past four P. M.: standing thence | steam. The awkward position of the messene Piste conned a - wine tee ee wo Deas. oe lee moored oat emigration from Europe to that continent, piace | Came together, and after ling together with 20 screw. wo i‘ tervals being filled summoned shift of wind, at fort s lose of four hours and @ half’s service of A out ‘Two companies of the Thirteenth, sre) oe ee eee payne f While working by themselves the paddle cugiaes showed | by the shipé forming the inner line, so that we steamed | zation on cheap and caty terms. Still, 1 they could ‘apcbor \o the bows without a check proscenium, the ship's carpenters rigged the stage, and pot down tbe movement, joined in it, minutes past five, from southeast to northeast, relied on to drive the ship at the rate them as if they were apparently in Indian file. | Great Rastern, there have been no The Sixth regiment of the line bad been sent to Potenza | brought down s dense fog that at once put | ot eight to eight knois and a baif an Bou. The night. af Fey consisted of tre beary frigate, the iadem and tbe | the American! laws in his reapect, and, short distance ver leaving New York our lereey, nine pattie ips, Mars, 13 peti aycbngin rst ti : creed tel hiss rabrige lawns na . ‘SOIRAMB MUMICALB Algiers, the Trafalgar, the Edgar, the Conqueror, the point bas been mooted as to whether the retailing of town it sent forth a unanimous cry of ‘Long live Victor | York. Being on the edge o! it Bron commenced with greater vigor even than on the passage ,the Abookin, the Royal Albert and the | liquors on board in American waters, and im the Ameri- Bmanuel! Long live Garibaldi!" and when it reached | fore, liable to run upon the dangerous Virgin Rocks, the | out. We have several talented amateurs amongst the besides eevee! ge boats and small sido- cae eonsting Uende, Je seks. Satbee ~ Anuletia resolutely refused to march against ite fellow. | ship was at once stopped for soundings, and then kept at | Officers and passengers, Loca pogengnepehargperredagene D are all fine ships, but to your cor | tom Bouse laws of the States, under which an Ttaeahchely ‘4 collisi Four times di the night | terest that it is now dimcul ere the gor- t's unpracticed eye the Mersey was queen | is exacted on all wines, malt liquors and spi leueed canines te talaaine eftizene. half speed to avoid collision. Four turing the night | ous ladies’ saloon after P. M., the bour when the | ship of the fleet. After her came the noble three decker, | was a rumor that the American authorities required ahem © an. to Getnine he octatendion, ‘A Naples deepatch of the 28th ult. announces that the | soundings were taken, until the gradually deepening | concert commences. Professor Jacobs & Brothers’ rongs, | the Royal Albert, bearing the tiag of Admiral Fremantle, | bail from the Great an Company to answer any Sune nm on oy eyoten EY en ed ‘troops in Calabria had again been beaten. water told us we were midway between the Bank and the | !mprovisstorial and ventriloquial performances have the officer in command of the squadron. action oo the part of government. This would a ds the goverament hes contrasteda loenb tone of veya) aga muuch to the general dng Ege corwaedlaadongad As we approached we could make out thatthe decks | be an awkward denouement to the first ocean voyage 92. ‘060 a ‘Foe insurgents of Basilicata were advancing towards | island, whence wo steered mid-channel course, degree to make this one of the most agreable pansages on | of these fine vessels were crowded with seamen, whose | of | the Great astern; but we suspect the un 600,060 piastres, at eight per cent a year, and the re- @alerno, and it was believed they would join Garibaldi About one A. M. of Tuesday, August 21, the fog began | recerd. dark blue shirts were relieved by the red coats of | graciousness of the prosecution bring down vend See ee, House (worth Se and march against Naples. te yet beteg Seen Dee Se ene wee Pap rmngeetpooy Hh copes paeaed A ays =A ved the 7 ante ary eng dw crowd of ou i og ee ‘cea aan ‘iw to sot an exansota of sien, ot to bia ocalay - ¥ sociabilit, ry i@ occur: in us, an juce Garibald had furnished arms to 10,000 inhabitants of | putat full speed on a great circle course for Caps Clear. these. trustcel gatherings oven evening. It supplies pawl ‘active fellows started aloft, until every yard was | even should notice of such bave been lodged. ney did the alge! Nee ors ee 000 fay g ‘abe province of Basilicata. A few hours’ steaming carried us well to the north of the | want which all sea voyagers must have felt, and it is sa- | covered with them standing upright and looking down it would bring promineatiy into light the protective ten- | & Yetr, 2 a toa eal Doatmen on Banks and into deep water; but the cold, cheerless at- | ‘ist to know that the musical taste and talents of | upon us. Some more hardy the rest _never stopped | dencies of american ‘and contrast strangely cooks been dismissed from , -» Capt. J. 'V. Hall are a sufficient guarantee for continuance ‘wail ceed the truck, where they remained sit- | with the extreme liberality of the British Parliament, | V' of SBOMEWARD TRIP OF THE GREAT EASTERN. mosphere of Newfoundland clung to us fully twenty-four | W1!.! he has command of the Great Eastern. tipg ‘and, in three or four instances tpositive- | wh: throws open our parts to the shipgiag of the | Avother important event of the day is the rumpus be- * | hours longer. By daybreak the wind had hauled round | By midday the weather cleared up to the pointof being | ly standing t until we had passed. whole world. An action of the sort make the enpreer tee if mgr neg and the seceders from. eee to the south, and trysails were got on her; but it was | quite agreeable, and the wind baled litle 20 as to As soon as we were abreast of the sternmost vessel her | shipping interest of England highly thank‘ ul for what bas | Ur ese mean the proseiytes to Protestantism—- Whe Arrival and Departure from Hali- E ay 4 make the fore and aft canvass draw. This gave the Aus- | crew gave us three chzers, 50 stmeMansously that it | beem done by the Great Eastern ; for, to pro- fa ed tal of one of their flock. You have doubt. N 4 © the V. too light to be of much use, soon got ahead again, and | traiagian achance. She was not in sight, but there was } sounded like the voice of one man, but wish a nobdle | voke an international suit which would the leadip; of it through the European journals; but ap sax—Interesting Narrative of the Voy~ | 11. ine sails lifting. A fortunate break in the lower- | no doubt she had crawled away abead again during the | volume of sound that its effect is indescribable. Of the country. into entertaining reciprocal | they are strangers to our domestic or internal troubles, 1. age—The Amuse on Board—S&it | ciouds about noon enabled the officers to get the | Period of our detention. The same thing occurred on one of the eleven ships | views, would be a gain to the cause of free nevigation. is patural eee St Gale onan Saree thes, Ventriloquism and Diablerie—The wal With this exception of an accident, not to the machine. | forming the squadron. Our John Buils were jubilant, ‘We may obeerve that the canvassing of this question ee ee unbiassed by prejudice. J if Pa usual observations, showing that we were in 48 degrees | leslt, thong eadcabten caused by the vibrations of | and, with eyes fairly suapping with delight, they returned will Jend Yo enlightenment, if it does bot detrect fFom tne refore endeavor to give you a correct statement of the: Behavior of the Ship and Passengers | 1. iatitude, 49 degroes 6 minutes west longitude, Dis. | the screw shaft, nothing have beon more eatisfacto- | this noble welcome in kind, but sadly detclent ones, both Wve views of the Senate and Congress. But theearn- | facts. You know that every community here has its own Arrival Home and Enthusiastic Recep= | 6, made 306 knots. FY than the parformanes of both serew sa paddle engines, in quality and amount. Tnere must certainly be something of, ‘was not meant to circumvent the | Particular burying ground, and these cemeteries bave tlom—The Great Eastern and the Navi- bo nuts required tightening, no key was driven during | very contagious in genuine enthusiasm, for before we repeal of the United Baates Navigation laws, Weoannot give ae ee to take care of the grounds. No Whalee spouted alongside during the afternoon, and | the whole trip. During one watch the screw engine was | were half way up the line your t, in common the managers credit for any notion. Their treatment | 90D can be therein Mg pee gation Laws, dc., de. rolled lazily on the same direction as ourselves, coming | got up to forty-four revolutions, just to test its capabili- | with all his fellow citizens, found himself shouting as | of the 1,600 excursionists is described as most shameful. the ere sete. On Friday, the uiime, a OUR BPROIAL CORRESPONDENCE. times quite close, on the suppositioa, probably, that | tes for such rapid work, and nothing ¢ould be more | lustily as any one there, He believes he received the in- | The ship is Atted to accommodate 300 passengers, and ory Armenian, Provesant commun ty died a6 sometimes qui oF ippesition, J satisfactory; but to do this continually there seems to be | fection from the captain and pilot on the bridge, who soon | she therefore had to provide shakedowns or mattresses }, and on g Sunday he was taken to cur MitrouD Haven, August 26,1800. | we were one of the party, but throwing their huge flukes | greater boiler power required. got to cheering mueh more vigorourly and waving their | for 1,300. These mattresses were piled in the cargo | burying ground a} Biimneb-Kapocesu. (the ‘Your readers will, long ere this reaches you, have heard | 119) in the air as they sounded in a great hurry on dis- Noon taw us creeping at eight andabalf knots | caps quite as excitedly as any one else in the crowd. | spaces, and some of the ) Wishing to as pow Ee ae heh of the commotion that the coming of the big ehip pro | covering their mistake an bour, in latitude 50 deg. 63 min. N., 24 deg. | The ebare taken by the American passengers in the vocal | much as possible between bodies and deck | Tea! usual » wi ‘Dot baving been ob- tle town of Halifax. Hai ing s shortly es » 25 win. W.; distance made $20 know. ime and } demonstration gratided our English cousins immensely. | planking, seized upon a oe ae tained bey @ were gomnges .. Thereupea our- @aced in the lit Metin pe VENTRILOQUISM AXD MAGIC. rain equalis alternated pretty equally, and by six P. M. ‘on the best of terms during the trip, your corre- | to pace the decks {nstead of getting rest. This was proof Provestan insisted uy werring their dead after the advent of the Prince of Wales, it is to be hoped | we were somewhat amazed this morning on taking our | Produced a very pretty phenomenon—that of rainbows t could see that there was a warmth and cordi- | of great disorder and utter want of regulation. Then, | Without ye ate keeper on his part that it will not inspire the worthy Blue Noses with a taste dial bo fed bane teres tem Reming a complete olreies« bty or ninety feet in diame- y in their bearing afterwards which is latent in the | egain, the provisions om board were, it is said, fair ty ht. — straggling Armeniane, thee ent-attho-un ftien 14 | unl snte-prandial promenade, svat ter, in front of the bows. charming women on the | English character until evolved cage Fe eo it quality and adequate in amount, but the atempt lon h-9 Rear, ae ee Serexcitement, for in a 7 vw posters cecupying various prominent positions in the | forecastle who witnessed the sight were loud in their | amce or by some such incident as that which just | commodate one hundred Ee in ‘saloon fF, ey took the part of the keeper, and’ ‘would be bard to gratify. They were much annoyed to | 911. gunouncing the early advent of Professor Jacobs, | Praises of the “beautiful thing,” and many were the | tranep seated at the tables, with tw: number standing —— o~ Pt Le having apreed tsrough hank that the ship contemplated no stay, but, like wensi- | 10 knelich magician, ventriloquist and improvisatore, | MDArt Teferences made to vhis emblem of hope, as typify. | it was a noble speciacie, and, x of our citizens | round ready to seine the first vacant Chair, Uarough tbe | ceeded in preventing the forcible bnostten. 8 cae best use of the brief iglish mag! . ing the future success of the ship aud a happy wind up to | who had sever seen & feet traly said, | agency of two or three miserable negro waiters, had by tbe Occupation our Die people, resolved to make the °P | who, under the patronage of Captain J. Vine Hall, | our voyage. worth having crossed the Atlantic to witness. | to obtain their supplies from a buffet, tended by another | rounds Protestants. portunity afforded them to inspect the monster veesel | 1, omcers and passengers, proposed giving an | ., Tbe Light which followed was similar in character to | Your correspondent paid for his share in the transaction —— of the same interesting race, to cut ae renal Lon ae an in their unjast de ‘that loomed go grandly in their floe harbor. b the .! Of edmis. | ‘20,“AY, changeable, but agreeable. The mooa, being now | by not being able to speak audibly for several hours af- and dribble out coffee by the cup, would fe age ane, © Sogiish and American Minietere,, the mad before n | CNS eatartnlament next day—price past the firet quarter, ebed her mild beams over | terwards, and being as hoarse asaraven a; this present | have been ludicrous if pesple had been in & ee righte Armeaian pa- ‘The anchor bad scarcely planged into the m sion, $1—the proceeds to be presented to the Dread- | the mimic waves that, with crisp cap of white | writing. tame of mind to appreciate the joke. The same in- , immed made an appoal to the Porte, and re Detilla of boats crowded round the port gaugway Iedder, | noueny Seamen's Hospital ship, in the Thames, foam, sped, on @ small scale, Rever ceaa- Tm AWUvAL. adequacy of means existed to meet the demand for abla- | | sired to our ib, Presest pereonslly, ageing’ excited natives came swarming up, diving to the bot- Wd 5 ipg ‘undulations of those lords of the Atlantic | Steaming up the Haven—which, by the way, forall | ion, aod even for water to drink. Washhand stands | ‘Dis injustice. At first their aad , Returning from © successful trip throagh the United | wno had ov lately rolled in solemn grandeur after the arposes commerce, is very little iaferior to our own | ould be found by diligent search, but no water. When | ‘Feat severity towards the Patriarch and the armenian tem of their capacious pockets to satisfy the demands of | sates and Canada, the worthy Professor and his obese big ship. ail wight the cud shadowe fitted over our bay of New York’—wo reached our anchorage at half | water was here ee 80 soap; and on to, ed erent ee fe peeve tg ood . house: “ ” broad 5 break came there our oi . M. broke Ducky: owels, tbeir absence matter meri cate they recogn! undeniad’ a. ce ~ ortlae deoneatacen ne on the after | fraternal relative, the fascinating “Sprightly,”” adopt. | Dic’ “iite'Hal, the austesiasian faraway ahead on the | beef Ue smalieat of the Poglish navy yards, but will | souree’? eet their places ian poset hand. | Of our nation, at oace relented and appealed to our pews. ed this mode of keeping their hands in for the farewell | port cow. She was carrying a press of canvass, and was | ne of great capacity and com; ‘to one who mea- | kerchiefs. Now, if this is a specimen of the public | 'osity, saying —That since the deceased was takan io the Al) the authorities of the town came off, many of the | porsormances they give in England prior to retiring to the | close hauled to the wind, evidently mak ing capital good | ures it by the standard of the Brooklyn ostablisument. | have to from the maegement of the Great Susp | &round it would appear unchariiable to turn off. the dead, offcers of the army and wavy bringing their families. | prades of private life. time, while we, wif one or Soe ‘There ie # thriving village in with the dock. will be deterred from poaesge Tne mags oui. be countered 0 on, Armenian. This ap~ Between of ‘ival aad dark several oe eee oe aan were yard, aod the town of Milford proper, which we passed | by Ifthe company could not cater for 1, Peal effect, and the Patriarch voluntarily ogered = the brief interval of our arr’ The wind soon hauled more to the south, and, though | almost entireiy on our motive power. We had evidently | :oming up, is growing rapidly. With the great natural | sons, what will they do when the ship carries, [erred wt yy UF the cemetery —for, Seen ote. Dundred people visited the abip. Forty-five of our pas- | \i2ht, managed, by running counter to northerly swell, | made up the twenty knots lost during our detention, and pa the location, there is no doubt that | to the estimate of the Board, uo less than 3,100? Had the tng lnvolved in the matter, be was willing to to seagers left us here, They stood around the starboard | 4 raise a slight watery commotion, amid which the big we bow began slowly toalter the bearings of our competi- Haven is @ port whose name is destined | managers given the hye to any shrewd | the wishes of the Ambassadors, who the act 4 \or, until io the afternoon we lost sight of her on the wea- | 19 become better known before many yeare roll over | waiter of a at New York be would have improvised | 10 the light of a special favor. meng mem aod gang way, waiting for the tug which they wore informed | pip rolled with considerable dignity, but, at the same | iher beam. Many of our passengers were ‘THE ENGINES. rome -and-ready tables to dino at least one-halfata | ‘wo Armenian functionaries, — Bey and» ‘wouki take them on shore, but no tug made Its appear. | tine, 9 somewhat unexpected amount of inclination. This ig the official report of the log and per- | ‘ime; there would have bean, no confusion if sickote Given Kishor Shendi, processes te burying ground to seo, after ill were tired, they wore engines. — had been served vat to and late diners. Thecom- | ®X Op ® spot. But the place which these gentle ence; 0°, oe pe ssi may be sccounted for from her being very light, pany bave saved the ‘ture of afew pounds at the | Men selected did not sult these deinded brethren, @bdliged to make bargains with the boaimen along. BER DRAUGHT. Leng. Din. cost of their reputation as managers of a great under. | WD0 style themselves the faithful disciples of Onrist. side, get their luggage down as best they could, and do- She loft New York drawing twenty-two fect forward and Ww he. Remarks. en bin te ‘on hiraion, a, - this concession 4 rs pace bar aed my tere sae, ae vob a ees Daulpal| | Soanbge of. fe Areas ioaterecaten soeuietp boaeveiest Kmbessadors, scare RY Baltimore, jar . . at. 4 Be spite of a very unnecessary detour to the southward, ducing power to the bard Welsh coal employed on the 442 0 02 Fd ‘Sandy Hook at 4 tne other sto of Ua, ere sever weg or ere Noted y's proper explain of te ae, wars nt pever 5 ‘some ea. She ehip made the run, against light bead winds andcalms, | outward passage. The conecquence was that much more 43/6856] 73 Arrived pilot 8:90, Halt Serpristng cltisen of une United Staten may sot tate the an cocurrence, You know that who. from Sandy Hook to the harbor, in forty-six hours. The | or i, wag required, and the more so that wo had ve 46 57 | 66.45] 318] fax 4:65 P. original ween. Tt 20 bappane tat ive | bad deen insane im time past, doubtless @istance run by the ship was 650 knots. Your nautical | pounds more pressure of steam in the boilers. The large 48 00 | 49 00 | 906 [Lett do. 6:50 A. M.; left | Yankee discovered some time since that s might be eee OES rem coeaee 4 data to figure out for a recs tenlt 60 10 ) 44 44) 320) pilot 9:60 Fased propelled, edventageonsty by the waited agency of tee become tbe spoleeman of the Froesiania. He, readere will be able from these daily consumption lightened the ship rapidly—at one 61 00 | 32.46 | 340 for six hours | screw and paddies, and be forthwith is ey ae te ‘themselves bow far she went out of her way. She never | ining of w foot per day, She was, therefore, one anda 60 68 | 2626 | 820] off Cape, and discovery , which comes tan bean paatel ty nee. i Sea fantionarics, began to abuse: re en tn rr nt te ent a | ht he sy hn eg te S8/48] 2] Seat | Seer ceeremasekices | aad tres sommes Secreto Gistance of Gfty-four knots, te a alent considerably below her lightess load water line. sau . . in mede 73 to St. Ann’s Head, the counirie he pteniea had ‘no remedy: at, che Ship rays ler him wo promt bu they ‘wore checked tea sixteen knots an hour. The ship of paddles was fo Wednesday, August 22, commenced with much the | puter ae Aye a erga seve - = ving ae entered the trade of socident interment was, of course, to beso great on the run up that on the arrival at Halifix | sine kind of weather, light southwesterly winds, damp | io command.” The foul sate of the bosom, cane 5/000 miles, Sums, bectvew has hin gaont Ran born | Eirenak te esis toe Geico” One tt eee the able engineering stail went to work to rig outthe | ,incephere and cloudy sky, but gonial, agreeable tom: bs, Mn, nd hs Pa, a Mave of War, aren Seat boards two fect further. All vight the huge wheel | poesture, ‘Towards noon the sun oocasioually glimmered oy Dy 8 regiment of soldiers engaged in. rang with their stardy strokes, as they unscrewed | for , moment or two through « break in the clouds, and who were geting omena my his biguienaea” shee? pots and drew out bolts; but it was eight A M. of San- | our worthy captain and chief officer, sextant in hand, tice towards them, and throwing themeclves in day, August 19, before their task was completed. dcdged him most perseveringly about the decks, but the way 20 a to the procedure. Tee At baif-past cight « signal gun was Gred and the biue | wisnout much success. The observations, guch a ‘and ordered the soldiers to drive them off at the poins peter hoisted. The reverberations of the report among | they wore, gave 60 deg. 10 mim. N. lat., 41 deg. 44 min. Ube bayonet, and about twenty were wounded. ee ee eee ad the pone | Se ne Se, Deen the saelness APFAMS IH TURKEY. towards 0s sonrmes maniveses who taty ust oaeiees Clustering down to the water's edge, the piers | ire swell increased and the ship rolled quite considerably, yy yh 6. Racine Fy their to their ground. At Yr and shipping soon presented a densely packed mass of | 4: pon the equare sails on the foremast were set, but da Nag AY aoa ey rn ee ye a Our Constantinople Correspondence. ‘wounded. national cause, the mpectaters, while the windows sad roof 0’ every house | the breeze was light and the ship seemed to steam away A, the above it will . when the fury furnished their quota of eager gazers. High over all, at | pom it, for the saile Aapped at times as ia a calm. ‘nocommodation, aa ‘verse! has been nearly fourteen knots an N Commaxturoris, August 6, 1860. SS eye te, the gate of the frowning citadel, the main guard tarned fim wear, nan an bi yng aw as | Tasted 8 grave to be dug outside of our burying ground, (owt and stood round the motionless figure of the seatinel, At eight P.M. the passengers flocked en masse down on my pana Ae ery \dopted by vo we a on & picturenque group, maguitied by the dim mist of the | into the afer cargo space, where, by presving into his amd most comfortable Porte Reston f 6 5 wanedbatanry ab ober of our = ye wil lease ek morning into the stature of giants. With a cheery song, | soryine all the gay colored bunting in the ship, our gen- nl i Buberrenments Turkish Gow | was the secret motive which produced such a. @bundred stout fellows manaed the buge capstan bars, | tiemanly mateof the lower deck, Mr. W. A. Davis, had 7 ef the chip and, peasengers, sed to You te aa menaing Sate Os BO aaa | SREY. 4 truth, io the tween the Armenians Protestants—Qonduct American minionaries have Bot comed and with a stamp and go, that rang along the broad deck | rigged out quite a tasteful impromptu theatre. Professor 7 pam gy Bot oaly through their ramp legion of out » oi ht the Jacobs’ ampie atores supplied smart Drocaded damask Tn American Mismonaries, dc. organ, \nedaper bat o_o ° a etsy apt be . - Since 1 wrote you last so many important events have Jeta, and ookosssed te a, since. ‘THE FINAL TART FOR Howe. As noon as the dash of the paddies whitened the water alongside, tbe colonial flag was ralvted with four guns, and et fity minutes past eight A. M. the Great Eastern, unde" full steam, stood out to sea, on ber way to the fair land that gave ber birth. A few minutes suMficed to lose sight of the gazing thoumands that with bat and kerchief waved her “God epecd”’ on ber voyage, and as we marked the fast reoedigs shore, and the foam fying like a miil race past her graceful counter, all felt that, unless some untoward check eooorred, the next Sabbath morn would see ber Fiding ip the placid waters of Milford Haven. An bows run took us clear of pilots’ ground, Padidie and screw ceased their busy revolutions, for @ moment qolied back the seething tide, and the great ship ay motionless, while the pilot's dingy was lowered end be and hie two men embarked. Their parting * burrabs” came but faintly to our cars aa the ship gatbered way again, but the vigorous response from ony willigg throats was probabiy more fuccemsful in ite mis. +tem. Lost ever and anon between the long swells that ‘wees: i!] rolling {rom the southeast, the litte boat strack out hravely for the abore, fading quickly to a epeck that al last ovas seen po more ‘The morning was dul) and loworing, with light winds (Grom the castward and as we commenond our course slong the rugged coast of Nova Scotia, sweeping fog ‘wreaths would cavelope |t from time to time and hide it from our view. Fleets of American Ashing schoocers, rumning gocee-winged before the wind, stood in for ghe fend, appearing and disappearing in the mist like spec: Crem, aa they glided mmeothly along. By two fF. M. the wind freshened and blew =p ram; bot thie cleared away a the sun went Gown, weaving the northern horizon well defined, eo the: when carknes) closed around we wore @laddened by the sight of White Island and Cranberry Highta on our port beam, shining out brightly aad telling of dangers tha: we wore leaving rapidly behind. Rigging @ut the paddle Boats seeme:! to have anewered well, The tip was reporied 10 be much reduced, and, although the Fevolot ion: were algo redeced from twelve to ten anda (hall, the sbip’s speed was increased. The log told of f/teea gd fiftees an! a half knots an hour. Monday, Auge: 20, commenced with true Bank won sher—iuil, lowering and damp. We shivered with the re eodection of the genial warmth we had so lately Jef, aod pooght refuge |B Bick conta nod boots against the loaidi- 60 Bass Of adee Blip TAI Mie Towards noon thy when the curtain rose the potent wizard and the face- tious “Sprightly”’ were discovered, surrounded by a mass of thetr glittering apparatus, littie inferior to that displayed on admilar occasions on lerra firma. It = unnecessary here to tell bow ladies’ rings, gioves ane handkerchiefs were locked in a box before the eyes of the fair owners—nay, given into their own delicate hands to keep watch and ward over—and how, in spite of all this, a wave of the magic wand, aad the simple command “Pase!"” from the lips of the mighty magician, were found suffictest to convey them, invisibly, from the box into the centre of an orange on a tree that blossomed and pore fruit before the eyes of the audience; how gentle men’s watches and coin were transmitted !o the same mysterious way to the innermost of & nest of boxes that bung suspended over the heads of the epectators; or how « magic glass bell rang of tte own sccord, in anewer to the ques tions propounded to it—never making « mistake when pass away an evening thet was most agresably wound up by an improvised rong on each discordant themes aa “Great Baectern,” “Sherry Cobier,” “Pickled Egg” and “Worcestershire Sauce,” which were euggested by the audience. There waa bot one drawback to the pleasure of the oa- tertainment. that was the undignified behavior of the big ship. Rolling along, with a ewnggering alr, which might have been accounted for if hosting on anything stranger than salty water, she capeized ‘Lilliput Hotel” and the “Megic Windmill, Great wae the fall thereof, aod email ey | e D i on, we ber. Evrene this may be ite game. if : : NAUSEA MARINA, Some cighteon of twenty geutiemen had jurt mounted to the deck and were waiting to offer their amsietaces to | the Indies, Suddenly they appeared to discover some- thing of great Mtereat to |, forgetting the fair re- | mporsibilities that were mounting the ladder. They | | started of in the darkness with remarkable speet ‘od cemy of pepo, aed woah duane, names of the pamengere | To this Captain Ball wrote the following reply — Grzat Rastens Brea Cartate Wu. Monnim, Royal ‘Sin—it emir, at Sea, August 25, 1860, savy — aki Ht HE tT F i: gs a) i i il i att i i \ : tommy | * — ! a ee) 33 SSBBESES | un il s i ry a 2 ¥E3 dei a= ESF EW 35 i 425i e i if * g H |. another Sunday, In the case of the district of Soutari, 5 = if al 3 = is S = g i i = #3 £1 hl i = E class or caste, but have, #0 far, selected reliable and patri otic men—dankers as well ae tradespeople, literary ws a2 EE i i u -, 5 i 2 f ii 33 i in 7 i H Hi : F f E 5 } iy i i i tell z 5 vincos, and the seatiment of the whole Armenian nation 237 i # i HH E i | i | All-absorbing topic of the day is the privilege of real self. ‘be embas- government among us, the Armenians. As you were the | mdors. You can teat the recent originator of that movement I suppose you will be glad to | SStauty for ‘im eee, bear the particulars of its progress. I am happy tomay | wo bury’ thetr where bey on. tae bo one can inform you better on the subject than your | had no right’ Was the on armenian > bumble servant, who bas the honor to be one of tne elect, for lam an M. C. After great opposition and intrigue on the part of the Amiras, tbe Armenian nation has finally succeeded in adopting ® constitution for itself, amd the Porte was obliged at this time to listen to the voice of tho people is ij : i he and grant ite sanction. As on every similar cocasion, the toy iS a Sam sho first thing to be done is the formation of the body politic, Syne, Soary regu to ja the national council; ro on Sunday, the 8th ult,, in the af- Stotmense yy be tmrnoon, the work of election commenced in good earnest | Gent The bed two ben fs in various parts of the metropolis. The polls were held ‘ribose cnt ae Soe one of the secoders,. in the vestries of the different district, under the sur. | WhO Bede « ons, as | veillance of a committee and the presidenoy of the varte- ede (spiritual heads) of the different churches. Every johaneas, val Up sian thing went of quietly. All taxpayers or real Se fasten ert were duly registered and allowed to vote, could do either in person or by letter, the "3 g if if iy eee i! in behalf of this or that clique or individual, but the peo- pie were left entirely free to select thetr ewn candidate, ‘The majority of the votes cast elected the person, and where such majority was wanting it wae postponed to i i out of eight representatives only six being elected, remaining two are to be chosen from the four candidates who had, during the last election, received the largest number of votes. i if He i I: i Tiel j i i : f i to be actuated by one motive, viz, the good of the nation; henee they bave neither shown partiality nar aversion to if fi i it well as illiterate. The consequence is, that we shail have wisdom as well as practical common sense in our pational council. Letters of congratulation are pouring in from the pro- i i | | 3 et ia evidently unmistakesble. I will of course keep you | “TAINO | statement oan any body bare the etron Gu courant of aii our doings, Ac, Yousee that we haye | to agousp ue of bigotry, “ier, Tanatnien,

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