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2 NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, SEYTEMBER M. 1860.—TRIPLE SHEET. rate of affairs in Austria, the movements of large bodies | men. dy the way—the lower-clasnes—wear no bonnets at | friend say what they will—was never ro ardent, 80 ab- iy of Russian troops southwards, with the meetings and con- | all: in teu thereof an old ang on their heads | sorbing, I may affirm, in the French breast as now. . INTERESTIN 4 F?0M EUROPE. Tereuet and jarueyiogy of every of crowned | andomming down over thelr shoulders asa sort of cloak), | This thorn! genoral report prevailed at tbo various roorerch, from Crar to Grand Duke, the general | one would ine that ther sombrero filchiog was & | embaseies ‘the King of Naples had fled. It was said _—e ~~~~ ” agitation of political affairs. The flight of the King of | very laudable undertaking. ‘that the agents of the King of Piedmont had’ exercised * THIS PORT. | Siamige, the pressees oo Eta es , phe journey of hese litte traits, of character are worth not themselves 00 anaisuonaly i the “services” that all as 4 ‘apoleon and his Empress to Lyons, » Savoy | as failing imdicat enterprisin; reliance given way. Those mon ve ARRIV} if THE ASIA AT ‘and Nice, sll point ip one dination ta ueakel ep caen and 1 “haeg’ ne coat | hot ‘the eotrati ‘stood by the tottering King epuid not do so with the hope to be op @ greatly enlarged Cate Within a week Lex- | fehermen of the lagoons of Veniaw, a thousand years ag0— | of apy Support in the hour of tris), and from this and other peet to hear that Louis dropped in an@ | when the energies of the Galwagians are directed in more | flying rumors the report above mentioned was prevaleat. T7{REE DAYS LATER NEWS. mace a friendly call on hie brother and companien | legitimate commercial channels, it will make them a great ¢ certain information was expected to night, but too ‘narmes, Victor Emanuel. Grea’ events are. in store for | and prosperous people. late, I fear, for the poss. the writers of contemporary history, and perticularly for Among the ‘upper ten” Galway has all the character- ze telegraphic Reapated of the 30th from Marpeition, ” tbe actors; and in this we, on this side, preeent quite a | isticsof @ country village—full of coteries, jealous contrest to your thirty millions of people’ who are ¢uietly | cliques and equabbles, intwbich the pareone—at least . ~ we hear that on the 224 Fuad Pacha ordered sevent; the Dur Londor, Calwa”, Paris, St. Peters- | electing a President and gathering in your bountiful c murderers to be banged at Damascus, ons hundred and ten of the soldiers to be shot, and compelled three of them—play a conspicuous part. Ia the political, na of cereals, to feed atl the world and all the world’ teal, commercial, ee eal ay municipal, gocial, mo- | thousand of the inbabjtants of the city compromise? in 1 r li Corres on “ence, ders. ral, religious, clerical aud journalistic atairs of Galway | the late scenes io be enrolled in the army. Four thou- burg 2.¢ Perlin Correspon-ence. Why Jet the stricken door go weep, the geif elected leader for inay years has been a Jesuit | sand five hundred reneh soldiers had lauded at Beyroat. heart led play ; priest—one Rev. Pcter Daley. ‘ile professing to be & | The wife of Garibaldi, about whom so many strange - For some must watch while some mutt sleep: man of great self-denial, disinterested and patriotic, be | reports have been circulated, is now at Marseilles, iatend- ‘Thus rune the world away. bas managed to amase a large fortune. The bish- | ing, ed oa Pedy ted over to Civita Vecchia. Sue is a Mr. Lindsay’s Mission to the ‘You attend to your immediate affaire of growing end | op of the diocess being a very meek man, be got bin un- | daugbter of Marquis Raymond, an Italian noblemao coneolidatipg into ® powerful nation, aud one of these days | der his thumb and induced hit to throw reveral parishes | of immente wealth, and wag married a short time ago to y you may be called upon to join ina grand struggle of into one, and make bim the parish priest. He enjoys the | Garibaldi. Some reports state that be‘ore the marr United States. Whole workd, where barbarism, papscy abd superstition, | rcmmesnat priveely income of over’ six ihousant dollars | was coseum nated such dampiug evidence was placed op the one eide, may be pitted against constitutional go- verpment and progress on the other. That struggle— perbaps in thirty or forty years from no ay be as merabdie ag the Crusad f the Mitale 4, Improvement in the Weather | urtes'Gcy tievee utes cue neat 2° fciaimont at e cure of their souls by a large number of per- | Others say that, about three weeks aft-r the marriage & great many of whom are ry dregs the lacy wes caught in ‘This coneiets of voluntary contributions, given | Garibaldi’a bands that he immediately quitted ber. im the ver; of igving with @ courier, There y. He knows which pide his bread is buttered; | is evidently some strange mystery with which the world ably like Bob Southey, be butters iton both sides. | is rot generally noqusinted, and the lady's present inten- pr ‘Trieete, on board the Avewian frigate Kaiser, The firet | Without apy family, be resides in a palace; keeps re- | tion of going over to Italy may not be ‘so indicative of a in England, officer had a hole bored through the side of the powder | tinue of rervants, one or two very food looking nes; | reconciliation, or refatation of calumny, ss is ally megezine, and bad got bis wire aud ch ingerted to ; gives parties, balls and route, and ‘fares sumptuonsly | sup . If the evil reports be true, what s glorious blow all on board to perdition, when he wae heard, dis- | every da; This much it ig necessary to know in order poe ‘tion bas this eilly woman abandoned, Who would not Aw 4 the wi’e of such a hero, and sit—if only for one hour— ~—_—_ covered apd veied, and he had just time to make a rud to appreciate the stereotyped opening of all his »; Cen eait frow the world by & pistol bullet fired through | when, after thanking for their very flattering | on the throne of Naples ? his head by his own hance. It was the occasion of a fee | recept‘op, the ‘unexpected applause,” Ac, &c, he tells The weatber whieh, since my last, seemed to have its Depressing Effect on the Price tivity in whicb some prince of the royal family was to them with the air pe ne ey ‘an Aminaoab Sleek, | aeeumed an entirely vew sapects bes te the last two or play apart. It was anticipated that the explosion di. tLat he jg really ‘‘a very bumble person; “only a poor | three days returned to its former evil ways, aud any of Breadstuffs. Fecily (a the midat of great Dawber of vessels sould | pricet,” ‘‘deslsoue of polhing bas te do good,” he. thing more triste tban ite appearance now cannot’ by ima- have caveed a vast destruction of property and life, but A short time since he was dismissed from the chaplaincy | giped. The earth is covered with abundance, which the design wag fortunately frustrated of the Union Workbouge by the Town Commissioners, and | most inevitably perish without speedy sunshine. voyage of cight days from Halifax. The Secretary has | higher avthorities, but be received no sympathy or re- pied now deprived of their patural ae vublisbed a letter etat! that she will return to New | dress. He tried very hard to be elected irman of the \d Empress, are away 8 ‘ ‘ i 3HE NEWS FROM CALABRIA. The Great Fastern has arrived at Milford tiaven, ina | he tried to get their decision reversed by appealing to ‘The Prince Imperial avd the Princess a , o York on the 17th of October. That will give am opporiu Peard of Harbor Commissioners, saying he wauted the po- | are the only Imperial Highnesee: - bave to evliven us. nity for large numbere of American tourists now in | sition “to do the place good.” The Commissioners, how- | It is curious to wateb there STRATEGICAL MOVEMENT OF GARIBA LD | rarer eee eee eee nome suk’ | {laveaives more spaces plete Coir ea! ccser | and dattig us tort respettine cease a ness occurred on board. She is undoubtedly, by along {| ty than he deserves from any merits or demerits of hi uch they are way the Gnest passenger ship ever built. own, bot in writing about Galway, to omit noticing Rev. bo futore inflmence either may bave on the fate of the 0. rid Already the little Prince ees * , © wavguration of street rail 8 wok place yeater- | Teter Daley would be a greater otpesion than the play of prac: the royal IMPORTANT FROM SYRIA | auvatmirenhead, where tir, George Francis train exaibi. | Hemiet™ with the “'telangholy Dane”™ left out. | excreise of centuting,”” and gete through this Arat a of and ted to a very distinguisbed company, of eome five J shall bave to take up the eubject of the commercial | kingcraft exceedingly well. or six bundred pertone, the style and manner of the | rerources of Ireland otber busicess matters in my The Empress bas Destowed & Yankees in carrying on their city trafiic. Mr. Dargan, | next Ictter. Laat evening there was a great dinner given | chain, enclosed in an elegact case, with ber arms en- Bxecution of One Hundred and Eighty of Dublin, the great railway contractor; Mr. Juho go yy the citizens of Galway to Mr. Lever nod Mr. Roebuck, | graved, on the young woman who had the houor of o 4 be goer Be Lace sont Bp apr tye ot onen dl aD haga: ‘ pF ber AJ reece th ‘nto the silk the " jayor® and Aldermen of nearly every city and large towa | por! ©. Gray, made a cap! speech, r opportunity of weaving | letters Moslems at Beyrout, in the ingdom, were present and gave tbelr moat un- | 40d” the speeches of Lever aud Rocbuok | ber own name fovrder and detender of the packet service to this | pluc'tg’ the shutile ta her band at Lyone, and affording qualified testimony and opinioos 8 favor of street rail. | were long and Joudly epplaudet. Mr. Lever The salaries of all the public fanctionaries through Saannaanaanene As promalicd by horee power, “Young america”! in | bad never spoken or defended bimee™ fYom any of the | France, iis tid, are to be s 7 ‘this, as io other matters, wil undoubt eminen' etatements accurations, however absurd—and re: ANTICIPATED RISING OF THE MOSLEMS. | rucceearut. He is next ong to open some of the wren | they wore moobebuerd ansienieanses= but Tan night be Panis, Avgust 29, 1800. Prpenenia ty highways in the streets of Manchester and Birmingham, | explaived bis whole course, and evidently to the entire * aa . J Steamship affairs are undergoing the ueual changes. | spprobation of his audience. | When it comes to be pab- ¢ Death of Mrs. General Harney WARLIKE PREPARATIONS IN FRANCE. | 77s tetve: ractna toe, omen? Soeszi ec tant | Lages,!em eure Be will ang Bigher hen tosever ban). Mra Mareen, wie of General Samay, of ‘he Uae ‘ven left on the 24th instant im command of young Mr. Hus- The weatber continues a8 cold and stormy as ever, and #ey—a most capable and talented young a nephew | the prospects of @ good harvest more and more discou- | °8 Monday last, 27th. The funeral service over her re- of Mr J R Croskey, ana for some time the first officer of | raging. mains took place at the Charch of St. Philippe, Faubou: FWRBNESS IN AMERICAN SECURITIES, | (i. uiamer Vanderbilt, when commdaded by Captain | Xpur correspondents in London and Paris undoubtedly : - = Biggics. The Apgio-Laso line broke up, or rather | give you the Intest Intelligence from taly. artoaldl ia Honora, v1) 8 Gonoiemn and imposing crenentats &e., &e., &c. ceased, not for want of English or Brazitian patronage, | fairly op the mainland with a large force, which is being | of the Roman Catholic Church, of which she was «mem- es to be Excel ‘bat op account of the treachery, false promises and meaa- | augmented daily. His motto stil! conti ness of the Portuguese goverument and the plunter of | stor! Portuguese agents. The whole scene of Portuguese com served her sop, son in-law and nephew, Mr. ner, American Minister; Mr Calhoun, a planter from Louisiana: ber. Amongst those who dia honor to ber remains | ob- ‘Fhe steamship Asia, Captain Lott, which sailed from | mercial affairs is one of wholesale plundering. treachery Our Paris Correspondence. Colopel Stewart, son of Commodore Stewart, and many Liverpool at ten o'clock on the morning of the Ist inst., | and koavery. : Paam, dngest St, eee... | SSR, deen se peeehiet ne ae and from Queenstown on the evening of the 24, arrive:l aan ea yes. eee rg Another Important Specch—The Power of Prance—The x tere at one o'clock yesterday after noon. ance and in ite shares lately, and bas a brighter pros. | Syrian and Sicilian Imbroglioe— Effect of Queen Vic- Our Berlin Correspondence. ‘he Jura is advertised to take the place of the Cana | pect than ever for a fikavle career. Iu the mouey tovia’s Speech in France—Reported Plight of the King Brnuix, August 29, 1860. i . ‘ article of the Time to-day, relative to the pri dian, leaving Liverpool for Quebec on the 6. instant. stocks aa. eran fn Treaid, we yA sg ‘Foe adjournment of Parliament iad led tow dead calm | ey quoted, are" improved in Gonwoquonce of tm politics in Fogland. roceedings in Galway, where the town gave a spieadid | other from M. de Persigny, with which at the present | gerial Oumferences, dc. A letter from Captain Young, of the Arctic craiser Fox, | Danauet to Mesere. Lever and Roebuck ou the opcasion of . @atea Haidersing, Avgust 7, states that the Fox was on | aga perfect ovation of the mos: enthusiastic and cordial | by M de la Gueronniere, of & Naples—Movements of Garibaldi—The Weather, dc. | The Police System im Germany—Police Congress at Stutt- late To the two specches, the one from the Emperor, the gert—The Unity of Germany—The Effect of the Late Im- their late visit, The welcone to Mr. Lever was described | ™oment all Europe ie ringing, s third has now been acted A Congress in aemall way bas jnet come off at Stuttgart, whose status as a political writer | which, though leas noticed than the royal meeting at the point of etarting for Iceland, afver a successful survey | deecription. The e} be delivered at the juet, and | attached tothe imperial councils entitles bim to almost | Toplitz, is not quite uncopnected with {t, being im fact a @f the Farce Islee for the purposes of « North Atlantic | it? the Fpeech ol Gray, of the Dubin Freeman's Jovrna?, Show conclusively that the outery inat the] ¢7ual attention. product of the system that led to, and is to be consolidat- telegraph. founder of the Galway line was a piece of tophittry and But, in fact, the harvest in this direction bad already | ed by, tbat interview. The Congress in question was one ‘Me sirike among the weavers of Coventry was atan | treachery from which he has suffered from the commence. | ment. Ho bas not been the chairman or the Deen gathered by M. de Persiguy. M. de la Gucronniere | of those annual police conclaves which, as has been men- nd. The weavers, after severe privations, Eocepted the | fia he nae been ina minority on the board ever Tboting | bas scarcely found enough to make a gleaner’s sheaf. He | tioped by me tn previous letters, were first introduced by the terms of the employers. frat three months; and pow \t is clear that he has not | takes for bis theme the arsumption that Frangs 's too | the notorious Von Hinckeldey for the purpose of concert- ‘The fret street railway in Englend, upon the American | beep in the remotest degree responsible for the | strong for Europe, and its goverament too atrong for | ing measures to keep down the eplrit of democracy, and wretched management of the company. The whole Principle, was formally inaugurated at Birkenbead ou the | matior has been 60 dreadfully mismanaged that now it | France iteelf—an assumption which he demolishes bys | to nip in the bud any attempt that might be mate to Bed of Avgust, and the general impression was highly | is that there is to be an © recon: jeo. F. . | Struction of the board and of its officers. Noth’ less Gaverabie. Mr. Geo. F. Train, the promoter of the enter. | trl oie 7 the sighs fects France has strengthened herself by the annexation of | many. To attaia this end the police administra ttesue of truisms and a mass of unmeaning verbiage. | breathe with a little more freedom in police ridden Ger- Prive, gave ® grand Fanquet at Birkenhead in honor of the | regard and confidence of the Iriah people, with whom lies | Savoy and Nice; and is England to twit her with this, | tions of the various States formed a sort of mutual as @vent, and delivered a characteristic go ahead speech. | the main support of the line. whose apnezations in India bave been incessant, and who | surance company, by which each of them became Mr. Train's efforts to introduce the system in Lovdon, | _, lt has transpired in the exemination before the Packet | nes « sentinel placed in every port of ibe ocean? Prussia, an It were a ring in the great chain of deepotiom, anda Committee of the House of Commons that Mr. Lever re- Debio, Manchester and elsewhere, were meeting wth | fused the offer of the Canadian Company Inst September | Austria and Russia bave ail bad their annexations,andshali | system of cepiounge was established that extended ite 8 proportion of every euccess. to sell the contract when he held ro not France accept—for she did not seize them—tittle Sa. | ramifications all over the country, and perverted the an its then issued shares; thet be could ha’ Me Londen Tincs, in a leader on the subject of Mr. | M5, qhen lmued waren that he could ite orn ‘Voy and Nice? As for the government being 106 strong | original functions of the police from an institaton des- Lindsay's mission to America relative to shipping mat- | would bave injured Galway by changing her ai | for Fraace, 1” by this is tts the | ie ie Jers, raises a objection to the appointment, and takes ex. | connection from the United : 7 : “1 ee ined for the protection of life and property into an en eeption generally to the policy of taking the business of asta a pane Se gongte of @ tay who he country out of the bands of the responsib!e ministers | Guerce of ae States to Canada. Press, it is mot so much the action of the government | gine of political oppression. The chief object of their de- conse. | ‘Dat imposes these as the improved manners of the age, | jiberations this year consisted in devising some meant ery intimate association wih ® Jesuit priest | which reflect upon the execution, and demand that a | to put « stop to the activity of ihe National Bt foreign courts and placing jt iu the bande of novices, | of the name of Peter a of ap arrogaat, over. | check shall be given to Nicentiousness, assuming for ite | Verein, ational association, which bas lately | pearing disposition and dictatorial character,and who, by ‘who purchase, by rerving the country for nothing, a most a vatural consequence, is most un} with a very | Stise the mantle of liberty. becn the great bugbear of the reactionary govern- @mlien ited |icenee for mismanagewent. large pumber of bis towpsmen. Roebuck, bav: In regard to the interruptions which bave occurred in | ments. You are aware that thie association sprang up Mrs. Yotcr, & on @ celebrated actress in London, is | thrown bimeelf, arms, body and sou), into the custody the imperial pacific programme, be says the questions re- | ‘ast summer during the excitement occasioned by the the Rey, Father Daly, bas csused much merriment tn emt. England—an example of the decadence and deciine of a | Mating to the East and to Italy were nog of the Emperor's | Talian war, aud is composed of delegates from Our London Corre Vor of the banger on of a fourth rate priest. Lowpow, August 31,1800 | aro the mighty fallen! The once keen and cutting Sheffield mdience. once powerful and influential politician tothe posi- | originating, but existed long before his time. Hehas | diferent para of Germany, members of the perish How | simply the merit of giving them e legitimate solution. No | state Legisiatores, avants, and men who took Rageried Fighi of King Bomda—Landing of Garibalii at | diate, ae a wiity joursalis: bas said, “transformed into | °@ Reed be afraid of France in her power, for ber mode | » conspicuous yart im the events of 1848 Toeir Reggie—Discription of the Surrounding Coun'ry—The | %# old buffer.” ration is ever pre-eminent. It is only in ber injurious | avowed aim is the covetitutional apity of Germany, which, Difcutiiea of Garalds's Prttion—Kowwh's Muce Our Galway Correspondence, or many Se Pl son ge nes, olen bowever, they hope to bring about by evnciliatory tenis—Singular Attempt to Blow Up the Austrian Pi Garwar, Ireland, August 28,1860. | ™ sie . victor of Solferino, is leas to be | measures, without having recourse to revolutionary ag! gate Kaiver—Spread of American Meas in England— | Sem Stick's Opinion of Liverpool—Commercia! Proopecta eo. pres dryer sen tation, They propose to reform the numerous abuses in Br. Lever and the Galway Line, de of Gainay—irish Opposition to the Galway Subsidy — speech Persigny will have already reach | the admixistrat on, by laying open all that is faulty and Jt le reported here in pot veal circles that the King of | vw Raslwaye Projected= Revival of Businas—2he Beg. | 270% #8 alee the English comments thereon. Ihave | rotten in it, and applying eficient remedied against mis Naples tas left bie dominionr—tsland, continental and | care of Galway, de. ‘been curious to examine (he effect it bas produced on the | governmentand other grievahces. Thay wish 10 do away fal—apd tat be tas Jef Nobody knows, end nobody cares. Be bas taken away thirty million ducats in mpecie with im ; and really, that war quite teo bad, The best joke of his distinguishing mark is bis utter devotion to the per- | of tLe police and the bureaucratic in the concerns of ‘his war—thie grand theatrical performance on a large | ‘He much talkea of and lately opened packet port on the ton of Napoleon; and what be has sald oo the preseat oc. Yate invioni, Bot above alley are ensboo cts casion i believed to be perfectly sincere, and the real | auspices of Prussia, in a sense favorable to the libertice geale, where comedy and farce were strangely Interm'xed pe sey = gin tt hang the railway ste- With trngedy—the dest scene in the performance would | “2: the traveller walks directiy into the Rail- | 1.5 of Napoleon's mind as imparted to Persigny. In | of the people, and We to vend the Washington, or some otder steamer, after | **Y Hotel, attached to te station, and the property of I : there, then, to be an end of war and war's alarms! the Stromboli and capture her, epecie, courtiers, king- | PC Company, It is built of cat granite, and rosembies Tam | displayed in, Bere 2 z t of ii and Hanover. afraid men in France do not so read the signs of the | were cotertained of ding (you know a young duck Is called duckling) and all, | We Astor House, Dut ie lee han bait ino size. le fronts | mes. ‘They aay the language of M. Fersigny, stripped Fiveled, but ae i has eae ery te Jnl tem, Hf be could be brovght back and tried for deserting his | °P* *™all park, or public square or six scree, 10 | or ig outer garb, means simply that France, having an- | Si@ 'ssiend of prompt ecergeie sean, tbe her tenets bane the centre of the town, but from which the unwashed ; members bave been creaming away time in that mingsom, 1g outrage: }, buman and di. sumed an eminent position, wishes to be let alone and | state of emi 00 peculiar to German poiiti- vine, aod then taken to Piezo and banged on the very | Crowd Are encluded-—eighboring householders aly | 4. srerea to cultivate the arte of pence, while the proper | class, whe are as iA es they are atven. greurd where poor King Murat was shot, it would bean | Dolding tallemanic heys of admisaion. Galway is un- consequences of that posttion gradually work themselves teres Te tecry Nevertbelas te Kote BOY set of retributive jrtice, Bat his people win | @estionably destined to Agure among the commercial | Tr nurs ss ao, he on Sake filed the kings and privoes with fear eveniy oar be avenged by bie leaving country, throne and king. | Pisces of the world, and will be at least the eutrepet and hp © weak. Gun Gun Go Se | entane or iearee thes, net taled a podons , outlet of Ireland's western commerce. While Cork ie a | 47 cm world No an | rarliamest 10 rept re tole Gem, ane allow ing his subjects to choose their ruler. The avalanche. Look at the Bourse, it is said; doce | £*! it, rise up before terrified Biremdoli je # Ot name to m steam vense! that bears away | Port of call, Beltust tbe manufactarieg cenire, and Dublia | 14 seem g shade brighter to-day than : Optica. ‘The more insignificant these principles are, the the bombastic, bombardiog Bombalino, and if she ie not | We Pelitical metropolis, Galway will be the commercial | 1. 51 ay securitien tending down, ‘ome poses nf crowee. wa the Grand Tabet ine fae ee, by a bombshell, then ioe fe not done bh 4 | capital of Ireland. Judging from whet I have seen : territory ie about baif the size of Connecticut, port Salen y apne parc ® Mim) and | quriog the past few days, the Galwagians toom, if not ax | Pambblets which day afer day ieque trom Deotu’s prees | of rare mad an March hares, to eay the very least, in a wonderful through innumerable editions, Whether these speak of | rerted ane tried for bigh treeron. Bat ae bite covid be the Eastern or the Italian question, do they not owe and |} rbeomn4 pd styl athe ye Ty ha SO im ‘Gar |daid) seems not to have landed a!! bie army at once €a the abores of Calabria, as the Neapolitan fect in the | Ste ofexcivement on the subject of their mail subsidy, | 1 aeciary that the real struggle ie between 130 marrow trate of Messina—abovt six miles in width— | Packet brant: — eae" out a fry he ’ <0 Kept toch good guard at to menace both bis embarkation | UDmeasured be upoe beads ae |e gland, agencies which mest , posed their line, there is nothiog too extensive, too | 06 CA! in the poritive intervention of their principale and landing, except in the night. The hero, with hie rivalry po sei Donte fell of Poldiert, railed just north of the rock of | £004 and ton liberal for them to bestow upon those who | C0 to the bast, where the wher ag “ even while the two pations ostensibly act im concert. Seylia, while the Neapolitan cruisers were anchored near | Beve fives whem the, great commercial ood, | racre, us M. Louie de Dandicour shows, whoee brocbare Garyddie, The night was dark, and the ever biazing pa . lamestary TOre- | ius reached a sreond edition, the Maronites sevtative and founder of their steam line, Mr, J > SS.oee Strombe!) wever cast ite larid light on a more heroic postacagee Bop iS one Bone sar Jobo Orrell Lever. The very men whom Ireland has a | °* TYsner, the Druses the proteges of England, whoee in Directly back of Reggio the grovnd rises up \nto a series @f bile, and eventually into mountains, not quite es eud- @eoly an Whe rine of 2000 fect direcily back of Mersina, om the Sicilian side; bat by going back @ few miles the ove for their mail service—at least several of them— of ai. that bas bappen 4. England, {t ts declared by her moved heaven and earth to keep the country the com. . ‘i sb excited the Druses agaivst tbe Maroaitas, = zg Lf a g i i i 5 3 elevation i erably greater on the Calabrian side, ‘The ground i# pot eo precipitous but that {t is cultivated, A, 7 — end presente a fertile and pictureequs scene of vineyards, danger that thie ! erebardt, olive groves, fige and fruit gardens. | remom- ber secing an old stone bridge, of & single arch, that bad @eme rubetantial repairs {1 medern times, aod a Latin feseriptice—apparently restoret—in which appeared the Bame «! Hannibal. This bridge wae thrown over one of these mountain torrents #0 common in the mountalsous i ef i ty i districta of Sicily and Calabria, and which, if they are 4 7 sd scares of oreo i} Permanent rireame, go by the name of fiwme, but if tor. 2 ') proposed Fepte, that only apperr at certain seasons, when the snow Neal ‘be’ mate i z zt Ma melting on the mountains, they are called Aw mere. 1 give them to you as pronounced to me Tisible Defore il iu not seeking the to be closely watched by the suthori. by my Sicilian guide at the Lime 1 visited Fos. Fatare Eventually Bapice should deere to pi ne a Yori readert of history, at @ period of one or two thousand trope, why thea she would ply ay of the by at 4 Years (rom bow, will read (he campaign of a Hannibal of Freneb allisnos. The meaning that if accustomed 10 follow in her wake, the nineteenth century of the Christian era, which, in pa: | govantage. Then again will be anotber eld’ of conten fs tritiem and heroism, if not In the number of men aod the- | Non for Frafice and a. Bo, alvagetnae,, I Ballers | that could be constraed Mar grinary datties fought, will quite equal the exp:oiteo a} pals songe To ce talting 700 as “4 ae ml jeuitucions of Germany Whe great African campaigner bave as yot Selene, ae in digs Garibaldi] bas now got the mort diffionlt part of his Lt ing tbe suepic ioe lorg en, on Tranee—that a Roropenn war can alone out the knot ‘Work betwre him—the actual capture of the place, the Shich wae tled by the treaties of 1816. their eee gna reetre the rabble on both fides from pillage and | | Te eathan aati rea ytin benowed_ on the opt preservation of oricr ana trent Prender, ant the organization ofa firm and permanen' — avahmpress is every@ quoted qoiliity, io which ‘were all equally interested. With civil government. We all know tho embarrasemente | {i fp ae Be pee I thon senate th an i fat tastt {i pational had to iefied, as weil they might, Tern coutaiae at acknowledgment thet Proeia cease to encourage of 10 approve of the object for which the association was ; iar lake (Lough | Nice Was weicomed, and the magn iGeent public Gico ities and distrenses experienced by the founders o | Corrib) to a place called Cong, thirty miler er Majesty bes decreed cannot fall to secure bis | veda) republic after Washiogton aod bie army | an active traffic, and set a large amount of money in cir- a ac Criven of the British, and the county ee grosalog culation. reall] ded. from the above wader the debt, the privation and the poverty of @ Aa for the beggars of Galway, they deserve a full chap will bot be diffeult to infer that ine cxweeled mane > abe haceting War. Now the cirew ter to themeeiver, A® I am blessed with a very goot ciation itself i* incompatible with the malptenance of at at and = Neapeliten pole will | eyesight ae weil at memory, J am inclined to thik that “order and tranquility,” and from thie discor: ‘is be bared ered by this stort etroggle, But the | there'iee alight dleninution im amber, and that the dirt bot a short step to ite fins! diesolotion. Wi be! m expeetation® lormed by the Italians of iTberly, and the | and rage that cover those we ese area shade improved to of Forope—when binge and | fa the gree \gboranct and uniotelligent character of ihe on their predecersor’ of nine yoars age The of ¢ bo grently in need of the confa f Uphill work to bring them | Galway are ae noted ae the iazraron! of Naples, acon i founded sight greater nolrance, When | was here Piece of in 1861, myeelr and friecds, while potting op at raven! We are no longer at the period Of our reverses, 1y hotels and lodge houres, found Galway literally it knows palpaoly it chon tag | te | of their people—it is wise to deny them an reepert } ci refortn, and leave them 2 bore of box bf | condition exeept by the entire gubversion of formes of povernment, '® quite another question td will | probably be dreited’ at no very distant ported. The | Greet are © marvellourly docile and good natared Constitetions! government. Voter Emane ned Garibaldi lot oe . den of thieves.’ Clothes were stolen, trunks were broken open and a stolen, and the parties who had in acc:re being adowted, In teveral cases brought the pro | the French are intent fo much as peace. race. 10 Apt ty be led y tale words nterpose any obeiacie, OF act at all out ef Rome | back, and evidently considered they were then on. Tocre i¢ net « public man in France who doce sot i bis | ‘orb thet tre’ forgotten when the ioe ef eoger wreaks mee sh "vlen ts 05 Re Wente 0 lee Game to out i, aad even | r Beart hoe, dest the tet bs gsite (he Gunter. do not | the experience they bere bad of Inte must here e r he hanks © ‘ bate cieappeared wth marvello to my, anid 8 hewing, the | opened their © inelined bie Flirring epirit and bie wonderfal oratory hive ne who bas several times visited Gal pheritor of @ name le oF Siates bo orn e a thdir roe win fos teem moore # me that on every with Char action, The teen idle that no _mouder be loage to be at the _ last ten years of © general Eoropesa | bad Looking at the fact that a rast pro- fase nation !t ones bad 'n France: but depend epon ever, ood the uneetied bere baye shocking bad hate (tke w> , de Sepal> See the preced of revenge fer the pestmlet the Emperor of bie | ret thie capital Jalkede toa meoung a Fight to lock to to take their part in struggle like the | C*MAnt dread and jealovay of France Ie at the bottom . ometinnes at Klssoach in the | French mind, and for thet purpose have thrown myself ‘with the many restrictions still im force with regard Ped: sesopge toe erssnapanghrab Leper the way of members of all parties. + | Secametion from ane Gartnan Stats tote anathée, wa tbe pected oe Pr oad on praca re | _NOWM: de Persigny enjoys peculiar character ta | dificuitice thrown in the way of a person desiring to on Seseranae aauial prey Pasa France. He ie known to be a mas of ardent temper, of | leave th: place where he was dorm to settle in a neigh- “anenaia ia’t all the world.” pooner Jam now in | S004 Batural parts, though mot particularly brilliant; but | boring kingdom or principality, and with the luterterence a” of German a exa who tve come tages, bie etree their some of the dirst ‘ fm oumber, 10 interchange. ideas on the of law leave ees Se en ete reform, which is as urgently required bere a8 in almost Russian 40 as to be under the pro- to id. Trial dy jury was introduced | tection of our flag in case the’ Hp country jo titsco years since, and worked exceed- | pied by the barbarians. con ateaeaiaueccameead ingly well till its course was vitiated na — — tion that set in with the counter revolu = iter that event, a veries of persecutions was commenced MR. LINDSAY'S MISSION. ‘against lending members of the democracy, who, however, Lenin pinnae were almoet invariably acquitted, in consequence of | Ppe Maritime Relations of Eagland with hich the cognizance of political misdemeanors apd of- Tenccs of the sreasarerempred irom the jury and traza | the United States—Our Coasting Trade. ferred to a tribunal composed of judges vominated by the the Chronicle, August 24. crown, who, it was rightly j, would show them- sae meeenal the’ United Ki po A selver more Buteervient to goverament and more severe | relieved from @ state of suspense have “ ip their treatment of political offenders. Thus the very sak Geningpn renee clase ¢f offeaces for which the institution of juries is most ces controversy. & the of ee at tenn et civil yr cee pen | re olay pie ats years’ aclay- shipowsere have noting jet apa "he have: ri ded Chis peeaton succeeded in br! ‘and. jes, murders apd go forth, which might be dec! their case fully Po yen ‘a8 much ‘mpartiaity by rn nomi- | fairly before Parliament, More a & your ago ihe free: nees. This sul will und referred | trading and protectionist to in the Lawyers’ Congress, and resolutions moved ex- | However 0} in opinion about free trade im naviga- poeirg the anomalous state of the legislation in this re- | tion, both parties had 9 very keea sense of their own epe- tpest, and recommending the res ‘of the jury to ite | cial interests, and com! together to ‘out their proper functions. But potwitbstand! ‘the liveral pro- | views. If the ehipowners in Varliament mot agree. feesicps of the present minietry, there is very Iittle proba- | about the ‘tio vexata of of tne repeal bility that these will be attended to, orthat | of the Navigation laws, at all events they were as per- they will consent to forego a power which they find quite | fect), will be im any project 28 convenient as their whieh would relieve the shipping interest from the charge. igh! Our St. Petersburg Correspondence. which they Sr, Perensnuns, August 90,1800. | However aah a commaitioe was formed, and Jock!ng Enihusiaam for Garitaldi Among the People of Russia | Miner Gibace, the President of tho Board a The Government View of the Italian Imbroglio—Napo- ted , Mr. Horsfatl the len's Policy Distrusted in Russia The Eastern Ques- ‘tired ke teen bad «esa aay, Tee tica—Complication of Affaire—Disturbances in Cau- poe ad ore cuiperts, having breaded for years casus, de, dc, by, = Sanat Feat pn hy Our attention is divided between the Hast and the | Soin don to pour out thelr affictions. We have read ‘West, between the sufferings of our Christian brethren in ee pen Bonen must svow at once Turkey and the military operations of the bola Garibatdi. ? . wo Although the former appeal more directly to our religious | yrederick Young, we admit, and national sympathies at the present moment, people in | an expiring effort i i general do certainly exbibit a more lively interest in the en a a ae: all gt Pe yy ee ste Intter. We are all Garibaidi mad; nothing is talked of pny oe nee BE ‘bat of the law regulations, in our salcns but the exploite of the Italian hero; his por- | Teepe ee eee te under Mer- traita figure in the windows of all our picture dealers; edie ‘Or tee one. hance ae our newspapers chronicle his successes with undisguised | owners’ esponsibility they bad the most conftsed aud exultation, and even the Invalid, the official military | ¢rroneeus notions. “administrative re- fora, ove portn of enknaohs graphy. | free a tad ay Calera, If be were allowed to enlist volunteers in Rossia 1 am 3tbb Saye been invented with the power to deat with ‘hi persuaded he would have no difficulty im raising half a | interests in question. one a telligent As- dozen battalions, to which our young noblese, and par eee Reesions © Sn eee Deere Ue Board i i ticularly our young literati, who are all republicans ia | otner officers connested with the their hearts, would furnish a very respectable contia- | P! gt Ree de gent. Wagers have been laid that be will be master of the whole kingdom of Naples before the end of this month (old style), and the telegraphic despatches record- fits i : Hi ing and anticipating bis movements are watched with the deat er’ the aie iret, ring to parcetes Se be oor: most eager anxiety. under foreign flags, pow 0 per cont of the It may be eabily imagined that the views of govern- ore oe rae a eee, ment op this sudject difler widely from those of the pub- tone, and the 00 per cent upon 19 73 tons, ft is Ve. A stateeman of bigh etanding remarked the other | vain to allege these exhibit a declin' day that the cause of the King of Naples was identical | ‘rade, arnin, in the remengee Wate, upon which euck with that of monarchy iteelf; that the sovereigns ed ean ie grater poten a go of Europe were ‘ail more or less menaced by | tive business to ourexclusion, it appears. that while, the progrese of revolution, and that if they toa i100 Bris ony 18.00 mere covey = veyed in rightly understood their own intereste they | former in 1859, and 000 ts the idler, would bury their private feuds in oblivion and unite in Tae Teper of the committee it | all events, rev against the common enemy. This opinion has found a nay Ad ged fealty nverecasty ‘powerful advocate in the Empress Mother, who arrived Rea No doubt the sbipowners, since the repeal of here from Nice a few weeks since, and whose influence on lawe, in many v : f f i ' i : over her son is very great. Deeply imbued with the i i i high conservative notions of her late husband, she has is particularly Py Dow besides @ personal friendehip for the royal family of | ¥ (Ene gsm thet case, that Naples, by whom the most flattering and recherché attea- | Sfcemp ah ee a ee © tions were laviebed on ber during her residence in Itaty ceakion ts evumed onions ats and Sicily, and whose distressed condition therefore ex- Tratepe cca tp aaa, eae aie ing cites her liveliest sympathy. The defunct Kiog of Naples, | have the advantage in ig ey too, is said to bave written an affecting letter to the Rm- | other hand, far Cyd rivals peror just before bis death, reminding him of the ancient | fteemers; end in the theo of various alleged lib: alliance subsisting between the two dynasties, and re- | ip fact, driven Collins foe ‘tion 80 since the —, o fampes in. ted we bee 8 Stale Greer aealeee at that time; but perhaps thie may be excused by the Seo caiente te woten D a Cifficuities of Bis poritimm and the fear of offending the presion or pF gk, rae: ‘Western Powers, who would have been too of a pre- pe aa egy ng us that the text for picking a quarrel with bim if be had shown aay Se. to over production in shi; leaping towards Russia. doth in Engle and im foreign countries, and to poit! and | 80d commercial eveats over a bag control than the shipowners = perost premmat svat far eats to eager’ supplies fngiand, it be- | grain, end to meet the requirements for tonnage 0 | Nheved (het'n perfect tnservtanting bas beet arrived at | ad China, is once more to build a wall of Bises. in ‘on this point between the Cabinets of Paris and St. Pe- | OUr colonies, and to revives monopoly in the carry oot epguur ue bo mee pag By of Napoleon fit quarter of the rine This most chimerical alone excitee conaiderable distrust, and there is a strung auspi- hedging in the ovekoo” has imet trom nl cules ae clon that he only wants to make a catsyaw of Russia in | Q¥ivoca! condemnati®n. order to frighten the British cabinet into conniving at Nota je witness proposed to revert to |! plane which tbey have beretofore opposed. The con: uct in their entirety, the com of M de lboovenel at the conferences in Paris gives some BEY Boge" color to this suspicion. It will be recollected that our am. the reestablishment of en he eo Tes werg bene Las ge hog me te eg and from per as Rrance was author! vie oe of the old Nav ig ut protect tbe Christians in that , other be final acd irrevors'bic sbould be at liberty to interfere in Northern pro- Thie decision practically di of the second quert vinces of Earopean Turkey, ifthe state of requiring foreign Po there sbe ula render euch an jatervention 2 ia! pompessions to reciprocate: ‘advaot ‘of Count Kiseelof! waa supported by the Kostrian administration, whether cous ; but Lord against is most ventured to that the ret: vebemently, and after a Ca and haw. Act of 1849, bave rema'ned ¢ ing the Fresch Minister gave his vote a favor of Kog- should be put im force. In | land. pg ope ay ye nye a separate clause tho id be inserted in the of te | Oo ar legislation has presented tec!’ Conference, etipetating that the intervention of MS SS Sie. France in Syria ‘Bot seem es @ precedent for simi. | The Of the nen-reciprocating Powers ‘rom lar action im any other part of the Ottoman empire; this, | Cceetieg trade would have no practical coercive hotiever, wae Tefccted by Ooant Kisslod, whe ny 2 a tarentened to retire trem pes trade between the pi porte, i jab} declaring either for of om to the other pate of “Sram he cinaie anaes sani car | St peeabat Dyer car tities att," ‘Wet the rumors of an entente between our Cabinet and alove « of could be deferded. ‘West of Viewna are mot without foundation. Wore ia- | The committee have ‘8 good deal of ind: ceerton tn the forthe sake of to fore, Derse on a better ‘with Russia, and the powers, these whiot it object of fection occasioned by the bebarior of France may have Be jag Cy RL TI resort. The wade cor ‘more willing to listen to her over- Le House of Commons, at the ‘tures. It i possible that the arrival of the Countot | Mr. W. the bad Flar ders, second een to the King of the ia St, | Decesarily oted functions of mgr F cmngtact aa Cy ts sdncied sept opal em oe Setter between ‘and other Powers. French a treaty ef ae i ae : ig i i fl See eerie | Sees See hime cae F | 4 i ‘fier the Emperor's return from & eee att he ne ther ine | sdvieers of the Grows, whe are conatitetioeal; weet Oriental war. be a | with Se. geeve power of and cope) nd tritmph of the fte sym. | treaties. ‘peror of Freech fe conv ioc ‘with the Tiana ght ia quite prepared to ay, ~ ‘Count ments for a more liberal treaty thas s jor Nesaelrose, many youre ferme ie ma eaters! ambassador at a ate my ry w | i Between being ou more tmicobirterms with Austee’ and Pacer eee et i i ; i i them | place for the purpose would be #0 here ‘all | views of Peres |e naek pee Gocoebaves on Nn the Webetols, Uhre everything Since It seems a romor Pettit Ma Jour - ‘The finn man-cf-war that wae waiting to reorive bim. Hod ae ry md 1, Gad romaine, ete Frglab end French equadrone bad arrived at the month | {be only great maritime Power which bas declined. e Pebe, andt lait were preparing to defend | tent to Ibis condition is republicnn America: tot th fmity, Dut eo jittle confidence | fusa) bas been coupled with « saving wie ee care ete