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1 tad endo of giving employment to a good man) peorle. Tle ws Diack, greea aud whrrtentes ‘aud is a very Patt ‘article (or tables, window sills, mantel pieces, pillars and | purposes.’ I should barcly thiak it would go far Sete mueh support to foreign commerce, though it | form an article of export. j Tet ‘reaud, bavo her fair share s. nem, ship lines Ww foregu countries, drain, d Fecisim ioe bogs, and let the people cultivate that stea- inees and tenacity of purpose which are wuels predomi- want characteri#tios a their Koglieh and sootch neigh Dore, and the day is not fur distant when the country and Abe race will’ Bons, They who live ut afar greater figure in the family Of na- to see Galway dfty years from now city of very considerable business mercial mart; and them they will oof the Tribes” has go lon a he world 5 oceans. This will be _— at, a8 a few hundred years ago, we are wl — was lar commerce between port apd ig and Mediterranean, The waters boww jo laud and Fea—ot the west of Ireland have alw g abounded with vast quantities of the moat valuable fis, ood, herring, mackerel, ling, turbot, &c.; and the “Axes and streams with the finest of salmon. At one place, to wards the upper end of Lough Corrib, out o¢ much a3 thirty tons of salmon {i ‘vast share of these are supplies of food to as vast’a population as that of Great Britain, it is Lie ad w observe - seasons that vari- ous things—a) ly minor articles—come in, and not the leagt of ‘hiss are the different varieties of fruits, gawe and fish. As the comedian said—in playing the of s Frenchman telling the habite of the ‘ish"—'On de twelf of Augus he shoot de grouse, on de of ber he shoot de partridge, on de first of ‘Gotober he shoot de pheasant, and on de firet of Novem- Der he shoot himself.” Of course the destruction of the eat mentioned animal is of interest in an economic polat ‘of view, which, without enlarg ng the supplies, diminishes he number of consumers. The Hnglisb are accused—and toa considerable evidence—of living largely on very eolid food and drinks—beef, mutton, bi » cheese, ale, wtout, Ac. A consequence is that amount of fiesh, fe'undity of form and ruddy complexion so geno- rally met with in Fogland. I believe the lighter articles of diet in use more generally in Ireland, Sootiand, and in France, seem to give tumt greater viva- eity, with more wit, and generally groater vorsatility of . cbaracter, than we ‘seo in the sober, stolid, muscular, beef feeding, ale arisking Bagiishmaes, 1E Believe the cake, ge, milk, potatoes and herr! that seecelsicds ihe Satire dict of the mlddlo and lower'olass- ea in Scotland, are more productive of strong frames, good health, and brilliant intellect, than the diet of any other rece under heaven. Of course the climate] and the race are both causes that operate, more or less, in giving a stamp to character; but of diet alone, | know of none that I think in al' reepects equal to thaiof the Scotch. As goldiers, Christians, scholars, poets and philosophers, where ‘s the nation, coveidering their numbers, that stand up in a more i position? But I have wandered far away from my original sub- ject, the commerce and commercial resources of Ireland— probably too far to return. of Steam Na’ n—The cess of the Great Eastern, [From the London Post, Sept. 6.) A quarter of a century ago it was a question whether @eam could be applied to ocean navigation, and meu ‘whose opinions were of undeniable value were disposed to decide against it, Such an authority as Dr. Lardner in- pliped agaivst ite possibility, or, at all events, 1s powor ‘of competing with sailing veseels. It was not denied that steamers could live on the ocean, for already, ten years ‘efore, Captain Johnston had recelved £10,000 for mak the first steam voyage to India in the Ealerprise, wh sailed from Falmouth on the 16th august, 1325; but it was denied that the communication between distant coua- tries could be carried on by steamers as certainly, safely and profitably as it was then by the magnificent American Ymners, which were the flnest and jastest passenger ships afioat. However, in 1828, that question was set at rest by ‘the Sirius and Great Western, which latter vessel, then cua- Widered a marycl of naval architecture, made her first mas. wage from Bristol to New York in eighteen days. Her extreme Jength was two hundred and thirty six fect, ber Durthen one thousand three buadred and forty tous, hor mean daily rate two hundred and fifteen miles. We neod mot trace Cur progress in Atlantic steam navigation till, afow weeks ago, the arrival of the Great in New York harbor inavgurated anew era io that impor- tant undertaking. Fortune certainly has not smiled on the great ship. Her troubled launch, her deadly explo. Bion, ber Grancial diffieuities, her limited freight, all evil omens, e crossed her path; bat, nevertheless Feach«d the other side of the Atlantic with an ascertaine Fate of twelve knots an hour, which it is confidently be Meved will, when her bottom 's clean, and her engines imto order, be raised to fourteen, if not even more. Hor return voyage a‘lorded a still more favorable specimen of ber capabilities. She weighed ber anchor at New York fem the evening of Ibureday, the 16th of August. She made the run to Halifax in less time than it has ever been accomplished in before, and remained there ove might, reaching Milford Haven on the gvening of Supdey, the 26th. The night at Halifax, yw ‘ever, reduced the time she was actually under steam to two hundred and twenty-two hours. whieh time she accomplished two thousand mime hundred and eighty miles, giving ap average speed of 13.42, or nearly thirteen and M knots per hour. Ia 8 few days more she wil! be Ligh aud dry oo the gridiroa at Milford, when her bottom wil! be soraped, and with an addisional half knot, if not more, of speed in her, sho will make her second ocean start on the 1dth of Ootoder. Ber succers mechapically is therefore beyond question ; ber capacity for paying is, uafortunately, not so clearly Gemonstrated. ‘The formation of the gigantic gridiron whieh is to be her substitute for a dock at Milford. as welt as the magnificent character of that harbor, will ly bavo the effect of making South Wales her fu- home; but tt may be questioned whether [ll lyhead might not have been & more advantageous selostion in & commercial point of view. Witn easy steam commani- cation between it and Liverpool, Doblin, Helfast aud Gias- gow, it ie the most central port in the United Kingdom; ‘end within o radius of ove bundred and Ofty mies of it Mes every acre of coaldeld in Exgland, Wales aud Ireland; the Sootch coal districts bem also nearer wo it than to Milford. Proximity to coal, of course, pot only facilities for coaling, but ready access to every article of manufacture which bas ite birth ia a bed of eon), and Milford is deprived of that cheaper gation by Intern tl navigation which |1 80 abund morth of Evgland, and which {« still spplicab! Dukkier commodities. However, at Milford she i, and from Milford eh» wiil sail, it is to be hoped, wich « cargo Baflicient to [bring ber to her proper bearings in the wa- 4 to afford @ remunerative return for one of the mast magoidcent caterprises of modern times. however, the Great Faswrn can be i profitably QBodt, she will revolutionize pavigation. Tbe existin Steamers, Which are now superseting eailing vessels, wt become themecives obsolete. Wherever the monster goes al) othors will be out of date, and especialy every contract ali over the globe will be liab!e to dis- ance. All our great lines of mail packets have a speed far below fourteen or even thirteen kaots ao hour, and rhe can certainly make the latter rate. From Liver- to New York, by the Cunard line, the contract speed eight and a half knots in summer, and sevey and o half fm winter ; and an average, nine and three quarters is . rom Southampton t> ‘Thomas the rate, contract and average is ten knots; from St. Thomas to the other islands the contract is and the avorage rather bo From Soctaamptoa jtta the contract is ten, the average nine and « Bombey the contract i# ten, the average nine. Galway and St. Johus, Newfouadland, the oon- me both wags is seven days in summer and eight jer; but in practice the quickest voyage bas been outwards seven days four boers in summer, erven days hours in winter, homewards, six days cighteen hours in summer, and eight days eight and three quar. ters in winter, whilet on the other hand the slowest bomewards bas been pine éays ia summer, and Sight days sixteen hours in winter; whilst outwards nine ays twelve and a baif hours bare been occupied in sam- mer, and no less than nineteen days fifteen hours in 18 will be, however principally with the Liver. pool and New York lines of packets that the Great East. ern will come {oto competition, and she will be able to the best of them two days start from England and them into New York ‘Thos far the Great Eastern concerns the Postmaster Geperal, An imperium in imperio is bad enough in all conscience; but the would be an imperium super im Perium, more of a post ofice than the Post Oilice itself, au catinguaher wherever the goo, But that is not the ‘7 Hy it i oaly branch of the public scrvice that she atects She ie the largest, eafeet, and apeedicet transport in the world, could carry a small army at an unparalicled rate of A ‘division of infantry seven to eight thousand , fifteen hundred cavalry, and three batteries of artillery, with all stores and matériel, would got crowd ber cayacious decks. She would be, in fact, an engine of war of unheard of power She conld’ transport Boch @ force—ten thoorand mon of ail arms, a body com. in \teelf, and ready for immediate action or rapid Bévance—three bundred miles in twenty-four bours. From where the now lies she could reinforce Gibraltar to il? ? that extent in little more than four days. Patting sake the horses, she could throw a still larger force into Qaloutta in between five and fix weeks; thas forming « 2) tremendous strength between us and our most dis- Jone, a8 Well as our fortified positions In Ra She would have little to fear from ene heels of every ship afoat ene could ran opponents of distance formidabie ones Tho of carrying Coal enough to go rourd the world give ber an im: rable advantage: indeed, constructs! for Ing, #he alone of all the ‘existing is equal to the task of Keeping, not, ‘8 continuous blockade, but & continuous lookoat harbor that might be considered dangerous and Id be a national Rin, ae well a# a national shame, she ever become the property of any oibor naval fF i Hl 3 uf i t vhey the next lowerdown. In the dark might it waa dim Galt to distinguish one from the other, and to calctiate he force of the current; berites this, there was proba: Sp Senceney tn So tremens Demianen vo make 0 ittake pales atany rate, the guites who were to Bave bees there could not be found — In order to look for them five men were sent to the right and as many to the Whether tho Neapolitans hat discovered that a degeent had taken place, or whether they tad posta out the fort on the slopt#, certain it i# that one of these @etachments soot out to look for the guides fell with a Neay patrol, exchanged = few shots with 4 at the mame time thoroughly ¢ fortress. Some ernnon shot were fired, which we Saw ant bewrd at the Faro, fol lowed by fb wild Gre of masketry in the dark, sMyor Miesor! wae for waiting Ww fee, but a part of the rather shaken by the eiets of th which war raired ty EES ure of the Monte Alto, between santa Pu wefan, where they were joined by de » bad gone tbe other way, minus fire, Neen ee, NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1860.—TRIPLE SHEET. . 1 who were lost in the dark, and fell into the hands of the | only for reference it ought to be in every library where | nese in bis steam carriage, built under his own direction, ‘Neapolitans. 7 Share 1a Seoerguent ibe beaks Tolan ouhion.s ana though, owing to ite being the market day there, thé If the failure of the first attempt to take the Forte <i} Biackwood gave the Rev. John Caird £100 for the | Toad was Aled with horacs pcommanenees S. kinds, Fiumara rather disconcerted the small band of volunteers, | copyright of kis “Religion in Common Life,”? | bis lordship passed through their landing, the preparations of Garibaldi on ell sides, | whichtas itwas culy a chilling pampbiet, looked a very | nom fr pay reconnolesange eee seem to have | handsome sum. The sale ee tig gone far be} a hele talegeacnin’ pong Ae "sige | ond thelr expectations, they aflerwarie preset oot bs ioeldien vol y ag everyuns 3 seowrsed cau of their own acoord, with ap addi at Cannitello, to the left of ‘at Bianchi: Bo- 7 t2,"” veliva, on the east coast, Garibaldi did land The sixth volume of the “Complete Works of Lsibuitz,’ reached Beauly—a distance of fourteen miles—in an hour at Melit hen’ take edited from the original MS3. in the library of Hanover, | and twenty minutes, notwithstanding the frequoat stop- tallto, and Yet, w she linding ad Place, they | Ptr. G. Terts, ashen published wt Berio, 1b 000" and’ Siveen minutes lost water. After some ‘As ‘s 1 saw that it was all over with the | ‘ins the mathematical writings of the author. PSs Beauly, on those parts jose time, aod set | Chapman & Hall, of Loudon, are about to brisg out a | distance forward can be seen, following "the road | collection of papers by albert Smit, enuitiod “Wild | elghtcen miles ap hour, and ould have kept up thie for ae od eer | oe cera ee y miles, ty mi, the Smith, Elder & Co. have in the press “Over the Clits,” | road givens Bonar Br Here the eek eee oy, 8 bridle yo ye rather | 4 novel, by Mra, Charter, sister of the autuor of ‘Alon riage had ® severe test appli to it, but aiticals to rr ‘single Sine, Mo Locke. jon | 470¥@ it up the hills without difficulty, and Si cetummmayanietenl cece, | Sor, Oby Sate BRR cL" Us | Sara seaaae Ge oats eva a " & new hove suthor of “Paul Ferroli;’ a 3°% joins m je contr om This was a great drawback in a corps which ve oper Dovel by Lady Soott, authoresa of “The Only Chis” | Over tt was most satisfactory, and enabled him to de- animals | ever saw, the Sicilian yoluntecr on march is the | “Ud &‘‘life of George Fox, the Founder of Quaker, scend at any rate he wished, and with perfect ease and A 7 fn compiled from documents left by Fox, and from other au. | safety. Leaving the ie inn at Lord Caith theme be driake te tence wit want vo dri. tn im | ‘enle soureen bere Groted Botar ‘ridge, abd drove on 1 Gashroore, | From the ceagus of australia taken onthe fret of April | of atic toting to fotnon more ii apy animal ; he can- Greombridge & have in " after a successful drive of nearly seventy miles. Satur- | last, it that the total population was 117,727. Of | of Halberstad! re irrational in this reepect than wy i rf Song jon a new t, has recent ol pase a well or foutalstwithout takvog hie share,and | work by Mr, Jobo Hollingshead, "Under Bow | 485 being very wet, be here tlt the afternoon, | this total oF 137,727, no lees than 43,849 were bora in the | Regent and remaaved to Wi he ha solitue control over himaelf tbat he gata om Bells,” pees crore en to Golspie ty yauma — Suiey, rec Shy 788 in : eed and Wales, 7,172 in otis, Served In the bouse once pletely demorali: @ cannot tndul in this «yy ” Perfect confidence carr! from Treland, other British possessions, ‘Though the collection Gesire—anolshoot of his fancy. Garibaldi, on | guncry Mie Bentley's semmroreimee” ebbing, Saree | workings on Friday, be expecta to reso Basrogll ustio, | in Sermaany, 1,066 fa:Soeign sonntrieg, letring 188 eb} tars hou oeld ~~ the contrary. has complete control over o a & distance of eighty miles, and over the 8! roads in | specified. sand haters himeel’, and allows no weakness in others. He 4 ,, Mrs. Sewell’s “Stories in Verse,” the second reries of | Scotland. ‘Ths lasabitnl of fare divided into two political | anxious that it should ie without pity in this respect. He thinksevery one ought | \Homely Ballads,” ig announced as “nearly ready,” bY | me National Gacetle of Berlin mays:—We learn Jee—the ‘and liberals. The former haunt | benefit of posterity. The to be #0 absorbed with the object in view as to forget all | Mesers. Smith, Elder & Co. from a good source that a treaty has been concluded be- Port Santa Lucia and the Chiaja; the latter belong to | of paintings, thirty-four of the little miseries of life. A greut friend of walking, and Among Mr. Murray’s forthcoming books are ‘The @ tween Denmark and Sweden, by which the latter Power | the quarters 8t. Ferdinando, Monte Oalvario, Avvocata, bis » of the indefatigable, his habit is to dismount, teke bis sword | Sahara; or, Wanderings South of the Atlas Mountal ‘undertakes, in the event of Prussia or the Germanic Con- | &¢. These have now petitioned to be no Venger called Erasmus, Pontanus, Ulrich on bis shoulder, and stride along for hours without halt. | by H. B. Tristram; and “Lincoln's lan Sermous,” by Wm. | federation attempting to establish by force of arms the | lazzaroni, but popolani. nent men of the time. ing once. In the march to Reggio it was, bostdes, im- | Thomeon, D. D. Germanic pretensions over Seblesw ick. to send 10, ‘Aretarn. tasued states the number of the Irish con- | *irty-four ios, portant not to loge time, and to arrive before the Nespoli- | wr. W, Fordyoe's ‘History of Coal and Iron, and the | Swedish troops inte the Duchy. ‘The treaty is 10 | stabelariy force at the commencement of this year at 12,. | Lather and hie contemporar: tare See ae ee — Rexgio. The | processes Connected with ‘their Elaboration "in Great | Bave been negotiated at Paris. 403, with 958 horees. ‘The total expense for 1850 was wants aoe — remai , ” man, and were picked up by the column under Major Migsor!, Labcorp Seng he a ay for speody = Greek Patriarch of Carlovite has just petitioned | £672,716, of pen op pate yore Yer £657,206, and ‘of Puther and emi which baving descended from Sau Lorenzo, followed the | PUb!ica! : Boas. Se ares ae Sine sae eount Owen £168 jumerous manuscripts of the samo road in the wake of Garibaldi. ‘To carry out the object of ite decieion as regards must- ean A A held. In 1548 the same | “Of the twenty-five barons who were appointed to en- | tion consists of a most valuable Having given » short rest to his troops some mile from | ca! pitch, the Committee of the Society, of arts is now Pa & synod and congress, and he then excited | force the observance of Magna Charta,” says Sir , silver, &c., strack Reggio, ‘the march was resumed the next morning at day- | circulating a declaration, recommending the fork pre- aren to. enema, hey Sh al rar against the | Burke's second series of “<Vicissitades of Families,” | vale. and a remarkable ser break.’ Thestory about the people of Reggio having asked | pared at it instance, which all the advucates of uniior- | Magyars; which resul suppression of the Han- | ‘there is not now in the House of Peers a sing! in bronze and terra-cotta, ecemae See 1. Damez, to fight outside mity are invited to sign, garian revolution and the establishment of Austrian des- | descendant.” ET who ciate sentben 0 ‘was true, for, leaving m few hundred men in the fort, he | The Blackwoods bave in preparat!o: teue of | Potisane recent haneye: 5 Mediterranean Extension or works relating ‘went out with the rest, and took up @ position at the | the library edition of Sir Frebibald gh Naf arr The Emperor of the French has a fondness for Ad oe eee that, im order to Mire vila! of 2,000 volumes Te fiumara which jg croesed by a stone bridge just outaide of | of Europe from the French Revolution to the Battle of | American horses, and the French em| have jast vi tony be ‘want of Uireot telegraphic communication be. | collection a copy of all books Reggio. wa in theee regions is a vatural poai- | Waterloo,” in fourteen yolumes, tited Boston to purchase five Vermont horses for the Im- | tween Malta and Corfu, a has been by | Luther, tion, not only in winter, when !t is often inaccoss!ble, but Mr, Bent bas e perial stables, whioh already boast of twenty-foar from | the government to ‘@ new line from to | an annual report in which even in summer, when there is no water, for the bauks ee ready ‘Regoarchoa and Dis- | that country. The horses are a!) of the Emperor's favo- | Otranto, by which Pha te islands will be connected via | serted. are steep and always well wooded. But, in spite of this, | Pores Min iy bade wien of Seveu Years in the | rity color, dark bay, 15 hands high, having a fine action, | Italy nae Siclly. ‘As long as the new cable is in ‘The there seemed no intention on the part of the Neapolitans | L°7aht of ytilene and Rhodes,” by | and trotéing a mile in two minutes fifty seconds. | order the government will pay the company the #0000! aoae to make a serious stand. Garibaldi divided his force into | ©: T- Newton, Theircost was between two and three dolars.s | tmotety of whe subsidy, vise '¥,, about ¢ Dumber, three columns. The town of Regyio, like all towns built on A work on ‘Christian Architecture in Italy Between | pair. entire payment of 00 per anni 5 H i a8 F & parrow beach, is long and of little breadth, although it | the Fourth and Fiiteenth Centuries,” by W. 8. Okely, Fel- In eome parts of Switzerland singular judicial penalties encroaches coneiderably on the bills around ‘it, by which | low of Trinity College, Cambridge: und ‘*Factaand Figures Corfu recover ft is commanded, The object, therefore, wus to ger pus. | relating to Vancouver’ lalaed alta British, Cotambta®” by ora canhahed We dae Talbumat at Unisreaia he tote Detween Malta and Gagliatl, whieh, now session of the bighe of the town and of tho | J.D. Pemberton, are preparing for publication by Messrs. | When ina etate of intoxication in & public hease ? | of being finally restored. * hills. The chief attack, under Garibaldi bimeolf, | Longman & Co, <a iaaige lmuguage venpeting tee. Topnrend he want” She Snsteion sai ba pe epretoraihn nd a while Bixio ope- Smith }Elder & Co. have im the prees “Scripture | condemned to twenty blows with a stick, to be adminis- | scjze proclamations exci = - ola See ont Lande, ction with their History,” by the Rey. G. | tered in private, a fortmght’s imprisonment in the hos: | aro largely |, and even the Neapol perovennted Aon wp AA oy ~ S. Drew-ggamw Beal, vee retirement to be pessed in religious exer. | One of them is as follows: —**! very desperately, or whether they were discouraged by | . Swunders & Otley announce as forthooming ‘Summer | oi Mike, Sotaery Ct tM eat two youce, und Wek coaigs bee ee 0 vith oe some other circumstance, at any rate they gave way | Shee,” by Mortimer Collins, and “Crispea Ken, or boon in the centre and on heir right. On the {eft alone Fasiuges 10 the Lite of a -Clergyenin/” by the ‘euthor of | 22 Sesel Siti ater Tnerived te nie they attempted some resistance. Garibaldi, with a tew | Miram May.‘die 8? . nite period of bis civil rights, and Gnaily to pay all the men, had taken possession of a cascina ite to their “The(Story of Barnt Njal,” a translation from the Ioc- | gogis, t Aviad position until a sufficient reinforcement could be brought | landic of the Njal Saga, by G. W. Dasent: and ‘Popular 2 = up to charge with the bayonet. At the first attempt the | Tales of the West Highlands, Orally Collected, th ‘There are fifty-seven cities in the world which contain Heapebeee cave wap sad” We ceca’ snared tas | Sraesiaiion,) bs 6. 5, Cumepees: well publi. | {0m 100,000 to 260,000 inhabitants, twenty-three from town, chasing before ‘it the Neapolitass, woo {led | cationjby Mesars, Fdmonston & Douglas, Ediaburg. 20 000 to 600,000, and twelve which contain above = =d 7 — a Ce end of Atchley & Oo. have in the prow “Steam on Com — Se ee ea yy thy “Erinn | man lunie,” Dy Mr C7. 8 Youbg, , ehtu water | Tne atmal Coden, Medeid, socoere. the Curie of Of the Duomo, cutting off the retreat of the Neapolitans | Sower in ibe Unites iiates, by 1, oly Beer Catalonia to France, sl tl 2 who had been before him. Arrived at the Piazza, the | New York, ‘The nrunicipality of Cologne 'e preparing a grand rifle we itimas quarter. The 5 aruring to know, is not the result of sudden latter went off towards the higher part of th trade or other the right, and when debonchin igher part of the town to | ‘The Historical Society of Fracce is gprepariog. for pub maich to come off towards the the present month aanen vutes of ouiae tae into the,upper street, which runs cation the ‘‘Jouroal et Memoires du Marquis d’Argenson,” | oF the beginning of next, and not caly ‘are the riflemen of are ' ‘and the opening street, they fell in with Garibal edited M. Fremy; apd the “Memo ined) vp. | All Germany, but those of Switz»rland, Belgium, Holiand, ‘the of nuptial es teers ‘prepared to attack, bot were prevented by Gari. | Pauld, q Pomponre,” edited by M. Mavidal, | *2d England, to be invited to take part in it, baldi, who —— they were coming over. The Neapoli- Librarian of the Corps Legislatil. A crown of gold, worth 5,000 piastres, tans,’ instead of coming over, took to running, followed Michel Levy, freres, Paris, have broncht out a | #8 of great artistic merit. bas been offered to the by ours, and were taken prisoners in batches of twenty | “Histoire de l'Art de la Guerre avant I'urcge do la Pou } Duke de Tetuan (O'Donnell) by the province of Alicant, abd thirty, while the rest dispersed and made their way | ¢re,” by M. Dubareq,and san acknowledgment of his political and military ser- toward Giovanni. The town was ua clear in less | Ordres te Chevalerie,” by views. than two bours from began, . jocament states consumot! The. fort “alone. remained. The loeses aa oon | , Jischetle & On, ft agers ge Bee or coal in Franes is 11,0000 leas yeatly-—<chree titi: of trif_ing on both sides. | They would have been more | Roligicuses dee Juifs pendant ies deux siecles anterieursa | ‘+ 19 manvfactories. A Portion of the whole is boats started, and made ush for the other side, ‘ Al when they were quickly followed by thirty others. Both | Work it's traral tion from the Russian, published simul } peuge the latter for their Trouble he dinects that etal the steamers from Reggio and the one from above made a | *Beoualy ®' gute Lion to travelling expenses, each sball be with race to overtake the boats, butall they ovnld do waa to At Gotha hae heen published a “Geachiehte der Chirur. | « gel medal bearing the effigy of .Esop, tl prototype. send ebots on to the beach and shatter the empty buate, $s von dem Urzeiten bis zum dea achtzehnten A letter from Berlin says: — The Ministers of War of while the troops they coptained took a position on the | Jahrhunderts” (Hi of Surgery from the most An- | te various German Powers, assembled. at. Wurtaoui Deights. Besidce they had soon to think of their own | cient Times ap to the ing of the Eightoonih Conts- | have decided that they will, under every ciroumstance’ eee ee Seeare een see All che firing, | Ty), by Dr. J. W. L. Greunder, mmintain the principle of unity of By sang which we watched from Messina with such anxiety, did | «Die Volkskrankheiten in thror Abbangigteit von den | ral army. It hence remulte ‘thet 7 Cr of the Peop serious, and perhaps would have preveuted success, | ” . rought from abroad—! tons from England, 2,700- | equal’ had the Neapolitan steamers, of high thore were not Key etonge Beachner a “ O60 from Germsaay, and 100,000 from Fransiay 8? | SSome t tras larger than seven, done as they did at . But the; be x, iP A ‘e, sur Mahomet, et sar ~ had evidently orders ot . ine ane peng FE yy They le Koran,” by M. Lefloch, has been publishes "by Mw. She Seinenee Loy oy appoluted by the she Det erreseess, have ad’ tention tent a few shot and shell towards the road while | Devtu, Paris. It is intended chiefy to be am exposition | Horse yr 4 ae peg afd the Whitworth | to pay oii, om the 1st of March next, the outstanding por- the column was advancing. but cea.cd firing a8 soou as | of the Mahometan creed and the Koran, which the anthor el - s ; Majos\y’s service. | tion of their £800,000 & per cent loan of 1850. This por- ‘the latter bad entered the town. Besides this their at- | Says is much talked of but litte known in France, jeer eo RoI pe bem agg pen tage por ep pe yee os ne = tention wansoon called to another point Goacos bu 6 | A new werk Professor Lapsiag, enived Dora range; GiMeulig eh extenctiog tke enpanicd cantetign: | soon Nas tne My take, bauer mas presente rian every read; escen| coast rungs} ‘er Aegyptischen, cy Roms , 4 Gemte erent haar stn te ace | tas Cnn» Caen Fo trent pa, | Tite ernest | Sat un" ly cea sc Reggio. nety Donte full of men were waiting for | Greek and Roman Chronology), bas pubi; by bs cou, outstanding for Ove years. as ape ge Mg lake, where they ones Messrs. Decker & Co., Berlin, ‘The italian journals state that a wealthy person of pons notice ly Neapolitan steamer which Broskhens, Leipeic, have 1 the Floreade, just deceased, bas left a singular will, It Of the children born in Sootiand the second | rora, Temained towards we eutrance of the Straits, the | ,Brockhans, Leipaic,. we bronght ou! first | ceciares that the of his fortane shall go to | quarter of 1860, 2,494 were iliegitimate—S.8 per com. of | others, others being engaged at AS soon as Ane fret pees ‘n tebe-s0") (hovibenh taut ail tee: the man wih heergest hampoa bie beck i al Tana, iotenels vember born, or one in every 11.3. In Eng- | ness were beard from sixty of the try of the Amoor th 1864-56), by fr von i 4 Ser SS tals © gelecting Jend, in the latest return (1868), the lees on 6. Jory " & £ i i it is < no barm on our side, and bIy little on the ether. | Witterunge verhaltnissen” (The Diseases A aa the It is positively that 3: Except a big abel, bellaved tbe a 13 lech, which oarsl | Deperceat upot Climate md Teaagorire) sates tite | belees the meets Dae ok ac some sheates an} the service, of Nase Dake of Modena, have ‘eater above: batter: ithout , a work by Dr. K. Haver, Vienna, stated to be based on | in a worre one, use hitherto the secondary y not a single Neapolitan shot ever reached the’ Sicilian bee years : , The bureas of the Emperor strikiog scene, thore. " Gur arhilorymen, of course, stoutly ranintain | Austria, i the chief oepitaia of | rought ir measa of conetiation whick have vow become | teed fur sale, was 8d at he Hovel des Venten on tne | be, forwocten. 0, Grelignt on tho wi ‘that their shot told more than once, that they ret on fire ‘Ab official publication { that of the 19th ult. for 6,000f. dead, the grief atre tage > ere blicat in Prussia shows some bushes on the opposite shore, and that they disabled Foreign Miscellany. tation, 17,799,915, at the end of 1858, 1,902,021 were 4 circus cows, of the same of Braquet, who hes lately | their ows, and £ 2 eg, it a3 Aid ope steamer at least We translate the following from a Lisbon Ia | Pol Moravians, 6189 Bobemian deen giving performances at Aviguon, France, undertook | vilege of a lest sonaintnr ears taht natant | el naa Gres mate tea te, | Nisa tm ana, Sprint inal mee | See Seen an, cob tgs ct ’ 5 heer Setubal (anglicé St. Uves, about twenty miles from | ants of French refogees, and the rest Germans. balloon. thousaed persous assembied Ww witness the tans out of the town, took measu to blockade the | | shor), in comm i m™), cneeqnence of excavations which have been exhibitton. loon after the bailoon hed rimn the spec- Kort of Reggio. All thes shore forts bave their roal line | mace there, roi day to day are being disinterred The Miuister of War in Austria bas just ordered that | tators were horrified to see it catch firs, and tne cords of Of defence towards the sea, while comparatively little | vuricus Reaan aptaquities A tule while ‘Thece | Protestant eoldiors shail ouly be interred in cemeteries in | the trapizr being burat through the man fell from a the land side. Thus, with the fort of lage pearshaped funeral urn, vo gol | & Part separated from the Catholic portion by » or | great Fortunately it was at that moment of it are closely surrounded by ‘of the Emperor Honorius, a ring of pr | SLCOeUre: Some of the Austrian journals complain of | over the and Braqnet fell into the river, sod as hoores, and only that looking to the sea is free, whilo the blac stone, on wi gravel a | ue meauure a4 Deing exooedingly illiberal, and oaly | the spot at which he came down was deep, he was not heights above look completely into it. All the iseues 'n bead of aa arro atied forth by the requirements of the Concordat. bart, apd ewam to the bank. ‘ bu Wing been cen) ar as some of the conta: from Vi Deusen, one of theas Gevultory Grings ‘tegna which ina oun nd CE cat Deas ine byt Garand my gah a BF 2 eg moe Raperet of Austrin, ban jan eoengtenss | a ‘outed on: bath stim, “hiseng’thans whe’ sulbred a hg gt RY FE neon Samat Henn of Pra a oe journals state that there is every probabi who su a ; H ; pane. on this occasion was Bixio, the Commander of the seve oon sonen peeres aelol eat ee | The ragenns saan - that the of Austria will nnortly Rave sorvooy= 4 Digan, win wan raed ed @ tell cm the Ln Gus ame pe ean Maye a aod of & The German Gaczetfe of Frankfort says:—“The follow: terview with an illustrious personage, and te Queen of arm, |The fort anewered with grape and round shot ut re Tota half of a brase bockle belgie ccsnfem agent pop ty ay enn tn, | Creat Britain is named as the sovereign indicated. popes pg yt gE toa belt, ard sume steel pina such s@ ware used by fret, there exista between the two States a cor vention, in | _ The Eapérance of Athens considers the events in Syria good rifle #bots, the Neapolitans soon left their cans on | pair. “| hold up their loug | virtue of which Pavaria will, in case of sorely ee oe een nee oie the platform and retired into the casemates. The Com : S threatens to break out tn tan ooree mander himself wae Iortally worded by & ballot in the — aren enten, Coupe Cat fatta ds etenss & where a number have cotabhiahed Le upag after the white flag appeared om thefort | OPN i ot —Two Oubits end a Foot, a selves. In Few 3 my = Eaperance Gar lili hae addressed the following proclamation to | L#¥et and two Locke, 0 Gore stained Gee an rt t- the people of the Neapolitan conticent:— pier ebipg == So , & Briign and RE fe oR, Toe opposition of the strangers interested in our bomil. | $6 .e0and 'w Trelhop; a Haut with For and a Rosoneks a | set Were le 20. salvation for Germany except ies meng tengure, residing ea, le Corvnry Somakeoes have impo ted Italy con | Coiher bring Coke and Coles, a Hott which Leoxe,a | ' en intimate alliance with ‘Austria--thas te feel wiseees Greek jourpa) adds that it is from Mecca that Today, it seems, Providence has put an end to so much | Patten conveyed by a Boud to a Fellow with two Deedes, | ore the Secondary States would be absorbed by Prussia. | 12 be given, ae it did for the massacres in misfortune. Tho unanimity of ail the provinces, and the open company of gentlemen who are Rich, Wine, Lang | The Queen of Bavaria, La & Prossian princess, ia. | Mecce that saints (or holy men) and vietory which is amiling everywhere on the eons of Iib- Moody, Lowe, Merry and Thynve—owch soquainted | limes greatly to cards ap ailisnce with Auatria.”” their sapguisary ey ay. erty, are proofe that the evil times of thie land of gon'us | W't® and Knightley, To sum up all. they hare | Irish papers of receat date speak favorably of the har. | LEORE over, the whole empire la order to draw towards their end. gt ‘om two Kings, one Duke, a Marshall, a Palmer | yest prospects in Ireland. to this plot, = the A step still remains, and that step T don't fear. Ifwo | Sd ® Knight. rn the killed st Mele oret woke guvuae Galt ain compare the small qieace which led a baad(al of bravo | The cathedral of Christcharch, Oxford, Bogiand, stands + Colonel Corte aod Captain Guastalle, free enrny, een: | Doasible seed e powerful army of men to hese Straite with the great means of which we | upon the site of an ancient uunnery,’ founded’ ja the anh abet from Mantua, one of | otherwiee, while the Maronites in ore Gan dlepcee mow, every One can fee that the caterprise le | cightb cevtury Ly & Prince of Oxiurd, j Tr me By thang the dusting officers of Medict's ata. ‘Yenged, the fire will break out and spread in ever, aot difficult.” Saint Frideswide. According to the legend, the beaaty She Bie fore ae Wye Gopteg = * oes But | wish, novertheless, to avoid blontshed among | of Frideewice, who presided over the nunnery, attrante pegs lie wiped fa jn the South of | Ti appears from a return just test Italians, and therefore turn to you, sons of the Neapoli- | the attention of the Meroiaa Prince Algar, who, unable by | E&rope, where the bar vest is terminated In Italy it te in erecting sebvols in siace tan continent. entreaty to prevail on her to overnome her resolution of | OBy i the North that the crop of wheat ie | IsbS: under the minutes of the Privy Counclt of Ihave seen that you are brave, and don't wich to ase | celibacy, determined tocarry her olf by force, aud entree | pedy - | tom, ie £1,397,112. OF this large sum £682 308 tagain. Our bi the eity of Oaford for that To evade this par. | cht, Parma and local’ rates, £79,185 by n00-local eubsoriptieas, Of the enemies of Italy, but betwoon us lot there bo peace. | tit the pious virgin for some time iu a | S24 ¢ifer ip various wer csdante wes tetaunee ey tasiamentey that right and which has never service « pigsty, and when thie unsavory place of seclusion no Sketch rant, Dut which bas been hardened in the fonger availed, Heaven interfered fo her beh , ote oe Ste 0 eS i peopie. Task you to help daring lover was visited witt Slitdneess fram hich he wares of locusts G5 inte he tows of Glows aeons) & teens Joes of ber sons, and with you I will serve id not recover ntti he bad reper ted of his evil designs, jock puama'te ante aler ue amtnes teen | ee her. a and then only tarongh the interce.sion of the saint, No can be of the extent 10 which thay ee Literatare and Art. a iccture ti Beltat, Ietead, og tbe Tub uit guve's Soot Cecnpy the fat and and 0 tated that 20,00 mea are indephia and Mr, W. Hi. F, Bosanquet is about to give to the pablica | Suc ne of the car of Jnggereaut + fave & ‘cor epgeged in ing them. The insects extended in | this mettical translation of the Fall of Mao or Paradise Loet | [est caer the history of tie oe Hiei aketshed an their course to « of sixty versie and a breadth of | more new metrical arrangement of the lines | Orta cay that, Inetexd of Jomeors ane ty, be woat twenty verats, and are in 80 & condition that | now, that it fsa) teat, and aa latrodection ou the : iy . oreaut being, as bad been they are furnished with wings. Prince of Wales ification of Cudmon. o nee 27 eres Vi Guniet oek A spirit of disaffection to the Anttrian es | tial Fifth A For the coming Italian winter season in Paris it ap their betog crushed to atoms besesth the wheels of his py I sore | Goer ooam pear that ncitber Muame Rorgh! Mamo nor Signor Tam. | car, be wa the Mont mersa!and peaceful of al tbe Hin tne teres te sana pare » | se seeest ritk is engaged. Signor Mario and Gardon| aro; so is | doo celtics. It was an entwely mistaken idea of the mis pe TR E ~- ~ nor Pancani, another tenor. Mesdames Peaco and | #lonaries to eay otherwise, Juggernaut meant the “Lord Sense tne cattrion inte tocar teemenber titan | ommee | ‘Albon! will also're appear. of the Universe,”” and there wonid be nothing wrong in Ko the mnbdaie chase, whe have beleppenred ts iboats |. When Blackwood & Sous bave published Mr. Frederick Hard. | Christian addressing is Meavonly Father in prayer, citation, are declared titegally from the “tate, and man's “Spanish Cam) in Morocco.” Mr. Hardman | ‘(b} thou Juggermaut.” The car wae either largs or their pr onafs sated. was pent oy ty tral scoordiug tothe wealth of tbe worshippers, Te Gaeta he cetgretnee mensare bes aot Mr, Newby announoce a work entitied ‘la it Peace, eet bight pp ey following statistics concerning French wines may Jeti’ marin wbY ane Cabinet Miniter; nad and bonselllly dcsnpeass wah a reobtianes of tie Sey | 228 coaree of construction, oF shorty to be 80; rh fr te 2} ae acre,” by & &. eetguaey. seated ou a throne. Thecar was drawn twice io the yrar— | and to be expended amounte to 6,781 millions, of which | tense merey waually amounte to 2.282.161 a aah nt Sar, sneha eras cretroft e | me fea June ged oe conng of Say Aces | S405 MOOG. had beeu employed upto the State | slg aur tw deve aneekt Peart ike dest of bis brother's multifarious writings. bepeee this conutry trom ray and other carriages worry — pes ae ~ of France cover an sree of 2 000 bectares, ye Boresteré ape ab to of the worshi juggernaut | _ Accord scooun been recentiy. caneal ee Aid erence tiie, tne wget Catheteas ct | to cast Yeorsel Under the wheels Of his car. waste simis, | oeived from Restia, the emadcipation of the sorfs—a ques- Iieetolitres, worth about 800 000 O00E. {he Nineteenth ontury.” Mr, Murray will be the pub. | take.” The car which extstot/n the place he (Mr, Gan. | ton on which the Emperor feels « strong aa! inte. me twentieth of the total production, Naber. : ‘ Pav: | poly) caine from never killed elther man or woman, ani | Pett—is Dot to be #o speedily accom Trot a cotismnsea ob G00 3000. sed eas Mr, Bentiy promises “Chapters on Precious Stonea,’’ in | ibwase old thate new ove had lately to be made,” He bre oory Bay A gh TT roar is esti at 90,000.00, and ¥ had, indeed, seen four stout men crashed to atome in | tt bas latterly entrusted, bas given it aa his opinion | the expenditure for copyeyance not leas than 30 000,000f. : i i i ‘1 i a i which Mme. de Biaréra will discourse on diamonds, | minute under the ‘ar of the god; but im ‘erery religion ‘that i iil not be poesible to have it carried out so ao ie, ke., aod on persons and events connected with | thero w hjects of infatuation wi ages »y | Promptly as the Emperor could have desired, and he wine gives rive in France coneiderably exceeds the theme lorturing tuelr bodice they secured aémiesiog to heaven, | Fecommended what gradual proces, whicti will occupy | of 1000 000, nd bcp A fresh contribution to the biography of Béranger, trom | Juggernaut demanded no himan ercrifee, he was the | SX Years it ls operation, should be adopted in prefer- | The rerowned Father Clovanni, Garibaidi'e the peo of M. Pau! de Lascaux, has been publiehed by | Brahmin god of love, of prace and mere: ence to the more immediate plan wh been ori- | monk, displayed t courage at the battle of soldier- Merera, Amyot & Co., Paris, under the Uitle of “A la Me: | y¢. Abbadie’s communication to the Profesor of Nato. | SMAlly contemplated. Taarcsed, enty Gouriog tat erste a ine hand, he raw moire de Beranger. ral History of the Musoum o/ Paria, Mt. Quatreparés, has | Abdel Kader hag been the moans of saving 11,000 | slong the'ranks, cheer icg and animating the volunteers to ot Bait im sia we be writing & pew opera for Mier | startled a. Teo learned traveller iteclares the complee bay plan Nae 4 gry kg ty God & be and Mr. a the race to be fo en Londen annonces that a Ru yl, mi foremost fon of aman tirely tou the Gasette tian ukase | 2 myself to the grape shot and tee 7 Dr Greeahow ie preparing for the mode of nourishment, that he Las bobeld in Nubia whole | authorizes foreigners to enter the Russian commercial “Dupaberin, fen Rutery tad Treatment,” te ee Syoveaca races of negroes who, from the entire use of animsl food, | guilds on the eame footing as mative subjects, and to on by 4. W Parker Son, Londoo. tas fine a carnation as the iohabitants of Southern foy all the rights conferred by the guilds upon Ras A ver 1 work hee just wr Parepe. In Algeria ithas long been subject of remark | sian merchants. Foreigners are to have the right to ac 7 anata Jost deen brooght out. This | uhat the butchers, generally tegroca of Kalu, are as fair | quireall kinds of i real and personal, excepting “Dhetonary of Ort English f 8,” whetuer ia ‘int or o aaa Som tas Canteen ee Te the crag an tee is empenie ag the Roropean settlers, although stiii , ench asthe Russian t i try, yotl remain vorcathed, And suill, ag he shouted ne waved Soh the oroas. tary ynobility and foreigners are alove abie to obtain by virtue woolly barr, Should this theory be found | porseesing equal r: 4 y Pope “in all his rights, spiritual and temyoral;” {te rule of condoct is “entire subm to the Gusef of the Church;? its means “prayer,” pedlications advooating eter” 3 matter bow prepare OM, SRUSALE OF pole eat of this animal Smith & Eller aro bringing ont a new work by | ‘Paratly, in the fesh of b Waiter Thornbury, enti Turkish Life aad Chareg. | sbether you call it pork, ter,” the iustrations of which are from photographe. When ap | rdawee feventecnth centery, with notices also of Latia plays Gar English vegetarians stem | nal 1 4 eetar id achance of becom | of existing laws. e Jews are excepted from these con- It is wtated at the War Ofiice that the a) strei Se Shoes Ghentemre, be and partiouiars of their Mified at the second generation. | coasivns, and are sabjected to & special treatm sot. site Propores to organize a fourth of Toanves, to re. | APPERFARCE Of the large Dickens’ new little story, which te exci The Academic dee Seiencos, Paris, has just receivet a | At Naples, on Gatibald!’s birthday, there wars grand number of battalions of Chasseurs da Vinceauee | Ybat loomed above the surroasdiog i in ated own,” will appear alemoet steahtacs. communication, whitch as literally ewiged the goitie | dlumination. $e a toa bee polyp hah phew henle) padey toon of tha portion ate 0 Ay ee "Rngiand and Amerion upon that fret{u! poreupive to stand om én! with Horror. | 4 eiroular just feened by the French Minister of Pub . tof regi ~— A pt RS: | A savant of Wartzhoore, M. Wirebow by mame, na: | rpatruetion, shows that the Emperor apolecn ie an inwie | ™enes rom 102 to 110. ey Sy by Sigror Gaaee ~~ hed A. principal reenbors noaneee the tea I diecovery he bas jast mate of the ex | jcoty as Count Cavour to tolersio slerical modding in lay ‘The Austrian artill bas been making experiments Clarem ont, wae in bie views ae far beyond. t) of Madame pany, baw died at Amster iam tatence of & dread eople animal, the truchina | wmairs, A society has been formed @n I yous to ald the | Pile ited caupes, ionded with gun cotton A\thorgh the | him se be’ je mow the particular Tine In y | wiet Is ver 4 eces can be loaded at | ' | the morale. At the last account they had succeeded | Dest known.” throwing & six pound ball three miles with sit cctene it ant”), man? _Joett pes Bre came to gun ert There gun are very light, and this, with | 2 te A fhe Tremaout ant the emal? quantity of amuanition reqoired, renders ther | hands. Syeiem, aticotion ticularly applicable to maintain warfare, ape most minor wants of , Serupniows nestd R possible to fre for s considerable time fefore ine | 6000, fare, Soom wom for" these large bosass enemy learn whenoo the ehote are coming, sinee the gun viable reputation. ry cotten makes no amoke. M The Nactene gives ne tome curious details ae to the costumer of Garibaldi’s gallant egions, mniformity does | place i ot far from Alabama not appear to be particularly prized.’ The artillery is | come femour in the Seuth clothed a& in Piedmont. Tho line wear red tunica, ted | tion. Tt wae at the Rattic canvass tronsers. The Chaweurs of the je WitD (he Oalaorese bat and binek ‘10 grow palé and emacia' s strength deeerta lim, a! | she righta of the I ae Wy bee % it corresponds With a commission of Cardinal and with Gereral Lamoricitre. This body—so secular in tte do tigne—with its budget, aod Se pond with the command @ to the attecks nin od Megal by M. Row t * Motes knew well whut r. “It openly denies roate th: {sw ine’s fosh to bin the State and the ob nen. poring on ite members en T, Without distingw Hurst & Blackett, Tondon, announce Mr. Langiay's « Narrative of @ Residence at the Court of Meor All |" {C™ lerwarde; hie str Mcorad,’ in which much original and ioterestiag infor. | (unt Ve rne.or te pinth woe beay wo be. allen aa na lente vehin’ sparate, Which proves that death must be The fonrth wotwme of Runsen’s “« Reypt's Pace int ar consinepston, vereal History are y " tary at War to corres. chief in Romé—is pro: the ciroular to which wo the Minister, “the rights the citizen, by im Submission to the Sovereign hing temporal order from the al e socvety uRUrpe a soversign part which clong® to the government of France, and {t aseunaeg Th «A Narrative of or H. W. X eu are e On Friday | Pont ase of ling, pow one ot Mr. Stevens’ partners tne Hotel, became an adept in conducting » med by the Rev. Wiliam Rees: et by th nies 9 werner Gonera . ntore, etaried from iaver Au the off al fects