The New York Herald Newspaper, September 28, 1860, Page 2

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ee Peien of pence. They ay, while Loo, Napoleon tatke | ut be aneserabie fe be cnnpcanee @ Tey 8 mserh NEW YORK WERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1860.—TRIPLE SHEET. “4 be watched with inereased interest, and ive succesets) ce and 7 ae | Gegrad. ow " consaomation, Mt & momext mow perhaps vot very re peace, proclaims peace and prates larg’ sty of hp benefie re red you ta wy ash etter that Some wee io bated wit! general | y. ‘™ peace, be preperce for war and ™ ang war, tt ie now ato = ee mote, will bo ad ve aye vendered certain tbat the despatch to the times a work the s#ruraue wer We baye not yet rece! reat leprae of guemap the 8 tm v f 4 > 2 try inte the city of Naples, and the style of recep age—tbe 6.6—'rom Viewua, repor’ cing @ pacific mosage | SU a entry Tones d@ Jlothecki! 1's organ) Yeor Peetere will bear v bis ated 4 * ve 5 Grom S:. Poersburg, end foresh’ dowing an alliance art | ‘nrsina that inany movtba #00 Ube Catork!-, of I meton, | fuoB a juncture, By the way, wile! think of it,l may | e2orded to bin, bat we know well enough what it was wm iva! good understanding Detween the two & mente, wer a canard—a sheer fiction. Mary peliere, tod | With pocd reason, that It wae a concoction Jr ont whilde, got ‘or stock jebbing purposes. sent forth Tepounced thw alliance, which wae thew | contrad.cted by al! partise exeaps thane sash concer Austria parsing over the in spite of ths alliane A wo! Polané ldo cotbing wherety eke to the world in the journal they ow: r ery and vil ‘ peiitical vews of any tmoportaaie wea Hemercle chactot | Bight endanger Ker good relstions with Fracse Ake correspondence from Austria to tt ¢ 71 od The by ‘be creat bouse of money le: oo in the Papal dom iniont = ndere ‘The wOg 6 @ reliable Gcoouml Of Che emurrection | Cbioa, in which it dulates upon before we read the extended ascounta, Toat overgro#o and tor] t capitel bas exchanged a chief—the most abeclatMPidexible and cruel which can be trained ia the schoo! of despotism—for one among the most generous and beroc which this age bas produced, Garibaldi, as goon a he bas reduced to organization, under his own af We! motion that the Monieur corrects @ verbal ina. . | Curwey in the Bmperor’e epeech when at Ta- wtend of the jes'our faults of another age, bis Majesty said he jomidious falousies of another age, “les Sunestes joa- teaeiee The Moméimer of this morping has a leug letter from accord between distant quarter of the Frene® and Pogiish arm.es in eve to the tnenetaletate of afaire ’ af cement wo a Pome, 08 ue bondred | Lne tyes Eo yh AE : ej better system, the confused materials which have come ‘Were these a - Segoe Citizens drove out the troopa hamoriciere. | ap )).1 * —_ we of Peeboe SO ndersiahdiek . between Austria 4:4 | This was the signal for a iraggie tm al the 2 | the com interest of the two greatest uations in | ‘lo bs aye Will be at liberty to move towards the : Sta af pence would be stre Montefeltro, Urbino aad sevral other pinces, the inrar the certs. thay ave here practically exbibiting an almost | Adrucyi toeflect a union with the army of Piedmont, derviand ng may 7 me, a Ee taly cod | ny a -4 , gry Sl aaa: hl foot | °* bolding out ‘ve band to bim, across the narrow neck ar rvs Fears ctor Emanve! et the ineurrectios = acovunts mo Sy mew! , yoy ee on the italan | SMENL, 8 ‘Asgo abdowaer, od the moat Rigby re. | paquant It in extraordinary,” it a faid, the dread en- fot Pope tenribeey Sen the Adrian aes, he jenlions pig eems tu be the | SPected personage ty the Marches. Re bas for some viewed by the Mahomedans of the French, notwith- | which is the policy of Piedmont, once effected, it may be es hie beg gp its croak of waraing, Bot pe Ee A oye Casing Witty Seevatose te geeesnce ot ee considered that the comquest of the Roman Power will be i on : uty at the last sone. son ee 8 re an ¢ atanication, cons to carry im 19 the commenced ie bie own comiry, Be tmuagh’ ® hip opportunity to burst into their harems and carry off their | more thar half achieved. The door of Ancona—the most ts ee a aoa duty to join im it, apd be mmetianaty hastened | woves and daughters. Not » fervaic is allowed by them to | important for Austrie—as an entrance into Italy, after hea A nase ewe Sd aot pocw, | into the miast of the [poopls, whe, if lof to Memselves, | appear in the bazaare, or to leave her house on any pre- oneld fi deeniia the Austrion Bore would perhaps have "en to the F movements charscter | lence whatever. They bave even gone ao far in thei? pre- oaie ie Pegg cvcin ‘Of | Of eeorder and of vivleuee, Which bie guthorty alone | cautious as to make #tong doore croseed with ‘ror at the nih ge adi fect Ya Slound poachiow on that | Will Prevent, Umbria has already followed the example | retraces w some of the email lance leading to their quar- | doctrine cf non-intervention, to keep out of the steoggle ew be W* pred “ofl; i fact, Re gets the warn. | ofthe Marclice. ‘Thee two egunteien declare themselves | ters, ina word w barricade themselves or rather their | ‘or ze pesscesion of Umbria and the Marches, whish is ned off; in fact, be gets the to be bound togetbor by S commanity of wulforing and of , women : impending. She ig now introdeciag her soldiers in coe hing of SOF qinig hae sent an army into the | bopes. The insurrection of Umbris iret manifested teil | A curlous history of the coinage of France fo given, by age inqeny, 5 4 rene, m Marchee—Papal Sta wand 4 ool is xpected | ®t Orvieto, which if at ouly & very short distance from | which, since the First a ‘t oppeare that the im- {| thousands ‘nto the sma!) towns slong the coast, north of tween his 0c? fen ee ~ cs the Tuscan froptier of Piedmont Tha pieviscile ie Sey | peror Napoleon bas nearly doubled the amount coined by | sncono, What sort of a stand Francis Il. will be able to a a 4 and lamoriciere. | ne eon | bad been fixed for the 16th net. Ibpow appeare thet | Louis PD! ippe in romething lees than ball his reign; be h ith f Gaet eball, abtedly, i ane t {curse events are taking ea fe snow | Garibaldi has cent counter ordere to the pro Mictator De- | amount being 3,787.960,276 francs, while Louis pallppe'e, make in hig position of Gaeta, we , Undodtedly, in be finde will be j heat see oe ie Sie ae a Fretie. who paturally dares pot recat, Garibald sates the larger Olkerwite on (he catalogue, {# 1,072,851,183 w days eee, mm cent daDg’ pS e collision bevweca Vistar Bmaneal Hat bis missiso will only torminate at Rome and Veaten, | irenes iy de m at The friends of Austria and the old order of thices, in aad Austri® OF , the north, and with the Pope and the | He '# desirous of uveiling himself of the cepuasoss WRG } She Boaree le terribly ‘ul. The uncertain @tate of af | or. oes autre ane taking, are nearly over. Frevoa in ‘ot ior Italy, ‘The Italians certainly are in getty Z ber dete! Out of (all they Bave galn- | sopoxation tovk place Immediately, for all berty of a Aitics Weare quiet. The campaign in Ch fe eet Teka ee oat important ‘etentintis th along very fast, but ia New Zealand the toio- | 18 MY,00' 10" met With # bad repulse by a ravaye chieftain ever 80M 4 regular troops, commanded by one of the red tape mar tinets of the dock and Pakenham schoo!. “ir Ht pry Bulwer, tbe British Ambassador at Constan- Smopic, baw got into sad discrace, from which he will the Lalian ImbrogiiomTie Opening of the Great ever fp il hat court. Diplomatic inwr se aren e feren fy ery so common at he Porte, that the Drama—Garilaldi Not to be Checkmated—Depression in poor s y been able to call hi soul, mind, the Funds, do, €2. aitan bas bard! ce or W of diplomatic knaves of the Si ve or silly pedan's like Sir H. Bulwer. emands of the Sultan that a certain Pacha should be disp jireed: the only crime that he was guilty of, itseems, the holding the ogliah baronet la very great empt, bat to this the Sultan said “No.” He then ap & great {nse, becanse some tradesmen, county; tain goverament contrac es bis own, 80 fully have they tiord with more indulgence than I should have anticipated and even Syria, provided by special messengers despatches for my own peculiar use. Where all & jon with the Sultan's ‘ » ber apparent to the throne—a complete viola- | ‘6 With unspeakable cagernces cach shade of « shadow e cite and rule, avd, altogether, the ae of the turn of events, and calling into exercise the cost- # ador seems to de getting deeply in the mire and drag- | jiest machin t their dig; he is a bold American | pag bis mation clang With bisa. Mo oun; prouanty, | ae wid St ra rresiialsisadin fer mooured Sir Henry Bulwer of belog a man a | °rrespondent who ‘“ keeps let pen Fimngie ‘ouch above mediocrity; his only merit bows the accidental fact of hie being brother to a highly Spopuiar English novelist. He became noted in Washing- Tow, & few years ago, for some very silly speeches, aad ‘for leny ng the place very suddenly While largely in debt that he has quite for- will bis utterly bogus 2 Palmerston and the members of her Majesty 8 government? » Toixig of ambassadors, considerable talk has been cre- Sted bere touching the ‘miesion of Mr. Lindeay, M. P’ nited State, determined w ac! if, and that of some shipowne: from the United States in the + nf the national coasting trade. Free trade is a it mg, no doubt, but go long a8 you want to hold wn in the trade to ‘© 9 your own hands, the werld. So soon’ ata British ship can leave Liverpeo! or London, loaded with British goods, load and foad ai New York, and reload there for California or New Orieape, just so soon will you throw into the hands ef the ship-owning nation @ most profitable branch the trade, They have the steam, passenger traffic across the Atlantic ly in and let thom trade—as they retri fometimee to read the ingenious transposition of rience has Satly contradicted, put forward as eecret friend of the English Premier, &a, clenched with ber it was I who gave it you.” Living at Paris, the great piyot on whioh the most 8, ri form a threwd guees at the direction which afal likely to take, a correspondent, without indulging bot travel upow sources of information patent to all, Wilgon, the superinteadent | Jal cepartment of the Iadian government, | holera, at Calcutta, jast before the departure of | t mall, and Sir Hewry Ward, Governor of Bom)aj dout the same time. The loss to India, in the Wilton, i# thought to be nearly irrepirablo. d careor has beon a singular on be wage bankrupt tradeaman— cannot command. The distance, jas went out Lo India to resassi- cen of that country, so long andered and tucked to o famubed skeleton the kinglom of the Two Sicilon furmisbes to attale thet object, whieb, he says, be could gever accompii#h if the | lation, The three per certs yesterday were at 69/.60c,, a Paris, Sept. 14,1890. Parts the Pivot of Europe—Potitical Goesip of te Day— 1 will pot imitate a habit of certain correspondents from our side the Atlantic, which seems to be received | Prince Regent \e expreesing bis satisfaction with the be- yours, aud pretend to give yon intelligence from Naples, “ ntraining on the etari’”—where governments are watch- moment,’’ in order that be may give the United States | Venetia, thecrowning exploit of the great ili buster, within the benefit of bie own special despatch from Palermo, Naples and Beyrout. Letters of this kind unfortunately | Austrians bave taken the alarm, and are preparing to de- their way back again to Europe, and it is amusing words of a despatch that, in {ts authenticity, must have | boon stationed there since the truce of Villafranca, four found its way to America in the ordinary couree, and to | entire corpe have been mobilized, the railways are en- see broad statements of the looeest reports, which expe- formation privately communicated from an intimate | garians in this emergency, the most extensive concose! m8 strong injunction “ to put that ia your pipe, and remem- | The reconciliation of Avstria and Russia, so often an- citing events of the day revolve, and among persons who, while they recetve the earliest information, are able to | at Toplitz, is about to be signed am! sealed at Warcew. these playful fancies, may be very useful toa distant public in imparting political gossip, which, while it does often of a nature to show the future laclination of events. | clines ail responsibility for the acts of the Italian patri ote, It ig not required of him that coursers, with panting sides | although he professes to disapprove of the conduct of Sar- acd breathicss horsemen, should throng his doorway as his burried goose quill darkens bis hasty sheet, nor that the electric wire ebould do that for him which despots | cause which is, in reality, identified with his own. the still impertect at | Postal common cation ovtstripped even at the last mo- ment by such telegraphic agency as the Haenaup, regard. | of Austria's rule in Italy is eesentially directed against e—and be then turned bis attention | egg of all cost, secures at the last European poiat of land, | himself. A despot ut home, he i the natu Sea Set bun ant nd Perey one . tee rome i ae sen i nd | dispenses with all such showy qualifications, and bide us | ral representative end ocbamplon of the revo. | work to be allowed to go on to its desired and legitimate metaber of Parliament and Vice President of | enactan humbler but, perbape, hardly lees important role. | tion abroad, and if it is put down by | end’ Many a hitch it We live in times when speculations on the future makes | an alliance of legitimate monarchs ‘a Ttaly, the tenure by one almost dizzy, The Kivg of Naples, tn accordance | by which be holds his own throne will be seriocely me Aire copseqnent op events in Ttaly 8 6 check to all specu. whelmed with mingled indignation and despair. The Co- lini gnaw their tails tm their rage, but they are impo- tent for misebief. The day of severest tre! for the miti- tary bierarchy of Rome bas come at length, and \ts powers Of continued resistance to reasouable progress and tem- perate reform are about to be put toa final test. The public opinion of the world bas beea brought to bear witb all its force upon the Court of Rome, to influence it, if poesible, to yield to the moderate demande of the Italian people. The journalism of that portion of the coumtry freed from deepotic rule, and where it has grown into energetic and vigorous life, bas exercised all its power to intluence the Papacy to adopt 2 liberal policy, to renounce foreign alliamees and embrace the national cause. But all this effort, put forth with ‘so much zeal an‘ sincerity, while it has bad its due effect to tnfluence and win over the Italian people, lias made no impression upon Rome. Neither to entreaty from its own people, nor to pressure from without, bag it yielded, or will i€ yield, a single one of the much needed changes. It has red to rely upon force rather than moral influences, for its security ‘and the preservation of ita power: and now that all other means have failed, it is about to be confronted by those as foes who have striven to be its friends, ol ormaa with military weapons, since euch are the weapons which the prelacy elects to ure. It is highly probable that within forty-eight hours Rome and the [ta!ian kingtom will be in m etate of war, The great camp which has forming for the past ten between Arezzo and Rimini, bas already swelled to a e of considerable magnitude, and {t is ‘said that it will be carried up to 70,000 men, this army takes the field {t will be under the command of the King. The time and the direction of its movements will be governed by the bY Ea to the note gaid to have Lg aonnmge | by Connt Cavour to Antonelli, the Cardinal ry of State, If the nature cf this note is what is reported, t First Minister of Victor Emanuel bas exhibited his cha- racter atic The Count asks nothing lese from the Roman authority than that the mercenary forces which Lamoriciere bas gathered shal! be at once dismiss- ed, or mach reduced, ob the plea that euch an army ie a standing menace to the peace and good {ellowehip of the neighboring provinces. If the requeet is not complied With, the Predmontese troops will at once occupy the Marcbes and Umbria. Meanwhile, baif a dozen or more towne just over the border have declared their independence of Rome, and bave sent deputations to the King, asking him to acoept their allegiance and give them protection. Urbino— glorions as the plaice which gare birth to the greatest painter of the world—has been frat among the revolted towns, end Pieano, Pergola, Montefeltro aad other places have followed. Lamoriciere bag bis eoldiers alroady ia motion, for the purpose of mening them tw exbjection, The Piedmoontese soldiers stat in the neighboriag Valleys will Zot look on and see the atrocities of Perogia ae without fying to the succor of their distressed rotbers. All, not too much carried away with enthusiasm, con- lower point (hap they have recently touched. Our Berlin Correspondence. Brnrix, Sept. 12, 1960. Garibaldi’: Sucovsses—Their Injluenz Upon the Public Mind of Pressia— The Peeling Belwem Austria ond Rus- sia—The Question of TLalian Unity Approaching tts Solu- ton—Pant-on the Bar PBourte—Decline in Austrian Punas—Werlike Preperations, de , £0. While the Prersians are playing at soldiers, and the on | havior of bie troops and their commanders at the “grand mapcuvres, events in Itely are progreseing ata rate which threatens to supersede these mimic feats by the stern realities of actual warfare. The brilliant guccesses Of Garibaldi, the downfall of the Neapolitan Bourbons, and the insurrections breaking out elmuitaneously in various parte of the Papal territory, seem to promise the vexed question of Italian unity @ more rapid solution than last | was anticpated, and to bring the prospect of av attack apon and are the compass of a few weeks, porsibly ef a few days. The fend the relice of their dominion in the peninsula to the the | last extremity; besides the army of occupation that has cumbered with the transport of of war, and to secure the dowbtful ilery and monitions in. allegiance of the Hun- the | have been offered them by the Imperial government. nouneed and 8 often contradicted, appears a: length to bave been a foil accompli, and a coalition between the Ubree Eastern Powers, the bases of which were egreed on ox. are | Europe is evidently on the eve of a gigantic struggle, \o in | whieh the principles of divine right and the sovereignty of the Pope will once more be opposed to each other, and which must decide the fate of the Continent for the next , ie | generation, Yor, although Lovie Napoleon cetensibiy de- inja in areuming the initiative against Austria, the force ‘of circumstances w.il ultimately compel bim to espouse a It cannot ercape the observation of go acute @ politician tha, in ite jast results a coalition formed for the maintenance encountered, and many others, not to be avoided, it must experience. But is no violea:, perbaps eerious hock to come from abroad? Outside, as Febbed ard p ‘well a8 Within, there are so many jealousies existing, 80 by We cormorant rule of the Fast India Company. He | with what lorg since I was able to tell yon was the gen Baced | As long, as be continued on terme of decent et ae Lx port, seh me bad wh be was removed by death, . x r lebip wit ‘ussia, and of apparent intimacy with persica in play Cause p~ he pours el em a | pelea Peaster tte tne Out of the back door of | 1.6'Czar, he could afturd to sink the cheracter of parser | Posed to all sorte of . has her factions, Abd ab\ccitais Yankees have not shown | Naples while Garibaldi bas eptered it at the frout, In } inthat of the colleague and associate of kinger, Esc now | cd even at « Lime whon the destisice of the cocetee wot wD partieular Drilliancy during the Iaat few | fot, there was only an interval of six hours between the tbat bot theve Powers have gone over tothe enemy, be or pele) SJ ce po 3 _ ve | ma Will have no -boice bat on original posi- | °' . ; Great Br tain, Mr. Ten Brock ‘ran two events; aud T ste that the Mondicur of this meraing | ‘co. ead to taveke tus eaulstancs of ibe iectonooe, | fetece dpos thewelnre ef the people A Derby, kept him company, Howes | 8Pncunces that, in presence of ex®ting aifairs at Naples, | spirit that existe in Hungary, in Poland and ever i | there ar@ ‘bore who atrive with wt thelr m, etors of a great American circus, hat m the same prize la the same way, of inet year, and—to use a term known to ed by them in the same manner, A row beweber were broken, the manager cleared out payment, when the boy, aasiste! by bis com- yader, w red the mule and took bim home, at the | marble—perfectiy justified. the Emperor bas withdrawn his Minister {rom Tarin, rt ° io Proseia, the critical aspect of aiairs men and the truest patriota of the country. a po ag leaving only a Charge d'Aftaires. Of course thie refers to | gytqy ansicty und Uisarrangement, was | _ Hardly « soldier of the regular army now remains ia eign We any one who would ride a certaia | the bold rtep taken by the Piedmontese in following up | another panic on the Bourse, which ly afiected | Florcwce. The city is in the banas of the Municipal or trained at rearing, Kicking and throwing | events at Naples and crossing the frontier. The somi- | Austrian funds, but extended also to Prussian and | NatiouahGuard; » part of watch, te Teseany, os in the & boy, @ youthful Rarey, | ving in stables, | Cn. /utionnel had whispered some gentle monitory ac- | Ctber Aecurities. Notwithetanding the hatred felt may yes be mobilized, if it should be to borte irieks, performed the feat, when the great s - . against Louis Napoleon, a war with France would be | “‘emanded by any pew agencies. showman ined to down with the | cents, and, for the sake of consistency, the Emperor case particuiarly aggravating was, | withdrew bie Minleter, but no one for a moment supposes ry popular ove in Damfries—William here that Vietor Fmaauel is or has been doing anything but such as a previous programme—perhaps not graven in It ig thought that the revolt of the town of Foesombrone, and its summary suppres- tion by the Pontifical troops, rather bastened General | bas jcet entered e of or counfo: Germany. the counsels and the plans of the wisest extremely unpopular, especially if undertaken in con cnc tion With Acetria and Russia. Such a league recaile to forcibly the traditions of the Holy Alliance to be viewed Without uneasiness, and —— the official = government keep repeatirg ueque ad from having an ontoward eitect upon the internal policy of Prussia, the example of this coantry ve urge Austria forward in tbe path of . The public place very little faith the | 19 such sesvrances, being aware from experience tha Our Genoa Correspondence. Guvoa, Sept. 11, 1960. Grand Mumination a! Genoa in Honor of Garibaldi’s Ea- trance into Nayles—triumphal March Joom Reggio to Noplo— Fnthuniaen of the People—The Attitude of Aus- tria—The Pillage of the Castle of Mome Cristo, de , de. fae ‘ime pitching one of the circus hands Cinidini’s (the Sardinian General) movements. Oa 5 Yeaterday the harbor was gay with Gage, and last night — 4 ¢ Nith. Possession be connection between Austria and Prusia irveriap! ® * Me iw. Howes & Cuming banded over | Part of France an important reinforcement to the Roman | fends to" insveare the intatuee Of ihe fone ay | tbe city was Drilliaut with thousands of lighte. Garibaldi 5, obtel their animal and waked up this | garrison bas been despatched, as you will see,and in | to diminieh that of the letter. Ami besides, | i# in Naplee. On the 7th inst. the King departed to Cacta, fed themselvet famoas, or rather infamous, | every respect the plot may be said to thicken, the progress of reform im Prussia hereolf bat | as Garibald entered the city. He was received with the {a the Temes, {/atly Tacoraph, ant the | 4 aiguificant feature in the opening of the drama t wiuence abd circulation Dos ness, Mesers. Howes be carried oa in as honorable were not theif equestrian career to foveral acts quite as ait on record. If self respect nor sod repatation themaelves, let them act #0 ¢ their country at the same time. A brace beer pbresologats (rom Broadway have com: dom, but John Bull t# too kaow: a | and totally opposed to the enthusiastic narratives tng 8 cove to be caught : not without precedent under the prev. tnt biel principally to empty decehes in emall provia. | ‘ile fout—wothing could be ao little imposing. Whether | have'even become of almost daily sesrereny armies, darhing down the colore of their kingdom, rushed oa! towne The game, jece of itiwereat moun. | it was (hat the Liberator was earlier thaa was expected, | burg & troop of halang made a regular to join bis ranks. And Naples iteeif, the city of the Bour- benkem, « played out i, giving lar 8 thas on any former occasion. harvest st/ll continues, and favored with al- rropted good weather, The crop promises to p bo the average. returns aod drawing | Neapolitan correspondent, not the slightest exritement Oar Parts Correspondence. j Neapolitans, fear, eeized thera in fll forse, and every ova ponieh thee that akenee themecteca sam snrestening 10 | take plas) sven. ‘Teun tar good; but there will be com: Panis, Sept, 13, 1860. scudded to his house, Wo are told that all the diplomatic | P’bave not beard that the gallant colonel has bee plications and difficulties yet, Things have been drifting a rember Pepa! Troops — Viclor Bnanuel't | agents, except those of Rogland and France, accompanied a — =< 5 must be su foacolligion between the troops of Victor Fmanuel and Addras te Wis Tropa Dalian Vnity His Ambition—The | the Kitg 10 Gaeta, and that M. Bornter, while remaining | tore, Meople remember, owe thoge of the Poutidea) States for some ten days. Wer Poo The Erie Cordial: Between France and | simply as a private individual, expressed a hope to the | was manifested 733 ng > J © ‘ The official paper of Torin anpouncee that to-day the bs «+ ‘vious to the battle of Jens, are by Do meabe fure that o~ - « sai aed Provisioual authorities that he should not be preveated trepidity exbipited by these beroee again’ Sardinian troops will march into the States of the Church. The Veiegraph acnounces that the Papal forces bave at- | from “ walking about itizens is @ guarantee for their saccces | suppore this thing will be done with « perfect under. Locked }em Drowe, and thal after overpowering the Now it is impossible to belp suspecting that a damning 5 standing with France. If not there will be trouble, and ance of the ‘nbabitante, the mercenaries of St. Pe | parration of this kind is etther the result of a jeupdiced - 2 ee for Strelits early chit | austria has threatened, if the Neapolitan kingdom on the soccemmor committed the same fearful massacres o& | mind or hee been written to order. If the last surmise | Dune of Mecklenburg, who died cn the ah notes Tents | mainland be invaded by Garibaldi, she weald et voce # lerogin lant your. Geseral Caldini crose! into the | be correct, what is the motive? Ie it now that the royal chabty secend year of age. The deceased Grand Dake | March shrowgh the Romagns to the aaristance Pape! dominions with « large Piemontese corpe d'armée | impediment to ulterior evente is fairly removed, to hint | T2# Strgae ten gx ke a & march 05 setend the Papal saben, Sects await Gari. Ae voce ae he heard of \hit outrage. From Turin we boar | that other pretenders may be at least as acceptable to the | ecen Loune of trams whore memory is etl charieved bald! at Venice? From ail accounts she will not have to teat the King has received the deputations from the | Neapolitacs as Victor Emanuel? Is the cloren foot of | by her eubjects, and wepbew to Queen Charlotte of fing. | Walt t, Before the end of autamn the campaign to Marches sod Umbria, amd that at their solicitations his | dynastic aspiratious pooping out? We have, io fact, a } ale ee pa) ee ‘ret pee tet ree eee Majyriy bat promived them ald and protection, and that | moet inscrutable man, who holds the destinies of the Although younger days he had distinguished him A little epteode will the ron med state of men's he tae ordered hut troope to take possession of those pro- | world in nie bande, and \t i¢ worse than useless to indulge | self by abolie minds bere. About two weeks ago, the steamer Orwell, prsorse tn eporuiation. Limburg, be bad since the revolation of 1848 by Gt was about prooseding 1 fi | . “ most urcompromising hostility to li to to be sold and to Garibaldi. The Victor Rmance! bes teed to bis troops the following It Garibald) ie not stopped by Victor Fmanue! gene. | nowhere in a! Germany had the spirit of reaction been | CTeting before she was to bave sailed, whilst the captain ral opinion i that be will manfully play out the game | carried to such an extent as tn bis diminutive os. Se See who bad taken of Crsar aut Nullar, Friends of his, who thorough! Sriaies, composed exclusively of thenobulity, with | for Mersin Satan ere 5 ¥ | a few delegates of the cities, were restored, the peasantry | ePeiveer to raive ‘and went out of the harbor. understand bis character, say that be will boldly argue | again end the jarisdictioa of their seigneurs, pL AG, L Uf of proviai ms. Frovlocsy | (At the minion be bas andertaken \s not to be measured | corporsl pun reintroduced, the prere muzzied, im | They landed at the of Monte Cristo, colevrated by Tiveeie’ | by ofiinary eventualities, and that there is nothing, short, a ripime establiebed which, though not so cruel | Dumas, pow ovens IL, an Bogtish gence. to me or Under bw peculiar circumstances, more impossible in | as that of King Bomba and the not Henwe nan by the name , robbed hie house and grounds Rome apd \enctia thag in Sicily and Naples.“ Thacea | perbape because it met with ices oppositioe—was quite | of (very tbing eatable, killed hie caitie and wantonly de- bost bebind,”” he bas been heard to say. ‘more formi- | as lawless and otic im its character, sof | Broyed what Pt to a dable than ten thousand ried cannon, What ts the good | the inbabitente emigrated to scek beyond the auiantica | Last week, the fee: having been advised of the tions when the garrison ie against jt refuge from the yance of these petty tyrants. the | Circometance, the wae taken possession of by fone gk notion is gaining ground that France will | remainder suffered in siinees, with the stolid resignation | them in Sicilian waters, and the Giitustere wl! a4 ah proveruites ; | Counsel the Pope's withdrawal to Avignon, in presence of | pecoliar to the German race. A Prospect is now se receive cond ign at the hands of Joba At. cad Gineend Gheppe | the dueuities that encompass him. Popes have, ere this, | opened to these victims of op, The oldest som it). Tiearn these from a0 Foglish passenger on 4 | i critica! circomstances, taken totheir beds and“ slowly | and successor of tbe late Grand eke in Diind, bat ite | tbe Orwell, who made bie escape from the steamer at 7 ded” What if the poor old Father of the Church | hoped, notwithstanding, that he will show more mental faye that two Italians, l'elott! and Se should fied this world too much for bim to give place to yerepieacity than bis fatter, aod replace ibe medi» val ayw- ringleaders, thet retased another soccesvor of St Peter! We know there is a Gona- | tem cnder whish ple subjects hare so long by Ly ~F on te belonging to the Sacred Coll at Avignou ©, and Reems perfectly content with it. - etermand (hat Victor Eman ie ond iba the ot oes © progress, cir sa! éangere of revolt Sree his proclamation, where “a war, both un #0 arnest, atve aod HBere GOTOTEMeT | agaiwet ly racny ant euperstition bee ere ary Commences flow it will end time alone can aco sures far, 88 OROF Intervene. Should the (o eB GORES! contict becomes inevitable, aad the Wy 1 aeele be drenched with Ve ies wa ned wow « #8 we hope that Providence will eid the peopie, ana (het Peaece, Wh ber powerful arm, will protect inaily from the legitimista, te, em “eee her melt, memy 8 can tell ae Dy avertale ehiavet onapariicts, « © he Bmperer Napeiere © net A Berope @ Strowgly leavened with the hopes of Lacien “ - may or may not be counteganced by the Court. «cea o, S® @oremente seein send an army ‘Vou wil bawe seen the report, subsequent 'y contradict. on 2 ation Pecaet S60 bead, would at ed by the Morning Post, that an alliance had beon o be torn 4, Gnd ll Meas of bomanity, or depires tg — detwern Fegland, Avetria and Praesia, the object of | times incognito. Indeed, bie Imperia’ Ma ety perme to P< pre Tot people, me lonly expremEd ia be Loa. | frugtiers of France Now, without seeteaien ne ie ike | down for centaries, under the humiliation of « foreign | have awakened up from & leng lethargic epeil of harees < careaie, COU Pe WEY WO Ihe stronger doeire of | deporitary Of aay State secret, 1 a8 well romarc that | Tele, rising from ite long slumber®, \te thraidom and de. | life to the etern realities of hie portion and great hopes . ale, the ooneen ng 6 fare | Fe The Bmperor ie well aware of pag - Embassies io, th though the Morning | cay, taking Once more into \{s own bande the control of | are being entertained of hie Contumeance Bb requinite cat xtf presen, sien Way ferkape force Bim te ‘ook the Nord, $e, torah pg Ryley Circa, | ite destinies, and moving on to agscme a place among | determination. Bis women Are Gute © deepair, aad oe oct take 5 fn © sy pele that otherwise be Nothing of Ube kind pas beers Dut (have | living mations, The sympathies of Ai! liberal minde are | abbor the very came of Drose and Hanwe e The ox ved Gees et ewe! Peck be the case, Paginas along east 1) at tbe words are Lord Joun Rumell's letter which appears this morning in the all but official | of war it is very likely to be wutionnel, giving an account of events at Naples, nished to the I ondon journals. According to this, nothing could porsibly be more tame and noiselefe, more entirely nnenthosiastic, than the reception of the two great events military chief, and pot to the which at this momeot are agitating all Earope to its | cot centro. The King went outand the Dictator came in— | te and that the indifference which accompanied the royal Exit Hung its shadow on its antitype, but, according to the vailed. Yee, there was some, for when the Sardinian dra- peo waa planted on the fort, and a salvo of artillery ac- companied the ceremony, the normal characteristic of the b lege, and why shoal f not be and the Papacy together take up a permacent abode | Poperor has jost been to visit the ) | and are the only family of e Murat, and | tion i@ at this moment passing before our eyes, with made | own, that | with the Italian people, The progrese OF dele couse wit, ‘ea wildest enthusiasm. He bas taken posserrion of the go- vernment, and now is etyled “Dictator of the Two Sic! lies.” The Neapolitan ticet be has given in charge to Admiral Persano, of the Sardinian navy. His bolleting are beaded “United Italy and Victor Emanuel."’ The late King's farewell to his people appears in the same paper with Gar{bald\'s fret bulletin. The march from Reggio to Naples has been one of tri- umph. Cities opened to him their gates, and opposing by ew altogether, or to arsume a retrograde direction Hreaty the reorgan':a Vion of the army by virtually eliminating the la dw *r, a popular clement, har teuolosed « prigcipls cofarorabie to the maintenance of civil liberty; the soldier is more and more separated from the citizen and targb! to con sider himself a superior bewg, omly accountable to hie fur- oo 8 village, and took ‘A tim ilar scene was enacted, inbabitante armed themselves with fails and pitohferk:, pre- | Sod finally drove off the aseailante, with no (ncone\dera ble lors in wounded and prisoners.’ At Gorlitz thore wae ‘a Oght in the etreets between the ‘fon and the towne people, after which the Commandant de plac, Col. Gor doo, seued an order of the day, ordering his men to cut bon, at bis approach, poured out to meet him, aad he was. etcorted in by two bundred and fifty thovsand people, who shouted “Vive Garibald), viva Italia Una, viva Vit- toric Emanuele,” it bow Tremaine to reorganize the government and con solidate and confrm the victories. Annexation will now iu dF : 8 ore in accordance with the spirit of the age id the dictates of com: sense. He * marr: that the object of these men in mak: English Princess, a sister of the Duke of Cambridge, whe capture of the Orwell was to go to Ni mj is Said to poseces considerable iafiuence over her huebsad, capture « Neapolitan frigate, bet t and by w he bas an only son and belt. The hoose of ney mote Setemapt of the Kied. i | are the dencasentct 6 Guevenie chtotens’ oiee nat te prevent aay fatty alien pt gree! ft toe e jan s 10 iJ a | Guered and coaverted 10 Christianity Dy Henry the Line, Se cumen ty sires re Solavon ic orig! X.ste among the reigning yuasties of Europe. taat ull Uur Florence Correspondence, Foonewce, Sept. 11, 1860, Prospect for an United RolymEnthusiann of the Pople Poticy of Victor Bmonuct and Garitaldi—Otstinacy of the Pope—The Popular Current Sweeping ait Before Tim The Continental Powers om the Verge of War, de, de. We are the near witnesses of great events, A proces. Cometasravorie, Sept 1, 1860. Bomemy to the Royal Hous koll—Tht Jmperial Catind— Moments of Durviah Proope— Affairs in Syria —The On. tome m Government Recalling its Paper Car omy, do ‘The (tomas goverement @ actively carryag out ite actors and objects #0 heroic and nobie as to win our in- | his aanction Council of tate, and, it # seid, baw vinted it severai penece of ibe royal Dousebeld Deve bere reicce! to thew minimum; all exira eyeyauie have been pul aside om emma pensions until perier t mee, and the gala show of Avababs and'ev'gnchs bas almost d.sappeared. The latter =: STU eee THE CRISIS IN ITALY, tee Seem disceyeolate, and fecl that thelr occupation s ‘The Htalian Revolution at Its Zenith— Entry os neerly £07. jn fine, the Sultan ‘r ectting ap excellent Garibaldi Into Vaples—The xsmp¢ of trugality and economy, which lé conformed to ies, 234 See nancy the by #4 of hig minievers and public fanct onariee. There is @ U Enthusiasm of the Detter feeling among the principal men of the capital ‘DOW then Cas beem the case for a century, Private dieeen- tions have been cast aside, and several persons, agaicet whom there bas been an enteni: mmonget the ministers, haye been placed in stations of importance apd responeibility. The family of the late illus trious stateaman of this country, Redsckid Pacha, and that of Mustapha Pacha, of the Island of Gandia, both very wealthy, have been taken again into fayor. The eldest fon of the latter, Vely Pacha, formerly ambassador to Paris, bas been named Governor Generai of Adrianople. All of the troops about the capital, amounting to some 60,000, are kept constantly under drilJ, and thus out of miechief, Nothing is beard bat the sound of the drom and the daily discharge of blank cartridges. The Minis- ter of War, Riza Pacha, a wan of coneiderable military adv nietrative qualifications, i# up early and late in the discharge of bis duties. Ho is the Sultan’s favorite, and ‘Das more infuence with him than any other person, from the fact that be twice saved bie life, i ¢,once when the late Sultan, Mabmond I], ine ft of aoger and intoxiea- tion, ordered bim, bis som, to be drowned in a garden reservoir, from which Riza Pacha, then Riza Bey anda Chamberlain of the palace, withdrew him {pn time to pre- vent drowning; and secondly, wheo a year or 80 ago he discovered the conspiracy which bad been formed against the Saltan by come officers of the army. Troops are still being sent down to Syria, where some 20,000 are now stationed. There are 20,000 at Beyrout and 2,000 at Aleppo, Fuad Pacha cootinues to send news of his active operations in Syria, where, by the latest accounts, he had already arrested more than 1,500 persons. The landing of the French troops had already been effected at Boy- rout, without disorder, though it was apprebended it might be otherwise. Ihe Ustoman soldiers bave proved faithfal and loyal to their’ eovereige and the officers in command, and it is not feared that there would be any further outbresk. In the meantime a royal Grman bas been issued to the (iovernors Genera! of Diarbekir, Khao- poor, Erzeroum, Toest, SivasfAc. 0 Asia Misor, com- manding them to see that there be no negligence showa ip checking any disposition on the part of either Mussul- man or Christian to attack the other, which violence ‘was not to be apprehended, for the Museulmans there are ‘not £0 inimical to the Christian population as they are to their own co-religioniets—i. ¢., Catholic, Greek or Protes- tant. So long as these pseudo Chr .stians keep the peace among themes!ves there need be no alarm or fear from the followers of the Muftis. No wonder that the Mos- lems enterta‘c such an abborrence of Christianity. They fee it in ite woret torms. Wretche! shurches, intempe- rate priests, ignorant of everything that ie good in their own faith, setting the worst example to their parish\ou- ers for love of bakki and wine, card playing and of a whose Divine migsion wae sgaine: Paganism and de- graded Christianity. They sce their churches adorned with miserable pictures of the Deity in the Garden of revert barge fae | = of Gnd snd So prea, tee. mediately precedi 1 own; of sainta, wi ves commences their sanctit; well know that to and private life these Christians are far ww their own daily Standard of and Let Coristian: ‘Vince itself to the tind ‘of’ the Moslem, and toon be a better state of feeling Cy wor! lowers of the re’ormer of the Arabi Nevers tm the divinity of Christ; for until the ved of of the otherwise than impressed with ‘vast superiority Mussulmap imaum over the Christian priest—the face of the “old Turk,” and the sly, cringing the Greek and the armenian, they are treated iy be former. promiced by the ‘istian, tbe found to regard bim as an inferior being ciple, though not in the wisdom Such are my own {tmpressions, and sore in thus exposing thom where I the Mugeulman \. 1! be treated with impartiality bis due, irrespective of his religious tendency. Commissioners, as | predicted ia one of jettere, bave been sent by i rance, lad ¢ z ij iy Fs Ht z z ge fy re Hal | the secretaries of the Russian Legation bere, for nothing in particular that | know of, though I do not doubt he will “play well his part.” Rusia will have plenty other (secret) agents in Syri im the bush” him. Fuad Pacha will, it is believed, know bow to 18 own business without their aid, } i Ls uf ll 2 zF ity i TF aud favor wi freee Taft : Ly = ES 5. y ? H i Fr oe é ‘ 2 rite ! 5 i i 3 Ei ij TH ial I : if i Fe &, z E i i i ate g g H 2B j E i iu for | ae =F zigs H E 2 : | E 4 Fs 1 i § : i Peeple—Seenes and Incidents— The Bing’: Parting Words-— Garibaldi in a Red Shirt— Optaions of the Press, &o., &e, &o., a {From Naples Correspondence to the London Times. } TRE APPROACH TO THE CITY, ‘We remained at La Cava long enough to ascertain that the 12,000 men gathered together at Nocera were about to raise their camp, that the foreign troops refused to = and that the work of dissolution was ae compleie it the capital as it bad been in the provinces, when We rode back to Salerno, and a little before six o’clock we joined a lon; train of carriages on their way to meet. Garibaldi. The General had k wiletta in the moraing; he bad balted at Eboli, where, ised of the real gtate. of things by our , and by those of General Tra- i, Who cme to Salerno several hours afer ue, Prepared to make hig extrance into the town into Salern« 5 of cloudiess drwughi, ané wade our way into the palace of the avotinnen, fighting our way through a frantic crowd which the very bayenets of the National Guards were unable to keep back. We again left Salerno for La Cava soon after wit- ne ag ee tumultuous scene, with a mind to proceed to the same night. But we found it more conve- nient to rest for a few hours at La Cava, and travelled to the capital by the early train of the Vietri and Naplee Railway, for, euch bas been the progressive character e this Neapolitan cat that Garibaldi and his ofiice’ walked through the it stages; they rode as soon ae they won saddle horses; took to private carriages when chargers were knocked up; then hastened their by posting, and finally ended their march vy At every step, as we atvanced from one to another of the frequent stations of this slowest of railway lines, we fell in with the splinters of the reed upon which tyranny bae for 80 map; 7 propped itself. ~ At ever: station we = swarms of disvanded, sullen, tit heartened soldiers. We saw them by hundreds and thousands quitting the vast 8 and the forte with which the whole of this blest Campania and the emiling bay was lined, The King left in the afternoon at fovr o'clock, acd embarking in a the treasures he betaken himeelf to Gaeta, og army to follow im, and leaving bebind him a protest, by whica he inti- mates that, although compelled to quit bi bya ee be tully intends to wz the struggle out of it. The troops are following to the best of their speed and incli- nation, with their madériel; but the disorganization ie complete, and {t is doubtful whether they will muster in sufficient numbers and in such tol its af to enable them to make a stand even behind the wails of Gacta. A!) the usual posts in the town are in the Weanwhile still cecupied by them, the Ne- tional Guard, everywhere mustering, ms , mar- shaiipg, are to take themse! ves upon sharge of the place and the maintenance of order. The , Which, ever since the promulgation of the copstitution, bad been beyond the control of tho public force, but which as yet bas only been fretting aud Murmuring without a mature pian or deliberate aim, be. wd bow to show some symptom of action. 5 Hed with young men bearing aloft the Italian fig, the tricolor with the cross of Savoy, are driving farioumy a avd down Toledo, amid deafening shouts of Viva Garhal. di! and lam {t is dangerous to pass before that na- onal etan: ithout datflug one’s hat. THE TWO PARTIES IN ITALY. The Comitato dell'Ordine, & net of moderate patricte, belonging to the intelligent and honorable classes, bave sent & dep rtation of e! et General a: Salermo to invite him to enter their town, While the #0 called Comitato d’Azione e d’Unita, made 9; of out and-out revolutionists, have long since endear: to bend the mind of the Dictator to their views. For here, an in Sicily, the country is split into two boetile factions, consisting of the partisans of immediate annex- ation. of expediency and compromise on tancne side, asd, on the other, of the so-called thorough Unitarians, who Mire fet their heart against all diplomatic considerations, and are determined to conquer and unite all Jtaly by the mere- foree of popular revolution, regardless of the war their French at Rome, 5 whico was ted ip Sicily by La Farina, and bad’ te bead. in Turia in the Cavour Cabinet, numbers here ie. Whole peniteula, prefer to keep their conquests in a gro- telosal state, to povers then ‘by dictators or pro dicta. ore of their own choice, till such time as the whole fallen ter rior, be utterly free; when tue repre eptatives of * Bation, meetiog ip the nataral ‘terval Italian metropolis (Rome), shal, by the tree cen- fth,of # Proceed to the ‘corocation of their monarch i E i z { > g i : Fs g $ i i if Hl £ Hi = BE =3 3 By & 5 5 i i i ; Z z i ¥ <f 72 HH Hi 4 = PTH atid i i igtif ri ou tal | i i 9 g ry 5 E I i z 2 ti E BF HY i E < Z i i i is ? 2 i 3 a i : sf 3B i H a i i i f g 5 i s§ ij st ly i z i i £ i i Persons, they say, Garibaldi y abd the country falie {tute of intelligence and the revolution i only (as if that could be a i oH = ? surface Li i i : 23 Es uf Pei 253 La 5 lee 2 & 3

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