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NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1860.—TRIPLE SHEET. 3 : of the Council, and of Grace and Justice, It i@ reported to me that the Spanish, Austrian, Bra. Eng) ith people on the great misefon be bas to carry out. | be told plainly to men who have donegsuch grea: things | trations w:ii fore long time be for india) ‘our firm resolution always to oppose rea- | zilian, Belgian and Wurtemberg Hisisters Seeger. Be epoke in the eet terme of the impartial and kind | by means of cotanans, ‘hat they pet uonaicrally mis- | ip our judgment ry Pome Benard py ed 00 and right to violence aud usurpation. panied the King, as also the Nuncio, who bag takeo | conduct of our Admiral et Naples, and requested us to see | take popular for strength, and the “ visas”? of | andeven diverse action in matters not absolutely aud FRANCE3OO I]. down bis arms and bas placed the French flag above the | him ey in the evening at Salerno, to whicb place, after | the multitude for the gure omen of victory. Never let | palpably cesential to uational safety, the better. DE MARTINO, doorway. changing horses, he was hastening. He thst bis | it be forgotten that Italy did pot make her revolution (From the London Her: li, Sey 16 ‘This was followed by an address to the people to the LATEST MOMENT. determination wae to take Naples at th3 earliest moment, | for herself; that til] the French wee bad advanced The withdrawal of M. Tall rend ‘hoe is 6 r same effect, ending by consigning the city w the care of I haye just been into the Toledo, where the furore is | and that be desired to do so without ity costing a life, if | into Lembardy the Powers which now tramples | Turin, which was referred to two ot threo da: = ia Ie Santa Lucia the cannon, which have for #0 many years | the National Guard, and wishing ® prosperous career to | something tremendous, and we are in Tur acotber night of we All was bustle and excitement. The National | on aud despises were strong enough to torture and op | Ze Nord, and thence copird by the F ve) i sacnaa Deen pointed against the King’s most beloved eabjects, | his couniry, at whatever cost to himself. ik A procesa‘on of priests was coming down, carrying | Gaard,eware of higapproach, mustered in large nambers; | prese her with ‘ihe ulmoxt impunity assuredly the | ometal confirmation ia the Nonveur ct presones of were being removed, and I felt that my chances of In this address the King said :— Danrers and decorations, with tri-coiored scarfs ao’ Ubeir unmusical band were miking their utmost noise. De- attle of Solferino was not won by the Sardinians againet | the facte which have just been accom Mid mee of eecurity were now far greater than they had been in the The diplomatic corps residing at my court has known | ribbons. They were soon after presented to the Dictator, | putations of prievts and Franciscan monks were crowding | General Benedek, and {t was not from fear of the rising of | says the Imperial organ, ‘the Emperor as reso! “) Kas morning. On a sudden ] heard women's shrieks and in- | since the commencement of this unexpected invasion with | together with @ few bishops. Afier the bishops had | into his prevence. Women ana children were throwing | united Italy, but of the army of France, that Austria was | his Minister sball immediately quit Turin’ It te vocations, What on earth ig the matter? Trash to my | what sentiments my heart has been filled for all my poo- | been presented this morning, Lord Lianover had ao in- | flowers into the room, in the corner of which be sat, in @ | content to surrended so much at Villafracca and al Zurich. | pigcant proof of the value that is attached b; ‘aon sig windows, and see a great crowd of Bil'ingsgate | ple, as well as for illustrious city, with a view of se- | terview with the Dictator. Garibaldi, in faci, having | rickety old chair, unmoved and tranquil. There isaeim- | We yield toro one in our admiration of the wonderful | fy) observers to the declaration of the Frencl pron eseembied below, alternately increased and diminiebed | curing ber from ruin and war, of eaving her inhabitants | heard of his being in Naples, appointed midday to re- | ple grandeur about his demeacor which is very striking, | Successes and the brilliant talonte of Garibaldi; but we | meni which, jodeed bet 7 People rasbing in and’ out of the neighboring | and all thelr ty, her sacred chtrchee, her mon. | cetve him, Bands, banners and’ National Guard are | very cool aud collected, but when he spoke of the eubjecs | cannot forget tbat those euoceases have beea won over | menu wat, ‘bis apwauncement, hich. juigel by ae t what ‘# the matter? “ Medcnna mia!” was] ments, her public buildings, ber collection of art, and all ing under my window, and, uniees the rain prevente | of French policy hia eye lighted up instantly, and in short | Neapolitan troops, always the leas: formidable enemy \n | Piedmont, compared with .the context of astial. {nets the univereal cry: ‘Save onr King. Make peace for our] that which forme the patrimony of her civilization, and of im, we shall bave the Dictator shortly en route to the | ep'grammatic sentences Le spoke of the ey mpatbies of the Teneo et in this instance demoralized by a wide spread | creates rather the contrary impression. The pro? King! See, the Madonna of Santa Lucia is sweating; | ber pious. st which being an inheritance of future | Pie di Grotta, but, unfortunately, a thunder storm has | Freacb people with bis cause; but in terme woich J need | di tion. Geribald) is master of Napies; he has won tic remonstrances of the Constitution el and Lo Marge drope are ri down. her cheeks and vn generations, is superior to tHe passions of aday. The | just set in. not repeat of the policy of the Emperor. it without striking a blow, and he talks of proclsimin; i ict Bideed Matonus, spare the King!” ‘The whole place was | time bas now come to fuldl these prefeesions of mine, The | As I conclude my letter the troope have rusbed ms: Moubt ng our mulee wo started ack to Salerno, and on | the aunezation of Naplen to Viedmoct from the sum | fais ,fallel Wo, citer the stern resolve of Victor imap y oar, aud a few swearing or weeping war is now roaching the walls of the city, and with | out of Caste! Nuova, shriekiag wildly “Viva Garibaidi,’ oar journey met one of bis regiments on their march to | mit of the Quirinal, as if Rome were garrisoned | wi!) bardly * stop e forward pe BEE card of red i have Set the city on fire, despite the aut ism | unutterable lam now to depart with a portion of | while the civilians are kiseing aud bugging them Qj gg | Salerno. 1Be General had retained the bands of two of | by Neapolitan soldiers, or even by the heterogeneous | piedmontese troops. The Kuropean world looks om wenn fre and water, but the troops and the National | my army to betake myself whither the defence of my THE NEW GOVERNMENT. the regiments which bad laid gowo their arms at Monte | mercenaries of General Lamoriciere, The error of | almost with amusement at the little comedy that is boing Guard were soon on the spot, and hy force and modera- | rights calle me. The remainder of my army remaiogin | Garibaldi bas succeeded in appointing a government | leone, end nothing could be more ridiculous than the ap: | the French at Tarbes, who attacked the English Rille poleon, Os bow ‘ tion managed to quell the disturbance iu « short time, It | company with the honorable National Guard in order to | for the kingdom of Naples. Thetwo commitices of ‘or. | pearance presented by bis tattered troops headed by the Brigade, mistaking Cem for Fertaquese, was Shot more pay Aaegtes wht Muities ce impo, of m wae my neighbor, the pxr/ovo oF guardiano, who had | protect the inviolability and satety of the capital, which | der” and “action,” or, at least, some of the members of | smart band of the army of the a Rafortunate than would be the mistake of Garibaldi if | policy which works out its aims by such Tortnoos ana spread the report of ‘ihe “prodigious miracle,” and, | | recommend as a sacred treasure to the zeal of the Minis- | each of them, bad, with the Dictator’s approval, consti- We shared some wine we bad on the mountain | his Neopolitan triumphs should emboldea him to try con- | peitry means, If we in! t ‘tale rand’s returo ja & “"Bece Signori, what were thoee drops on the neck and | try; and I call upon the honor and the civic feelings of | tuted a joint committee, charged with tbe temporary pre- | side with the officere and men, and drank the health | clusiocs with the veteran troops of France who form the | straightforward sense. weet bettas the letter to ‘Mor » "Hig Holiness, however, seeing that bis trick was | the Mayor of Naples, and of the commandant of the said | servation of public tranquillity. It consisted of seven | of our Queen, the friend of Italy, and success to Tapio of Rome, weary of a long inaction and animated pry ven and the assurances of noa-intervention wered, put himself into a carriage and endeavored | National Guard, to spare this mos: beloved country of | men—three, Riceiarai. Libertini and Agresti—elonging | Garibaldi, under the shade of a large vineyard. On y that contempt which regular soldiers always feel for nm to make his escape, but was arrested in the course of the | mine the horrors of internal discord, and the disasters of | to the extreme; three’-Colonns, Caraceicll and Pizanelli— | entering the town (Salerno) we found it bril- | irregular levies. We sincerely hope that the King of one of menace and ingult to Victor Emanuel the ‘Towards midday it was mate known that the | civil war; for which purpose I concede to the above | to the moderate party; and oce—Confort—is looked | liantly ‘Jiuminated, and up to the very top of the | Sardinia’s troops may be in time to arrest procecdings | cause of Italian independence, aud must have been pre- King would poeitively leave the following evening. Mi- | named the widest powers that they require. Asa] upon as ® man of neutral politics. These men, | mountain every cottage bad ite littie lanterns beeping fraught with each fatal consequences to Italian unity and | ceded by a long series of protests aad remotstrances misters went to take leave of his Majesty, the Spanish | descendant of adynasty that bas reigned over this con ppon thelr retara from an interview | with forth like glimmering stars ‘‘in the blue canopy of Iiperty. We lave felt it necessary over and over again (o | which totally belle the promise of non-jutervention, But Steamer got up its steam early, and, just as night was | nent for 126 years, af having preserved it from the General, agsumed the title and authority | veo.” Thousands bad collected, bands played, and when | warn the patrivis of Italy against rushing unsupported by | tt is more than this. i me Gevecn ‘fie, clamation cloning, last of the Bourbons bade farewell to bis | horrors of a lng vice royalty, the affections of my heart | of a provisional government, aud isued a do- | the General appeared by torcblight at the window of the | France. iio a collision with Austria, but we never dren! of | gt Milam of 1869--& contradiction ty the policy which led throne. jiven to Palmerston? This last step of the Ea; r capital, if not to his are here. Iama Neapolitan, nor could I without bitter | cree by which they appointed Garibaldi Dictator of the | Hotel de Ville the enthusiesm of the people knew no | warning ‘hem inst a@ step so utterly preposterous and Frenot: WHAT WILL THE EXIL¥D KIXG DO? fef, address words of farewell to my most dearly be | kingdom of Naples. indi nt this absurd inperti- | bounds, ead into midnight was this scene protracted, | suicidal as ing France tn Rome. Lat Caribaldi or. | tae frenob army ac the blood cf 100,000 ‘geliant soktiones ‘The of the London Chronicle, writing loved peo; to my fellow citizens. ence, the General ordered taem to be arreated, though | The crowds seemed drunk with the idea of liberty, and ize bis Neapolitan conquest; let him assist in ridding | }, jg a poy a breach of that’ compact whict: says:— GABIBALDI§’ ARRIVAL—GARIBALDI CAME IN FROM | he soon afterwards released them, as men who knew not | with the of casting off the despotism which had | Italy of Lamoriciere and his myrmidons—these things | tho most nefarious state act of modern days, ae po tion of the C@rt is to make a stand SALERNO BY RAIL. what they were doing. He then charged General Cosenz | crowded the horrivie prigops with untried victims, and | are within his duty and Nie pores Yat det him forbear | or Savoy and Nice, was nccom plished. Fo fo Ne ie fouliate at Gecta. All the troops tlst can still be relied upon are a th the task of forming a ministry. “Cosenz himeclf is | this night the General will sleep with his staff | from effect of which must | enough to believe that the Moniteur means what ‘ts words: ished. iere left in Naples. For months the | the entrances, and flags were coming down in rapid suc. | War; Li 0, Home Minister; Piganelli, Minister | s0ldier of the King, nor has one life been the sacritice. If we turn from the consideration of the ition of Ga- | any other purpose “od aaah the tallies te Cold lay | cession, for the arrival of the Dictator was sudden, liko | of Justice; Glacchi, Minister or Direc'or of the Police; Ds | What s revolution! 'A dynasty overthrown by the mighty | ribaldi to that of Sardinis, we eee in this Indiscreet pro- Gan Feally suppose thet’ he boner we nee ae ‘and the last royal act before departure was thing he does, and people were unprepared.’ The | Cesare holds the portfolio of the finances: ti ig the | influence of opinion—a iin 80 corrupt and so de- | Clamation only another proof of the andeven | of treason to Italy or of desertion towards his old ally? one of word to seo Trecaury waiting-rooms inside were full of the moat eminent cha- efect for the city and territory of Naples. None of them | graded that a hired goidiery, employed to suppress the | necessity, of the step wi she has taken. iaia is | He simply washes his hangs of all responsibility in ine going until be was furnshed wit racters of Naples, at least among the liberals, There were long to the extreme party, so that it wocld ecem as if } constitutional liberty of tbe people, refuses in the hoar of | deeply interested in the success of the Italian revolution, es of the world. Cavour could probably tell ue more ween £140,000 and £150,000)—a price | all the members of the Comitato whiob has issued its | the influence of the good Cosenz provailed over the more | peed to protect even the person of their King! What» | and it cannot be expeoted that she should allow it to perish | about his real intentions if it were necessary. Neverthe- ‘rom the London Times Correspondence : a desperate Ley Pe] marched north. By to-morrow there will not be | _ At the railway the National Guard were atioged at alt | tho Minister for War; eeavget, 3, Onder Secretary for | within an bo:r's distance of Naples. He has not met a | be to undo everything that he has accompl imply, or that the Emperor makes use of language fi considered as the purchase of the ious mands for #0 many months ; Azala, the | dangerous su; jons of Bertani. The ointment of | lesson to monarchs! before her eyes by errors 20 grogs, when it 1s in her power thero paid accordingly. find cece cunasier of the ‘National Guards Leopardi’ the | Romano and toe milniatOre of inn oanoie, | Taba enter Wagles with the General, and will send you | to take the guidaace of It 1nt0 ber own hands, and to give | Pindarnar hie taker eben oe a nee, EP. have no belief, however, that any real fighting will | historian; a great many of our coun! , Lord Lianover | during the short constitutional rule of the last few weeks, | @ little eketch of Ube acene. to the exaggerated zeal of moment of popular excite- | defend the line of the Mincio with her last soldier, and efoated | among the vumber; afew, but very few ladies, as still | has given but little satiafuction. ment a direction consistent with her own safety and tbat | that Austria, conscious of the promised support of the take place at Gaeta. The royal army is utterly and demoralized, nad Lamoriciére’s forces are but | there was an impression that arow might take place. At | (From the Naples correspondence to the Londoa Chrovicle.) | OPINIONS IN ENGLAND OF THE ITALTAN < the nation of which she is the leader. It is theconstant | German Confederation, may, by the mere assumption of ‘broken reed to put one’s trust in—as I bear the King lens twelve o'clock p trikes, sad a dell {ae THE CROWD AT THE PALACE. TMBROGLIO, wp tekgeuncot eee me ee icsia cud & menacing eitiiede, readily provoke the attack of the — vitae cn sun xihe, pe ey Oe gd a teri iter ee her the | cue uate Seees nee Zenenen (Oe ceoed. femeden- SUMMING UP THE FACTS. them. aly bas not this excuse, as she did not create | ‘Yecounts rom Nepker ave nol of a character to quict he wing eden ru edb tha aac, | tai ab fm Tune ect and in arene; | Liat at oe Genre ou go habla Hewars | Toe wtitnatar he Prank natator ‘vom Tan, | Tenlag Sot om deareyeg ts lasage wie My | apps ts ct il he or izens,—The wing. ofa 0 wi most unm ‘al v! ce ch Ambaseador from Tur Dg ees whic! © | impr “ ion is - pe 3 bigest, oy My . — afi ared Senael shi, nataped with a belt roand his waist, . impulses of revolution and prevent an attack upon Venetians presence duct canbe ba doubt ey coer aoe ‘your con former on ee eae et poe sae eal cet cWvil ocarage. No feng Fa Bg a Keoked worn and old, and stooped constantly as he ed- | cagion to point out the reasons which made it impossible NGat nde’ meas a8 inant ene ‘gue of you will disturb the developement of the heroic des. | man had gone round by another door, and’ so there was a | mow fio honed twine. oe thvign Chek isnt tatty | Yo carry out the Villafransa conventioa. No sooner was | fatal whatever be its result, between Garibaldi and the French Tin at's vislonaxy, nor down. hia recuns career Invor Ainies of Italy; no one will think of lacerating the count rush in all directions to iatercept bim. We drove round | and, when the cheere died away, spoke ina voice tha; | Austria driven beyond the Minzio than the people of | garrison of Home! Be beliet that ho will subordinate his programme to tha the Moniteur, is com: | blood and the toil of others have prepared for her. Jf | tect ibaldi make : cept the exceed 08 01 yesterday morning in qj a h he . territory, Garibaldi makes no secret of his hopes or inten~ elderly man who by virtue of his white beard was taken | his drees,to distiogueh him {rom any of bis tulle. To ere ee eee erm NT | Si netar teen SRN tak tee hen ake | tee “ie E opohe-apoy, Amocena justified in order to prevent a collision, liberation of Venice, tbe, proclamation froam ious dictive hands. R: by aside to the front of the Carmine, Northern Italy took the matter into their own hands. K o : 4 cine aa tes meaeahinden atin, wil piano {eee “iota wa coma ta teeth ol too de 4 Pere ne oo OG Parte oak OL ROE GEES: | She nate Of the exiled Princes. was. lmpractionble, ani Pom ged ght yyormvcet of cnbongh cht merbaheeedl my le Th eae tery ee to our coun‘ry by which it may escape from ‘and | is no mistaking that face; there is the jour and the | "When his short speech delivered the cheering re. | the French Emperor, though strongly urged to it by Au. | remark the very decisive attitude assumed by the Em. | cannot fail to bring to mind the incidents of 1848, the ad- ifficuities without new convulsions or the sheddirg of the | openness of Nature's nobleman ex and it does not | commenced, and Garibaldi’s stati came out on the bal. | *tfi@; declined to take upon hi 0 invidious task of of the French. Notwithstanding his repeated pro- | vance of Charles Albert, the early triumphs of the Pied- i of our brothers. That is near, but meantime | say one thing while plotting another; it is marked a opposing the lar movement. We need not ita. adhere: trine . = Piped of car brothers: Thad day Dear, Dot meant | aan whic be vais might be ouugitfor ia tnak of mony | Giaysnd hea the whole party retired, and whe crow | {0 dctele weicnare familar to our readers. We will | the impsror har gisndcawe lis arsoatouice rte Tere es | ward movement ot toe Austrise ating” the baillerot_ Ne: course with confidence; let every one continue the ordi- | of the so-called great ones of the earth. Daltiamidst aronfuced mob of eiicers and ministers aca | ONY remind them that Napoleon has never, for | a mark of the displeasure he feelsat the invasion of the Pa- | vara, and the prostration of Italy, Thon, as now, all Ital Rary occupations of life; let all opinions unite ia a sublime | struck with his catm self po session and treme aning to everybody, burrying to and fro, | OBe moment, faltered in his resolution to protect | palStates by Piedmont. Ho has strengthened the garrison | was in arms against the hereditary enemy. The Po; bed t to save the country. sweetness of his smile, He was not in the carriage of the speaking, to every body», hurrying to and fro, | the sovereign’ Pontitl. In whatever other points there | of Romo by two regiments, and restered to the command | gen: forth bis army to ght In the natioval case. Fer~ A VISIT TO THE MINISTERIAL OFFICES—THE PREPARA- | French Minister, though believe it had been at Sat ‘a him tha; | MAY Bave been a departure from the original programme | General Goyon, an olticer considered to be devoled to the | dinand of Naples had for a moment forgotten his en; bis disposal, but in one hired for the occasion. Followed there has never been any mistake about this. The | interests of the Pope. We cannot pretend to understand | ments to Austria, and joined the ranks of the patri accompanied by three lines of carriages he went wretched obstinacy of Cardinal Antonelli and of the Ul- | or to justify such a live of policy. It certainly seems to | Central Italy it with Piedmont for the common ob- geoized for insurrection, an him tocome with haste (premura.) ‘Haste and ~ pele —_, ripe Bote pondent thus describes a ‘the Marinella, through the Basso Porto, surrounded Garibaldi: ‘you ‘can't be ii¢grester’ haste than 1 | tamontane party bas been She fruitful cause of ditticul- | us that it is better for France, better for Italy, bettereven | ject of Italian in lence. But the Grst reverses checked Large boxes of royal propert, by , and deafened by their greetings, up the | am.” and with these werds be passed on tothe next | ‘es Which peror tried in vain to avert. Inex. | for the interests of the Pope himself, that Piedmont should | the national enthusiasm. The Pope recalied his troops. tug for the Lago Castelio, and so on by San Carlo and the Palace of | cia{mant on bis attention. pen ay og Position of ailairs we must be guided | interfere with an overwhelming force to disperse | The King of Naples withdrew his contingent. Discord ‘tion that the the King, which royalty left only « few hours before, and | ““toen came dinner, aad then a visit to the Archbishop | Simply by the facts of the cage. The language of the | the mercenaries of General Lamoric! than that | took the place of unity. The national army mcited away ; value, but strictly, notwithstanding reports to the con. | entered of reception for ‘oreign princes. andhe tortreasca,’ And after tbat Garilaldi nerve re | Moniieur i surely distinct enough. Woare told teat ‘in | Garibaldi and Lamoriciere should bo allowed to fight t | and when Radetz4i mado his Anal advance Chere were only trary’ private A AN EXCITING SCENE. the Pelazzo Angri, at the head of the Toledo, where he | Presence of the facts which bave jast been accomplished | out with 1y Condottieri on the one ‘and undisci. | tbe Piedmontese forces to defuat, aud Italy was con event is not The crowd waved backwards and forwards, and looked | stops to night. In the afternvon the following prosia- | 12 Italy the Emperor bag resolved that his Minister shal! plied and wa ble levies on the other, iailicting | At present there is ihe same enthusiasm, the game one. abe villa. up to windows and shouted for the appearance of | mation from Romano, the ex-Minister of the i 4 ‘was | mediately quit Turin.”” Up tothe present moment the | incalculable miseries on the of the States of ths | ness of impulse aud object, and neither Pope nor King of fhe bas lon; Gari First lished -— " es French government bas abstained from any intervention | Oburch, and protracting indefinitely contest which it | Naples stand in the way. But there are hidden ani- and it bas at last the hero. Whatacry of fo He UNconqreren Gevgnan Garmatnr, tue Dicraron | Southern wate Tbe Bourbon dynasty is bauished for | is moet desirable should be closed as speedily as possible, | mosities in the Italian camp to which the hour of reverse taken off w the vast ‘OF THE Two Sicrues. > ever from Ni j, and the appeals of the ex-King to | We do not complain that the Emperor of the Freuch | would inevitably give a dangerous developement. There is dinner, 100, bya With the wildest impatience Naples awaits your arrival France were rejected with scorn. So far there bas been no | chooses to guard the person of the the city of Rome, the instability and fickleness inseparable from all revola- if be ’has of toalute you, as the Redeemer of Ttalyand to deposit in, | austcalty, but it isexactly at this crisis thatnew complica. | its seaport, and the desert between them. He cannot be | tiopary movements; and there is Avtria, this t Joopboles an ‘were only your hands the powers of Ihe State aud their own des. | ODS may arise, We do not pretend tobe in theseorvts of | expected, after havirg protected the Pope for eleven backed by the army of the Coufederatios ieee frighifu! years the pees tipies. Garibaldi, but it is notorious that he will not consider ii to surrender him bine mercy of Garibaldi; and | awaiting attack, her soldiers only too eager to efface the annon; and round tbe palace and the arsenal crowds | self Tn this expectation I shall remain firm in my duty of | ‘hat be bas fuldilied his mission until the is ari. taly bes noble cities enough without requiring for its | dishonor of Magenta and Solferino upon a foe whose infe- of indiferent ‘were assembled, looking idly | leaned over the tron rail protecting order and public tranquillity. Your words, | Ye from thesoil of Italy. On theother hand, Sardinian | capital a museum of ruins which fever and’ malgria are | riority they bave learnt in ® bandred bard fought Gelds. — — ‘ , | crowd. which have already been made known by me to the peo. | ‘focPs are mow in Central Italy, and Victor Emanuel has | rapidly making their own. Such a residence wel! suits | On the other hand, Piedmont has the command of the oa invaia. ple, are the best pi for the succers of my endeavors, | ‘04 us very distinctly both what he intends to doand | the declining fortunes of the Pope, but we confess we learn | sea, and, if necessary, will deubtices appeal to the revo- taking T await your further orders, and remain, with un. | WHat be intends to avoll. We know, for instance, that | with surprise that the Emperor resents all intervention ; lutionary element in Hungary, which is the weak part im times; 1 he will t the chief of the church,” and, in that | Between Garibaldi and Lamoriciére, and is willing to leave | the Ausirian cuirass. What the issue oi the impendiag , oy BORIO ROMANO, Minister af Police, | #8082 his policy ie identical with that of Ube Fréneh Em. | the right of invasion open only to'tumultuary and revo- | condict may be, and what ite proportions, no one ven fng, anda Even at Naples, in the excitement of the moment, | fe wioreign be ae a pga ay gee od raoen 5 tures to predict. But every day eecms to indicate more Lam glad 0 say that the indocorum, to say t8e | vince, Between Victor Emanuel anh Goural Zemaritiars | bartnnee imperor tbe French othe causes which | surely the approach of a struggle (rom which Italy wilt least, of this language, from man who, not twenty- is - ror of the French to this step, but with | emerge either completely indepeadent or more bo; four bours ‘ M there ig war to the knife; nor should we be surprised the step itself. We earnestly entreat the leaders of the | prostrate than ever. defore, was @ Minister of the King, was | Gov; These chaste inca beschwel aarocmes ;| teaen morecans aT Gree ‘co strongly cathe ia. |” Phe rumors of an alliance betecen Austria and Russia are felt i. the to for th prevent the Papal carplal from becoming the sene of an un- | disposition of the Emperor to undo the work he has | daily acquiring confirmation. But our Vienne corre- pay Og at Ey Zormly conflict The departure of the Prince de Talley. | aotleved, They should remember that (he tame had ner | spoudent states that Yuesia will mo: let the Austrian go- bure,”” Francis Il. % is thus compatible with an absolute | has made can unnake them; that if the French 7] ‘roment off on terms, and tha a considerable mo- — ieay ON Ri NE mid A nn between France and Sardinia, ‘The in | them'np,a word from iis Nich vawale jell them tiuon, | ideation of her pelicy in ‘the Past must be ome of the old woman. was inted, consisting of Messrs. 2 3 =: — strengthens the piciges he has given | Under existing circumstances time is everyth! If La. | conditions. Russia's great object, we are informed, is to Dleesea Madonna.” A Caracciolo, Citorna, Confort! and Pisanelli, most Pope, , £0 to speak, retires Re Ee we spe” moriciére can be at once §put down, it is jle that | throw off the obligations which i oo <r im- whom < during the consti of” of the Roman territory which he orig! to France and Sardinia may once more to term! posed upon her and she is now voring < eenen ay ng ihe con me ‘Naple boda! Sufficient to maintain the integrity of the Pontiff. The | cession of another provieas roan Pind trett To bring about e revision of Us treaty with view ts character. y, SS ‘Vice Dictator. At the same time, pope of the Pope is widely different from that of the | everything; out if the contest is allowed to spread itself | regain the territory she surrendered in 1556, to place the = steamer, too, the accompan: Programme was issued f ‘4 ing and Princes who are now exiled from italy. wide, and to last long, there is the most imminent peril that | Black Sea fleet on its former footing, and to reacquire her THE PARTING WORDS OF YOUNG BOMBA. _ ving ee {from the London Chronicle, Sept. 15.} | the Catholic Powers will be drawn into the contest, anda | Old right of intervention in behalf of the Christian #ub- After the King bad sailed, the following proclamations ment. PROCLAMATION. There is one courte by which Austria could gecure to | war commenced of which the only certain result will be the | jects of the Porte. The negotiations, it is thought, will ‘were published:— : SCENES AND INCIDENTS. To me Brroven Porc.ariox or Napurs, tae Tacx Daan. | herself all the vaine which really accrues to her from | ¢#inciion of the new born liberty and independence of aly. J & i. ‘Seen ae , AS sown Narra, Sept. 6, 1860. In the afternoon Garibaldi visited the Duomo, and the | rex or rie Paorue:—it is with true respect and love that | Venetia, and that course woold instantly. solvo the ides ths Sanlon Hows, Bent. 35) Seon Gord reas ter baleve, tial i tee gives Hi H 2 i { , ROYAL PROCLAMATION. were more enthusiastic than in the morning, 1 present maysett 10 this noble and imposing centre of the | greatest remmining CmONNy Jwees. the auateina nO | Every ove who looka with jealousy on the progress of | ment {Vienna ‘nds fteolf in. aay reat ras, nd the pm i It ‘thy demonstra: % t coe ue salen recive oning, tg tthe | tata create See's rtani wine users tag, | fered Coat teens decane ta | Sou tet gina of ily were"have ben marie pope: | SY eyaatin om Auaan and Berane nant | Rami) wre ara aay yt , free | in the Toledo, where for the t he resides, if he cau | knees at the sight of tyranny. rations, to ; oy Sciam pd ih nr naomi | So eng accan gearing | tw memo terme nat to | ase Lr ry Dolpa | meat erin gen! ri ay iy Sat, | rags yng Up ne sl om . ment dwell? Amid the enthusiastic shouts of victory | gariaus are represented " ‘address voice ‘ ever know movements whereabouts. | created harmony r avold an reasons why either gar! ‘epresented everywhore as roused to the es chaee eae oom Bie tse people's voge siaad 1 Tosu't make out, But our provinces Re ihe reictetlletion of tbe, nasi, tad Suc antadade etesenak ts entsohaeein tee of ths wai bare ennalenaiy nelped one another is tbe conflict Etognty wan, never more. ofthent, tos el roads een. re 8 ju in conrolida: © ry e - Gare wee ne cossstnn ete to a. Op | Sr ualty tbe onary lag I hl gh commenecmt, ad Gay ase 5 tienes to woo the | 8f¢, Of eourse, upheard; aud no true friend would wish stracted by tbe Austriaa government, and the Noerality contravention to the law | this Oitieed cay; and Sow nicht has set in, every house | the fatber of our fualian laa niin work fiaished. ' Whon Garibaldi received the deputation | leew nigh very italian, patriot, whisuber be te royalit | teoy have shown in commercial matters, have opened up 4 o “ ” from \ enetia. ld the | 4 ’ new mar! 3 lor Hun; aD }UOe cr Hopi my adhesion to Tamatital the banners toecuet ons eactaer Wrest tae - Pitt. ais descendants the duty fA say Daly le Hane felt in the olty 0 the Senter on be replied” thes | bay Ietiie editsaband te neh neh pecaey _ repens memnent | the great resourses of thie icey grloulturat country te were. inated. Looking Cresta the eins : : pandoertain, | an unprecedented degree. This iuflex of wealth and ity, were not sut. ry windows, and there is s blaze of light between. Ry of a people which bas elevated bim for their | they were not more anxious than himself. Statesmanship, | but that it ie nigh even at the door, Whether Rome be | inc of “ Bes is a toreblight procession in and on ‘ef iastic even more than diplomacy, might a pause: but, ncreAse prosperity mast aagmeat the diihoulties in a en ne iy of tne Siase eutaiied upon my | foot in ‘whe ‘Toledo and other parts of the cliy. Chet. th enthieiastic eyetioe ug of their tevo mis- | t2speak abe trudhy GuriBaldi has met shen @ rapariy for | nalkzensablo as a capital would seem to be an unanitiod | ihe way of tbe revolutionary propaganda, of whose ac- ihe cbtaitoan of ots wh T have, always deplored. | Crowds rush along with, tarsi oe tr eee ee | ices nae, a8 A guarantee of the respect with whic they eeetas Y antcer OF Oe ee eee cata ac ea, | Euaneel fo the poople of Umbria Aud the Marehes, he we | the empire there la no dewvt. and Stow lnsly ovosen: Inow protest sgainst this indescribable hos- ives or swords other, | will be treated, the ardor, the patriotiam, and the truly ‘adent! Fons te Chause Whe the tide | Md willing (o leave the vernal City (o the Pope, | sous may even now spare the Emperor the btn) tation tility, concerning which present and future time will | Bacchanalians, only they were not d | Christian conduct of their numerous fellow priests, who, | C0?! point on! who can arrest the tide | provided all ihe ret of ihe peninsula be uniled-and | of buying Rassian aid b; f a and newly found libert; of Gari i's chivalrous progress? Again, Austria her iyiog y concessions injurious to the Praases tel tlm why eras an inoan, | Cearned ek Fak oma tam the high Ae bepraed mena Laguna | Segre Wisi es stack ttm | Goh aly eit’ att, Set aunt | Dea atria obec and of Burop idae oe commaehosnent of “A invasion, | But were I to write bundi One and all, in the sight and at the head of our soldiers, | ‘he Italiaps by an attack upon the Italians. After we had Sd ehidbee ebeptiootioesh cos aempeeatins tonne | (From the London Post, Sept. 15.) ‘with what eentiments my heart has beea filled for all my | Sbould be only repeating m: defied the gravest of battle. | pointed ous that fact, many of our contemporaries, both | ParnZ: wheel, cousin anciont seat of empire | The interest attached to the Italian question is ot like! 4s well as for this illustrious city, with a | scene for the night. Some roum Lrepeat it~concord is tho frst want of Italy, So, wo | 08 the Continent atd’ia London, have perceived thé rels- | fom priatly misrule, as an indispensable condition of x | to diminiab, nor is the amouat of speculation whan 4 fectring her from ruin and war, of saving her | the Borbone and other Neapol will as brothers those who once disagreed with | tone which exist between the axtual state of the Sola. | Settio# and diguided, ational gover Neb wonia | by ite succcasive phases likely to be lomenod by the @ Jnbabitents and all heir jacred churches, | hoisted the Sardinian fag mast Ue, but who now sincerely wish 10 Dring their stone to | Youlsn populations, inclading Hungary and Dalmatia, | Command the Seapect and obedience of the entire natin ah trom Porta. te the aiies tapt.Utn grogieene too er monuments, ber public Duildiags, her collections of | O70 salute algo. As for the ralae up the edifice of our country. asd the progress of Garibaldi in Soathorn Italy. In | Ghmmand the respect and opedience of the entire nation, | [ots which bave just been inet le eee Brundall that which forms the’ patrimony of her | off Ischia and received orders ‘ples, she | Teepecting ‘other people's houses, we arc re. | Order to prevent the confiagrations spreading to her | the suir points toe time when tho temearel and t — y : iq rf | piritual gover: of the Latin race dwelt together | peror has resolved that his Minister shall immed: ‘¢fvilization and of her greatuess, and which, being an ia- | bas gone off to Gaeta. solved to be masters in our own, whether the powerful of | touthern and eastern borders, Ausiris may woll think it | in the city of the Crsars, uot constantly, perhaps, but | quit Turin.” We cannot, however, help comsidering this Sees of future geverations, is saperior to pas. ENTHUSIASM OF the earth like Ch GUISEPPE GAKIBALDI, ply Fon ny = doy a say oy ps bo 3 | frequentiy, each Sndiog enough to occupy ims with bis erent 5 setter ay - iatiention s one ympism m of pape s . . be own concerns, and each lending su) rt ther's bd '* uals, se \y ad ‘The time has now come to full! these ous of | _ Tho town is at reat. Wo had lastnight fe reminder of our day has been, ae you may fancy, | SPon aly, (or ee Datrian postcxion of | anthoriy. May not rac Uings be again’ or, if not, way ing, than aa the certaia, or even tho probable, frerauser cee ree Titers Tried am wok aout to depart wits | sion to crows the barroweat und Dusieet atreata Belgian, and Wartemborg Mialstare have lof, Tae Papal | , Oar own correspondent, visiting thal usbepoy city aoe ree ee oe realeee, aot Tone’ witisod | meninn ‘ihe, serepation, by Ring Vitor Emamedl of te & portion of to myself whither the de | ward of Santa Lucia and the port, jadustri- | Nuncio is still bere, but has taken down the Pontifical | #me time since, its actual tenure. It is held Political from she rest of the bend’ 49 which it geo- | Marches and of Umbris may lead to European Teace of Fights calla me. is eonseast ot my army | 008 classes of Naples as silect and unconcerned as if | arms. The Freuch and English ambassadors, however, show | ¢ Pt y the cannon. It ie held by nothing else. If raphically belongs, as Fravkfort is, and Genoa to | cations #0 extremely serious that we can casily 4 fs eft tn con ‘with the honorable National Gaara, in | nothing had happened. But along the Riviera and Strada | no signs of loaving,and in answer to a request from the | ‘he questioa were put to the vote tomorrow, as it was for A few monthe will probably samise to solve these | stand the clesire on the part of the French {-nperor to Seder to protect vhe inviolablitty and safety of the capital, | di Chiaia the houses were mostly lighted up, and Toledo | King before his departure, informed bis Majesty that they co—as it was put to the vote iD | cuestious: but neither moaths nor years will determine | avoid the appearance of all direct complicity wiih the eee oe eet end. nau sacted treasure 40 the geal of | was thronged with an insane multitade, a prey to a | bad received no lus ructions which would fustity them ia vid answer by an uaanimous saitvage, 6 Yar more important question, uamely what is the dest | Sardinian policy, and the motives which have prompted the ; and I call w honor and the ervic foi, | Bacebaualian fury which I shoald be sorry it [was able | quitting thelr poste, ‘The Neapolitan men-ot war lying | “Weare Italians.” Some years back Venic? was exceod: | form of iugtsations for Italy lo general, avd hat | this diplomatic ‘protest agaicst © moagure at variance of the of ‘of the commandant of | to describe. The crowd consisted of the lowest rabbie, | off the town have raised the tricolor ‘lag, with the arms of agly rotianite Austria, but that day bas passed. Before | form are her newly united communities most likely to be | with the letter ‘of Interneticeal bowever aid Guard to spare this most beloved coun- | with a of men and women of the middic | Savoy. Afer some delay the forts began to ‘ire salutes, | 1848 the Lombardo Venetian province, ‘which in popula | permanently content? F harmony with the interests and wishes of the ‘of mine the horrors of internal discord and the disas- |. orders. It was a flag and torch procession with cries and | and all the evening long we bave ‘one gun boom: tion comprised one-eighth of the Austrian empire, yielded | PSs pa nn entertained (by the cabinet of Victor | pespe. Yetthe Emperor Napoleon can ‘of civil war, for which T concede tg the above | shouts, such as can only be uttered by Neapolitan throats. | forth after the Th bomor of the day. £very ho one-fourth of; the revenue Lombardo Venetia was called | pinanuel regarcing the tare exquataaiten of Stell prove of a step which he must have furcseen to be sooner named the widest powers pay Teauirs. Besides the incessant, deaiening “ Viva Garrabbaldo! | that passed the crowd and the excitement have growy | ‘the milch cow” of Austria. Tho year 1543 absolutely Naples, may be suihered trom the statement which M. | OF laler vnavoldable. fis own letters, the isstructions As 0 descendant of the | greater, The streets are thronged with carriages and Raed int OTe ta ies ccibeeteeniy | Faria; Minister of the Interior, receatiy made im tne | to bie Ministers at Rome, the ianguage of hie Ministers @eatinent for one be ae. The Toledo |s one biaze ol tight, and I can bard! fo J ine fm as menen enmany ay th Coune!! of State at Torin, and which has been widely cir- | at Paris, the reas snings advanced in the pamphiets writ- having preserved it = write for the ceaseless sboute of ‘Viva Garivaidi’’ whic xceoded 7 rm hg y 7 Ne | culated by authority in ‘various parts of the peaiawula. | ten avowediy under lis inspiration, the language beld the afiections of Fe ee moe teatractlre ok? | “The political circumscription,” says M. Farin!, “tbat | by bim ate aofvery distant Period ts tho Aroabiabep of Bor could I, wi! exclamation of aah of Lombard omuue. i ‘the Brn ‘on | Ought to be established. ougnt neither to be the frait of | Bordenux, the expressions in bir letter to Count to my most mob teeair he Pg 4 one a. ‘ eT nae an abstract idea nor of an arbitrary work; it ought to | ® ny, the capreesions in Couot Persigoy's specob to the pny Valuable balf of the ter aimougt we Have not | Teprevent the actaai subdivisions which exist in the | clergy of tis wative province: all theme bave been ant 7 a it prosperous 1 bolted and bubbled sme deeveares of Dale the statistics before us, we have no hesitation in saying ee rm and in those centres of | directed to establish the fact that the siate of matters wen. igen ol aa ae g mpm abou fata nae that, while Venetia returne far lew than a moiety of tho | Pop sin Ay ich, if they have been overlaid with aries observance of alr clvie duties. | the meen Hi 4 +08 fags oF wealth which Lombardo eee tar cists eeu | Seukn Gl yonmule, emmeirer' ia Ga. Yak not an excont've zeal for my destiny be male & pre | bate; the women Faordored fy tue ‘Jetence of Lombardo Venetia since 1818, Thus | ggg BS. EE ‘ence ’ ie garments, 3° ‘Austrian accounts in the Venetian branch of her | Med) may admirably Contrivute jo the stromsth | sadly aumergs! jou or wiatever tay be the tims at | runkeoness, in which, however, drink had 20 atablighment alone are probably eyen more iusolveat | {aly "ihe work of decentralization 1. ‘give | Heit ie atc of le sestene tue w Many of the women were girls of locus charactor vou Fee her nets tiles cal eerie tans ny | to our country tustitations wai it better, | 7 : fpleadid by the free institutions whieh ters ir oom op ante: wane mad chowel uow bow o legime of Ve po ad pa wg Eh Lo ye Napoleon, bars | + pot the notion or ouliveras 4 ee tA | {aon tonpecerumant whicu tae, Sapam Nepoleos int it—al from this time | suviennes coald be much better mustered hore in Naples Mae ay tbe J ing the “mllch | (res and circumscriptions, in imitation of the depart- | during the last eleven years, has publicly deplored orth, is to behold again iny people ealtes and | than at Paris: wo ee re re ay Soper | eentalen of Frasce’ which be justly, characterises an | formally demouneed? Wherein consiste tbe grievous is Two Sic i n Sepang mid- How little the empire is able to endure thet process of | ‘ntolerant crntealisms, “There never wan a country, fe, | 40 th peace, tt tarope it consisay notorioesty, te 1. ome otventarer, pesmecstig, sil (D0 force of | dle orders, from observed that great excitement prevailed in the | being aa LT Bs Mat 4 | deed, lees likely to submit coatentesly to such a Guage. | two principal abusss—rin the clerical syetom of corre revolutionary Europe can diepase, has attacked | appearances, |. | town: the shore was thronged with io; te whee | Suede Woorenee was anean Seneeo ove evortiog tbe the Without suy of the facilities of intercourse which else- | ment and in the aoti-nationai tendeacies of the cierisal Gus ne beth fotation and bh ts Many oF - ieomacone 7 standard we ebarve Sain vigesetnt Tlistened joie ‘sun, acd yeue aes on0 ont = doubie—the deficit be by | paw hy ray tooghte, EY on ioe oun, vorament, by waking ia, chief cnivereally hated, five months long, with all the means in our power, on | bearers who was a paragon of face | the echoes of loud ‘‘viras” reached us. What did it all | 90m te abe an hig Leg AB hea. | the Sicilians and the Piedmontese are, and during the | involved tbe necessity of « foreign force; the bardess Dehalf of the sacred independence of our . lighted up with the fire of more than haman excitement. eaten ee ek daar aifalrs ¢ pe | lifetime of the present generation are likely to be, very | and rigors of a foreiga force have increased the hetred ‘The fortune of war has proved tous. The | Such glowing eyes—such lushed complexion—you would pape ay of 'e pd bowery ‘mae Sr veer to WU on. . od | diferent in their of civil life. It may,’ and | felt for the clerica! government. The same causes have she can find credit nowhere; ber Ministers haviag eo | Pr") ray om my a pag hy td managed that the only mode which ber ablest liaancier had t vindleate bis owe credit, personally, was to com. | And with wisdom coutrary of which the above sovereign pro- | have said an arche: 5 bie ignorance in the most formal masaer, aud | There was e mingling and blending of classes aod sexes; ‘at the moment when negotiations | & full license to beggars and pickpockets: to jostie honest intensity, until the evil can be ao counsels and warnings addressed it Fxcey For there |, indeed, a method by limited, be now relies on the fore intimate alliance between us, re- SS the many-beaded monster was that such assimilation will to a great extent be accom , Catholic and Protestant, to the Pontitr Na hs own bate Sci anit. | In ite beet humor, We did not sce one cuss. of sctusl | bose of ‘Selerno, waved all. sorts ot pleces of red | at dee ce en ee Conte tei cemtip | plished. But, in the meantime, unity will hardly be pro | this till recurring source of trouble, ence—tbat at the wi ‘of Earope as. | drunkenness, oor did we bear of a row or fight, or aay | cloth, the tricolor, the Sardinian and the Neapolitan colors - what veoctia <= mM ned Stare wally | \uoted by the imposition of one iron system, either of ad- | a deat cor. And becaure Austria can win Inattorence, or imed the prin. | Other accident or offence and handkerchief of every hue. Every window was boy featio ye at Deaat neither to “™Y, | ministration or of law, im matters relating toevery day | up his bated rule, beenute France grid sce intervention leaving us to fight against | All thie time the royal troope still virtually held the | thronged: the dark eyes of the South Ttallan beauty tlashed | Der fort! ae Gen ne Sameaten Dsolute uniformily, in all likelihood, there will | that the term and conditions of her support are in One way, od reer: | from every casement, and fair hands waved their faos wus Von an ques there qurve tk Asearian éak er be; but until great progress sball have been made ign mercenaries whom be has raked toge:her f om all Catholie States, and rajlreads, currency, weights and measures, pational Hi i : ; the point of extendin = He be hay | in & mavner the most valuable, [t isa method enemy neighborhood, On | Nuovo, Del Carmine and Dell’ Uovo) bad still no other But who arrived’ Was Garibaldi here’ Had the taxation for national purposes, military organization, and | by whore aid be hopes to silence those subjects whore a ‘otber band, both and yrovisoes of thé Con. | garrieoae than the troops , man whose came is now on every lip» reached Salerno’ | “hich @ all the more Way ate oar ellremly | a variety of scbordinale matters, it will be idle to expect just demands be will not satiety, The evile agaiaet whic se r ising tueurtect Y mine + you, toon Weere wus ie mr” 4 the Tt cee toneon wee Her, but tm all qaartere. We are convinced (hat it is @ sieouiien thes dene beameed noe asd tue tiga tous Gm | Soing removed fe only cagunented by achange io the erat LA Tug "treed provisicaal. go a. | somew Who were in the town yesterday, and hed been seat from | plan which has been gowtemplated equally in Venvie ise’, im | Partnership for life on equal terms, and with fall muta. ‘ois, it can therefore exciie no astonish. Ys i Naty bowe Naples to wake the iael stand for ite effecte and impotent | fu"in. Londom, Parte Piewna. His the bale of Vone ality of liabilities and. prods, is ons thie tive and | ment that, on the Grat favorable opporvunity after receiv. } ~ FE ES Neapolitan fet, wh a ee ee etl cone te Vit Intendenca recat | (ia 01 an equitable, nay, al a liberal extimate. Italy would | fagciuble fusion ie ancuber. ’ The former "a possivio, | lng iatelligence of the successes of Garibaldi, the owns iw fal! author! : in my card, and found that the gallant Colonel Peard, Ga- | #ladly pu Bho can eoon collect the means. And | god may be carried out loyally aud safely coder one | (he Marches and in Umbria have followed the exampie of the my Paw, * have only d one be WS to de. have on ome " bape won fifty ima har Chey woneld do. They have r that little transfer of @ useless property, Austrian | supreme administration, prov cial assemblies beirg con: 108 might, for a time at least, wear a be 1) | stituted to adsorb the political energy . al Italian (Sardinian) colors and put iteelf under the orders | ri i's Pnglishman,” wae installed in the gaudy roome of Admiral aspec' enough °o te have some wence on the future of Of the old mansiog, and one or two of Garibaldi's He | ™ bad entered the town alone, and in the name of the Gene. | (.' flower Katey A f y frigates, not be prede py is evtertained that fhe Partenope, ral had taken possession of ‘it. The Bavarian troops, wo empire—if the empire is to bave a future. only done wival, as he informed the Archbishop ae ‘thie vest ing her engine, will soon join the other ships, the day previously were stationed in this town. vad who (From the London Times Sept. 15 ) a few months ago, will be deme in Rome ina couple cleat memories, rit of the Neapolitan marine is described as guarded tke beat | pase which terminates the railway The Italian nation bas disptayed during the Ofeen ona! of howre of the withdrawal of hiats 3 heving done eo, were not to be een, and four unarmed men had captured months which bave succeeded the battle of Solferino qual. | regret the destruction in that Lhe question at once Fu bat course he this fleet, sen’ than ae ie ali the ureasiness about th! " towards the provinces that have thus rieew King was said to contemplate to send to Tr! & considerabie city, From Colone! leard, with whom I institutions between the capital and th pursued io to put it at the dieposal of Austria, completely removed. | bad an interview, I learned that the General was ex: Absolutiam, whether of despots or of di ingurrection, and by what means can the repetition of ishout any orders from the Dictator, certain lists of | pected at Eboli—a village about sixteen miles distant— lights of course in the metropolitan theory of rate; such risiogs be prevented? Their bloody repression by names 29 of those formin; the provisional government hare and I at once proceeded there. Along the road we me! those who wish for the (ul! aed fair developement the hordes of Lamoriciere would leave matters a been pincarded, The public are warned against any swr- | man; the {intellect and all the mora! worth of @ country will gp yp A cone § before. Neapolitan troope who had laid being the wili of the Dictator the guilty Moateleone, wenting | way | and bas trusted them fairly and honorably, The Italians never desire to see centralization left unbaianced by loca of creatures, footsore dia. Powers. We are beginning to feel even in Eogiand the | must cease, from the song th vy LT ‘The Prefect of Police, in another order, says — the edges ot the vineyards half it fod of thet nemieess end y in| other Karopean Powers. Wi ‘Unat jealoy jeavened All the abipeof war and merehs: vessels wo the Al the entrance of Ebol!, on extremities which is produced by congestion in the rev ifa French corps occupied the whole terr! between reean| a jon of the heart. But in ‘Were ar in | Civita Vecchia and Ancona’ Nor would the of dia. minis or the Feo Sralien, the artoanin, qwateriate of war, are rf added to the squadron of the og of Italy, sic, epee enptent be finally removed by any other eccapa- mmunanded GARIB. . ¢ Verests and great pursuits wholly independent of overs | ment or ot retlsoal organ of any kind, which hérve in a certain senses to control the centripetal commercial powers exist, In Italy, | more to guard vetimes against the U which Is certain to await a newly fousded executive which rape oo ‘much power. M. Farin! confeswss id the question only relate to Lombard: and Nocasy it might be comparatively easy to prov ye oe tion, even were that occupation ‘ai ‘ (rand os teeming ual” bisadel of the ernmen| the check ing clerical caste. The inbabi ou and Ve ria Tr r asi more. Like & national government The rensonabien ses of that desire cannot be costested by France, whieh sent ite legions into Italy if order to give it full effect. At whose hands shalt : Romano ie onfirmed in hie office as Minister of the [n- terior, Cosenr is appointed Minister of War, Pianelli Minteter of Justice, De Cesare and Giacchi are in the Directories of Finance ani of the | Grondy announce.» his \etent\on troops Com! impulse that on Our admirat #>me aston! LJ grenteet. pear ‘sitos jaah The time has, however, for their political wante by mere expansion of the | that desire now reoeive the natural, the necessary satie- the resolution, which ha‘ taken without any com- were announced. He remained lately necessary for constitutional system of Piedmont, ss har faction? At the nande of Garibaldi. Ps ees munication with himself, the more so a# such & step few minutes, but was Ttalian affairs to of fact, already done, But the annexation of Garivela) fare only fought, the victories of Garibe are seemed to be quite une’ . If, however, the w® most cordially by the hand, | cumspection, if they Tlaly and of Sicily reders a mere persistence only won, in the name of King Victor Emanuel Tae ac- French seat men on shore he m.70ld do the aame to the the state of Naples, and whether | forever, all that capedicnte |mpracticabie. An Italian Parliament there | ceptance by Ni Til, of the policy of noe tateeven. having first obtainet permission of the antho- tbe lime of our departure, and ary, 1849. Tat inust be, and an italian army, and an italian exchequer; | tion bas Garibaldi to wrest ihe kiegdom iti ‘and be begged the French Acimirel 10 commons Placed betwoen bol) and | amoniater, but for the developement of local resources, Two Sicilien from ite covereign. The operation vara conte to b,w bis final resolution. WH to know ibe feeling of the whieh ibe present nad more), provincial aeegmpolics azo provincial polley hae guaranteed the revotted proyingee ot the Ressag,