The New York Herald Newspaper, October 19, 1860, Page 2

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NEW YORK GERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1860.-TRIPLE SHEET. 3 _ $a of Anglo-French affairs in China, the frie Er gland. for Sardinia, and the cc ity of a peaceable alliance between tls cc and France, it would not be at all strange Ut Joys in Paris, {had two packages of | terposing against Garibaldi’s attacking Venetia, | Embassy no very startling results are expected to a U3ing from England, but Iowas only | that heeaid not intend 0 doing. In une of the | ensue from it. The relations of Russie aud France own, Sas they sre rede 0nd. ieee ren’ ight rifle guns ig constructed, to command = ford Jutiable or prohibited articles, | New York Hesaps just received here I notice | are believed never to have been once interrupted pe hed no ee pemite 6 Cronin oa | eee Volturoo may be’ crossed. On the hilo’ und replying “No,” I was told to ‘*Pass on,” and | the following paragraph:— since the treaty of Paris after the Crimean warfare, | Wile fabio co es sneaking kindness for Austria, | another ~o er turned a key or showed what Thad. At | 4 paris correspondent of the London Herald says that | and the belicf still prevails that a secret under- ee in inserting this epistle and making it | bard Capua, from whence “a constant ire the Prime | Paris the muititudy left the train and dispersed | France bas just purchased ten large steam traueporta in | standing was arrived at between the two Powers ba pond tof an editorial, in which the case of | Jy Lan] up to molest the work: Vis. | without that old formality of being cooped up for } the United States. on that occasion entirely favorable to French ob. | the subject of an, editors, Twitch fie, Aka | seven abelia were fired yesterday, but the « ad | from Jiftcen minutes to three-quarters of an hour, | ‘This is, as you justly surmised, a canard invent- | jects. I am told that nothing has since happened itt ao f which the Thunderer iss- at amaster, | ¢t, Wes 8m unfortunate donkey, who was to poe iC we had our passports all en revie. | ea by the said correspondent, who is addict to | ¥0, remove that impression on the part of the Eag- | ie a6 followed, @ day or two: ards, by 8 | Gret siete cau ead cant and ¢ The years of imprisonment, of travel in America, | sensation writing and to apnouncing frightful in- | lsh government. to be outdone by the | furious onslaught’ upon the Prossian government, feae ea clnanet ut horror of exile in England, and a varied experience that | creases of the French army, French navy, ¢: other 0 French are not going to be outdone by the | 14 especially upon the Prussian laws, which are jitans dred seven a { i ; | observed, “is an on the — Victor Bm lide alk th the same fcty and wit ite | trom fear that owen it to the consciousness | might have remembered the old Roman 3 4 of Garibalt, Victor Bewraeal and France, you may | slide slong with he aus tacts arora vege: | Ol steered orientalis circus ote anh | © Merde qui clo dat.” Now that Tie cnbetiet is Cent ete, “Geotiets; mt ken Toe Louis Napoleot, need not be surprised to uave | lations. Except to show my passport on landing, { needed, for the Sardinian Parliament has just sanc- | done, and his army anuihilated, it little matters submit to be dragged out of a railway some of the ieweis knocked out of his crown. Ina | and getting it ciséd without any charge or ten mi- | tioned Unanimously Count Cavour’s determination | how it occurred, casri by railway officials, to be possibility of Coat combination, and loo\ | nutes’ delay, Twas not asked & question or inter- | of not attacking Venetia, and it was easily to be | Much as been sald about the contemplated | SATARS OY TOWED O° “ing a filthy jail, critical condition of Turkey, the grave | rogated ring severél !oug journeys and & | understood, from the fact of Victor Emanuel’s in- | meeting at Warsaw; but I know that at the English and then told by the Attorney General of ‘the | it sfreneed aeeen ome San Lncaio te Se ' | ge 4 5. i Ey i af 44 fast 5 i At Austria on cne side, the other, will be a i : 4 i cannot be u ‘ial P1 ‘ ‘ 7 Ca Fiaisg look at affwirs in | seems like @ romance, have unquestionably been a | yesources. By way of a dbange, this prove dis- | English in the matter of rifle shooting. Volunteers < Me savages and admin- | fer as we are concerned. The Garibaldians ott! Ager s of yesterday is & | fitter education for @ man in the position of the | coverer of political mare's nesta has gone out of big | are impossible in a land where the conscription (ele alien Howrte Prussians (at least | small stacks of those they pick up; of the 67 shells al een the | Emperor of the French than any otler ever marked rane . c+ | says, ‘Come hither, my fine lad, don the shako tremely 4 Mentioned oniy 11 burst. a beveral places the advanced. ra barba- | out for a Prince, and good fruit is itbearing. Tam ppt yen tes ogre perl ey i ve aA and the blood-red pants, whether you will or no;”’ a.g00 ee oer eee ety naly poste of both armies are so close to each other that a good. far from being an admirer of all the acts of Louis | the scene of his discoveries, for the English accept | buta ball in the bull's - is as eaay for one coun- | Puiovers in the incorruptibilit succinct histor great Oriental desy Fians for the last dit 7 : 4 of their judges ° Ade, ) Napoleon, but he is unquestionably a man created Sncrust try as another; so the Committee of the Tir Na- on the King’s mother, on our side, are responded to 4 ae have not for’ the time, a ivot“on which great events are pe ht roe spa ir eoy toy ayer tional Francais have thus flung down the glove in and the-inialenee tied piel of indlneten ngerenees cnn at i) ‘hey do 3 ask bad better | D ground | it | turning. Garibaldi is another, but so fur ina dif- | go large. sf ‘ all courtesy and chivalry to the bold marksmen of | FC's | sweeping condemnation passed upon them | having ‘ined off a pleoe of coarse Diack bread and seeing assumes in all animal life the } ferent career and in a more limited area. Isce the |" The s.eamer that conveys this to your city will | England: by ‘the English’ journal. Angry rejoinders ap- | ‘be Neapolitans tauntingly holdiug up for our tantalizas vigorous 1 concentrated in individuals | hero has defeated the King’s forces in a pitched bring over, a8 a visiter tes land, Mr. Thorn- Gentiemen—The bigh importanoe that you jaetly attach 4 in Sc owepapers of all shades, liberal and | tion roast fowls and well filed gourds. staff is anxious give them supremacy, and the weaker of the | }uttle on the banks of the Voltarno, and taken | ton Hont, son of the celebrated Leix!) Hunt, and-| to the establishment of national rife matches in Bagiand Meactlonary; the English are told that M. Moller | #bont Piedimonte, a corps ot 6,000 mea, which occupied , sawe and kindred races go to the wall. And 00 prisoners. The work goes bravely on. God ont edi . swing Chronicle, | @0d the remarkable skill which your marksmen bave > Eng! : A the entrenched camp before Capua, having di Et not so anong nations? "Were not Julius | is preat, and bis prophets carry out his purposes ia pronenadiion at ep apewecnrnt, Saclin ge. tielayed in there contest, have Tagpired- us with the | Was quite right io stigmatizing their insolence and | ‘ovigg tye night. The. Garibaldlany Rave x ompperee Cesar aud the Romans carrying out the natura sterious way. Let us accept the service with uiring ‘a cessation of his labors. He hae written more - Re aria you ee ye Cia renee ete ae oo indulgent towards them, but thatin fatare ing utterly in the dark as to the movements of instincts of the race of man in making an irrop- | thankful hearts, ‘about Americans thin any other Englishman | jowed to be — ee the — Vinseanee, | they must be taught to know their proper place, |" me tacrative conctudes:— Gap into Britain, end sweoping swag) is, Goer cr read, ‘and will, as 1am assured, send to the | ap soldiers of the two. great vations who have achloved | and he cured of the airs of superiority they as: | J may remark that tbe approhensions of the stall were bunting savages who lived on nuts and wild ani Our Paris Correspondence. Chronicie the resu'ta of his observations while in the | giory in Sighting together on far off shores in favor of | "'\o over other nations. ‘There is doubtless a | quite correct. ‘The telograph-—-as announced yesterday. meis, aod planting ® mare vigorons people on their : Soe t a, 1890, | United States. We may congratulate the readers | Civilization aud humanity, let us unite, gentlemen, on the | Toatoum of truth in these reproaches; for among | las brought tidings of the fal of Piedimonte, a sucveas Jands! Did not the bastard, William of Normandy ra Ree ied 2 of that journal upon the fact that, through Mr. | Peaceful Geld, where skill alone SAE te senpe—eeaane vio. the thousands of English who inundate the Conti- | Which will enable the Neapolitans to tara Garibaldi’s po Ag Sie sine Tene ge sat ghee oe SOc a Departure of Ereach Troops for R Vapo- | Hunt, they will get a fair and impartial idea of men Mery wil excl epalaton, eaeent Sat am LR nent in the summer season there must be some exact parallel—and a more powerful one still—in Adeance of Aus- | and things in the United States, as far as one may | (sD oreciateand eateem each other. Wehopethat Kagiieh | whose conduct is not quite unobjectionable; but | Garibaldi and the Wounded at Caserta. more pow: “ inis IL Strong. |-Jadge of them during a stay of @ couple of months. | sigemen and sportsmen will feel » pleasure in answering | their base offence cousists in their habits of | The following extracts from a private letter to tho the migration aie vie a ws ree fect of Miaszini’s to our call, aud that they will, by their —— add to | independence, which prevent them from ex: | Eiitor ofthe M:dical Times and lie, written, bya the red man’s wiliorness in Anietios, anf there obey s Cueshe’ fe the splendor of this to féte The prizes offered | }ibiting that deference and submission to | friend who has recently vis.ied Naples, will bo road with the injunction made by the Creator—‘‘increase and Jnjluence Over G Probable Sale Paris, Oct. amount to more than fifty thousand francs. TheTir | which the public employ’s of all classes | interest. The letter is dated Naples, September multiply, and replenish the carth, and sulidue it.” aS Yada tri he Great Powers Re- | Potitioal Excitement tn Parté—TFren National will open on the 7th of October tnetant, and will a of ‘was received this week:— > ’ eh : ‘enetia by Austria Fr€0 lowers ‘olitical Exc pent in ‘aris. are accustomed in this country. The word of a And why did the English in India and Anstralia; . “y i F 7, he 4 2 ee last twelve days. Receive, gentiomen, &c. By order of | |. rn ment fanctionary is law, and no non-official A few days ago I was one of a party which went dowa fhe Spanish in Mexico and Peru; the Portuguese in dto M in Peace—Inaceuracies of du Wounded by the Defeat of Lamoricierce—CGO'l- | the administration. J. F. ANGIER. g the rps Titiseate, | % Carerts to visit the military ital, where the Brazil, and the Y in California, override and h Letler Writers—An English Elilor on | daldi’s Mission Supposed to be Accomptishel—} ‘The decision announced in the Piedmontese | PeTso™ Ventures to gainsay it, or, in case of Caplte, | wounded were brongut after the unfortunate affair of crush the natives and residents of those countries, de., de. Affairs in Noples—The Mysterious Ruptve | Chamber, of not molesting Venetia or Rome, meets 7 pt tr tick cant cord to mp ihe other | Tease omen Seoania n't cara: Sees except by the 6 o piat DromDMraus | The great event of the day is, without doubt, the | Letereen Garibaldi and Cavowr—The Pope's | With general approbation in the French journals. y, “You have resided many years in Prassia; did | » body of oflicers praccising rifle shooting, Among ‘tee ee ome oO see cena ee cauie | sending by the government of twenty thousand | -1Uocution—Rigle Shooting in France—Serious | yg? TEXert to subjects of more domestic: charac- | you’ ever hear of a Prussian officiat being in the | was no less a pergonage than Garibaldi himself. As goon of ; ve nO oe one din y u , remy 4 : gags . ter. You have, perhaps, already heard of the wrong?” I certainly never dif; and this is the | 98 he perceived us he came frankly forward to Mrs. causes at work in cram n the an troops to Rome. Why this is done is thus account- Accident at the Hippodrome, &e. wonderful Leotard, whose voltaic performances | reason that poor Captain Macdonald fared go ili in | W——, who bad with ber a large hamper of lemons and Fotten despotisms and ¢ mame les OFF a gor: — Ar a ann Feneti ite of ie not cas scrit r have nightly collected such crowds at the Cirque | },) se Hag oranges for the wounded. On her requesting him to give a pl 4 for:—Ausixig is sending to Venetia the elite of It is not eaxy to describe the mingled nature of : | his encounter with them. Naples and Rome, and pla ¥ : ve in the Champs Elysées, having met with a terrible | ""4¢"j, ‘t this episode is not with- | [Ter toat he might be mdguitted to the bospital, be inn. more vigorous set of actors her armed foregs-—regiments that were stationed | the excitement at preseat prevailing in Paris in re- | Overthrow. As it did not happen till after the de- | out political Smpareanon, and it has renly discon taivelan ghtarvends the beagle ace 5 UlGs Giiciaban ee ctical Christiani i , Shania Soseniiia Goins in 4 litie va fi i. ie! : 4 , con- | minutes alterwarde the people wore a pod Fraese _ om hermit ry in that portion of Francis Joseph's dominions have gard to poliiionl affairs in napa bat to pina paar gage acter eorenl I may as well briefly re- | cerved the Prussian government, who are particu- | toe aorinsilt anive caclinee English lady and ber two Peibo end before the walls of Pek We need not | been replaced by others, because the troops forming | tan in particular. The confusion and complication Fob ge) sp performances—not SS jaa art be oe Pie gly Weng fo agree her peeing Reghr dry godisew! ow hospital. ask how it i t a little island eipire of thirty them were more disciplined and inured to campaigns, | in the Boot of Italy is certainly enough to puzzle than herctlean—have made him such a favorite of | " . he peony: po Since i ages Hoy serra tee chat , ane teatace baie Rapamtg millions of peop able to take possession of | and other equally significant arrangements are | the wisest cordonnier, and there is little doubt that | the fair sex that it is said he is obliged to Keep a | ‘Alliance, can. hardly be looked upon with a | {om without, but the wards are too small, and the eee ne swell kek ety ated hot | aaily occurring, such as replacing in all the for- | some of the longest heads whose hands have been | book of his Jetious engagements in the liste of very | favorable, eye by. the British Cabinet; | WradMinen yt cctsids Ineo thet tes see es ee gannon ball v hrough a wooden barn filled | tresses with the heaviest guos those of | busy at the seerct strings are just now pretty well ee eee eA He eck ack noone. | Sb eee highly undesirable, therefore, that | {tec"nccwed ats the weres’ in suck foctere eke ae with hay, or why a shot of cast steel will penetrate | q lighter calibre, and increasisg the num- | mystified as to the results that are to follow. vil Soewl to dem tne stemiumtte tome eosin ta tie Sear ear cia iat came cocld hardly, move about. | It was « moat affecting sight Seip TaNaS Of AS EASERS., TES Gay Bae COemA ber of guns as well as fortifications, “‘Le von Dieu ct ie peuple” of the Garibaidians | general business of the establishment, and keep | now, Prussia haa been in rather beticr odor than'| warrior appronched the aick bed. iiyery ue was tintet the ceascless march of . When y of x : abagie sag . “ Fecideeaenteen aa kudiaros when Dot vaciiin, » Prus app |. Kyery one was visited ht from the West must penetrate the [and | While munitions of war are piled up in Venetia | have for the nonce been not quite sufficient for imnself apart tr ‘i all Though 8 | her two Eastern neighbors: she was praised for her | in turn, and he had a few words of consolation for each the almoud-eyed, and ‘fit. is necessary | until even the most careless can read the designs | them, and the fickle fools all over Europe, who | "midair likes snipe or a swallow: Though re- | iiberal institutions, her high civilization, and the | individual. He laid his rough band @o kindly on the 40 fasten that spark of civilization, that copy of zs ee > uit ’ ceiving some $25,000 by the year, he wasanin- | order and regularity of her administration, and | fevered brows of the most suflcring that the tears started an Chat ‘spark Of civilisation, Py a | Of Austria, She is getting ready for @ desperate | would nightly sup on horrors, are now ready to juredindividual; and thoughablétofaneuralongthe | people were not prepared to see her func- | {0m their oyes. it was a hot, sultry day, and the the Bible, or that commercial treaty, to 9 hand | |. in upon poor Ital was feared here that | fling scorn on their former idol. So wasit in th nlevards, he was so sick that he could not per- | tionari duct Ives like Austrian | MF Wat very carefully exciuded. The ven te made or an artillery projectile the jane pring vpon poor Italy, It was feared here that ig score on mmer idol, was it in the | form; M. Dejean had taken advantage of his youth ae ee an notnaps. Na doubt goverament | 002 My seking why the windows were not open, wad nu must be effected, and the missie sped on its | were Garibaldi to enter the Roma: 8 Austria | beginning, and ever shall be, Added to this there | gyq inexperience to entrap lim into an engage- | Wish 'M. Moller me Satie, ene oora po tases ale foo freely adesisied. was a0 So Soea Sener way. Iam sorry to offend the susceptibilities of | would at once attack Italy; that she w d d over- | has been a whisper—whisper though it was—of | ment, and he ought not to be bound by it. But a] ject him to a public reprimand, if it could be a profound observation, but afte oe Mesetis aha onik babe pardon oo FE mye run the newly annexed provinces of Victor Biuan- | besrding France, and the gallant Lamoriciere, a | very polcncn “2 he pate of judgment and baw ome without Gicamua the prestige of Prussian | baldi ordered the Trindows to Se throes toe hive. Wee the tight an@ wroug of every step taken by the | uel, and that she would place an immense force at | French general of renown, though not fighting un- | 4emned him to Me engagements av pied | oftcials; as it is, he will probably be snubbed in | baving ruggeswed to him the propriety of doing go. ie so ) P ) i |. | dela ettre; to dismiss from his fertile mind the private, and some other means found to appease | fore leaving the wards, where there were about Bexons in their 1 nae Peeeeet Rome, not molesting the French troops there, but | der the French eagle, has been tumbled in the dust | luscious offers of more than double this sum he had | {he ire of the injured Captain Macdonald and his | ¥¥ndec—the most of tném having been sont into Naples — penn ng Ae ig virtually taking possession of the city nevertheless, | and things of this kind are not gratefal to French | received from London for only @ period of six | incensed compatriots. Garibaldi made bis secretary who had followed bi : To prevent the occurrence of such a coup de main, | amour propre. Perish Sardinia, Victor Emanuel, | Months, and to remember only that in default of At the late manquvres a Lieutenant Ostrowski, | faney. ape pre: aged ertiheg a Be 4 ial hes: siren i P, Jaribal ia Unit ' i each offence against his contract he must pay @| attached to the staff of Prince Frederick Charles, | withedry Fp Be dn | : e te Be declge Victor Emanuel has already invaded the Papal | Garibaldi, Italia Unita, let the whole peninsula be | fine amounting to one-third of his mouth’s salary. | was severely wo d by @ conical buifet, pater a doe oar he Cyrenb gar apa one, aot eae ovind now thelr vast expire if crumb. | St#tes,.and France will now send a respectable | reduced to chaos, bat let no one so much as hintat | How Leotard jumps since I have not ascertained, | soigier having loadg@ bis musket, by mistake, with | about usiog water for dretainge, by whics fos, to dust by precisely the dcs:ription of na- | force to Rome—one that would keep the Austrians | the loss of a hair of the head of France. “Avant mips feagven eee of Pharaoh's cha- | pal) cartridge. ench peper has a letter from | bere might prod. He aeked particularly tural law that throws down the trunk in check, even were they fo attack and defeat the | loud la France et la gloire,” is everywhere the aspi ‘A far more serious downfall, however, has oc- Pettiget cations coknona Ge Le ane Geamraee rir fa My F Hi that fal grazing animals th carnivora’ The die i i Ss il i is (ee tat bas lived tte allotted time, and forces of King Victor Emanuel, which they are | ration, often th ession. By all means oe durred at the Hippod! Yesterday, whi “ 7 $ 2 led i “ $ g Victor Emanuel, which they are tion, often the expression. By all means occupy urred at the Hippodrome, esterday, when per- | regular battle with a German re, iment, in which to the common soldiers being Gaoiahed, Garibaldi went to a yen pice erg ers likely to do at any moment, although they have | Rome with 25,000 troops, with 50,000, or 100,000, if | forming what is termed the “ aerian trip,” in which peante of twin persons were killed or wounded | $*¢,the cfficers, of whom there, ware about dozen, He what opinion of their sags crldly wisdom, | promised France they would xemain upon the de- | you will; spread them forth like the sticks of a fan; | hundred feet above: the-level_of ‘the ground, | 2 both sides. As far as I have been able to | warmly with al, requesting ever ouctto male known to whe Sen eos ae p dlcgel pita Pena | fensive, and not attack were they let alone, The | let the French network reach its farthest limit; no} the three performers—a Mile. Louise and pe oan s Se eee, Whereyee, ta ae Setenhotee eiselicase seaiee ea ep pongy Haag al PP seabird and gaidance of the Em. | French troops will also serve as a check upon Ga- | king or kaiser, no principality or power, must for | MM. Hypolite and Francois—were, by the | jast accounts, was doing well, was re- | that there were many things required for their comfort: ck Veneti n instant i asl al breaking of one ef the ropes, hurled to 4 es ck Venetia, | an instant interfere with France. Every one, how- | ine pond d, and new lay, if ne actually deal, vo bt ne waldo tl yl toa oesaee ott em, oth eedioal ‘ep and | ever, is very sorry for Garibaldi personally, but | without e of recovery. They were observed to “i . | One“ gentieman,” calling himself an inspector geacra) pro- | very gled that any cueck, any discomfiture, how- | turn over as they came down, and fall with fearful — cane ee pve) ueee 2 of Garibald ‘ salar | ever mortifying, should serve to lift the Fzench | heaviness. Ee an bay cra was instantly brought | jt) to the presence. of French emissaries; | {mer Cust NsDles., Quere, whore did i come from? — : ee sis lose. Medical aid found them still breathing, | 1,4 . “5 — oy Heed | cegie on its vinion toac " but the hatred of foreign rule that has always | Dr Simpson’s plan. I cannot outer into details, as it ‘p 'p ba pinks but apparently beyond all hope of life. Anago-| been evinced by the Poles is ‘Yuite sufficient | just post time, and I write in haste. One of the. depended heretofore To speak more seriously, men seem pretty gene- | nizing shriek broke from the audience at the ap- | to account for it at a moment when the idea of na- | was preeept when I was the bee coy ed sts would not fight, Bat | rally of the opinion that the mission of Garibaldi is palling accident, and many fanted. The manuer | tional independence has been roused to fresh vigor | tbe bospital here, He bad tried in vain to secure the ar- the performance is in this wise: two men take | by the scenes now enacting in Italy. If this coun- | ‘¢'¥—® small one—and the man r by one of the oldest and wisest statesmen of | ribaldi, who will not be allowed to empire, Yin-Yau-Yung:— The ibaldians were repulsed at Ca ‘The conditions of peace, it has been lately reported, are | have been taught a lesson that will most like pearly arranged, and amoug them are rush articles as pe 1 More providing indemnity for war ex, Tox ist | fitthem. No ibaidi understands that i , tbat China, the mighty, mighty empire of Ta Cstog, | trogns ca: s gai roy ¢ fet be constrained by a few thousand barbarta.s; that | OOPS cannot and agniant an army of troops; ir successes they have but to command , and she shall tener t upon the fact that the roy: Ber land or ber cities. But of the clsuses whieb are moet cious there are none so Woefai as thuee which au “ Borie the tetablichment cfs reeidcuce to the capitat, | once they make up their minds to the reverse, the | accowplished—that the hour has passed away for | tie rahi Gaal was getting faint froma in the terior, ead the t ‘ ion of | Geribaldians must organize, get artillery, and tight | the disappearance of the walls of Jericho by the fhe tight rope tet gid’ proba aunts Mite omar be Bera a eeiee “a ere a covded in errentng Phe ietng ata needs An m with vexation, Wrery cue saows, | With method as well as bravery, or clse they must | biast of a trumpet, and that the hour is come when Reng pn eo meek ae Se — —— her | the Rhine, it would be the signal for serious dis- Whey may begin to use it by and by, 9 A ebildres, that It 4 ot | re i fan ‘i " : inci- le of the other. In this man- ‘ ~ — + Shae Wo the women and children, that it ought a retreat. 1do not imagine, however, that the dis- | only the heavy metal of experienced and disci: ner the three pened | they reach the climax, the piste sigs a arg ge Daag one The Capt a ans at Cajazzo will | plined warfare can solidify the good work he has | altitude of one hundred feet above the level, and or . J The Piedmontese Gazette publishes the text of the ca disfavor, although I | so well begun. So long as lis wonderful career | it was just there that one of the ropes ‘uapped, | pat oh ath fees snongh to dverawe the Pitlalon of Ascume, which a foo have been assured that the King coutemplated | ‘mained wngbecked it was wise to Jpok on with | Spd all three were viviently precipitated to the | tuality will be among the qu fons discussed at | by the undersigned commaalesloucrs, by ordes‘ot tis ke. ce To come to the propsgation of religion. Without being | @étrous defeat of the Garibal vereed ip the religion of the Lord of Bearen, your ser | have any serious result in ¢ vant takee ite general aim to be ty disturb the worl! to | Dewilder the people, to foater privily 2 desire for what is \ earth, sarang, Were olicrwae, why 8 sid Vg Ratlons that making an eniry at Naples at the head of several ) folded arms; but in @ country like Naples the —e Warsaw. : Sone ke nee el Gee ig herp f eer stianee' oe | Lome Karun thousands of Lis followers. Were he to attempt this | slightest shadow on bis prestige calls for instanta- Our Berlin Catrespondence, - ‘The Battle of Cajazzo. = Meg te. order of 2 Pens coe de Lar 0 roaming through the 10g boldly no one can doubt that at the present time | neous action. France and Sardinia will now throw Baar, Oct. 3, 1860. [from the Paris Correapoadence to tue London Herald.) | B<ciein ise pace athena cee Fe ron al po abe ae thm Congas ted by fat | he would succeed. It is a remarkable fact, and one | off all disguise, and at once stand revealed as the | <4 Row wend Its Conaequences—Prussian Opinion | trom Naples and of the second day’s fighting be- | ores and powder, clothing, Lemp coal, vessels of | iilustrative of Neapolitan gratitude, that when the | ‘‘stars”” of the real Italian drama. Yet, in the! of Englishmen—The London Times Retorte— | tween the Garibaldiane and) the royal troope, which re. lenge be to govertusest, Koch ot tee itn ten cutesy ores Mabenn, te tuataky apreeaey | Garibaldians were repulsed by the royal troops | midst of all, a new messenger from Naples arzives, Mutual Indignation and Contempt—The Prus- | seroes the Voltarno. Oa the 19h, after driving out the —— pa land oF sea service, ahall bo im: one pegged egg Eg the peasants fell upon them with knives, clabs and | in the person of the great Alexandre Dumas, in | sian Poles Attracting Attention, de., de. Seeagetenna tien the vines, 5 Ses Cometer ty Oe eee | Oia ee ee ] pitchforks, and despatched thea with brutal ulac | search of artists and artisans to assist him in his -\ pretty litte quarrel has sprang up between | Vacchieri, by » Bolognese company, 1,and | Art. 2 The laad ferces of his the King of Sar. a T . uoder eT ee eae teleesttor | MK ctor of the Beaux Arts of Naples. | this country and England, which, though originally | fractious Of other Vattations, in al about one thousand | dinia shall immediately occupy the fortress and entroncb- new oftice of T Abemee!ver of the dimensions of the empire, of the fea. | | | er and weakurss of {8 forces, the fatuess ant lean etm turn to the Pope. His Holiness ; ” camp, the outwork: Gardet lunet: Zine of ita lands they will contract relations with tbe ba aye ide pe > + Rome a few ian Re himself is a ‘‘star’’ of no trifling magnitude, and, } referring to private individuals, has become a sort postion, seen Ga wppuention ‘tor Tees ~ Stefano, the fort of the Gapcting, ited the feo Pn, Sok cnt tes pra ead seals ss fo 00 werk on moma k and taking re pain. Cardinais | after his own e/oquent, enthusiastic fashioa, is Gll- | of national concern, and is occasioning considera- | \ieneral ‘Turr, but they never made their appearance. pony yh ole and ihe gates of th» mole hearts. Thore are good Proofs that these ‘are the means | . ae — to this often be ieee ing all the city with the praises of Garibaldi. Never | ple irritation on both sides. Some two or three og eagle ge on Oe = ba ee 4 ha nt oa Ee, they cat thelr wa, eo little tea? SUK@Orm | etermination, ‘The result was that the Marquis | Was there on the Yace of the earth such another | weeks since a British half-pay officer, by the name pefore ‘a ely ye found fa Suan eaentee What minous idea of the Christian religion | d¢ Cadore First Secretary of the French Em- | patriot, genera! aad statesman. He is the adora- | of sacdonald, was travelling with his family onthe | i¢ peinforcemente were Ei ef a eartiages the old rascal Las! I think he must have taken | Dassy @t that city, wes despatched to Pacis to con | tion of all Naples, and ere many days elapse will | banks of the Rhine. Arrived at Bonne, he left the | should at least be \mmeciately The request Bible lessons from the Sock of Joe Smith. And | fult the Emmperof upon the wablert taunt wove | Wipe out the disgrace of Copua with new deeds of | railway carriage for few minates to stretch his | Ras met with the f Venanerl, conten thas came ab yr ert = vanities mre troops to Rome to guarantee the Pope's residence. | imperishable glory. In fact, even as 1 write, the | legs and take a peep at the walls of the famous | the enemy were well supplied with artillery, asked for a Keep off the outer barbaria | Ser ony, tn sean pag oe are ecm: wings of the telegraph bring the intelligence that | university which had the honor to number Prince ea oof 2 A Sikkeues Se feron cod De not, says an ancient proverb, over advantage | will then st once enter, and Italy wil, be united “Richard is himeelt again, that the Neapolitan | Albert among its pupils, when, lo and behold! on pag gy Fa Tg Sea eae, “ieee? Guah te Seen OF tee ine under his rule. The Pope's retreat would no doubt royalists are everywhere flying before the once } returning to his place, he found i; occupied by a about ncom, Vacchicri's sentrien signalized @ strong gynatty eal tallow toy Sue > Buore oa he q | ee ee eee eat te lore more victorious pale See himself writes to | German doctor, who had settled down clue af Rese, wale came out of ee = ich I sleep myself” The is ws : | Naples, 0: § 1:—~**Vietor iinet > wvaneing towards Cnjeaso a tous pot, "Hed tbe outer barbarien ght tridate | upon him must devolve all the responsibility of riot "» October 1:—""Victory along the wholeline; | there very comfortably and seemed no | HDius or the Voltarsa, Ih was about 8.000 strong, uit till should free ingress and egress have been | such a move, and no excuse will exist tor exciting bravely? yalists are routed; the volunteers are in purs | ways inclined to vacate it. The Briton | and included a Proportion (some say two, some iDited ae with them Seeded * — | the animosity of other Catholic Pow against | suit.” requests him politely to “come ont of thats” the tareo es and 2 vetcrans—pol- Fevarued without bolog alowed ts foley and det. How, | PTance, EhGre YoU av tae ee Napoleon | _ Without attemptiog to penetrate the mystery } doctor respondsin soncroushigh Dutch, and, neither | ire aay army wight be proud of. It was 4 then, when they come with violence aud hortility, with a | 4 i determined that . | Which has shrouded the apparent misunderstand. | party uaderstanding a syllable of the other's lingo, | bY Sve squadrons o cavalry and « good many field pioces foud ‘that bas lasted through generations, are they to be | Garrisons Rome. He is determined that no re! “ apd howitzers, Vacchieri, in spare the village @aflered 10 siation officers bere jo oflicial residences, to | = ey shall stiety aastameute” that | ing between the principal actors in the great | Capt. Macdonald takes the usurper gently by the | if immediately got bie little force under arms Dave their (ree say, a, ase — any scemingly eee, Ttalion drama, and whether or not the whole has | shoulder to explain his wishes in a more intelligible went out to meet the enemy. oped to deiay of the empire, Gulng The Piedmontese troops have not entered, been but trick to th So § their advance for @ while, while tiring woul x and the | (barbariace from weet aud east). as yet, the Neapolitan territory, and, vy al- et ® mere stage trick necessary to the | manner. Up jumps the doctor, shrieking for as- | warn Turr and induce him to come uate re- Suse, ems aacient until now, have such | pr A just vesatvol, we hear That they have | proper denouement—and a very large majority of | sistance, the railway officers rash in and com- | !n’orcemente, At one o'clock the Soames, been beard of. * © 4 nat extent of mlschiel | so fortified G that, without Garibaldi | politicians here seem much of that opinion—I will | mence pummelling the unfortunate Briton, who, sromne atte Samia hed eo oe oy nd pS ang a4 ay ppg es (m4 bypianegey A | cannot hope to capture it. An immense camp has : , ingle f r i deavor to give you some description of the | after a determined resistance, is finall, . | posed toa murderous fire cf grape, etry caa’s valee % he been formed near the city, works hive been thrown | 2O* endeavo t ee, nally over: ‘ Tey Sey noth ous tite vistenee a8 om oon, | up, rendering the approach of an invading force | current opinious in regard to Rome. And perhaps | powered by numbers, and dragged to the in- | £76 Pan = Sine capdaten er F< Bennes nor ‘eooh!- : seem part, Fight 00, once jor ail; your enemy is of the nature of a | very difficult, and immense stores and munitions | before I go any further 1 may as well remark, by spector's bureau, where he is ordered to pay a fine | eri’s men bad not » cartri¢ge, and he therefore had the veep; once chastived and subdued, be will uotdare | of war have been piled up in Gacta. Thus, naless | 0 way, that the Moniveur of this morning, at the ~ | ‘ed. to aveng Victor Emanuel interferes, the fate of Naples is not » of ten thalers on the spot. Fully persuaded that | Tre “Garibaidini rushed forward, ‘but were | Cials, as well as those of the post offlce and telegrapbe, Probably true: but when the Celestials have “ch yet decided. Garibaldi had, as! informed you ina | ¢nd of a long and thickly printed colamn, touching | he is in the right, Macdonald refuses to obey this | met by the Swiss ard Bavarians, who bore thall'be considered a8 bat rank of officers. 4 tieed nd England | previous letter, given up the Neapolitan fleet to | the various architectural improvements of Paris | decree, and, as @ punishment for this contumacy; | '¢_, Speet without _ flinching. ‘Tre carnage ase. Se weetane be left 19 Ancona under the Bo dé ng as the “fa. | Admiral Pisano, the commander of the Sardinian | already accomplished or still in progress, inf ' A b ree A BR ed , and Veothier!, | §reme J "8 government; those among vored rt 2 vaty between China | fleet. Now he desires Pisano to retarn him the | 1 <0 : P progress, informs | is provided with lodgings in the city jail. His | seeing that the enemy's cavalry was trying to get in bis R ped tse ye be alowed their own orderiy. sere et a ctates. it soome auoct pity that { ceded Veasels, but the Sardinian refuses to do this, | its readers that when the grand opening is com- | family apply immediately to the English Con. | Tear; ordered « retreat, which was performed in wolerabie | Dmoers Sacto compriand in thie capitan r forces could not co-operate with those of P Rie rere Taylor pare nase ep ale Ae vag oi <<. abutting | sul at Cologne, who offers bail to any amount; nce and England. You reply, probably, thay | journa ae aver. ‘ough the Marthe Gate on the Bols de Boulogne, | but the Prus authorities decline to receive it; inister was p 0 go to Pekia— being attasked on all sides. The reason is simp, ge . i Caen ert te ee ty thee, ond | that the Dictator hasallowed himselt to become the | # €normous place or square will be made, com: | and, after passing six days in durance vile, the Consequently you have nothing to resent. It is not poe ie weet oniatts tea tenet of oy assared wn cba = the Sean de ie the fre- | incklese traveller is summoned to take his trial for Bows on whether everything was done with he is 5 oF nent grand military spectacles, of which it is the 1 " deed sutty soa decentlian a Tok tongs. The act | and that he will make short work of te Mazzi 4 eatre, which shall bear the title of “Place da reer rr ge a rd hese 0 Se ike The Ie passed, Whatever good may come of the Anglo- | Let.us hope that my informant a be correct. Roi de Rome. ote lorney, Moller, wha conducted the case French Chinse war you can share. [am sure no We are assured that daring the late combats the This, of course, may be simply a pleasin, against him, not content with dwelling upon the one in his senses will regret that the shell | Young Neapolitan princes, as well as Count de Tra- | souvenir of old times, like the St. Helena medal, | alleged offence committed by the prisaper, uttered of that great ferra incognita is about to be | pani, the King’s uncle, acted with great detormi- | the Nice and Savoy annexation, and so forth, of no | » vehement philippic, denouncing the English na- Broken. Let us hope that the kernel will be both | Dation. The Count de Caserta was wounded. The | great political signification, but it rather happens B werketable commodity, ‘and will be planted and | King, with bis young wife by his side, rode on | to coincide with remarks thatare prevalent in diplo- tion in general, and the English residents and tra- were With | horseback nc soldiers to aaimate them. | matic circles just now—namely, that the Emperor | vellers on the Continent in particular. They had, | $u\,¢r® Bity jumped into to w into a tree for the benetit of futureag ; ; iver, and Signed in jicate at the headquarters of the e power of Russia on the north and west,the | They received Queen with lond shouts, ande} js determined that the year 1s62, which completes id, made 1] . | succeeded fy Te ty — ‘under Castro, ae ‘icwinion of British India on the south, the | Were much more enthusiastic towards her than the | the decade of power originally pe = | he said, themselves odious by the boorish- | in ewimmiog acroes abeavy musketry at Vitla Favorite, On the 2h of sep- ed Japanese with their Amorican trade | King. During the absence of Victor Emanael from | im of the French people at the great om ness, insolence and rowdyiam of their condact; they | Sena hg! a — the fleets and armies of the twe | Turin, the Prince de Carienan will, it is ssid, have | c@etud, shall witness the concentration of a double | must be taught how to behave themselves, and the | to Santa Maria, ‘The published i 1 CHEVALIER L. MAUI, MARQUIS it, of human affairs, ond still further proves that the te, and the h policy by the secret intrigues of England, - her of a party in England. The Grand Duke {Was prevented from publishing till the | government as soon ashe got home. Very likely Ami de la Religion, which, by Hy y pon where he bas just ar- | Empercr's opinion was taken. The Constitutionnel | ke .will do“so, or has done so already, and adiplo- | Mari UP to Oujaazo. }t must be added that for if oD i account states that LEPR 1 and military Powers of th 1d | the signing of decrees. « would go to chow rown- t of Rome ell all ‘ ite joes was four hundred. This is wholly below the tifloal Comm iorioners. wechcons wi tare fondue aarti | tat We Rog contemplates a teguened stay om | Snyial fay. tn ike meant. yte me Frenne | mer the bar ought fo be punished weverl, | Sukobal wimp ie tape on cot ne xaos Gering st the vory walls of Pekin, and with perse- | his capital. The moures of this atvenee are appa: | garrison grows stronger: the tes which connect the | {0 M've 088, Neth ne e'daans optus teva, [Ee Lette tebe BERTOLE VIALE, Vering mercbantmen of every nation crowding the | ren! » and more than likely or Emanuel | Emperor with the Holy Father become, in the } Court were evide © opinion; severi q portaof Canton, Foo chow-foo and Sianghae, do we | Will return to Turin King of all Italy. It is thought | estiination of this last, weaker every day. The | witnesses appeared in favor of the accused; but | private icticr before me staten thet thes mcr hare bees | ORDER OF THE DAY BY THE RING OF SARDINIA. SES Eee, Sie witeny ok the VOR, 08 pining 60 the | pode Ton nig et et te nt wht Reena Vope, turough his, cardinals, makes knows to the | 1he testimony of the officials was preferred, and | fexr thoussnd, bot not more, and four to ore is heary Pee Cat Sree of Be Gay Gh Bie Majetty tee King moonday sun, saying that the mysterions ex. | leet b| r a yan world through a vchure—whether, as the Con- - 4 odds in action. 7 ee w 0 cefor h nus y surrection, whic Naraf, 's o conan vider rt *, e » hi ‘sim: | io ae eer viet ¥ the rest of the world, and prove them as vigorous | 8OW transpiring in Italy. Fravce is to Lave the island of Sardinia under a " rit | veplinese and alter carsiesgnece ‘isplayed by the Gari. | the mercenaries whom I set free will teak of italy as the junior nations of the West, or else go dowa It is now certain that powerful efforts are being | new arrangeme an assertion at which the said | &9ting greater severity. . “ bmg oa phe By A, cnsegh #0 bee = end of you ia Seretgn contzien, after having learned thet and disappear in the conflict? | made to form a coalition “t F €. ius | semf-ofticial journal, see this morning, lifts up both So far, #0 good. The Briton paid his fine and | je, upapr Toekout:<s Ad 1e¢0m penece: By ferve Him, and aut those The state of afry in Syria, Turkey ad Berpt | sia abd Austra have drawn tuer, dud are | fie hands im pious horror, “Again: the Pope sends | went his way, certainly not rejoicing, but vowing | - The guua (be tt 8) have not Zot frome vp. and hardy | We nat ertabiok « strong lala, msuarchy'os ines gives rise to the same reflections on the mutavility raged to avow themselves the opposers of | “te eg ed to the consistory the 2sth vengeance, and threatening to complain to his | * exertions are being marie to iiab a battery on the peoples who will aid os with order and ovwoord, | i } berty of billocks of Gan Angela and Sac Miche, which command | Tye national army will increase more aod more ine glory iaht ceotaries has thsae ou hs meee Most vigorous races must predom weaker fall and disap) by the vidoa! nations, like individual men, 1 is now in Lond espatched by th aroy. Soldiers, 1 take the command. It wouk! comt me oo iy, to @ | rived, : : as i I 3 : Russian government to | reproduces it, sneeringly obeervang that it is clad to ‘ ; Himited extent, crente or bring sbout great revolu- | asceriain the exact futention of England's govern. | perceive. that althotgh the Holy Father expresses | Matic correspondence will be opened Between the | for i King, Franc! capital ust ar be pleased, aad.oraeh na | MUeh Set 0 Be fremont wherever there may be danger. Yions or important oras ; but if we are wise we can | ment, a fact hard to discover, Lord Jotm Hassell | no gratitude to France fot the protection she ex- | two Cabinets, which may be expected to lead to x ‘To the neig aemoia always recognise the march of events, accept the | has just committed himself by vending a strange | tende to him, he isnot the less content to avail him- | the result that usually attends such diplomatic cor- heed The Expulsion of Fit: from, changes as they come, and make the most of them. | circular to Count Cavour, in which he informs hen self of it, and that he seems apparently determined respondence—/.¢. nothing at all; but ia the mean- releubis or Ocid works to protect the ie Naples” ett: i You will pardon me for devoting #o much of my | thdt England has taken cure to prevent Sardinia | to remain where he is. ce is in fact not posi- : fveee fault. The fortidicasione are precieely in the eame port! ‘The followirg peremptory order was \smued on the 28tb fro epace to foreign affairs, Here, Parliament isnot in | from having an ally in case she attacks Austria. | tively named, bat the wrath emptied oat against | time, the affair bas heen removed to the cognizance 0 17 be henuaiNien were gemgen.. © General Meil- | ult — session, the Cabinet is dispersed over mountain, | The Minister of the clly of France thus plainly | Sardinia by the Father of the faithful is evidently | of a tribunal in which these matters are not treated | Witz (Garibald ian) went to wader & fag of truce for | | ray river and loch, the Queen is in Prussia, and very | threatens that Power of @ coalition against her:— | netall meant for that Power. No one can read with the delicate reserve that characterizes diplo- = ee ee pag oh Se a de) Ute is taiked of, printed or written about, except | “The only hope left Sardinia, were she to attack | this famous allocution without concluding that the | macy. There are quite a number of English families | ¢*7,Felsano had sent to 14 Meae, at wante Marie, Tor gome | regs foreign transactions. | took a ran over to Paria | Anstria, is that she might again draw France into | crisis is at hand. | resident at Boune, who naturaily felt aggrieved by | the tows escorted by 8 very polite oMcer. He eaw Salzano, i the fore part of the week, and there I found all | the battlefield. Let not ¢ adage in | The Pope, too, finds, like his Divine Master be- | the remarks of the District Attorney in reference | eo told him—“Sir, boaseared that yours and our opinions | —You summoned me from Palormo, aed, with- attention, gossip and new t Powers are | f re him, treachery among his familiares, The pri- | to their nation, The first idea of Fngli he same dire The | retary of Cardinal Antonelli tad a brother, | in such cases is to write to the London i he incouti- | end to the Zwnes eccordingly the aper writing set- | that pernicious delusi ; T Reeing or hearing me, you bid me, through reneh are under- | resolved to maintain peow Great Britain has | vate " eoretary, Pertan!, to quit Southern Italy within | wenty four hoors. 1 declare, aw I go, that I yild to) hmen | ad principles are fame, bot we are compelled to dght Times, | in defeoce of & bien We have foreed wl ocr hives, th bour an enfortunate erent iw going a silent revolu ommercial a@uirs | interests in the Adriatic wh she watches with | and confided to him Papai rete, a wrote. Their | and sbieb at the ¢! im the commencement ef ation of the com- | careful attention.” What interests may | nently betrayed hey Garibaldi and the | letter contaived an indignant t acainet the | committed ese reas We psy Pd the Inet ce alone, a# there le no’ right of any moet ad.( mercial treaty with England. A vast number of | be it were difficult to but 4 we | Piedmontese Cabine’ vas thus that Gene- | assertion ot M. Moller, that ‘1 nglish residing ry Ce Stee emg oon aig! end Don redo (were it even your dictator. art like cutlery @nd machi have @ British Minister openiy espo the intended jnnetion with the | and travelling on the Coat wore uotorious for | PY, Tee Bee ct nae the thscks hey mere ies, | strike withont lwbnlog. I yiid tc formerly prohibited canse of despotism and ranging his ment | Neapolitan tr was frustrated. And we their rndeness,”” Ae.) ou asked how an offi- | to Geet. The movks ot Cajanza vited ‘wie the Garibel- | ‘n babtening the encexation of Sicily to the alien ‘kt eon rate of dat bor ¢ | avainst a policy th sup to the prem mere. | now told that, in consequence of a friend cer of the Prussia) own could recon sile it with | gine A private letter I bave econ ways their convaut mn of Vitor Rmanesl, Gad never weas ba) cived the open encouragement of all te rhe i have ngland, All thie proceeds 1% contemptible | French g¢ ses in | communication on the aahj n the part of rae, uM at, t ie wet Cowen years vo Frange; vut never did | jewousy of the increasing power of Fraace aad | arrested. Some think etary's brother high position t) ‘asait a whole nation, and a | wae sornt. The same correnpendeot giver a graphis | asaine and begging you, through the person ot your Proy ie nie e French goverament stion to which the wife of hie fotore king be- | sketch of the relative position of the two arm ce (letater, Dy menne of petitions of citizens and of longed. “The Princess Prederick Wilam,”’ they ‘The two armies are now facing each ciber, the Caribe. | cipal bodies To mek and to beg was vever t= =?

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