The New York Herald Newspaper, October 19, 1860, Page 3

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NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1860.—TRIPLE SHEET. 3 erime. I travel once more, after eleven yearson the | Gentlemen, thie would bo tantamount to giving one or ; 1859, no more existe than the two icilies at the ce have alread; ont the hal! arate gothorities interferes most serionely with all | T a yy written ahont the which is to be i path of exile, before heivg able touwrrive at the place of | tore provinges tne power to hunpoee thelr will avow tn | sent’ day. From ite existence ass. ealfvronteluel Sess, | great works of loyeroa! iuprowemens. Canela fies oo: | given te hie bonor at Vila. You ill, perhaps, be ou | Laws oy crn pativity, where are the survivors of my family, and vinces alrendy conethuted, wad to fetter dows thy | Piedmont has heen actually transformed; a: ia now & the Grand Trunk Rettway, which exteuds ina | riove to keow ia what manner be was invited. M Naz! i aaa on where rest ‘the venerated ashes «f my father, whom | Piture orgenination of the natin, iptroduci:.; ® raical | polities! ceotre rather than a ration’ she has boot Sri & thousand milks Bat tbe proviags, | mot the Govorsor Grueral, wax very desirous tba dim Na v from Haytt. P —TRONHLE WITH BT. DOMINGO— " ) LAMARTINE—STKANGE ADVEN- TUREQ OF & BOST OF LORD NELSON, Dll Mpc IM ell sae ir og fatal germ of avtagoniam and di@sepsioa Oa | the solid island aronnd which all the eemante—foaring | GUring wx months tw the Year, porsester no comma: | fpvitetion might bo taken ty St. Petors*urg direct, by time I go with perfect rage of mind, although sorrowfal | peg aye Slo oes ory to affiem stat che ava | or adrift—or the Italian nation cthapdheasper seo: ~~ cts aiaet he ie oft od) "y & brauch line, | some depotation from the nobitity, ‘This was eqaivaleut By the arrival of the schooner Elia we have received 1 go back to the Diesred land which weloomed me in 1849, | tin of annexation bound to conditions, which we reje | mete facts are more roggestiv 1. | which proceeds from Mouteral, theuce through United | to perruadtog a roan who gives a fele agwast nis will, | our Hayti Mle to Pep emir og . and which will see me Again in 1860—a land whore, on- | je contr to the patore of madera sommunities, whith, | the beginning of 1850 Miedmont passesred a povaiation af | Unite es tev itory to Portlana, oa the Atiaotio. | aed is ‘bom elled ty pay ‘or it, ta go with a8 alllag coun- President Jef ard led etard has ttevedalaw modifying article , onder peculiar cireumstauces, convenieutly | (im round numbers) 6(00 060 inhad santa, a poopie bay | Hf, unfortunately, thie country ehonid ever be engage? in | tematce and an obeeq ious aie to offer that fe'e bo tho fm der Victor Fmannel, treedom and justice rolgo—noping, | if they for my country, to the generority of your nature, WbICD | organize themselves under federal forme, no longer re | pily combining Talian fervuur—ior the aun of Tbaly did | DCIS With Amerios, Unit mean Of transit woud of | peroras a spontereour testimony of bie uifeetion—a dif val! 1d of the Civil Code, as follows: — will get the upper band of sinister coudsele—boving that | quire or estat a comspact of edition; a mere relic of the | net sine ap with the Teatonic charao | couree be closed, Hub Ke giand possesses the port of | task, wortby of tbe dipiomauic, finesse of which M Nox All persons who, in virtue of the const through yon this Southern ftaly will also shortly receive | middie ages, a mode of union not very worthy of ap | teristicn inberited from their ancestors easing tn Nova Boots, obe of the foes’ harbors in che | meft’ sa master, and for tho attainay ot of which even | become eitizene of Boyti, murs, witnn any from our King the bieswings ot freedom and good govera- | jralian king and people. from tbe forests of the Riioe, ovlonized the aah alowe ‘pen all the yer round, and uoarer to the British | bis authority as ‘Govervot General might not appear aue | their arrivel, make before a jortice of the ye ment Your devoted servant, After tbe uathonght of and unlooked for events which | pisins. By the treaty of Zurieb, Miedmont addot 2.000.000 | i#laees than Portiaud, or New York fem years ag? iho | perflucus. “Accordingly, he sent for the Marehuis of the | renouncing thereby bllegiance to any po r Narixs, Sept. 29, 1860. FILIPPO CORDOVA. | we bave witnessed in Italy, it must bo clear to all men | of Lombar+—tre mest rurconeful tillers of tho sol) posal ) Brite yo verument whe asked to assist inthe formation | pobility of the tires provivces of Vilas, Kowno | than that of Hayti Furnished with an attsaves by marr vag that we are vo federalists, Neither do we mean to de | bly in Bur pe—to h Count Cavour's Manifesto. centratizers, a8 We prove by our views reeproting the | the war meager wo er ‘The following meetage was read by Count Uavour to the | adi inistrative orgavization of the State Novertbeless, | retain the old tradity jacta. The remoter results of | of Aline whieh, starting from Halifax, wonld meet tho | end Grodao, in order to iuform them ’ of his | the offipial of thi fact, they must present th-meelven cb 000,00 from Tus -any nm who | Grand Trovk at Trois Pototies, and thas give the mother | withes on the matter; put bo had reckoned the cffce of the Presioent of Hayti, to re: om the ‘of \ueir conntrymen for THB noble | Comutry done se bo y portion of ber North American | witbout bia hort Oae excused himself from re- (biet of the State ab act reoogulziug them as citizens or Sarcipien Chombers, on the 24 inet, — we would always prefer either the fedrral or the thor: | Italian Nterature of the olden dayr—500,000 from Modena | domivioss during, all period# of the year. Nova | sponcing to bis appeal by the baduess of tho | the republic Gunter wen—Three =, orn pete, the lash of oughly centralized sytem to political arrangement by | atd 460,(C0 from. Parta—ttallans liberated from patty | Scotia ond New Brunswick, with their comparatively | roads and the difficulty of the oy age; another eald be iioria ane making by the govert ment to introduce Jouroment, Periiament granted to t! 4 ee vies of the which the provincee, although j»iard ander the sama | foreiga roiers #ho bad po vont ta commou with the | small rerourees, hive constructed portions of this | conld teke no steps in‘ the matter withovt the genction of | trial by jury Ail citizens of the republic, of a pro, the supplies required to provide = gre nega oan of | Sceptre, should, in the) wost important Izislative mat. | Italan fathertand, By the successful revolution accom: | toad; and although since that period Lord Gerbs, | his fellow nob! third declined the honor by Rayiog , Wh! be liable to jury daty, exceptiog the p) wd Btate and for the promotion of further prog! tere, possees au authority independent of Parliament aud | pliebed byfthe peopl» alone in the Rom ‘and by tho | Mr. Disraeli aua sie Bulwer Lyitca have expressed | that bie provia as nob in gbe line of hia Me hy religion, the government ollicials, and tho the national cause. the nation, liberatiog éword of Cialdini aweeoing away foreiga merco | opinions favoravle to the un‘ertaking, aud stated | route. and that he could not enc egoh on the privil tive service. ? ‘When tbe two houses almost unanimons'y voted a loan Here we must observe that, although thors who have 9,660 000 of the Italians of the Centre, nave been | Wat & government guarantee ought to by given, | him colleagues; in aborts, M. Naximoff found atyorearies | There aye symptoms of trouble with Santo Oomingo. sufficient not only for present need, but alo for lees press | oon trisuted to the trin nph of the national cause accoot in th th ages . s oat | y the millions made free, Theo, ia. fow montha, | Bothing yet bas been dono. We are jnclived t» think | before bim armed with pretexta whieh are in so {ur more | subee to be taken up fo 4 fogcmtingsncien, Beey 204 ey ernest mocetl ores Driveiple the ides of the annexation of Southoro Italy, | Garibaldt, the giant killor of the dav, wirikea town tae | that a Feeral Paritament in Brith North Amoriva, re- | redvubtable than reasots that they esuct be refuted | Joho Brow or ipti Seeaat weseatte tenet = hg times ig no. lene indienen, | Jet, Bowe whose love for their country is no matter of | foreign ruler—fur the Bourbona have’ aleays bien for | presentivg & population which vow You wilt, perbapa, be astoniehed to his In order | tive’s comp'ete works, snd Lamartine himself bas written wei \nan pecuniary sabsidies to enable thom to carry | Gouvt and whore devotion to tho saared person of the | ciguers in Maly—of South Italy, aud 9,000,000 of Ita!iaug | rable vation, wouldbave little diiticulty in completing | to get the Emporor to be. present at the bail it was uo | a letter tom Hay ti editor, thanking bim for his exertions saree poveroment of 8 free people King ie vgually known, decmm it expedient to pat if the | aro, for tho Gvat time free This gives a population of | the great and important comnusication which wo havo | ceesary to invite him. Pecple who desire the vd desire | to weil tbe eadseription list, By sie cMcacions support the King’s government had | St f annexation till the work is comploted, that ja, till | 21 400,000 calling with one voice Viotor manuel their | mentioned: | When quessions of ra the mean whereby to arrive at 1), but it is uot very cor. Among the Aca! mountains there Ras been found, #8 iu their power to follow up the fortunes of Italy, and the questions of Rowe and Venice be dually solved King, Striking off 400,000 for the p pulati t by the | disporal of wi'd tands for pudtic imp ri } tain that they w@re very sanguine in desiring the eud. | in un old hovee, a bust ef Lord Nelson, It is of to accomplish daring enterprises which will leave a deep We think if this desiga could be carried into practice | cession of Savoy, we have & purely italiau population of | Ppen Feparate Tegisiatoros, {1 is almost impossible to after endless conversations, telegraphic | wh: mewhat stained by time and ueglect. fn jon in the history of our national regeneration. it would have the most (ital consequences. Why should | 21 000 000 united for the frat time in the history of the heve that Uolied action whied ix Bo requisite for (ve com » Corresponde and negotiations wituout | Nelson ia represented bie ebstume of admiral, aud e military preparations, pursued with activity, not- we keep Naples and Sicily: im an auomalous si world. The regulie, territorially cowsidered, are not the letiow of wats ae if Oue result of the | |. Nazim fl determined to do with out that whi 0 re cb bie brewst & Or wb Ove ia commemo wiuustanding the great outlay they bring with them There can only be one motive for it, und shat is to a kets Wonderful, Take a map of ltaly dated iu the sprin tuo of Wale $0 Cavuda should he the unica of | could not get He aonounsed that he would send the in- | ration of the bi f Aboukir, bas the inscription, ‘Rear Gratributed to. cause the principle of non intervention 46 | We's-telf of the work of revolation to arco nplish of last year. See Austria strong io Venetia, and | ald nees for governmental purposes, a gross | vitation bimself, adding ironically tha: the Emperor, | Admiral Lord of the Nile’? Another medal bears Iberation of Italy, Now, this would boa most deplora. | stretching its iron rule far across the plaing of | €Dd will be accomplishes Doin as regardd the futare pros | kiowing the affection of tbe iubabitants of thess pro’ | the words, “Almighty God bas blessed bis Majosty’s See Rateions Se Vil creat ion bleerror, At the point we have attained, when it is ia | Upper Featy to the bank of the Ticiao—the old | perity of British No th America ane the power aud influ | vineer, would be satistied with this invitation, and would | glory ' 7 Y P DY | our power to bufld op a State of 22,000,000 of {talians, | double-beaked eagle with both wings apread. guardlag | €bee of this coun! ‘stern hemisphere. ive them it for their good wishea bust, Interesting In ite artistic and historical asso- British governmen’ the sam See ak ee etaoneeanta or ne. sheameadl strong and unanimous Sate, which may dlapory of | from all foreign sympathy Tealy of tho contro ant of Yo vives There i to be & grand haut in the foreat of Pialowiez, | ciation, was fund ov uu altar devoted to the fetiah wor. 6 military preparations at the'same time placed ne | Bumberiees means and resources, material aa well as | South. Pushed into the corner ot towards France— | B'umeral of Mr, Herbert Ingram, M. P.,a¢ | Thich is the last haunt of the bisons in Kurope. Already | Fhip, where for halfacentury it hes been reverenced as” tma postion rapidly to free the Marshes aa, Uanbrin | MOFal, the revolutionary era must close for us. Italy | indeed, over the Alps into Savoy—is Piedmont, with Aus Boston, Engiana > @° | ‘hey have tound thirty-foar of these avimals, which are | the Dei'y of the Mountaiu Streama ‘Tne aames of the from the iron ycke of foreign hirelings, without too daar | MUEE with great eoourity commence her perio’ of inter- | trie, almost by her own territory, outtiag bir off froin {Prom the Loudon Cur nic 8 Oct. 6.) * | obo killed by his Msjesty Enormous preparations are 5 ere Coale & Lealy, of Lambeth. gerously abandoning the defence of oar frontiers. bal order abdorgaoisation. Europe would otherwise have | the rest of {laly, and doing i ua electualty through bor Boston, Oct 5, 1860. being made for this event; triumpbal arches aro bell burt of an Koglish admiral has ? reagon to believe that revolution is nota means for ue, | setellites, Parma and Modena—their strong pisces garri- The mortal remains of Mr. ferbert legram, one of the | {Fetes to celebrate the skill of the victor; the roads will « hen tdot If we look at the result b pete Lor pre per hirdnd acsidey space 2 butan end; and her benevolence would be withdrawn. | soned by Austrian troops, their Privces dependents of the | members far this borough, wtivee welaucaooly deata ic tue | be Btrewn with green doughs; and an old castle, which | | The flucer of the statue has refused an offer of ve hun- po yard rnc Kingand the pation “ct the | Public oriolon, so favoranle to us hitherto, woxlt de- | Austrian ccurt, In the eenire are the states of the | wreck of the Lady Eigin steamer on Lako Michigan, on the | *as formerly veed as a place of meeting by tho’ Polis | dred dollars for it. hs ry the ——“¢ mien ihe Pann i te clare against us, aud enlist in the rauks of our enemios | Chureh—the Pope, a dependent on Austria, nis fortresses | Sih nit, bax aireaoy been announced, were conveyed to | KH es When bunting, Ia being repaired. This forest, the 11,060,C00 of Italiane aseembied round the monarch by The accomp!ishment of our Italian enterprise woala be- | filed with Austrian troops, his sub. held in awe by Ubeir last resting piace this dey under circumstaoces of | Iergcet in Europe, was formerly hunted ia by our kings News from Artzona petal anpate org peal lh ning ay oly more dificult, but, perhaps, altogother im- angen the South ie Nap ruled (by 8 | peculiar fulemalty aud iwpressiveness. Seldom have wo | jt fe alro made dear to na by another recollection. In OUR TUCRON CORRESPONDENCE. of mpal « wate wen wy 1e cnn! ” * < Iv elapeed and already 11,000,000 more of Italians have | P Revolution and constitutional government cannot long | when dreaming of ibe oe Aaa Bg = Pilssesed mace © dteeiay of vabive Szinpaihy axvuas which | TE U0 50 tie retnge cf une leat dutendars. at oar laser Tocion, Oot. 2, 1860. roken their chains, ad have become free to choose that, iat ie Theale wits producing. >: ‘i v4 deterred by the threat of | was wansfested on (his occasion by the people of Bustoa | government which they may deem more suitable to their co-exist in without produciog by their duahen an | w Austrian army to put lown any attempt | for their eewemed and | ted tones the § a Extensive Indian Robbery at Flirt Breckinridge—T) cops 0 Sem wrubes tnd teres.” gpvoniion od & oul which woxld oly tara w ue | at's covgittinn (Thin Unrest “was used by Prince | hoy who bas riken througn tho exercise of tis bern ine | A Darpy ien bas suggested the ar angoment of this hunt the Fidd, éc en abies’ benedt of the common enemy. Metternich ‘The ministers are far indeed trom attributing to them- | PSTee ten ens the " se aaeryar, bo merit of pach wondertal ovente |” song Prirlor who hitherto opposed the aaneaation at Ne- | a. mere They do vot deny, nay, they loudly avow that so prodigi- pg ons change ie es pecially t be ascribed to tno initiative | Poet gueteus co loud aa ihe Marebee and Canbein ravtot fter 1815, to tho restored Ferdi- | dustry and iwieut to the proad position of repr after the mode) of those of King Augustus Il. The Fmpo- dwell ‘the Italy of that day— | them'in the Seuate of his couutry. proveating | jor Alexunder is to show himeeif to the Poles. in the li eographical expression” —divited int» All the shops and dweiling houses throughout the town | P&S Of the fovere\gos whom they regret Orders bay the Apache Indians, to the number of about one hundred tee; al’, save Piedmont, depoadeut on & forclga | were closed, ail business belug surpedies the veascla ia | D€eD text to the Kassian Rmbaesy at Dreaden to make all | gy ary a of the popular mind For what coacerns Naples and Sicily the euhjecta of oue State forviguers ia another: | ihe port had their coir huisved balfimatt het, and | BCCeRRAry & in the archives of the Poliah and Saxon | 824 Afty, made @ descent upon Fort Breckinridge, and it ie Pre nde due to the generous cooperation of the | 2 South from the centre and north of the peninauia, port reguiatiou’ and customa barriers separating | balfmicute ella tolled from all tbe churches | ¥2DR8, 10 arrive at a perfoct resemblance of costume and | carried off all the cattle, mules and horses belonging to yoluntetra, and, more than to any other cause, to the | ROW to persevere in tbat system would ave no osher ef avs from 096 another; soldiers kept for | throoghout the day. fhe procession wat formed | “tauetic ‘myeror of the Fretch having had a hunt | (he post. The attack was so sudden and unexpected that high aovied daring of their iljustrious leader, "“Gineaat fot than to oppose useles# delays and hindrances tothe | court show or police use; no natioaal aspira At noor, and was Leated dy the Firgt Lincolnshire ala Lo at Comptegne, it wae thought proper to do Garibaidi. 4 national caute. There is in the nature of events a Ingic | ticu#, no national hopes. Color the map with one color to | Voluntecis aud the Fourth) Liscolushire Rilo Vo, | Something similar at Viva,” An ides copied from two | Dut very little could be done to save the stock. Several porne ministers only venture toobsérve that these memo- Pag Sigg of meat ng the ean Tn een ee Peep ay penne or ond. Leryn orhay Hey lunteers, followed by the Mayor, magtatrates and BAL CUCE pane ge original. Indians were killed, avd Licutesant Cook, promptly fol- ie events were necens: 0 pol weetern corner free from lomiaton, direct | corporation, ' " on alo queetion whetber the Poles willbe much flat- Tey formerly Initiated bs Caries Athtet mad fois doi | made permanent in Naples aud Palermo ant very shortly | oF indirect, of the foreigners Took sb th map of Tialy | ip pecotion, ond. |e nce] aabools; thee anconenively O18 |. serae as tats vountiection Of Uheis Kings. To parece betere.| CN UE 0 remelnter, feet a fw anbaaiec: Ope of the representing | Foresters, the artisane of Horton and the neighnorhood, | their eyes the epoil tak n from them is hardiy a means | @ragoon horses was killed in the ekirmish Thais was a On Friday, the 20th, about nine o'clock in the forenoon, for tweive sears by the government of the present some: | tbe authority and command wii) pase from the glorioos be autumn of 1860. The dark hue, . Bad that poltey been set aside, or aie raling hands of him who wrote on bis standard, ‘*!taly and Vic- influence, bas been driven bask square leagae | the clergy and other miniators of religion; ati the above 4 making them forget that all the petitions they havead- | bold movement on the part of the Indians; bat the policy principles been changed or altered, iouriamtenet | Emanuel,” into those of men who, for this practical re league; it Still lurks in one sorner—Veaetia | preceaing the heaise, which wes followed by detween reared to the Emperor Alexander rince his coronation ureued towards them for the tt thr 8 Rosen would certainly bave provell powerless to accsea, | f0Fmula, subetitate the dark and mystic syinbol of seo- | ix etill under ita gloom nt the color markiog fres Italy | twenty aud thirty carriages, Coutaiaing the mourocca, | DAYS Temaincd Unanswered, and tbat the nationality, the | P ey past tare sa anaee Feer Giluk The deliverance Of on eage n pint of Teal tariapism, ‘ God and the people.” (Long and loud ap | bas advanced from.ite sub-Aipme retreat; it testextended | relatives and friends of the deceared, tho whole being | abRwaRe Bud the faith of their ancestors are trodden under | As tended to inepire them with contempt ratber than Mf the ministers, therefore deemed. 1k thee duty to | PIsuee and cheering ) eastward into Lombardy, nearly to the Mincio: it then | wound up by a walking proorssion four abreast, of at | 0% For the ten million inbabitauts of this kingdom | with reepect for the whites. Only a few days since the convocation of Parliament. at, tats danaunt | ,, We Fepeat—that provisional and revolutionary order of | stretehe‘ southward, and’ Parma, Modena, the Romagoa, | Jeast haif a mile in engi, The whole line of route, from | tare la neither a Polish wolvereity, or echool, or uewe | Dp. Steck othe. meee ea the mill. Parle of te ee AL aan at eect at this unuacal | things which might have reasons to exist in Naples ard | with their petty boundaries, arecifuced, wo the reat of t86 | ihe market place to the cemetery, tao tiles ants halt | Paver, oF periodical: all arwaciations—even thowe oxtad- | DF Steck» agent Of the Apaches, notified the mi SMloacy of ihcee principles was at all sbaken, ‘They wore | Sly must come to aa end as soon patible T! Papal states follow. Then, beginning arew at the South, | fn jepgth, was lived with crowds of interested spectators, | Utbed for industrial or agricultural purposes—are for- horities that he should distribute presents brougitt to this resolution by s conviction that the pro. | Teavired by the interest of those provinoes for wh ational color spreads, until from Seily it reaches | the windows and rvots br ng aiso eimilarly phe mn The | Vidden Telooks as \f everything were done to plunge 4 Apaches ia Osioner. These Pinals have of gent emergencies, unforeseen on the day in which the eas eee See ee eer yery, great par tlhe cy brd nation froniler of the pouthere umber of persons in deep mourning was saoaiiacunie | tho country ‘eto barbariem—perbaps to sink it below the ie warciced woe Sn rtolen a gro ag of oi 0 i nn 0 tide ¢ great sea of revoluti in ® rom ir 3 Sherefora, ws- Was voted, laid them under a strict obligation‘ | fyrerest of tho national cause, How could, in faob, with | glee Today ihe Wallan soldiers of the South. tie clowns | Put Ligh and low, young and old, scarcely an tadivi ee ee ee eas of the India Departoeat, thoy @acertain that they have not Jost any part of that sup- “ . . but exhibited seme httlo article of mourning, if tt rhicl Port of the Chambers which oosstivaies we mals arrenetn | OULETeRe, detriment to the dignity of the crows—how | of Melazz0, clagps the hands 0° the cvaquerars of Anco. | Uniy a black velvet or ele rosette, ok hear vision on - to de furnished with shirts and new bisakets, which they Of the governnent. They thought, besides, tha! by a me ictor Emanuel consent that Italian pro- | na. Is ie ws if all ltaly bud bevn fused by the beat of pa- | » colored bonnet. My pergous’ came to the funeral The Fi elal Conoition of Austria. will tomediately trade off for guns, powder aud kaives. free exposition of their intents they would place the | Vitees snould be go long a time governet in his came ae | tional passion into cue mase of dery liviug valor and | from various outlying parte, the deceased bain; [trom the Paris Debate, Oct 4.) _ Lieut Horace Ranaall bappened to be on nis way to cor quered provinces, without appealing to the free ex-e civic virtue (the staid old Piodmonteso themselves havo | generally kuown and ‘respected in the Lancarinre | _,We know the faijure the Austrian goverument expe | Fort Breckinridge, wiih thirty men from Fort Bechauan, Fepresentatives of the nation in a porition to pronouace | Orr ered Pr . ; ‘ preesion of ths peoplo’s wither, mcosrding to the solema } been beated in the change); sod we now soe the process rienced at the commencement of 1859 when trying to | SE4 on hearing of the wtiack instantly pushed on to give a solemn Judgment on the poiiticsl system they bavo | Er tegal formecf popular muffrage? of Uansformasion. ‘We eill'stand by the furescets Neen eee a teocld nee iio Laeola 45 | Contract at Loadon x loan ‘or. six miliious of pounds ster, | Lied Cook assistance and pareue the Indians, who mide Ki ts vpon there grounds, gentlemen, that I hope for | the beat of the molten mags in our faces: {t rushes along | ihan 16,000 to 18,000 rersoum present “24 | jing (150,000 060 of francs). At home,it never tried, but } Quick retreat arose tho Gila iaio the Pinal monatains. our approval of the bili which Thave the honor to lay | 'n hot wares, and some ecum and dross and tmourities | tenth ot whom followed tho hearse. teri Bt Ma covdved itwe'f to cemanding from the Bank of Viouna an | At the time Fort Breckinridge wie attacked its effective pure ued. Ideem !t unnecessary to recal the events lately ac omplished; they are ¥o well known aad recent tuat we " a fore you naturally ris¢ to the surface Wesco the mould 1a which advance of 123,000 600 of fhrrins ona In arrigon did not amouvt to over fifteen mea, A few aan tion thy " mould {a Sa - vance 0 10 600 of thrrins ona Inan to bo tne re a aoe ee enee etaer hand, it is no} the | “Oaly, ia the important and extraordinary circumstances | it 18 to be caet, and our hupe la to ace aries from the pro- phy Menor OF ceutiewee Coane ed ite tes tide” | at a more favorable period ” This period, ie einai’ | Nights before the attack an Indiam, who was fvand skull Pee ATe Dow todo that Decoimes, Inattoe for Sue doce’ | ie wbich our country Ie placed, Parliament should not | cess a grand Agare of Ttaly on firm podestal and of iron | aod artistic de “of tha [lusrated London Nene | vad arrived lase March. The subscription was opened for | ie€ around the fort, evidently ov the watch to steal a der’ | jimtt itee!f to ieliberate opon the legislative dispositions | power—bard and tolid in proportion to the beat with eee amon News, \ a joan of 260 020 000 of florins (50,000,000 of frauce), | borse, war fired on by @ sentinel and-kiled. ation. of which the deceased geutleman was the ori bor . bh the ubfoiding of political eventa may render oppor | *hich its elements have been fused ‘a. | Th a o In Sonora the Gavdaristas or church party have ool- ‘Henceforth the whole of Italy is free Yenico alone whiel 1g Of po! y PI sole proprietor, had places nasigne’ them The b. } ¢ rate of eruie#ion was advantegeous to the subseriversr; 7 " J tune or nesessary. Toe new Italy will, in pop lation aad territory, be the : t ial | the bait of a bonus was adied. A “gentle pressure” about 700 men, and are moving to artack Pesqui- forms asad exception. Regarding that noblest of the it +/ service was read in & most mpreesive meaner by the | 52% ite operation on individuals and corporations, sini. who is entrenched at Hermosillo, the capital of the Tt is also your duty to consider whether the men who | fifth Power in Europe; and if the great Powore of Evroy : Renee Oe bare realy statechanament Knows our | ave in theie days the honor to it at the Onuneit Aart | rrmain limited to five, she pel maka bor. aust, @A the | cence cota cies ee ee . op! | of the crown are equal to the high task committe! to | European Areopagus to the exclusion of Prussia. We | Iywered inte the gra Ser eratial vicdats cont & Jar ‘o what was done, at the great loan of 1854, called | Sate. There wil probably be hard dglting. national rod volurtaty, An offer of 76,000 000 out of thi ematic dooument published not loog ago. We do Bt | them, and if they serm to deserve tho onnfdence of the | bave, tbrefore, seen ib ovr day, iu. tao Yoars, tbo build: | Kew cemetery” there wr tesceshe ce dese ese Ee ete | 260,000 C00 asked for—auch wan the reAult of those. com Testimonial to Capt. Wilson, Phunk that wo can declare war against Ausiria inthe | pation, All material means placed within reach of tho | ing up of a great nation, a work hitherto taking centurien > ceasuabien a : vothes | bined efforts. It was not however, the public who fur- | — qhe following is the subser! Mik torn tant Beene ea ence opposition of ihe Pa-opean | executive power, and all authority granted to it by tho | to achieve. But we ard wrong. In ttaly the eleraeuts of eC ale, elt ae ate OF ee ret Abo | nithed even this fractional part of the loan. It was sub: en ee ec ee unpropitious moment, would call forth a formidable co, | WS Laways be scanty and weak. unless the kicg’s | catiouallty have existed for youre, strong az lile tn the | to give vent to their fecliags vo imoreseive Pe ttle we | Seribed by the Ciétit Mobilier, the d'tconnt company. the | to Capt. Wilron and his crow, as furnished by Mesars. Aiition agatuat us, and endenger not only the cause of | M2 stere can reckon on that moral efficacy, that irroeisti- | limbs of the traveller plundered by thieves and left | have rarely witnessed; it tn event which will bora | Tallread companies, afew great banking houses—all of | Howland & Aspinwall:— Tealy, Dut the oanse of liberty all over tho Continent of | Blearthority, which jn free conetitatioual ‘governments | bound by the roadiide; the next wayfurer wh releases | tained in the memory of the ipbeditants of Boston long | WHot have peeuitar reasons of their own for wishing | We, the undersigned ms " —n pe. Bo rash an atienga weald piece ws la 3 aoe t flows from the perfect agreement between the greatest | him restores bim to life, but doos not give him life, The | after the existing generation has parked awa 00 OD | preverve the goo! graces of the treasury. y . ie uD ay a -_ © by city of New open hostility with the powers that do not recagaire tha | POWERS of the state Emperor Napoleon saw italy to chains. Hix known ayma- |" The Stanford Mercury staies that the “J. tion of a | _ The experiment was complete, In the monarcby iteelt, | VOTE, APPrcciating the noble conduct of Capt Wi som. of principien we ure dghting for, und would cotrance fromag | ,. 18e vote of confidence you gave the ministers a few | pathics stirrod the question to its depths, aud Austria, | monement to Mr. Ibzrein is seriously contem iated, and | ANd im tbe great money markets of Europe, on the eve of 7 the Wn deaoier ts ted ses een cn. being Tes apmapathien of those Susteh which aco eee Im 88 | months since enabled them to overcome dificultios, both | witb all the rarhoess of guilt, appealed to arma. Ths | the churchyard, near the market place, bas le aod | a war, or on the day succeeding the peace, cupitaliate ro. | 3f,the late disaster to ihe eieamor Connaught, and being troduce ta their policy modileations on a liberal uae. | BUmerouR And seriouk, which stood in thelr way.’ Now | result we now see, dae in the Arst place to tho initiative | of agan appropriate sito. Ithas been suggested, Low. | Muived deat to the entreaties of the Viennese guveru- cok mouths iaenuaia: do aaumeteeeenes ot mgiuce ia thelt policy modideations on a liberal seule. | that they may bold with a steady hand the heim of the | of France, But witaout the aid of treo grest Italians, | over, tbat a beunti(ul altar tomb, witha recia-ut | MeBt The fact is unexaumpled ta the Goanclal history of | rer our oumes for that purpore. ogaatioa angering of the Venetian populations, do bor farpet theie | State it is necessary that they should know, and that Itely | men born for the work, the tark could not have boed | figure, placed in the northwest corner of th) spacious | Modern Kurope. Howsed & Aspinwall, yD. 3 Gauso; wo thigh, om the Gonteury, we are sorvine i Cat | shold krow, whether their deeds and behavior during | achieved. Vietor Emanuel might, after Novara, have | amtoehured (near the fout), inside the noble prrish | _ he Lcbaie cuptraste these facta with the readiners with br genty EAA... Petre 4 Cflectually by coustituting a etrobg and wolted Italy. "We | ‘iS iuterval were of @ natore to diminish tie cor idence | played the part of an Austrian archiuke; bo would have | church atid be howeh dian? thon any ting Dusit out of | Which France ad Piedmont, and evea the revolutionized | Howland & as 100 Ocirich & Oo. are, in fact, thoroughly confident Met an conn cs we aban | YoU put in them. been petted at Vienua and decorated by tho Caan} goore.” 6 Ttalian States, after Villafrancs, obtained loans on not | Geoimue a coe te eS ave attained that desirable object tho peseral opioion of | This i@ all the mors neceesary, a8 a voice justiy doar to | Nicholas. He preferred tobe an Ttaltan prises, to be —* very onerous tering. Tho wriver then refers tothe spe | Geena Matar & Co tO Mara & Co. natjons und cabinets, which is at present opposes to ma- | Be multitude expressed to the crown and the country ita | loyal to bis word, and to give the Italians an exsmupl) Of | THe som, Grantley Berkeley's American | ©4! Tehork of the Committee of the Roisharatis:— ~~ 60 King e forcible attempt to emancipate Veneta, will be fa. | “istFusbot us : moral and poysion! courage by riskin, 6 aod crown Experiences. Tn what peculiarly coacerns the debt, the report of the £0 Yorable to a settlement of the {talian quostion » alah will Sach a declaration, indeed, painfully affected us, bat it | on the datiJeficid. This gave the lialtans the une man {From the Loadon ‘News, Oct. 6 ] special committee, charged with the examination of it, ia- 60 ead forever in Southern Barope the era of revolution and | ¢ud not turn us by'a tittle from our purpores. whote ciaims to the kingabip of tho whole nation were | Om Thursday night the Hon. Grantiey F. Berkeley de | 1Fm# us thadon the dist of ecember, 1858, the sustriaa 60 W. A. Bale & Oo of war, Fajthfal guardians of the constitution, of which wo must | beyond aispute, and hence anew fooling of unity ander | jyyered a lecture in the Queen's ooms, Glasgow tne | Sovernm ot owed 106,214 991 floring in Vieuuese cur- 60 Com. M 4. Ine We are likewise convinced that cousiderations of the | Be tte most scrupulous execators, we think taat the voice | the one banner and the one na Next in importance is | penedt of the friends of the Acclimutization Society, | TePCy; one willard 818 milsions 223.208 forins 1a Conven- - iy tone Weed exalted nature make it our duty tor ‘the city | Of oe citizen, whatever signal services he may have Whose calm wisdom has cose much to | giving an aceount of bis excursion to the far Weat " tion money, and 78 202 899 floring in Austrian curreucy. | 4, war a hi bo ‘ae Mat hich the Supreme Pontiff resides. The Roman ques | Fendered to the country, should not prevad against the | preserve Ttaly from giviug any excuse for the interven | America during last autumn, The lecture was under the | THis le the selaiule of tne, consolitayed debt. To this T Riebardeon kG...) 80 Ne. Life is one of those whigh cannot be settiod by the sword, | *U\BOrity of the great powers of the State. on of Rosela or Prosais. fo thio interesta of “conserva. auspices of the Glasgow committee of the society, Tne | Mt be added 345,216,167 toring of Austrian ourreney, | Weg RCO... 6 Bebe Bro, settlement is Impoded by moral obstacies which morai | 4,2: therefore, is tue duty of the ministers of a constita- | tism.”” Garibaldi, the free sword of Italy, has Wlso dae | Tord Provost preside, ani the andience was large, aud | the mount cf the flostiog debt. In actual or Austrian | f.negg Gucnen ks. 60 le Mati ; Fore amen is impeded Dy Hore! coaacieg Whuct moral | tional king not to” give way before pretenslous not vory | ail that a brave mau could do; but, creut'as havo been | was composed of the clie of the Wert cud " money (adopted in virtue of the German Monetary C»n- | j'SErth Ge. n, 60 N'Y & HaveeS f Go Lo or later moral force may edlect ctixoges inthe great ina. | [eal even if they be backed by a eplendid halo of popa- | Bis schiovements, it must be remembered that Victor | “The Lord Provost, in a few remarks, introtuond vention of January 24, 1857), and brought to the uaiform | 4 "Reimort & O0....., 80 © Vanderbilt, re ip ocnformity with the wishes of the inhabitans, | Mfity and by & victorious sword. Emanuel hae given him the prostigo of his name, ant | Mr Bexaziav, who commence! by Caprensing the hiope | Fate ct @loan at ave per ct, there debis would repre | Auvehsedt &Gcbbard, $0 < L Michi ee j — Y of al tree Ttajiang, with the roal | .,Btta# We sould fall im our daty by giving way to those | that but for Count Cavour's diplomacy and the Emperor | that he would mucceed in amusing bis Rodienco, at loast | ReRt the total sum of 2, 308,071 682 fories. The mum ta | it a Jebnaon 4 Gor.-; 60 Oplombiau lus Oo... 100 po ped aA 2 y rane pone hed we should hare falled in our obligation Napoleon's known autipathies, foreign armies and tleett } he would do his beet for that purpose; and he assured | More than respestable—tt is ulmost appalling. Neverthe: | Ward ‘Campveli k Co. 60 We ‘Or; 60 ‘Wo will act ‘Saar sea ete eee a. pane Parliament if we had pot put the question to It | might months ago have crushed ont the insurrection io | them that in what be said it was not his intention to | @S#, 14 1s not complete. W. C.'Pickersgill & Co! 60 Cyrus W.’ Field & Co 50 eeiten atte wan tee no Carano 49 whether it be ready 10 sanction the sentence pronounced Selly, dieparage that magnificent country of which he was to | _, 12 & note published at the end even of the committee's | Geo = Robbita & Son. $0 N.Y. Mutnal low Co, 50 Which must be effected by the operation af time aod ts SF ews wien vin nes Ose —_—_— epeak. At the ontset he would tbe object for report, bane ay SE eg ag han : 60 Maitland, Pholpe & Oo. 50 great, the incalculable influence which Italy } enaurmone:, Accident to Prince Albert. which the Acolimatization Society had been furmod | ficrmy gions lim bey ~ ee 60 Sturges, Shaw & Co.... 26 ‘will Bring to bear on the ¢} of the mony arieg [From the Cobor deve of the doudon Tiss} | He had for many years attempted to establish | Hoperial Council has depicted the nancial situation, de, 60 S.A &TA Patieson.. 25 But even supposing our opinions to rest upoa erroneous J = “ht'e litte beloe dive o'clock, on. tho 18th, the Prince | euch s society in this country, for the -aocit. | Si#fed bimwolf the inferior sum of sixty three millions of £0 Fi Marquez... 6 data, the very presence of French troops ay Rome would | Vitor Kmanuel, Gartbald!, and Italian | Consort, baving some business to travsact, took leave of | matization of everything that could bo useful or yang byw) Spectre 60 British & NA. Royal suffice to cause us to abandon anv ae ier "v J the parly. and entered a carriage to proceed alune to Co | beautiful to ornament cur tly FB ee ey Dd Eg 60 Mail 8S Co 50 tack against Rome. , ne thi ae ea ae burg Afier be bad gone avout three miles, the hyecs, | or Gelde. Ho tried for @ gor macy ‘years to pnt | Admission, did not tak into account ts Lombardo Vo 50 Panawa Railroad Co... 50 m? ream he. pent, es Beene eae whith wore driven fara hand, commenond kiotiag vio: | euch a scclety on foot, but It faired soot deat of efort | Betis debt, nor the guarantees of laterest, conceded to 60 Havemeyer, Townsend ~anent i clregimalanced to atiack openty the aol- |. The inten cy Ron rie dint | Juntiy, sod sbortly started of ai full speed. Tne coach. | to pat Jobn Gull ta motion. Ho (Mr. Herkeley) had ai | Yerions #hare companies, nor the State debls of Lower a imma " It, it would be i . ; 7 strin, Sipria ae Gerits, wor, lastly, the debt oa . Puhesantses v0 SSSumG tatters ate’ chs ting | Heel prove wha hg ay pot apne to | manor yi era ghost grrr ie | endeared ens sta aactan Gns, | pee oe i eho milion ore)” | 3 QhKRapean° 66 etal eeparate yl] ing ito wesvant al arbitrar; po _ a a8 a generous madness, which, though it may not cause mais, bot without effet. with hie ueual kindaess, wrote back not to abandon the | 4 0tthn ts i ae ae ee. Oy tte dale dente ot | _ Thote desirous of subscribing to the above fund will the » Ball ber coufidencs api a)! ‘the ruin of @ nation, is the source of immense sacritlco ere ben a, Mais onergetie, expii amen "AL about the distacds of @ mile from Coburg the road | tckeme, but to have one more meeting in London He oh Ne opinion tp aly iss new proof of tho maturity | from Callenderg crosses the railway at a level, aud apoa | reierred to Lord Breadaibane, That meeting, though ttle the colossal total of the debt since the | Please send their subscriptions to the office of Howland & ‘ved and realised, partially at least, im 1369 | Aspinwall, Nos, 64 and 66 South street. idem of fighting egainst the French would lead Italy this epot the Prince Consort observed that | there were only even or eight gentiomen present, was and great suffering. But in the present state of things | 4 w | ex uired by nations by thetr past fuulta | sp’ Senst gineering an ange Rog tote serrations, ia, thie tmapaise, which carries all the | be bar which is lowered to provent carriages sroewing | satisfactory. Fesolved t9 do their boet; but ‘thetr | nd ISO, se Fg an 97 Ravel tntetiiaene Tae of tunting ‘would be inadeqaats to ime Periosula towards Victor Emanuel, in prefereace even to | the line when « train is expected wae cloned, preparatory } best would ecarcely do without a or s. eS | the committer of inquiry. The consoiidated debt, pro | gue DEPARTURE OF TH! RICMEOND FOR THR wEDr- to the arrtval of the train dee at Coburg at dro o'clock, | band ¢o liberal that itret the suciety up nds 8iNC | roriy go called, would amount, then, now to two milliacdn Guaiaee. ‘The soldiers of France were ocoupying Rome at the time when other soldiers of Frasce, commanded by tacit generous Emperor, were fighting io our behalf at Magenta ‘A wagon which had been stopped by the bir was aled | the time ho lart addrenacd them in Glasgoe, That donor ! trandiog upon the tan A vieleat corcareion being thea | was Mies Burdett Coutts On Wetnestay he received a | Abd 700 millions of fori OUR NAVAL CORRESPONDENCE. inevitable, hie Royal Highness jumped from the carriage | letter from ber saying there was £600 from her at the | “41 ave per cont intercet thie wonkt require an annual Unremp States Sreaman Ricrtosp. is, to six millards 750 ‘and 4olferino. If the opinion was then entertained that al he fe he re be ground. Though receiving | option of the society. He then proceeded to describe his |. : “4 Soig’with the laterests of haly, we ought nettoer to have grd-undoitand hat Gemrat Gartatd 7h man For | Fone Toner te a ee Peat enue ae prnien ate: oe tere ee —orbegbeameg: compel 7 P not al wertous! \ gust ast year, pommt- jorfolk yeaterda} Gemanded nor accepted be co-operation of our powerful send 0 reel, © Oe ee ee ea | tot P prosedet tonssiat tho coachsaan. the car’ | biefor him io be back rom America by Christmas Bus | fi down at U2.te0 oto Kane, rettigen 4210250 france, | Cape Henry, against a strong head wind and rotarnod to dean At’ tho prescut tice, therefore, If wo turned | Moreover, represents the mo the goniict, the | risge be. in the meantime come into collision wiih the | be replied he would be home ia time to eat bis Caristmas | nor ihe expenso, put down at 25 000,000 francs, of the | Hampton Roads to wait for more favorable weather. At net Fri the arin which ber orien have placed | present, with ite charces and incidents, tho force #hich bar of the railway, and was upeet, the coachman being | dinner, and he waa. Mr Berkeley then decribed bis ar. | 001, on the «rentes”’ due to foreign capitalists. "Neither Sa. ei ere eit’ea | Palsce abd moves nations; but Victor Emanuel representa | csthes to tbe grourit and considerably burs, H's Royal | rival at New York, and bis opinion of that city ta regard | {icq qhie gum (nelude the annual subventions, which in Present it is rainiog very heavily, the performance being i eth ll Mh wo the bearta of all who are | durable and definitive order, the ferce which makes Hig oness immediately devoted his attention to this maa, to ita architectural and the character of the | ai the states are rogarde? as jategra: 1 parte of the public | varied by strong northeasterly fquails, As soon as it ‘not blinded by spirit. stable the and grandeur of civilized nations. fa | wRo was conveyed to the lodge of the railway servant | people. He wes, Ae Sun ge, Aimiration at tho | “eyt, and amount 1% 9,700 000 france for Lioyd's, at | moderates we shall go to eee, The engines worked very eames tn weball’ of Youite wnt) fous wecseass | divisions proves bereuit sues, more cova of Be Tho horses Raving thos freed thomectver from the car. | but which @}4 got surpass in appenrance Piesadiliy | Trictte; to 2.t00.00n raven fee te cite Sere Toso ooo | Well yesterday, though, our eteam power being but aux- u destinies whieh the unanimity of ber people’s wishes and . fe ps Continued their carter into the town of Cobarg, | in London. He raw no magnificent buildings, but m | Phil “ei ts een Pardubitz and Iteichen- | iliary, 1 doubt whether she will make moro than seven America which could not be too much ; ‘The Pope's Allocution. the Jay, ‘The colonel immediately procured a carrisge, | condemned, aud that was the ter ble cosiom of spitting. | *eTeraleeondary vat sumiiay cheations, which Mee tory | pyerybody rajanxious to be off to the Mediterranean, or universes! syrapathy of Enrope, if the minds of tas most | | Tbe following ls © simmary of the alloontion do. | and, securing the services of Dr. Baly and Dr. Carl Hore: | Why the Americans conlescened toe DiMhy © bait, nat | Inetly, let us add the interest only at five per ceut oa the | up the Straits, as the sailors verm it, eepecially thows who eympa' 5 4 pig tage oy 9 im the Consistory of Cardinals, beid = the medical attendant of the Duke of Sst» Cobarg, faeeem is tose of Mee sean setae, bo cael) SF defolt, with which the debt will be Increnred during, the have spent some time in the Gulf and the Caribbean , on th alt felt. . the Ladies’ dresses tn radway Ni ‘ wateabon th cies We Gah cau cian of te | His Helincas detested anc depiorea ed the conduct of Pn | | The Prince, who was elo the smal cottage, somal eer pe pndyarkey «begs ee Hy WA A oh Bg M Arah and uted tas poverameet now tartmsten | Jest think bay @idsrence: to exebange the oe aoe “ mont, an ty Invasion Papal States. attention medical gentlemen vacthman, 0280, ned beauties of Mexico and Contral America for Provinces of the penintula on the'r Gret shokiog y desired Colonel Ponsonby to convlinne his roate to | and ween aware of tue habit s yg fy) eyed houria of Italy; bad whiskey, at twenty con a pen! of: \- bad #poke with emotion of the brave soldiers who died in hrs | an ao aonval char, sane wae So bese Bek et ee oan nee, and had the firm bepe that they have obtained | meet ber Majesty the Queen, who was at chat time on her | themen, ets So ve ee Cae Sod thirty millions of france, This sum needs bo Som tongh, lean beef, for good, cheap wine and helpless of 4 5 were there seen Colonel Ponsonby, the Prince’ Bumber of most gigantic hotels. There was cue 4 although risen to liberty, fee) want of imme: | the union of ber force promises her. ‘9 "ie ead been on Kio qustter part oy berg. Not to make the echeduie too long, we pass orer | knots under steam alone. i i i = i E a i E t H i 5 i i g s - & fl Those provinces afforded the moet signal proof of the ber There wee coe that ii tra and biestedoces retura to Coburg, in order to inform her Majesty of what | over her carpet. great ehot | ine— | mentary. Yet, to Ye ite fall pign! rains’ an4. pestilense Soople; by Matantiy recncviog all germs of ascehy, oF proved and Condemned in every way the dotesta- | hed taken pleco, Cos sas room okt ‘reps push S aieen with her soctty tell to remember tuat the public revaness , | inden atmorpbere for Prcbing alr and ire ation; for, Reoptis ‘eithout delay those privciples of sound organ’ Die and sacriligious attacks of the Kin, ernment His Royal Highnces’ escape may be considered as most Rae aan eveitteeel thas be head oe ope on lo ae, taking the average of the Guancial periote from 1860. to | talk as you the moat seesitive pr pot ped} gation which obtain among the nations moat adyaace ia He declared their Hand of no | providential, ie echelon te (ae thoogut, at her fon | 1889, amount to six hundred and seventy five millions of | bis stomach and pocket. Hence it comes thet whenever ‘Whe exercise of liderty, ant by eviccing their firm will to pretentes. and would Proteat, ia ee ee eee eernaet) eran don't tee | sane: the requirement of the debt therefore will ab- for the Mediterrancan there aro handrede fesue out of a provisional Stale, and aspiring to the ‘oati- in entire the civil power enjoyed by tho | The Prince of Wales and American at dios d wil epit in i (Langhtar) Whisk | fOr sixty four per cent of the whole, oF nearly two- ation of a government freo and national, bat at the same eA cars ins a lade wated. “Oe thirds, peak of the revenue officially called the or Mime etrong and oppreed to any exces.” ‘The Pope further waid that the support of foreign as- [From the London Post, Oct. 5 ) See ioe te ote eiateacr Stat Cotas, | aivery revenue, Nevertheless, the difficulties encoun By this moderaticn an’ concord, by this uoshaken | #istance sgainst crimival (nvation wae atiil to be devired, | The Prince of Wales, when about to leave T My Bright were tterly in error. Instead of holding | t¢Fed by the administration in collectiug this reveove, firmness, the of tuscany end Aimilia ended by per- ‘and recalled the reiterated declarations made by one of | dreeset the follow portly yy ey ine ab to oeny ah vepeeded h pone the howy arrears that rennin at the end of exch floan- funding diplomacy that the Italians are oapabie of con | the most powerful princes of Hurope. of London —words tice! state, It was la the greatent Mato of po! tical confusion | Si! Jinirere/ the eumninees oumpauinte ety tg serocting a vast kingdom, based and organized upoo thus cot tinued — a fg which bie Roy pas | and tyrany that had ever come before bim, and he ought | Gets treat prensa t tho came mnsnee tm Southern oy a aves Geen of ae to be a to Jadge of the | ee eee eee | pa po premotor Stent thas the Soe. ohare an exoellent selection of ofcers, Should an those people mf of the North Amerioan colontes bat all the ex ~ ibutive cord )* stretched to the utmost, that the le | On molest our commerce or opprean American citi- amen ate a ined Seeee and oe eet ed rere | Gloucesterthire for 20 years. He bat learned sometning of | S10 burdenel beyond thelr paylog powers: te a word, zene, our fag oon, Bell, will ring such @ peal in the ears . the cncertainty of a provinsa' rule. Disturbance and aa. | 8 [ar . tations | bad formed of their devotion have been wore | Cicer lis to Oty, but he bad never witnesso’ wach arch: ‘would toon break the eause of rance that no one would oppose them. than realised by the demonstrations | have witoemsed " ~ . 4 ordinary revenue of the government is ie_as will wake them from thoir Phage gene Tage a at mage t= i 4 ‘ fon a8 be bad seen in the Uaitedjatates ‘on thas people burdens alfagether oxtre- id show them that we koow ont rights and feomet r i th 01 “Ig presence of such a periloae position we seo oar | His ‘al Highners on g into the United States } frightful coere! | Meaity’ The great atonal movement, breaking from | selves forced, even agatoet our will, to the eat nessesity | bas Dele pecstned Gvah on amount cf entbaneem equat | Be eceuieee he ied of iilveace that was there exer | to maintain them. As for Captaia To he the path which it has hitherto followed with marvellous | ¢f cocupy ing ourselves with the measures to be taken for | ling, if not excerding, that which has attended iis pro- ctoed by “ sal tat oy a 4 4 -——-- showed at #my roa what stu! American are regularity, woul lead to extreme dangers, as weil to the | We protsction fe cee." , 4 peratotoas | Stee troughout, the dominioas of the Briaian Crow = i, 1 a ose antes to te apireimen va Pay oy Latter from Aba-el- Kader. made of. divin Fi Til sat Sy calvin prov! Vhose whi been pe then dep'ore: ieastroue and pet ons | At Detroit the lo; republicans etrem!! ia such country, Arabic joormal publis! 0 Paris ander the name follow! correct. officers Rich J ee ES bec ant in i . Nnetr Th tor that Baron | Ob Ie America, The bailot there was a curso to Ame | or ine Faglc, hae the following translation of @ letter, | mond:— for more than one year [ree and independent. This mast o% boncthie enanct be allowed by the King or the Pariia Ld oiee Se a ment. “ped ram ‘The generous sovereign, who is hailed by the whole evils are com of Italy 8 the mover nnd eater ‘of the national rosurree- | event which fe deplored, policy of non-intervention, and, above all, ite deteetadie | pambers to greet their jllustrions est Renfrew" and bis suite, though Le ng) yd gros! | Mayor and other civic authority in the detestable ity tn ercaping from “the wi! rica, ‘retead of @ boon, and gave no freedom t» the exer. cee eeted gras | cise of the franchise. ‘What ovis be more serious than a ee Damascnt, 8) eh. Lad by Abd el- jae Noone et Bell. Kader to Card ipal jot, Archdiabop of Paria: — Captain—[upean N. Ingraham the fact that tho classes in America eS Mort Fre inent ood Reverend Lord—May Ave Mort High 1, yleutenante-—Robert Hw man, Alexander F. Warley, rolong the Curation of your archiepiscopal authority; \vingston Breese. mn Francis F. Shep eided silence during these elections, becouse they Tinea.” On the oocasion of the voosataowe, Tthooght of | perd, William @ Doster, — they were overwhelmed by the masses? Meser®. | your noble qualities when | received the letter which | Ficet Surgeoo—W, 8 W. Ruschea' 5 and “ knew they were not telling the truth | Jour eminence honored me with under the date of August | Parred Assistant A me up the American iaatitations as an | 16 Yourgtiminence has acquired freah claimato my grati- | Paymaster—Goorge F. Cutter. to featenant ay ent hasiaain ahd said taat if sooth an otious | of the crowds on foot who blocked up the ruate, tion, bas epecial duties towards the South of italy, Tao | violation of international law were not entirely nullified | and intercepted the royal party at errry turn. Wo nao work of emancipation began ja bis ; round bis glori- | there would no lovgor be leit any force and focurity t | po doubt that in every portion of the United Staves. from and premet. Be- ard ry any legitimate right Chicago, the great commercial emporium of the West, to py Ga’ tek “All sovereigns,” his Moliness said, “should be con- | opulent and magnifierrt New York. the fou of the Quero fore Exrope, before poster ity, be is aus weravie for their 3 fate. ‘ ae sly yinced that their Cuse la fatimately bound up with ours. | of Bogiand will be reoetved with that ailectionate courtesy | ¢xample nN Mr. ai wen | a ge nn tude by the congratulations woich you have Fires £ ames Ft Jouss. ‘King Victor Emanuel does not intend to dispose at his | In coming to our aid they will provide equally for the | and reapect which is worthy of a pation whore liberty, pes ged b4 the Yankees exhibit towards tit address to mo. ‘aro AD additional ‘of your char!- Fig Officer's Seeretary—Gideon Soul! orn Sieseare of the people of Southern aly but he is in Drewervat pone of thelr Say one itn ae dent ewe and Worstare bave from ry oan source | Oe TO gemme saanbe apes tes nat “= 7.006 sanettiy pre aoe = ighly flattered V4 Chief Frgineer—Jamer H. Worse. ee m bound to give them an opportua't, ths an lines cone! that with our own. v7 thie Kind # jo more to u a with wl yperor Pareed !pmen—lames ‘jechets, ward Terry, bef Sei Dy moe. openly, would coms to the crite; or to remove any Joutounies | fergom travelleng im America wat considered rerpecable | benor aman whove only mori W that Of hat Byrom Wilson, Clarke : by % that the Catbeiic princes and com: 7 or end to their provinional condition, by mos: openly, most pt or the Waaner of ‘the Faithful, who t was accompanied @ “man in black’ what be owtd t@ his conscience, fon. beled by may plimentary phrases of diplomacy or statecra(t As | % introduce ee enple Lom | i dere distivetion fallen to the lot of an wnoce: man— Wecked have existot than all he com In my eyer, iiss high iret ‘Agsiatant Haginecre--Virgiotas Freeman, Joba Ww. free! ‘ing utterance to their wishes. ge tere of the ph | veh thst he fs 7m nets wall opportunity of | came. Mr. who only does bis duty i not entitled to bom A | Second Apsistant Eoginoer—Rben Moyt, Jr. fm the electoral urn. As ane, we *' — moreorer , an oo! en ore m4 wee sitar of ibe provivees'not yet untied should | Net Meault of Napoleon's taltan Poltcy, Bnglish Uhetitutons Viverted of these wae chooks and | 8Y Philadelphia, where tweniy four men were | Freat achjcct of Gelight for me is the assistance which | Third Arwistaut Br 1. Butler, Jamon P. ‘act as thore of Central Italy bare done’ and that with the From the Lonion Obronicle, Oct 6 compensate na which the wisdom and ‘ence of this | watting ‘ie ibe Emperor and the French nation are gi: fo the in- | Spragve, William Pollard, B.S Herring, Heary Fagan. a re oe ee aie ne ated wtuon | ported SP ter cas: eeteppsmsach, @ sagueotne'et crury | Jremeband de tat afpnert cocina plats erreption. 7 | the rayeat the Frosehinmperer's peter, wes har el hs Rice tan wale @eclare in favor of thet principle of daifcation w' by our own © against ory, } the master’ i L Lien f ls No hand over |- There are some perrons in Req'and and in Uansde who corners of the world I orvante ready to Acting Bratawnin—Inanc T may Dring the whole peninsula under the coastitutiona | way. If the Emperor Napoleon feapere of Viwcr enue! Dis task of protecting FF leas & “genuine Italian | bare areociated with the Priace of Wa'es’ visit some im Ministers of a ive Hon 8 collision be- ‘itten! ian. their duty. Deign to present my respects to the honora- ‘Acting Gonper—Jamee Thayer. ‘Die coolrsiaeticn who furroand Fon, amd to my friends. ourpenier= Beet ae ory Bail Henry T. Stocker. MVrtied ou the” part of Bar Ano mv Karon Bax Mo- | _ There are ao on Busquebaues, and’ Liect D°D. Her. Tt bas been stated that the Sovereign free from personal amb! | Power,” we bave a decisi ton, and who consecrated hia sword ant life to the great | tween Italian soldiers and the ‘Rohit vement of vindicating Italy to the Italians, we must | out of the question, This will of the to | chua, as weil as Secretary of ‘ormiy = boone |, whatever may be the iin pot of tao to Tian eo toon Ferre to seceriain the wishes Ipors. soph Beale, for tne thore it shail be respected born of coourrences of the Gay; twelve months ago | Brities North sgey for La 8 fo barbor that you will agree with us he wae rently, te enmasien, he cuter Se urosaee and that, should Clty Intelligence, crew of two hundred and sizty bine jack on this We alt wish 10 bring tos termination | into Rome, What the Rmperor Napoleoe hee steadily | imperial sud other MexriNo oF Tim KxoweRRs xD Foumcey or mux Fite | CH and fly one marines, ‘the great of national unity, bot it must rise from | disapproved tf the fn! of Soldiers im | vited to take the Derat of On Monday ‘We are just standing ovt for sea, the consent of the people, vot “y any deed of | italian aifaire. The ot the Ee confederation. At present the Governor RTMENT.—A meeting of the engineers and foremem with bright sky ‘wind. and force. and dignity in Rome bes ‘the by Tom gh Sy fy ln the Fire was held at the ‘These conatderations induced the government to | Catbollc world, but the temporal Of the | tain General of Britieh America; bat this offlser Firemen's Mercer street. The wae held ‘Williameburg City News. eek the Chambers that power should be ranted to it to | Pope in Central — is an’ Italien , and } has no real to interfere with the discretion for the oe ‘the ‘Ansistant BerctaRy —The extensive pork packing setadliahment the snnexation of ail those freed provinces of | any interference Avstrian, | of the of Now Brunswick or Nova Sovtia. Joba " for @ person to ot which, questioned by of the direot universal or Bpanh— sould be A revival of the old fons o orgs For all local purpores of improvement ani de- MN bis place. re wae received and Pomroy & Koch, corner of South First and Fitth |, Should declare thet wish to form a part of | of all evil in Italy. For holding to his erood, fence. each province is as we if it be a committee of three to drat of remo. | atreste, was entered by burglars early yesterday morn- Sererricttns nectar mer | keratin ene Lect es Se hs | Sah Gabatee nln wons'o cin as SSS Rice VS! | Genrer erect ct rt me oany 19) 4 i y wo ‘fi mite invere do wot think’ that the form of patirage Nono STopntive from Rome, bo hag been bitterly at- ae ee Governor to determine manner for a perton i tee pean ee Of the burglars, They appear to have entered the pre- may be A subject of dircussion, Tt will be the same | tacked by that email Iminority, the repoblicans of Italy. | whether he would despatch troops for the suppression of a 7 the noenes and charactor | there were three oundidaten, Mesers. Jobo Wildey, mires by realing the fence in First street and breaking Bireacy adopted in the Fimilia and Tuscany. The people | Put he bas bad the courage of bie opinions, and bis poliey, it | the curbreak. In oonpequence of this system of calontal bg enjoyed whilo hunting tho bitovs on the | mag of engine company No. 11; James Leonard, ex -Fore- nthe back door leading to the office. The safe wae Wil be arke | to Prop stinoe distinetly whether they wish | is now eeon, is the only one offering proepect of reconcil- | administration, governore, commanders. in chicf, and large | Prairies, and concluded his lecture amid inuch applause. | man of engine company No 2i, and George T. Alker, ex. | (hen taken out and placed ona pile of pork, to deaden to be joined to our State, or not, and no conditional tng reepect for the Fee eee ies 4 Sianenes staff of officiate, have to be maintained ja each provinoo Foreman of engine compan: No. 88 They received the | the sound of explosion which wan to Row! aad after vote shall be a¢mitied: for it ie, indeed, our deter | Hew of the world the interests of ‘regenerated | at the ee the mother country—a sahject which The Emperor of Raeia in Poland, following eumber of votes—Wildey 60, Alker 47 and Leo. | drilling @ bole sod loading \t, wcwndum artem, the load Mivation not t¢ imposes the act of ancexation npon | Maly.” bas recently attracted considerable attention in the Im [From the London News, Cet pard 18. The election will take piace on Wodneaday, tho der wae pot in. th* mateh applied, and the any part of Tialy, but wo mast with equal frankness ‘the Emperor t) of “a genotne Italian power.’ Tt] perial Pariioment, and one which it is certain oar dan Visa, Sept , 1860, 94th inet., between the bowrs ef seven and nine, and the own up, leaving the fellows, however, only twelve dol- declare that we ¢o not think any anueration ¥ thet euch a power t* already | cla! reformers will not permit to slumber But this i# | I send you somo detatie respecting the eppronch og | geturpe are to be hauded in to tho obiet’s vilice bofore | lars boo'y for ail their trouble Nothing hae been beard Should be proposed sabject to Any special condition ‘sted before the war of | comparatively a triding evil, The existence of ibese sow of the Emperor of Russia ia the kingdom of Polatd — twelve P. M. of the borgiare, ‘

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