The New York Herald Newspaper, December 22, 1860, Page 5

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NEWS FROM EUROPE. Arrival of the Steamship Fulton Off Cape Race. THREE DAYS LATER INTELLIGENCE. $638,000 in Specie En Route for New York. Confirmation of the Reported Capture of Pekin by the Allies. Attempt to Assassinate Victor Emanuel. REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENTS IN NUNGARY. Our Paris, Berlin and Naples Correspondence. Cotten Unchanged, Breadstuffs Advanced, Pro- visions Dull, &., &o., &. ‘Wp addition to our usual newspaper files by the arrival of the Persia and Borussia at this port yesterday, and the Beception of the Bohemian’s mails, which reached this ity last night from Portland, we are in possession of a large amount of interesting despatches from our corres- pondents in all the principal cities of Europe. By the arrival of the Fulton off Cape Race we have European advices to the 12th inst., three days later than those previously received. Further disorders are said to have broken out in seve- val towns of Hungary. Mention is made also of a pro- gramme drawn up by Kossuth, Klapka and Pulzky, who sim at constituting themselves into a provisional gov- ernment. According to the Berlin Bank Gazette, the Hun- garians would try to come to an understanding with the Roumans for the foundation of a kingdom that should stretch all along the Danube to the Black Sea. ‘The English Admiral and the Commandant of the Ameri- ean squadron dined with King Victor Emanuel, at Naples, Defore he left for Sicily, in company with the deputies from the Marches and Umbria. ‘The Duke of Newcastle was installed Provincial Grand ‘Master of Nottinghamshire, in the city of that namo, on ‘the 7th inst. The installation was attended by the Earl of Zetland, Grand Master of England, and a great number @f nobility and gentry, including representatives from the Grand Lodge of England, and numerous other dis- Singuished members of the craft. News from Syria to the 19th ult. has been received. A Christian Sheikh had been appointed the new Caimacan of the Lebanon. Our Naples Correspondence, ‘Naruas, Nov. 30, 1960. Dissolution of Garibaldi’s Army—Fight Between the Gari. Daldians and the English Brigade—Reaction in Naples— Attempt to Assassinate Victor Emanuel—Duel Between Two American Officers of Avezzana’s Staff, de. ‘The late army of Garibaldi is fast melting away. The men arebeing shipped by thousands every day. The English battalion sails to-day for England. A fight took place a few days ago at Caserta between the English and some Garibaldians about a woman, in which four English ‘were mortally wounded and one killed. The loss of the other side is unknown. ‘The King, Victor Emanuel, sails to-day for Palermo to test the loyalty of the people. Be is exovedingly unpopu- Jar here, and it i rumored that Mazzini will make a demonstration during his absence. The people are prepared for another change, aud having ascertained their power under Garibaldi, they will not be loth to go a step farther under Mazzini. The King has reinstated a great number of the old oificials who were #0 obnoxious to the people during the She late King. He reviewed 17,000 inen in thy Mars the other day. He has a» tid of a republican demonstration Dlood shed than in the late struggie. that th fan and Austrian armies bay at needs con Arm ation. arrived here from Turin; but mpany them sailed yesterday for Spegzia; all w quehauna hag left Gibraltar on her way hamp ¢ Ww Constantinop Ap atiompt was mado to assassinate the King on the day of the review. The shot, however, not onlf missed the King, but parsed harmless through the large which surrounced him, The would-be assassin el was fought a few days ago between Capt. V. jana, and Lieut, M., of Nashville, Tean., both Gen. Avezzatia’s salt t. M. was slightly wou the first dre, when the difficulty was amica Revolvers were the weapons used. Vesuvius gives some signs of a grand eruption Thor {#8 an instrument bear the crater which is said to) fnfallible. and it clearly indicates a movement of the huge cauldron. Our Paris Correspondence. Pants, Nov. 26, 1860. The Sword and the Gown—Important Letter of the Superior General of the Jemits to King Victor Emanuel—His Pro teat Against the Virlent Suppression of his Order in li Wy—His Character, de. ‘The following isa translation from le Monde, of « doon ment which has recently been transmitied by the heal of the Jesuit Grder to Victor Emanuel, and which has ated the deepest sensation ia tho public mind of Italy and Franee — Sire—The General of the Society of Jesus respectfully ‘approaches the throve of your Majeaty, to obtain justice and roparation for the serious wrongs which bis Order bas, for some time past, euifered in Maly; or, if hie de Matis should be made . tomake public his pro- | fest against so many acts of injustice. | From the very outset of the trou Clone of 1847 aud the comimencement of LS45—all of th houses and colleges which the Society of Joeus ed im the Sardinian States, both insular end coutinental were su) |, their estates conliscated, aad thelr | Membors ienowimiously dieperred. | In order to give some shadow of legality to thees acts Of injustice, a pest facto decree was issuel, su, aeing the suit society, alienating tts property, and importing Reedieswy vexatious obligations apon its members. This | decree was publiehod without the knowledg iim op Pesition to the intentions of Charles Alb your majes 4y’s august father; for thronghoat his entire raig Monarch manifested the most favorable disposit) ‘wards our Urder, and wien the political burricaas Brox» forth, exhorted fathers to remain steadfast, plaining to the Superior of the want of contience wil rotect them of certain members in whem he he of agitation and fear. ch a decree could have no retroactive fores; but it w Hed on to legalize the wholesale spoliation of our Or fend it hat been maintained with the strictest rigor bh the government whica has since presited over the dost fy of the nation Daticg from last year's war until this day, the priests have lost three houses and colleges m Lombardy, #1 in the duchy of Modena, eleven in the Pontifical “tat Binewen in the kingdos ‘They have been litera): real and pereonal; to the have been chased away from their b. conducted like felons from place to pia thrown inte public prisons, and maltreated and o NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1860.-TRIPLE SHEET. that personal inviclability of which no one can be de- Prive without being weoused, tried and condemned. 1 protest im the naine of the sacred cause of humanity, infamously outraged in the persons of se many weak and infirm old men, hounded frem their peaceful homes, str ip- ped of all ussistanec, and flung pon the world without means of procuring their daily bread. If Lean give to my pious brethren no vther aid, they will at least recognise in this proceeding that their com- men Father is not insengible to the sufferings they en- ure. I address this protest to the conscience of your Majesty. I lay iton the tomb of Charles Emanuel 1V., your Ma- jesty’s illustrious predecessor, who voluntarily descended from the throne, forty-five years ago, which your Majesty now filis, to die in our midst, clothed in the habit and by the vows of our society, and leading in our jate at Rome, where his blessed remains repose, that A of life which your Majesty’s goverument stigma zes and pursues with its bitter and calumnious hatre: ‘The remembrance of the kindness which the illustrious nstantly testified, in times past, and ihe sublime character with whieh your Majesty is invested, give me the right to hops that mny petition und solemn protest will not have been ineflect ual. But if the voice which pleads the cause of so many ruthlessly downtrodden and outraged rights shall remain unlistened to by earthly tribunals, then I do appeal to the supreme and dread tribunal of a holy, just and Al- mighty God, before which oppressed innocence will be assuredly restored to its rights by the Eternal Judge, the To the hands of ehameless special pleading set forth under the pemenen of argrment. So, it ts argued, the reeent imperial inodi- Feetien muct bring Mm its tram an immense aileviation of the restrictions of the press Having said thus much of what I believe to be the general opinion of the result of the recent ebance. it will he intererting to state the more common view of the mo- tive aseribed to it, On this bead 1 hear many men saying, of whom 1 should hardly have expected so much frankness, that the Jong continued, obstinate attitude of Eng’and has at last Deen teo much for the Fmperor; that he finds it literally le to exercise the mission with which he believes pe endowed, so long as that power persists in its attitude of jealous antagonism. A greater leaning W- wards liberty and consequent 0 of policy Inust lead to a better understanding with that country. Again: it is said the Fmperor feels all the difficulties of the Ital- jan quertion; he sees that another war with Austria is sooner or later inevitable, and he desires to cover him- self with the mantle of national responsibility. And, Jaetly, it is Said that the imperial mind is big with the fate of the Pope, and that in this matter he every- ming to gain frcm the mest enlarged expression of public epivien, ‘As a matter of fact, by far the large ity of edu- cated men in France are simple believers in the philoso- phy of Voltaire. ‘The priesthood is still influential in fa- milies, and the women are, perhaps, more under its sway at the present time than at any period during the last century. But the moment the subject comes to be dis- cursed in Parliament whether it is essential or not to re- King of kings, and the Lord of rulers. tain the Papal suprcmacy, the ground will be found the All-seeing God I commit our cause, supplicating Him | "ore wnembarrassed by party «ating than any to instil into your Majesty and the ors who sur- | “ther, and it ts conjectured in such a discus- Tound you sentiments of justice and equity towarde so | SR od il brs 8 perk no pons fag ee Se Rye eg ee lee, pets De from due Russen Pupil and’ tat ts soopel at Marna Vion takes on itself the responsibility of advising it, it is easy toconceive how comparatively smooth is to be a qmurse which, under any circumstances, must always be a formidable one. Even the moral courage of Napoleon iJ, may wince before the fires of a priestly war, How. ever, alter all said and done, there still remains the for- midable fact that the Emperor, like your own republic, appoints his own ministry, which is independent of Par- Mamentary majorities, and, unlike your republic, has an army of 600,000 at his back, which may sweep’ the con- stitution, whatever its form, into the streets any day its master choose: Lucien Murat, son of that bean sabreur Joachim, who was shot a8 a filibuster by the King of Nuples of ‘other cays, wishes the good people of Naples to remember that he is still in existence, and, therefore, when things are somewhat uervous with ‘the intrusive King Victor Emanuel, writes to some ‘dear Duke,”’ whose name is not given, a letter to be duly published. "Its pur. port is soon told: with Divine right still dying hard at Gaeta, and popular sovereignty extremely badly deftued, and not Knowing how to bebave itself in poseession at Naples, Lucien, the von of Joachim, says nothing, but takes to praying, he says, as his father would have done, for the prosperity of Naples and Sicily. You will very naturaliy expect to receive from your correspondent Bome Version of the various reports that have so universally prevailed respecting the departure of the Empress. Now, I really believe, in the main, there je net mech to add to the published statement that, at a time when her Majesty had experienced a, severe family Dereavement, alittle divertisement, in the shape of change of secne and air, was altogether a thing to be desired, and that, as the general state of the Continent was not such as to invite her to go thither, the best thing she could do Was tO visit that ancestral country with which France hod furmerly bad such intimate alliance. But the world will taik, and idle as rumor generally is,1 believe there is seidem much smoke without at least a little fire. ‘The Empress has arrived at that period of life when women in Franco begin to think whether it is probable they may one day take up with devotion. She has not ex- actly reached the point when, as with Queen Hortense and others, she might fairly be expected to settle to it as a passion. But he ty was bred and born in Spain, @ land rendered ical everence for all , there has French priesthood that the days of Luther and Huguenot heresy aro im: pending over the country. Even the imperial confessor cannot turn the Emperor inside out; but there is that little chattering, shailow-brained, pab-mceaing ings the beau, tiful Eugenie; why should not she play the role of Fsther, and work tpon the Ahashuerus of the ninoteent!: ceutury, til he hang up the Haman who would counsel the execution of Papacy on the gallows he had prepared for Pius the Ninth, and instead thereof to promote the Pope of Reme to greater glory than ever. It is said that the words, ‘For, if thou altogether holdest thy peace at this timo, then shall there urise enlargement and deliverance to the Jews (rom another place. But thou and thy father’s house shall be destroy ed; and who kpews whether thou art come to the king: dome for such a time ax thist”’ have been laid before her with ail the authority of the church, and Ne de had answered, if not in the words, in the spirit of her, “Co, gather together all the Jews (the pious Catholics) that are at present in Shushan (or Paris), and fast ye for me, ond neither eat nor drink three days, night or day. Whatever may occur, my religious brethren and I will, under all circumstances, be consoled by the remem: brance that we have been deemed worthy to suffer for the namo of Jeswe, and in the testimony of our con- sciences that we have given no cause for this resuscita- tion of ancient hatreds, except in that we have preac Christ qucitied, respect and obedience to our holy church and its “head, the Sovereign Pontiff, and submission and lidelity to princes and powers established by God, PIERRE BECKX, Superior General of the Society of Jesus. ‘This letter has proved a hard and bitter nut for the red republican journals of France and Italy to crack, and has been received with corresponding exultation by the Catholic party. It must seem a marvel to citizens of the United States how, for no other cause whatever than that they are the most strenuous advocates of the Catholic religion, fifteen hundred priests can have been packed off from their native country, unaccused, uncondemned, and really guilt- less of any offence whatever. As there is a strict rule of the Jesuit order that no individual member shall meddle with politics, either directly or indirectly, any further than to render faithful obedienco to all de facto constituted authorities, and as this rule is enforced by themselves, under the severest penalties, they have not had the power, even if they had the will, to take any part in the political conflict which has agi- tated the peninsula, Any Jesuit who would have actively propagated sedition and disaffection, or intrigued against the rule of Victor Emanuel in Sardinia, would have been instantly expelled from his Order. Yet the word Jesuit continues to be made a bugbear to frighten grown children with, which is equally unworthy of the cause of liberty and of the age in which we live. Father Beckx is individually a hero, this very docu- ment shows it. But few are aware that while Vienna was being bombarded in October, 1848, he was in that city— in lay dress, for, if recognized, the red republican mad- caps Who revelled there would have hung him up at the first lamp post—and that during the four days of the bom- bardment by Ban Jellachich and Prince Windischgratz, he remained upon the barricades, dragging the wounded and dying into neighboring houses and churches, in order to bestow upon them religious aid and comfort. Every one so assisted by him was the sworn enemy of the bugaboo which they denominated Jesuit, and yet he exposed his life from hour to hour to render the greatest services to thore who were bent upon his destruction and upon the downfall of all he held dear on earth, He was then a sim- ple priest of the Order; since then he has been raised to the dignity of its General. He lives in a style of very inforior comfort to what is required by most laboring men in America and Europe, and enjoys the respect alike of Pro- testants and Catholics, who know him to be one of the most | 1 also. - he bramgge irl fant ataw tans ond 0 wie i upright, conscientious, clear headed and inoffensive of | fyerish I perth oe ne eourune t aw; and men. But then he is a Jesuit! And, for this, learned old professors, pious bookworms, men so busied in their lite. rary or scientific pursuits that they ecarecly know there is a world aronnd them, and whose names wil! adorn tho page of civilized history as as the world shall last, Well, the modern Fsther, it is av ‘od, kept her pro. he Finperor’s especial appointment neil, did incontinentally, at the lit up her voice—a still emall oue—to pro: test, in the name of the God of her fathers, at the violenee y dope and in contcmplition to the Fi of the the cid more; wien her trembhng voter had are pounced upon in their eells and libraries, given a dol : cut Her arta, eid. bor heed between lar apicce, and told to go tothe devil, What kind of | thom and sobbed go divtressingly that, by the Emperor's “liberty” would we call this in America? wider, ber women werd , retaove ‘The day efter this it was annoa Finpross de papel ai or rather her health gid, chauge of air and the : é mer The Late Malifcations to the been Significane the Concessions—Puilic Sentiment ty agai France Relative Thereto—English Jeu Nayolan eae ween Bo the Pope—Vivit of the Empress to Scolland, de., de. Franc ring m to end with what it calls a | a Hy and b - as 4 oe ie abe P * iz ca earth; bot M. Fe political thunderciap in midst of a ser ky. € | withdrawa from offee provisionally. His Hberal respondents have written to their various journals that | cpinicre are very strong, and he hus a ’ the recent Imperial modis the constituti acvecated them whenever @ fitting eceasi.u ; eee 5 : bot the manner of bringt tails of which Dav sip siveedy esaeen Foeshers about has not been to bus taste 1 colt public ear; that the p ve hie acts g Ange 80 Uae that nothing but a | &teterned advocate in War OF @ gene A stir it into anima | Oi tnert ary «hoe t Allowing mueli Cc * tone of pubic | the Puperor. b my in this pa: us i With ry # from those l | with whem the Emperor formerly indt tters of Qs kind Tdo not mean to say that every one you meet believes | {he water now.n days, Sumothing has heen a : desta but 1 piece uo oredit to i pelieve, however, 4 there is an end of the despotic reg No; bat | priests have teen very busy with their subtle influenc jomed to wateh affairs and to broad views | cf late, and finding the armor of the Emperor is att om to me, almost to a man, to infor | itepenctrable, they have not rerupled to try what ali bork stair manctuvring might accomplish for a c important to the world, new and hereafter, to be & by trifles. tension of liberty ts at hand. as matters stand at present, wo Of whatever intelligent wlalive chambers may consist morally creatures of the imperial will, Every have bot a phantom bef e us. Panis, Dec. 7, le Intrigues of Austrian Agents in Fuglandt—Sagac Materials the they are but 0 ions of the English Prew—Matiers in Pramce—The Clorgy deputy is but a government nominee. Hf you want waco | Vo Mu) ME Mae prema the f nt of this, go into the nt provine: a ee i " get. a tenn Aamagthe da ra Movements of Victor Emar in Kaly—Poprlar govertment fixes the name of ita candidate on the wall, and woe be to Lim who dares eo much as breathe a wish in the interest of his opponent, The prefet, the sous- Frefet, the Mayor, the ten thousand subordinate employes which infest the Gepartment like a swarm of locusts, are m him fforthwith. If he be an independent Outhreaks in Hungerydey 0+ Pres om Secession, de, ,he., he. In my last letter | mentioned that Austrian agents were at work in London trying to influence the English prese in favor of Franeis Joseph, ‘The Obremer, a Sunday paper, war one of the Gret Londen journals that spoke out for Turkey—The Brylich down man he mest live in a state of leolntion. AN men | Tris Om oe tion is that the Olecrer wanted a _ epeak or look at him; and a8 | | veuticn article for its Sunday readers, and (hat thus it w next to impersible but that some circumstance | 146 more readily was persuaded to ansert that Austria should arite rendering the aid of his neighbors important | (4 rich, was powerful, and able to accomplish to hisn, hie will eoouer oF later be £0 made to feel the pree- | 1°" «put the Obecrwr has been left far behind by euro upon bim tat io mar lath, ofr eet he ‘hp. ne, deenbs, tae deen tees, Gas hein ae estiane ‘ preteen en woos journal having just informed the world that “in r to defeat the machinaticns of hea real enemy, Aus ja seeks on alilance with Victor Emanuel; that she will code to faréinia Venctia for a large sum, and the alliance Kk the to him and his calling. ire him to pport and countenance of Ofieials will crows woe 2 aint bi a nh pirit eee ee eee ee ra caca | eilenaive and defensive of Maly," Aji this to defeat the SE Eee carers Bim wil be torn | machinations of France and to overwhelm Louis Napo | from hitn, for wot even an exorbitant rent will induee his | eee ciate fundon Morning Herald aaseri landiord to brave this moral whirlwind by whieh he ie tm the most atrocious manner, prevent~| from seoking te. | fuge in the bosoms ¢f pious familiar: and in many loa’ ties: no regard whatever has becn paid to werkness, in | pety firmity or the weight of years: | ‘These acts have been consummated against mon anne ten irreproachablo before tie law — ried on without legal forms, wit? peana of jastity: themeelves. in @ proceedings have been savagely harsh it acts had been committed rluring a popolar ont- break by's bint and infuriated mob, we thight, perhaps ‘have borne them in. silence; but tho attempt bas b made to sanetion them by the laws of Sarlinia, and as the provisional ments establiched in Modena and the States of Chorehaad the Dictator of the Two Biejlies are by the authority of the Sirliniw heh me any invoked, and stifl invoke, in Naragy heme their iniquitous d> eon legalize thelr loiguitons fepeadivon, T can no TerksiD a silent | or ay yt of the od, ol myself Seabed to derkanl forte rote a to see ba tenia to protest b Feejgnation and religions yatience may not be mistaken for OF foto af of our vi mcg 1 sity pets, then, against the fon of ity to which my brothers in religion have been sub- before the Catholic world, and the name en de ripe of cor holy chareh merheqroadly vetated pious foundations for the living and the dead have been ren ere! null and voit, in the name of the rights of property, deapis trampled under foot by brute force. J protest iy the came of the rights of citizens and o that “it T #troke ¢id Victor Emanuel mich the work’ by bis ingratitude.” The tory journal think thus, because we all Know what tory political good faith is worth; but the world would indoed be sur prised to find Victor Emanuel eiding with the oppressors cf Ttaly againet her delivorers. No doubt, with the Maral the wih fathered the thought In France matters are calmer. The clergy are for the memont checkmated, and Napoleon II has a breathing spell. The new Ministers have assumed the duties of their offers, Persigny har addressed the pre- fects in the following liberal manner. You will jadge from the tone of the eirevlar that I was correct when I onnouneed that M. de Petsigny wished to remodel the Chambers and make liberal changes throughoot the whole empire. He also plainly saye that “ere long the prefeets will be called on to prove their devetion to the government.” The priests know what thie means — Pann, Deo. 5, 1960. were a moe parcod if he dares to keep an anti-imperial bea The poor n OF profes#ional man must be made of stuf! than are citizens in general, sur: rounded by femily ties, if he can hold out very tong teveh a crbivation: #0, for pexee and quietness, eulkily 9eq But, say the reflceting parties of whom 1 speak, the permission given to dienes the imperial speech in Ta ameut nd to vote ¢ above all the con. corsion ined in the present report of these partia mentary disevesions, controlled though it may be by an cfleial censorship, ie the yn end of the weige which ninst fnally eicave eeunded#he present dictatorship. The value of ¢ ing Opinions in Parliament will only be in proporticn to the charecter and indenpendence of the de- At first there will be a epectes of hypocritical cen- sorship of covernment measures, arguments put forth | expressly (e be answered by M. Magne and M. Billault, who | ereomy sterne bi Fere, e addrese are to be the government debaters without portfolive; Moxencn 1m, Pesver.—in taking presceaicn of the we- but thie cannot last, bypeerity is proverbially inconsivt- |v which the confidence of the Emperor has ent, the traneporent sham will be too obvious, and fow 1 Libnet first request ail your co-operation, for the more beble the spect | by the iteperial net o aie. i which has boen given us ‘4th November, the more will be hardy enough to continue a rele which exposes them in the deily press to universal couterapt. Deputica | sion! the intorpat : ere, of the country be ine vst be dumb or more independent. Hence the present. | epirtd brig: verets thonghts. se vertanuntel interteretee iw election« sonet be daneibig.| We tebuld w Prince whiny atter ‘having Received the governmental interterenge 1 eeesions 5 Y | powers of the nation to re-establioh public order at borne Thon, again, with regard to the publitation of modified and the roof the country al , i8 the fret to debates, and here the Steele bas a significant word or two Ib for expreesion of the wishes and the opinion of Taree, * tcouer if he victorigue over enemies at to say. “| heme and abrond aye oe Hees Into vUT institutions ‘The gist of « leng article on the subject may be thur Seaegere Ph . of his confidence in the shortly stated:—ihe government claims the right of ex: | “the account of this first portion of hie reign will form a emining the report of the parliamentary discussion be- ougete jod in our lled by the voice of the fore Ht is Committed to the press, Tt will, in fret, hate peunle to the wn lacie arom only ite oven reporters, thoagh pledges iteelf to adiminidter snd posschy «hen comregneney on a true and fifa) account of what Wi said. Bat, pays) hel int things if an t a8 to pro- the Sierl-, it never cam be supposed that ordinary joursals eet eG YF er. ever seem at are, like the Monitewr, to publish the whole report, ‘eatin, pcaroely oom naliete must be allowed to Mil their columns only wi athe interior, w] “aed the situation such debater and with euch parts of these debates as they Fudge ta éedeetael ‘another task not lees im. think likely to interest their readers. Granted they will RE ape the high ee ee confine themecives entirely to the government report; thint ho won'd be carried by war beyond but this right of selection of subjects, and of parts of the a eee eee be Prance, bie windom Aisouetion relating thereto, is almost equivalent toan | Cha inue nop abe teenie ter a odtemnge of a a4 ae on the part of i Pa our oe pg be a My opp hye yes = he " " opened to world a hew era proaper' tate before a reaer t's eiguitcnat move of Giaquasten, Toetly. te terminate thie Peters, being i his veritable mieeion is pot only te place LE come dy EL ee ide of ba slew ous founder of hig race, but to assure the destinies of the cov ntry, he now prepares it for the noble and peaceable exere se of the liberties of which the popa jar " one of the Nepoleons is lO protect the develope- ment. Monsieur le Prefet, if I recall to you these great traits of our ory, it is nct that you may make them the sub oct of official common ions to the poputati ot your | par'ment: &t having 60 marveliously, on the 10th of L 5 nd of themselves the lost thread of our destinies, they have no need of any one to assist thom im reading U reat pages of the empire which they have founded. What I simply degire is to make you un derstand in what spirit I claim your co-operation. Convinced that the liberties of a country can only be developed im so far as the State itself enjoys the most complete secur ity, IT beg you to be always as firin in main- tainit g public order as vigilant in watching the enemies of the State; but I recommend you, at the same time, to neglect Lothing calculated to complete the task . cillation between the various parties. Many and Gistinguirhed wen former governments, whilst rendering homage to the Emperor for the great things he has acecmplithed, continue to stand aloof, owing to a sentiment of personal dignity. Pay them the considera- tien which they merit; neglect no upportunity of recom- mending them to give the country the advantage of their talents and experience, and remind them that if it is noble to be faithful to the worship of the past, it is still more £0 to be useful to one’s country. And now, Monsieur le Prefet, that we are about to labor together for the welfare of the State, I ask you to free yourself from personal upations, which too often embarrass great affairs. Tell me always frankly your Opinion, with the independence of character which con. stitutes the real servant of the State, and, consequently, without caring whether you please or displease. Remem- ber that a civil functionary, like the soldier who exposes his life for his country, ought to know how to brave, if necessary, unmerited disgrace. But do not fear that [ shall ige you without a hearing, and still less that I shall ever place my responsibility behind yours. Do not fear, either, that whilst you may be devoting yourself to the public welfare you will be exposed at a distance, with- at defence, to the resentment of men of unsatistied am- ion. Very shortly you shall receive instructions on various important points of policy and administration, and [ shall have occasion to appeal to your zeal and devotedness. Receive, &e., XE PERSIGNY, Minister of Interior. Victor Emanuel has lett Palermo and returned to N. ples. In that city discontent is loudly asserted by the reactionists, who are becoming numerous and dangerous. The Neapolitans are a mean, dastardly race, and unwor- thy the sympathy they have hitherto met with. Ihave lately heard of transactions in Naples that make one feel disgust for a people so vold of all ideas of honor and gra- titude. T am not now at liberty to make known the facts I refer to, but may do so ere long. Your readers will then, like me, say that the Neapolitans are a mean, dastardly race. There are exceptions, of course, but I refer to the masses, Italian unity is now in great danger from the increasing power of the revolutionists (ie, the Mazzinians), Count Cavour finds himself sadly impeded in his work of organization by the intrigues of the | and material influence in redresting abuses an | vindlentiny rty [refer to, who are even powerful in the Sardinian Parliament. Anxious to obtain position—or, rather, plun- der—the Mazziniavs do not care one iota for the welfare of Italy; they only desire to keep up a state of disorder’ ‘and anarchy, #0. that they" say profit thereby. ‘Their intrigues are at nt be coming dangerous. They have the cause of the disbanded Garibaldians, and, taking advantage of their feeling of arger and ‘annoyance, are pushing them to measures thut must sadly annoy Vietor Emanuel ard Cavour, and that will greatly retard the settlement of fhe affairs of taly. . ad ustria is arming, arming, $ arming; the ont vender t, auereaed mea te ibe money t0 sep up the immense forces she now has on a war footing? I wonder whether the Rothschilds could not solve the mystery? In Venetia Austria hus brass cannon enough, if melted into pennies, to pay ber expenses for many a day; but it sects the prefers the brass in the shape of rifled cannon of the heaviest calibre. A queer phase of the armaments going on is the fol- lowing :—Fugland if putting Corfu and Malta ina state to Lear the lougest and most turmidable siege, Preparations on a scale that are really terrifying are going on in these laces. Immense piles of munitions of war are being id up, and Armstrong guns of the most formidable calibre cing mounted at both the places I have ji re named. What ean these demonstrations mean is a ques- en that is now asked here with painful interest. From whom does Fogland expect an attack shortly? As yet no one can anéwer. Next spring may solve the mystery. In Hungary the discontent of the people is increasing, and it is evident that ere long it must burst forth aud force w) Austria }iberal retorms ora por, tet struggle. In the [anubian Principalities serious outbreaks have oc curred, and aeanguinary conflict took place, wherein several perscns were killed. The people refuse to pay certain taxes, and the government, in endeavoring to ou- force its measures, has met with a most determined resist ance. The alarmists soon to rise, and that re this is no doub th war a eflurts to rhinent is evidently making © pa condition of the country tently serious'y meant are being gra ve just heard, by a telegraphic despatch opie, tbat the Minister of Commerce nirated to the embassaders pre forms. We hear of other great ( ‘Turkish governement just now; bat as it is the Constitution- nel und tho Moys that announce them, and as tbeso jour bab are the property of M. Mires, Uae contractor for tho avist not be accorded statement ever 80 berated the slaveholders of our as the London Times. have #0 but pow that their ti becles of evil soem Likely ta be that the South talke of d exchims againt § g studied the institutions of est to the United Staten"’—aned that much for the slaveliokters as for the save new it understands the diffieultis in u ©, ond the Tb rminates by a loud [peal agit et Beeese “What wilt beerme of New York, of the metro Pots,” ape the Mme the What o p b sexes in Lond n ubotiti fone 80 of f ther ongevd: North ant the Ment the Bug 8 betweet) our citiz th that the ha deb regret it. Ard why? Not t two mrch love for us, bot they fear t ving of new com ations between Fr and the South, to. the pientof Engle! interests, They hear of Southern s to the Emperor Napoleon; they hear vbat etov and other Sout of » hever think of doin: business but with them, This new ey mpathy wiil be justly estimated, 1 dare ray, om your side of the water. Your ties of Vngtieh journals will yon all the de tails of the Empress Eugenio's vielt to England. Her Ma Jjenty returne to Paris next Monday, the 10th. Ido not dovbt that mueh references will have been made by the Varin correrpoucents of New Yors papers (o the scandal ae regards the Countess of Castiglione and the Emperor Napokon. Twill here ptute a fret that somewhat mara the paid eeandal: The Countess of Castiglione ts not, and has not been in Paris for more than four years, ‘The departure of the Empress wos, Lam aware, attri beted by many to the fret that the Countess wat here. Trepeat that she has not been in Paris or in France since 166. Our Berlin Correspondence. Baniis, Nov, 28, 1800. The Si Meswig Helston Question —Athitude of Austria ont Pruma—Ageirs in the Gersan States—Death of the Prince of Ligne Schaumburg—Trial and Dremissal of Sticter— Imp rtant Disclosures— The Opera, ae. T have always abstained as much as possible from bor ing your readers with the eternal Schleswig Holatein question, whieh all Burcpe has been sick and tired of Years ago, but which continues to be stirred up every now and then by the German governments, to whon affords a cheap opportunity of display ing their pateh Tt appears now that ihe time hos again arrive | for su demonstration, and that Anstriannd Prussia have at dreesed notes to the Danish Cabinet ealling upon It to re: store the privileges of the Holetein States, in accorlanes with the decrees of the Federal Diet, aud holling out « threat of armed interference if their remonstrances are not attended to. Of course the Austrian note is me bratem fulmen, as the Cobinet of Viowna bas not the «ight est idea of enforeing it, even if it had the power, which it bas not; and should measures of covrcton againat Denmark be resolved wpon, the t f carryiag thom into execution will devolve entirely upon but it is to be hoped that the Prince Rewont and his advisers will reflect maturely upon the conse wor of auch & step, and not walk blindfolded into tue trap Lud for tier by Avatria ond her tool, the Diet. Tw pick a quartet with Denmark, under the prosent cireumetaness, would not only place this couatry in direct opposition with the pou ey of the British government, bot afurd Lute Napaloa a pretext eo long desired for intermoddling in tie attire of Getmany. There can be no dowbt that the popalativa of the Duchtes are justified in complaining of the conduct of their Danish rulers, but fn the heart of Germany there e many States who are suffering ander @ far more gall ing oppression, and if Pruesia withes to exert her moral constitutional right, it will be best for her to bog nearer home, aud leave Denmark for sere more favorable opportunity. ‘ ‘The Chambers of Hespe-Cassel have juct mot to do- Wherate upon the new charter ocfroyed by the Electar in lied Of ‘the libéral eonetitution of 1881, which was wet amide by bi With the aseitance of Avetrinn and Bava. rian baywnets. The people of the Rieterate still cling fondly to the free institutions they had enjoyed for nearly quarter of acentury, and if they were areured of the fopport of Prassia the Chambers wonld andoubtedly te. Jeet the sham constitution offered by their perjarca povereign, and persist in maintaining the iberti-« whieh were only wring from the unfortunate Hesaions by brate fore; but Russia blows hot and cold, advises a compro mise, and has even renewed her diplomatic conneetion® with the court of Heene-Cusse), whieh wore broken off | last year, with a distinet understanding that they should not be renewed until the Elector had entered on the more constitutional courses. Let Prussia encourage the Hessian Legislature to hold out against their little despot; let her remind the Grand Dukes of Meckleuberg, Schwerin and Strelitz, the Dukes of Anhalt-Dessau, Aehalt-Bernberg, &e., of the constitations granted to their subjects in 1548, and violated almost as soon as given, let her give & friendly hint w the King of Hanover that he is the sove- reign of a civilized Ftate in the middle of Europe, and not a Turkish pacha; let her, finally, move the substitution of a national parliament for the federal Diet, which was legally dissolved by its own act in 1848, and it will then be tithe to think about Schleswig Holstein. AS long, however, as Germany is divided and sub- divided into a multitude ef kingdoms and principalitics, seme of respectable size, sions, but all. indepen pfvitesmimal dimen. of a thorough reform inust Aqueer epecimen of German sovere departed thia life the other day, in the person of George William, Prince of Lippe-Sehaumburg—one of the most Lilliputian, but not the least absolute, of his fellow monarchs. He was seventy-six years of age,of which be had reigned seventy-three—twenty as @ minor and fifty-three as a full-blown potentate.” His principality is wedged in be- tween the territories of Hanover, Pruesia and Hesse-Cassel, and contains about 30,060 inhabitants, most of whom are the farmers of his Tramspareney (Sein¢ Darchlancht), who own nearly all the realestate in his dominions. The capital ef this powerful sovereign—who maintains a stand- ing army of two hundred men, with about half 45 many oftivers, aud whose’ court boasts a rand Huntsman, ‘a aster of horse, chamber: ins, cqneries, ' ladies of honor, and’ all other fitting appendages, of princely rank—is the little town of Buckeburg, situated very picturesquely at the pleasure of visiting many Yeara back, when I reeatlect our pioneer Jehu—it was ‘before the age of railways— made the jocular remark, that when the Pringe sneezed the whole country cried,” “Mach good may it do you’? The chief revenue of the magnanimous George William was derived from the brandy monopoly, bis Transparency being the only prblican as well as the only landlord in his dominions. Previous to the revolution of 1848 this nice little principality was blessed with a sort of legis lative assembly , c¢ d of clans delegates—i. ¢, , repr: utatives of the clergy, the citizens and th santry, which was abolished at that time to mal way for a coustitution based on universal suf- frage, which, in its turn, fell a victim tw the general reaction, and ak the old legislature was never reinstated, his Transparency reigued from that time forward as absolute as the Grand Turk, the undisputed monarch of all he surveyed. It is but doing justice to the memory of the defunct Prince to say that he did not abuge his high powers; like James 1. and the Baron of radwardine he delighted more in the cousciousuess of i tive than in its exercise; be never cut of anybody's nor cropped anybody's ears; bad no bastiles f plitical prisoners; was quite lenient in regard to oifenc of the prese—which may perhaps be explained by the fact Uhat there is not a gingle newspaper published in all lippe-Schaumburg; and 80 that people paid their taxes, held their tongues, minded their own business, and left Lim to settle allairs of State, they might live very quietly under the benignant rule of the pater patria. is more than can be xaid of some States of much greater pretensions, even by some that profess to enjoy a consti- tutional regime. ‘The disclosures made at the trial of Police Director Stieber, which came off last week, have shown that in Prussia} at least, the forms of constitutional government have not always been a guarantee against tho vast ex: 8 of despotism, It will be recollected that Stieber Was prosecuted some months since by the Attorney Gene- ral for abuses committed in his official capacity, but was: acquitted by the Vrimary Court for want of evience, and, in defending himself, retorted upon the Attoruey Gencral, whom he accused of being fully cognizant of the arbitrary acts which he now laid to the charge of the police. “This put the Attorney General on his mettle, and on the trial coming on last week ata superior triba bonal—the Kammer-gericht—he converted his acte daccueation against Stieber into one against the police in general, He unrolled a picture of the state of things in Prussia under the government of Man- teuffil, when the notorious Hinckeldey lorded itover the country, setting law and justice at defiance; he quoted instances of persons who bad been arrested on the most flimsy pretences, and kept in prison for weeks and months without tria}, and then released without k: 33 they bad be ed of; he described 1 the police, smplete Impotence of the courts of jus tice, and a system of reckless anarchy only equalled by that of Naples under the rule of the infamous Del Carretto. He showed, $2 that Baron Zedlitz, the successor of Hinckeldey, i followed neg in the footsteps of bis iiluetrious predecessor® and that, notwithstanding the benevolent intentions of the Princo Regont and bis Minis- , the law continues to be wet at naught by the arbi- trary will of an irresponsible police. The Prussians were highly offended a short time since by the stric of the the administra. philippies of the varend London Times upon The excitement e is immense: and although Sticber has been acquitted, the fects adduced by the Attorney al, not bearing on the particular offence for which he was indictod, | H will be impeerible for the matter to rest where it does, wially a& Stieber has published a declaration in which ofters to prove that the Minister of Mustice, M. simota, wat pertonally in ed in the illegal acts committed | by the peitee, and arguing very plansbly that it would | be unfair to make subordinat rics answerable ® | for tranractions that had taken piace with the full appro: bation of Uh eet oftioers of State, Stieber is a dan gerour man, & iriven to extremity he will not | ebrink f z { the prison bow m concer PO Ono is More Competent to give the } meat arup ation, The ministry have always been | blemed ior allows the’ colieagae of teuffel, to remain in oflice, and unless they order bis ev dict and that of M. Zedlitz to be tod tow striet in Vistigution, they will lay thomeeives open to pico of being in’ no better than their prodocr ssork, Our two ttn Lill eugaged ina flovce vocal war, and etrivivg hard to xupplant each other in the good gracer ef the public. At present the Vietoria seems to be in the ascendant, Madome La Grange having made a fection, and | that exqui | atingixhed her Fone of our first a from ther ihe elars of viol f which Vieuxterap 1 are the chief repre ives, to whom bh careely infer is a completa master of trement, which he manages with the dexterity of Poginini, and 1 bay joubt but that he will eara golden opinions among your transatlantic cagnwecentt. Prince Murot's Mantfesto. Oran Dew # not only by you, but by a great num ber of my friends, that I tind ms vsume an active porition in the aficirs of the kingdom of Naples Py making my reply pablic [reply to you and to all, My words are dictated by a feeling of patriotism and of duty. My m ts at the idea that my inflvenes and thatof my friends should create an obstacle to italian unification rerollection of my father is sufficient to prove that, far from being averse from that work, 1 de fire to co-eperate init, Tt is for this reason that, in re plying to yeu, 1 declare that I ¢ raise any dither and that in any ¢ willever religiously respect t to al The sovereignty of the people, work of Italian unity reste on the principle of the before which rises still me- nacibe the principle of The latter hae pre- od vive rghit, vailed for centuries; it has created and main\ powerfal menarehies, of which the history, it must be mitted, identifies iteelf gloriourly with that of eiviliza tion and’ progress. It has reigned respected, and the upiverral veneration whieh 0 od it was the effect of the eagacity and virtue of great kings, At pre: sent it le falling to pieces; but, in order t efface it from the world without vielence and without it is ne “ger ccreary thot popular rights at birth should labor to eurpes it in eagacity and in virts Seeh is ation for this new law that the cause diswen to take from the of Was to avoid all pretext f es the sovereignty of the peo Peniod by the indiepensable acecrpaninent of wii the greateivic virtues. [eee, in deed, the ballet box open in the pabiye squares, but am ighant at seeing Corruption and vivlenee’ prowling around it. It is truly ponful w find that a traitic in places and of public interests, always revered by the fathers of Italian civilization as sacred and inyiolabl has taken place at Naples. deplore that the acc ple in Ttaly wai ‘The events of IMS are too recent for us not to take ex ond fostrection from thera, The French republic emise itmenserd all, an destroy all, how to ntruet alition of parties whe gy ra aly at pre | #ont-net forget the leston to be drawn Crom there oventa, ‘They have s@ yet proved themectyes to be more tyra | ca) then the covermmente they bave overthrown, Fiberty cannot be inangurated by evep ei | ny. What menre the disarming #9 many communes } volaimed jn fo Many provinoes? rot proving the ep neces character | of untverral suffrage and the confidence of the new au the pening of the nation preserve ms from fresh tier, AR tas Jong as thy re tay rable ai @ epeetntor, contin ng mye IE to youd w © Whe Lave undertaken the regeneration of people, ber (6 the mocel of glory and iniefortaner, shall be in- oly dy the virtuop, the gagacity, oud the patriot- | bem cf cut anecatete. | Ppropened ntedération beeaaee T helieve it to be moro iy sonturmity With the ational traditions sad the cut. | tame ond interest of Naty. TD proposed it particularly oo hel orint of fey avery 16 ail tyranny, 1 know that | the ee herried attempt violence have no daration, and | the preeent atte t Ttalian anification appears to me | Pectvetly artifeial and wielent. Ibeliewe that the fede. fatict, @ebe can produce the uni thorit MM ty deetined to recomeite Iiber ties end local itttereeta with the national authority, randle ay, my fat t Sha be avecmaplieheds nn” LUCIAN MUMAT. CaaRAt pk Betaesy ar, Now. 260 THE NEWS BY THE FULTON. aes St. Jones, N. F., Dee, 21, 1860. ‘The eteamehip Fulton, from Southampton oa the 12th inat., arived off Cope Race at five o'clock en Friday moras ing, where she was intercepted by the news yucbt of the | peers. Her advices are three days later than thove received by the Persia at New York The Fuiton has 600 tone of merchandive, $600,000 in epecie and 199 paseengere foot of one of the spurs of the Hartz, which I had the | And that | ‘ swurance. I might say more the presentimente wiieb ru! deubt Of the loyalty of the moans employot | ts, Lgreatly | ‘The City of Manchester sailed om the 12th from liver 5 pool for New York, with about thirty-eight thousand dol- Jars ip specie In the Lond ties were flat. France had granted an amne-ty to the Proneh Jourr als for previous infractions of the prese law. King Victor Emanuel returned to Naples on the 7th inst. , and would remain there a fortuight, The Sardinians would await the fallof Gaeta before summoning the citadel of Messina to surrender. In casa of refusal, they would besiege it, Agitations prevailed in the Danubian principatities and at Pesth, ‘The Austrian Ministerial crisis was over. Pekin surrendered to the Allies on the 13th of October, and yielded to all their demands. The Emperor’s summer Palace was sacked and an enormous amount of spoil taken, The Emperor and the Tartar army had all ted. Nothing was to be seon of the enemy at Pekin. ‘The allied forces will winter at Pekin. They were en- camped on the walls, and were all in good health. Colonel Parkes and Lock, and thirteen soldiers, had been released, But little hope was felt for the return of Colonels Brabazon aud Rowlby, and other Freneh officers | who were missing. Norman Anderson had died of brutal treatment. A new and distinct rebellion was reported at Shanghae. Patavian affairs were improving. The steamship Canada, from Boston, arrived at Liver- pool on the Oth inst, The steamship City of Baltimore, from New York, ar- rived at Liverpool on the evening of the 11th inst. ‘The Fulton reports December 14, lat, 60 30, long. 11 10, pasecd ship Montebello, bound east, COMMERCIAL INTELLIGENCE. LONDON MONEY MARKET, Consols closed on the 12th at 925 a 92% for necount, ex-dividend, on stock market American railway securi- AMERICAN STOCKS. ‘The latest sales were —Illinois Central Railroad share, 265, a 2734 discount; New York Central Railroad, 79 @ 80; Erie Railroad shares, 361, a 36. LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET. | The ealee of cotton on Monday and Tuesday reached | 18,100 bales, including 5,000 to speculators and exporters. | The market closed quiet but steady, and quotations were gencrally unchanged ‘The advices from Manchester are unfavorable; the mar- ket for yarns fs easicr, but quotations remain unchanged, while for cotton cloths the market is very dull, LIVERPOOL BREADSTUFPS MARKET. Lreadetuflk were active, and there had been a slight advance in all qualit Wakefield, Nash & Ce., and Richardson, Spenee & eport-—Flour has an upward tendency, and har ad Is. per bbL; quotations Wheat active and advaneed 1d. a 3d. per cental; red Western, lis, a 12s. 6d.; white, Ils. a 188, 9d, Corn upward, with an advance of’ 6d. on mixed and yellow, Which are quoted at 866. 61. a 31a.; white, ‘89s. a 41s. LIVERPOOL PROVISION MARKET. The provision market is generally dull. Beef dull, Fork quiet. acon quiet. Lard easier, Tallow. steady at 58s. 6d. a 508. LIVERPOOL PRODUCE MARKET. Sugar steady. Coffee quiet. Rice quiet. cemmon is quoted at 4#. 10d. a 68. Ashes—Pots quiet; pearls steady, Spirits of turpentine dull at 32s. 6d. LONDON MARKETS, Rreadstuffs steady, with an advance on all descriptions of American, Sugar dull. Rice dull: prices are easier but unaltered. Coffee steady, Tea—Small demand, and prices are weak. LATEST PHASE OF THE IRREPRESSIBLE CONFLICT. [From the New York Tribune, Dec. 20. CONCESSION. There is great force in the right use of terms. Worda are sometimes things. Let us bear this carefally in mind in the present controversy between the North and the South, The South, and the Northern friends of the South, pro- peee a compromise. Now, what is a eotnpromiset Simply au agreement to settle a difference by 4 mutual couecs sion. But is this what the South demai Notat all, £0 far as we yet have euy means of judging. Tha propo: filion of Mr. Crittenden, a fair representative of the most erote Southern views, is net a compromise, but a con cession, to be made alter ether by the free labor States, the cher party conceding nothing at all, It ip bettor to understand this at the outset, and we ehall simplify the question by adhering to the richt ase of terms. Seven mouths ago the repablican party adopted a plat- form at Chicago, and by virtue of the prin arbounerd have ¢ a President and V th ramont dee tion carries ¢ itieal here with history, with legislative codents, and “revolutionary in tendency.” # that freedom fe t ermal condi lerritery of the United and it de y of Congress, of a Territorial Logisia dividuais to’ give legal tence to ‘This # clear and explicit; it is the ae a whole and of the indiy/d r itnor they have any cted tion ot n's proporition? He asks be amended—and amend 1 gos t einvery hall be recegniged vergrcee.ond ehall be protected rial government, and that when nor even of that north 7 kk for admission to tho E a # the States themmclvea , t ik be grant In other , asks, on behalf of the . hall beccme an irrepealable constitutional pment, which the re Wopore to cone wu? Only that # siavery shall be prohibited in ¥ State therefrom shail be ad. © Union on demand, notwithstanding it may have @ prowinvery copstitat If it be waid that | Uus, prectioniy, i of no impertamee, beoude a pro- | slavery Constitution ee be of no service where, it is slavery cannot exist, then, itmay be answered, prohibition ef slavery north of that line is of no prectical value. But the teuth is, it is a promise made to the ear and broken to the hope. In bat portion of New lying worth ot 86 deg. 2 very may be low into it from = vy thing when #he heecties a member of the Unwn. Tt is absurd to call puch a preposition es this a compromise, It te a ‘ crsion Of the mort readies) and vitel character, Wo toade such a bargain once, and were ready to #tand by it. | abe webvure to breek it, when, Uhirty years | wanting, there » some chance of Ure North ‘receiv ing her thare of nett, We have thrown up our bands ond given them the game twice already, wo are Got diepored to third time, Mr. Crittenden’s tecond proposed amendment ts, that Congrese shah bave 1@ power to abolikh slavery in the State. The implication here i® that some men, or body w propeme to exere hayewer. We know ! f of men » not gis of the acensation by ' t to do whut ad eituer the irtenti« in this we cation slavery in the District ts a question of e which we are quit gress, Tt i® not tik ener than it ought (o be, and it is sate where it now resis. If the weehes of any distinct boty pafemeing, «have never of the power to do to be put in the wrong by The of people are to be consulted in regard to it, it should he or these whe are mest pearly interested—the people, vam ly, of the District iteelt, and mot of two States out side of it | Nor co we gee the reasonablences or propriety of grant ing mere to Fhewery im the free States Chan was giv of the constitution. Savery antes ly the and Ws repeqnant to the common low and Gur Jathers felt that they fad concadert ‘ ogreed that the fugitive shave shoakt bet be Ger horged frei service by State legistatton; they ¢ ot oy ree thet the slave eode should extend its jurit coction ever the Tree Ptates, and that the common law nel natural seatier lat ide fer the convenience of the own ere of We do not care to eee the port of New York, for instenee, a port of export for Virginia and vee wanting abjpment to New Oreans, to Maryland pla i to Centre! America er Mexico, which, under Mr Hed compremine, 18 to be open anew f ts Keen as hereafter 4 + doves inve the free Seales, ” ed ay ia oe at the vik f loving them ina orm freetom. In this reapeet leeth ue, and the compro: ed we should retvarn the fugitive ” theseterc mice wbereby they wine positive chenge for the nettor Mr. Crittenden eis, ond che ently. The framers of the Fugitivs + bilo 1800, righty judging that «man who was # > mi joner ander f to act © that anconstite low wovld aio Ie base to accept a bribe, J Mmght not be wanting, prow forit in the law The fee for a j tagainst an tlavo wise for cae in be faves 1 cay as It m, but bas proved euficient. Thi of Cite to repeal ppreee that the nt ve catobers #] itee if * $10, nete, pend for—bet all | Northern idnay or cor it cif eult to take re lawe & pd on] rene up all that adegititnate, const years: | Of labor. inspired by deep con- | vietien, bux gained, they im days of Carkpest and peril, would pever: peek | fo gem what, if piven new, woukt back | goin onder the growing fentiment of the North at Bo éieta Ddack | when de- tertoipation en ene and on the other would jeod to a strogglie to whieh oe child's play, Itina | foto) fooliebners to make euch concessions now. We aro holf threogh thie battle; let ue finish it ike mem, and be with the controversy forever.

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