The New York Herald Newspaper, August 23, 1863, Page 2

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2 THE FRENCH OCCUPATION OF MEX: Prince Napoleon's Organ Condemuiug the Emperor's Policy, and Showing Its Inevitable Result to be a War with America Co. who shed their complete triumph of tue sacrosanct idea of liberty. The Spanish Press on the Ameri- ; can War, &e., &e., &e. [Transiated for the New Yor« Hexaup from L'Upinion Nationale, August 9.) We are about to dnd ourselves placed, in Mexico, in a situation pertectly aval to that which we have made for ourselves at Kome, between the liberals, who vainly ask us to gv for’ wid the reactionisis, whom we refuse to follow in their backward course. The clergy applaud us to day at Mexico just as the black pafty applauded us at Kome in 1849. But if Marshal Forey continues to speal of liberty of religious worship, if he refuses to restore the property of the convents, if be permits himself to resist the Archbishop of Mexico, he must expect to see the party which had so warmly acclaimed us treat us soon ag we wore treated at Rome, by the Merodis and the An- toueltis. And then, no matter how little the situation may be complicated, we may calculate on General Ba- zaine, who is charged with the maintenance of public tranquillity , writing here that fi\teen thousand men is too small a force for him, and demanding reinforcements. We do not yet kuow what the government of Mexico will be, whother it will be monarchical or republican, nor particularly on what broad shoulders we are going to Pluce the heavy burden of rehabilitating a bank- Tupt vation. In any eveut, we bave cause to belicve that that laborious work will fall entirely to our charge. In fact, what they are a little deficient in everywhere, = at Mexico far > than ee else, is capable men. will be for us to organize the army, the finances, pyiblic education, highways, and the adminis woh omy We will thatéfials, to Hind ourgely i dear do CVerHILITE Ue real ven Hes i} lave ws administer a great empire: we will be responsible for ite destinies, and if success is to redound to our glory it must be ad- mitted that, by a fair return, its failures will be imputed tous. A considerable share of our attention, of our sur- Works, for building iron-clad steamers, was biown down, los will come embarrassments, difficulties and complications, the responsibility of w! A cet iy ich we will.be no longer free in vain shal! we ask ourselves whether it advantageous for France to go so far to seck pete ~ g neglect its internal affairs, its European work, for the eak6 of pudertakjpg education at a remote point, and of unnecessarily cifirging ourselves with desperate cures. Tho answer will be that it is too late, that we are en- ‘Dot jonths, ficult the Teun tinestand ward etna, oD pa jean ton, being open, a portion of the rest of ‘the ovens end | The Ostdeuteche Pow says:—‘‘although Leo has net mat dploratie rife J wag soraod with fearful oraah, been annihilated, and the pacific overtures of the South is a curious is A 2 ane ove Cael partin pd aca fact bean ioe trae Cade Tomar nigh to bays have not been confirmed, it is undeniable that the. last ame gone to Meese gat te one kaos exactly wohy | whart a large quantity Of umber was tipped over, broken | V#tories of the Northerners have givon the theatre of that has grown serious by the very i, | 20d scattered, and some boards carried by the wind some | War quite a different aspect. The invading army has Obstacles which it has encountered? Js it a vast proje distance. The tragments afforded considerable been ifteea giveto Francean American India, lob: poverret and ening, | OF fuel seekers, Several other, wharves Sutfored ‘some, me web apna nae namie ‘ed a3 England governs and exploits Asiatic India? No one | #94 little wind mill, between Moulton and Corey streets— p South of the Botonng, and the henciiee f Mestonte can say with certainty, But certain indications permit the foe i supply peer on De. Begs block of houses on | established at Berlin, qjose to the river, which his caval- Suppostion th is enterprise had, in the idea that conceiv- “3 haa already crossed. esistance coment ey edit, a certain connection, difficult to be defined, with the PB icsegrantng or ag tobave been heavy, and rs pa am York and be having Sadie Every one has remarked the solicitude, unexpected enough, which the French government has’ evinced for the Southern confederacy, and its oft-repeated attempts upon the English government, fortunately repelled by the latter, to give a united recognition to the slaveholding republic of which Mr. Joflerson Davis is the President. Public opinion in France has not understood the reason for this preference. Ia principle, the South is founded upon slavéry—an institution that is tmmoraland Jy opposed to our ideas and our mauners. It ‘hat has commenced the pe with the North. Un- 8 nterest us, “But que:tion 3 land stilt nd a i profound. the South stopped the i Zt ardor re of = Brenth government * On the 9*%er band, and admitting that the South may form 4 “parate State, and that the recognition of France -may/kid her in doing 80, it is certain that our presence in ‘cico will be still more disagreeable to her than it, Bo to the republic of the North. In fact, the slaveholding ing | at Y in went ‘that even Lee’s army, the last hope of South has only cme chance cf, living and of rotating he At Givot (Mehal’s ireuplace). in 1745), wank fe study | secession, wan partly demoralized, tus the Heaato states pret then rom wa scr aera t| Gat precared him on aunts of a sble Yvatan, | Sha sup cpnning on. pee a Pm ‘Ton. a! 4 “4 BE. Slavery, restricted will secretly undermined ur | By which: Lo Te a a ia de bite | fantey, artillery and trains all inextricably tized up; go v y overthrown by the North, The South can live | enter the service of the Duke of Orleans. After this | 'b*% (General Meade pursues them he'may se Oy eee eye ge ans ous recognized | prince's death Navolgilloacquired an honorable reputation 4 “perhaps end the war by a single, blow. But, the orto wa aE ee it ee atte lactone duce Cuba, Nic- | ag a conductor by presiding over the concerts of pursuing a flying euemy seems to have been lost with the ‘Bragua oe Contral American republics, and the | Ojympique, for which Haydn had writer. six first Ni i 4 absorption of Te eee cousummated, show clearly | 419 opened a gratuitous school for violinists ‘The much talked of and deferred interview be- enough that the South toworebends the necessity that | markable product of which was Alexandre twoen the Emperor of Austria and tbe King of Prussia has weighs upon it and that drives it to conquest and tothe | the eccentric patriarch, who died the (her day in | At length come off. Francis arrived at Gnstein on Propaganda of slavery. wt extreme old age and want, énd who, recollected, not | Sunday afternoon, and remained till even- It, therefore, the South should succecd in consummat- as f who {p“nis time set Ful ing, he took his wire for Vieona. Of course ing its separation, it ee dor:btful that it would regard | on fire, but also from f Nabe cemnan TOp®. | the official telegrams describe the meeting of the two po- “with tho t distavdr tho French fing tloating over | Napoleon. At @ late Arid, Avoigilie entered the ser- tentates as exceedingly cordial; but it remains to the soil of Mexico and protecting it from its avowed | vice of Louis Bonaghres when, King of Holland; subse- | whether it will bave any political results. The Em. “covetousness. Our Mexican establishment will then | quently returned to Paria, and died there in 161 ~was not attended by any of his ministers; bave @ dangerous, threntouing vicinate, So it is one of | Vote gome works “2 the theahin tt relerolne Suisse’ | Dut this, if M. de Bismark is as clever as be thinks not the least astonishments provoked by this expedition | among the aumb ..” “duce and trios for the , might rather bo an advantage for Prussia than ‘that the French government should porsist In seeking t | Voting In 19", 2" gSlk? RORAEAE, luce tit tee torevo sive teeing tbat his Imperial’ Majesty hax been ‘induce England'to recognize with it the Soutbern repub- | justi ot M. Fetis beugl aret tenes to perform strange freaks when not Tio. whore attacks the French flag, if it romain in Mexioo. | printed * ‘ud Tepublican music—the first, popular will inevitably have to repel. 1/, then, as is bel ‘and | Fi wn separ: the Sern phere gat adahacere o Ct Mag! ed the and ned the 1 ipedition to Mexico a: icy pr Te pect to the sm, “ » | gradually underm’ by that of Poli Beranern confederacy, must bi achnonier 4 hat, | Of ene ut sie by ciara Naval in, ia more forms | STORED, Azote and dome!” vst re the orday ot 1 lecapen! caoow and Leopol, dread anly polat that remains evident is (hat, We soryain at than ene—as. for os we ee ae niment | ‘acurring the resentment Laie Bapoloce ‘that prevents sexi a nat hae bat nuoponed ty goa? ts Praieds | Now: lotus 900 what bo says of fauget de islet | She Austrian, authorities Ing sul more severe , sae Ghe ahall hate o repel an incvitalte invagigr? eeibear, and 1 Know him fo 1800s oF the buss of my papi i , eo oo If, on the contrary, Oa SR eC the great ve | ale te oramo trogasntle there; and wrote HP tranquillity will be sooner at. eit aot bo, Indeed, for the punt any betler fortune. Serentcos by. instinct. (for he was spread of, revolutionary ‘eas | more ery, which it will bave abot se Of spreading slav | mediocre musician), for which sho used fending toether tare OY onch oF oan wed at homo, that it will Peer Hrangatlantic (Wr 5"but rather for the pur- Hse of repelling Europaap * uiher’ wniluence, of maintaining intact ical education as his, he could produce the melody— ‘come Rorofgwing emp 4 Heme doting and. pena, | gona ore owl rhymedto which har, | "Hii and rein thwe frig ams dane six hundred yan apenas nown is owing.” ‘The al curtous, coming as it does » hich na be faeee- and soldiers who have contracted the i} itive claims advanced by | Teuses by @ defensive alliance, which woul seve ett ey Atd won the clwe of the civil war will | hae Tyne held che oone-culoe tune ‘asa Plagiarism from | diately Joloed by all ‘ua otber States of Germany. Sich uthout employment n discussed at ti a passal 1eN3,3° noe dread war when 18 aaefcl, whem itis just Xe Core a eae 4 be, accopled. asa | designs of Franco apo the Rhine, and force Louis Napo LY” y the supcuss of a great cause, when the blood sued | fing] adjustment of the authorship of the melody, | leon, if he really means to undertake a war for the libe- ae redemption for @ great injustice. and the price of a ‘reat stop towards the normal reconstitution of nations. But really to provoke «certain war with North one certain in both hypotheses, whether of separation or Teconstitution—and all for tha vain glory of weaning an oid colony which our diplomats have mistaken for a young nation, would appear to us sv deplorable, 80 sensoless, 50 perilous, 80 periectly opposed to the interests, instincts, ‘and aptitudes of our country, that iis not without pro found apprehension that we see our government ome without eare,and, as it were, in a fit of distraction, into this fa'al cours.’ At this moment the whole swarm of con- tractors is buzzing around it. Nothing is spoken of but ratiroads and canals to be built, mines of gold and silver to be worked. But, alas! ‘tall that glitters is pot gold,” and if the government is wise it will hasten to profit by the iy fh (here the best government possible, and bringing back our (roops and our flag. “3 Let it give advice, let it lend skilful mon, if it has any to spare, but let not mufle elf up ina guardianship of which (ht present gene ation would no see the end. Above all, let 1 Dot be seduced by the fallacious hope ot recover. ing the expenses of the expedition; otherwise it will s000 have expended a thousand millions to gain back three hundred millions. If these three hundred millions are lost, se much the worse Let us pass them to the account of protit and loss, and let us not engage blindfold am an unknown way at the end of which is to be seen only a certain war with North Am rica. Let us bring back our troops to Europe: thay will not be at any (oss for employmen’; and if Mexico falls back again into disorder let not France be drawn juto a solidarity which nothing justifies, nor be paralyzed by a transat tautic Algeria, which she would have to protect against enterprising aod formigable neighbors. Opinions of the Spanish Press on the American War. {Translated for the New York Hexanp from La Discusion, of Madrid. | * © © What with be the result of the strife? Europe is full of shadow, aud there is no time, perhaps, to see which succeed each other Your days ago profound grief were io favor of the speak, the sentiment liberal Inbor shows ittouists.” Ail appeared loss. and Port Hudsot’ were not ore their walls and 4 fallen, cast down with the ible rapidity. upon the minds of ait w! d "i , the faith and the constancy victory produces. And bebind those disasters was seen tn tly tive the inevitable fall of New Orieans, and with $¢ the wndispated possession of the most He y and usctal part of the Missiesippi, that great artery ot the United States through which flows the Tie of the Caion, symbolized in the thousand boata that move on its waters as the stars deck y And on the other side, the ast. sure and courage. The banner of » army of one hundred thousand m © the talent of a distinguished general, h the storehouses the most abundant and com had penetrated triumphantly nosylyania, and was threatening oe the North ia the profound abyss din the atil more horrible one of slavery. ything was supposed lost for the North. Imperial nging for iniquities whieh are the only fruit of despotiom, was preyering to profane the tombs of the jonns of Lafayette with the rade plant of the protoriins of the modern Cesar. Cautious Tngland, notwithstanding her reserve and PTudence, was About to move, and some facts like the extravaga:t and miserable proposition af Roebuck io the Ff of Commons shéwed to the world that stil the fortune of evente weigh mach upon the ofd polt- And in five. even in + whose role, hitherto peutra! ood even indifferent, but most just, appeared cor tainly the most useful, its galvanized and sleepy minisiry were rising af © spectre (> throw themselves into the arme of the slave traffickers, paying them bock with vedo for tho outrages and disturbances’ whi: h Gree the peace of Cuba and strove t separate bor (ro Dor metropais, WH) France still inaist in ber thoman and giver Qeaice, Kogland in her imperceptible proote of toavin. deren cae South, Spaim iw ber saacume es of row. | peat, because by it the Liberty of the world ts aclyoved. The Tornado at East Boston and Vicinity. | avout az reg in Fast Boston, o Bforya af Bet P rene iu the northerly part of the Island. recently erected on the Glendon wharf by tho Atlantic ae 3 } portion Of the shod was carried {rom tho wharf into | battle af Gettysburg, which it prefaces with the foliow- damaged by the fall of the shod. at from $1,000 to $2,009. Just lott off work, and no person was injured. streot, owned by himsolf aud Mesars. Mok: were algo prostrated by the wind. hehe Duilt, at a oost of $1,500 each, to f anaes pe: ‘Mun ramet ictal ious, resistance, dee Saath bes sot the frame Ant fe. —— Bquando, ways in wi of tho fi rious Confederates, started Dy the root of the shed tallicg tee ee nere nesmanencie Sa Ne soa Stoner some fifty or more A portion of one pene) crashing the roof for about fifty foot, and causing the aenorndi ot etesnen ses Ce wharf is estimated at seve. | °CCubled with the sieges of Vicksburg and Port Hudsoa, building, and {a remarkable tially delayed by tho destructi 4 Qne of the ‘im trees niggers barge quantity of window glass was bro! Yeiliance, wilt have to be devoted to Mexico; and henee | 4 learn of aay further damago ¢ nen Rabe ee 5 } trees were denuded of limbs, window glass broken, &c. | "In Roxbury thore was but little rain, and the wind very strong. Charlestown in its exposed portions, and also the hills in Chelsea received a heavy blow, with a sbutter or two tanbled owe eee Dut Cog paterhil daurtge,” Pao where, but no mater . Fattling of the hallstones’ on Mount Bellingham ct have taken down a few light objects, tt shutters and loose Sane ae caudate paar glass. In Watertown, during the height of the storm, the lightning struck one of the barns ou the estate of Mrs. Winchester, widow of the late Colonel Winchester, near Grove street. on ly back of Mount Auburn Cemetery. The barn was the one near the residence of her farmer, Mr. Joshua Stone. ‘The atroke set the barn on fire, and it was totally con sumed, with eight tons of hay and one ton of oats. : The speculations concerning ‘‘La Marselt more than the has not wished, up to : this. time, to eae he South; and te t¢ she who has er toot name of Navoigille, though the real name was Julien. Ho was a composer and violinist of some celebrity, born considered the parent of any of tho fifty. For, as w: pointed out in one of a series of lectures “ On National Music" delivered not long ago at the Royal Institution, that collection contains three or*four song: earlier date, claimed also by Rouget de \’Islo, in which every form, and almost every modulation of ‘-La Marseil- laise,’? are 80 distinctly to be (raced as to arrest (almost 4 “ beyond disproof) every one who has a perception of atyle. reba!) We cannot turn aside from this argument Coe! the that, tee M te I with the un prououpcable thecry of M. Fetis, unless we are to assume that Citizen croft jason os ucvavnt a tates from the alleged scene Navoigilie wrote all the go called melodies of Rouget de Visie. Further and lastly, there is less in a printed name ‘a ‘especial! temporary pacifica ion a! Mexico by promptly comstituting | {entve' , ong wae a tune by Relesiger tesued. after edition, as ** Weber's tast waltz?” Thore wasa melody called ‘Pestal”’ published some years music of @ condemned amatour, writteu on the eve of his execution, but afterwards claimed by a living composer. The names of Beethoven and Schubert have been again ‘and again confused on the title pages of Vienna waltzes. Tostances of this kind could be multiplied by. the score: the case is merely worth dwelling on as showing once duced by the fancy that he has made a discovery, and as illustrating the caution which ought to accompany every step of musical research. fixed for to-day. speak of it most highiy. (the chorus master and composer who ro set Lhe poem of Here Wagner's “ Mymz Dutebman’); on which M. ere nebo nd resizu the baton, and an excel conductor, M. Georges Halal “ oo ses Halal, (rom Lyous, reigns w ing her most eternal and most dangerous enemies? The telegraph has spokeu with a terrible eloquence —The invading hosts of Lee driven back to the shores of tha Potomac, which ippears destived to be the thoaére of the grandest episodes of the war; tho walls of Vicksburg Dattered dowa, those of Port Hudson sbvut to fal! ‘Yoo North is cong at if tt ws howto protit ction Ought to be sub: OUR DESPATCH FROM PRUSSIA. jorover, Ahe routed pA Ldagce and oppose a Bike t Tha Our Geriin Corres; wuop the North records tho capondence. war, if a regard for the blow its ‘heart, au enthusiasm foe hymns of triumph to the men food aud lost their lives to Becure the Bonuin, August 6, 1863. The German Presi on the American War—The Beginning of the End—Moeting of the Emperor of Austria and the King of Prussia~The Polish Revolution—Contradiciory Keports—Summary of the Last Operations of the Insur- gents, tc., dc. ‘The Germaa papers are full of the latsevents at the pont of war in America, which moat of theat seom to look upon as le com nencement dela fin. The Bertia AU- gemeine Zeitung, which has already published a series of instructive articles upon the different plas of the cou: test, written, fam told, by aa officer of high standing a the Prussian service, now gives a detailed account of tho Turrahsfor death! (Viva be mrrte’) nt So cried this brave copie entering into the battie Long live death, we re- [From the Bostou Travelier, Aug. 21.) The storm of wind and rain which visited this viomity last evens did much damage ‘nado a Tie obw thea The buildiog was one hundred and Of _ dab! ag by sixty foot wide. The tron-clad Casco ‘was not | Te remarks:—‘The iP Reenaye racine of the The logs is estimated | Cofederates into the Northora States has ended like the ‘The mou employed there had | first: after a lost battle General Lee bas withdrawn his army beyond the Potomac. Now, as thon, tho North was apparently ia imminent danger; put it soon They bad just been | turnod out in both cases that, whem met by a Two large sheds on Mr. Douald McKay's wharf, Border In one of the sheds he bad laid the keel and most of suflicient strength for a guoceasful offensive movement. The biocks of the | The presout failure, however, is likely to have more ge- upon them, aud injured. of the t : from various indications, that their resources are nearly of the sheds fell upon the new machine ‘ exhausted, and sinco the severe defeats sustained by thom in the West the Northern armies, which were hitherto derable damage to machinery. ' The whole thousand do! that none: of them red. | The building of the Monitors will not be mate. quarter.” After desoribing the battie from a strategic point of view and awarding consideaable praise to the manosuvering of Gea. Meade and the steadiness and devo-° tion of his troops, the article concludes by observing that tho casualties of the Southerners may not have been much greater than those of the Unionists,and (that they do not appear to have lost more than a couple of thousand men during their retreat; “but, even without adverting to the fact that numbers tell more heavily against the South, the moral advantage obtained by the North is of the utmost importance. Lee’s veteraus, who almost began to deem themselves invincible, hore discovered that the troops of the Union, when led by a! and circumspect command: or, are their equals in every respect, and the Army of the Potomac will bave regained that confidence in itseif which had been weakened through the incapacity of its former chie’s.”” Maiden chimneys were blown down, int Bellingham, Chelsea, ded rather though not without @ bloody conflict, the federal com- mandor-in-chief will not want the moans of pursuing Lee, whore only line of retreat will be the high road to Rich- mond. But even there the secessionists will not find tt 80 easy to maintain themselves as previously; for in the South the federals have resumed the attack upon Charleston, and have already taken Morris Island. In Tennessee Rosecrans has driven his adver- sary clean out of the State, and Bragg has taken refuge at Atlanta, after abacdoning his strong position at ‘Chattanooga witbout firing a shot. To add to the disasters & few panes of the banks of the Charles river, and near- Musical and Dramatio Gossip. {From the London A um, August 8.) ? put forth ao late number of the Gazette Mt ran accordance with the rule of the institution. This is t! m§:—Rouget de Visle, Captain-of the , 4 of the Confederates, the fall of Vicksburg and Port Hudson mn f 6 ‘ © | Bach of the various hotels dines from five hundred to-fit- + 2 ° a0omployodas guch “ Dourg io 1708, composed a | tias deprived them of their last foothold on the Missis- | sonal ecitaiet soot an nite: mintmioenbees. toon hundred daily,and the proprictors estimate that | Srilliant Skirmidh with Rebels—Rumors of More War tw co mepiggtaled ‘itinog "rogue ames OF's- | sipp, and baled the attempts o their goueral to effect a | 10 the prisoners, to that detection woule be more aay 1a | twonty-dre er cont more vistors have arrived at Sara- rng a gd of = Bushwhacking—Stavery Agia , case attem| escape. OR, 7 a and fell into the hands of a tt known by the | diversion ia the vicinity of New Orleans. Lee’sarmy in toga the past season than upon any previous one. BC Hu vi isolated. rock Bene eng feos bleh sical py md ‘The “dippee’ boys, who work 20 wealously deaiiog out 4 A Orilliant afair occurred in the Gouthwes) oa: the , stands bow like an against which the surf te beating with increased ‘fury.”’ It would appear the forte accom! 1 was always aston: oie (to ‘conclude our citations) “that, with 80 poor a ‘de ’Isle’s own story of its origin, fixed to | ration of Poland, to carry it on somewhere else than upon eet German soil. is collection of fifty national songs, dwindles into tne | GPT the polish insurrection, the dificulty of obtain- ag | ing authentic information concerning it increases with every day, and the syatem of fictitious telegrams is Ccar- ried to such a pitch that one hardly knows what to believe The other day it was announced that there battle ai Krasnistaw, in which the Rus- had been a great ew jatness of an impudent lio—what is more, 3 of a far of action, The Wiener Zeitung, which boasts of more cor- rect intelligence, gives a resume of the progress of the in- surrection during the month of July, acocording to which tho patriots were particularly unfortunate im the palatinate of Kalish, where the corps of Taozanowski was beaten and di , and that of the Frenchman Gavier completely destroyed; also in the palatinate of Cracow, where Chimalinski and Ruzycki were defeated on the 7th at Janow and Luthiels au and killed on the 12th. The palatinate of Sandomir was remains of the detachment of ‘on the other hand, a new corps bad made its appearance, under the command of hapa ng hha tne / an officer-io the Turkish service by the name of Murad Bey, who suc- ceeded in reaching the forests of lubarton, when be was attacked on the 15th by a Russian detachment, consist. ing of four companies of infantry, a troop of and two guns, aod an action ensued which ended in the repwige of the Muscovites. Meantime the Dands of Javkowski, Laski, Ruski, &c.,had collected oear Hansk for a continued attack upon the rather important town of Chelm, but which failed for the want of unanimity among the different commanders, and after some skirmishing with the enemy they fell back into the marshy district that skirts the river jn the provinces of Augus- towo and Kowno the Ri 8 hac massed large bodies of troops and fought severe actions with the of Sugino, Tack and Wawer, 1a which the insargeots were s but escaped mostly actos the Niemeu into the provinos of Grodno, Among the partisan corps in Sawogitia those of Jablorowski and the cure Mackionwicz were the strongest. The former was defeated in a sanguinary D+ gornent at roseery by the Russian garrison of Tan- To gen and afterw joined Mackienwicz with the debris of liis corps in the woods between Portewicz and a Here they were hotly set upon at a place called Towiany, by the Russian General Engelbardt, who by a skilful ma- nwuvre surrownded and routed them with great slaugh- ver. In Volhynia, after the failnre of the expedition of Wysock and Horotye everything was quiet tll the 20th, when a detachment of two hundred men, under command of Wisniewski, entered from Galtcia, but were driven back upon Anstrian territory the next day, w' the loss of only a few men killed and wounded, but many prisoners Altogether the balance of success is not on the side of the Poles; but the Russians are y mistaken if they imagine they have destroy band » on the contrary, the ws, are recruited ded afresh with arms ‘as concerns music) than our lexicographer ‘edition as the in how an ingenious and laborious critic can be se A rehearsal of the Oratoria of M. Silas is, we are told, Those who have seea the music score Signor Marchesi, jt bas been said, iatends to attempt the career of oratorio and chamber ooncert singing Kogland: but from his appearance on Wednesday as Loporello, in Mr. Mapleson’s ** Don Juan,” it may be in- ferred that hg intends also to take part in opera, where a singer of bis Qualily is much wanted. No success on the stage can be decidea by a debut made under such circum: nces. “mm title of Herr Offenbach’s graud opera, completed for Vienna, the text by M. Nuitter, ee teed with the Baron Alfred von Wolzogen, is be “ Die Geister des Rheins.”? Horr Offenbach is the Goldoni of composers, ia right of fluency. This week's Gasette Musicale speaks of yet another new work frem bis pen, & saynete, Lieschen: ot Fritzschen,"’ just produced at ims. week or two since we were hearing ot his ‘Il Re Fagotto"’ there ‘The Baden opera season has fairly begun. M. Membree’ one act work is bardiy. worth mentioning, except as heavy and wearisome—the latter a rare fault with Freuch composers. The dosire of showing that he can write serious musto has betrayed the pleasing author of “Page Eeuyer et Capitaine.” ‘A posthumous opera by Marschner is about to be pro- duced at Vie At the late gathering of part singers at Prunswick, a part soug by the veteran Methfessel, now in his eighttech year, but, uabappily , was executed in his presence, with every imaginabl nan musical ova tion The Theatre Lyrique will reopen on the Ist of Septem. r, with & new opera by M. Bizet, one of the Laureates Conservatoire = ‘The lat eurviving brother but owe of Gerald Grifin, author of “The Collegians,”’ and from which “The Colleea Dawn” is dramatized, Dr, Daniel Gritlin, ts no more. He membre reassemble | alicia avd Pomerania, prov munition, and ina very short time are p: died jately at his residence ity George street, Limerick, atter weeny a foztnight’s ness of fever, contracted {a [apr ne dns ‘ewe wrelghpesing® yy the discharge of his profession st daties of their alinost uninterrapted defeats.’ saya the SeAle * " sich mg, ‘the Poles are ho means discouraged: _OF tho sum totat of £20,756 subscribed to the Trish | gyen if deserted by the Western Powers, on whono as Central Kelief Committee the United states contributed | sistance, however, they fully calculated, they are deter: £80,000, whieh, allowing (or the diderence of exchange, came to £20,724 of English mouey, equal to more thah two thirds Of tbe whole amount received by the com mittee. A monument to Captain Cook, the great nav'gator, is about to be erected in the Sandwich Islands, A remarkable calm bag prevatiedof late oa the Atian- tie, Late vessels arr at Greenock report the sea to have been as sniooth asa mill pond for days, without a breath of wind ant scateely any porceptible swell, and one ship was becaimed for fourteen days about one bun- drod and fifty miles off the Irish const, a remarkable oo in a quarter of tho globe notorious for the op xtreme of weather xhiditiog of the pupils of the Paris Conser- told that the tex0r voice of M. Soustetle, ‘the army for the opera, excited groat attention, thing oxtrt * ival of © Lew Veproa Sicllieanes,’’ at Paris, has icon place withoat a storm. The orchestra was not tw Signor Verdi, and Signor Verdi returned the sutae to M, Dintaeh. the pre ainga: couluctor mined to carry on the war to tbe last extremity, and tt is only thetr complete exhaustion that cin iead to the termt- wation of thig desperate struggle.’ Murder on the I UNITED STATES COMMISSIONED Before Commissionor Osborn. ‘Avavst 19.—Charles Hur bronght berore the Com. missioner, chargot with nurder of John Russell, a seaman, on board the American ship Swallow, om the ‘voyage from Callao to Hamburg, in the mouths of March and Apri Insts fhe accused was second mate of the vessel, and om (b6 night of the 24th of March, 1963, while + prekeit atoher,”* the eecond mate instructed the aa. canes ho egw wg ig econ eat) wea Russells wd, Marted to Ko, when von coe! ‘naked the deceaged “*1{ hia maine was Rugaeti” @ roplied No." SAVY are Fou to-iog’” retorted the mate, and knocked dectirod down and kicked bim white be was lying oa the dock, Several other witnoses temtided to the beatings recotfed by deceased at Ube farthor boar eas rey 74 Wad wp nes by EY @ornuee ; NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, AUGUST 23, 1863, . and none now comes forward. roar Wer-tiring cadences, | throw the control of the place into ether havds. Map; Tadlno ett Cchisenl all.ae Seine to Pavan ete (PA | dai age ai ale * £ improvements have ‘already projected, and! have he es aoe! continue to go in that direction until Mr. @requite» number of the reigning New York § no doubt that next summer witl Gnd the pl tne iadinal wo sheet belies, : te differently. A grand coacert halband ballroom is te i MNS EL ARERR & reek Gebliot- atlemaion | _On¥t nod Saturdays a fine-band onbivens the | be built, which will relieve the hotelz-of great trouble 2 LATHE quantities have. beon planted, which aro | company, who indulge in any quantity of pollms, bops, | and expense wear and’ tear of farniture; gae, &. aoe a ver’ forward, flourishing state. Sea and cot- | quadrilies, &c. A large Gahbouse is to be built at Schillenger’s 4 a, y Mr. Blake, at “Rowley’s Bight.” on the | ~The has been peculiarly appropriate for pic: | and passenger railway cars will rua coustantly betwees soacoast, to the northward, on the 9th of June last, was | nica, of which:we dally havo two or throe parties, and if | the hotels and the fanding: . in bloom on the 13th of July; and, more, it bids fair to | one tithe of the readers of the Hagato knew what a treat | The season consmenced late thts yoar, and the landiords at this time except the James Welsh, for your pert. prison. new hall, each end of which are locked up separately in colls at seven.o'clock ia the evening, and are uulocked at about seven in the morning. They the privilege of walkiog the hall through the coats and Fires in Demand, dc. , dc. the grocery man, the @fficers and their wives, and: alse: . which 1s perhaps ove hundred and fifty feet long and | gunday last was bigh noon at Saratoga. Saturday night | the borer, tho sesond mau. ee econ OR a ig at Cape May, twelve feet wide. At oight A. are conducted to the common dining hall, and have prison | Svea full cars set down their freight of new comers ‘There is dancing every aight and musi: on the lawas, fare, with, I betieve, the addition of coffee and sugar,and | at the depot, and the various hotels, halls.and private | which are to be endured after night brows her sabler some few articles by ives. mantic o'er theearth. There are two bands, ove atone pecan, tronteoi The gover @ butternut in. amount of our ‘ament ‘and postal currency found ou the persons of the other officers was not large. They had considerable Confederate | Presence, 80 that Nis ad ig sandy, |. He looks to be an ordinary man intellectually. mander—he knows how to obey. to the establishment enjort ence couabatel Nahin panne nt ee notes in stxteca hours of that day was just strty dollars, | ©90ugh, Coffee made the threatened attack. The Axbe: Colonel Cluke ts three or four inches taller than Morgan, | Considering that oaly one in four or five of the drinkers lasted an hour, when the rebels retired, gloriously. whip- Tory slander, with a thin, sharp face and resolute Oye; | uinks of the boys at all, somo little estimate may be | Ped, leaving their deed and wounded on the-field. Cathor- daring than Morgan bimsel : formed of the qumber who must bave crowded the piace. wood puraued them and captured sixty prisoners, a large: Basil Duke is a small man, firmly built and muscular. | The Columbian, Wasbiugtoo, Empire, Saratoga, High ‘number of horses, guns'and three wagonloads of baggage His complexion is dark, and bi and head indicate and ammunition. The revels were about six hundred some mind and a bad heart. He is much the most intel. | RC snd other springs had their proportionate ratio of ligeat looking man of the crowd. attendants. strong, while the Union force did not exceed four bua. a bas aot changed since 1860, n0r 1850, for that matter. ‘The eame glorious old ocean still breaks upon the strand, WEWS FROM BRITISH HOMURAS. ' THE WATERING PLACES. , PO Re Our Highlands Correspondence. Hioucaxve oF Navesunc, N. J., August 20, 1863. Send tm New York Bay—How to Dispgs the Blues—How to Reach Here—Native Lauries—The Music of the Ocean—lerpsichorean Amusements—The Weather , Bc. One of your correspondents bas favored you with lat- tor from the“ Neversink Highlands; 60 I propose to do likewise from bere, though I suppose he meant Narsink, | (1 oroamanting, tbe { ’ Our Belize Correspondence. Brtize, Britian Honduras, July 38, 1963. falernal Improw:menis—A Yankee Mud Machine— What the Natives Think of Ii—Cotuon from Matamewos—-More Ready for Shipment—Mahogany Cutting—Cotten Out- ture, de. “J Oo the 20th the Guatemala Company, from your eity’s of which Mr. DeBrum is the director here, commenced to dig the canal back of this town. They brought dowa } andnot Neversink,as these bluffs are properly cu!\e+ So een Gat Sethe and pinta Sand: geae ‘ ly agree with your correspondent ia the ju. (ri- on ay Put steam on it and get it to work. Aithough | bal be pays to the delightful scenery and foe water 4 ‘The stranger who arrives for the first time at Cape May tho machine was now and everything stiff, atill it worked | yiew’ hereabout, and also to tho panegyric be pays | is sadly disappointed in bis anticipations of seeing a firat weil, aud those who hate doubted, and said, “No steam | ‘Thomp*0n's Pavilion and the company assembled there; clase place. Instead of wide gravelled streets and can over dig a canal here,” were forced wo cave in and | but the elegant and spacious grounds end ‘pri- spleadid beach, stretebing out for miles its door of ada+ mans, invites the pedestrian or rider; but the samo row of miserable, diagusting looking seda re stil palmod olf ‘aa bathhouses. There is ing wanting to make thia place @ first class seaside resort but a class of mea lewport, Saratoga and paved sidewalks, one sees miserable sandy rouds, with sidewalks ecarcely discernible; say, ‘It i8 a success.” The working was in every way | vate resh tonces that are dotted along the hills above and | whore gravel is ‘not only sees broken 7di- B.tiafactor: to the director here, and perfectly astonishing | below Thon ‘00's, among which those of Mr, Minturn lapidated fences the , but even 2 pee - to our natives, who, in crowds, were all day looking on. | wif vie with S0y seaside residence in the country. Onp | {be | carrowing. the ‘apace tet ae comeariads ne A Wyker, who had looked im amazement for some time, | of the finest pa 20ramic and birdseye views of the Hook, | detracting from the appearance of the hoteis, which firned away scratching bw bead, saying.—'“Hi, lve, river, Long Branch, Branchport and | would look more lively and imposing without thom, ‘One What taneet too damn rascal, do him work that fashion. the cocan, ts pacsented from the terrace of Me. M's does not seo a looking in the place, except wid seeeet®. Tea ae ee eee eae anaes house that I have ever witnessed; and, then the ramble the United States. and that is, closed. The rest are sll fd a ‘0 it, or alon; beach, is mot made uy; are ve of, 80 good Carib replied—'*Bolize done for now. | Poor man ucnen he Wa visit there. : ame | aetae n, Oee oe ie cane beind of teat vania Dutch farmers. There is no pretension to melee Locale along th Hudson. rat Now the view from the taqwer is magn! inary e ) OF rt oF “y ‘Branch, and I venture to assert that the Mountain House cost more money to erect than tse whole of Cape May hotels. What they call bere the lawn and pavilion would make one laugh who had een the nicely out eward and lattieod bowers of other Joss protending resorts. ing Tho lawn and big patches of open ground are filled with “and make a rank grass, weeds and clover—eate harbors for mosqai- ‘This place is qi toes, as one may easily find out who attempts to wall speediest way, however, and the mast comfortable, is to | across one. ‘Not a tlower, a tree, or even @ bush, relieves take the steamer Helen, from the fot of Robinson street, | the monotony of this view, or affords shelter (rom any morning at cight o'clock, and Ww)‘ eleven o'clock one seang ses ee aoeen a August. In the middie of cam be duly installed in any of the ,botels, aad if he'is | this spot je-a square box called the pavilion, im fond of oysters, ciams, crabe, hb, weakfish, | which a few roegh pine benches, without backs, are sup- muscles, &o., he’ will be duly . fhe national | posed to supply she place of seats. From the second of the United Gate en ee the Commercial Agent | heyorage of Now Jersoy—apple wit—can also story of this box you bave an excellent view of a row of pe ry port bids fair to be as popu- | procured here, if any one’s appetite abould lead thas hods used as bathhouses, 0, ye gods! Buch bathhousesl the United seemeeoeancr anon. Have you mo good men i | way, ebough we aro blogsed witha better beverage ia & | Made of beards whol never exporienced ‘the handiwork tbe United States, or can they not bo had for fteen hun- | doe welt of chalybeate water, whic’ imyatrts a tonic in- | of either planer or painter, they are filled with knotholes « ee ‘and the pickings.” The latter are to the stomach and digestive rally. end cracks, and they are ofthe sand, sendy. From those rable, and covered up under the names of office hire, | | “The-eompauy here this Yoar has boeu muah larger than | wrotched holes the Bather emerges to struggle, through price ea ce eared a pee is as sol heretofore’ yex we all have beon well wathified. I cag | the deep sand or cut his feet mmong the and stiff bes of oue hundred and sixty bales of cotton | scarcely how any one. can enjoy, the stifled airs | reeds whion are strown along the {rout of these boxes. eer cner Cerra nate: trams Masasncece ty the Britis’. |. end stra: etiquette of Mn@ Sbaron, tesay | 1 do not mention these things for the purpose of dis- thadten! la, owned in Halifax. She reports more | nothing of tbe mussy victuals, ‘Ritcheos and paraging tho place, but to show that Cape May has gradual- a7. (c0 thodennd Dalen at Laas OBet under abiement. Tuned seaiters, whea such. a place invites them as (big. | ly eunk from ber higty position as » rival te Newport and fe have bad no floods this year: consequently the ma- | The total absence of absolute formality ip adorning aad | Saratoga, not for want of facilities of communication or Doe) ae tag wees Yoor' cutting are still up drensng for tenis and promenades le spetbor feature, | natural ‘sdvantages, but throughs tne, uaeotorpriaing ri hore ‘commends itself ‘comfort lovers, white | character of the mea own tele here, as Sarsaparilla is as scarce ag those woods; the war in | hilo of antinnat metodice feocn'tie tangs of brase lo- § 0s the themselves. This will all be changed now, symphonies of Old Oceau foncn produce an abundant yield. ‘Trado continues duil, aad no vessels are in our harbor ee ae ee eee a Reames feared was with # rus. Washingtony Baltimore, Wilmington and Phil ia furnish the buik: of the visitors; Pittsburg. Cinciraati, St. Lous and Louisville also dnd many representatives. The soctety ia quite different from that of 1860. One misses the dark eyed Louisianian and the prou@ Virginia bolies tu the: balirvoms, and the tall ‘Miveizsippian, and frank, generous Georgian. that we could look iuto the future and. see those days: re- turn. The vew people are those who have made mone; either directly or indirectly, through this war. The gu: ctractor, the harmess makor, the clothing contractor ,. they were losing by overlooking these Highlands they would at once vacate ail the quasi fashionable summer hotels, and’ at once put their baggage ow the route for this. delectable oceanside resort. fn the Ohio The chaplain arte Obto pet itentiary rites to the n wi Christian “Advocate that there aro sixty-eight of "3. They occupy the south side of the 4s tetaporarily closed. They Our Saratoga Correspond Oe Saratoga, N. ¥., August 16, 1863. The Summer Hegira—The Springs in Fut Operation—The Veteran General Sickles Recuperating—A Grand Bali on the Tapis—The Preparatsons—Coot Weather—Great- M. and three P. M. they to make upthe clags now boarding houses—slroady overflowing with gucsts—were still further tasked te receive and accommodate the last invoice of arrivals. The sanctity of private dwellings even has been invaded by the health or pleasure-seekors, and dinisg rooms and parlors were converted into bed rooms at aight for the benoit of the increasing tide. of the two priucipat hotels. AFFAIRS IN MISSOURI. Oar S¢. Louis Correspondence, Sr. Louis, August 17, 1868, fur themsel no “belt ‘lled’ with gold, greenbacks and Morgan had His valuables amounted to $23 and sums io "men aro all nee Hogg Morgap ani hi 12th, Colonel E: C. Catherwood, commanding tho Sixta: regiment Missouri State Militia, bad for some time beard: of the approach of Coffee’s guerilias, six hundred’stroug. He concentrated bis gallant regimont at Pinesville, the- county seat of McDonald county, aad on the 12th; eure: ‘His upper lip is short and somewhat sunken, front teeth are glightly ex His com. ‘the waters at the Congress Spring, and whose only remu- and the bafr quite thin on the top of bis neration is the gratuities given by the visitors, state that they received more money upon one of the warm days of He has, however, one of the qualifications of a good com- | last woek than upon aay other day (or seven seasons past. He conforms strictly | qh¢ amount given them in gratuities of five aud ten ceat dred all told. Coffee's object was to overwhelm any and detachments who happened @& be in his way, and: to intercept the communications in the rear of General Blunt. Catherwood's victory will spoil these ptaus ead mato- rially assist General Blunt ia bis operations agatust the revels near Fort Gibson. ° Rumors aro fying through the air once more abous One of the pleasing features bere is the photographing process which occurs at the Congress Spring every plea- sant morning at precisely half past seven o'ciock. Stereo- scopic views are taken of tho spring and surrounding butldings, and of the eotire company, who stand in all the various attitudes of taking the water from the dipping The Diplomatic Party at Auburn. (ccretary Seward and the, party of foreign dione ry ard and the party iplomats and their altaches, cn roule to Niagara Falls, arrived in this city tast evening, at . quarter past six o'clock They were met at the depot by a large delegation of citizeas, and, after entering carri were taken to the residence of rd, and became his guests. The party | boy, drinking, chattiag, &o. ° for rrlae cathe jncintys ee ien'as oe are General Sickles is here, with bis staf. They put up at | Motner projected iavasion of the Southwest by jal ir . Mr. ee cecal nina: ee Taasara ihe Mis. | tte American House, where the Geaeral holds levees | * large force of | rebels, The report goes that ister of Spain; Lord Lfous, the British Minister; Baron | daily from eleven A. M.to one o'clock P.M. At eight Holmes died of delirium tremens the other day Stoeckel, the Russian Minister; M. Mercier, the French | o'clock in the morning his carriage rolls round to Congress | 'a Arkaasas, and that Sterling Prico immediately took command ana ordered a movement towards Yellville and Carreiton,in the northeastern part of the Minister; M, Sobleider, the Hanseatic Minister, M. Bor- natti, the Italian Minister; Count Riper, the Swedish Min- ister; M. Astaburager, the Chitian Minister. Spring, where he alights to drink of the waters. No matter how great the crowd may be about tho fountata, ‘This morning the party visited Fort Hill Cometery, the | they fall back and ano passag ‘ne ai, | State. It is claimed that the ons against Bluot are Auburn State Prison, the Insane ‘lum for Convicts, b oon peargal ig. “pores 5, ont grenge designed to provent any flank movement the West ‘and ofber places of public interest. This afternoon they | WB comes i paged I against an invading force of rebels moving Spring- are enjoying the voi ber: estagg cores! oo a Orderly, and takes his giass with the rest, and under the | fieid, The campaign ~; peregrina desperate re. Seward’s lifeboat, which, fortunately for 1 oye present. a sort to desperate measures. If it has been concocted as pressure of every eye pt it. A brief waik about the ail, which is doubtful, the movements of our - ononetie,“Gretved from: Washington’ {welts Soe: A7* T Seameinw grounds surrounding the spring gomptes his “After the other exercises at the lake are concluded the | Morning call. leaves for breakfast. Siice bis stay * ounds horg he has gained very idly. He looks very pate yet, ogres fagpnes i eApar Angad “ke buts I, bopetul, Bb y speaks with great enthusiasm ward the heart of Arkansas may mar Price's 5 though the temptation to throw a force of eight or tea thousand rebeis into Southwest Missouri was nover se greatas now. T. 1. Martin, where a collation will be prepared for thom. ‘The guests will return to the city about six o'clock P.M. | Of bis Rf np bg inge i ad he thinks ey far diss | tr Price can be bgined by bustiwhackers, bo to It is expected the Mayor, the Common Council, the Pro- by hme ny Sar tuoeseten t ty oe | ‘ofit by them now: for they are hard at’ work in the fessors in the Theological Seminary und the clergymen of all it yo Sot aeentae a uread tik oom ixth Congressional district, doing all the-mischief to the the city will pay thoir respects to the distinguished gen- | Sent woek. This, (Tuosd: Mig aa ee nrepara, { "ational cause tbat devilish malice and cering cun- tlemen this evening ina body. Such other of our citi. | off at Congress for which most exteusive prepara | ning can accomplish. Afew days ago they committed tions are being made The tmmense drawiogrooms of Congress Hait will be thrown open for the occasion, and ali the furniture will be removed to allow fuil scope for the dancers. The colonads upon the outside will bo jHominated with many colored lanteros suspended from each of the columns which support the roof of the pro- ronberies within three hundred yards of Kaneas City aud zens a8 may find it convenient to call will do so at their have burned wagon trains and robbed the mail stage fron, pleasure during the evening, Flags are flying in all directions to-day in honor of the distinguished visitors. Auburn is a quiet, modest town; but no one can blame her if sho puts ou airs on the pre- on. Atnan might live a generation in any of rillas, Home Guard and troops turned out strong to repel the attempt, which was postponed. sent occa rs 5 Our small neighboring cities and never bave an opportu. | meuade, and innumerable gas jets, darting tlamo in over ‘At the Balla road the guerillas bave reappeared. This ia nity of paying bis respects to s0 many of the representa. | direction, will render the eee Oc eee = the frau poteg reducing the guard the stage tives of fa ations, It is an toteresting eveot in | Hant as noonday- inusic wi io to and (rom Springfield from thirty to five, Recond ‘Auburn. hallway between the rooms, and will comprise seventeen | jay arier tho reduction the was attacked and the history ‘The party will leave the city for Niagaro Falls to-mor- row morning. formers in the country, under the leader of the Il Brothers. Gottschalk, who is drinking ship of the the water here, has volunteered his services to act as one robbed, while guerillas in am’ attacked the guard. The guerillas on this road are supposed to be on the took out ~ ee @ paper wad lately interc iwd le of the committee, and it is expected that the pianist will ‘The Maris of Gallifet, wis ies mae “iho Mexi- a bis wget fig en rong Pome gio | omnes fame to pay trogpe a Spring oid acer can trophies, after presenti captured standards to corde dances. of In Callaway oounty the following notice was receatiy the Em ‘at Vichy, retarned to Paris, and banded Mrs. Banks and other colebrities hore will look | rouaa ‘posted to a treo on the Mexico wall in upon the dance during its progress, thus lending a TO THE STAGE DRIVERS AN OWMEXS. over to the Imperial Prince ® miniature piece of cannon taken at Puebla, and “ offei ‘the Army of Mexico.” | Pleasing and attractive feature to the programme. Iwill | ace notice, that if the stage carries any more damned ‘The gua is of American manufacture, and yas presented Maas Remceaae atesing 2 prend ances vail coves om ay | Yankee soldiers from or to the railroad, the stage will be by the President of the United States to the Mexican the United Staves, at which elegant fancy costumes will stopped on this road. Take beets. or gee government ‘Accounte from Messina state that the voloano of Mount | D¢bePredominntl sine aisine natin Etna is vomiting fire and lava. A new eruption is threat- | wil} be thrown open, neatiy and pre} ened lathe direction of Bronte. The iababitants of Ca- | Weaiss ve given by the guests of the house, and wh tania ato terrified at the formidable uolge and the shower | thoy' gay ghail be second. 10 00 affait of the kibd that has peg tices om Mig epson ge ag Leg compa- ny at Lexington they must any goverument Seetnees; if they did, the line would he out doen. Affairs ia the iatertor are really in a depiorabie condi- tion ia many counties, The fear of the Conscription bill of the Union for ich of ashes and stones falling in that direction. Prayers r fire belog offered laine churches, and the relics of saints | 7ettaken Pisce DAS 1 4. resent here, morniags and | 324 the desperation of rebel leaders, inspired, by recent are to be exposed to the piety of the faithful. Terror | eygnings, that greatooats and woollen shawls are indispea ., eek aod a od fre provells neteng the eatire popelaticn. Stole te Comfort. ‘Coal fires burn cheerily ie the grates | Scenes of ineurrectiog which exched, te Siete matonor Tho tons of life among the inbabitants of Mani t the hotels; people sbiver and chatter at the fountains, the lato earthquake isropresented to bave been ah And the stoops of the botels are deserted for the more prtaky Bek ogy yo Lg AL, of 4 reat. The Cathedral, the Royal Chapel, and the Churches | congenial atmosphere of the drawingrooms. Qn Satur- | many have been to @ standstill io . Domingo and 8t. Isabella, the paiace, military + | day the exodua will beg. The company, WhO | their farminy ‘merely for the want of horses. Ia some tais and Tribunal of Commerce, were all razed to the | have been linguring, in @ measure, to participate in the | 22906 peinbors have combined to protect each other, two ground. ball, will be prepared to leave, and Sunday will ina de- with loaded guns while the third pisnted ed, with numerous other houses of nove gree inaugurate tho reign of quiet that settles down over | Standing guard wi lentes goes ae ‘run away. and steamer, = i Kner ing off the port at the time, the place during tho fall and winter seasons. m a are going to waste because it ie 4 u i ivate them. to the American Our Cape May Corresponde: m of the immediate emancipation question ye hundred thousand operatives have been Cara Ietaxo, August 14,1868. | 1s sil tourcs ott pponltion to pa ree hui RAD vi ve con. are ao act tantly employed in the embellishment of Paris since the | Now and Then—How to Go to Cape May—Scenery Bn | (ion Of the State Convention that it sometimes first of January last. Reute—The Disagreements of Seaside Watering Places— | seems that it Kiam been ng append with: A meeting of the outire of the Roman Catholic Bishops | Avaricious Hotel Kéeperi—The Army Contractors on the ae Gomme Save Seen See Ca Sea ct Ireland. was bold. in tho Pro-Cathedral, Maritorough | rmages-ffow ime ts Killed, cbc ‘¢ tation, Yet the question la ful of practical diicatio street, Dublin, on Tuesday and the two following days. [+ sin ca Lig The next session of the Legisiature wil hampered by The affairs under discussion, although not stated, are said Three years ago—in the summer of 1880—I visited Cape Bn rare ‘and by the project for a new State conven to be of the uttbost importance, May. At that time there were three fine steamers—De- . ‘ ‘According to a statistical return recontly published by | iaware, Boston and Keanebec—to which @ fourth was Pe sire ine bo ee oe gf the offioial Journal of Moscow, the popalation of shat city: rived bere by the ‘Sorthwestera Baliroad on Satvrday about to be added (the Cosmopolitan), om *the line be- tween New York and Philadelphia. The war broke up the business of the line, and the government took the ves- on the 1st,of January last was composed of 210,757 males and 134,709 females, divided as Coliows:—Nobility , 20,991; clorgy, 4,929; burgess class, 92,403; peasants, 189/927: 342, foreigners, 4,658, individuals not classi night. A few escape from every such lot before de parting from this city. They find no difficulty in conceal. ing themselves when once out of sight of thett masters mailitary,, 2: now down around Port | or masters’ agents. The negro rogiment raising bere of fied , 10,908. outs as ‘Wenmaperes.- Thay. ore soldiers up the | fers splendid faciiitiextor concealing fugitives For the week ending Augutt 5, returns show that there | Royal, employed carrying | negro ‘A story ig in circulation felating to Edwin L. Price, pany By ted into or canner tenn gold valued | different vayous and rivers. I understand, how- | gon of the rebel General ear 40@, wis a at £772,670; and silver, \—togetber £1,131, 275. I be reestablished after | repetition. Same time ago commander at Bru There wore exported gold, valved at £180,100; ‘and’ it. | crete ‘uae the line, wt SA; rites $0 wink in Chariton county, tasued ao order requiring ver, £25,003-—togetber. £155,429, Tho imports exceeded | ‘he war is over, which wi Lief owners of lessees of all public places to raise the Unioa he exports by £045,846, only to shippers of freight, but also to pleasure seokore. | flag. Young Price tem ie fy The Qaven of Spain ie again enceinte, Her conduct | At present, therefore, the New Yorker who desires to | ther's tobaceo house, ap dipgunting all clston of het peo a extravagant | yieit the Capo must take the care for Philadelphia, | Who threatened (0 Bal down, titted meat for the " 08 to the Nan Patrocinio, . Wicked and. diswolcte woman, notwithstanding ‘all ber | Whence be may go by rail or steamer, as fancy may | emergency... ose unat @ band of despa. plods: preteasions, are awakening load murmurs of dis. | dictate, The cars leave Camden (opposite Philadelpbia) phan, £ phy Aa Tecentiy in. Jobneca county, com content amongst the upper classes of society. Crinoline, wow and then, makes some amonds for the disasters Mt'was caused. This occurred at one of the théa. tres last week, where, cpon the stage, a trapdoor was left open, through which © favorite actress would have been ‘at half-past nine A. M. and four P, M. daily, reaching the Cape at half past two P. M. and nine P.M. One of the steamers (Manhattan and Wilson Snfflii) leaves the foot of Areh street every morning at haif- ecipliated had not the abandaut size of her crinolige | payt eight, arriving aboot six P. M. The for. Riiod’ up the eacancy sud suspended her fair (rame bo- {ween the work above atfl (he realms below wax! suceor | mor route W tlirough « very uninteresting country, ‘nt has the advantage of 19: the latter route, along the Delaware river, although possegsiag none of the charmiug and features of the is yet not deatitute of came. A boy hot more than ten years of ogo, named Giovanni Gargano, the son of an itinerant doaler in bas Just exhibited before the Society for {he Promot the fine Arta at Napies, & group pe An in clay, reprosent Points of interest, not the least of which is the subject of A painting, tho Dasoeat o view of Fort Delaware, whioh the boat passes so gear tog the tbe Cross,” a preserved in the Church Paola, and muck adm\red by Retists. {that the pansengers may seo tho] faces of the rebel pri: «gqmers as they move to and fro. ‘ ‘After landing on the bay side of tho Capo, a drive ted and « half miles over 5 heli road bringwthe travel- Jor to the collection of hotels and cottages known by the dignitied title Of the “City of Cape Island.’ ‘The wlece CurawnaTt, Angast 21, 1963. Roturos from ali but nine countion ia Keatacky give Dremieste, (or Goveraer, ovor 50,000 maori

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