The New York Herald Newspaper, September 18, 1863, Page 4

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4 NEW YORK HEKALV, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1863—TRIPLE SHEET. , LS — oes ae Ee ~ 2 The Times has wot, during the lat fow dayo, born writiog | application of gar principle to one Had Pro- | te be protracted ou oven terms for a long series | took gold and precious articlog, and the reply was, | King of the Nethertands (lor Caxemvarg),,of we Duine “ sident Moor hi of yoars. This, howover, ‘not the case, and wo | “Pretty quick, when we get them.’ The papers of n ADDITIONAL FROM EUROPE. bo Geocecatinaty agalnet sho building of iran, ships for Whe, } ING SSS Cette peetccepaainae theek Saari mrisded | soe’ tearahane Sek aoeeh lmeaneh with a eoasre tro all kopt_and a valuation # made be, | Sehworin aad, -Birolitz, and of tho Southern rebels without the consciousness of the dan- gers to English supremacy which are indicated in the above few sentences. If the journal which for two years backed up Jefferson Davis now takes fright aud turas round, as it js doing, all this means that the prizes tation that a ve of ambition and a lamentable motive of —had bo con. | balance of success which Mr, Seward claims for bis own | fore the destruction of the veasela, in the expec s sidered ait-bumanity aud not America aldoe—ad he ia: | side. 1a potat of fact, taking one Geld ‘with another, Uhe | when peace 13 roatored the Conlederate governmeat will i eltngs, Sav aloabug Saxo Ooburg.ce br aright instead ot semanas @ pri ad ho | South has bad a greater share of victory thao the North, oa of manney equivenes eae — ‘Anhalt; of the’ Princes of 5 Wwareburg-Sondershatsew, jomanded non intervention, uot iu the Bame of miserable ate! . Tn consoquence lorida, and the | Schwarzburg-Rudolatadt, Liocitonswin, Waldeck, Reuss satoreats only, butto virtue of @ principle, under a goneral Mi aey, Ulo actual treagure of Dewriyoa. the cath Of the | Of tho. elder line, Reuss ‘of the younger branch of tbo fe THE MAILS OF THE ARABIA. 7 form and upon the widest inda——we should give our mily , Seb: burg LA Lippe Beimeld, of the M. ‘ave - “Northern star” is uppermost agaiw, and that south bation future independence ana solvency of the confederacy. . Schaum! ippe, Lippe * large: ta discount, "Nothing 13 60 successful as mars Sgerransroen oa ict rein opt, priviloge “apyway,"” said Captain Mailit, “we have ovst the gov- of Hewso-Homburg, the four (ree cities, Members The Great Britisher is beginning to respect You now, because in the might of your great resources you are Winning “Yes,'' said © leading Inglis legislator to me tbe other day, ‘the Southerners were wrong. They bad no more excuse for their rebellion than Disraeli and Derby had when Palmerston and Gladstone came into office. Sul (so like an Englishman) 1 would be giad to see the Sout win, She will not win, nevertheless; and I Bee now the North, with its enormous resources, must little, for wo've lived on the enemy. Oh, | five and six of the Di "y_ to be elected for one year. ane ween teas det beautifully." In reply to | 8 @rula,'the members of tho Directory wil! be represented ‘ome questions, aa to the method of capture, tho captain | bys plenipotentiary, but they reserve to themselves he aid, “Wo only make war with the United States govern. | right of appearing ip person ou oxtaaordivary occasions. and wo respect littie property. Wo treat prisooers: Art. 4. The Federal Council to be composed of the with the greatest respect. Most of those whom | Seventeen “voices” 8f the Bonen Kate (Gonnliee Canes 5 captured have apoken well of us. To be sure we But 18 Austria and Prussia are now to bave met with some ungrateful rascals; but you meet each, the number of voices in the Federal Council will be 16 took | twenty-one. with those all the world over. ‘he last prize we ‘Art. 6. Auatria is to preside in the Directory and tn the accepted. By what right should Amorica be closed interveution rather than Asia, or Africa, or Oooania? And how can Ainerica herself, 40 proudly displaying that programme, make military demonstrations tn China Japan and else where, without being false to her own privet joar The events of tho lsat few years bave unfortunately demon- strated that the Moproe doctrine is far from baying 4 character of absciute disinterestedneas, The United Svates, which prociatmed it, acted in obedience to certain OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENCE, The Question of Rebel Recog- nition in France. . ¢ was the Anglo-Saxoa, which we took tn the Fnglish Chan. | trlumpb, But what are they going to do with tho peepee on ml ich, qyerent pepmagen mt an: ignation of a belligerent. Why, in recording Beltho other day, in'mid-chaone!, about aixty tales from | Federal Council, ‘but i tho ‘Austrian Plooipoteatiary — ~ - Diggers’ ° 7 7 Avtietam, the federal Secretary is actually compelled | Cork. She had coal on board,and we burnt her. ‘The appear PES. ‘Thue dheor hoary gee posseaging all 0 expatiate On the identical Peres nn of the contending [amg Was @ saucy fellow, and ‘maintained that he was on fo other Dekelioge i gar tig ne Eresiaanny sie! ~ the requisites for admiasion into the code of eterna oa forces, and to add that the Northern soldiers were thea | his plioting ground. He insisted on being landed io an bray peg hd seen. “ reaolut - pd 4 law. In the first place, it has neither the ion of tne | proved, for the first time, to be not inferior in neroiam | Eaglish port, but we could notdo that. I brought bim Sy A a 4 ry aA simple majority oo ce ‘States on the old Oomtinent, nor the approbation of the na. | and valor. and twenty-four men hereto Brest, aud sent them tothe _ sbe voles aor 7 Sekion, he party w ert He, or fais Fm ara ot | rei thn ea at cnet | Ret tat haan eset Rats | ven witb andntod tants Se gory, f ¥ "| ards ment is u . ry the 60" y 4 Py paper peneteeny eat it i not be of ay tolls as, tbat all is infinitely of what we wore pro- | not my business, My business isto take care of the | | The regolutions of the Fedoral Council will be taken by Shali I tell you my answer? It was thia:— ‘Those Yankees have produced’ sume of the greatest inventors the world has ever seen. Your London newspapers, in which you abuse them 80 grossly, are printed upon steam machine of one Colonel Hoe,ab American. You get Your boots and your clothes stitched by American sew- ing machines. An American is at this moment cutting C .evalier’s Pamphlet on a Mexican Empire in Alliance with the Davis Confederacy. i ity of votes, except in certain cases which your splendid barvest with bis reaping machines. The | pared to take for granted two years ago, without being | sbiv.” a simple majori aeaeaaaanemmenmananee allway tunnel through the Mount Cenis 1s at this moment Torre et “45 or the party tiving Iris able ‘any the more sanguine of Northern success, We thought | When the Florida came into Brest she bad been at sea | @re mentioned below. being cut by engines invented in America. You acknow- | to compel them. Hitherto Europe has never thought the | the North would overrun the South in a brief campaign, | for eight months without spending moro than {our entire | The Pleapotentiaries In the Directory are bound te ledge that some of the very test books on jurispru- | Monroe doctrine worthy of serious notice, nor has ever | but would then find its difficulties begin. Mr. ‘Seward | days in port. Betore entering the port of Brest she had | obey the instructions received from their respective A Large Emigration from France to | deace have boon written by Yankees, and that their best - a. | tells us that after two years of mortal si the | not been more than twenty-four hours in any one port, | governments, The relations between the Directory and condescended to discuss it. As to the American popul men have been amongst the greatest orators | tions, especially those of South America, since the Monroe | North bas of the th | although she visited Nassau, Bermuda, Pernambuco and | the separate governments will be maintained b; aE Mexico and the Elevation of the of the world. Don’t. you think guch men know their own business best, and can manage Sterra (Brazil) Xa, ttadeed, air,” Said the captain, | Plenipotentiaries in the Federal Council, Tho Mili it successfully without your impertinent interference? ve solid junk, with- | Commission of the Bund ia subject to the Directory. The out repairs or provision.” fae gle erg ge seat of the Directory and Federal Qouncil is Frankfarton. ‘ i not doctrine is.as far as they are concerned, merely a pre- | having the real 4 toxt for invasion and absorption ¢o the advantage of the We only conclu Latin Race Recommended. United States, and as they have no wish to beeithor in- | have not oven that superiority for which we gave Don’t you think that these men, who have had to deal ‘absorbed, made very little them "i that relative of the | only lost Gfteen men, including those who wore killed and | the-Main. with negro question for ages, can settle that negro | o¢ the political entire in auch favor at alten Confederates is by #0 much the greater. If Mr. Seward | wounded at Mobile, the paymaster (who died of consump- Art. 6. The executive power of the Bund to bein the ~~ ~— question far better than if ignorant moddlers like you | «america ‘Americans’? is all very well, but only in | really wishes to make converts of French and English | tion), and one officer (who was accidentally drowned). | bands of the Directory. In some casos, gion wine thrnst in their oars?” The response hag Sanh, aman 40 far as the nations of America shall think proper to be go- | statesmen, he must adopt a different ine ot See cane Nese come info Riess on 200ke We Sabinass whlch spestiads S-s revausd. to consult the Federal Cc ti . uw fat’ A t f th variably, that I was right; and the Anglo-Saxen is at verned by the men of the New World. By what rightcan | ment. He must show us either the Sout evino- fey order, shaft being Gusts nell rottow its op! aye aptain Ma: 8s Account 0: © | arriving at the conclusion that the intelligence of Ame- the United States claim to impose their institutions and go- | ing a readiness to yield, or that the North has a line. ‘Emperor has given orders that the Forida isto | Art. 7. In asfar as foreign Powers are Crui Tica can alone create the solution of the negro difficulty. | vernment on Mexico, Brazil, La Plata, Peru or Canada, if | which will admit of the restoration of the Union G he petealtted. into thn bes fon. All neneaneny connie, and is Direcheny Je the representative of she Bund. The Directory ruise of the Florida. wae ena #tacovery which 1 bare foal made 1 | Chose eoantries prefer othr inatiaions and our rover. | fia submis.on. Bus be Sockinaseare tert SSCINNS is a7, eae | a aneneaie Selene mere ni Darema alliance with Russia and quarrel with France; for, be- Draeall acne eenae nn ne Pas Tae a In the course 6 aecearten cease Moe, save m0 88 possi i eae Should there be say eoneee of 7 Silents wita Sante Fresco med Prustie, apeioes Keene Srine ia oh loanls fo modern. ciibeen, ae Caiatee tA aera ‘Those ave been three’ in number. "The. Clarence was | territory, the Directory to" take the aeccosary. stops’ for The French Press on the | 24 Acstris. ai the intelligence of ihe world seems | Creittsed nations, and ihe American deencerete:rorsooth, | But what is, to captured of Pornamibuen om the Sth of May, and Teuton, | the detesce of tue aame. "No formal decaration of war th en pan a a ae na “the | Would fain rear them in America! And when the same | the = Oe por ripen Lamar ore sacar ro ‘Tacony, a | “voices” of the Federal Council ‘should there be danger Monroe Doctrine. Hess see Presse nH ie Re Geeceeate, poe i pe ahd pr nipmpnee pet soa ape Frege itrntngeg te tier eal hist aan conteren phodtn altar and tie Locawan Weteme foreign Power and a Federal Slate Ttaly 20d, Spots follog aet:"and’ehore England shale | ©,t78em of sullenéurolation | This might have boon the | Fouth gives not the borrow Captsin Mam expression) ‘'she captursd right | which has possessions not belonging to the German Band, — vend Shein follow aa yand where snail te icy of the Red Indians and tho aboriginal eavagesof the | eveo be inaly, Sem ce poate: ie einen nme found afterwards I do not know. I am told that Maxi- front nc Dut that it sbould be imed by that | very unevenly balanced. arbor, other ‘ft out” was the Lapwing, on Feria page oscar amply oceans ‘There Vv In: milian will not take the Emperorship of Mexico; but I ‘enormoss mass of Europeans who have poe reason do we persist in Doard of which Lieutevant Avrett was put to cruise on | must bes majority of two-thirds of the voices im the How Spain Views the vasion mati tall ou this much in contidenpecettat, th ge the and who have notbing American but the name, would be | subject; but though Mi tbe rr ie made several captures ‘and bas now re- Fosorad ¢ Goan pete wa ee be declared. Peors, of Mexico. “Emperor”? of Austria, he ett toe ‘Louls Ne, | More than an aberration if it were not caprice and eccen- | pains, we Pay consale ite Captain Mamt showed us over bie ship, which was in | Council will decide whether the Bund shall interfere,’* poleon the apocryphal title of «Emperor of Mexico.’”’ They aeectinnt ta ibe ace en inner iaaies “the cag oe expended, This object pretty good order considering the eight months almost | and it was storngly objected to by the French and Italian cy See be a cps en otaron complishing, in Mexico, In reply, it is only necessary to | from inderes Tats ate coteragecatsar: wulen ieee photograe petatticn ter aan too tltee ai Dorma. | Sit the tercitory of the Bund is attacked by hertite 8 t Seward’s Circular offered the imperial hers, I have the best authority parce upon sean pop ‘hey please. | coat upwards of 500,000 lives and at least five hun da, Florida mounts only eight guns—six forty-eight | forces, Germany, as a matter of course, is at war. The ape § : Wi. Cornet Jowett wos here in bapand & preets siding them fn he wor of aainal rgenare: | milions of money i a, eMC acveat™ athens, tle | bier aod wow sunsors” Pere aie at Lam Mowe, S88 | Pre enaiong ust be mae OF the Reviewed in England. who calla bimself’ an American citizen, who raves | 08, and neither restricts their liberty nor the independ | desien of interferiog., The CAAOMAEO Oe themselves | On taking our leave Lasked Captain Mamit whether be | and no pence can be concluded unless with the consont of ence of their choice. matters ‘ about “mediation,” and who seems to me to be all the {From Le Temps (in 6uy of the Union), Sept. 14 ae “exclusively” as Mr. Seward can desire,and if we | expected to be inte on ‘leaving Brost, pointing at | two-thirds of the voices of the suid Cates Bs tien one aa byaireny eas Cy ert ve TE tBe | onto tee! oiAfter all, WAR Is this Monroe doctrine? Why | add another Sy ace tng hep patrol ip! on perry met pe and - to. and from tse ade, cdc can aaae ae of ibe ase of Confederation. eye Seed in ‘the ‘maintenance of the | ine policy of non-intervention lecalized: the United States | to suggest that people who thus busy even super. | affords the only ingre egress nde. | cordance) with) a so tot Crateagration. R rt of the Ge: Prin: great American Union. Do you know th! about | of ‘America keep aloof from the affairs of Europe; they do fouala iotdeprecaiing our intervention might bees little less 'Well,’’ replied he, ‘I expect there will be seven or eig! tl quarrel ween —* ae 08 OMT opts are pet ae Raed se pear: Old World, | tot enter tao wbat is called the Huropean eoacert, on | forward im Areatening ws with the which woald | Win clght blockades alrosdy-‘and i'll go bard but Vl run | vwith'the intrections costatsed to articles 38 and 31 of toe Reform. With that Territory: “Mherstore Mr Mediation’ oemete | the other band, they wish fo regulate their own offaire | drive us ot thesinen. irr your obedient gervast, J. L- | Act of Confederation, does not get on. Have you no law of high tzeason to | (monastthemsclves, and ave fo allow the’ States Barat, August $i, 19° soars Art. 9. The federal governments have to take care that AS deal with creatures of this kind? Look at that base the | ¢/ Surope fo inferfere more fend rvtlneerstabarg THE PRIVATEERS. nates? ee aud order are maintained in their States, Dut Kerr es oe Jer Conway, peop iscsi ouaae mance * This is the trac story ple ee Npreca Komtet, cat ‘ Ship the Clyde. rectory bas to see that thé interna! peace NEW STEAMER OTHER is not imperilied. [The offensive passage in the ida in the Port of Brest—An. | 4 NEW STE FOR RAST! AD PLaces wor | is the, tlorm i felaive to “prcactmary mranren ‘From the London Times, Sept. 5. against possible disturbances” bas been struck out. Among telat trips may be mentioned that Se ene Forgus, | _ Art. 10, The Directory has to see that peace and oon- lately launched by Mossrs. A. Stephens & Sons, of Kelvia. | Cord prevail between the different members of the Bund. "7 hbaugh, which tn runoing down the river attained the | Serious disputes to be referred to the “Bundes-Gerieat,’ rou! and conciuded by proclaiming a republic, with or with: | and Two Hundred and Forty-five Days | speed of nearly twenty apda half miles per hour. This | the new federal Court of Justice. DISSOLUTION OF THE PBUSSIAN LEGISLATURE the abolition of slavery. ‘Had wea row in England,” said an Englishman to me, “the man who behaved as that man has behaved would be banged, drawn and quartered for high treason.” fpdee it, we need only imagine an interversion of parts. | The F tus, therefore, suppose that North America. during English Visit to Captain one of the revolutions whieh have occurred in Spain, Reception of the Party and Histor: Italy, Greece or Belgium, had thought proper to inter- His Cruise=Sketch of R 1 vene; that it had taken the capital of the country in mander—! Broadside question; that it had suspended the liberty of the press, of the Ericsson—“Bobb' Russian Project of a New Con- stitution, THE FRENCH VIEW OF RECOGNITION. | itrnine(¢ caament ogee wb rou | Sm'nait Sunk Teas aocbd hy. capa roy ber a pe | Ace nl roma, ae, he ede Powers bave said, especially those TO THE EDITOR OF THE LONDON TIMES. jee ree « 9 | tions in legislative matters. No propositions for an alte- ae, &e. ae pe was on ice Pi SPL errs Iving nearest the State in question? Would they | Arriving in Brest the day before yesterday by way of | Stephoas aro at present building another swift paddie | tions in legislative matters. the Bond, or foeeanpgie: y ave Post pee lag hl ey ge rien fing | steamer. The Mariani, a screw built for the Societe Ac- DF wane eon pave dina opt Ba ge beer I Roe ae eae ae ariautea tke retarcaywe Hties] celeree d?Hayti, has also made a trial trip, at which she re Ctrl rae ge good reason to suppose that they would have invoked the | river Klorn from the latter place to Brest was the arrival | steamed at the rate of twelve miles per hour. as enon jesse calead there Usa majority ofiseventeen doctrine of the European equilibrium, which is not, for | orthe Confederate Staten cruiser Florida, and on crossing | built by Mr. 7. B. Seath, of Rutherglen. and is one hun. | Project tt was. “unless there he & majority of pevente anything we can see, either more sacred.or more unas- | the glorious Rado de Brest for the mouth of the harbor | dred and forty feet in length, eighteen feet breadth of = oh eee a ne ph a or the seaalior poten snilable than the Monroe doctrine. Why should not the | ; had no difficulty in making out this now celebrated vea- | beam, and ten feet deep. Her caries which are Df | cio. whoare tari ly afraid of being ‘‘mediatized.’”} United States be justified in doing, with regard to Mexico, | gel, as she lay at anchor among some of. the giants of the | fifty horse power nominal}, bave been supplied by Mewrs. | LoS: Nit ine lorkibiy arid oe ain | ei Ol ae what France would do in the ease of Belgium? Thus. the | yrench navy—a long, low, black, raxish looking craft, | Campbell &Sons, of Glasgow. The Mariani, which is 7 ith the ‘ogni tof tbe bers of Monroe doctrine, the pretension of the Americans to settle | not over smart in appearance, yet useful every inch of | built on the same model as the sister vessels already des- i apenas consen| mem! their own affairs, has wothing more absurd than the very | hor—a pigwy among these monsters, and yet a formida- | Patched lo Haytt, vs expected to leave the Clyde nert week. Br erete. said han'hh coh thes narnia or wich Ws eo fell ot eer dene ae seek “anon | ble piemy, mhsranas free meas Ph Usain eee the Bund are properly ‘carried out, and, if necessary, by whic all of res} proud mizen, We wea INTERES troops. Poland isin the question, ought to treat thom loss fip- | ¢yngP"yce” Agmiral, a Russian Vice Admirel,, and a TING FROM PRUSSIA. Tee ce nag OlaeRer es been teeeancasas of a a pantly when America is concerned, Senstor of the Empire on board, and you may imagine ee military matters of tbe Confederation. sis or His Arguments. (Paris (Sept. 3) correspondence of London News.) 1 have hurriedly run my eye over the proof sheets of a Pamphlet, to appear to morrow at Dentu’s, entitled “France, Mexico and the Confederate States.’?- The usual means have been resorted to by the pub- lisher for inducing a belief in the public mind that this opuscle is officially inspired. Whether this be so or not— and adhering to the opinion I had occasion to express some time ago that the pamphlet dodge has been very mucb overdone—I find in this production such+a p-rfect harmony with the known leanings of the French Emperor that 1 think it worth while to make some quotations from it. ‘The mails of the Arabia reached this city at a late hour yesterday ovening, from Boston:— Our European files are dated in London and Paris on the 5th of September. The papers contain some very import- ‘ant details of the telegraphic report from Halifax, which was published in the Heratp last Tuesday morning. The compilation which is given to-day in our columns, with the lotter of our London correspondent, will convey to our readers the actual position of the American question abroad at tho time of the sailing of the Arabia, as well as | ee ee eos ee ee ee one ‘was an infinity of gossip, but no reliable informa- ture Dissolved—Report ofthe art “at ‘The Directory x have the management of the ‘. a . Gnan rectory. very three years Some very interesting information concerning tho pro- | to Franco, and that the expected Benefits are only 10 be ob- MEXICAN AFFAIRS. Me\vinen we landed at the Cale in the harbor the crowd | tho folowing royal’ deoree’ ae pobenet ja Bortia oa | witraitt: tos anpeoval one Vederal Gousslly tev beter’ gress of events in Russia, Germany, France and Great | /ained by the recogniticn of, and subsequent alliance with, which vaually «ssembles to welcome or pester vew comers | tne 4th inst.:— the House of Deputies the estimate of the ordinary an@ the Confederate States of America. If Mr. Slidell, the Southern envoy, who has lately bad repeated interviews with M. Drouyn de Lhvys, following Britain \ Spanish Views on the Mexican Question. | was fal! of “La Fioride”’ and , ber doings. | *«Kilra’” cried By virtue of article 51 of tho constitution, and on the | extraordinary expenditure of the Bund. Should the Mr. Adams, the American Minister in London, left In- St Paris (Sent.'4) correspondence of lar. an enthusiastic commissionain to me, ‘elle a, Monsieur, ‘oposition of the Ministry of State, we decree as fol | Directory not be able to come vo an understanding with the Swericaroren tan mer might from Madrid, “it is je rows assure sur ma parole dhonneur, pour deus millions | fog 7 3 e WS i Chamber of Deputies in respect to the estimates. the sum vorary, Scotland, on the 31st of Aagust, having been on | Upon audiences with the Emperor himself, had re- | stated in the semi-official papers that he bas obtained | ‘de livres sterling a bord, tout en or, je vows axsure."” ‘‘ Eh! Article 1. The Chamber of Deputies is hereby dis- | expended dure the preceding period to be disbursed. visit to Inverary Castle. covet pe et egg publish @ pamphlet in | leave of absence. Bat such is not the case. He received | man Dieu! c'est beauconp!”’ cried a smart little mous-from | solved. [This stipulation renders the right given to the National ~ oe by pod Meg not have written more favorably | a summons a little more than a weok ago to present him- | the Turerine. I could not help agreeing with the mousse Art, 2. The Ministry is intrusted with the execution of | Assembly to vote the supplies Perfeotly illusory.) Im Our London Correspondence. the pitertd ap ginal pectoris ine samoniots oe self forthwith in Paris. His presence is needed at St. | that the sum a are greg seed tage Siecire the present decree. WILLIAM I. oder to cover an unexpected outlay the vices Der, Loxpox, Sept. 5, 1863. | hot think, however, Wet Me Siidell area netoritate, | Cloud for the purpose of informing the Emperor how the | | That evening (a y my fellow » Mr. the | with the consent of the Federal Council and the Cham! ‘oport to the King, which precod French poliry in Merten is treated im Madrid, A& the | Tunner, Vice Consul of France in Guernsey and one of the | agine,mnisterial roport ‘ “ of Deputies, levy the sums required. If the Directory plans of Napoleon concerning this country are about to go | jurats of that Ieland),1 found some of the officers of the | swith the present Cha, eannct come to an. understanding with the National As- through a new phage it hos been also thonght well to give | Florida at the Hotel de Nantes (rue d'Aiguillon). Liew. | Gersanding. His Majesty the King, before his departure, | sembly, ithas to give to tnat body a satisfactory expla. 4p person fresh instructions to the French ambassador at | tenamt I. ngard Hoole (a young man, who apparently did | was to ex; bis concurrence with these views | nation as to the cause of the extraordinary expenditure, oot way mpapees ean ae tor Sh a hee = nome vaaniaea ~ oa — per | py ny ) pethg - Woy peaprie but Sean — pose was Seas fsa Les B haced the Directory bas kage f before the cute n mp dala to tive the Mexican toe French | nionom bard. He ttaied, towever» that bie wperior | sncy that tie hasta oe any eround een coaahe | nana ae ie ar eee ta eNO oun Prince for whom ‘they pray. Mexico was the subject of | officer, Caitain Mafilt. was generally to be found on | in the Propositions of the Ministry, which his Majesty | close and dissolve the Assembly of i 4 a, ‘lively discussion” at the last counell. ae of the | board his eset AO Sous Lope} -— ee The frooreed had approved. On the other had, tendencies have mani- | The Directory to represeat the federal governments wis-6- Gicted thes to enrrien’ able county and hep arse: it | bp thie young officer lenpresved vs micet favorably. feaacsl gon Aeethmem atch aera | rn ae, must almost drain the Exchequer dry. They also united in | All next day it blow gale of wind in the Rade, and we | Prussia from that, postion as a arent’ Power in Germany oY daaaeah Aamnaas 40 hain showing that it must lead in every caseto an American war. | could not find s boat to venture out. To-day, bowever, | and Burope which i, her well earned inkervance from our | gait 16 The Federal Assembly to be formed of dele- If the federals gain there 1s no doubt but what they will | the weather was mest propitious, and early morving | ‘orefathers, and which the Prussian people bas at all gates from the representative bodies of the several attempt to apply the Monroe doctrine. If, om the other | found us alongside of the Florida. We sent our cards to | \imeg been determined not to relinquish. Under these German States. Austria to send seventy-five hand, the Confederates win, they willbe fount warlike and | Captain Maitit, and were immediately admitted on board, | Cireumatances “it mil, bo incumvast son che’ reve, | fromthe members of the Relenarath who wore elected im acqressive neighbors. The principles on which they found } the captain himself coming to the top of the companion ( } sian people to give expression upon the occasion of the the States belonging to the German Confederation, or their government will inevitably force them to seek an | receive us Directly Captain Mattit understood that we | annroaching mew elections to the fact that no difference | (rc™ the members of the diets of previnces be- extension of territory, But for the present the Kmperor | were British subjects be invited ua below into his little | of political opimion is 80 deeply rooted in Prussia as to | OOSIRK to the same. Prussia to send seventy-five delegates ie bent on carrying out his schemes of conquest. His | cabin, and when I told him tbat there were many people | ondanger the unity of the le, anf the Saumoeabie from the representatives of the German provinces im reonal interests urge him to do 80. The piety—iruly | in England who regarded his career with grent interest he | fuerte with whiel ther are attached to the tonal ha the Prussian Diet. Bavaria to send 27 delegates T Spanish piety—of the Empress urges ker to Jond ail her | catered very freely mto a recital of Lis adventures. When placed io few OF efforts tending to diwingk tee me | Hanover and Wurtemberg, 15 each: Baden, 12; Hoses power to the priestly party; and bigotry. no less tham fears | | will here subjoim a copy of some notes which Captain | Yenendence and dicoity of Prussia. Cassel, 9; Hesse t, 9; Holstein and Lunenburg, for Cuba, urge Syaim to concur in the views of her Imperial | Maffit fubseuently handed to me relative to tbe carcer | “Poe events ifthe laat tow days have only served to {i luxemburg cod Limburg, 4: Brunswick, 2. the tee ally. OF the Bcvide, protines, & va | confirm us in our proposals; and ag the new elections will Rivesieuns sate: eee cot ye) Sao et tion, which bas not yet arrived. They are as follows:— | reauire a period of two months, the measures approved ningen, Saxe Altenburg apd Saxe Coburg Gotha, 2 each; of the Throne of | rx coxrennnare stares! stRaunx yLonipa, cowmaxnen | by'your Majesty in the sitting of the Council of Mnleohen me burg, 3; and the other States one eac oie Mars England's Terror of War with America—Panic in London at the News of the Fall of Fort Sumter—English Relief in the Loss of Canada—League Between France, Russia and Prusna, de, © There is bad pews from America.’ That is the cry ‘on ’Change to-day, and gold bas gone down accordingly. Can you toll mo why the news which sends “‘greenbacks”” up and gold down should be bad news? My own private veading will not explain the matter te me. For example, I tearn from Adam Smith, and from a much bigger man, one Edmund Burke, that the cheapness of gold ig an infallible sign of prosperity. When I wrote last gold with you was about 133; it is now down to 123, That is asign of increasing prosperity and well being with you. That is athing which I would have supposed would have given pleasure and confidence on the Stock Exchange. Why, then, does Stock-Brokerdom and every other dom in this great British empire ring out the knell, “There is bad news from Americay”’ Because you have captured Fort Sumter and Fort Wag even thongh a Southerner, would have readily coincided. in the overtnrow of the Monroe doctrine and the h- ment about the Latin race and the benefits of French influ- ence in Mexico which this pamphlet contains, But on the principle that necessity makes us acquainted with strange bedfellows, I think it quite possible, nay, likely, that Mr. ‘Shdell or some of his clique may have contributed to the Confederate paragraphs of this pamphlet, while accept pg by way of compromise the French views on Mexico. The pamphlet, sn ap early page, admits with as much candor ag perfect truth, that the Mexican expedition in its present condition was the personal work of Napoleon If. lone. While, in the eyes of “everybody else”? (mean- ing the ministers, the parliament, the public—everybody who ought to have avoice in committing a nation to a serious and cost!y enterprise), the war in Mexico was a simple military question, the Emperor alone had settled in his own mind “the bases of an entirely new relivy.” In support of this view, differing entirely from M. Billault’s vehement asseverations in the Senate and Corps Legislatif, and fastening upon the Em- peror ap amount of personal responsibility which may tay be found burdensome, the pamphlet quotes the ‘ing extract fromm the imperial instructions to Gene. orey:— % present state of civilization the prosperity of Ame. is not indie » Europe; for tt is America swhich Austria Still Afr: Ms of Hesse Homburg ie also to have a 1 amtOe. held on the 16th of July mast be executed without delay 7 : nor, and because you are sure of having Charleston, the | fees 0 facty, com , erested is s ber be This steamer was builtin Liverpool and sent to Nassau in 4 » | tive in the Federal Piet. The four Free Cities will nave ial ot aan ; Seal od a 4 n seeing the United powerful and prosperous; but it Geentes piccneacoscatomer ease hee phase rag mtr ian: was pt in the AGmiraity Cour: c'eared on tir | in order to render it possible for themew diet to be con’ | two represcmuatives instead of One, as waa otiginally pre- ‘ebellion, in your hands before this letter | jy ,or for our inter Je should get possession of the ‘a of Mexican affairs shoulé leo August, when her present commander took gheree, voked to discuss the budget within the current year, posed. In States in which there are two Chambers the Feschos you. The other day, on *Chanse, John Bul, | enise Gulf of Mezics and rm tat bane ot oparatgns de: | Gm watched ta avsteis will ieely muarest after nouame | Touitel nine ae Oe os tet steam the low fev ae Epper House wil elect" one third and the Lower House vineer over the Ant! 1 the Sor ‘ ; jc. the Te «yell Plethoric in bullion, fluttered a hundred pound note in the | \i:pensator of fheproducts of the New World,” | of a conspicnous member of the Imperial House has been red’ on board, and ( IMPORTANT FROM RUSSIA. two-thirds of the delegates. The Federal Assembly will {soe of humbie men like myself and said, “I'll bet that | France, therefore, it is argued, is bound to oppose the ah- | brought into close connection with the question. Contra. con persons. art. e delogates to be elected in. accordance La Prance, of Paris, of September 2, publishes the fol. | W'th the laws which are in force in the countries they are lowing reapecting the pro'ect of a constitution for Russia, | t represent. The Assembly of Delegates to meet once im pes) npg iy amd three years. [The King of Saxony tried to pornuade bis Take her in. For two houre and forty-eight ‘nccording to the proposed plan, the parts of the empire | fellow sovereigns to allow the Federal Assombly to mess SECRETARY SEWARD'S CIRCULAR. Becta onts roustand ou deen forsee bed Sa ee ee ee eee ie May. The Naweuisty eae "us poole ae tbe Devaney od er gt Y vee | number, viz— 4 é ¢ Meese ss oon or sary eda, or aighta: ia fact, ‘she was alineat hetpiece, | The Grand Duchy of Finland, the Provincial Assombly | oF 4 period not exceeding two months, and it inas Uberty dietory reports of a decision having been already arrived at afford us the opportunity of declaring that we are again able to aflirm the positton stated by us upon the 4B | Phe entire blocksding fleet put afer ult. to be in po way changed. was brought 1p from a bed of sick sorption of the South uy Northern America, She bas also » duty to support the “Latin races” on the Western con tent, An*immense French commercial arty’ is to \ollow that of Marshal Forey, and ‘‘the recognitioa of the South will be the consequence of the intervention.” We are fartber joformed that what Napoleon IIL. wills be wills steadily aud patiently, avd that be will *‘see his will accomplished.’ againat twenty that Charleston will not fall into the hands of the Yankees these three months” the paper of®the Bank of England is very pretty, and exhales a peculiar Odor, exceedingly refreshing. I knew that hundred por note wowd be mine if took up the wager, nobody would. But T bad not what the sporting world bere calls - 4 to adjourn for 8. Should the Assembl 4 Stock broker hag saved his hundred. But Boaur crast abd), pon Hee rich progections, its pora, unequalled tm ing seven. | Be shot away: and sone | burg, properiy called Fathonia, Livonia and Courland, the | D¢W elections ‘rom the London Tim: one thousmnd fi ot track ber bull and Art. 19. The Chamber of Delegates to elect its Prest- Sept. 4] , bly of which would hay ot saved Charleston. nother hot countries, its “‘precious” timber, its time | yr. Seward’s diplomatic circular, which we published | masts. Frovancia Mmpembiy of which would have its seat St | ait Vice Presidents and Secretaries; its sittings. to BO 0 u on dyes. and, above all, its tempting mines, Hitherto it is , consists of ition, an argument and an So far the notes which Captain Maffit has as yet found | St. Petersburg. able ' If you could possibly suggest to the great Britisher ay | en ei tae ee ee I ac tn cian ame, 6 Tis proposition is that the’ statesmen of | time to send me. Of the captain himself I may say shat | Great Russia, the Provincial Assembly of which would vee gh house 18 fran whee two. ares ot ee Process by which he could get out of his sympathy with | hands: but the mining field ts represented to beunlimived, | Kngland and France, having conceived at the beginning | be is a slight, middle sized, well knit man, of about forty. | meet at Morcow. t fama tn hen 1 Revenge passed the South he would be exceedingly obliged to you. There | and “what the English have done we can do.” A doc | of the American war a boliet that the restoration of the | two; a merry looking inan, with a ready, determined air, | {ttle Russia, with a P MN trevtacet aaeoeety os Ged Art, 20. The Chamber of Delegates has a right to pase | (rine highly congenial to the empire of universal suffrage # then laid down —namely. that in Mexico all the anar- chists belong to the higher orders of society. The lehi—i. ¢. the people who have no education, no proper- ty, no miluence, and who must necessarily submit to the powers tbat be—are all lovers of oraer; but rich people, xoneral officers. and even aids de.camp of Presidente, are mostly Drigunds. ‘This is the charmingly convenient doe- (rine in virtue ef which Ponapartism pretends, in the name of virtue, order, religion and property, to gag evo- persist in that bel the | full of life and business. apparently the sort of man why | Southern Russ: prement BouE, a remaset recires itself tate by Jong | is equally ready for a fight or a jollifieation, and whose Western Russia, with a Provincial Assembly at Wii narrative of the campaigns of tho last twelve montha, | preference for the latter would by no means interfere The Kingdom of Poland, with s Diet which would be and this historical compendium ts then applied to the | wih his creditable conduct of the former. His | held at Warsaw. urpose of correcting the prevaiti belief and | plainly furnished little stateroom looked as business Kastern Russia, with a Provincial Assembly at Kazan. Fonpressing the two Western Powers with convic | like as & merchant's officer. The round table Finally, Siberia and the adjacent provinces, with a Pro- legisiation of the separate States, tions moro favorable to the federal cause. In its | in the centre was strewn with books and innu — eee Jan region ana ot | Coonected with aa on Hye object this State paper is certainly intelligible. | merable manuscripts, and on the shelves were for. egards the p ucasian region poo enene lB at Bll ange pe A, , 2 és American Russia, thetr organization will be ulteriorly Mr. Seward is perfectly accurate in his presumption that the | midable looking rows of account books, charts, ke. I which may at some future time be bronght under the stalesmen of France and England—he might have included, | may observe of the cabin, as of every part of the Florida, | considered. The particular institutions for Poland will, | Ypict [My at some iueun (This led to {3 ao impression on bis mind (and it takes some time, I ass, (0 make an impression on that article) that Mr. Jefferson Davis’ rebellion cannot now succeed at any price, and, as England firmly believes in tho clever French saying that “ there is nothing so successful as auccess,'’ she is anxious to disconnect herself from Fouth ora failure as soon as she possibly can. She ts convinced resolutions on the following subjects. — 1, On alterations in the Act of Confederation and ite supplements 2. On the Budget of the Bund. 3. For the establishment ‘of general features for the ft that the Union must win, and she finds she bas made a | rybody who has @ voice, and to speak on behalf of the eed. those of the rest of pe—do consider to this that none of it appears to have been batit for ornament | !t is sald, be very extended. Shonid the Poles decline to ori tateh ned eves angry dterenions, CrightCuj myjstake in going 1n Tor secesh multitudes of hewers of wood and drawers of water who | fy thar theold American Union cam never be All for use. "You seo.” said the captain, pointing to the | fn aie an ta alan ON the reat aivoe ct | ile relative to an alteration of the constitution of the tent ayaa ee roa cy have none, Emigration 10 Mexico om alargescale, under | t'ly natural, t00, that the should be desirous of removing | heaps of pavers, letters on files, account books, &c., | the Rmpire, their scruples wou respected, and the | a4 supplement to the same, or to matters ebich g SQuid velal rideniem dicere verum."’ So save the Tom | iench protection, 18 recommended this conviction, but the argument which be employs for | whick literaliy littered the table, ‘you soe I've po sine- | special government of Poland would act under the sole | Dt a ln ettiod by the legislative bodios wr the Moore of Rome, dear old Horace. 1 bave been talking ‘The pamphiet is careful to say—and | have no doubt | this purpose is both ineffective and ncediess—neediess, | cure of it. Since my paymaster died I've hid to be my poeta pnd a ee Sew the tee peparate Staten, can only be passed By a eajorey of as trath playfully in the last two or three paragraphs. fut | uo good grounds—that whether the Archduke Muxi- | because we all know delorehand every particle of his | own paymaster. There's a young man, named Davis | tenant of the Emperor wonld Alt th AI MIS: | lerat threw fourths Of the members of the Federal Assema- h ts to thie —That | Na accepts the throne or pot, emigrants may be quite | story, and ineffective because, even if we accept it ex- | (no relation to our President). who does paymaster’s 3 . pally ts wee four-aftha, the seriousness of ali this truth amounts to thie ~—That } sare chat French influence will prevail.” ‘That take to | Sciiy ar it ie presented to us, it leaves our conelusions | duty; but bes ot yet quite up to the work.” England is at this moment in awfol terror of a war gress spoke in favor of & majority of three- with America. be a settled thing, ‘and | attach not the slighest import st what they were. Captain Moffitt forthwith an animoted recital of anes to rumors which C have hen: \ within the last day | 2"S's¢ truth ta, the course of the American war has taken hig career and adventures. He js forty-two years old, THE GERMAN CONGRESS. (wo, that M. Drouye de Lhuy® assured Mr. Dayton a ei Nrdereh rong rne tap cba us by surprise. Whon we first arrived at the conclusion ¥8 the oldest officer on board. All the officers wore ‘eral Assembly, like the Directory, has a right it if @ bil) contoins propositions for am ‘ , r British mind at Inst that you don't bunkan upon his honor’? that the Emperor was anxiously await | thar eh io the Confederate States, and most of thom wer Prospect of Reform of the Bi Pp by } 1 z ¢ South. could never be coerced into reunioa at the | born . re pee e Ba ‘roposed ‘of the constitution e or of & eup- Much as tho Britisher, ia {8 stupid insolence, attributed | ing the earliest opportunity to withdraw his troops from | point of the aword we suill anticipated prompt military | officers in the United States Navy before the oulbereuk of tm the Congress of Prince: fetovor ts the ease, ft trast, bobere ean be vesegh 2 to what he called “Yankee swagger.’ he bas been stag | Mexico ‘ success on the part of the North. The only roserve af- | the war. The oldest of the is pot more than | (Frankfort (Sept. 2) correspondence of London Timer.) © the Approval Of at least three-fourths of the mem- ‘ : An apology for slavery, carefully toned down for French | footing our judgment was adoabt about the earnestness | twenty three. The men are more mixed. There are one | _ My letter of the 17th of August, which appeared in the of the Assembly." The passage quoted is said to gored at iagt by the mutual attitude of England am! the | readers, is subjoined to tbe above arguments. Ignoring | and unanimity of the Bouth i claiming independence. | hundred able seamen ou board the Florida and about | Times of the 20th of the same month, contained a | introduced at the express request of the Kiag the fact that the South is fighting for slavery, and boasts that it is the corner stone of {ts institutions, the pamph: let represents that the Southern leaders would be quite United Statos on this ioternational question of sbipbuild tng and tMockade fanning. The correspondence which I dition being satisfied, we considered that thou thirteen officers. Four Ge fellows are from the ‘nh- | summary of the Austrian draft of a r 1 twenty saiions a wee were certainly stronger a Dorhood of Brest. Capt. Maffit says that be has hardly man Bund, and | vow forward a complet nine millions, they were mot so much stronger as to | ever taken a prize but what some ol the crew of the prize | Reform act which was yesterday signed by th following rt, 21. In all matters which concern the vont you a fortnight ago revealed the graceul | disposed to relax its leading principle in obedience 40 tbe | jure any chance of subjwgating their mine mil. | have come forward to way, “Should like toxerve with | members of the Confederation:—Thue kmperor of Aust Lt swindie (under the letter of the law) by which, | persuasive voice of Fravee. The argument is—“The first | jones, dispersed as they were over an almeat dlimi- | you, sir.” Generally speaking, he has to refuse; but if | the King of Bavaria, the King of Saxony, the K. b In all Federal matters the Chamber of Dele- from the Pabamas, England committed a constant | Power which recognizes theConfederate States will havearioht | rapie’ territory. We bardiy doubted the imi 10 | ho sees a very likely follow be inkes him on. of Hanover, the Crown Prince of Wurtemberg (for | gates bas a right to make representations and complaints, rom amas, Rog! < © obtain . 1m favor of the negroes, much larger concessions than | superiority of the North in the field, The general expec: | Captain Malt was a lieutenant of the Cnited States | the King, his father), the Elector of Hesse, the Outrage upon & Power with which it wason terms of | ine feteral States would maim ones @ ieee ronerae Be tation of Englishmen was that the South would soon be | Navy before the outbreak, and in that capacity dfs. | Grand [uke of Hease larinsiadt, the Duke of Brunswick, OF THE ASSEMBLY OF PHENOM Union by victory © * * That which is impossible during the struggle will become easy in time of caim. Ihe eruancipation of the blacks, the complete abolition of slavery, can only be the work of peace and of time; and [rom our alliance with the South will proceed that great social renovation which England bas pur sued in vain by the right of visit.’ Observe here how artrully the pamphieteer who professes to speak im the pame of the Emperor (whose personal schemes friendship. Tho outrage has been capped by the disco vory that in the river Mersey, close by Liverpool, two stool clad ships are neatly completed, and that in the Clyde, at Glasgow, another is almost Gnished, for the ser vice of the Southern rebels. Ile Foglich government know of all this—they took no stops to provent it. I muat confess that London merchants knew nothing about overrun, that its seaports would be all captured and ocen- | tinguished himaolf greatly. In 1858 he commanded the | the Puke of Nassen, the Duke of Saxe-Meiningen. the Art 43. Agarule. the Assembly of Princes will mace 4 - ~ lowe of ordinary and extraordinary sittings ‘4 that strong federal garrisons would hold its chief | brig Dolphin, when ne captured the slaver Echo with 400 | Dake of Saxe Coburg-Gotha, the Grand Dake of Mecklen” | after the close of the or Pie a a nort, we Auticipeted that ihe frac ere covetne,, | sloven On board, and took bor lato Charleston,” For ibie | bare saree; toe deead tote er Oldenburg, the Duke of | Of the Chamber of Delegates. The Emperor of Austria or at any rate the first year of the war, would see the | foat his health wae drunk at public dinner at Liverpool; | Anualt Cothen (he was represented by the hereditary | 84 the King Of Prussia wilt together invite the Princes pros tration of the Confederates thus far completed; but it | and it is. curious fact, for those who maintaiu that the | Prince of Anbait Cott: the Prince of Schwarzburg- | 1 S#embie. The Princes may be represented by mem ‘was then that we thought the bopeleasuess of the work | civil war in Amorica is founded upon the slave question, | Sunderabauten, the Prince of Schwarzburg kudel. | Bere Of thelr respective families, [It was propoed te would begin tobe felt. If at that time we could have | that the commander of this im t Confederate cruiser | stadt, Prince Liechtenstein, Prince Reuse of the | '@t 'be mediatized German Princes bave two representa foreseen that the successes of the North after more than | should be the very man who has distinguished himeelf | yoouser breach of the family, Prince Redas of the | “Yes im the Assembly, but the motion was set aside. | two years of desperate fighting would amount only to the | actively against tho siave trade. In 1850 Captain Madi | older branch (Le war ved by the King of Saxo Art. 24. The Princes to deliberate as indenendeat sove- ath < we are told in the beginning were at the bottom recounted with commanded the United States steamer Crusader, and | ny), Prinee cha: mbui the Br: of | Feigne, who are on an equality with each other. " doadty torror, One of them said to me frankly—“This is | i» French public opinion, to affect Gisapprobation the Washington government more impracticable than *Precaptain bad s great dea! to say about his successful | burg, (The Margrave Hesse Hom! who |s an | ton the revuite of the deliberations of the Chamber of golng too far—Amorica must resent oar conduct, During | of slavery. He proposes, it is true, an alliance with the | aver We wemture to add that Mr. Soward himself would | feat at Mobile In Gis opinion ithas beon the greatest na- | Austrian | eutenant (enoral, did not appear at the Con | HePuties and fually disposes of the propositions made slavebolders, whose only reason for war is the mainte- nance of slavery, bat pretends that abolition af siav will be the result of that alliance. The pamphiet conclades in the following words — An soon as the Confederate States shall be recognized bt ‘ be quin hi 4 been very much of the same opinion. We think it | val feat of modern tines. He dwelt and warmly | cress, but he sent ina declaration that be would agree | DY the rame. (|t was privately agreed that no bill nay bo said with some truth that tbe federal govern. | upon the incidents of tho affair. and poisted proudly to | to anything recommended by the Emperor Francis Jo. | SB0ult receive te sanction of the Assembly of Princes ment had, at the beginning of the year 1861, foreseen that | the marks of ahrapool, which are numerous enough, upon | geph. woless with the fall consent and approval of ail ite mem~- i» the middie of the year 1863 the seceding States would | the masts abd smokestacks. The Florida was struck with The princes whose names are pot attached to the Re. | Vere.) It orders the promulgation, by the Directory aad stilt be free, Riehmond and Charleston still safe, aod three hearty shots on that occasion, and one can easily | form sect are the King of Prussia, the King of Deomark, ] by the separate States, of the atte it bay comes uy Washington in gome little danger, the war would never | perceive in the side of the ship whero the mischief caused | toe Grand Dake of ‘Maden, the Ring of Holland (Prinee | @xAmives into the representations and complains of the have besa undertaken at all. That Mr. Seward, at this | by the eloven toch shell bas boon repaired. The Florida | Heney of the Netherlands, who represented bis brother in | Chamber of lwlegates. It can take Into consideration period of the strife, should be reduced to sing a prran over | mace 00 endeavor to reply to the fire which sho received, | the Congress, yesterday declined to sign the final prow. , Propositions for the reception of new members into the the deliverance of the North from (ha invasion of a Souhern fT opening | bee Shoes ie aim and her | coi), the areee bape of pg) Schwerin, the | pooper and for a change iu the right of voting of about strongest porte proof of the ismnem | email crew being uch oecn| a management | Grand Duke of sate We mar. ral SAre-Alteoburg | Sf" i) bers. F iesene - ve Of the abi. The captain showed us a water color sketch | (tour daya ago his Highiess@nuitted Frankforc without | The sight aries Felative tothe formating of the Fade. The foderals thought to sweep the Southora States with | (very well drawn by oae of the midshipmen) of the Fiorl+ | taking leave of his federal allies), and Prince Waldeck, |! Court of Justice and ita attributes bawe undergone ug their irresistible forces At Heat they actuaily imagiaed | da running the blockade, ft would not have disgraced @ | (The German Coafederation as appears by the foregoing | “haves worthy of mention the Crimean war we apoealed to the American govern moot againat the butlding of a certain war vesse! which we koow was meant for the Russians. They stopped tho building of it, What can we say now in excus Cor ourselves, when a couple of our ship. wrights ace building three steel-plated rams for the doutheroers? The Yaukees are justified in deciaring war againat 0; amd, even suppose we beat them, we shall nom ree mtechief which Ueir privateering wilt do ¢ uitherto been restrained by (he phantom ntiawe whl follve Praner us." In point of fact Kogland is capable of being wounded o months and 70,000 man would antice far the | professional artist. lista, i now 00% Of twety-eight princes The parts of the Austeiba project of reform that were oaly ou tha high seas; and sho believes that no Tower | Tomine Me cincerad wtih the. ad! Weak three Gngie bawle (aught than the ‘ccicator thie | "tee only browdside WBich the Florida has fred ts anger | peprtucntatlves of tie four free cites” oo born A ORR ee | cau wound ber there except America, Look to it After that England will do Hkewire. ‘ognize the | miscalculation, and though they stil) (imited the time to | wae against the Ericsson, an armed merchautinan, which | xgroRM OF THR GRRMAN BOND, a PROPORRD WE rae comme | 4) 0 8, 9.9) 11, 14. 16, 18, 20. A cane 26, 21, Wan There hes boon much laughter here at «telegraph ¢ South. The Northern Sintes wii vo longer perserery ta 8 y days? they expanded the armament ‘000 | sho encountered some forty mile from New York. The OF POUR MLD a | 84." The other articies, Aftona i + Were Savaptad mong secaemyreg nse nseless struggle. 7h $07 Petar ts oon crrpmuient wleteh ‘The 700.090 did ne more than the 70,000 bricsson, @ vory large vowse, dil not reply, but made the Article i, The objects of ti | em bloc, ia order that the gecessity for ministerial conta. patch just received, to the effect that a conspiracy Bas | fr woud i, «At 1 gre they were defeated io tha , heat of bor way off, aud succeeded in escaping. When | are —The maintenance of (lve security and power ot tor, | ences might he obviated. , boon ditcovered at Toronto, the object of which was to | The check to the upward t whieh the Bourse nat All that can be thay ventured Within {ofty miles of New York they did 4.10 foreign conntrie ranintenance of | , Count Rechiberg bas displayed great inct sod still 1 ‘ ror to the United States, We all laugh, | experienced yesterday ‘has | than co itorated } orn egatiation (# thet tbe felern's have taken two ptaces | not know that the arrival of the Teeny (one of thoir | pubise order at home, she furtherance of tie luterests of | te management of bis votleagurs, but he will seo have band Cnumia ov vices rope : 8), | today, Rente for A has turned the corner of | in the MiKsissiDpi alter singes t times aa tadious | “outite”) had put the New Yorkers on their guard, and rian nation | snother and harder diplomatic baltic to ght. frumuia because we all say, “Where is the need of conspiracy? | opt, and closes wi rise OF $60. Mobviller rove 57. SOC 7 gud aa contly Ne they were expected to be, and that they goon found that there were about seventy armed 2. A directory to be pau fe peeparingta take the fled, and it will mewrediy he You Yaukeos can take Canada whenever you like: and | The only important change in railway shares wae have not had tbeit own capita upied by 80s enemy sols ont searching for thet, aud so were glaa to re- | of the affaire of the eouted 0 to | soon that she wilt give her dougity rival a great deel of t do y of L5f, in Kastern, Among (bo rumors of the day ov = ed highty probable tbs ago. Mr. Seward 1. “We never seck & fight.” eajt Captain Marit, rmed of the gnverammdve, | trouble, im feet the dificuitien of Austria are now abowt mich good a be explanatory of the rise 8 ONe Of a Metiean low while colocieg bie histery be cen m ‘and we don’t avoid one You see we've only two be convoked pertaay | DEH — ij — For baa not the Times said What crn we do against | walled to talk ot few Alen up events creditable to the | vessels agai 1,400, 60 chonid steed 6 Aimost alt the German Sovereigns have lett Frankfort, a Powor (meaning you) which em puch two how | wrench Opinion of the Monroe Doctrine. Fedora arms, and the which in designed poor chance. Our object i@ me eatroy fad during the day there haw benn a Leg ches | 4 men serone the froutier in’ forty-eight | Prom the Parte Ia Prose, tept. 4 Abow the unquestionable nace ¥ Of the North sp me, 80 as to bring about a peace, We bh Anwa 0 fags and femoval of towers (com the haicomian Ct phe finn eee] + what is the Monroe doctrioe worth’ | of the ‘necessity of covering the national capital, ether seventy two prizes, and estimate the va ty may. in ae far a9 ite suwarg ns take care of yourselves, all we can do | How gnould To the fr: ¥ lot ia | the absolute equality of the belligerent forcas tm ita imme 000,000, The J wel wlooe Prussia, of the King of Bava orned, be compared to & reveltly de. e American Ports The poor boggara | say O, aX well as European Toe captaic exhibited a book in whic Hanover aod Wurtemberg-—v Why, the hole strew yuld ve | dip Monroe docrine pretends < nome | urp “ Ve pres wore reguiarly entered an par te Directory for the period Cas teem debs cand otis : to ia vality, only weakens and ait eithor we i ibis country or the Am lating thereto. Te explained that ate of proce | pentative of tho Grank Ted 3 davoted o aia purpose alow (sud fail at It): tO Protect | Meee eeny t Mo One ia more OppMeed 10 Intervention than 0 fodornl Staten had boxun by rogmediag dnre was to burn and doat erty ot the Nerth- | flees, of tho Grand sicutta, China and ia mails roached usq Pavir commmpeyyal wavy Cevua Your couudlese vtivatege, | gurssives, only we are consistant, Nod do not limit the b iiawrents ae equally metodo, ant tho war Ae lik@ly | orn States wherever they fount L waked if thay | King Wi Deomara (for Motstoia and lanendura @ van peptember &

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