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a2 NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1863—TRIPLE SHEET. EUROPE. birds fly, where the winds of heaven speak eloquently in storms, whore lightuings flash and thunders roll, and youd all description, the sound was something wonder- | many gentlemen of wealth, taste and toiaure, who have (at The vast roar of London was lifted to us through a | good estates and broad lands in pleasant localities will where moteors play their fantastic tricks ¥ Perpendicular height of ton thousand feet. oop their baloon yacht and their aeronaut for the bealth, ~—_——erer Ascending above the clouds in balloons has gone be- PUBLIO BUILDINGS AND VESSELS BEEN. Fecreation, am@sement and intellectual gratification of youd the arena of idle amusement and adventurous curi- The streets and separate houses were distinctly and | their families and frionds. ’ Osity, and bas entered the domain of practical science. | Whatever may result from the invention of De Solomon ‘Androws, or the enterprise of M, Nadar, the bistory of gerostation must include the scientillo ascents of Messrs. Coxwel! and Glaisher, and the military ballooning of the United States armies, under the direction of Mr. Wise. We now gee that one of the practical results of traversing the air is exhibited iu the inspection of an enemy's camp and the watching of the movements of the hostile army. The meteorological observations and discoveries of Mr, Coxwoll.and Mr, Glashier will ere long be embodied in 4 scientific report, and from these isolated facts valuable clearly visible; but the people we could not aco. Bt. A g00d balloos can be made for a few thousand doliars, Paul's cathedral fooked like a chité’s top—a ‘model’ | #0 4 man to look after and navigate it for two or threo church, a little plaything—while the London monument | thousand dollars a year, and whére coal is plentiful gas is ‘and the Corinthian Pillar, erected to the memory of Nel- | 20t very expensive. Certainly many persons expend thoir gon, in Trafalgar-equare, resembled a couple of ordinary | thousands on pursuite far lees laudable and less elevating. oandiestioks, Every ship and steamer on the Thames | It is very easy to say that geatiemen in the ordi- and in tho Rast end Weet-India docks was distinctly visi- | Dry avocations of life—whether mon of business, ble; but none of them, at the distance we were placed, dis- | Statesmen, literateurs, or men of scionce are played any motion. Tho only evidence of life that wo | fools, Idiote er lunatics, for risking their tives bad in the unparalleled panorama below us was in that | in 4 balloon, The same may be eald of men who explore awful and continuous roar, ‘The veesels looked like chil. | arctic or antarctic regions, or whe go down into the dren’s toy ships, and those in the river appeared as if bowels of the earth or the depths of the sca, who take Additional by the Canada and Etna. Our London Correspondent on a Balloon [From the Tandon Times, Oct 13.] 0 imes, Oct. 13. Voyage from London. eae tiemday eaten ben rey vit definite sot wi a tion. ‘The broad dro told, has ow been marked Of heed, be supported by the Goshiwic, and, if groaler Messrs, Coxwell and Glaisher, Hon. Robert J, }.reeults will be elicited, they were frozen or petrified ina stream ef ice. distant voyages for more pleasure, or who climb Alps or | not for us to conjecture. AU that ts yet certain ts that the | gireugth wore roquired, by tho Liverpool. The lass ‘ With a good balloon and under the direction of a skilful ALL APPEAR AT A STANDSTILL. Appennics for health or recreation. Dut calling a man a | Cart wut te Rongh ameter aieaen ts tai ear See ee ee Sine Werke toed eee ete Walker and the Correspondent of the | soronaat, 1 do not believe a balloon excursion undor ordi. Everything was.a fixture. ‘The Serpentine, the orna- | £001 for acting according to bis natural and intellootual | falablished in tho rotect discussions to make the matter ‘littlo to tho north of the Great Low hee int irkevhea, The gunboat Gosbawk also had up, and was moored to the landing stage ia the basia, THE RUSSIAN FLEET AT NEW YORK. (From tho London Post (government organ) nary circumstances is attonded with a particle more risk than @ voyage in a steamship aoross the Atlantic. In corroboration of this, there aro several acronaute of this generation, at least three of whom are now living—Wise, Green and Coxwell—who havo made from five tosix hundred or more asceuts, white it is known that at loast mental waters io the parks, and the round drop (appa- impulses, who seeks to gain information, enlargement of rently) that forms the cireular lake of several acres in | ‘4098, 0r rational pleasure, or all combined, by going oxtent in Kensington Gardens, seemed more like saucers | WDere the great crowd will neither follow nor lead, does or oups of water than large ponds, as they are. Finsbury not necessarily prove him a fool, circus looked like a greea and gold colored dinner plate. ‘Where would the world be ‘in national and scientific Mavs. DarEpaOMae Progress were it not for now and then # Vasca de Gama, Herald on a Scientific Aerial Trip. gerents; ment by the federal representative the Morsey are destined for the Confederate service, and that they ought to bestoppod. To justify suob probi- bition, therefore, it would have to be shown that the al- What Was Seon and Hoard and How 4 e : cet tion was the real one, and, i Earihly Obj:cts Looked. bby ior nd ergy Roto oe peti ee Bae While looking at a scene #0 novel, and one seeming 60 pahee -ctaad ys odes pay A seen aynsbay Whit | wee annlawtal dostiaation, ‘The first OF thee peston Se prock td tno pertett at a tiniest fain scetonenton? with a ipwreck, involving Ives | impoasible or 80 contrary to the ordinary laws of nature, ry a Daguerre, a Herec! after @ | G. question of evidence; the nei. question of laa and the warmth with which the officers of the most des- eee of @ part or allon board, And in a great majority of the there is great diffioulty in believing one’s senses, Now, Columbus or a Mongolfier bas made one successful voyage | Now, as regards the law, it seems to be ad- potic of have yy the model de- cuges of balloon casualties the “accidents” can be traced ‘| tb anew and unexplored fleld, why: should tho whole } mitted that neutrals may i , afford striki {itustrations of with that some twenty-four hours have passed, 1 am coustant- avy extent, and n mores Mar art to some direct mluunanagemont, inexcusable carelessness world stand still and wait till apother Columbus or an- Of war, shine Selly 4 | the pecullar character of American institutions. There The American Flag and American | totems nee mlansnsenen, tnerousnle ret Fae etal deca foe JOUreY W654 | cinor acronautio hero will enture to follow tholeadert | Zit Wb aba otha te to sre al of a hom ony andi toolve soma Roasts . Ho @ been the case in every ono of the fatal balloon ascidents \\ * Something practical is now coming out of, neroatation, | neutral merchants should not trangross the limite of cus | patural that the fovernmeat which bas Tuasts Near the Sky. tdias’t tive Shiba “and dah Of tues voudiled Ju-she denis fm ae rip wtp . fond thle generation wil!’ be6tidee ‘pelaif “ludieey some Sins ete ned anaes ve tence belt reas, twa yoars srtuered away the liberties a cae a! of aman that T onco accompanied on an acrial voyage ae. bi dpsits tea Jit actra oe bn ashes practical inventions being:‘brought out to aavigate the | in view, any Brig sub os may sot oithor gua oF shire Teprespatotives cf the sovereign was is pow, a(ter bis extending nearly bait across the island of Great Britain. | °° bn as. aed tele pbortschertan wit, | 2’ And what better enoouragoment oat be gived toate federat“or Confederate customers without of- | own peculiar mauoer, reforming se. oe AS BWA ROAR OF LODO, |.” 2s! sercamt aman shouts possess physial Ee ee Relteeina‘ieoy | ©. 2m adventurous and a useful science than'to: have’ Sit ewe némissons ame tat: the ‘bergnine abal:-1. eertiny caepontie’ce este meas ot omnetmetinae’ * | vigor, gvoed heaith, a ciear intellect, good temper, discre ipdotured, tot if we Fis poblemep with large estates, eminent, statesmen, men of usted in the wey of tade, and that the acter ligeg nN naa ip emer NE SALINE hha tion, courage, quickness of perception, sound jadgment, pi opener beste peat apres con, | !9tters and science who write F. R.8. or F,R. G. 8. after | goods supviied are for 6 eg Sy Apel Eo Toe) establiatied at Washington, it would be Page tnd that ordor of mind which enables one to know how to | fe: away io Us ieee Tnortale was quite vlaivig, | {U0 nadies, give it their patronage, countenance and nisl salen to Eng toceraide sd tecee acest f Teens: nue lene exteasatioualy, jn lore aS French Opinion of the Mexi- | %ti2 case of a sudden emergency. He, moreover, should. Sh is uiibow hala eho ot Pio support, ts ?. ties are carried the Atlantic to New York, Eng! and Russia are now ab issue om as vom man of strict temperance. None of these are very | 114 "1: would hhaye been beyond the reech of vision, |, P%0bsbly an,American army officer owed bis nominee | 200, rosea, |S tot ee eT | ee ae ae ee eo ae can Empire. Tare qualities; but they are certainly not all possessed by | Pelee ee one time it looked no larger | 100 £0 the office of President of tho United Stator tothe | War, as. wo often” do, to. foreign govorn- eer Bate fairs 7 Of this evory individual, Thon the risk ig very difforent at ditar- | (0 °F Eevee: fact that be had stood on one of the highest peaks cf the | menis, delivery is made of these vessels at tho ports of | we geileve that those why have dono thelr Best to wane ent times and seasons. It is by no means unpardonable Rocky Mountains. Very possibly como future candidate, | the purchasing State—at Alexandria, Cronstadt or Con | a. war of exte {nto tie Staion of the confede. coe for an apronaut ta.mako an'asconsion during the threaten- ELEVATING REFRESHMENTS. and succesful ono, to the same high office may be a man | stood, of osuld be. rowotably agsnmed, that any vessels | Tacy,ceDDek Out bavd.a tow loon af the kingdom of bo. Maximilian’s Reply Prompted | 0 warns of @ coming storm, for a laudable wish to fae tnt cenllpmerralenls iB, tee Pag is, | Who tas soared above tho clouds ima balloon. Now and built ig order ofthe Confederate government wou'd be de- | Tard, Wo might have doubted whether Wt were, posal. beneath ered, like so much oar or Savannah, Northern Statos Parsue meteorological observations, or the urgent Becte- tt sec peridd.’ We—wbile ‘treating? oureelves—tevated 1s.|:ncTentet, Coa persons who go Up once; twice, oF alt.» | AUS: bo taken into tho Confederate esFvioe, the wena: |. inacua thax timceasives: the aymgabhy of Kirope, Ooh sity of a military reconnoiasance may justify it, aud the voyager knows the darger, and is prepared to risk it, just as tne hardy navigator prepares himself to meet a cyclone or ride out ap equinoctial gale on & dangerous coast. But the mere amateur, the aceker after a now sensation, has by Napoleon. GREAT BEAUTY OF THE EMPRESS ELECT, dozen times in a balloon, will neither be accounted heroes nor lunatics. At the very worst they can only be christenea baHoonatics; and however atrocious the epi- thet may be considered, your London correspondent of the present writing will not feel in the least offended action would be perfectly lawtul. If the ships left our shores and arrived at the territories of the pu: unequipped and empty; if they only recoived upon arri- val at such points their’ equipments, armamonts and commissions, and were tl despatched from the ports of the belligerent on the work of war, it with due reapect and condescension, The munificenco of one of our party had provided several bottles: labelled with mysterious figures, marks and hieroglyphics, and among these we could decipher *Chicquot,’? i 1” &e., &. A cork on jd be ii atl inn; uo right, morally spenking, to go above the clouds except | {/Xeres,”” “Lafitte,” *<Cognac,” . when apy ono applies it to him. would be impossible to impeach the part played by scans prin pncin. sn ody: coming out dt 0h sake aud report, bat the stream pert ie eu hides eh, proven nae he Ruvottaiian Treaty. The Deputation to Visit Mapoleon | _ 1 2 b considered fortunate that battoon ascension or gous beled stogive additional clevalion to-oat Tou, nary, without being at all’ “elevated” with Sop ener aig Beehreiared Ctier, ost: ieee d cee tee Sere canis er onmname bins enced oe . ig attended with considerable expense; for were it to be | Spirits. Breathing the air of the upper regions or of imbibing | sustained against the noutral government for | iwoon Russia and Italy:— and Return to Mexico. purc!.ased cheaply the adventurers would be so numerous ‘TOMS, ERREEMESES AD SEES . pertnliging pach tranesctitate Tt may be aifirmed that this treaty is the most Uberal Bw! the transactions now in question are not of this character. What is suspected of the iron-clads in th Mersey is that they are designed to follow the Alabama, and to become what the Alabama is known to be. Now, the Alabama, though a cruiser in the service of the Con- federate government, wos never exportid for delivery at a Confelerate port. She recaived her equipment ani her com- mission, ond proceeded to act against the enemy with- Out enr, having touched Confed-rate territory at ell. If, therefore, these iron clads were to do the sama, onc 0 two things must bappen—either we, the neutrals, must have provided them with their equipment, in which caso wo should be participating in the war; or ‘the beiligerent purchasers must have done so in our ports, and therefore made our neutral territory the bagis of hostile operations. Ifa sbip leaves Pritish waters in a condition to act at once against an enemy, it is clear that those who conduct her are doing just as much as we ourselves could do if we were the belligerents, and not they. It is equally clear that in doing this they are exceeding their rights, and. thes such \ proceedings ought.not to. be. allowed: Je 1s'not tavwful. for neutrals to equip.a veveel of wir dga inst, a t; itis not lawtul for in ES equip a vosnel-of- from a neutral port. Y¢ coonninn id not destit.ed for @ Cobtederate port, pe the cbaracter so which their d cena inbuflder whose muy bate under sdspicion to my that is unfounded, and that his goo's bave been really spoxea by a lawiul and iniocent customer; but that plea, if sound, could of course be established 80 plainly a3 to preclude any further dispute. It would be also loasts wore drunk and spocches made—the former en | {8 exionsive champagneous views om overy sido, do- 9 , scended as gently as a feather, coming down upon a moun- Ls ced cascades Among ‘he gontiments that | 15 top, alighting in feld, near the lituo village ot ‘The Kings and Rulers of the world, Pirton, four miles from Hitchin, in Hertfordshire, having Queen Victoria. ‘been up @ little over two hours, and travelied forty-eight President Lincolo. miles. ‘The Fmperor of Austria. 4 REFLECTION. Each of these rulers had ‘“‘subjects’” on board. Then Such are the brief notes of our aerial excursion by ‘one of the party gave “Scientific Acrostation,” which was | gg jolly a party as ever drank champagne, with the world responded to in a brief but very cloquent and appropriate | and all its cares far beneath their feet, while they—or at speech by Mr. Glaisher. “Aeronautics and the eminent | apy rate, your correspondent—was miles above the aoronaut, Mr. Henry Coxwell,”” was given, to which our | clouds. aerial captain replied most feelingly, telling us, to our great gratification, that he had ascended into the heavens in Pt Petts Carscignnmease. balloons exactly five hundred times previous to that trip. ‘ Pieat, Octs'185.1968, Mr. Glaisher had also been up sixteon times, and Count | Zhe Russian Fleet im New York—Commenis of the Pari, Schaffgotedh fous times. Press—The Mexican Deputation—More Troops for Mors, Being myself something of a veteran in neronantics (I |. ©—Conto-ation of the Senate and Corps Legisl had beon up just onco provirus, and that was twelve peter Sheseeseoets oh the: nang Eeatetany experienced"? i"? he. ic. 3 babs fe a, Se ie » od gave then tha | _ The presches of a considerable Russian foot in the Hage ‘igreenhorna of ballooning’ —Measrs. a , | bor of Now York, tho grand recoption given by the to which those gentlemen responded with groat humor, | % ! ollicere, the speeches made there, and the re ana I must say with all dignity and courage. that an offensive and defensive alliance is to be formed ber In reply to the toast of “ihe United States, one and in- | Wee Russia and the United Stater—all these nave divisible, and may she always remain 80,” the distin | “eated no little excitemout and ivterest in diplomatic ever concluded by the Czar’s government. It grants te the Italians in Russia an ensemble of rights which ia oot ret conceded to any other foreian nation. The loviola- bitiey of the domicile, the privacy of commercial ‘the administration of justice, and an unfettered right defence before the law courts, are therein guaranteed to Italian aubjects. ‘The right to hold real estate, personal taxes (; personeiles), the right of importation and exportation, transit dues, bonding and re exportation, have been the subject of the most liberal dispositions. ‘Trade marks have been guaranteed against all imitati 9, and Italian public securities have anew market in Russia. This mar- ket is worth mach at caren ‘The tucessant domestia loans of all kinds absorb att our disposabie capital; but 16 certainly will not always be so, and tne principle, ia aay e! a serious conquest obtained by the government of Victor Emanuel and its clever representative at the Russian Court ‘The treaty also stipulates for the complete liberty of commerce forthe seamen of each of the two mg in the ports of the other, The coasting trade only pressiy reserved. io every other respect the atipu- concerning pavigation are of the most liberal char- that among all sorts of mon, and in all kinds of weather, there would be a pretty large number of casualties, 1 would not care about going up with a balioon that would contain less than fifty thousand solid feet of gas, and one containing seventy thousand fect I should consider safer, provided more than two persona were to accompany it, ‘The balloon that carried up @ party yesterday contained ninety-8ix thousand feet of gas; and this, with other items, required an expenditure of fifty pounds sterling (two hundred and fifty dollars). LATE ASCENT OF MESSRS. COXWELL AND GLASHIER. During tho last month Messrs. Henry Coxwell, the well known aeronaut, aud Mr. James Glaisher, meteorolo- gist of the Greenwich Observatory, whose scientific ascents are now so famous and widely known, had several consultations with some literary gentlemen and “distinguished foreiguers,’’ aud the regult was a determt- nation to muke up a party and take a trip in cloud land, There were in all six—two of thom Americans. The company comprised the neronaut,@ scientific observer, two literary gentiemen, a distinguished American statos- man and a foreign nobleman, To gratify-the curiosity of readors, the names of the aerial travellers may as well be given:— Henry Coxwell, acronaut. THE LAIRD RAM CASE. MR. MASON IN LONDON. BEECHER'S MUSCULAR CHRISTIANITY. THE FRENCH IRON-CLADS AT SEA. Vincent Wallace’s New Piece in the English Opera, &e., &., we. ‘The Canada, from Queenstown on the 18th inst., passed Cayo Ruce on Monday afternoon on'ber yoyage to Halifax and Boston. Cur ageat at Newfoundland telegrapked the mun pouits of her report, which appeared in the Heratp of yesterday morning. From the some sourco we receive | James Glaisher, guished American Senator gave us a fine, minute speech hy cues Dr par Paris. a i mame Coe, Lei tay that bo was building addition wi % whic Count Feanz cl yotsch. e Comments ress U) ie Speetl e Rus; | & Vv ich was his uy who additional news by tho Canada which we puplish to- | sion) Robert J. Waller. or "grenk eloquence ene | powers <2 Goat e°9 “a0 yy osiecea, and c lawful trade, and that be bad ne concern with the bar- | (aU Austrian subject, who acts as its hist . day. Pliay Mites. sponse to a political toast by an eminent statesman at | 1" Admiral are brief, but pointed, and show a good dea | (yin after delivery to the purchaser. But this plaia state. | After the official en io eee oe on, Our European files by the Etna are to the 15th of Ucto- | Nicholas Rowe. convivial gathering was ever given under such lorty | & (elite: Both our foes and our friends here regret the | ment has not, a8 far as we know, been put forward on | de Heirads je arolduie entered ite Sowers We tober The ‘ollowing important lettors from our corres- | The ascent was a purely private one; but, as it took | and olevated circumstances. Cheers amd clapping of | *PParcut good understanding botween our government and | Petia of tte vessels how suspected, and it le impossible | with great attention tho progress of the pondonts in London and Paris, with tho newspaper com- | place iu the grounds of the Crystal Palace, ono of the few | hands followed tho telling points of each speaker's ad- | tat of Russia;for all the liberal journals here, which have | Aiapama. in short, assuming that the alleged destination | monarcbical feeling in Moxico. OF that progress be was Dilation which ts annexed, contain most interesting details } localities whero a supply of gus can be fad, the visitors | dregs; but the great audience below—tho undistinguished | SIWay® Austained our cause, are also in favor of a war | of these iron clad: for the Confederate ervicecan beciear. | ennbiot to torut > foul HOAs Frans Oo tllnesl ebaehe of tha advices telegraphed from Cape Race, that happened to be at this noted exhibition witnessed | three millions, who had “pit tickets,” gave us not | S#sinst Russia for the en‘rancnisement of Polana. A | ly, catablished, the law Applicable, to the Alabama | Soci as from the accounts given in. the English ‘Tho London Times of the 14th of Uctober says:— it. From one totwo thousand persons were present,se- | one single cheer. But, if they did mot fatter our | {W extracts from the leading journals relative to this | two things would be beyond deniai—eliher the | Spanish Deawapapace, He showe! paeea nmap se Meas. ephiuices om ft. Pcorsburg couiirm tho statement that parated by a ropo barrier from the balloon and the excur- | efforts to be eloquent, I will. give them the matter will not be uninteresting. Annee erage have ee. or the | ©? > yeaa him — Pane « gel a already 10 fp remitied thither last wee eo sent 2 ") ton est steamers, justi te. devlar lesion forthwith, as tho Russian Dank declines to makeadvances | *0vists, with their friends. We greatly desired three | credit of being portectly respectful; for not one | La Hvance, always opposed to us, tu referring tothe | fettilan ot teks Miwammanl | Oe Jeane. time | He found, howe ons single person of the vast multitude around and beneath | femarks of the Russian Admiral about tho burning of St. us offered or attempted to come into our room to inter. 9 Petersourg, says:—We of course do not know bow far rupt us. I suppose it was owing to the good breeding aud we should covsider this language, which is, to say the upon gold’at a low rate. M. Loon Plee, of the Siecle, disapproves the conduct of all England on the Polish question, and threatens Great things, namely:—A pleasant day,a south wind, and pre- Parations so carly ip the day as to enable us to have some six or eight hours of daylight 2 Fe a ; 2. i re Of the Alabama was certainly not regarded by any par- | fourth ot Mexic ties iu the business ag a lawful or unimpeachable pre ceed. | army will soon deliver the other Pa. ing Those who took her to sea smuggled her out of port | from the pressure still exercised upon 5 ona false pretence. Those who had their eyes upon her | When this complete liberation shall be effected Britain with the loss of the French alliance if'she aban* | to euable us to travel directly over England, not stopping | confirmed habits of the peoplo in this aristocratic coun. | !*s#t, imprudent, as the expression of the disposition of | and who snspeoted her errand were only prevented ‘rom | Mens? majority of the Mexican will dovs France oa this oceasion, or if she does not fight side try, where all persons occupying a high position are | We Cabinet of St. Votoraburg. In any caso it is curious | stepping her by accidental impediments, Had she re- | vote of the “Notables.” still the Arcaaawe declared ies mained twenty-four hours longer in port she would b: he owed it been detained. and the despatch of the vessel, a tuct has | Be was to devote bis life not never been booked upon as anything but a | ¢rument #0 lous ies civil war lasted twented with venpect and deterance, to see Yankee abvlitiousm consorting with the abeolut low on the Social Science Congress now sitting in Edin- Another tooat, which never can be.omittod in an intel. ism of Russia, and to Msten to the encouragements by rg. by side with her. The Loudon Zimes of the 14th iustant say! f we arrived north of the Tweea, and perhaps drop s 7 E F ei 2. oth Since the commencement of tho American war tho tin | The morning opened rainy, and, as there was only an | ligent assembly, was‘ The Press,” coupling with it the | W2ich they exhort each other to continue a atruggie at ucceseful evasion of the law. If concerns | us EME Soni pe "ae, reves: tha Plate makors of South Wales have goue through & rather | eight inch gas main, tt tok nearly eight hours to fil the | name of the lending newapapor of the world, «The New which humanity and civilization shudder, ‘This under | O04 TRO". why the public, has “felt ‘pecs | Tewdy to set out for his post at twenty-four hours? notlee, minal wiarkets, aad in fuct the charcoal plate takers ax, | Dalloon, thus delaying our departure till twenty-nine | Yous Hxna:p,” acd’ calling on your correspondent to | Sanding is a fact to pen the eyes of those wno sustain | or satis‘uction in the detention of these now famous | He prayed! thom Leta on ge Saag sg yey peuded almost cutirely on that country. for thelr sales, | minutes past four. respond, which he did with bis usual felicitous eloquence, | ™ Furope the cause of Poland, and coudemn at the 1t ja not for us, not for any one, to prejudge | feepene to the cal stake, in order thet he show wee The conseatience was that several works were lopped, THE sTanT. . Thad a copy of your journal with me in the car. samo time the cause of the South. 5 yn Sent rea act the case will | cocnize in an infallible manner the of God in the fund miiny overs were only partially employed. During | Boing provided with a couple of emall hampers, filled | Then your correspondent, with his proverbial gallantry, | THe Nord—the Russian organ, and always friendly to Gnd that the suayeced waste tl either Pees em | mission which. devolved upon him, he insisted that the J hes with creature comforts, and numerous overcoats and us—says:—The London Post exhibits its jealousy on be- ep Fd gave a toast, an account of which;] have no doubt will be 4 . read in your columns by millions of bright eyes in every | D#lf of Franco and England at (be honors rendered to the part of the habitable world, while sighs and eloquent | Russian officers. Does the organ of Lord Palmerston prayers will be breathed from ten hundred thousand hap. forget that the Cabinets of Paris and London have always py and lovely bosoms for the long life, prosperity ana, been more or lgss favorable to the confederacy, while Yions of rotarning prosperity, and some of the works that ‘wero stopped have again commenced operations, and those that wero kopt going throughout tho depressed’ times are now more fuliy employed than before for a long time, and yew works are about to be started in ditfereut parts of the district. The coke plate, from tis cheapuess and other E t vith clean bills of right or not Weave at alt. We | Rational will shall be mani'ested, go as not the should like to see our shipbuckters standing toldiy and open- peceh rested on the spontaneous character of ly upen ther claims as neutral traders. The trade ‘ in quostin is either right or wrong. If right, there | , The deputation were struck with the proper view is no reascn why government should trouble itself | bY bis imperial Mighvess, and they ail declared that with “anxious inquiries.” If wrong, what is really | Sexican people only desired for the moment to obtain uniawiul should not be left practicable by evasion. | 20quiescence, and as regarded the epoc! travelling blankets, the aerial traveliers stepped into the car amid the cheers of their friends, We had two neat flags—one of Great Britain, the other the Stars and Stripes. i 4 i i the circumstaaces, has of late commanded a nore active do- THE LAND FADING FROM VIEW. hi that of Russia has not departed for a single instant from i uld leave it entirely to bis Highness. » ha a appiness of the travelling bachelor, who never forgets the As to the expedievey or inexpediency of the law ag it | #uculd leave i Y pointy) ei ee eee ce canbe ero As Captain Coxwell sang out “ cast: t gotberopes,” | dear creatures who £0 often econ ree: than reaa— | /5 sympathetic neutrality toward the United states? ——, oo » ee Mp eye We are now | THE BEAUTY OF THE ARCHDUCHESS AND ITS BPFECTS. vol ; sotat a h . ” 8 friend! nt concerned only with what is, not with what ought to be. e a were then introduced coal aro 278, a 258. at the works, and I Coke 21s, a22s, | we slowly ascended, un American waving the glorious | nig jucubrations in the columns of the ladies’ favorite | %¢ Zemp—always friendls—says:—The Russians are | Toure timo we shall Jeurn what 19 the case for the peooe to tbe hncedaean sokanerareae ae banner of the young repubiic, and a “ Britisher”” swing- ing the other. Amid the cheers, the novelty and the beauty of the scene one Las no time for personal fears. Instead of our party rising up, the carth seemed to be sinking away {rom us, while each individual object— According to acircular of Messr#, Arlos.Dufour & Co., ; of Lyons, regarding the silk markets of that city transactions both im goods aud raw material baye been suilicivntly active during the month ended October 14, to ournal, the New Yorx Hmnaty. The sentiment was what | C@°idedly very popular in New York, It must not be might be termed ‘the toast of the day;” it was “The | forgetten that the very vest understanding has for a long ‘ . ” * time existed between Russia and the United States. Dut girls we've left behind us.” While other torsts clteited | Ie'therrcsent state vf allaire the ovatious given by tbe cheers, this produced the most unbosnded enthusiasm, Americans to the Rvssian oil.cers are none the less ia bad One eloquent and devoted member of our party, with | taste. . ite! ‘The Opinion Nationale speaks of the provable alliance cution, aud what the case for the ce endants, Whethertle | (adds M. Debranz) when heard her, beaming suspicions wb ¢) have prevailed in the matter are F weona, beauty and freshness, Leep wp the conversation in the pwrest by entertained or whether, even tm such case, the ven- | Casiiian.’’ The cothusiasm of these gentlemen reached ture is @vtua'ly au uniawfal venture, are questions to be | the highest pitch; for,on leaving the }, Ohe of decided bere (ier without prejudice or bias. In the | them declared that “the ver tight of inecmparatle interval we know only thie, that certain vessels sos- | Princess would be worth to her august husband an + sustain prices, although the autumn business has been 4 oa uu Sabin pected Of a destination like that of the Alabama will not ousand ; there was not a OO ee ee = Stoaa tease cn Lroegake cae) strue siugleness, devotion and constancy, gave ap indivi: | ofthe United States and Russia as the gud resnit of the be auowed to sip utas the Alabama did, pf srieante abo, se the aawege ot the Opens UES Ls EES Sree, 16. #8 peomausllg of ay Yeu, ali which it contains— alual, personal toast, ies Julie ——-,” and wich was | useiews «)mpathies which France and Eogland bave too | (fFOu the {. malin Pat (guvernmect organ). Oct-14.) | Charlotte, would not become an enthesiaatic im tmporta a:.g0 taking place in quotations for some s ceived with due feeling and gallantry long exhibited for the cause of the South «© “sectlou sevem (of the Foreign Enlistment act) is | ~ The &mperor Napoleon will be very glad to tla, time, pines on the one hand the news from Ameries re. | e7mtracted to the dimensions of @ fairy show, and | receive ie reaped ‘An alllaues betwoea our government ued that of Russia | Whe cue which tears upon the question of Mr. Laird’s | though he may regret held Dot Kiet it-before,, for o Gwindled into miniature. The Crystal Palace, with its ope TRAVEL OVER LONDON, would make France and England ‘sbake in their boots,’ | Tams. The length, intricney, ambiguity of this section | would have saved him the thousands who have perished moves the ho any carly settlement that will restore | oy two nundred acres of park, looked like a gentieman’s But I forget, we are moving over London; the gorgeous | and ihe idea ot the recognition of the South and the at. | have been very gexerally complained of, and hence the } by disease or by the bands of the enemy, The agoet the consumption of silk to its nominal importance, while opposite constructions which have been put upon it,the | chivalry bas not yet passed away. It has abandoned fetting sun illuminates the beautifol earth, casting long | Lombt to ‘once ab exmpirs aud an emperor upen, the Mex! country resideuce, with a small flower garden in front of shadows, golden lines and purple belis among fields, | ting forth all her immense resources now in the construc it, We rose very moderately, perhaps getting up two less stringent one, 1 ts contended, being supported b; I refuge in Mexico, tho general scope and character, ab well’as tee opectte regayindeigherdesderrce al on the other {nore is@ gradual fneroase ia the European cmand. te it i ae wane roles, of One Maghaation: Sete alee urged, that ee ain: THE DEPUTATION PREPARING FOR TOMS. aud feet in three or four minutes, rising about at an forests, bilis, valleys, cities and plains. tion of versels-ar: T, aud, with our immeuse a re is Tt appears by a communication from Ajaccio that the ais peril ave pater sarge A prdcrtersbotey ” High gleaming from afar! cin her, we could sweep, the commerce of France aud | tinesion Dotween the adattel right of the subjects or | sean tk an wlemine Glen Sales GO cultivation of cotton has been successfully introduced . Se eiuts ‘Rasera On, thee ova tesa conte tt cht | Carrying them to the port of ove belligerent, for ‘sale, | Nazaite on the 16th fustant, in order to announce ‘the If the joys and pleasures of lifo can be measured by | ailmnce with Russia on their own beads must fall tho Sensaiivps abd inteliectual pleasures an afternoon trip | consequences. ‘ ‘The Mexican deputation, having received the Atchluke over London cn @ clear autumn day is worth a nupdred } yasimniiian’s reply, have set off va their return to Paris, yoars of ordivary existence, Iam entirely conscious that } where most of WV I have utterly failed to give you anything but a faintcon- | The Emperor of Aus ? ‘ , ene ing io woy way to commit bimse!f in the «litt coption of our wrial Journey and its surrounding scenes, | WEI 0ny way | be eapected to make in reply to them. ‘The highest point we reached was a trifle over two miles | They will be received by the kmperor Napoien, bow from the earth, Of course our object was not to obtain | ever, and oe aber for yore aid the French ete , » fo troops in preparing (be Mexican people for a fuil and tree & great altitude, or we could have gor © up four oF five | expression of opinion. More troops are being sent from miles, or, as Mesers. Coxwell and Glaisbor did in their | France to ‘assist’ at the “plebisc ite,” which will be memorable asceut last year, seven miles from tho earth. | Portpoued as long as porsibie in order that it may be cou- eke seurmharc: Aneted under the immediate direction of these troope, who — wish to see that it is periectly fair. A regiment will leave Al the Leight we reached the temperature was not at all | Cherbourg for Vera Cruz the latter part of this month. unpleasantly cold, though the mercury was about twenty abe Memo vel ate marique saye:—*The Emperor of the s r French, az goon as ho heard of the reply of the Arcuduke degrees lower than on the suriace of the earth at start: | Maximilian to the Mexican deputation, addressed au auto- ing, and which, if Iremember rightly, was forty-eight | graph letier to tue [riuce, ia og we warmest degrees of fabreobeit. Neithor was there tuo slightest | ems, tae thueerat Sr rad bed clk = ditticulty experienced jn respiration, On ascending | gaw it what the reply was to be. What a farce! three, four or five miles Mr. Coxwell eays the wrial it is pow remtel ¢ tee hn hel is to retern voyager finds bimeelf breatuing more epasmodically, | $2 Frame, will re ut @ short time, bat will return to ‘*gaeping” as it were for breath—that ts, trying by perteciy fiir rea Ae i PORE Stroug effort of the lungs to draw in enough of the highly | A decree iw the Menitewr has convened the Senste and Farle oF thin air to gubserve the puryoses of lire. Malis the tet doce sat ceca ee ener, een Mr. Glaisher and Mr. Coxwei! both say that inthe | goustitution requires that when newly elected, as this is, higher altitudes the lungs get afar wider inflation, and | it eball be called together withia six months after election Mr. Giaisher saya be feels on these occasions, and for ® | Pr sna fi ty weil uiiersiond. that abe reavieg mason long time afterwards, a hoalthy expausion of the Iu will be iminediately ¢ mmenoed. Tho kmperor’s address And a throwing back of the shoulder biados, a vast m is Jooked for with much: interest, and the Southerners aro ber of the air cells in the exterior portion of the lungs LOOKING ON LONDON. The wind carried us a little west of north, and directly over London; and, though Sydexbam—wbero we weconded—is goven or eight miles from the metropolis, wo soon had the great commercial capital of the world Spread out beneath us like a map, and, for once, in an at. mosphere as pure and clear as a sunset on Lake Superior, I doubt {f there has been one single day in ten months as favorable for secing London as was yesterday afternoca. Fog or mist there was none, and the smoke of Lon don’s three hundred thousand chimnies was wa'ted over the northwest part of the town, leaving every strect, every row and block of buildings, every church, tower, bridge and architectural pile in clear and distinct outline. A complete photograph of London from such a stand- point, or rather dying point—what bas pever yet been taken—would be @ curiosity, and would constitute a map The Poravina sailing frigate Arica, Captain Alsemora, phere biog Percashe! a be ponetoery prone thr hear Pat to at Plymouth (England),on Sunday, October 11, | woes are utieriy inadequate to give an idea of the grar- wind bosnd. This fs the vessel among the crew of whom | sour gud gorgoune magnificence of the scene. Mr. hooey “ign, aa carn riedd abl, Wi >: bs, Glaishor said ho bad often had Weautiful glimpzcs of pic: eaten ta | pw be fs a ah Bote foe | tufeeque colors ta clouds, but eeidom anything to equal ert a fow days Rince for Peru, with « general cargo (OF | this, and he never had time to take note of them, as be yet spvedth chelate i always had to watch bis instruments, i . * Raised entirely above the einoke and mist of the earth, lon, will be named the Belliquouse and the Taureaw. ‘Tho Ma! government has signed a contract with Mr. | ‘8° Mewly CRTERINg San, WrspPeh SS BENEM Crnpery W. 3 Healey, an Fogiehman, for the construction ana | 0Ué® through which it gteamcd, gave use gorgeous color. - 4 jog and picturesque effect that notiing that I have ever seen futo the Lsiaud of Corsica by Count Bacciochi. ‘The expectation formed by the Paris shopkeepers of a brisk autamn trade has (October 13) been futly realized. The accounts received of the vintange from the eouth Of France are most favorable. It wos concluded in Lan- guoloc with magnificent weather, ‘The wine growers in that district admit that they never were moro highly fayored both as to quantity and quality For the accommodation of the increasing number of Russians who visit Genova it has been found necessary to erect there a church iu which they might worehip according to thelr faith, and on the 26th ult, the Orst stone was laid with great pomp and ceremony. The can ton of Geveva has given @he ground gratuitously, and the plans of tho church haye been made under the per- somal superintendence of tne Grand Duchess Marie of Tusata. subject only to lability of capture by the other, | D&ppy tidings | of mance of the come to the neu ort to buy them and fetch i them away, just as he may Duy and fetch away arms ad | cord with the reccans aliame army, ail other contraband, will give to without a difference. co the development desired by his Imperial Higa zons of @ noutral may carry ships tor war purposes to | 008, aud rally to the vote of the Notables belligerent’s ports for sale, that they may carry arms, {| &T@at majority of Mexicans.” M. Debraug thinks thas ammunition and other contraband there for sale. that a | the Archduke may proceed to bis destination ja February belligerent’s agent may come aud purchase and fetch | OF March next. Their Imperial Highnesses will pay @ away from a ventral port arms and all other contraband, | Visit te the kinperor of the Freuch after taking leave ef except ships, and that these he must not come to pur- ah Leopold at Bru chase and iet-h away, but must Lave them carried home . Debranz hopes that all this wiil mae to his own ports, seeme, it 1s contended, quite pre- | those ‘who Lave eyes to see and ears to hear whe posterous. Such ‘are some of tue more important | Seceptance of the sramhke b ey ject, pointe which the case of the Mersey rams is | Dut las enierod into the sphere of practi this calculatad (0. raise, and which it is desirable | 1# the case Xf. Debrans proves by one fact, which he come should be Fatisfactorily settied. The question | Siders of great importance—1 nae banker, M. will mainly toro upoa the words ‘with intent, or in order | Hevoitella, at a banquet given in magnificent palace that” the ships in question are to be uced for war purposs in | % tbe Mexican depulation, the Mayor the service of ene belligerent against another. These who | Of tbe Chamber of Commerce of Trieste, proposed as bis support (he coustraction of the act most favorable to the | “rst toast “The bealth of their Majesties, the Emperor trade in sbips urge Uhat the neatral builder and of | and Empress of Mextoo. pang a sunteay a reer? bh ——— STATEMENTS ‘OF THE DEPUTATION—TAHE FINANCIAL proat out of bis trade; aud that, ia the sense in which the | (Paris (Cet. 13) ¢ rrespondenee of the London Times, terms are employed in the act, those whe “Ot out an if there are people who persimt in entertaining cuip’’ veesels of war “with the intent, and in order | about the unauimity of the Mexicans’ adhesion to the that’ they are to be used for the purpose epecitiod, are | vote of the“ Notabies”’ and the offer of the crown to the thore , and thove only, who, being subjeets of England, | Archduke Maximilian, the Moniteur a,to some extent, intend also to ge out in the ship aod belp in Hguting her | the cause. The official journal in ite ‘foreign summary themselves. H formed the public that Juarez bad but afew hum Mr. Mason A red Men with him, The Paris corresponde Oat Bens, and Chae eg cn he SS Ses eee andred or three hundred men, apart Bight, as goue Dick to Tondon ou some business relative | resources of any Kind, continue to keep wtder the doml- — ps nation of their leader a territory five or six times =a than (hat which is occupied by @ French army num! confident that she long aud frequent ‘‘hobnobbiog” of the Emperor sod Mr. Stidell at Biarritz bes not been without being inated that ordinary respiration in the lower and | jts affect, and that a word of comfort will be givea them laying of © submarine cable, sixty-two miles in length, | denser atmosphere rarely calle into activit: Some } in that “ment. Idoubtit jhe coming feasion will Feeling Among « Mechanica 90,000 men. It is Indeed aiMenlt to conceive how a hauw between Otranto aud Vallone. By this means despatches | °° the surface of the earth, tn s pretty wide rangect travel, | tests toe , sR be the most siormy one which has occurred under the } (Liverpool (ct. 12) correspondence of London Shipping | fal of men can thus master a whole poople—a oo, pe sansa, the Poraiea Gull Aid. India tek errive | BA& Cqtaltod oF approached, And not alone in the weet | Cmiuent physioligists have expressed a decided opiBio® | empire ‘The opposition members intend making & ter- azette execrating the yranny of Juarez aod glowing with onthe: oF CORSETS or iE ADA Thdia Will ArTIVe | ay it tet the clouds were go brilliant, They wore piled | the healthful influence of balloon ascensions toa rare | rible onslaught upon the Mexican swindle, and to exhibit Yesterday great 4nd was manifested at the re. | siasm for isair iverators. if a fow bundred brigands, the taly more directly than through Germany up like vast fleeces of amber, purple and gold, in the | Stmosphere, particularly in its direct oftects on the lunge. the frauds, corruptions and coercion practised by the boat Gosbowk, tender to her Majesty with hardly a masket {p their possession, and reduced ta The Italian Minister at Lisbon has orders to negotiate |“! 4 . Professor Airey says he believes mos nd | SoverMment at the last elections, Tuere will Le lively om her previous position in the Lower t extremity, have beaten tue Mexicana so com- har ls te Pte ik te | eastern horizon, and receiving the last gilding of the lu most people would | ins" reat Float, where the rams are being fitted ait Hife aod spirit, it will, I foar, go bard the ¢ i tele pd ig w Americana poses.) i nssv of day. The only clouds near us were some dover. | lengthen their lives by an occasional bailoun ascension to The Menilenr, tn its “bulletin,” notices the fect of the | out. This act of the governme: , it im expected, peror when left alone and without hav. iona 4 establish there @ penal colony, to which \ over the north part London, bat (ar lower dows thap Ap altitude of three or four miles seizure of the rebel iron-clade by the Fngtieh gowern- peep Mar of much discussion in this town, a8 already jog “. ca tas A to = fyi upeo. a tal cone Uhirtoen huadred convict wil edi ’ ug OF ’ M * it have . ment, but without a word of commeut. much iaterest is felt in the matter, and great diweatis(ac- | told, that, waile Juarez, with bis starving and phen cmnppedaggint rims ng we w Perhape ere long we shall bare acrostatis doctors for | "There has Leon quite a scandal at the Grand Hotel. A | tion been expressed at tie policy of the government in | cudaws, performs this” miracle, the Triumvirate” er mali from the various ports on the Thes apd looked like the | Persous threatened with consumption or chest complaints foun Soenale very botorjousiy “fast,” both here and io | not giVice #oMe explanation to (be builders before taki are obliged mfict Ones on some of the towne ia ate a ty a giand | a erecting f; wand, whenet origi , an Jo hb . mportant step. Besides " er to brir m to oc Meee ind chet Eng, THe OWE | rom mre deargs of esac ote rvew, | 2 ie commen ania hasta pce | Settee, arate Tae "Mf" tt | fuera Sar, nln atm are agaae | Sm sad Totemsigs bs" fale “tes Belt itn oc ch weld of bhaete like New Orleans, mee the a eof yellow fever, | father having keyt ao ostablishment near London | and her Ma.esty’s*hip Liverpool bas removed her anchor: | Augustia),a town of 4,000 souls, for instavce, was called . TRACING THE THAMES. every person escapes tho epidemic who lives only Mfty | where that hoalthial and noble game was piay- | nge lower down ibe river to almost opposite Mhe entrance | upon to pay 6,000 plasters, ant being either unable or OUR DESPATCH FROM THE SKY, Tus tnacon was aie from tapetaremee ander: | fet above the wurce othe grad, erage some | SAL, gM, HEE, “kaa ot ike | Oe i aes | grin anny hn smu ge er hae on ings i Ox(ordshire, near \i# source, clove to its mouth in | TANd pneumatic breathing machine, some steam ole: | ender the name of “Anonyma,” had the honor of 1% | Was put on board ihe Ft Tonsson on Monday. which i@ bout half a dozen leagues from the capital, the SPLENDID BALLOON ASCENSION IN LONDON From the Liverpool Observer, Oct. 10.) berdquartors of tho French, will be “reappropriated.* ‘The seizure of the two steam rams, at Messrs. Lid’ ‘The Madrid paper in question, the Epoct, slates, more. shipbujlaing at Birkenhead, by the offloers of Cus rivtmvirate’’ demanded from the capt. toms, was dor 0, by superior orders: and wpen | talists of Mexico a joan of million piasters, payable in . This act is nething of the detention of those vease was done by word of mouth, Bot ft is at on, phant with a long proboscis, will be invented | a number of communications devoted to her i (iat will olevate ite huge trunk two hundred | 40 7imetand whe sovuslly did, daring » fnsbis season entire course of the Or four hundred seot into the air, suck down the pure at- | jn Hyde I " mosphere, and by moans of tho same mechanical force | Curie and a fine face, and dasbily drives « veutiinte and vivity hospitals, sanitariums, tuetitutions | DAYS, A0t SCAye, manage ey trom gentlemen of learning, botels,and even whole blocks of houses or | who ee mx aon + ny ed ‘4 —— more eaves, ont are were an yf bay ovtivecities, thus driving the “end of fever’ or me. | nately for “Skittles,” $ and makes | more formal and res character, Having dec bo pretension to that quality which makes @ | that these vessels &! be detained, in order to await Phitic exhalations far away from the abodes of med. I | woman a “crown to her pysband.” "Bo the virtuous the opinions of the law officers of the Grown, ani the con- the Germen Ocean, The little river lockod like a silver ribbon stretibed tu graceful curvos io the midat of a va riegated carpet Military and Sctentific Acrostation= ree Pablic Batid+ dral, Seen from Above=The Roar of London=Tonsts and Spoeches Above the Clouds=Speech THE BLEVATION. While over{the centre of London, Mr. Glalsher, from the ruling of bis averoid barometer, doclared our per- | Pendicular height to be one mile and threo-quarters—a Vory reapsctabiec elevation, certainly, for modest gentle- » men, though som ty, © the Teast, woald | positively believe this will be done at no distant day, who ‘at tho Grand Hotel feared they would be | sequent deliberations of the Cabinet, it would not do to and the New Vork Herata,” de. | be ranked aaosg the cbigher chessen”’ of orclety | and tefore long Twill give you come detale and practl. Footaminated er presones and gout a deputation to | let them 1 forested formate, under which ha ints tension owoom, Oct. 10, 1968. | anywhere cal ideas on the subject. Nekidtiee” should be ousted. The’ resident. irector | got’a thing vo be trided witn. Doing’ once afixed: it te an'e correspondents are wherever grass SOUNDS FROM THE BARTH. ‘A WEW SOURCE OF ENJOYMENT. disitked tbe taen of parvng wah ber; for it is naid that more than the riotous crew of the who are now Grows oF wator runs, why should they not be where | And, though tho sight was gorgeous and beautiful be- | What is (hore more probable When das ing ghort Uae | Gearing ber Cortaight's qlay she had expended about twenty « in Liverpool, will be in & barry to qncgunter,