The New York Herald Newspaper, November 5, 1863, Page 2

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2 NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER. 5, 1863—TRIPLE SHEET. = were expressed as to the reception | Mr. Cobden that government vessels should be constructed cot tthe Th Be minions of Queen Isabella people were told Wal it. was | im getting off. The mandarins are that Bur. | with tacrodibt Gone for no ottier reason than to eatisfy tho unanimous will but there hardly seems | to rise, and gevine attack 8 these doubia were | by private builders. On the, contrary, be thought it was ‘Dom: fouli grounds for fear as long as Quingan remains ip possesion | a furious, disordered race; sty, luuselts for, tastead of be. | desirable tbat the government should retain the OES CoP Y 0 secon te tee, (ene | Sr tos ieportaione . trees, thickets, St Soremouy,, be’ pasved rapidly ease: Ey, Big A Oe ne on years of separation many vicissitudes, towards tho — hook ; it ay from Baden to hin, Jt : other A ‘inedeAl, aud. then hurried op, exeus- | ments, 90 that in case of war they would aot only have ae pore eb eet ee jou. THE WAR IN JAPAN. ahi ih we plunged 4 use tout busivens, which required bis | the Sernrarte- te fal Lg em eed received the ‘that Spain did not refuse to open her atop |" wo pied irbe ALLEL A \ithographed publication, issuer bi i 5 '. 5 urged that . see ine salen dloral party. and which may | both im engineoring and shipbuilding, as well as im other her, (a bal envaherh eas aa Noes soirenees oe Metiremes amivel Mupers Wheet Pitman sa fain passing Do called tho wan! for rie of the goverument, says quite competition was beneficial, agd brought out tbe on learning ‘tut ney are to wave a descondant of | (shanghao (Aug. 20), correspondence of London Times.] | U4” cries, but we carried away 5 openly that tho leaders of the Cologne democracy ind ability of tho competitors. Io support of this Baeries V. for thoir Euperor, What, then, can be the By the last steamer from a wire, AD instant afterwards wo perceived bai aurea to get vp a demonstracion against the King, | view be referred to two ships which had beoa built in pm iy genre hich. bas -come over | ene yd naeiane Sroniner trom Japee, Baws wae received of pt a oe fo case be shoul’ be accompanied by his lremier; | this aeighborhood—the Alabama and the Florida. Hf jul change St. Domingo? It ig mot asserted that the Soealess josima, on board the Euryalia, accompanied by the Pearl, put that the plans of s wicked Jacobins bad | (Applause.) He was uot afraid or ashamed to 3 Dosa frustrated’ by the determination of bis Majesty | owe thet his sone baill end denpned the Alabama-> have made a tyrannical use of be power, which St; | “Argus, Persous, Coquotto, and Havock. Among | (ist te eee ae ree ae, sre to slop away from tho proposed fete. ‘The | ('* Hear,” and cheers)—nor, bo was eure, was the build. itary foo must have ‘Knows what abe was doing, wha ene | £00 demands which Colovel Neale was instructed to make | Sintias to fa eiender scream. of Osler, for whom Friends of M, de Bismark evidently conaider it a triumph | er of the Florida ashamed to say that be designed end | « bility, aad something more, tbat Mr. Lincola | & Se a ae ee Ae On the Japanese ta conssquence @f Ricbardson’s murder | Sooads le 0 denne not one had any fear’ ail . for bim if he can prevevt his master from going where he | built that ship, but the testimony borne to the Character | will have to retire from the conduct of the war on his per- mr pe AR tuee by ae viceroy. | Were it will be remem! , the payment of twenty-five ‘ase uote, ail facen tle Sain Noles eld his wite 4s afraid to go himself, if the Minister is hy meen be is % these omen vee aot the, eves. Of Sithkanbend, as sonal merits alone. L ne ponyr eer ig |e ay 0 ‘There is reaqon ¢ Seeaab tbat alter all’ the desire for Dosage | soapte. Gere A Fay Ne Ptaoe £ we covering her with his body. Poor woman! Byery ' 1 least to enjoy the saiisfaction of having bis uppopular- verpool, or this country, bul meri ese two | cosgor, and, in the pledges oxacte m bim, she - ‘ bh tsuma Oe t bared TH the King. How the adborente of monarchy | vessels had been buijt @ long time, and thoy had defied he | ment of the American people as to tbe wisdom of per- —— to Kalan (riety? panne Cha EG. ss pene. reported to havo offered the Mikado to fulfil — che, nee: eae SS wean possibly iumgiue that the cause they pretend to have | e/foris of four hundred ships of-war to capture them. These | gisting in the atte! to conquer the South, What os waseupl i these two conditions, but to have been haughtily told that ia! an act of po much at he promoted by such conduct, is amys- | sbips, be repeated, were designed by private indi- | weight will opinion have on this polat? What weight | the dupeofa handful of malcontents and adventurers. | tho matter was bofore the council, and to have teft in | Sublime heroism. olambered op io tee betting, toe Bo this aa it may, the Spaniards are uow taking onergetic | prey awe, (PRY Reaneta eeaib te i ebocks of which wore ao terrible three times y be ul the preheusion of orémary mortals; but | viduols and built for private individuals; but in this ith local or corrupt interestet Which way will the . 4 ig! igeon. = Admir: uper’s vis! Kajosima, a Hr ke safely alittoad that by plating. the King'tnithe | comibrythe ayatenn wea'foredeiuaa® to salty Chetek ftittboe rhe eens tik eceealiba bet OR bitatigencs moasuros (0 restore (heir domination, Matters must in- | town ju Satauma’s territory, situated in & bay at ¢ on my head. At loogih be reachod the cord of tbe valvg, foreground, aud ro. 1g him persoually responsible for | of the whole talent for building ships. He mext | of the country tie on this point? If the true patriot- ead ao far’ tot ie ore ina. to. besiege the South of Kinsin, ts to exaact their performance now from | Phe i Pogealaged orton ai y Lag Pt the arbitrary act advivers, they are’doing more to | referred to the want of guflicient dock spaces for | ism of the country pronounce..the -warto be . | aicans 6 Batsuma himself; apd it im generally believed that he will I iD » shot along @ horizontal ee ap a a ae re Sue ‘car, ¢ care!” we ay) : d Captain General in the town of St. Domingo for three | Comply, subject tothe ate creeorar ) royalty and raise up a republican | goverment purposes. Referring again to the | less and ruinous, will it be supported? Should ply , appl es 01 the population than the most strana | Alabama, he contradicted various atatements which bad | jt tara out that the numbera find their interest in | 4a7%., And) pushed their audacity to duck & pllck as to aera TeNarnen AO Ria omepicaeial nt T0030; 60k ee eT a ie and tas alleged Jacobiaical party could ever have | been mado shout thor departare {yom this port, sald that | a ray, which "increases “some kind. of employment | iis chio(s, Florentino ‘and Puega, a tty head. entetad in foreigners may ns aces esemaaae ae aa {09 was broken. but the balloon was discharging la gas, 3 tet ‘on the 1st of Seprember; 10 native Gove- plain we were ry f waits ke rite ci tiot ea | rch ea ein Se eer | Slr‘ pert a tw tar ele, | Marie Str ras Siang | np ow wremaet bu doef a at BEECHER IN LONDON. eleven or twelve o'clock the foliowing day. Lord Palmer. | of bone and sinew, but will only incresse the value of a | @nd ‘had, fhe, Brine ae ata dectaton to expel all foreigners from Japan, be sent an | {ip 5 We, must leap out at whatever risk, for Kits 2ubdeVidde mat Wicakctant’ witn tbe fio hue rebened tuethlinble to damages UF they had setsed Somo momentary siecess and elece asotber war Pree? | eMablishod itaolt in San Jago ; and, Gnally, that & | terminate ‘tion residing at that sottiemont “who. rofused petite “prc mpg the or, and raising Dissenting Clergymen—Hia "Throat | the Alabama, but the recent speech mado by Fart Russell | dont, thon a freah light will be shown ou tho policy of ap. | Bative chief, named Patongo, had been chosen to leave, The Governor, who fortunately is more en- | [¥! Suflored from a wound in Ous cllorts of t 4 - “ f the republic of St. Domingo, The town of Bt. Domingo | jightened than ‘of his follow Daimios ediately 1 knees, my trousers were torn. ste 4 p 4b Blairgowrie did aot eocm to agree with that delivered ling to uiversal guffrage every four years to Gil the | © lighter man, follow Daimios, imum ly Nite elipeca et? SNA Plus the | ty the Promicr, “Farl Russell ad undortakon to say | Chief eMces in the Stato. It passes the power of bumas oor ed oe ee tna ca'svar, | opaired on board the gunboat Leopard and taid bis tn- | goi'raitaeie my mend. carte no revolutions, (From the Loudon Times, Oct. 24.) some EE oad ee ee ate aa Tay | Computation to aay how the tultitudes will incline, and | Waeiming force. Rosistance was, however, offered at St. | Ou the atation, The fepiy waar Of gears; te tho eter, | THE CAF Was then far off By the aid ‘ 4 " . ow. He tai jown thal joy four voer, and decide, and act @ bw 7° 5 inet Dee nally oe etc et ers Of aatoeen Jian: consisting | jaw not sufficient they eould go to Parliament for an in- | Know that the multindo are ahortsightod 10 their views, | 283. A combat ensued betweont the native troops aad | that he would most likely fall If he attempted to carry i forest, and having gone a few stops I hoar tho Spanish garrison, which continued for threo days, y some 5 gembied at breakfast at Radiey’s Hotel, upon the invita- | dewmuity, He (Mr, Laird) bolieved Parliameny would not | partial in their intercats and impulsive in feeling, Ad | Ant Sion ong hundred and forty killed and two haa: | {hem out, and his Excellency bad tho was fe prefer vo | Sey Tie eetcrecnaaentee soll frightfully disdgured . ap arm « ” ene " , | indemnify an act if it was Bu) to transgress the to them is, not vo say worse, an ay ‘to blind . to nis dapartare lor Artorion, ¥ passed there was a law by which all were bound | [aws | Extensive rogions havo beon ultorly dovastated.by the | C208 uuurds poarly aa tho Mexican, Marquor acted for | Pade aBy Paimio fe, purchase a steamer or otbor vessel | Hoared. After crossing a river | hoard a cry. ‘The Hog. and Rev. B. W. Nool occupied the chair, wore not made for an admivistratiou, but for the country, | war, and the proprietors ruined; but they are chiolly in | tye Sraniirds hoary as fee, Meson ations Meelis | from any foreign nation. ‘Nedar stretobed ou the ground with «dislocated ‘The Rov. H. Wako Buxcasi, who was received with | 8nd they wero bound to obey the law ag they found it, | Confederate soil. Myriads bave lost relatives, but they | Gonoral tlcreutino was bard in pursuit, \ ri 4 2 and they were not bound to obey laws made hereafter. | may be thereby moro dis; for vengeance than for eh ne wn rend at rn | (le fe eae Medi Seed ae | Rey wah mateet a argue | we luey a eat a face par tndSan ge | "a A ~OON VONAGE NROM PARIS. | Fatrani Nutr ants ts, i ye aca ari ve e 2 4 a 3 A On bis behalf siuce ho had booulm tRiscountey.. When'bo | ™0t, Attorney Goneral, pointing out tho inconsistency of | they trust to increasing immigration, Manufacture ‘nds | (lly given tn the Spauteh papers In thelr news from (BO | 1 sceimeion of Mt. Nadar's Great Balloon, | (2 "a picked eee cent endl Touas tate eae Came from the Coutivent he had been for more than twenty | that gentleman contradicting in October statements | {ts account ina war tariff. ‘There is one city whioh wii! | Havana. Those last admit thes the novices tomel. M | ene tant ehe Ascont—Incidents of | done me good. By the assiatenco of the inhabitaute the aate weeks without speaking, and was quite out of training. ana | Which were made by himself in March last, always be loyal to the cause of war, 60 long as it is mot | ine are not encouraging; but, ng aggore. | the Journey, and Descent, vage was got together, Vehicles were brought. ‘alter sunaking i Manchester, klisburg, Giasgow and Lie- itself compelled to contribute in blood more than it Se ae eemmanies te Mate pi Pee [From tho Paris Constitutionnel, Oct. 16.) pissed es ‘straw. My knees bled; mytoins ud need erpool, bis voice completely failed him. He was afraidhe | England's Noutr ty to be Supported im | chooses. Tho contractor, the stock jobber, ne enute Out that the enthusiaam of the Donnicans for the mothor | ,,The balloon was called “The Giant,” it was waite. seemed to be like mincémeat; but I aid not lose my pre- ‘would not be able to speak in fixeter Hall. When, how- ariiament. turer , the shipbuilder, and the whole race rose to . Tho car carried some legs of mutton, ices, ter, | sence of mind an instant, and for a scoond Ifolt hunaill- ‘evor, on Tuasday morning, he spoke to himself he’ found [From the Loudon Times, Oot. 20. sudden wealth in this country sixty years ago, conatitute | Country must havo cooled down a good deal, champagne, carriage wheels, Chateau ’Margany wine, | ated at looking from the (russ of traw at those clouds fils voico as clear a3 a whistle. Some might say that his | * * * * * * * * — # | the public opizion of New York, and in only less propor- awords, Lyons’ sansages, guns, a wild boat's ead, speak- | which in the night I had had under my feet: It was im Fecovery was owing to the remedics he adopted; but he ‘The fixed idea of the republican party leadera was that | tion of some othor great cities. If these should bm THE WAR IN CHINA. ing trumpot,a dinner, service in bandsome porcelain, @ | this way we reached Ruthem, in Hanover. was disposed to thins: that in their use he had the direct in- | the government of England could not preserve a etrict | Control the Union, and eway the great decision on whic! printing press, a table, and ever te, for In seventeen hours we had made nearly two hundred. ittom ofthe Almighiy. Ouly last night he received lity in the war. They were surprised, indeed, that ber tho present fortunes of America, then we shall ace. s. . poreeety: It was mounted by 1¢ La Princesse de | and fifty leagues. Our coures infernale had ebvered pace by the mail some very dmiportans documents from Ame- = nf cid net fain make commen CARAS with Ls A tet Cmicgtact (Sea horpecrro p peer obeyed General Burgevine’s Coup d’Etat with ae & Satreraee Ered Te} leona bo three ieagues. Now that it i cra TRawe some fica which threw considerable light on the state of pub tho North, an in it In “crushing out’’ and punisbing ce ‘etion fi Cha: eo * a , . itgens! o ler’ . It doos not. ; We have made a good jour- 4 Tic feoting ia New York in regard to the negro. Thétate | the rebellion. Everything short of actual alliance bas | assembled people. Then, too, we shall seehow vain the | #!s American Troops—A Serious Chang ps sn wa tare nade Sees The E we | Tournachon, St. Felix, Paillat, Thirion, an anonymous in- | poy, and I marvel to sce wi Yiols were really the work of the Irish pvpulation. Mr. | becn construed into eamity. England has been continu. | attempt to oxcludo large populations, by the fictions of a | iu he Aspect of the Maxrotwe Kmperor | aii “and mysolt, Tho sumbor thirteon had beea | regdrd the most frightful death, Cor, besides the é of Oh 7 Beocher thon read numerous extracts from the report of | ally described to the people of the North as hostile to the | purely federal metropolis, from their natural influence in 4 -« | chosen by Nadar; it was au act of justice and ro} ion. | of being dashod about on our way, we bad that Uhe committee appoizted to relieve the colored Searias republic, Tt was.esmertog Goat, this hostility tcould com. | public affairs. But if is the srinciple of universal renee aaa Russia, Puzzled about Bure | 1) Ta: too long & time the cipher thirteen has out- | the pot nor how long should we have lived thea? I Bhowi the sufferings which tbe negroes had | pel the government to take some step by intervention, | that 18 now chiefly on ils trial. can be no doubt [Shanghae (August 20) correspondence of London Times.] Jawed and banished from honest numbers. ft was | giad ‘to have seen this—happier yeotat having to nt udu at the hands of the mob, and the energy | mediation or interference of, some kind which would | that the wise, the humane and tho intelligent among.the ‘Burgevine's accession to the rebels bas created cousid- | Covered with disgrace, it hid itself and dared never | itto you. ‘These Germans who gurround us are brave with which the merchants avd religious copgrega- | hamper the {federal government and prevent it from deal. | Americans are every day more wearted of a war bh ‘erable excitement in Shanghao, as it is felt that with the | impose its Ogure on others but with dissimulating | people, and we have been as woll cated for as the re fions wore setting themselves to work to compensate | ing out swilt retribution on the traitors who had wantonly | cannot possibly avert the disruption of tho States. Of | Ci7 of disciplined troopt, aud Kuropeans to lead them on, | Subterfuge. This grieved Nadar, who, with the philag- | gources of the little spot will allow. thom, ag far as possible, for thoir sufferings. The reply | destroyed ‘ the grandest political system the world ever | Course it 1s not they who prefit by the occasion to revivo he may do immense mischief, Cortainly the Tmperialists | tbropy of an excellent heart, at onee adopted it. I ought P. S.—I have just reached Hanover with ‘cont. to this report—a document admirable for oxcellent com- | possessed’? The intervention of England in the quarrel | tho old cry against this country. What want 8 | Wi be unable to withstand him without Kuropean aid | t say that we hoped to gain it on the side of our in- ions, and reopen my letter to tell you so. "the ition and nobie septiments—was signed by twelve or | was the only thing of which tho Cabinet of Washington | rest, not morely from arms, from bloodshed and extrava- after be hag succeeded in organizing a body of drilled | terests, and, by making towards it tho most generous ibs seetian sida came tous. Are wo at the end of ou teen colored meu, who were gentiemen, sebolars, and | oxpressed any fear. But that became an ever preseut | gance, from incesaant blustering and infinite corruption, | Pon" ties Gordon's force 18 largely increased, Directly | &dvauces, wo counted on its not playing us an unkind | reverses? Atany rate, Iam consoled to think they cam Christians, It was said that tho colored man was worse | terror. From Mr. Seward’s first despatches to Mr. Sum- | but from a atato of things which brings to every corner | f°). ne certain that be was in Soochow, Col. Hough, | trick. It progented itself to us under the form of a grace- | no longer laugh at us {n Paris. We have kept our pro- Of in New York than in South Caroliaa; but, having been | ner’s last speech this interference has been deprecated, | of the continent, and overy hearth in it, the worst | © .07r the absence of General Brown commands tho sta: | ful woman, tho Princess do Ia Tour d’Auvorgne, last | mises, and mx Aa the latter State, he could bear testimony to the con. | denounced, rejected in anticipation, flung back contomp- | miseries of a faction fight. But rest they cammot have @ | fo” Mi canatched Capt. Murray, R. A., in command of a | Comer to the fete, and who, on hearing there was every —_— trary beiug the fact. Hundreds and thousands of eman- | tuously before it was offerod, and even made the ground | long as America is in the hands of brawlers, ¢mposiors and couple of hundred of the Sixty-seventh and artillery, | chance of her breaking ber neck, could not resist being of Despatches from M. Nadar. Gipated negroes were being educated by white people, | of tho most angry threats. it is a singular phenomenon | adventurers of every kind, It remains to be seen what | Couple OY Bieter ol nie Cy omen tie) Bie guns, to |*the party. Hor last orders to her domestic wore somi- | [Paris I ne ) correspondence of the London Times. Who asked for ho other return but board and lodging, | that the federal goverument should hive 60 underrated | placo these mon occupy in Washington's constitution. | 7 08° oo" be at hand to support Gordon in | beroic—You will tell them at home that Iahall not re- | It is with real grief that I report that the eothusiasti The Christian church of the North was fully conscious of | the material force {t had to contend with in the field, ac- | Their voice has not ‘been much heard hitherto. They a Was ‘approhended, he should be immediate: | turn to-night, nor to morrow, nor perhaps will Tever | and courageous Nadar, after having passed a whole night its duty in regard to the black wan. He read other ex. | tually despising the armies from which it hos sustained | have sat apart, and cherished a wisdom which it was | fase, 83, was aDpromendad, (oe stoula, we Mateciate. | roiurn at all.”” ‘There is no need to describe tho car be- | in or above the clouds, and having made an aerial tracts from reports and other documents to show that in | such beavy blows, and so exaggerated the imaginary | vain to exhibit. But there aro occasions when such men anate it. Fortunately, their aid was not needed. Gor- | youd saying it was a happy compromise between an om: | of a length and duration almost, if not watirely, nape, 1861 and subsequectiy neariy all the Christian churches | peril of an English intervention. How the apprehension | have events in their power, and aro listened to because on bad in tho meantime had several succcasful skir. | Dibus and a champagno basket. leled, is very seriously injured. He remained in the ale, do Amorica had declared” against siavery. In tho | arogo we can understand, but why it should have been so | tho rest of the world are silenced at last. If this lucid ishes with the rebels ana completely thrown them back At five ininutes to five we quitted the earth, or rather | nineteon hours, and performed a distance of six hundred. North and West ali the most iuteitigeut laymon and | long entertainod is inexplicable, So far from tho English | interval is over to come on America, we trust it will be | Miltary WA) Coe tenet nan Coupe Fa and returned to | thecarth must have quitted us, judging from my im- | and fifty kilometres. ~ ministers of religion bad, as a body, settled down in the | government having had to dread any agitation in favor of | in the course of the next twelvemonth, and before the | oy Comin; tO Ceci ea Win pressions of the moment, In one second we were five | The following telegram hag been received from him oy fmmovable conviction that the war must go on until | interference ou either side, if has been supported by all | fatal vote for peace or war. That vote once given, sll Gordon had taken the field in consequence of intolii- | Hundred motres distance. It was a splendid sight and | his brother:— the rebellion was crushed and slavery destroyed. Let | parties, and every section of party, in the determination to be | good Americans will bave to shut themselves up for ano- ence received from Wokong that that city was menaced | Dever to be forgotten by those who witnessed it. Every We came down near Nieuburg, in the kingdom of Hlan- England give them credit for having suficient reason for | neutral, It iso point on which the feeling of all clasvs | ther four years ee large body of rebols, who, koowiug that the disci- | Object was diminished simultaneously. Paris was ré- | over, about noon on Monday. fo wore dragged for Ghat determination, aud for differing from those who | in the country has been unanimous. On thi, ques. ned troops tind all” been withdrawn to-Quinsan, proba. | duced to a bird's eye view: one would have said that tbe | ral hours, our anchors having broken, Salut Folin, a ‘urgod peace. So far asthe influence of England was felt | tion the ministry and the opposition aaree. The Housoof | aglish Monarchy d American De- te cho methe opportunity excellent to attempt ita re. | Beautiful city was concentrated and narrowed round the | wife and mysolf are soriously hurt; the others are protiy On the otuer aide of the Atlantic, it had been all against | Lords andthe House of Commons are influenced by the mocracy. y tne 8 ife left Quinsan with seven hundred mon and a | Pase of & cone, of which wo ware the summit, Tho | well. Send me a doctor trot Par 1 if possible, Liberty and for slavery, thouzh ho did not meau t» say | same opinion on it. Debate has been discouraged lest It | SIR FRANCIS B. HEAD ON THE UNITED STATES POLICY | PO! r Sune, on the morning of tho Sth, and the same | moouments became ravishing miniatures; the Vendome | or another if be ie absent, Send hewa at once to the that wag what she inoant. He hoped, therefore, they | should involve matters that it would have been uscless to DURING THE OANADIAN REBBLLION. Eeening, reached ‘Karpoo ‘and occupied tho stockade | Colump,a skittle; the Tullories, @ plaything; the Made- | saint Felix, Darnoud and Yon families, &o. Let litte ‘Would pot consider it an unreasonable request if he asked | discuss, Yet the latest party manifestoes in America 10 THR ROITOR OF TiIK LONDON TIMES. Gnich “had been taken from the rebels on tho | Jeine,a Noah's Ark of Niremburg manufacture; and the } Paul be sent tous. {Paul is M. Nadar’s son, and the re- them to revise their opinions on the subject, ana In doing | are as violent as the first. From theig, tone and Innguage Sin—In the leading article of your journal of this day, poses yon of his first march on Wokong. The next | ‘Arc de Triomphe,” a dice box. quest that he should be semt to Hanover naturafly causes Bo not to allow themselves to be iniluenced by com. | it might be supposed that the English peopio wero urgiag | In which you support our government for their detention os an sending on a portion of his force to We directed our movements towards the northwest, | intense anxioty to M. Nadar’s friends.) We owe our lives Mercial interests nor by unprincipled newspapers, | tho government to some hoatile demonstration against the | of the iron-clads in the Mersey, 1 have read with great | fhe city, ‘ho remained himself to reconnoitre, as | 80d, if the wind alded us, we counted upon reaching St. | to the courage and devotedness of Jules oes ‘To- Thoy wore thoroughly familiae with the matiers in dis- | Cabinent of Washipgtov, Mr. Saward’s request ¢o be | pleasure and admiration the following remarks:— the i A were reported to be in strength in | Petersburg the next evening. Nadar had brought some | morrow furthor details, [ADAR. Pute, which thos» three thousaud miles away could | ‘/e/talone” has been fully cumpliod with, and, if tho |” gne (the Alabama) was the produce of trickery and eva. | the neighborhood. is he goon ascertained. prac. | letters of introduction, and he made us all sign a decla- | Another despatch is thus wordgd:— Hot 69 well be und threo years of war was suificient to | confederacy is still tormidab’e, it is by no restraint from | mar’ We aranet was how, where or by what iments | ti sally, to be Correct, as he was attacked during the day | ‘ation of neutrality in the event of our descending into RRMRN, Oct. 20, 1863. ool any superiuous cuthusiagm they might haye had. It | Europe on the bands that were go easily to strike it down. | her equipment was furnished; but we can say that ahe did | Dyn largo force, accompanied by a nunwber of Eropeans, | Poland or the dis-United States; but—we descended at |’ TheGian: Sil near Eystrup, la Hanover. Of the nine was =| a question whether the war should be | The bugbear of Log re ought 2 he Ao its pd pce pte oe ot 8 onest Rivtattate the ‘mrongth of his earthworks and the ex: roy 4 Renee nance ch of abot we people in tho car threo are sertbualy and two slightly Stopped, ani they were not going to stop it whatever | in the two years that have go thoroughly tested the : “eacape, o not descen re, we fell!’” me not antici uu England might say against ita atieuanes. Peogland had | feeling of iis country. But it is still tunployed ‘on | 8nd auch escapes are exactly the things which we ought to | cellent practice of his artillery, he repulsed thom with ’ ‘wounded, vent. " T pehanisal pate events. Rot stood by them a such a way, withio the last few | every yosstble opportunity, egpecially after every | Pow" sir,as 1 administorod the government of Upper | cri ree one. eee ee red ener other | __ Tne voyage was a very joyous one. What had wo to | The Balloon (2nd, the Belgian Custom ears, aa to have any iniluenge upon them now. (Hear, | federal reverse. The declamation against England | canada in 1837, will you allow me ts contrast the liceos rpecine himeelf_bad fear? ‘The weather was good, the balloon solid, and bad Officers. Kear’ The (eeling among the educated Christian poople | is so timed ag almost 7 1, make this country Tespon- | course which our goverument, is at this monencpareang, peerage Toa ory following da, eckumteneaen ceo we not with us the Brothers Cog ed most mar- ( The Journal de Charleroi publishes the following letter, Jo America was, without exception, that Eogland had | sible for the defeats. 1 eer had the hostile intentions im- | and which you are so powerfully supporting, with that fensive, and marched to attack the rebels in an intrenched | Véllous aerial eer _The Messrs. Godard are only | giving very precise information with: to the pase! Deon selfish, cold and cruel He did not say whether that } puted to ug, the period of disaster ought to be favorable | which the government and people of the United States | position on which they had fallen back, in the direction | Teally at home in tho air; they Bia) the honors | o1 ‘quelines of the Giant balloon, whioh set out ‘was true or not; be lad no desire to make accusations, | for their expression. But the turns of success have no practiced towards Great Britain, when a very emall por- | of Soochow. With only two hundred and fifty men, be- of a cloud, they aj ize Ww it ts cold, | Paria, as is known, op Sunday, at five o'clock in the after- hia wish bei! i keep the two countries together in | effect whatever on the public feeling. t v4 Lion of her territory was disturbed by an insurrection, | sides a company whom he detached to menace their rear, | ‘dey make their reo inthe ether, they look | noon:— the bonds of Christian fellowship; but somebody | At tho eee ee enue: (ainis anpears unta~ | the insignificance of which, as compared with the suc: | he siccecded in dislodging thom almost without logs, in | POD the air as a calm sca, and the a Enquetives, Oct. 19, 1968, Cag te tel thom these things. | His countrymen | rovable to the federal arma. | With « faint hove that the 7 cessful secession for noarly two years of eight millions of | consoquence, mainly, of the cowardice of the Europeans, | 0st, while lam not quite sure that incase of an air- | sin—Last night, towards midnight, Pourbaix, the pointe- gid mat Meant 9 be separaced from england; on the con- | fixed \don ailticting the mind of the North may be shaken | habitants of the Confederate States, may briefly be | who ran away almost at the first exchange of shots, and | Wreck they would not know how to swim—they say 00; | man, and Collard, the Custom House Officer on duty at the trary, they wished the links connecting the two countries to | by & knowledge of the present state of English feeling, Wo | qamonstrated by the following figures and facts :— naturally carried the Chinese with them. but then are 80 modest! At six o’clock M. Delessert, | terminus of Erquelines, gave themselves up, for be rubbed brighter. (Cheers.) How, then, could England | would ask a bearing for its most receut demonstrations. On the 4th of December, {%s7, Mr. McKenzio, at CHINESE REWARD FOR HIS HEAD. who had beep buried in the first story of thecar, now | of something better, to pleasures of meditation, Stop the conitict? not by placing a hugo fleet upon the | In different of the kingdom the ordinary incidents | ihe head of 620 notsy followers,’ some armed with Ono of the Futal's first acts, in consequence of Burge. | ®ppeared on the platform, chai with all the neces- } an event of the strangest nature cut short thelr reflee American shores, vor by sonding a large army to Canada, | of our public and political life have furnished several oc- | sticks, many with pikes, and the rest with rifles, | yine's defection tothe rebels; has been to issue the fol. | aries for making a good meal, which we assisted at with | tions. The horizon, which an inavant before wa clear and Which would mako 'n» difference iu the conduct of thé | casions on which discussion of the foreign policy of tho | suddenly appeared before’ Toronto, At that moment | jowing proclamation, offering’ a reward of 3,000 taels to | 82 excellent appetite, and drank to the sncoess of our | starry, appeared 10 them to beoome suddenly obscure, North; but by slowing that there was a feeling of | government was natural or unavoldable. Ministors and | the population of Upper Canada was 450,000; the | any one who will deliver himdead or alive into bis expedition, without casting a thought that a scratch on | thoy thought they saw advancing, under the impulse of @ Christian unity between the two countries. It was said | members havo met their constituents in the West, | Home district, 60,000 ; the city of Toronto, 10,000. | hands:— the silk would terminate it more idly than was de | rapid rer, @ large cloud, black and opaque, which ‘that they bad behaved unseemly towards England, aud | in the North, in the East, in districts differing as widely On the 7th of December, with great difficulty, ho es- PROCLAMATION. sired, In a fall there are two terri ente— the de- {ts course above them ‘and seemed to Gaid bitter things to ber; but when they saw their chil. | as agricultural and manufacturing interests or con- | caned to disguise to the United States; and so completely ‘The undersigned being informed that a number of pe parture and the arrival; the interval of voyage itself | to ground. When it haa got about two hu t Gren slaughtered—and oh! what beautiful children and | eervative and liberal opinious can distingulah them. |” was his insane projest defeated by the loyalty of the peo- | sons have been led away under false pretences by the | 18 Dothing. There is a story told of a mason who, falling | metres above the buildings of the stations, the two wite ¥ Boble martyra had failea in tho war—when they found | Yet in all tho speeches mado at these gatherings, | Dig. unassisted by troops, that, cn tho following day, 1 | American named Purgevino to join the rebele ay w, | from a fifth story, addressed the following fervent prayer | nesses of this mysterious spectacle were in the Bimost every one against them, and even treachery | wirether from tho hustings or at the municipal banquets, | nor only issued a proclamation to stop the volunteers | this is to give sotice to all foreigners that the undersigned | during the rapid courso:—Ob! Lord, do let this | astonishment at perceiving, sustained by Yh the government, and knew oot how long they | all parties are unanimous on the policy of the govern- | who, trom all directions, were flocking towards Toronto, will, on delivery of the said Burgevine, whether alive or | continue!” I ii . * cords, an object which they took for a railway Sooo Ragland, nine if code: disesonernee ee nny | meat ia this American qassrel.” 2he ceniraliy i Ace > | bat | pincod abe-eniitie of oven counties at the disposl- | doai, ato his custody, or that of his officers, immediately | ,,Nightcameon st an early hour: it was sombre, and | Surprised, frightened, fascinated, not bolog able to i 4 and, is jntment they had said | served ix approved, an re is not ingle suggesti i ior Bir John Colborne. in Lower Canada, 4 ick clouds intercepted what remain us of day- Dittor things, God forgive thom. (Cheors.) If the meet. | any quarter that tts policy should be modified or reversed, | “im Ot Bir John Colborne. ie Lawes Canada, 1. | Pay over to the persons #0 doing the sum of 3,000 tacls; 7, | Stand by what impossible cireematance 8 carriage Re a he fi tees. th light; still we ascended higher and higher. We began to Com 1d nd iteelf in und. hel Currher. guarantees, theme agsioet any, feather | HENLSC Se very conse caloretanr eek ne an, neeeae cay ons See Co fing asked what could they do, he would reply, let every | The addresses are as evidentiy in accordance with the William L. Maroy, Geversor of the State of New York, in | proceedings on account of their previous couuexion with ehristian maa ri a the subject again to bis own con. | feeling of those who listened to them. Lord do Grey, | a jeitor, in which I stated:— Th 3. CHAN ‘but as we ascended the obscurity was less intense, some railway ‘House, Beieace; let him also pray for them, He knew they would | Mr. Collier, at Plymouth, and Sir R. Palmer, all advocate. Tra. sd habs asrebiae ph Madeline Caas' tare sta.net the rebels, wretal cad fapacnroeeenabien fragmenta of clouds carried to ua the reflection of ‘a dita eer alae heey boy tee tan id ‘ay for the South, aud be was sure they needed it— | the same course of proceeding. That thoy are membors | as 4iig moment, to my knowledge, within the whore extent | Si\NGuaR, August 12, 1863. * | light, and at last, at the distance of 2,700 metres, the bal- | incident, when a clear and sonorous voice reached thea laughter)—Dut let him pray for the North, who were in | of the government, and still assert that uon-tutervention | $i \pper “Canada, a singe pode of ten assembled with | if the meg whom Bargevine has col‘ected around him | 10m came out of these biack masses, the light became al. | {204 thé supposed carriages and. asked thems" Whas main right, and whose cause was that of justice and | must be our policy, at least proves that the Ministry hos | arma, orctherwise, in opposit'on to the government, wore even “indifferent honest,’’ £1,000 would not suiiee | ost bright, and tho most superb sight was offered to our ‘tment are we in?” The poli and the truth. If the South became at once an independent | no pressure from without to gustain on this question. Simultaneously with this statement I despatched to | totempt them to take his life; but being, as they are, | View. 7 ¢ heavens above luminous with stars, Delow a jouse officer, being polite that what tation, there was not one polut on which there would be | They do not once complain, that, this course is dificult: | wip, Marcy Mr, Bethuno, requesting his Excellency, in | for the most part, the very scum of the offscourings of | Teal ocean of clouds, with ite waves, its tempests and ite | they had taken® for scl ud’ was’ no but @ tho Notts provaiod and the Union wercreciorad,t | fuuveach’ tue. wisdonn of" this peutratiy, ter atte | conformity with the statuto existing Letweon the Caua- | society, bis lie will be im o0 slight peril. "The attempt | asorders. The illusion was ‘so complote that for ove | baligon’ “ot “gigantic® dimensions ran jorth pro and the Union wero restored, there | impeach the wisdor yeutrality ; fo dian provinces and the State of Now York, to deliver to | either to capture or assassinate him, however, will be no | istamt I could have sworn I saw @ vessel noar the | mense car, re; ‘was acarcely a siugie respect in which such a foeling | Faeex agricultural dinner, a conservative reer the authorities of Uppor Canada Willfam yon McKenzie, | child’s play. Apart from the fact that he | ector: , 3 tog |, “At Erquelit sad plied, “At nes, Beigiam. horizon. The most splendid sights are generally | then beard a conversation aorial trat would not exist between th two countries. (Hear, hear } | it was as strongly approved as by the libe to be tried for the murder of Colonel Moodie, for aceod p the shortest. In traversing the clouds our balleon cords 4 ‘ . catios . undaunted personal courage and determivation, he has s oon lers upon the situation of the locality, which ended Information in his power on tho eubtect of tha Tergat es | guaewse that tio yororsment wild thet past potey'a | Ae for the robbery, with his ownhands,of bor Males | many with him who aro ached to him persoaally, and | Vectme wet, and conseiuently heavier, and being | ja" aber reoelving Woankx. trom above,” The. lacident ‘Amorica, he resumed his seat amid loud applause. future difficulty. They will be supported in it witb an pone Uhass ‘ull pr ic! iulsite documents were | woud visit with summary ee any attempt Sede an belece, Gat on ‘asuing om —. Doniahy ae A A ~ Leitner une 4 . thim. No doubt, however, all these dangers were | 4m Mr. GeorGs Tuomrsoy moved a resolution testifying the | unanimity they ean scarcely hope to eecure on any do- . nd . t and admiration of the meeting for Mr. fecher, mestic question. The Americans may throw off all anxiety Rela letter and request I received the following re- ation by him before he joined the thanking him for bis able service in the cause, and | or fear, since they express #0 much of botb on this mat cords dried up and agnin we commenced an ascent— | and who never loses sight of the requirements of his sor- argue that since he was able to live | ® rewetting, & redrying, and so on, with the varieties of | vice, made a ironpelte his two bands, and shouted, , Srate or New York, Executive Derantwenr. quietiy on the English fettlement, despite a reward | Tising and failing for some littie tim ten, Professors Newth and From this moment | «everybody stays here for tho vinit of the Custom ‘wishing him God speed on his return to America. ter. The assurances they received two years ago did not ‘Aumany, Dee 28, 1s : © very body stays Ht was seconded by they. Jory Gnaiam, sud caried | $e" thelnapprehensomeatrnt, Mair lenders bad duter- | zo his Excehngy Sie Faancts Br'ilstorLisituant Go- | MqqtMe0e, ound, tele ofered “for ‘hia ‘oad, | me could ace meting, and #2 ere fmt nS OE ag SL ‘and up to this hour t vernor, &¢. -— ’ —e. capcuiabhs, Kadi sbiicisitass sada Pressed eos Soporte ee duemtmea sue iota. Sincl have {ved from D. Bethune, Esq., the oficial | half a milefrom his own—he may cecape in Soochow when | little excursion the very onset. We were descending | tation they went off in the direction of Louvain, - mighi be traasiaitiod to bis congrogation in Now York, | tivn altogettier. The spirit the war has excited strength. agers ien, wit tue docaments xccompaaying i made by | only asixth partof that som is ofered. But, although Mears, Gotan Soult, ¢0, was by A marialo st wath saa FE ae Mo ej Ry AN ON ey Tae or Who bad generousiy maintained him while abroad,” |@ns every reason we had from the first to keep out of the | York, for the arrest and delivery of William Lyon MeKensie | Norte bas hitherto been raised by the American Con- | §itehtion to avoid tumbling on te trees and houses, W, hy ~ This roquest was accoded to, and, after a vote of thanks | contest,” Wiuh this rosofution we may arly resent the | aaa’ fuyluve from fustice from tue proviace of Upper | Sul,t canuog Lape inane Sheen hermes | stogto: | cast anchor. There was a moment of provound slienoo. | Fran’ ta thee tron thie ene aa mgt fo tho Chairinan, the proceedings terminated. ong fe pumeats vee te Oi Bina ha Cannes, ements oe alle nt IA ica de Come 4 to treaty provisions. All foreign treaties with | Then we heard eh ney on had been caugbt, | regulations. What prohibited mercbandise might there : ADDRESS FROM COLLEGIATE STUDENTS, the evidgpeo adduced, we can oly loave party matics to | McKenzie committed the crimes tmputed to him: thet re ina stipulate for the surrender of criminals to their | M84 we felt, a shake “that threw us one on | not be in that car? Que of these gentlemen, who had 5 {From the London News, Oct. 24.) ar iisth out or to exhaust (be jublic credulity, Fious thereto be had revolted, and was in arms against her Tepresentatives for trial But the Futai pre- | the other. | The force of | the balloon was such | grown gray in the service, and who soos in Nadar and bis On Thursday evening tho Rev. Heory Ward Beecher | ¥% 3 Majenty'sgovernment of Upper Canaiia. “Hiscrime is, there. evine ruilty, ‘and offers a premium for his } Cpe pt DI = oo 4 DY | colleagues the enemios of ‘the profension, declared that if J e dy t " 3. c inehor Md was otertained at a soiree, and presented with an ad- The Presidential Can Considered aa ® fugitive to avoid the punihtaent fe we f he fall in fair Sght, of course nothing more | oo iti ty, ware moored, but the real daceer be We | Be bad been on the spot he should have made the whole Gross by tho students of five of the Nonconformist cot ; ~ vy | Offence, rather for these imputed to him in the. documents be said than that he has incurred the risk and paid ly touched land euficiently 4 eel bi ‘@ | staff take up arms, and summoued the audacious contra- Joges in and about London, vizi—-ihe Independent col. | BRITISH OPINION OF THE EFFECT OF THE WAR POLICY : your y's application, ‘These tater | the forfeit; but if, be bo taken prisoner, the Chinese pal ope tateygrel ype euniane ae hy carers off | veners of the law, under the threat of a discharge of mus- Hee ot ao ne Coupe cy Onean 4 Mo of writs te by Fane Oct. 93.) on a) maa pacons “ ine netdenta of thea eged ——o Lage bod yrs Be to ee Amerieae Consul, | ne would ha said tok onme rigantic cia nea ‘aon ketry, to descend in order to submit to a search. tt a! pliege al 7 ist Collego, m the London Times, Oct. 2: é reason, I have the hon: be, AC, V L. MARCY, | who, Ihave n jeve, woul ° Rogeut’s Park, ant tho Presbyterian Theological Hall, | A very curious question, by no meacs novel in political | — yt will be observed that, in the abovo reply, Governor | It is difficult, then, to believe that the latter will allow pon. oa bry-y A CR rg himself in F phe Wounded Voyagers in Hanover. : 's square. Tho piaco of meeting was the Independ: | solouce; ip about to receive a critical illustration in Ame- | Marcy abstained from noticing tha treaty between Great | this glaring attempt to procure his assassination to pass pice re ed the tee, How oe We not ae BO [Paris (oct. 23) correspondence of the London ¢ it Collogo, known College, St. John's wood, and | rica, What effect will the quadrennial pericd of (he govern- | Britain and the United States, in obedience to which | | withont strong protest. doin) eortiane, For a‘climax of misfortune, the On Wednesday evening the following telegram arr) = the number of atudeate assembled was about two busitred | ment have onthe Progress of the war? Io a twelvemonth | had, on his application to me, faithfully surrendered to | ‘The consuls of gland, France, America, Prussia, aod | ho held the valve cord let it go In the confusion, ‘The, | 19 Patti , ‘Aflor toa and coffee had bee: we fis Presiden > Bee tage alroa y P | the authorities of his State fugitives from the United | Russia bave conjointly given notice that any person en- | Pits Cound and Nadar sprang to the nd, and Hanoven, Ovt. 21, 1963. ' ig tng iad eon served, the company ro } ves of the Presidential contest is heard among the bul- | States, simply on the legal evidence of their guilt. Ho | listing in the rebel ranks, or endeavoring to induce others tried to themecives mastere of the balloon, which The fersons who received injury in the balloon escent red to the spac * library, and on Mr. Beecher’s en. | leting from twenty seats of war. Under the Roman re- | nlgo abstained from noticing the fact to which Mr. Bo. | to enlist, will be punished with “the utmost rigor the - or ‘anchor with frightful force. If the cord bad | BAY@ been brought to this city, and under the kind & rance, accom) by Ur, Halley, De. Spence, Dr, Tom. | public it was copgidered that the annual appoiatment | thune drew his especial attention—namely, the robbery | law allows.’” Active steps havo been taken to check the cae id a ‘or with us. “Let noone | &Pd protecting care of the Freach Minister. The King of . kins, Rov. T. Bi - Raleigh, Rev. James Strat- | of the two most energetic and popular men of the | by Mr. McKenzio of bis own State arsenals ma trade, which is already languishing from the diffi- it would have been ail over w' “ Hanover sent one of bis aids.de-camp to receive them. ‘On , “gh f ; ” Nadar on jumping out; “one man only should - Nedder, the Rey. Kilsby | day to the head of affairs contributed to the 20th of December, 1 culty of a] hing Soochow. The French Consul General | Stir.” cried r 7 M. St. Felix bas hie left shoulder fractured aud his face gentlemen, he was grovted with incessant activity of Ga State, wae in prosecut- | after having allowed the \merican Gen fany aided that all residegte vy the French concession eae ae pennines toa? had so nlensin wih - crete braked. Rader i bea been m lens sprained, and Matawe « ANSE, ing old wars or in finding out esh opportunities ith fi nity to s are to render an account! arme iD their possession s. 9 Nadar rc viol Wy comy and one FTHo Rev. Ronse Hatter, D.D., Presideat of New Col- | of¢ distiuction. The Cousul” 5: Inet ane Matineieed Wi Miipanity 40, 9 . horror if the cord was breaking! We were left tenein the pressed, was ed before the es of bi illery, and to Issue ‘proclamations’ by a fixed date; and ber Britannic Majesty's Consul has re- of her legs torn and injured. Jogo, who took tie caair, stil he Yeas sure it adorded all | world for, that twelvemonth, and) must make the | fhe United States offering £500 for my apprehension, with | minded steamers and other bouts plying into the toterior | SRF And one waa.a woman, she was burt by our fall. and | "1° Ritheed. Professor of the Faculty of Modicine of reseut the highest gratifleation and delight to receive in | most of it, begin and fish, if possible, and reap bis own | one hundred acres of land in Canada and $100 to whoever | that they render themecives liable to confiscation by ie fei fand a trangail abpegation that would have | Paris, received at two o'clock notice to prepare to start heir midst from the other aide of the Atlantic such a | harvest, Such was the effect so jong as the sphere of | would join what they were pleased to cail “the patriot | rumping pest the Custom House barriers at the mouths of "7 for Nieuburg to attend the persous wounded. He left ab - ed my adiniration ua man, but in a woman seemed 4 “ ‘Wan as the Rev. Heary Ward Beocher—not only as the | Roman enterprise admitted of a complete conquest in one 2” permitted the steamer Caroline, in b da creek: is applies principally to sundry small steamers | 2fOu* ~ seven by the express train, and expected to make the Of Dr. Boschor, whose writings were well kaown in | year. But by and by the told became too large. for. an: | light,in the presence of the Calted States Mamiad, 2 | whichare in the habit of running up to the rebel countr perfectly natural Some peasants came to our aid, tbe | Srey Ia eighteen hourt, ‘The won CC Neder aoeowaper . his country. and greatly valued, or as the brother of | Dual operations, it became necessary to renew the term | in the immediate vicinity of @ regiment of mi! ‘of the | for silk, and are suspected of carrying other metal as well we red the table—but this timeon terra firma—and | Diéd him, Dr. Richard took the tel 1c despatch to Mrs. Stowe, the talented author of that remarkable book, | of o ere creatod, and a succesful | State of New York, to be cut out of the ice by a thou. | as silver to exchange for it. But it is useless to remind | she abe jed to ® second repast: and passed a cloth tothe | S@F¥@ a8 A passport. It is stated the travellers Unole Tom's Cabia,” but also aud chiefly as aman who | general was allowed fo purtue his conquests with almost | wand men. fe allowed his own Collector of Customs to | them of their liability unless the penalty can be put in } none de in Tour d'Auvergne, fog her $0 exert ber would Probabl have an pera oa Cdied bat yas himself both woil koown and esteemed in Great | abeolue power, excopt when threatened .by a hoatile | give ber a license, under which, aud insured from Ine acti¢e, whereas the little six-pound guns which the : “ Britain asa writer, a proscher and a platform orator, and | faction "home for three, five or ten years. But | & bond publicly ‘given by soventeen American imerchaore | Chinere aflect wouldwnot do much barm ‘if they struck Leesey pe pein. Rw py yp Ra me G a hole ip the silk with a bateb@t, to aa to the gas one who bad reudered most important servico to’ the | the experiment of two annual coosuls bad worked itself | ghe aailed, amidst the acclamations of the people, to nog | even a twelve-pounder, which, unless in very rare cases Aw = a Noriee ~ eel nud Gee oe rete take care 6¢ fur bred froetom ia America long before the exist- | out even before the consulship of Bibulus. Hence- | asmpassage boat to convey government artillory and | is the heaviest gun carried by a gunboat, would not do tbe ‘balldon. * Aope ening 10 Wal AARON Gp ead WEE ng vor one out forth dictators, triamvirs and emperors, Fven the Fm- | American citizens to take possession of Navy island in | much injury, a8 the Chinese powder. used is execrable . oe S Lor i balloon, which was making bounds of from forty yards with @ violence that would soon have knocked ik Paris, while we started in the railway. 0 address was then presented to Mr. Peechor by Me. ror, however, represented military sucetss,and whea | Canada. Resides, Chibese gunners are not noted for their profi. | Dt the Ter we pieces, Youos, sanior student of Now College, which, among suber | there ‘carne the ‘great contest between the North and | “artor reporting to her Majesty's Minister at Washinge | clency, abd would not be very Likely to hit asmall steam. | | 10 terminating, 1 bey to bank Naar for the pleasant | MYST, recoivad at a later hour states that : Vhlngs, said'=- We recognize ta you one who'bas devoted | South of Europe, which wag finished not in three yoars, | ton the foregoing facts, I imperfectly expressed to bit my | errupning at full speed. To endeavor to stop the silk company. Othe balioon is aplens | Madame juries Afo NOt 80 Rerious ag at has been cone P . best energies and the rare abilities with which God | nor yet in three centuries, the Emperor was again and | feelings as follows: as endowed you to the cause of civil and religious free, ‘dom, and the morat and social elevation of the degraded trade really seems extending our complacency to the im- first stat , As is also M, St. Felix, again the elect of war, aud the earth wag thus fought for | T need not remark 19 your Fvetleney how unfair and un. | perlaliat® litte too far, however. no sch attempt will fe eet tee talaa canerrineat wih Os wh Tatie’ Guage pha 5 4 won over aud over again, So the world, always | just it is that a rebellion, which within this province wag so succeed soit dove nc muel 5 ae of a pobite house, | Tou ns the tirt war adventarous.” Fes. My own Part, Anchots and Otner Mattors from the Inalgnificant that ft was fristantiy crushed by the civil n ad Oppressed. During the whole cov f yo for peace in its time, and dreading alike the plan % pe you have ever iodigoantl condemned Te mesmeees of awarding thrones by wager of bat "aod the weary fants of the colgny. should be revived and rendered formiaa- | wag arrested the other day on a charge of being connect: bn hg) brothers Godard I would risk traversing the 7 in and curse of savory. and maintained with all your | degeneracy of long reignt—thinking, $00, to allay the | Pie hy the dinma and te etter mat ocly ne american | oq with Burgevine, He at once confessed, aud enabled "Es city eenesion, real U4 taxions, that I fot, was 0s FParia (Oct. 28) correspondence of London News.) felouence and at much cost the common Fighta and Hert, | (ur of factions—everted to fixed’ (eras. of power. | PeQplts CHeitadeand the, | the authorities to arrest several other men who were in a | ,, The only emotion, real and anxious, that I felt, was at Sere received. 10 Paris apeak ‘wit ago of humanity, Aud our earnest hope is that you may nn We, jealons As We are, surrender our liberties Population of | boat waiting a favorable opportunity to start for Soo- tpg I om Hs p a. j aa i... Ee er the bellow on ccrtala, on #00 the reward of your labor if the abolition of the } once 10 seven years to anew House of Commons, Our Jevaatation, oa and artisans, who were to have estab. | Peet: tee aa ie eappoae Ae oeert hn ahi tn whas it was or where it 4 etal distin of color, and in the renewed prosperity | governments, howe) succeed one another at @ War by the unjusticaute in- | jighed a foundry for shot and shell. Notwithstanding feoentt dreadful rencontre should occur’ * * De. | came It seems that while it was near A 9 tho American republic “| quicker rate, for Parliament represente much | ‘erference of Amertean cittie , Beechey's avowal of his complicity, It was found impos- | Dlace—it some dreadful (meme haga » | Tee eT uses cores or tent te ore ha broes Tho uldross waa signed by the senior student of each | too ‘truly the changes of popalar sentiment to Le | seterredt has long ago been Megiece and orp ioe ty ate | sible to bring home any tangible ctiergo ageinat him, aa | Cidediy) t have no ges any confidence In auch a mode | the earth ' Heel Moree vue, Oe Of te rans 4 Fon .22 Vata ofthe whole body. Mr. Beecher, in bis | conteut with ta, septennial choice of the executive, Sas corde ne bererteans coo pesne ete teeny | the had ne ation of tning the rebels himself, but was | Of travelling, I prefer Nadar. Sannage ibe roto «patting fea garden Sear ae barg, y. vst ontl ‘ j caus framed their constitation , diet Burgevin go" z Hslnm vo on oavtog alfred loseencwerving | wished to minke the President soroetblog.Detweon aoa. | State wil to weilte conalder upon what plea they can tomoforeigners hi) were arresied io Soookiog |, Account By s Pai SAE sw. tho bad Dever looked ds of pe itish jure of the Kiaochiao. u i fe a Public favor oa account of aay ta og be bad ‘t aan misuse, her « long tone’ thie py eetween oo a cose tneprevante roletia of Geta i 4 vine got into the river, where any fur Dalloou, writes as follows to the aria 2 ation sees, —— many different ideas was thought most successful, and | Shc, “ip itted, they would have en: senvored to stop him woas hopeless, Macartney ctty |ANoveR, Oct. 5 U ' -- and ail ‘who might be within to be My Dear Eprror—You saw us leave the Champ de Mars AMERICAN AFFAIRS, iovas oat fl Jott bite to bina themeavos | Prevent, and which, without Permission, they ail deeply | Sreaied. Nine were discovered, and, aa not. one could | on Sunday, You wore a witness of the majestic ascent of the Giant rising into the air amid the applause of the | THR RIY | give a natiatactory account of himecif, they. w crowd. They cried to us from below, “Bom voyage ; 5 Alas! Bayne Bedi! ag © FB. BEAD. "| fajned till further information regardiny obtal ‘A search in tho boat o} . bel pars and commission At nine o'clock at night we were at Erquolines; we the third grade, signed — Ex over Malines, and towards midoight we were in d sincerely lameot. Iam, sir, your o to quadrennial of quinquennial change of admiuistrae | “94 ’ tion, “Perhaps we are now in a condition. to. jad Caornos, Oct. 17, 1008 ourselves bow eae La * J — wi Me: ‘ ao ot eniehe 8 Revolutionary war, how wi uasian wi From Galignani’s Messenger, Oct, 24.) man, broug! with the agitation for free trade, or any of the The wedican deputation wes enterday received by the | e& military mondarin The Privateers and Rams. MH. LAIRD, M.P., ON THR BUILDING OF THE ALABAMA AND FLORIDA AND SEIZURE OF THE RAMS, if of From the Liverpoo! Mare j im, time 4 4. Last ovoaing (he Masic Hall Betesbocy, oid Cuber great questions which bave carrie! the good | Emperor. His Majesty listened with great attention to | BY. Chan Wane 2 ey bagi Re but it was necessary to come down by a highly respectable company to witveas the yreetnee the ‘constitution, under Dare poles, creak: | thePrepert made to bia Dy she Presifent—M. Gutiorres | Feels bead ores, and aa, notwithstanding tho plain eré. Ignorantjof that, our position was Ubu otk the prlame won. DY the anccmetel corsets | Ng in ovary timber, on the’ billows of passion and | ge Estra—of the reception given them by the Archduke | i (ordows Tere ant te ih ae ever had commu. | Below, as {ar a8 we Could seo, were Yue anneal prige meetings of the Is CR. (Capvain Hi, | likely to Varree eoeeeeniag rede ee-Snem, We ous. feo oD og Ra ee mm Hs wih the rebels, bis guilt seomed elear; 60, with | m nes and ia Ube distance we could bear the roar of aird) and the 5th ©.A.V, (Captain W, Laird)—the for. i i @ favor , | 1 al, ho was |. It is very ques- ‘oe throw out ballas! mou Jwor bolt at Lasoo on the 17th ultiag, and tho latter ai "ble sonvents raphy approachea when we shall | Proatest anxiety for the regeneration of Mexico, ‘> | the Futals approval en the sea. jonable, however, whether his guilt werereally so certain lost wight of the earth. |W! 1 tonne iaared. “T believe nothing bat his intenge fear of | you may. suppose, for tbe idea of falling into the soa ba admitting a former connection with the ploasant about it, and it was necessary to keep & life. Before joining Ward's force he by look out in order to effect, if necessary, a descent. ‘gin rebel employ, and during that time had earned compass showed that we were going towards wor be . e how this convenient quadrennial arrangement squares Uy Ringe mar! Whee reas era, of tae ae welvemonth kence a golemn form will be: ted at Wash. empire, the ‘of thanks of the junta of notables, de- ington, and Ame 0 and many of the most influential inhabitants of | cote erenttul: meee jenn weet Ae coptee akd tho | Posited in an oblong box of massivo sliver of poet “tel rugh baton for four tor cate workmanship, and tied up with ribbon he na. jon, which be k badly as a protection that is to say, towards Germany. sind, M.P., in the course of Bis speech, anid— | orm tae, end a fulet Ey tae ascitic ik | Honal colors of Mexico—red) whitoand grova. Tho box | ga'esse ho should, again fal [oto there hands, Had he | ‘In the morning, after a fragal breakfast mado in the od that if ‘wo wore to goto war to-morrow our | the ouemy infront, in flank aad’ i roar newer iteelt was enclosed In a small Case Of blue velvet Sxpiained this, probably be might have saved his redoscended, A beneath ¥ wag ig hd? iy fs et advocated pout eiee fight for he ng 8 well as fame, and, unless the federal i In the boat of bo 3 be on —_ ¥ ns Seek ake @ large ships drawing twenty-five feet of water | States decide for neertal ‘found some silk, and a 0 ‘ magical, va be propared wih large fled of gunboats oF | ae hows nt Pence wilh ho uncertain YolGe, all will be THE WAR OF ST. DOMINGO. ea tmairemes’s clothes, urated With bond, ‘They | un sbone splendidly wroe Al. Towards ight ofeek, we fee drawing twelve or fourteen foot of water. In] Bus the four yoars’ tonure of on) “ an a ‘admitted having been to Soochow with ® cargo of rice, , arrived noar a gr j found , ee wr coult possibly bo consider it for | proof next year, give the whale comstttmtion Ss m ‘ad its Rt give any account of t 04 fousd 10 q to Tica $0 the pang gvtag workd baa boon comgionsly vortser ad harbor defences, and those word on Mr. portuntt of owing its wrength ts mess . re accordingly beheaded, on. the double charge of ballast happily the heavens had , . : j pita. He theo referred to tho epesch de: | heal will io to the Armericag peoplomtnat far ibe portice | RNEASY sor eatentradencs of London Times, Thictt trading and murder, The slx others who had been earth, over whet, biaw a via wo v9 The Adelphi theatre fs nightiy ubronged. Miss Batemnan’e hich Uhat_ gentlemen het bese pleased ts” mand | dhut copeet wth be tae: wieons et Preseeaton te eee Tun pasar are \hety fo have 8 goed deal of trouble ta | arrested ware sant in charge of a guatd Woiangnse, he | Umm of Iron—were brakes. The waive wan suet, andho | versaly reengntznd as nmething worthy of care! mLady hat gentleman had been 1 to make | that appeal w the wisdom of prosecuting the war Domingo toa better | tried by the Futai on theo com ae y : ~ A a j fom9 com mentary terms avout the late fem at | with acdownemmation to sutjugate the Sooty ate ai COREA ack (nes? cSeordins tothe tort seesoats, thay. | pltoes, at, Durgevice, Bat OS by the | balloon, whieh coat carry ego, longer, vegas a eiddy | and the passage ty ry ~ A amt nha wt Hod’! bot ngreg with al tag gemarks of | and al any Cash Phere will aiso.ee anothor anertion by. | are gow in, Whea wig rope TAS agaened to We ce.) Wry, Uuee were shot by the guard @ gthers succeeded | gargs ong We? fe - - pH i : :

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