The New York Herald Newspaper, November 5, 1863, Page 4

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' 2 NEW YORK BKKALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1863—TRIPLE SHEET. ¢ wore oxpressed as to the reception | Mr. Cobden that goverument vessels should be constructed forge pecple—s pueetion whlee, may wot ouly acquire minions of ry ee. ‘eatiaty = ——- poh meyye yy Phe manierine ped hardly seems Kite by a @ the balloon cenadl + otth, It seems ¢uese doubte were | by private builders. On the, contrary, be thought it was i force from events of the aext twetvemonth, Cone Ser no ne eae Bn Bran oe a oe Soenkiang; but there aacly ateene | 00, rete Oe ee cet Ee. srog is See, ‘Thon bogas ty Liweelf; for, iastead of be- | desirable that the government should retain the | but which may even oaw.cast into theshade: the choice. | Wishes of ~~ imigans—to mogpont fee pos or i Chat O88 Guinean remains 1a poaseas ti * before um ceremony, be’ passed rapidly | dockyards ; at the ‘game timo they should ave | between peace aad war. That minor but perhaps | of aitwoment whic Shoy coe reg a gr om pees balls shook way from Baden to Berlin, just | @ portion of the work done at private esiablish- | more prominent question ts tho competency of Mr. Lin- perd = m ‘hide fo fo dean Sienna Poe which we bog, the thick mud of which entered morn aad hen hurried on dou, | events, ao thal ty cago Of war thoy would wot aly have | coln and his collagus 0 conduct Whe wee Ibey have ua. | ied’ The tranageeie ot fav THE WAR IN JAPAN. our’ mccthe aad cot Orta Ti oes eaten : rtaut busicess, which required bis | the dockyards to fall back upon, but the resources of | dertakeo. It would ill become us to criticise the manage. | baving quis of joy with which they peo yen ae ie eee ing. nme that Spain her iinediake aber A lithographed publication, issued | the private yards. (Hear, hear.) He urged that | mont of an enterprise which we believe4o be impossible | received tho did not refuse to open a the auspiees or the federal parege and which may | both im engineering and shipbuilding, as well as im other | under the best mavagement; and the Awelvomonth Se eae. eceese sgn aimants or the erin mgeiromans of Samitval Wunens Wicet 4, Noon ES Passing; & stopped Lo called tho inant ‘or thle of the goverumeat, says quite | matters, competition was beneficial, agd Brought out the | may bring great changes ia the aspect of the war, pie en learning thut are to havea descendant of from HKajocima. our cries, but we carried away the a perl] Openly that the leaders of the Cologne democracy | talent and ability of the competitors. Io gupport of thia | out @ doubt, however, American opinion has already com- Vie V. (or thoir Kuperor. What, then, can be the (Shanghao (Aug. 20), correspondence of London Times.) | vt, "At inatant aflerwarda wo perceived in the dis. bad agreed to got up & demonstration against the King, | view he referred to two ships which had beoa built in | polled Mr. Linen to change both measures and men, for | C150 of the woundertul change which has como over By tho last stoamor from Japan news was received of | 1000. » red houso—I soe itnow—the wind bore us fo case be shoult be accompanied by his Premier; | this aeighborhood—the Alabama and the Florida. | no other reason than that be was. enpposed not to oe ? It ig mob assorted that the ards the departure of Admiral Kuper and Colonel Neale tor Ka- for this house. It was death for all, for we beatae Aaa ay hy | SOR" ae" "ah atu” | Saas it ads Sut ob Sates | boca aie rnc e's ae fore, ote | rye aa tubs fa Haat stig | tne ecm eee cage ag eu y the determinatio , Ns Ns 2 stop away from the proposed fete. ‘The | (** Hear,” and cheeray—nor, ho was eure, was the build- | to the military qualities of the former, so ig | Domingo spon! ‘ ia . + and | the demands which Colovel Neale was instructed to make , ier dee: tee chee > 7 bo was doing when she lt to-asiender screen of osior, for Friends of M. de Bismark evidently conaider it a triumph | er of the Florida ashamed to say that be designed and | « bility, aad something more, shat Mr. Lincola | 68@ must have Known what 6 on the Japanese in consequence of Richardson's murder : Tor bim Mf be can proveot his master (rom going where be | built that sbip, but the testimony borne to the charactor | twill have fo Fetire from the conduct of the warren. hus per. | oxchanged or condition as a free Staote for the | were, it wil be remembered, the payment of twenty: V6 ‘gssmned counlen net cus Al CaaS ee Je alrai¢ (o go himself, if the Minister is unpopular, he is | of these vessels wag vot the testimony of Birkenhead, or | sonal merits alone. But shen comes the choice-ef his euc. | boner of ne guapect tbat alter alttthe desire yor | ‘ousand pounds iasemahy, by the Prince of Satsuma, | Wore ive. with bis body. Poor woman | Every shook Bt least to enjoy the satisfaction of having bis uupopular- | Liverpool, or this country, but of America, These two | ceagor, and, in the pledges oxacted from bim, ¢he judg. | There 1s roagon bo suspect tbat after al - and the execution of tho murdorers. Satsuma is | Covering bor with bis body. I 7 uy eaINe ume iaa foal Lop, case teprareioea ea implicate ohio nie te aeeaten teem tee ae ee voApe sates of bar. ai ar was supposed, and that the Spanish government was’ | TevOrted, agi tah® 5 Omered,, tuo, Mikado to full! | *°5ites Godard. thou tried and accomplished an act of ‘ean possibly ium a cause they preten vo | eforis of four red ships of-war to capture them. " in attempt to conquer What , i a ve aughtily jo much at heart 12 promoted by such conduct, sa mys: | ships, be "repeated, wero denigned by ‘privnic. iod\- | weight will eoinion have oe this polat? “What weient | the dupent a hand‘ul of malcontents and adventurers. | the matier was bo(ore tho oouncil, and ts have left in | Sublime heroism. He olambered up into the notting, the “ % . 5 ay, the Spaniards are now taking onergetic " shocks of which wore go terrible three times ho foe tory beyond the compreheusion of orémary mortals; but | viduols and built for private individuals; but in this | with local or corrunt interest? Watch way will the | Be this as it may, ¢ © | bigh dudgeon. admiral Kupor’s visit to Kajosima, a it may be suey aimed that by placiag the King ii the | country tho evetom was for ono man to oarry the brains | nimbore, tho wealth, the education and the Biteliigonco | measures to roKtors ek dosninallon. | Made Re M- | town iu Satouma’s territory, situated in a bay at the | Cnmynoed. «At sopgtt Re roachod the cord of the yah foreground, aud readertog him persoually responsible for | of tho whole talent for building ships. He w@ext | of the country lie on this point? If the true patriot. a bad ao far forgotten themselves aa to besloge tho south of Kingin, ts to exaact their performance now from tor ceased to rise, fa! it-still shot along in a horizontal - the arbitrary acts of bis advisers, they are'doing more to | referred to the want of guflicient dock spaces for | tam of tho country pronounce..the war to $ tok General in the town of St. Domingo for three Selene himself; apd it ig geuorally beloved that he will | jin with prodigious rapidity. There were we rn Gisgust the nation with royalty and raise up a republican | goverment purposes. Referring again to the | lesg and ruinous, will {it be supported? Should bre ‘aod pushed thoir audacity to sucha pitch as to hg 4 Dorney efron '8 approval. down upon the frail osier car. ‘Take care!” we fooling i si.c asses the population than the mostetrona, | Alabama, he crntradiciod various atalemente which Bad | it urn out thal, the numbers find their interest in | fite'sin td capitulate, that. tho. omiaican army, with | , Th lettor a returned to bis own capital at Jodo, and | when glrgo waa inthe way. Wo tana ten Ketan oe Ou: cllorts of (he alleged Jacobicieal party could ever have | eon made about her departare ffom this port, ald that | a war which increases some kind of emplogment | {0°01 “riofontino and. Puega, al its head. eniored in | {t,% il Bo ileresting to watch how his policy towards | Treo\was broken: but the balloon was discharging is accounplisted ah ne was lying in the dock ready'for, goa for somo time, | and diinioiabes the competition for it—abould they | (runo on tho tet of Foplember; that tho nalive Gene: | foreyeners may have been influoued by intercourse with | S04 ifthe immedi plain we were bad pote few Wont inte: the Ticer bn. the ight. bus hopped hare watt SM propper eeny <in de in ames here | ral gContiario co-operated with thom witha, (bo walle, | presence in’ the country. In purauanco of his ineano | @suet. we were saved. But suddenly furest Ls tg BEECHER IN LONDON. eleven or twelve o'clock the foliowing day. Lord Palmer. | of bone and sinew, but will only incretso the value of a | Sud, that, tho parish Governor had Ykel to Me | desision to expel all foreiauers from Japan, he seat an Ould be danbed to" ploces at" the fret coll 2 c + ; ative provisional goverament bad | order a fow di the car would bedashed to pieces at the first collision Seca ston had expressed his doubts whether the government would | man—sbould (hay listento. eome ory,or be elated by | Sips; that aw ‘ it a fow days ago tothe Govornor of Nagasaki to ox- His Interview and Breakfast with tne fnot have rendered itself liable to damages if they had seized | gome momentary siccoss and olect another war Preai- | esiablishod itecl’ in Sam Jago; and, nally. that @ | terminate thoso residing at that gottiemont who rotused pohly trp a ed had nating Clergymen—His | Throat | the Alabama, but the recent speech mado b: Russell | dont, thon a fresh light sri! be shown oa the policy of ra neue rcpotle eae os ieakOr one town of Be, Domingo. | {@,,l0ave, Tho Governor, who fortunately is more en- | (iia i torn. ‘ t Blairgowrie did got eoom to agree with that delivered | peal Nason lightened than many of his follow Daimios, immediatel, my whet wih Kaas and Plus the | by the Promier, Farl Russo had undertakon to say | Emiet Stee in the State, It passes the power of mueane | eurrendered, LA} 11d, without siriking @ blow. whICh | repaired on board the gunboat Leopard and laid his 4 ) and ee, fFrom the Londoa Times, Oct, 24.) something which Me would mel be able to carry | computation to say how the multitudes will incline, and vou ee Fe aaa cn tuewover ofered at se, | Structious bofore ‘or commander, the senior naval officer the ald of a stick f dreggod ‘ Yesterday moruing a numerous company, consisting | ov’. He laid it down that if thoy found the | yoer, and decide, and act a twolvemonth hence. Weonly RY ‘A combat ensued between tho native troops and the reply was, course, to the effect a ranane forest, and having gono a few stops I hoar€ on station. y of yt a . that he would most likely fail if be attempted to carry Priucipally of ministers of different dissonting bodies, as- | law not sumficient they could go to Parliament for an in- | know that the multitude are shortsightod to their views, | 148° ; which continued for three days some ' Sombied at break(ast at Radley’s Hotel, upou the invita. | demnity. He (Mr. Laird) bolioved Parliameny would not | partial in their interests and impulsive in feeling. Aa | the Spanish garrhon, which collage for, these Mtaee abane oss Aed ie Recellency all eae! pens ibey Be atd BES ee oseueaaiinnee frightfully disdgurea; tion of the Committee of Correspondence om American Af- | indemnity an act if It was supposed to transgresé the | appeal to them is, not vo say worse, af appoal to blind | 600 Cude fifty wounded of the former, and probably an ip " bat aa aro tas. his body was one wound; he ” 4 law, (Cheers.) Up tothe time an act of indemnity was | chance. ‘The Mikado’s last act of malice was almost puerile; he for- be ‘and an . TOT abeantttetie Aetiriger” Ward Beecher previous | rts ad\inoro was a law by sbich all were bound Laws |-° Eatssaiva regions have beon ulterly davastatod.by. the equal gummber of the later. Sante, Ange. Woe ectecs for | Bade aby Daimio to purchase a steamer or otbor’ votsel | Foered@ Xitor croasioga river hoxrd acct . aad Rey. B. W. Noel occupied the chair. were not made for an administration, but for the country, | war, and the proprietors ruined; but they are chiefly in on Pan ten TO a eee a eeetot Aces and | TouAny foreign gation, ‘Nadar was atretohed on the ground with a dislocated \ The Kor: H. Wako Buxcasit, who’ was recelved with | And they were bound to obey the law as they found it, | Confedorate soil. Myriads have lost relatives, but thoy | tbe lrench, ed for shelter to the Wo ‘ thigh; his wife bad fallen into the river. Agother cot. ‘mock Cheering, after some preliimiuary remarks, sald ho ho agen a ee ae eet Laird Ook og ners -cisponed. t_voeuenane hae foe Tt must be sald, howover, that these facts are given on | THE BALLOON VOYAGE FROM PARIS. muon ors stationed. We oecupled ourselves ‘with 8. could spoak 'reedom in that assemb, » » ey y concluded - | peace. good 3 paper, jadar . In assist 83 to waat be Believed toe tae uterponition of Proviaence | lading to the apaec roconily mado by. Sie foundel Pat: | Fr thot produce; and, even if labor be tess abundant, | {ti8 Aultorlly Ot ou ree td tholt nows from ho sie C383 tor T was oarly drowned. for fell into the water 0 bis behalf since he had been in this oountry. When be | er, Attorney Goneral, pointing out the inconsistency of | they trust to increasing tmmigration. Manufacture finds | {ully given tn the paula papord t Unde Rene tin AM | Degeription of MM. Ni Great Balioon, | sank, They picked me up again, and I found the bath ame from the Contivent he had been for more than twenty | tbat gentleman contradicting in October statements | its account in a war tariff. isonecity whioh wil | Havava. poy es bab ‘allowing for oxagyora- the “Gt —The A: itIncidents of | dono me good. By the assistanco of the inhabitants the eal- ‘weoks without speaking, and was quite out of training; and | Which were made by himself tu March last, always be loyal to the cause of war, 69 long as it is mot pine ak, ae ren Wet an Erincs, 1b. is Clear Ow. the Journey, and Descent. vage was got together, Vehicles were brought. after speaking in slancbester, Ediuburg, Giasgow and Liv- itself compelled to contribute in ° blood “more than it | tw Nhe. cation ine Madrid. government is sending {From the Paris Constitutionnel, Oct. 16.) placed us upon'straw. My kneos bled; my tolus tod nee erpool, bia voice completely failed him. He was afraidhe | Emgland’s Neu! 'y to be Supported iin | chooses. Tho contractor, the stock jobber, the manufio out that tae ‘enthusiasm of the Dominicans for the mother ‘The balloon was called “The Giant; it was white. | scemed to fe fike mincemeat; but I aid not lose my pre- ‘would not be able to spoak in fexeter Hall. When, how- Parilament. turer , the shipbuilder, and the whole race that ‘rose to try must Bayo cooled down a good doal. ‘The car carried somo legs of mutton, ices, a lobster, | gence of mind an instant, and for asccend [felt humailt- vor, on Tuesday morning, he spoke to himself he found {From the Loudon Times, Oot. 20. sudden wealth in this country sixty years ago, constitute | COuntry champagne, carriago wheels, Chateau Margany wine, | ated at looking from the truss of atraw at those clouds fils voice as clear a3 a whistle. Some might say that his | * * * + * . * * — @ | the public opinion of New York, and in only less words, Lyons’ sansagcs, guns, a wild boar's head, speak- | which in the night [had had under my feet. It was is Fecovery was owing to the remedics he adopted; but he ‘The fixed idea of the republican party leaders was that | tion of somo otbor great cities. If these reall THE AR CHIN. ing trumpot,a dinner service in handsome porcelain, ® | this way we reached Ruthem, in Hanover. ‘was agoned othn that in their use he had the direct in- | the government of England could ear presorve a strict | control the Union, and eway the great decision on which Ww. IN A. Printing press, a table, and everything necessary for In rs ‘ ferposition of the Almighiy. Only last night he received | neutrality in the war. ‘They were surprised, indeed, that | bang the present fortunes of America, then we shall soe .. wee m photogeap! hy. It was mounted by Madame La Princesse de | and fifty leagues. Our course tnfernale had covered @ Dy the mail some very important documents from Ame- | England did not itnmediately make common cause with | the true value of this great republican corrective, this | Goneral Burgevine’s Coup d’Etae with | /8 Tour d’Auvorgno, Jules and Louis Godard, Messrs. Ne fica which threw considerable light on the state of pub | tho North, and join it In ‘crushing out’ and punishing | solemn appeal to the conscience and the discretion of an ‘His American Troops—A Serious Change Nadar, do St. Martin, Delessert, the Prince Witgenstein, | derings. It doos not signify; we have made a good jour- s lic (eeting in New York in regard to the negro. The late | the rebellion. Everything short of actual alliance hag | assembled people. Then, too, wo shall soe how vain the in the Aspect of the War— Emperor | Tournachon, St. Folix, Paillat, Thirion, an anonymous in- | noy, and I marvel to see with what indifference we viols were really the work of the Irish population, Mr. | been construed into enmity, Eugland hag been continu. | attempt to exclude large populations, by the fictions of a of Ohina and the Oficers of Engiand, | ‘ividual, and mysolf. The number thirteon been | regard the most frightful death, fur, besides the Boocher 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 France and Russia, Puzzied about Bur- | °b0sen by Nadar; it was an act of justice and reparation. the committee appeizted to relieve the colored people, | republic. It was asserted Chat this hostility would com. | public affairs. But it is the principle of universal rage vd For far too long a time the cipher thirteen has been out- ri have lived thea? I ‘ i ine, do. Bhow! the guferiugs which the negroes had pel the government to take some step by intervention, | that 18 now chiehy on tts trial. There can be no doubt gow ? 20) dence of London Times.] | '8wed and banisbed from honest numbers. H was havo seen ‘this—happier yet at having to r a | that t . the bi ‘and the inte (Shanghae (August 20) correspondent n eased St the hands of the big mates eueray saadbscn oc interference of, some kind which would | that the wiso, the hpmane 238 tho intelligent among the | ("pi Pevine's accession to the rebels bas croated consid: | Covered with disgrace, It hid itself and dared never Th ho surround usare brave wer Ly impose its figure on others but with dissimulating , and we bave been as woll cared for as the re Lions wore setting themselves to work to compensate | ing out swit retribution on the traitors who ad wantonly | canuot possibly avert, tho disruption of the States. or | table excitement in Stan See esas ay lead thers ene | subterfuge. ‘This grieved Nadar, who, with the philan- oe of wih coun Kieg 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 revive ischi thropy of an excellent heart, at opee adopted it. 1 ought this roport—a docuboot admirable or oxceliens come | possosted.”” The lolorvention of Engiand in cho quarrel | tho old cry agaiowt ‘le eountry, What thoy wants | Mé tmay do tmmante miichic/, Cortainly the tmperiaisis | TOTSEY “ual ‘we hoped to gain it'on the sido-of our in: | pahicna, and" vaceon hop iotor toll VOU" oy ition and noble sentiments—was signed by twelve or | was the only thing of which the Cabinet of Washington | rest, not morely from arms, (rom bloodshed and extrava. | Wil) Ue unable fo Me astine ok Mua amopetn Te | terests, and, by making towards {t tho most generous Wis senlian aidnde tame fein saad ets the end of oug Brteen colored meu, who were xenticmea, seuolars;and | ocpronsed aty feat But that. secamo an, over present | eance, rom incessant blusteriog and infnito corruption, | alter viens Gordon's force 1s largely imcreasod, Directly | Sdvauces, wo counted on its not playing us an unkind | reverses? Atay rate,{ am congoled to tink they cam Christians, It was said that tho colored man was worse | terror, From Mr. Seward's first despatchos to Mr. Sum- | Dut from a state of things which brings to every corner | Pop, imines Goria a Lerch eee oi Cary | trick. It progented itself ¢o us under the form of a grace- | no longer laugh at us it Paris, Wo bave kept our pre- of in New York thau in South Carolina; but, having been | ner’s last speech this interference has been deprecated, | of the contineut, and every hearth in it, the worst who in the absence of General Brown commands tho sta: | ful woman, tho Princess do la Tour d’Auvorgne, last | mises, and more. fa the latter State, he could bear testimon: fy denounced, rejected in anticipation, flung back contom| miseries of a faction fight. it rest they cannot have 60 comer to the fete, and who, on hearing there was every ——e Erary boing tho fact. Hundreds ‘oad thotactis encom, | tsoualy betore i was onered, and oven tance the prowea | lang ae tmerca te tnthe Nands oF bravter, tmpotore aed | LD: oT eae ee the Sinky-covesth and artillory, | chance of her breaking her’neck, could not resist boing of Despatches from M, Nadar. Gipated wegroes were being educated by white people, | of the most angry threats. {t isa singular phevomenon | adventurers of every kind, It remains to be seen what | Couple of huni nc * j*the party. Hor last orders to her domestic were semi- ‘Paris (Oct. correspondence of the London Times. Who asked for no other return but board and lodging. | that the federal goverument should hive so underrated | placo these men ocenpy in Washington's, conatitution. | and, two | hundced | Temmteos, sik Bix grim. tO | neroicsevou will tell them at home that I shall not ro- Tea with real grief that T report, thst the eotusiasd ‘Tne Obristian church of the North was fully conscious of | the material force it had to contend with in the fleld, ac- | Their voice hag not ‘been much heard hitherto. They jate. | turn to-night, nor to morrow, nor per! will Lever | and courageous Nadar, after having passed a whole its duty in regard to the black an. He read other ex- | tually despising the armies from which it has sustained | have gat apart, nnd cherished a wisdom which it was | case, a8 was approbended, pe Peepplid ae return at all.’” ‘There is no need to describe the car be- | in or above the clouds, and having ania Gtx porial y force at ‘ tg from reports and otber documents to show that such beavy blows, and so exaggerated the imaginary | vain to exhibit.’ But there are occasions when such men | !¥ attacked in | youd saying it was a happy compromise between an om- | of a length and duration almost, if not enti 2801 and subsequently nearly all the Christian churches | peril of an koglish iowerveotion. “How tho appreheosios | lave events 10 their powor, and are listened. to because vacate &: Fortunately, theiraid ‘wae! sot Deeded, “Got Zina gd a champagne basket. leled, Is very seriously injured.” He 4 , in Amorica had declared’ against slavery. In the | arogo we can understand, but why it should havo been so | tho rest of tho world are silenced at last. If this lucid | 25 had in tho At five minutes to five we quitted the earth, or rather | ninoteen hours, and performed a distance of six Mi fg y. | ‘ y 5 pe undred, jute! Is and completely thrown them back i" " North and West ali the most iuteitigeut laymen and | long entertained ts inexplicable. So far from the English | interval is over to coma on Amorica, wo trust it will be | mishes with the rebel the carth must have quitted us, judging from my im- } and fifty kilometres. ministors of roligion had, nya body, settied down inthe | government haying had to dread any agitation iu faver et | in the course of tho noxt twelvemoath, and before the | 02 Soochow; go the column. was rocalied and roturnod t0 | Hregsiong of the moment. In oné second we wore five | "The following telegram has been recelved from him by Ammovable conviction that the war must go on until | interference on either side, i has been supported by ail | {atal voto for peace or war. That vote onco given, all | the settlement ob W yn ‘consequence of intolij. | Bundred metres distance. It was @ splendid sight apd | his brothor:— the rebellion was crushed and slavery destroyed. Let | parties, and every section of party, in the determination to be | good Americans will have to shut themselves up for ano- FIO ae ee i ae as macnaced | Dever to be forgotton by those who witnessed it. Every | — We came down Wiautennctn talkie aie. England give them credit for having sufficient reason for | neutral. It isa point on which the feeling of all classes | ther four years jence received from oer ee neecet | object was diminished simultaneously, Paris was re- | over, about noon Frage al Ar We words dom Po Han. (hat dotormination, and for differing from those who | in the country has been unanimous. On this, ques- aoe dy tre i no taeGuincan, prova, | duced to a bird’s eye view: one would have said that tbe | rai hours, our anchors baving broken, Satut Folix, peace. So far as the influence of England wasfelt | tion the ministry and the opposition aarce. Tho Housoof | Haglish Monarchy and American De- eg | she agate "4 beautiful city was Concentrated and narrowed round the | wife and mysolf are seriously hurt; the others are Well. Send ly thought the opportunity excellent to attempt its re- urged On the other aide of the Atlantic, it had been all againat | Lords andthe House of Commons are influenced by the mocracy. base of a cone, of which we wore the summit. me a doctor from Paris; Pelletan, if possible, Liberty and for slavery, thouzh bo did not meant» say | same opinion on it. Debate has been discouraged fest it | 81k FRANCIS B. HEAD ON THE UNITED STATES POLICY peti Be agence erage rere mon ani @ | mouuments became ravishing miniatures; the Vendome | or another if be i absent. Send bows at ‘Once tO the that wag what she imoant. He hoped, therefore, they | should involve matters that it would have been useless to DURING THE OANADIAN REBBLLION. Toning reached Karpoo abd occupied tho atockado | Column, a ckittle; the Tuileries, a plaything; the Made- | Saint Felix, Darnoud and Yon families, &c. Lat little ‘would wot consider it an unreasonable request if he asked | discuss. Yot the latest party manifestoes in America 70 TH ROITOR OF Tit LONDON TIMES. cree =nad been taken from. the rebels on tho | eine, @ Noah's Ark of NUremburg manufacture; and the } Paul be sont to us. {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 language Sin—In the leading article of your journal of this day, ead ‘of his first march on Wokong. The next | ‘Arc de Triomphe,’ a dice box. quest that ho should be semt to Hanover naturafly causes Bo not to allow themselves to be iniluenced by com: | it might be supposed that the English ‘people were urgiag | in which you support our government for their detention We directed our movements towards the northwest, | intense anxioty to M. Nadar’s friends.) We owe our lives mercial interes:# nor by. unprmcipled newspapcrs, | the government to some boate demonstration against the | of the irox-clada ma the Morsey,T have. read with great TROT ee dANg ed nRocalt tot reninnoltre: ke | and, if the wind aided us, we counted upon reaching St. | to the courage and. devoteaness ‘Of ules Godard, To- Thoy wore thoroughly familiar with the matiers ia dis- | Cabinent of Waghipgtov. Mr. Seward’s request (o be | pleasure and admiration the following remarks:— tho pe OR were reported to be in strength in | Petersburg the next Gil oe Nadar had brought some | morrow furthor details, |ADAR. pute, which those three thousaud miles away could | ‘/sftalone” has been bine # complied with, and, if the She (the Alabama) was the produce of trickery andeva- | the neighborhood. is he goon ascertained, prac. letters of introduction, and he made us all sign a decla- Another despatch is thus w = Dot 60 weil be, aud thres years of war was suificient to | confederacy is still tormidab’e, it ts by no restraint from | mon. We cannot say how, where or by what instalments tical; pepsin soe a8 he was attacked during the day | ration of neutrality in the event of our descending into REMRN, Oct. 20, 1868. Cool any superfluous euthusiagm they might have had. It | Europe on the hands that were go easily to strike it down. | her equipment was furnished; but we can say that she did d: p Dhol force, ‘accompanied by a number of Europeans; Poland or the dis-United States; but—we descended at |* The Gian: Xl near Eystrup, ig Hauover. Of the nine ‘was no longer a questign whether the war should be | The bugbear of intervention ought to have lost its terror | not leave our ports fn the character or fashion of bonest Bat ttiauke to ‘the strongth of his earthworks and the ex. | Meang! Stil, we exclaimed with legitimate pride, “We | people in the car three are seridusly and two slightly Stopped, and they were not going to stop it whatever | in the two zene that have go thoronghly tested the | vessel. As Sree tetas Geek oe | onilone tice of his artillery, he ropulsed them with | “id not descend there, we fell!” But let me not antici- | wounded, England might say aginst its continuance, England had | feeling of this country. But it is still employed on | ong such ese exactly the things which we ought to | Cott lemble loss, Geveral prisoners were taken, who |’ Pate events, not stood by them in such @ way, within the last few | every possible opportunity, capecially after overy | "Now, sir, as 1 administered the government of Upper | statud that three’ Europeans bad been killed and others | , The voyage was 4 very joyous one. What had wo to | The Balloon and the Belgian Custom ears, Aa to have any iniluence upon them now. (Hear, | federal reveree. ‘The deciamation against Knglant | cguada'in 1837, will you allow me to contrast the houest | et‘‘ian and ‘added that Buryevine himsalf-bad come up | feat? Tho weather was guod, the balloon solid, and bad House Officers. ‘The feeling among the educated Christian poopie | i# 0 timed ag almost to make this country respon- | course which our goverdment is at this moment pursuing, | atthe cise, ‘The following dey Gordon assumed tho of, | We Dot with us the Brothers Godard, the most mar- ( The Journal de Charlerot publishes the following letter, An America was, without exception, that Bogland had | sible for the defeats. If wo bad the hostile intentions im- | ang which you aro so powerfully supporting, with that | fensive, and marched to attack the rebels inan intrenched | Vellous aerial themselves? The Messrs. Godard aro only | giving very precise information with regard to the pass Deen soliish, cold and cruel, Ho did not say whether that | puted to ug, the period of disaster ought to be favorable | which the goverument and people of the United States | position on which they had fallen back, in the direction | Teally at home in tho air; they pay you the honors | over Erquelines of the Giant balloon, whish set out! was tru or not; he had uo desire to make accusations, | for their expression, But the turns of success bave v0 | practiced towards Great Britain, when a very small por- | of Soochow. With ‘only two hundred and fifty men, be- | Of @ cloud, they apologize when it is cold, | Parts, ag is known, on Sunday, at five o’clock in the after- hia wish being'to keep tho two countries together in | effect whatever on the public feeling. tion of her territory was disturbed by an insurrection, | sides a company whoni he detached to inenace their fear, | they make their salon in the ether, they look | noon:— the bouds of Christian fellowship; but somebody | At tho prosont moment lhe course of ents appears wnfa- | tho insignificance of which, a8 compared with the suc: | he siccecded in dislodging thom almost without loss, ia | UpoD the as a calm fea, and the a Enqueuiwes, Oct. 19, 1968, bho felt thom these things His countrymen | worable to the fodoral arms, With & faint hopo that the | cossrul secession for noarly two years of dight millions of | consoquence, maiuly,, of the cowardice of the Europeans, | D0St, while Iam not quite gure that incase of ao air- | sin—Last night, towards midnight, Foarbalx, tbe pointe, nol want fo be separated from England; on the con- | fixed iden aillicting the mind of the North be shaken | inhabitants of the Confederate States, may briefly be | who ran away almost at the first exchange of shots, and | ¥! Custom House Officer on duty at trary, they wished tne link i by a knowledge of th t state of English fool Trreck they would not know bow {0 swim they say no; | man, and Collard, the ry, they wished tne links connecting the two countries to | by & know @ present state of English fooling, wo lowing figures aud facts :-— £ : ° at y are 80 ! O'clock M. Delessert eens, : Derubied brighcer. (Choore.) How, tuen, could England | would ak a Learing (or its most receut demonstrations. | “"monatrated by the following dears and foots — | naturally carried the Chinese with them. Mio ned becy uriedin tho. Grat story ot tuo eeee era | terminus of Frauelines, gave themselves up for tbe wank @top the couitict? not by placing a hugo fleet upon the | In different parts of the kingdum the ordinary incidents itation, whea sy folk , Some arms it! . | Appeared on the platform, charged with ali the noces- tof the sti it nat “American sbores, or by sonding a large army to Canada, | of our public and political life have furnished several oc- ype! Apia cod ts = on ton cae pr Boda ti Mr Bs eae ee nar£@: | garies for making & good meal, which we assisted at with | tions, The horizon wifel an tastaut bets, ae aie Which would make n0 difference iu the conduct of the | casions on which discussion of tho foreign policy of tho | Suideniy appeared tofore’ Toronto, ‘At that moment | {nes orwction te the, reboigy has boon to, issue tha fol. | an excellent appetite, and drank to the sncocss of our | marry, eo fpr BK! North; but by showing that there was a feeling of | government was natural or unavoldable. Ministers and | the population of Upper Canada waa 450,000 ; the any. sop who will po aly, 34 Mlead oF alive inte bi | @xPedition, without casting a thought thet scratch on they eat may, AeA Ls cance Somers " Christian unity between tho two countries. It wag said | members havo met their constituents in the West, 4 "10,000. Pig the silk would terminate it more rapidly than was de- : ‘that they bad bebaved unseemly towards England, und | im the North, io the Fast, in aistricts differing as widely | Home district, 60,000 «tho city of Toronto, 10,000. | hands. sired. Io a fall there aro two. err! colie. the dos stoped i OMe cy ag et anny to tot ind. When it about two but r¢ i i PROCLAMATION, G@aid bitter things to ber; but when they saw their chil. | as agricultural and manufacturing interests or con- | cared in disguise to the United States; and so com vd 4 bei for . | parture and the arrival; the interval of ‘voyage itself haa Gren slaughtered—and oh! what beautiful children and | ervative and liberal opinioos can distinguish thom. |" was us ingage projest defeated by the loyalty of the peo- | sons have been: led aay. uuler {ales retances yee | $8 BOthing. There is story told of a mason whos falling | motres svove the buildings of tbe stations, whe. teno sotr $ Boble martyrs had fallea in tho war—when they found | Yet in all the shes made at these herings, | ple, unassisted by troops, thot, on the following day, 1 | American ied Burgevino to join the rebels at Sooc! from a fifth story, addressed the following fervent prayer | nesses of this m: ‘spectacle were in the Bimost every cue against thom, and even treachery | wliethor from tho hastings or at the municipal banquets, | not’ only isaued a proclamation'to stop the volunteers | this is to give moticoto all foreigners that the undersigned | during the rapid course:—“Ob! Lord, do let this | astonishment at perceiving, sustained by Mh the goverament, and knew’ oot how long they | all parties are unanimous on the policy of the govern: | Who, {rom all directions, were ‘locking towards Toronto, | will, on delivery of the said Buryerine, whotloraite or | continue!” cords, an object which they took for a railway : Could bold their own, thoy cid expect somo sympathy | mont in this American quarrel. The newtraiity it has ob- | Hut t placed she militia of seven counties at the dispos!: | Goal. into his exetody, or that of his officers, immediately Night came on st an early hour; it was sombre, and | Surprised, frightened, fascinated, not being able to i from England; and, if undor disappointment they had said | served ix approved, and there is not a single suggestion from | tion of Bir John Colborne. in Lower Canada, Pay over to the persons 80 doing the sum of 3,000 taels; thick clouds intercepted what still remained to us of day- | stand by what impossible circumstance a oarriage Dittor things, God forgive them. (Cheers.) If the meet. | any quarter that its policy should be modified or reversed. ‘On the 13th of December I reported these facts to | and ne further guarantees them against any further | light; still we ascended higher and higher. We began to | Northern Company could suspend iteelf in the air, fing asked what could they do, he would reply, let every | The addresses are as evidentiy in accordance with the | wijiam L. Mare; Governor of the State of New York, in | proceedings on account of their previous counexion with | tfaverse some very dense vapors that wet us to the skin; | prepared to attribute so misplaced a Dieasantry to. ieuil the . em. Lord do Grey, a . ascel Seteoco, Tet him algo pray for taem, fle knew they wound | Me, Clillrsat Piymoulhs aod Sit Palamer, al adveewss | & Helter m which T stated the rebels LE RUNG CHANG Fragments of clouda carried to ve the rediection of a-aies | Stuivs,momtil, 10 the railway end Custom Hone, ay for the South, and be was sure they needed it— | the same course of proceeding. That thoy are membors | ,1ts ft Tahonid appr se sour Bascal iancy that there snot | a cue August 12, Tao erm Commissioner, | igh, aud at last, at the diatance of 3,700 metres, the bal- | Serta tion clear ura sonore aanform, them of te fistenter) bat let Bim pray for the North, who were in | of the government, and still aasert that non-iutervention Canada, aaing’e pody ‘of men assembled with | If the men whom Burgevine has col'ected around him | 100m came out of these black masses, the light became from the supposed carriage, and asked them—" What main right, and whose cause was that of justice and | must be our policy, at least proves that the Ministry has therwise, in opposition to the government, wore even “indifferent honest,” £1,000 would not suMice | 0st bright, and the most superb sight was offered to ir meut are we in?’ The pol and Htaneousty‘with this statedieht I. despatched’ t ia life: view. The heavens above luminous with stars, Delow a ing polite A feoling of sympathy between her auc England; but if | they declare it essential, Their opponents cannot "ger ape ener Bd disorders. The illusion was so complete that for one | bali conformity with the statute existing between the society, bis life will be im no slight peril. The attempt instant I could bave sworn 1 a vend “dear thy valioon of gigantic dimensions ein ahah truth. If the’ South became at once an independent | no pressuro from ‘without to sustain on this question, # Ei the North provaiied and the Union wero restored, there | impeach tbe wisdom of this neutrality; for at the | disn provinces and the State of Now York, to del: ¢ “ «, ‘waa scarcely a single respect in which such a foeling | Eseex agricultural dinner, a conservative demonstration, the tuthoritien of Upper Canada William Tyon Mokearie, Roth Theses anoritven tae temitnns te teen ar horizon. ‘The most splendid ‘sights ‘are. generally F ooongy ead bg nn ie ag nh j Would not exist botween the two countries. (Hear, hear ) | it was as strongly approved as by the liberal electors of 7 Col the shortest, In traversing the clouds our balloon coras among Fiaving stated that he would be happy togive every other | the West. There is oot" the. slightest indication in any sees tne Robbers with his oot tenia or he eels | eenenied pereoual. ouraie 8d, deteemsation, be has | Tease “ Jers upon the situation, of tne locality, which ended ormal a ro ‘alt many with bim who are attached to him personally, and wet, and consejuently heavier, and being | in their recelving thanks from abovi Mr. Georax Tuomrsoy moved a resolution testifying the | unanimity they can scarcely hope to eecure on any do- enclosed. I ust him. No doubt, however, all these dangers were the cords driel ap. Gnd aguin' we Somesenaad nA rnd tom House officer, who bad his presence of mind, and admiration of the meoting for Mr. sasction mestic queation. The Americans may throw off all anxiety Bey letter and request I received the following re- | taken ne cons! —_ > De e he sey = a rewetting, & Tearying. and $0 on with the wahten of poe Ngned rphgfmminre ga, To gh age J a is i hey exp m sd cause. He may woil argue since he was to live 1 . vice, a s sbouted , It was seconded by tho Kev. Jouy Gasuas, and carried | set their apprehensions at rest. Vheir loaders bad deter- | To his Excelienoy Sir Francis B. Merve Lieurenace Go. | Of, twenty thousand tees offe for his head. | for tho night, when aa accident ew. hen ae oiaeel ttekane etre - unanimously. r mined that we must interfere. asd up to this bour they vernor, tc. -— ais pa . big e Serineee eae oe Ppa Bie ae Hittle excursion at the very onset. We were nding fe any Be ag bo og prone nn psp, Fag tay! m \- . ib a nk am ~y Soochow wi +] 5 - Mr. Baxciter oxprossed a hope that the resolution | bave accepted no assertion that we dieciaimed the inten: § yy te Poh ne official only a elxth part of that sum fe cabede But althongh | and ascending, Just according to’ chance are that he "el saan thes, Rs d to his congrogation in New York, | tion altogether, The spirit tho war has excited strength- | &! eae cael seas te uae ee ceed Gk a y aoainsained te Gitte Uaioe” thi ovary reason we bad from the fst to Koop out of the | FouE Haceiencr on me, ae Governor at the Bua ot’ New | wo prot bas hitherto ‘been raised by tbe American Gon- | Messrs. Godard could do wan, by a miracle and | bad left, the officials of the Custom House at Erquelines - ious as to uences which might acceded to, and, after a vote of thanks | contest. With this resolution we may fairly resent the | gs a’ fugitive from fustice from the province of Upper | Stat canuot avold the conviction that, in issning ® Pro- | Cact anchor. Thero was amoment of procound silence. | yeeuir tethers: trom this enserestad violation ot tee pu P op. fo the Chairman, the proceedings terminated. persistent misrepresentations of our policy. If they con- | Canada. I for we beard the anchor had been caugpt, ations. What prohibited merchandise might there ‘ tinue @ any effect on the American tind, against all | |The deenmente show. ae clearly as they can do, that | posed to tresty provisions, | Alt foreign trestles wit | aod we felt. a shako/that threw us ono on | nek’pe in x : ADDRESS FROM COLLEGIATE STUDENTS, the evidepeo adduced, we can ouly loave party malice to | McKenzie committed the crimes imputed to him; that pre ina stipulate for the surrender of criminals to their | $2 oie. “lh 4 rotten oe “tne balk Bot be in that car? One of these gentiemes, wie Rad ib {From the Loudon News, Oct, 24. ear tal our orto cahanes the pablie orsaniiy Tious thereto be had revolted. and was in arms against her | consular representatives for trial. But the Futai pre- | the, other. | The force oft loon was) such | grown gray in the service, and who soos In Nadar and bis Un Thuraday evening the Rev. Heury Ward Reecher e Majesty's government of Upper Canada, Hiscrime is, there- | judges Burgevine fuilty, and offers a premium for his | that SE UT cite oe conn by | Colleagues the enemies of ‘the profession, declared that if (Was eatertained at asoiree, and presented with an ad- fe Pt tte hey WAR RL HLT he must be | execution. If he fail in fair fight, of course nothing more | 1 nee @ econ’ ny was cane anc stuck in the | be bad been on the spot he should have made the whole Gross by tho students of five of the Nonconformist cot The Presidential Canvass, Gilease; sather for teres | f punishment for this | can be said than that he has incurred the riek and paid | @arth. | We were moored, bat the real danger . We | staff take up arms, and summoued nidacious con! Jogos in and about London, viz-—1he Indopoudent col. | BRITISH OPINIOY OF THE BFFECT OF THE WARK POLICY ] oon Cauying your kxcelency's applicals te Tees meant | the forfeit; but if. bo bo taken prisoner, (be Chinese | OWly touched land sufficiently to cause us to rebound off | veners of the law, under the threat o Jogos of St. Joha’s wood anit Hackney, the Countess of ON THY ISsUR. { | would be bound to deliver bim up to the Américan Consul, | SMe distance and recommence there the same thing. | Ketry, to descend in order to submit to s red as the Incldents of the alleged Huntingdon’s College at Chesnut, the Baptist Collego, From the London Times, Oct. 23.) z be ac, WoL. MARCY, | who, [pave reason to believe, would only deport him, | Ode Would have said that some gigantic child had taken Rogvat's Park, aad tho Presbyterian Theological Hall, | A very curious question, by no meacs novel in political | 11 will bo observed that, in the abovo reply, Governor | It in‘dificult, then, to believe that the latter will allow | OUF baloon for an clastic ball. aud was amusing himself in 7 qne yyy A Voyagers in He: : Quoon’s square. Tho aco of meeting was the Indepond ec, 18 about to receive a critic ia Ame | Marcy abstained from noticing tha treaty betweon Great | this glaring Attempt to procure bis assnasination to pass | CoUseuuence. At Inst the Giant” was laid low, but bY | rpaeis (oot, 23) correspondence of tho London Times. ' it Collogo, known as New College, St. John’s wood, and ect will the quadrennial peried of the govern- | Britain aud the United States, in obedience to which | | without strong protest. overthrowing ried low we were not smashed to On Wednesduy evening the following telegram arri 7 he number of students assembled was about two busdred | ment have onthe progress of the war? In atwelvemonth | had, on his application to mo, faithfully surrendered to | _ The consuls of England, France, America, Prussia, and | atoms I don’t know. te oom hed misfortune, the 006 | 11, Paris: f and Arty. the new elections will be in progress, aud alroady the | the ‘authorities of his State fugitives from the Caited | Russia have conjointly given notice that aby person en. | Who held the valvo cord let it go in the confusion. The Tawoven, Oct, 21, 1963. ' Aftor toa and coffee had ben served, the company ro } vows of the Presidential contest is heard among the bul- | States, simply on the legal evidenco of their guilt. He | listing in the rebel ranks, or endeavoring to induce others pe > saaaee tnoeneenved eas tade — The rersons who received injury in the balloon ascent i fired t9 the Spacious library, and on Mr. Beecher’s en. | leting from twenty geats of war. Under the Roman re- | iso abstained from noticing the fact to which Mr. Be. | to enlist, will be punished with “the utmost rigor the | fied to make themselves masters of jon, which | have been brought to this city, and under the kind & Irance , accompauied by Lr, Halley, De. Spence, Dr. Tom dragged its anchor with frightful force. If the cord bad f the Fieseb Minister The a ’ $ins, a T. Binoey, Rev. A. Ral ‘one | 22d protecting care of King ‘on,’ Profoss broken it would have been all over with us. ‘Let no Public it was congider tbat the annual appointment | thune drew his especial attention—namely, th ”” Active steps bave been taken to check the h, Rev. James Strat. | of the two most energetic and popular men of the | by Mr. McKenzie viwmtiuuw[”7 which is already languishing from the diff. ‘On ors Newth aud Neddor, the ‘Kev. Kilsby | day to the hoad of affairs ‘contributed to. the the 20th of Decomber, 1837, Governor Ma hing Soochow. The Frevels Cousal Geueral | Str,” cried Nadar on jumping out; ‘one man only should | Hadover sent one Of ft ie face Sonos, and ame Khor gentlemen, he’ was grected with | incessant activity of that State, whother in prosecut: | anor having allowed the Amerioan Generals Van Ray, that all residents ou the French concession | Compromise himeolt for [Eg At OW inthis | praised. Nadar has both bis logs sprained, and Madame Ugg ant Frolo: pianse, ing old wars a h opportunities | jaer and Sutherland with impunity to seize twenty-two | ate to render an account of the arme in their possession | Stale we remained many hoore, liscening wiih s chOepiOg | Nadar has bad ber chest violentiy compressed, and one ~The Rev. Rowerr Hatter, D. D., Presideat of New Col- | of distinction. : laced before the | pioces of bis artillery, and to tssue “proclamations” in | by @ fixed date; and her Britannic Majesty's Consul has re~ pane Fy eon woman, she was burt by our fail, and | °C ber logs torn and injured. Jogo, who took the chair, suit he was sure it adorded all | World for that twelvemonth, and must make the | the United States offering £500 for my apprehension, with | minded steamers and other boats plying into the jnterior ane the whole of Ous danger haa borne bereeif with Dr. Richard, Professor of the Faculty of Medicine of resent the highest gratification and delight to receive in begin and fuish, if possible, and reap bis own | one hundred acres of land in Canada and $100 to whoever | that they render themselves liable to coufscation by | Yet 9 Pid and a teanguil ‘AUingation that would have | Paris, received at two o'elock notice 10 prepare to start ir midst from the other eide of the Atlantic each a | ha ch was the effect so long as the sphere of | would join what they were pleased to cail «the patriot | Funbing past the Custom House barriers at the moarhs of | & sand fren aud & temmanll Ruuugttion tak MOON tad | for Niouburg to attend the persous wounded. He left at ‘Wan as the Rey. Heary Ward Beochor—not only as the pr mitted of a complete conquest in one | army; permitted the steamer Caroline, in brond day | creeks. This applies principally to sundry smail steamers | Sroneed my Nutairatiom i bts came to our aid, the | S¥€0 by the express train, and expected to make the ‘of De. Boocher, whose writings were well known in | y But by and by the field became too large for an- | jight, in the presence of the United States Marshal, and | whichare in the habit of running up to the rebel country rive tae cyanea, tho walicen Cokenaaa, andi ic” journey in eighteen houre. The son of Nadar aceompa- is country, and greatly valued, or as the brother of yl it boonme necessary to renew the term | in the immediate vicinity of @ regimont of militia of the | for slik, and aro suspected of carrying other motal ae well | Valve was opahed. the Daluit colmpaad, Wad’ |» «+ | ‘nied him, Dr, Richard took the etemrerey C Drs. Stowe, the talented author of that remarkable book, | of cousulship, new offices were created, and a successful | State of New York, to be cut out of the ico by & thou. ver to exchange for it. But it is useless to remind | We rel 4 cad t: and passed a cloth to the | S¢fV@ &8 @ passport. It is stated the travellers “'Unele Tom's Cabia,”* but also and chiefly as aman who | general was allowed fo purrue his conquests with abnost | gand men. He allowed bis own Collector of Ouatome to | ther iF liability unless the penalty can be put in | Proceeued tom Bene olen seat her to exert her | would probably have all perished {f Jules Godard had pot, ras bimssif both weil known and esteemed in Great | abvolule power, except when threatonrd .by a hoetite | give ber a license, ‘which, and ingured from loes by | practice, wherens the little six-pound guns which the | Princess dela Tour d'Auvergne, begging her to exert BE | at the risk of his life, climbed up by the and cut Britain asa writer, a prorchor and a platform orator,and | faction @t home for three, five or ten year }-e bond publicly given by seventeen American merchants, | Chinese aflect wouldsnot do much harm if they struck; | Wulents ih cleaniig tits KlAtnee, see aevocapanion to | ® Hole fp tbe silk witl a hatchet, ro as to the gaa to 900 who bad readeret most important service to’ the | the experiment of two autual cousuls bad work he sailed amidat the agclamations of the people, to net | even a twelve-pounder, which, unloss in very rare cases, | {ete ni Avian ee a some othersrto take care of | Sect. By Bo doing he stopped the furious course of the Paves of Raman freetom ia America long berore the exist: | out even before the consulship of Bibulus. Hence: | asmpansage Doat tO convey government artillory and | is the heaviest gun carried by a gunboat, would not d pee agg pe pete “vacked up aud sent | Dalloon, which was making bounds of from forty to Atty Bye t as forth dictators, triamvirs and emperors. mn the Fm- | American citizens to take possession of Navy Island in | much injury, af the Chinese powder. used is execrable, | the balloon. In tbe morning it was pag P yards with a violence that would soon have knocked the a address was then presented to Mr. Peeeher by Me, | peror, however, represented military success, and when | Cavede ; Chinese gunners are not noted for their profi. | 8,0 Paris, wile we wuarten i WNlar fox the pleasant | CBt to pieces. ©, which, among other | there came the ‘great contest between the North and | Arter reporting to her Majesty's Minister at Washinge id would not be very likely to hit asmall steam. | 1 terminating, t beg to thank Nii a an aceideue, but Fecoived at a later hour states that. : ings, said Wo 129 1 you one who'bas devoted | South of Enrope, which was finished not in three yours, | ton the foregoing facts, I imperfectly expressed to him my | er running at full speed. To endeavor to stop the silk | [oyage ! made th bis vampe F iae the baltoon is aplen- jar, whee injuries Are not so serious as ab is Dest energies and the rare abilities with which God | wor yet in three centuries, the Emperor was again and | frolings as (ollows:— trade really seems extending our complacency to the im. | Git SOM cag sate, and with « less weight it could float ing on well, as is also M, St, Felix, endowed you to the cause of civil and religious free. | again the elect of war, ‘and the earth was thus fought for T need not rem om, and the moral and social elevation of the degraded | and won over and again, So the world, always ies it ie that a x to yout Excellency how unfair and un. | perialists # little too far however, no such attempt will for ever. The second experiment will be as littie dange. Petion, which witeia thie province was eo wt noncng Len ay a4 Four as the first war adventurous.” Fer my own yart, | The Anchots and Other Matters from id Oppressed. During the whole course of your public | hoping for peace in ite time, and dreading alike the plan | Insigniticant that ft was instantly crushed by the civil in ‘A Euro) named Beechey, landlord of a pubiic house, Wwe fi: yon ave over lndighaatly Condemned. the mocstiees | oF ceceaton thoes by wager of battie and the weary | !anls of the colony, ne revived and renired formian- | was Karomed the otter day co'a charge of belog. connect? | With the brothers Godard I would risk traversing the ni—llow the Germans Were in aud curse of slavery, and maintained with all your | degeneracy of long reigns—thinking, too, to allay the | © ~~ ed with Burgevine. He at once confessed, and enabled | CAND: gion, Peal bd Rmations, that I felt, was es Sharia (Oct, 28) correspondence of London News. } ‘ploquence and at much cost the common righta and heri- | fury factions—reverted to fixed’ terms of power. the authorities to arres | other men who were ina ‘The only emo 5 A Parle epeak with 2age of humanity. And our ¢arnest is that you may Even we, jeslons as we are, surrender our liberties | goverment 0 Sara reward of your labor in the abolition of the peacefit! once 0 Keven years toanew House of Commons, Our | this province should be threatened with d - the moment of steppihg into the ratiway carriage for Some German papers received ip : mT! boat waiting a favorable opportunity to start for Soo- - of the balloon on certain Relation and | chow= ca and artisans, who were to have esta. | Paris.» When | saw the locomotive that was to carry me, | wonderment ot i Evowing what it was or whore it ; Y I said to mysel?, ‘Nor ppowe an overtbrow sho points, but without é al distinctions of color, and in the renewed prosperity | governments, however, suceced one another at @ | plunder and all the miseries of war by the unjustiiabte in- | \ished a foundry for shot and shell. Notwithstanding vane drend! . from. It seems that while it was near : OF tho American republic, guickor raul, for | Taclament representa much | Mrpertrer domduct ia the bygone Period to which 1 have | Beechey,s avowal of his complicity It was found impos: | Pitetis''iave no longer any conderce 10 wach, a modo | the earth it apeet three or four ore ‘, Tho «\droas was signed by the senior student of each | Woo truly the changes of popular sentiment to be | poterrud has long ago been forgiven and forgotten by Fog, | idle te bring home any tangible charge agrinet him, ag | Craly.| hove po euen May neveral telegraphic wires. One of Pollo; on bebalf of the whole body. Mr. Beecher, in bis | content with ta eeptenmial choice of the exceutive, | Torerted line lnm Age Denk wegired Nuk tegen by Fog | ne had bo fotention of ining tbe rebsls himself, bit wae / tf tas tsi damaged the roof of « pavilion in a garden Dear Nieuburg, Foply : vost ontirely of a religious characters | When the Americaus framed their constitution they } land, su rao dpa ae rd ey disuai meroly for Burgevine, and all got off very easily. in Hanover, belonging to a batter a Wolaimed the viva or haying suffered losses, observ! wished to make the Prosideut somethivg between acon | States w' haan teaibegs hostiie ver tbe pA {AB | Not #0 some foreigners who were arrested in Soouking Account By a Passenger. +, | anchor, with « rope attached to it, ig me bat he bad dover inked for the rewards of position and | ul, an emperor, a coge, a kiog aud a British prime | DOW entertain (eslings hostile, A people for | ater the capture of the Kinochiao. M. Fugene Arnoult, one of the passengers in M..Nadar’s na astonishment of the bite favor oa account of anything he bad done, minister. For a long time this happy mean between eo | DAving, wi » merely expr thetr | "" pireetly vine got into the river, where balloon, writes as follows to the Paris Nation — many different ideas was thought most successful, and | Pinion as to the probable results of a transatiantia civil fo stop him was hopeless, Macartney ord the oly Haxoven, Oct. 1853. even It justified by the Mt i . | War, which, if ae would have endeavored to foreigners who might be within to be My Dar Epitor—You saw us loave the Champ de Mars tog the fash Parliament a0” pubic to biud ther olwes | Prevent, and whieh, witout permission, they ail deeply | Grested. Nine were discovered, and, ax not one could | On Sunday, You were a witness of the fe ascent of to A quadrennial of quinqueunial change of adqjuistrae | Md sincerely lament, 1am, sir, your eet servant, | give a satisfactory account of himself, they wore all de. | the Giant rising into the air amid the of the tion, "Perhaps re are Bow in 4 condit ig d4e for a + BEAD. “| tained till further Jotormation Fegarding ther ‘eri be crowd. ! voyage!” ourselves how this woul ve worked with the obtal 9 buat . BUILDING Mex’ a to Napoleon, man, brought to | bel commission | At nine o'clock at night Erquolines; we pony OF THE ALABAMA | Revolutionary war, how with the Russian war, how From lonenger, Oct. 24. » bi it to light « rel pass and ‘cloc igbt we aight we werein From OF THE RAMs, tion trade, or any ag military mondarin of the third grade, signed over Mallpes, and towards it the Liverpool Mercury, Oct. gai bs tad “roenbas, ahem, baparberrion iho. on Mation was yesterday received by the | by Chung wang. He had, up to the time ee | aes ening the Music Hall, Birkenhend, was crowded ship ‘the constitution, under bare poles, creak sent = o Gene 10 | post, been acting as orderly to one of the officers We rose very high, but It was necessary to come down gbly ‘table company to witness the prosenta. ing in every timber, ‘on the billows of lar passion ‘sad lent—M. Gutierrez | i" Gordon's ferce, and as, notwithstand: the plain re fi 4 ition wae orloes won by the sucemeral competitorn at | (nf. ia ovens Umber, . the a ‘ate fer more the Archduke | geidence against him, he denied having ever had commu. | a critical one, Below, as pl the Ist CRY. (Captain HH. | likely to borrow something from us than we are from Von members oo | Hication with the rebels, bis guilt seemed clear; 80, with marshes, and in the distance we could hear the roar of we ahte ulti; ean Donen eer | Wem. “rok the time ra Fe ee eaten | @roateat anxiety for the regeneration’ Mexico oe | the sates woostvar, bother his gets werervally pevartaia | lost night of the curses barnat's nights "Nove iy slept, at “ir. Soa tare ee arrangement squares A jonable, however, w! it weroreally so certain lost aight of the earth. | tat Beto jo reuirat B terres do Estrada presented to a it appeared. T belleve pothigg Dut nis tovecee fear of you a suppose into the sen Baird) aol Por bel! at Leasowe on tod same place on Saturday last. Mr. Jobn Lair | See how this convenient qi M.P.. | with the ungovernable course war, A for idea of od the chair, and there wore also preseat 1 twelvemon . | the Emperor, in the name of the regency of the Mexican | gamitting a formor connection with the rebels cost him nothing pleasant about it, and it was necessary to kee or ‘am iny of the most in@uential inhabitants 01 . in a8 earein rebel employ, and during nn earned showed we 0" Abe orvough Tans, FReELTUl mouths, ie to wield the scoptre and the | Pte manshipsand tied up with ribbons of the Kis comnisston, which be kept probably az a protection | that is to say, towards Gorman LAIRD, M.P., 10. the course of Bie speach, aaidim | cron favee rot Vng,eAFR: but the war veil proceed ty H | tional colors of Mexicomred, whiteand green. Tho bo iy ¥. rrtble ould again fall into their hands. Had be | In the morning, after @ frugal breakfast mado in the Hi ed that It''wo wore to go to war to-morrow our | the enemy ta trrut nin gash Itself was enclosed 10 a smal LR ' =) +44 i case Of blue velvet ‘explained this, probably he might Baye saved nis clouds, we redescended, An immense piain was | F ean io Sank and in rear, generals will " Davy wots not iM afi sate, and he advocated that instead | Nght for dear life ak well 8 fan af In the boat of tro others: Greek and an us, The viliages to us like children’s 3 rb eo abt t né, and, unless the federal ' seme let magical diy fe prepared witha Tarps fest of gunboats ot | Garton (7 PONce with no uncertain vole, all will D@ THE WAR OF ST. DOMINGO. ae Ne eee cetie niturated Wh Dhoed = teae | Lae toeee epUamalaly ever al. Towares eigen crags we | ies Adtibaaw #ie GREAT ATTRACTIO¥ 1% LONDON, es drawing twelve or fourteen feet of water. In Bus the four years’ tenure of ~——a ~ admitted having been to Soochow with @ cargo of ricé, , arrived near a great lake, there | found out our iogs, (From tbe im Times, aso! 4 office Is not the only fea. Aietion that the yoong American actress, Miss ook! ¢ over tha navy list he found they bad only | ture of the American constitution af having obtained the sik in exchange; but refused to | and announced that we were at the end of Holland, near | _ ur pre 4 4 9 chips that enult poseibiy bo cousidered At for | proot next year. it will pice the whats Calwaehet, ©, U2 | Meemeh Reporte aad Opinions, of the | sat neg wnt of the. Dicod found Wh their boat, and | the soa. We were compelled (0 Uhink of landiag ia Order | Bateman, was likely to become a central olyect of attrae OS Saag pS what. | etn : paen 691 ly vertied sad harbor defences, and those wero on Mr. ‘unity of showing its strength or its : wore accordingly beheaded, on. tho double charge of to take in a little ballast. Unhappily the heavens bad | tion to iy going world been com v . pian. He thes feferred to. thy epecch de. | peal will Ife to the Americas plemtnat ibe neritoe eee Eat ity cortensenaense of Londen Times, Thiet trading and murder. ‘the six others who had been | made us forget the earth, over which Biowa wind #0 elo: | The Adeiph eat Gaustted cartier @ Lak a we Withia the last fow days by Mr, Cobden, | still comprised in the foderal lines. The chief subject of Nise te to have a good deal of trouble in | arrested were soot in charge of aguard to Shanghae, to be | lent that in a few minutes our anchors—enormous ful- | interpretation A. oma worthy of caret! atady oh that gentleman had been pleated to make | that al WM be the wisdom of prosecuting the war o back (he lation of St. Domingo toa better | tried by the Futai on the charge of baying been accom~ | crams of iron—were broken. The valve was shat, andthe | vorsally reoogn ' | a8 something b : fome comolimentary terms about tho late firm at | with a determination to entjugate tho South at ai! risk wats ott mint tran” eprordés to the last accocata, they | plices ot Burgevine, but, attempting to escape by the | balloon, which could carry us no longer, began a gidiy y f mt Ho det oof ogres ith ah tag gemarks Of | and ay any Gombe Bhere will 89 besanothor wontion be | gre pa tay When wi : ‘ ay, theese were abot by the guard gthers scoeedes rt re core from twonty to thirty metros, np fell

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