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5 nuw. YORK. HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER..6, 1869—TRIPLE sneer’ the present ‘except in the inconvenieu petal Oe ADDINONAL FROM BUROPB. = Ses hace eee asec datpiea parts, leaving @ valley with @ stroam of water flowing through 1. The Rapid, ten-guo brig which left this place for Marseilles in company with the Britan- nia, brought word that when passing over.as near ag could guess, the where the volcano is, both folt ° : i s RSRRS Oyownaaa.—On Sunday steam was raised in the boilers ‘of the Quintard battery Ouondaca, The engines, which ‘were bulit at the Morgan Jron Works, were put in motion TOE FRENCH CONQUEST OF THR REPUBLIO. (From the Westmiuster Review The Fronch couquest of Mexico may justly be termed Lo! es’? Opinion | tne most extraordinary event of our day.” It desory spot easiér’ reach fot the firet timo, and worked to the eutire satisfactionot | ‘Le ndon Tim P tle, Wot Decsuse It le’ the ta08t Importank, rey violent shook ae-{f they had struck ona rock tna, The third faollitate the transit @. concerned. The propellers, of which she has twp, of Beecher. would be dificult to inaicale any other 69 ‘with | they sy, has been remarkably quiet eee, he Each pf _ these momen'ous ‘ies ; not because It is the greatest, for there is little of grandour in apy be Fo sby Sr tt; Dut because it is most entirely out ‘with the cbaracter, F on and circumstances of the which L} 2 seems to have broken out in a pew place. Lheard was that the whole thing had sunk again into the sea, but that I can scarcely believe. THE ENGLISH FLAG PLANTED ON THE BURNING Weve worked up to about Afty revolutions with e mode- rate pressure of steam. The work on this vessel is progressing us rapidly as prod: is the prodigy, the monstrous I Circumstances will permit, and it tf expected to have bor | 4 French Transatlantic Commercial | 747s ours.” tne divilised world seemed te have ISLAND. ea ee If they aro oun. | owe you five anillings for. boing drunk and “iisordarl ready for sea in the course of a fow weeks. She is a made up its mind resolutely, and once for all, to have s Matta, August 28, 1! * of | Sttucted along the level they will engross an amount of | Turving to a friend, “Was I Senge beautiful of workmanship, to be Steam Fleet no more wars of mere aggression, or conquest for the | ,.° 1 must now give you some further account of | gnace and involve @ destruction of property which we | trate severely, “sir, ‘youre not of pesleng “eS saan ‘ Sako of conquest. Evory one considered himself quite |-the Dew voloauo. We were several daysat soa, despairing | cannot think of without dismay, and what with the noise | drunk, but of disturbing all Albemarle street. at two one of the crack vessels of our iron-clad navy, which al- . satisfied in belie that the volume of which | °f sceing it at all, as owing to foul winds, and light winds, | and the inconvenionce of crossing them will- probably | M.; bevides tho five sbillings, you must flnd bail. I must roady is numbered by scores, Tho gun carriages have toia‘of auch doods mist bo regarded ae closed orever, | Std adverse currents, we were kopt from Thursday ti | occasion muro spnoyanees tha they will remedy. | toll you, moreover, that your levity 16 misplaced. Per. been placed jefore her So far at loast it was assumed that we had progressed on py bes ‘nnight banging about the coast of Sicily, which | 7+ they are carried overhead they wilh still be open to some | haps you yourself are a magist You should respeot pe rennet gl am the road to peace, international harmony and true civili. | W#3. however, partly made up to us by a very good view | 7 ¢heie objcclions, and will be 30 unsighiby as to b¢ énioler- | the dignity of the bench. Who are you?” Gon ponderous armament will be in place. THE INVASION OF MEXICO REVIEWED | t3iscc" rie hosing of uon-intarvoution es long preached | Of ® very fine coast, particularly one afternoon, when we | apie even to satropolitan taste. If they go underground } still laughing, ‘Oh, nevor mind who I am. I told the ‘The Contingntal Iron Works aro very busy, and have on . ‘ aga princfple, bad come at length to be regarded asa | Were close in to the land, opposite Girgonti (the * of | thoy will havo to encounter all tho obstacles overcome ta | liceman; but after all, who cares. I am Lord Water( hand, ou De nd Muscoota, practical Iaw. It goomed to be tho settled policy of all | #Nclent Agrigontum), which stands op @ high ridge, -04 | tho formation of the Metropolitan Railway, aggravated by | 1 hope the present representative of the house of Bares both Lecomte eee, ine Coho : Bations pretending to be oivilized that uo foreiga in- | 8 Surmounted by ruins of several temples, which We } tho greater multiplicity of gas pipes and watcr pipes and | ford will not read this, ag I fear he will be shocked, sines et een ogi ting at eas ue ol | Lament sulin veining Kem . "i - terference should be any longer allowed to dictate independent States. Even Bus- iy athe Ya. odes ictpl thel determ! re le. 10 loudest "of ail in the heart of the | it only happened a few days —o Se is ano was soon, like w low Diack line, Bigher at each end | MCtTopolie, We need not det ot Me abit or “eater | tab said ABs i pat te inst educat @ peo} ris 7 fn te ala, wit cum while smoke ring Hntond of walking, Locomotion toast uot be kept slow Nig py I Ske MOBO. 22a from the eoutheasi end of it. ihe wind died away 8 | Ana dear, nt ine public seule lemyd to neglect heath PRA SELECTS 1 N SHUR MORNING. ee eee atte earene wih and aren | ful czectae: but we contin to eaariate, Soe meee eicedaeins tesuas toca the same dream * for short distances, railways can ever i f : win ia da ha dome ge ene | hichcan tr ra coe oy eR ge each ship, which made a strong party. We bad perceived | notice to, take up or set down. Supposing, therefor Shas sot the fachlon of, resasansties Bost 00 150%, aie Grrr tarot sage tga te rms | Sythe" Uad aa | foto er soy a i wi railwa; \* . ” aw it was a Wo landed nearly all at tuo ie walt chaamentwe, iveline to think that most | Majesty seems to give her mind to dressing. Defore tho two latter are ready for service, CITY RAILROADS IN LONDON. Mopuc, tron-clad.—Mr. J. 3. Underhill, of the Dry Dock Iron Works, is butiding the light draught Monitor Moduo, at Greenpoint. A visit to this yard will repay any one interested in this branch of naval architecture. In the first place the yard is very roomy, aud tho arrangemonta for carrying on the work are unsurpassed. The forges, Presses, punching machines, &c., are all in the most 1 delivered, scarcely @ ministerial reply spoken, mary an official manifesto fesued in France for yeare whi glorify the principle of non-intervention in that magnilo- poe and resonant style which has so many charms for ears of French audiences, Suddenly # French oxpedi- EXTRAORDINARY NATURAL PHENOMENA, perfect order, and arranged to save the workmen es | A Submarine Volcano, a New Island | tion crossed the Atlantio. , 8 usual, the ame time, on rth side, ine small bay, which has | WS itn “Wain hormven one gart of London and | Jt is said that in the-front centro of the ceiling of mes sible, On the ises is a bydraul ‘ a Mo pcre Dyers ber ihr haga since been digoided with the aI of Hotham Bay. | f,u6, tralie hi be carried’ on in. the’ upper alr, | Pflvate dressing room thore is a trap door opening into s Se issigat pramita six cola se or olght ween bs of Lava, a ving Colored | (fn ns’ apie east pean it opined a bioodthtraty pew poo Be pees ee oe — end Avail events, before we devise means of clearing our Pp rtyeoriyriga CCN iokine t ae ‘atgy of i con reduc was a itreets of residents engaged in their call. fat one time, This saves time and facilitates the work. River, a Magnificent Meteor, Re- Pa are hele OES for scrupie | Dut veryfow yards {rom tho water sido tho suriaco was | tan ‘we mas'es well eousider shother the sarge roculi Faapross hovel. In pert, of (here premes share 18 Thero aro mauy Improvements {tr the yard; but we have sul f the Earthquak the “policy pursued fm Mexico, fansmech as ig | extremely rough, composed of loose cludors of all sizes } might wot bo socurod by kooplog out thoss who have no | Yroue4 gi encesus lato tbo ign i se Oe Che apace 9h Be. poenens, Signe: te mantinR ae. ath. ete he, work of the Fraych Emperor, and, big gov- | Over shoes, and vory MOL ts the touch, ‘Our drat objct of | ROedt be there at Contry ites, ious tho contra! parts | if,16 pleaso ber se ss tagetid pecmar Race bi The vessel {8 somewhat advanced ia construction, and and a New Comet. ce PALE car ee ean course was to get Up to the Nagata, which we séoo%m: | cLoudon, end the con-tuction of dircel junction lines | frame and piacod upoo the linperial person: At pot, We ship thus far displayed is beau (a fy ished after & steep climb up the silding ashes. and | connecting tho northern and southern termini, are p i Losey Ge, NoeRrnAe Ie Stee Ge Pros OMA A athe ani Teeth ee Pena tae Provgebials but it } though we did not exactly, Ike the snail in the story, | strenuously iivocated, As to the lirst ot these | Perluaps auother aud auother bottom of the shia, is in place and tho irame up. The only justice to France to say that the Mexioan war-| SiO Gur rest back for every tree wo got up. thor was | Sewususly aivocated, As to the rst of these former ia well worth seeing as a pieco of mechanical skill. ss Core Wa ese gntest umount of Popularity in the | quite sliding enough to make the ascent rather laborious | yi." “Sup; ose, for instance, the Great. Weslern Rho Trensetienier Trae of ue a England Seizes the Volcanic Island aud Plants D v ¥ | under a buruing sun, and walking over rough ground, | Runway were prolonged to the neighborhood of Grosvenor | ORGANIZATION LET BROOKLYN NAVY YARD. Practical mode of ascertaining what Paris at least thonght dsp hot as to be unpleasant to handie, CIAL STRAMSHLITS. Of tho ‘Mexican expedition. At the late elections, the | Very steep, an 0 ip square, would the few minutes savod in time compensate [From the London Times, Oot, 24.) Novor in the history of this yard has it presented #0 the Union Jack in Its Ashes. r , rom. the Loo Me ag mon who carried all before thein in Paris wore those who had during tho previous session Leen mainly eonspicuous for their denunciation and exposure of its motives and its policy. The English and Spanish governments, anxious for peaco, approved of the proliminary conven- tion at Soledad. The French government, dotermined upon war and conquest, disapproved of it, and deprived of big power us a plenipoteutiary of the French repre- Mad tenet eo Bane Jurion oe the freee who wespn' it, the voice French Eim- pie qos s{fll, liko that of Milton's fend, - for open war—of wiles more inexport he boasted not. The rest of the story is ousily told. Its details would scarce ly intorest English readers. It is the Darrative of an in- vasion pursued with remorseleas determination, aud cul- minatibg, as every one ‘knew that it must, ia succes:, The remainder of the history of the Mexican coriqueat has to be written herafter, Whether the Archduke millau will accept the throne, what cousidorati n 1 will receive for it, aud how long France 1s to occupy the country, we shall'very soon learn, i( it 8 indeed not all mado known before theso pages are transferred to priot Whon we got to # w but the flag had | ine householders for the invasion of their c-mpara- rf oan planted toro bf Lda. SaaiMteadar «thy govern, | the, hawseholdors forthe, lavasion, of hele c.mnar: | ue cizde firms goatinyo actively engaged, and some iam Eodat cotter, alias the “+ ender age bad hore SUL | boa muol greater vulBaBes fn thar n ngasnor tod than at bt Launches have tiken place during back to Malta by the admiral the Sunday after we | », * tbe ro of le is, of COURS, Henrer to balled, with orders to reudezvous at the mand, aud | Vaddiogtons tus centre of a circle is, of CUUERD, Men“ST > | “iccars. Sontt, of Cartedyke, have Inuached the Lae which had got there while we were off tho Sicilian coast, fh tz | fayette, onother 0: the great ocean steamers which they ; Dut it does not xt all fol tthe centre o! a tow Bre ine iar tua Ohacanaie Gotarde earl and not finding us, concluded that we had been there and | the most convenient pl rivals and deparkures, 70 bul Bye One are eee gone again, and there!ore sailed again for Malta after is obvious enough that a railw to Is o Planting the jack on. the island, When on the top wo | PU{tC Other and, te ie ee utton anal ane’ | measurement, *8d her ditnerisions are as followsine were nearly to leeward of tho crater, and the consequence great many through passengers the loss of their tempers | Length, 350. foot; bycadth, 45 feet; SS WAS that tho volume of stoam that rose from it drove full | fs yell as of their trai, woud ayord the expouse aud | feet. She hes four docks, fe upper one being lu our faces go strong a sulphurous vapor as to make | Goiay involved in unloading and reloaing merchandise, | flush trom etem to sterd. 7hG three lower decks soveral of the party, including mysell, very nearly sick | aoq would rid our streets of their worstencumbrances, "| Have each a height of 7 feet 3 inches, and tho steamer One poor man did not regover it for au hour or two. The | Whatever is to be the eolution of the general problem, | Will act ¢ threo hundred and thirty first clase part on which we Werd thon the bighest, and seemed, | he necessity of dealing with this part of it imimperative | prsengers aud will havo capacity for 1,000 tous of goods, on a rough computation, about two bundred fect above | and fully reccguized by the committes It may be doubt. | besides stowing 1,500 tons of coal in her coal bunkers. the sea; Some thongbt more, arme loss. I give you the | (ul whether this grost city should be “regarded as a serics | Her machinery is Ueing fitted by the Greenock Foundry average. Tho crater was some distance below us, round, | or contiguous towgs,” to be united by a Company, and will consist of a pair of side lever engines wud perbaps thirty or forty yards across. Tue level of | tines, and whother the principle of tho Metropolitan Rail. | Of 560 horse powor nominal. The cylinders are 7 foot 18 (he water in it was from 12 feet to 20 teet below tho lip, | way can be carried much further with advantage, Jt | tnches in diameter, and 9 feet6 inchos stroke. Steam or highest edge of the actual crater. may be doubtful whether a London morchaut would | W!'l be supplied trom tour tubular boilers, each weighing It was much discolored and boiling strongly, throwing | jy..:;0at on the whole by haying bis station close to his | 61 tons; oach sole pints welxs 65 tons, and the paddip- Up quantities of white steam, with this sulphurous vapor | counting house ivstead of walking to it across a bridge. | Wheels will be 37 fot 6 incues in diameter. lively an appearance, and to-day there are lying at its wharves aud at anchor in the stresin more vessels than woie@in our navy before the rebellion, Yet, with this great increase of work, the resources of the couatry seem to be adequate Lo the circumstances, aud everything pro. grosses as if there were only a few ships in the yard. Admiral Pauf@og and his officers are, however, com pelied to put forth their utmost energies to superintead the details of this great nayal workshop. Yet they hover fail to meet the demands made upoa them by the Navy Departmeat. The yest possible discipline is maintained, aud the work pushed forward as rapidly as can be ina government yard, It would require volumes 40 contain tne details of work accomplished at this yard slvce the rebellion. Over two hundred yossels have beon Duilt, repaired and fitted out at the yard. Of course Fashionable Life and Imperial Fash- ions in Paris, &., &., &. Our latest advices from Europe contain the following important and very intere: resume of eveats occurring in the Old World to the 24th of October. Uhe London Times’ Opinion of Beecher’s Arguments, {From tho Loudon Times, Oct. 22. Mir. Ward Beechor starts with the assumption that the English are @ vation peculiarly ignorant of American = cee fact is obytoua, that whatever be the name of the r ‘ayet i built Some vessels havo been there more than once; yot wo | ailuirs, or incapabie.of that sympathy which is necessary | O0e fact is 0 which annoyed us 30 much. ‘The last timo it was visited | What ig certain is that everycuilision between a cab and ‘The Lafayette, which is the largest steamer ever bul count them each time as a vessel. (appreciate the defence.of a respectable cause, It we | ference corwireof kien hie aed Phe see eat | Hofore our squadron went there the craior on the south: | Jue of Pickford’# ‘vaus im tie teausil throrgh Loodon | in Groowock, is asister vessel tothe Washingtou, lau Sagsacvs,9.—the new doublecud guaboat Sassacuz, | Will ouly be so gvod as to look at this war from a federal | peg Finch military procthc: 5 sian 3 oust side was broken down to the level of tho sea, which | Yooresents sa sheof waste of tims, money and labor, | in June, Ae wing noschnetedy a be “| polut of view, we shall seo at once that the tederals are iu | "Wo have previously iatimated a belief that this con | Washed Into it, but now there was a compote wall ol | iituer by astraignt cut across Loudon, or by acircular | A third steawor in course of construc lusontheiGirgs Lioutenanr Commander Rae, arrived Wednesday at the | tho right, and the Confederates very much in the wrong. quest of Mexico, od $ it 1s in principle and iu means, | *She8 all round it. There wag apparently an underground | jjy6, uniting ali the others, tho wholo of thi tor the com: 4 ling wit! be ready in December, wi ‘ive other equaily Lorge steamers are being built by rush of boiling water from the southeast sido into the 7 aleed ae hat the : 9 rarcht bo diverted from the sireets. We are told that the | tre, vller ouNliy Trg, BeamerE are ge Nazaire. Soa, which might be traced along way by its dark evlor, | Nidiand Company cart one hundred tuouswd tons o! aud at the sams place a thick volume of steam rose from | good, through the metropolis in the year the Great the outside of the original crater, as if anow one was | Northern spend £1,000 a week in cirigugo, exclusive cf forming. A(ier staying some time upon the top, drivk- | Coals, and that the charges sumeti:nes amount to 58. or ing @ giase of grog to the prcsperity of Grabam | ¢. 4 ton, ikere ii cady, it is true, * semiciroular island ‘and tho health of Lieuteuaut Coleman, who | faiiway. by Kensington, but the ianager of the planted the jack, we went down again to tho | Yiuiwnd — itail complaius that the rates of This is either a very amusing truism, or it means that we are naturally more inclined to the Confederate than the foveral side. ‘As to the matter o: kuowlédge, the:e 15 ao country on which we read so much, talk so much, and fee! so much curiosity, as the Uuited States, Ordi uary Englishmen certainly now as’ much of them as they do ‘alout Ireland, and much more than they do atout France, whose capital is only ten hours avd a halt from Savy Yard, from Boston. She is to be Gtted out there, and will be ready for sea in about two weeks. Muracomst, 9.--The new guuboat Aletacomet was turn ed over by Admiral Gregory to Admiral Paulding Wed nesday, che will be fitted for sea as soon as possible. Victoria, 5.—The United States gunboat Victoria ar haz yot its prospect of advautage to the conquered coun try and to the world. In the fret place, it may give a breathicy time to a disorganized country,and secure ao interval of enforced tranquiility during which resources may be developed and political character strengthesed. No doubt the Froneb police regiine, whatever sovergign may enjoy the beucfit of it, will secure something like order in the country, will make. the rights of -propert Emgneipnation in Russia. ‘The following is an extract from & letter writtes by @ utieman who is at present travelling in Rui The cmancipation of the serfs is no “sham, but a great and a ble reality carried through with a caution apd re Bea : B , . cI Y journed ¢> our | bo virtually re that dl i honor tw the head and heart rived at Fortress Monroe on the 2d inst. our own. AS to feelings, Evgland has long been ready to | more reepecte ike aoe aecode crater, aud baving examined it adjoura yee me emoestant am “Or: Ge virtually. [fovarape tsa fe Qual Wiohoe ae NG. bi ice fa and twoulyroue of ah | swallower own pride when elie hd to deat with the | {his is comothte to bo taken inte accanaton the: mide ot { Botetvand pulled round the south sida, so a4 to oom. | tghibie ry- Hove is cme among’ minby “Nroo'y thst eatble. t0,cisasuire tbe + G., haying on Doard the captain and twenty-one of the } Uyited States, She hag accepted their natural cravings in | compensation, We are not jaecd lacined: to adiairs | "Ad a viow Of the rash of water before mentioned, which | ho compreiensive scheme ean bo cartiod out with. tion, by which nearly crew «f the blockade ruuner Venus/which was totally destroyed by the blockading fleet on the 2ist ult., twelve miles bortheast of Fort Fisher. The Venus was a new vessel, of eight hundred tons burden. Her cargo consisted f fifty thousand pounds bacon, five hundred bags coitee and seven tons lead. The Victoria is to be a despatch boat, to ply regular'y beiwoou Vortress Mouroe and the biockading (leet. ‘The foliowiug is a list of ber oflicers:— Commander Charles W. Lee. Ex.cutwe Vficcr—alired Everson. Acing Assistant Surgeon—Joun G. Park. Acting Assstant Pam ster—Samvel Tomas, Jr. Acting Ensigns—Wu. H. Mayer, Jr., and Paul Borner. Knjuwersmdciing Second Assistaut, T. D, Webster Acting Third Assistants, J. Haversiicld and Silas Adams, Aching Master's Mags—B. W. Tucker and Wm. Moody, Licutenant Commander Henry Erben, Jr., has been ap pointed to superintend the construction of fron-clads ii. the city of New York, _ liow of justification; sie has admitted in their case alone that they might reasonably ask for it was not their own, and has yielded to their shutfling diplomacy when sho saw thar hor cousin's heart was +0 much set on the at issue to be quietly denied. Woe may not enter easily into the precise point ys view irom witich Russia or Nrauce rogards the rest of ‘he world, but we have dealt charitably with che mot norinous pretensions on,the part of the United states. We re not aware that wo “ourseives advance any claims of a sort to elevate Kngland above the brotherhood ot nations. fhe ocean rule of Britaunia means nothing more than that wide prescuce of oar tiag desorived by Me. Ward Becher. ho United States haye long been iudulging in that siyantesqt® vein of protonsion which was displayed im the careers of some ancient monarchs aud conquerors, sd is” still found in the tities of barbarous kings. The Monroe doctrine, the unqualified rizh! of annex, ston, and the continual allusion to. the reign which is to spread from pole to pole, to shatter alt existing institutions, snd alter the existing notions of right and wrong, are the stride, the swing and the bellow of the giant, It is easier to admire very large things, and very largo pooplo, than to came from the fsland, bofling and foaming and throwing | out sumo sec. rity for mdependenge and unity of manage up a quantity of whit vapor and steam. Nothing can be] ient, Weiler we have ap. ibagr. pircult 0 ” more singular than the appearance of thia mass Of aahes | + .gniyg through the principal termini, or au 0 ia the middle of the sea. You may form some ides of the | 41 4 radius of afew miles, or both, a4 the committee pro force of the fire that must have been required to torm | ioog, the working of them will depend for its success wt by considering that 1) is, 45 near as could be guessed, | gy yhis condition, Upon the wholo, we must give the three quarters of a mile round, aud that, where it pow | Coamitteo ureit credit for shelving a variety of inge stands, former charts give soundings in one hundred’ aud | Syy43 und ambitcvus propocais frou calueme cngibeers or Uirty' fathoms, and irom the soundings~intely made Mt | oi ng London a labyreith of viierseiting lunes, and kee, » soems to stand ona large base. 1 regret much that we | in wead.iy in view the parzmount inporiance of tts being had not the good lick t ave an crupiion, though 1oer- | jatiravle, We are vory wiliivg that the iutereats of our tainty dé] not wish for one while we wore holding our | ¢ uutryimen from the suburbs avd (he provinces should conversazione at the flagstal, in which event hore would | bo fairly considered, aud shall be welnbted to hear that have becn but “a bogearly account of empty” boats. | the iuhabitunts of Késox have been gubled to visu kent piuge we left it is said to have entirely changed, bat 1 | yy ime passed through the Thames tunnel, Ouly fet 1 have not ascertaiued how, J remain, sir, yours faith | 9 Horne in mind ‘hat London is primarily for Londoners tatiy, _ Re H. Ae M. not only for tore who are eve. guing and coming, but Kuna’s-eND House, Worcester, Oct, 22, 1863. for those who actunlly live there—and that the pleasure of oe . residing in a place 1s not t0 be measured by ‘he facility of i A Moving Colored River. gelling away from it. tho Tenby (Wales) Guverver. motions « curious phe- 4 =a Pa ne arent naig i t So te Buy op the | - _ _lsife in Pax 6th inst, the day on whieh the earthquake was felt io PREPARATIONS FOR WINTER—APPEARANCE OF THE 00 of people are raised "from a condition we in to siavery, to the level of free men of other civilized States. Thi3 ‘great act is consummated, with comparatively littie sulering aad large prospects of fu- ture advantages to the nobles and proprictors of land, save only thoge whose estates should come under ap Incambered Eststes act. The emancipated serfs are al- ready display mg a degrco of intelligence aud industry that kurprises their former owners; establishing schools, laying Ont hoarded money on ands and tenements, and iu ma@oy other respects showing great tutelligence and © sagacity. : London Pheatricals. (From the London Suuday Times, Uct. 25.) Last week we bad little enough to talk about by way of theatrigg! news, aud this week iidds us again at” stand- fut the jul! will not be of Iéng duration, Mr. and f les Mathows are t reappear on Monduy at the Haymarket, and, cousidering the honor that the former lug done us on the other side of the channel, ought to ceive, a3 no doudt they will, @ heurty wecome. The ung talked of + Bel Demonio,’’ at the Lyceum ,will D st see what it is the fasion to call “strong goverment,’ or to bolieve that a peop'e can be drilled dragouned into a capacity for seif-raie, But Mexico, uabapptly, wants rest, resi at any price; as a fevered man needs re: pose, although It be procured by the agency of an opiate, or as One iv a delirious moment may require the coercion of w straight waistcoat, The mvasion, too, may. teach Mexico a sharp aud stern lesson, aod may serve ns a warning to other nations. The blind disunfon and dts curd, the absouco 01 that patriotic feeling which inspires forbearance, have been tho main oause of tho fall of the Mexican republic. 1t may be added, tov,that the fesson will perbaps do good to anether republic as well.” The United States will no doubt feel the mtrusion of France to be an insult anda menuce. But their disunton: has heiped phot | it ar and if ‘ir condust has ee prive them of the world’s gympathy.. The cooupation Mexi-o is the cftinction of the Monroe doctrine. That doctrive, it must be owned, {a both absurd and arrogant in theory and in practice. AState going to war tol support such @ principle would be guilty of s politica: crime and blunder still greater than the conquest of Mexico {tsell involves. We fave eard it well observed Chi ‘ve them. Russia, of course, being the largost, the next | that for the federal government to go to jo sustain’ | this couutry:— 2 base extending some threo or four VASUIONABLE QUARTERS—THS THEATRES AND | (HO light on saturday next, Independent of sir. Kechtere OENENAL ORDERS—No. 22. nowt ambitious, and the "next “most unwieldy, ean | mont of the Montos doctrine would in essontial principle | iniits ia ine direction oC ‘Amroth ‘Castie an immouse | OPmitA, WrC. . NP] uetsonal popelarity, there will be the novelty of the new, Navy Derarramayr, Oct. 17, 1883. oth admire and love the United, States; and as | be to pursue the safoe course as that which the Ruropean: piece of water, of a dark brown color, as ii holding earth. “ve (Oct. 23) corresponderce of the Longton Post.} pig ey senile ns Cresie am unaeeal excite Ata general court martial, convened by order of the | ‘cueral Yom Thub found a mate as sniall as himselt, the | States followed so blindly and disastrousiy when they im | in solution, seomed to bo pushed forward ia the form ot ia begins to preseat its signs of coMiing winter, | ‘ed, in one way * sederals are now happy ina (all friend.. But in spite of our own Lillipation proportions, we have done our best vo enter Intogbe American view of their difficulties, both on this and on all former occasions. We must ouly re- mind Mr. Ward Beecher that when America boasis to al ar view of humay alfuirs, aud to have an in ment, 80 we prophesy that tho opening night will be o inofe than ordivarily britiivat affair, “Manfred” sll reigns supremeat Old Drury, and people ‘Foem to blind thea selves to the fact of the undramutic character of the j«em. and to prove, by the patronage that hus ‘deen ex: vaded France to destroy her revolutionary republic. in either cage the object {athe same—not to-repel an attack, not oven to avert a certain danger, but to oppose a dan- or which is ideal, problematical, merely constructive. Department, at the Navy Yard, Mare Island, California Anguct 20, 1863. Captain David M. Cohen and First Licu- deuant Willlum B. McKeam, of the Marine corps, were re spectively tried ou the following charges:— and speciation of a charge, prefered by th @ cone, of course surrounded by water of a uatural | Famitiar faces ard fumiltar faxtpages are again seen in color. Ag they camé in contact the water wus thrown up. | the Champs Elysees; wivlows uf imposing hotels, which « height of several feet, the agitation extending round] have bee. long closed, once more let tn ihe daylight; the the whole edge Of the phenomenon. lt steadily | streets are more aa.mated; and tradesmen are dotug busi advanced in the same jorm towards Monkstoune, and | uess, ‘ihe hotels are crowdeu, and apartments begin tu the last of Tue Rivals” last week at the Haymarkot. [6 has™beeu repeated once or twice during the week, the other nights being devoted to Lady Giflurd’s comedy of own hands are not clean of Moxican plunder and blood. Tho conduct of the United States towards its neighbors Cohen, meee miles coased bout it whiots toy i thence sume miles to soa, when wi to observe it. | let at prices which show that ttiore must bo a great num | ‘ded to ft, that there are elements al nthe Marine corpe “Sy yee UO Treas Ler Ant ene le emuding \temnrelven with fatting, wore | Surca clot people: im, the world, end.agrest pumber of | make 1 ab woy rate worth | seeing. "The poem ‘Ciarcx. Te Soaaltalocai conduct tending to tho destr iy from any quarter. Travscendental not a little startled by the strange sight. When the J forcigners who prefer Paris to their native cities. has been | preceded ae, we 5 AE 4 tion of good morals, ne: ree repel sympathy instead of inviting it colored water overtook the boat they found that the point | Woon the Empress returns from Spain, there are to be | “xeuord’s farce of “Gone to Toxas' mr ‘Specyication—In this: that out, th » | gc fitt what is Mr. Ward Veecher’s own view of the ques | are to apply not to its own conduct, but to thatef its | of division betwogn the coloring was mazintained throug | issued the usual series of winter invit tio0s to the Court, | Roland for au Oller” has been substituted wor “The ane [P nae hag econ Soentiete tion’ The revolted provinces, he says, inheritiug great | neighbors. Let it be remembered, too, that America’s out th dopth ofthe water, the boat was violeatly pitched ‘The mivisterial and diplomatic world this winter are Deal Boatman.’ We are glad to fiod that we did not sew fed, at thé Navy Yard, bar a tbo B44 about, and the watar thrown completoly over it. kither | espectlly Bout on gettivg up surece uramailques, Ma «Iiffereaces, and being in ditticulty, ame to a compromise ween confederation apd natioual unity, which they The name expresses a political ii ir cig! ihree, at ihe Navy Yard, Mare island, Califorat. Captain David M. Coben sent a written message, in the a ‘the United States. side of the line of contact was porfectly calm, and the | dame Drouyn de Lhuys orgapises a company, which is ature of a challenge, to E, A. Selfridge, the clerk of the was quite as lawless as that of France, if perhaps some. wi water kept up a lashing noise something like what would | composed of pretty womun, und young attaches of tne | Ot a thie commandant of the said yard. aoe tas ca wen a EeT te Cane te ae | ee tt manners RNS: wes Reiceminel Ibe tiede UF oh imamuas steer mackerel, "it weoch foreign legatioes. The Priscees. de Texavad bos formea | ‘ty and Counter vy.) rCharie 1 aud he og d y ‘ Bes «f the eco Amorioa to Mexico wore Y n he fs if und the Lamb’ and Charge and specification of a charge, preferred by the one “Thats had ‘conaunted tromeie. by: fry oe al ee wrongs = » | Served first arubout eleven A, M. avotuer svt of amatear artists, whiist « third company will “My Husband's Ghost" have also been included to this Secietary of the Navy; against W. B. McKean, a firs. play at Madame la Marquise de Lethisy’s here are to be i A cessful soldiers and self-taught statesmen. No doubt it | not help remembering how one of the noblest and fi ‘vuumber of masked balls, avd the u ual amouyt of con. | Week’s pragramme. Miss Uateman's admirable tmper- lieulenant in the Marine corps. ‘. Chaun weighed against the Natu Phe a in England. ul . Bonation of the character of Leah, at the Adeipni, haw Caanck.—Scandalous conduct, tending to the destruc | {he prvot’ wae iu te Tosullas it Ie worked well, there Xpethy aod composure wiih wales the free states rogard 4 LANGE METEOR. conta. In fact, the comlag w ator prom ges to bom gay ope. | made no small stir ia the theatrical world, ult bowen tion of good morals. Specyicction—in this: that on or about the twenticti: day of May , in tho your elghteen hundred ana sixty three, at tho Navy Yard, Mare Island, California, the said Liew ‘ EDITOR mimes. ‘Another sign of the season is the opentag of tne Italian I saw the beautiful Sabicea tachtlinee by your corres. | opera undor’® new mavagoment, aud without, as of old, pondont, E, J. Lowa, very well from'the jetty here, and 1 | Feeelving @ subvention trom ‘the goverment. This ‘observed a phenomena which be does p tnotice, thestre, perhaps the most pretty aud perfect in Europe ry ed those uitous acts. If, therefore, the federal gov- orument of Ameren should. ow fod Nate dignity te its b is menaced cond Franco int Merion Wn aeeala remember that the rebuke ts and enthusiastic applause are the best proofs in the world the approbativn of toe public. ‘The Tragedy \ueen’? and “Catching au Heiress” have retained thew old im the bili this week. There is nothing fresh to record ab ag nothing to be said against it, and) mankiid had nothing to do but to wait and see how it acted. The sreatent didioulty 13 that which Mr. Ward Beecher de- ‘eribes. Some of the States had an institution whith he iH " v ‘the demands of the lyrical drama, has been newly J touant W. B. McKean, acting as the friend or second of | )-onounces contrar he fundamental laws of mora not wholly enmneriied ‘should accept it asa lesson A part of the lumiuous streak jet by the meteor re. | for the Olympic. At whe Strand a Mr, C. Fenton has supptied pean Lavid M. Coheo, of the Marine corps, was tho | log™thecetore, we may. presumer to tne Divine wi, and & wayuing for the future: It is abe destiny of ‘arro- | ™malued distinctly visible tur more than ten ‘minutes, wud | (ccoratod, the orchestra enlarged, and the arrangomenis | Mim WOHIOPE, ios tholus ce or «Turn tlm Outs the bewrer of a written message, in the paturo of a challenge, a the said Captain Coben to Selfridge, the clerk commundunt of the said assumed the appearance of acomet. This it was, . | for exit and entrance much improved. The Parisian bably, that your correspondent signing ‘John Phillips" | Public Of all classes are coatinualy askumy tor more ¢ 10 took for a comet. GEORGE BOW YK, | 10rt- and luxury at our theatres. The superior ac- Mauaarg, Oct, 17, 1863. jon of the two tew houses of the Chatelet ” 20 gn momwen Op res komDost tunes tthe Parisians already to ajpreciate commoui- Mr. Ward Beecher thinks no words too st for 1d aggression in politics to beget arrogance and d ete te he oy Reich be Suton eng as subjugation of Mexico cannot be wholly unproductive of latter gentleman having migrated to Mr. Swanborough’e otuer tueatre in Dutagunm, “Sliciam's Crome” is, oF course, UO piece de resistence, und the fun of *1be Muto’? burlesque de not secin W lag @ bit. The grand drama of +The Scottish Chiet and the Maid of Filerstie,” which has ae Upon revivion cf the record in these cases it ap; tant the court, in each cage, finds the accused ‘Guilty othe syecttiedtion, but “NOt guilty” of the charge, and ; ite ee is quite | good, and bas not been wholly undeserved, we need hard- | As I havo not seen in the Times any account of the | jwhtiup and abors an, good ventilation Ihe warloseast | proved ao popular at the currey, will have’ to be put om -uptain Cohen is sentenced to be ‘reprimanded,’ aud break up any constitution, to divide its f f meteor of Thursday nignt, which was observed by-S8tr | atmosphere of the vid theatres, such, xample,as the | ‘he shel( for # little, in order to make way for Shak- iveuteuaut SeKean to be “admonished,” by the ‘Secr. Ay pM wen Lowe, having been seen i0'Loudou, 1am induced to send | Paints ioyal. will cre. long cease 16 be toleared. Itvs. | sbero’s “Winter's Tale.” which will Le produeed to nigh sary of tho Navy. ‘hese sentences are pot confirmed, and the proccedings 2% the court are disapproved, for the following reasons 1. The record ta neither cage exhibits or recites the rharge upou Which he accused was tried, andof which be was found “Not guilty,” nor the specification of wate tuo was found “Guilty.” RY 2. ‘Tbe court in these cases had no power to find the ac sused guilty of any other charge than that preierret squiust them, and, baviog found them not guilty of the obarge preterred, they bad no authority wo sentence them (sary punishment, even nominal 3. The decision of the court appears to be directly in sontlict with that provision of th ot for the betrer go- vornweut ofthe vavy,’’ which makes it a punishabie o.- cace to “‘sehd or accept a challenge to Aght a duel, or act aa duel. if th (Saturday) on a scale of great magnificence. Mr. James Anderson will susiain the character of Laontes, while Miss Gordon, au American actress, will make her frat ap- arance aa Paula. ihe nautical drama of “Tom True” i afterpiece this week. Mr. Baruard’s bur. jon’ provided for the Royalty theatre “a local habitation and a name.” People never seem to be tired of talking about it, aud of praving the encrgeties manogeress and the merry compaty for (lo triumpm& they have setfred. Mr, Felix Rogers has given another provt of bis talent Friend the Major character with infinite eredit tw himself. the farce of “Larks im a Cage” follows the burlesque. As Sadier’s Wells ® regular rouud of good olf legitinmte plays have been provided, which has included * ibe the following pastioulars:— dolightful to sit a night out at the now theaties, with a On Ibursday wight, as near ten o'clock as possible, [ joe ton {rosb air always passiug through the building, was in the neighborhood of the Albany road, Camberwell, | people in Paris more. than ever go to the theatre to and observed a larxe meteor shoot from East 10 West. It | 55 amused by gorgeous scevery, dresses, and music, appeared, ag Dearly as 1 could judge, about midway be | whilst reposing in ousy seats, such pieces a: tween the zenith and borizon. 1t wag folluwed antie to **Aladin’”’ and the ‘Yoau @’Aue’’ require no mental atten. ly by @ luminous train. after ing visible tion from the audieuce—they simply adaress the material oue or two seconds It seemed to burst, much as a rocket | gonses. This is prec soly the ciass of piece 8 which will be would, and in bursting shed @ faint light through tho | most popular at Paris sor some timeto come What a prmeepuaess which was very misty. Shortly after it | change bas taken place in the taste of tLe public. and in rained ia torrente. the construction aud comfort of theatres during the inet Loxvor, Oct. 17, 1863. E.J.@. | finy years How great have beeu the vicisitudes, for exam: ‘10 THE EDITOR OF THE LONDON HERALD. ple, of the Italian theatre in Paris, which pow attracts the A magniticont meteor was seen hore last night (Satur. | wost fashionable audiences aud is the most elegant of day, October 17), about eight o'clock. It first seemed to | salles. Jean Jacques Rousseau bas put it on record be of the size of Jupiter, Sos re sew color, after | that the lugons dems, in 1762, played ja the French iucreased gradual erable niced and in the constitution of the United States. uudes thé idea, Mr. Ward Beecher explains, that it would remain & domestic institution, and would not come out of doors, hke & shameless ligate, and obtrude itself on the goverment and politics of the Union. Slavery was to fester and die athome. The poisonous plant was to languish and rot-in what we at hothe call the ‘chill shade of opposition.” Of course, there would be a con- stant succession of enlightened Mrosidents and Cabinets at Washington, avd of course no new territories or States would give the upas treo room to extend its roots and throw out its pestilont branches, Unfortunately, those hopes have not been fuldiled, Tho good elements of the constitution have not extinguished the evil. On the con- day on the race course of the » It dit fered, however, irom other spectacles of the kind in this respect, that the troops did not remain drawn up ia line, but (ormed a sort of camp. About — several batta- lions of the Grenadiers and Zouaves arrived and Mont Valerien in full campaign attire, with thetr camping effedts on their back, and at once, on taking up ‘their position, proceeded to light fires and make their breakfast. The same took place for the Voltigeurs and Chasseurs from Paris; tho Lancers and from Vorsailies and St. German; the ), she is, and otner troops. The cavalry ‘the girths of their was ony cieuce committed | trary, this hideous congenital disexse bas grown with the | saddics and picketod their hors0s. which its orb lowing with a ruby | Opera, and, he says, their success was go great that the } Gatnester,” ‘-iiamiot” aud ‘-Kvadne,” go that the bene sed it cousiated in a Hielation, or a teat uk | growth of the Union, and strengthened with its strength. tions mip en mvwere and tthe sasn drows | isis wed spochdor, undll t,premeciea at Hh or the | French Desa doy the elaging aud music of the foreign clare jolonds Keeping to ber promise <s papport 1) the ‘rts violation of evasicn cf’ a inw’intend, | NAY; Moro, it bas obtained the mastery; it bas usurped | up in line by one o'clock, ‘the Emperor and brilliant dufomi vetwer whan their own. Pamphiots were weitten | legitimate drama. “Guy jealng, the others being Scns Merger be Sip conti ae ewer wie J ;, t hae monopolized ‘oifico; it has cor | King of the wrecks arrived from Paris in a carriage aud ‘and horizon, com; the French abd Tialian schools; in fact, one | duced ws an aiterpiece on oue evening, *, for the Snce nol om ol e not ory rupted the seat of justice; it has spread an under Lo | be y thé Prince Imperial and M. Bachon, | its crowning point of reflected | would think, writes Rousseau, that the debating »about devoted to the reviva’ s a Sootiand. “Goo / epartinens caunot sanction a decision whieh woald J ‘Huence through the length and breadth of the innd:, it | the foung Prine ‘The w some of its vermilion glory. It continued thus for pearly | the two schools of music was an aflair of State or Feligion, | theatre bas been very well attoaded, especially on Tues. ag infected the new territory, and at last loft r and morality no alt ive but to close with the amputate the discased limb, and to exorcise the foul ead. day, ou which day Mr. H. Marston took his bonelit, and, her with bis wife, recoived a gratifying proot of the bigot or in which they ar rogarded b the Inbabitente ing grow gradually smaller rj 80 seriously was it conducted. l'veutually tne Itahan ‘smaller, its radiance now changing into # sapphire blue, | singers, rom jealousy, were banished by royal authority, until it Omally vanished bebind a cloud. lo 178% @ company of Italian singers was again organ- jon soem to Audvcate a deficiency in the moral sense, as well as In Ue reasoning powers, of those who pronounced jt, ud the toudeacy of which would be to eucourage adi: erry. then on Lorrebsok and proveeded along the tine 5 treopes thelr Majestice being followed bya brilliant, sta’ and teveral foreign officers. iT 4 " od for 2 dressed as a the EDWARD V. KENEALY. ized unger the direction of Viotti, and ere the | Of ‘*merrie Isliagtone b Roy’ anooupeed COE AW ON WELLES, Bec: ‘ But what dose all this show, except thai ta constitution | xing of the Greeks 10. © dark Uniform, wits tbe Broad rib. | Poxraaps, Naan Briaitox, Oct, 18, 1863. Parisians beard Paisicllo's ““Barbiere.”” Tho Italians had | BOX! Week with the originel music and every strong caat, GIDRON WELLES, Secretary of the Navy was itself an , and therefore ineviably ant | hon of the Legion of Honor across his chest. ; axe Row thoroughly made ao impression on the Varisian | There has been po change at the oity of oe GENERAL ORDERS—Xo. 23. deservedty incapable of wasting long? Men are driven to | The Prince imperial, in bis uniform as corporal in the sen Suh, public, chiely ot account of their melodious compositions, | would certainly be & marvel Pot pe | Navy Davanrateyr, Oct. 27, 1863. form themacives into ‘national’ combinations for tho | Grenadiers of the guard, and riding a pony, went in front ur. um fia \ the modi or the Fi and a’ company was playing ut oue or other of the “J went cane ny aaa cnaeetee At a naval general court martial, assembied at the | very roasou that a people who wish to stand before tbe | of the troops, with his equerry somewhat ’in advance of | . AS MF. Lowe asks throug Toth Ite earthquake’ | theatres every Year, eitDer at the Oxteon, the salle Favert, | Killarne: aca coumamn’ ar ton tenis ee Navy Yard, Phisdelphia, Acting Veludteer Lioutenant J. | world and take a part in its aifairs must have full power | thoir Majestios, The troops the Emperor loudly boy eg Togard md or elsewhere, until they occupied the pres nt bandsome ne eee ithe Man in the lrea Mace” See “Where clocks were noticed to W. Kittredge, of the Navy, was recently tried on the fot charge, preferred agatoat him by the Dopartment:— (vax 8 —Malireatment of ay ordivery seaman subject t bie orders. feagion—"n this : that on or about the fourteenth to enfores upon themsel: their notions of right and wrong, and of settling for themselves what they shall totak right amd wrong. Society expects consistency ia ® man, and the world expects consistency in & nation. We do pot allow avy man, or any com- bioation of men, to play fast and loose with building known as the Theatre Italieus. The government subvention varied from 70,000f. to 100,000:., until with- drawn this year, under the Ministry of Couns Walewski. ‘The Itatian theatre 0; ‘this season, therefore, un- aided by speculation, like the italian theatre in London. kffing Edward Bulwer Lytton Is reported to be in writ- toy anew play for Mr. Fechter. Mize Helen Faucit ie te appear in Paria, at the Theatre Francais, in-a drame which Is being written for ber by Alexander Dumas. Mr. Barry Sullivan is atili iu Australia, The ghoos is there as be passed. Marshal Regnautd de St. Jean d’Angely had the chief command, Generals L’Admirault, Camoo, and Feray, acting bim. ‘The number of troops on the gtound amounted to about any of Jude, in the year eighteon hundred ana sixt; , It ts not a favorable epoch for such an experiment as re tives ou board the Uaitea ‘Satce steamer Wamsutia, vo any serious question, henever the attempt ja 2 nen their Majesties had ridden along the whole line, y ‘tle above high-water level W.T.L de artists. We have no Garcia, Xubivi, Lablache, also. sapelo sovnd, the said Acting Volunteer Lieutenant J.'W. | made to play two games at ouce, and grasp at the advitn- | they took up a position In advance of toe stands, and the | “2d very ee iT Mad falibran, Grist, Mainville Fodor, Pasta, sovtag, Tamba- Photograp' hoitredge, belng ‘hen iu command of the said steamer, | ‘ages open to opposite courses, there is sare to come & | troops ied off before them. The , a8 they passed, | Wixneom, Oct. 17, 1805. Hint, and how many more one might name, of past lyrical | Crurin (oot, 18) correspondence taubrehted George T Hughes, an ordinary seaman sub. | crisia when it is necessary to docide between them. The | exeguted a sort of fantasia. whole proceedings, A NEW COMEP. gory, ‘M. Bagier, the- preseot tavager, bas done Wo bear that three Milanese, who went ees satay ject to his orders, by striking tho said Hagheson the face | constitation of the Uuited States has been tauded to the | from the time of the Emperor’s arrival to the end aid A new comet was discovered on the 14th of October at best to get good singers, but, with the ex with hi Ost, strikiog bim on the moath with @ loaded | skies, because it opeued a way to unbounded wealth, o ie describes it as telescopic, | cejtion of Mario and Tamberiitt, wéte are the great refuge to all mankind, & path to universal empire, and 9 degrees 52 minutes | attractions’ Madame La Grange, the J ten! donna, St Bot ocoupy more than two hours, the troops rovolver, anu etberwiee inilicting tilegal puntshment upon "ack fe Hog 5 " (us amid Magnes, ~ | the opportunity of a bigh tone with the Old World’ gov- | pround in a carri res 7 minutes, In | who is now siuging with so much taste in “Rigoletto,” is, dvdy f one Of which clnrge Le was found “Guilty,” and sentenced | craments. Grant that these alms were worth something, | Srowsd ia, ® carr Proceedings, the weather being of it 4 little both in right | L tear we must confess, not the production of to-day, ood firisof sastnes 1a sateonionens nat a: by the cvurt * to be dismissed the naval scrvice,”” they were worth at jeast moral self. command and national | favorable, The tribunes of the races, being gh this ocoa- | ascension and declinativn, so that it seoms to be moving | de Castellaue, when to produce at his pri. | Cotgut a Tartar abd photographed him on tise spot, be, ts., This Sentence having been approved, Acting Volunteer ey, Teanired it, Such aims were not | gion thrown open to eed were eatirely diled by horthwesterly direction. About the Sasha. Wane vole theatre fo tee Fi hoary Sneere renews ee return, took them for thees white devils, and 4 Froatenant J. W, Kitt { fo @ wit! enforce open, ai constitutional y ‘ter review his was pleased |, But does geem to we nichesse jul urs the servi a te renae t ‘believed by half the | wweweorapek, At Genta v0 be the same, eice It is described ‘as having a tail of an | 80 delighted tbe amateurs that a subscription was raised | {Hem over to the polloe, or whatever may. be the protes to charge the marshal commanding the Guards to express Nav apparent length of two motres, while Mr. Tempel’s is | tosend her to Milaa, where the colobrated macatro Man- | U¥e force of bie Highness the Khan. Abany rate, Milam y Uaion to be as immoral as Mr. Ward Beecher describes | io the troops his satisfaction at their fine appearance at t misses § jentra, Litta and i hat this example will have a | tuem, Sound policy, whether domestic or i its foreign | under arms, and with the regularity of the movoments | telescopic, with @ Mere rudiment of a tail, daniot saitiated her iu tbe schoob of | the - Italian FS ioer tuet the taasioa ollinetar Sit t botheon ollicers ard seven of the navy | aspects, capnot coexist with moral laxity. iho coustl- | which thoy executed. upera. As soon as fs tne nll He : ~4 to app'y to the Tartar authorities in aid of the mistaken ‘ig the one that the law ‘vane for the purpose | tution of the United States is, by Mr. Ward Beccher’s cit itrosds in Lo: ° pearing on the mee prom it ga ey nts) T put mucceut photographer. : 1 protectia : seamen from & wanton oF tyrabnous anuse | el wing, tn attempt to divorce the iment of the world Vv. yy ae ‘oan Caer ee ee agen ae a eel “4 <——aees of authority sual: not be violated pauity, nud | from self-government, in the face of the great maxim that THE WORLD MOVING. nis (vrom aon 0 ST, Fame, was, f0. auceeanul ‘tena cares ith” im) ° ng seamen to understand that, while they fod ‘ther nice, In Personal Intell be who would rule others op firatruie himself, But this The Stamford (Seep agony, neicing of Livan’ railways Aas not yet boon sailed, but only postponed | {M9 the aimired singer of Liay. was 10¥it d by the - ore bi ch we for the exercise of ay to assist in carrying out an ex y =A * (borlty, they; fa thelr banes WN BR tmpested ve euacbarne Seeest tan caly eomeabed tr cothaan Ee catter: A Submarine Volcano. Until next session, “It will then have to be deciied daal'y, | manager of tho opera Mm Paris to gratify the audience of | Bursts frst briel tor gourd, sare Ne Mesuive, Rates tueir dity, and conforny to the Fequbromonte of cuscipline, | ILy, not only (alt of meaaces to her peace, but contrary to | CONVULSION OF NATURE BR MALTA GLAND | or (or 60 loug & tie tocome that we cannot look beyond | (noe salle Ventadour. He selected “Othello,”” but ber re- entesed, in which Messrs. Wehbe and wll rea" bese and cheerfulness, "| all nose principles of per ect moral nnd pojitioal amity on TAKES POSSESSION OF @UE NEW FIRE ISLAND. it, whether oo the fe tion did not seem to please ber, and the morning after | (ynars'of stamford, wore chgaged. Um their arrival im GIOKON WELLES, Seeretary of the Navy. which ovr own constitation is framed. We have re- ‘TO THE EONOR OF THE LONDON TiMES. propriaved to busivess commerce, or si her ance she threw Pgh gemeut. Since that | iiss gor learned that their opponents had secured ee gpm eNom vounced slavery, aod we are prepared to renounce ever As Graham's Shoal, or Island, has reappeared, it may | made tbe focus of cou Porlod Madame La Graugo as visited Vienua, Verlin, St. | thy services of Mr. D'EWeR CO¥S, brirrmeter, who Wert (be Reenorixs IN Manveavi.—The @tearmer Gen. Meige | thing, however profitable, that is once condemned by U interest some ot your readers, perhaps, to see au accouat | cannot be nen nnd by au; ersburg and the Un ee. acquiring reputation | \tuiend elreatt. Mr. Goce bade irevailing Companion whe (loug looked fur by the durkeys ved ia the Wicamive | public opivion of the country. That, and that alone, is | of it from an eye witness in 1831.— _ The the And woalth. Ibis accomplished singer's appearance again | had thas year been called to phe Han, Stamford at iver On Toesday Taare! fast, ae Mne purpose of taking | thé g ound on which we stand with the other mations of Matta, July 30, 1331, city would make se as the prima douna of Italians is proof, perbaps, that not winking to thsow &,scuance away, resolved oft the pa © Regraee Our county. The news « tue earth. We do not blow hot and cold, dictating fa one There has been @ vory extraordinary convuision of | increape of im by me al Managers de not find the good 3 Stull io the younger wna 2 brief wo Mr. Coke's rep pant her Arrival was quickly known thioagvout the eutire | breath, apologizing in the next, towering up tothe clouds | mature not very far from bere. 1 cannot say ‘not a | the game result, anioss malo artista. We must take the goods the gods provide us and phy obey — 1 tt ted tn, eal county , and the negroes left work, family aud wardrobes, | as a mighty unity one day, and grovelling in the clay as | hundred miles [rom Malta,’’ a8 that is about the dietange. widened. pusiemen woah ee be thankful. Torkington proving victor us by the ald to get on board. sue was soon Iveded abd left the same ‘the In society we scrutinize ween the ‘of Pantiliaria and the town of Sciacca, | central arteries of cou! 0» 19HRD RUSSIAXS RIPECTED. Sartbeaee, as Sag Copies, wee te eveuing (or @ point on the Patuxeut. She retnrned again ations of Ut on the coast of Sicily, ® submarine volcago has iately | pulation of 2 Veare afverwatde. wens ‘dlaad elrcult, 4 on Thursday aod Kok sume eighty mor over ie broken out about twenty five miles from the shore, | population of ¥ Liudse. 4 passnge te kreat nhraber of boys too d Beecher bimeelf knows what The. is a report here ge Seater the fatigues of war. A creat many, howe map who first ovyertopred us by @ profitable partner- | yoar 170], and on an old chars have seen there is un | then, eminent rn] js i nt ed jrom car Victhity returved, and being 4 n vice, and, biting tirtmly planted himself over | old feof laid down called ‘“Larmocer's breakers, was given by « Stamford aty rney (| Mr. Tor eiug- their reasous for returning, replied, it out head, implored Our assistance 10 rid him of the evil | precisely on the spot where the volcano now | St. Ps ton). co the talk of domoticers.”) ihe oticors « which, baving made hie lortupe, now rained bis repute | js, it was first seea by smoke rising from the | now radiates from F for thoxe tums could be Wentiied by their owner tip and spoiled big repose The man must do this for | oa, about the 12th of this month, which gradually iu | ply paralyzed, Goueral Lowestive, wke45ummands tbe eet es = tho toa. J. W. Cristeld’s Jer, and we are told that wearily | bimeelt if he really wishes to do so, and If be ts ready to | creased in volume every part of the deine, ie 3 Sore Governor aller the Hoo, Edward Long's lett tm the same boat. of emalt island was thrown up above | elsewbere. lovalides, Paris, in a ‘Ornano. ts 5 the United Jbor far, bat one hundred and forty have loft this neigh patsaen Coaaa So een States cannot wttle this question for they can ne several days, till fre was seco oF ni or for Ny & sort eae a ally bave yw not left, as we were olde hour | understand and accpt a which ta the crater, up | the of of the ‘but yesterday moruing Quite juin ber of negroes are on ; i wil also d sinoke, Sa re ons declined the mor protering to retain pressed board, @@X10u8 to leave. Somerset Herald, Oct. 21. ages taking a high moral tove, Et ates iy Mt lathe 5 and | ditch Ren Reven VattaTs—Gov. + Of Midnesot, tu | Stais can really govern ‘eit T wishermeoh 10 g0 e24.oya'h, Oat. an Set | and, 0 bia treaty with the Indians, p= 3 fo purchasing a tract of nod 4 TA Seb Mace er fate nr = Peo P tet ‘ilen ts kovwn Oy tee woah os 5