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5 that the Prussians did not win the day we Eitoeeguoad apelin’ et claiming ef the United possession of a superior arm, Through ope & short—but at all Holstein question. government indemnification for the expense of of ther advance the needle gun gave the oe oi suppressing the reeent Fenian raid. Lord Monck’s ad- Austrians were oe path by the nature which honor of degree ¥ policy that Visers ought to have known that this is @ demand noe the reserves and retake the position, The. ballets , and musketry fire was country will not be 30 entirely departed from as that we tion or he on justice or reasom, and which the American sill fell thickly as the staff galloped afer their chief, try aro very remotely, if at all, involved. With regard | shall refrain from taking an interest in the independenco | that it was for the committee to prosecute if | ‘goverament never could eubmiit to, It wasa great and and on their approaching agma!! farm with outhouses to that war individuals may have their sympathies with | of certain European States. I am eure that {f the three | Mrs. Gordon would have nothing to do with the u- | iucompreheusible error to make it. The provinces need which should have shelteret them they were saluted Prussia, with Austria, with Italy, with this or with that | great Powers, England, France and Rusnia, are 3 Therefore Mr, Buxton had misrepresented—unin- | not be reminded that they aro unable to enforce tei abe ‘with a fresh volley of balls from the Prussian tenants, Power; but the sympathy of individuals bas prong: be will be im the interests of peace and to secure the tentionally, of course—what he (Mir. Bright) had said in } surd claim, and in England it can only be regarded wi ‘ene of which wounded the Archkuke Wilhelm in tho do with the conduct of the government, and I hold that | ence £ the lesser Without euch agreement I am | drawing up the resolutions. Of course, Buxton was | axonwhmen and disapprobation, head, but not, I believe, seriously. the conduct of the government with regard to such @ } gure Europe will be the scene of frequent wars. out of the question now, and bad nothing todo with Mra, 300 ‘THE LAST STRUGGLE AND RETREAT, all the rest were killed or wounded,” Age when @ | Waras that now raging is. to maintain a strict * * * — The indomitable Austrian artillery still | second wood Ci pay their progress, “tI > i ‘turned hundreds of muzzies on the enemy’s guns, and | against it, but did uot at first make mach girt their men in a band of fire. To let 4! caval- | for, the Austrians being here again concealed, | appeared the slightest of Ty on both sides of Klum, to crash through infantry and | the fire of the needle gun did not tell, | with those of other neutral Powors, such as France and Gordon’ , except so far as that she do of the samo mind to bave nothing todo with the prosecution f THE IRON-CLAD MIANTONOMAH. He thought the Proposition of Mr. Buxton asto the prose a a8 cuting Mr. '# subordinates was childish to the last 1 i pm a yee metho underage wore. He | Visit of the United States Vessel to Sheerness Bs, seemed really worth doing, though failure would | and a whole batte laced at the far end of | Assia, they might lead to a termination of this bloody From the Lor 10. knew there were Ramaay, Brand, Nelson others; but . Harbor. have made the difference Detwees a ‘defeat anda rout, | the wood fired pm ae the teas and told on | struggle and ries restoration of peace. Those good The pelt which ene ay lords yes. | he did not know the samieet the ruffians, (Lavghter.) {From the London Times, July 10 As would have been a supreme deed, fit for such a force | the Prussian ranks with awful effect, ‘These and other | offices ought to be at the disposal at any time of other | terday, under all the heat of a July to hear | But those people could not be brougat into a civil court The American Monitor the c to accomplish or to apt in attempting. And | incidents make it clear that the greatest battle of tho | neutral Powers, and we ought willingly and gladly to co- | Lord Derby’s statement learned to sympathise with the | in this country, but would be banded over to the Horse which bas ab were no natural obstacles visible from the | present age was won by the superior prowess of the vic~ | operate with them for the purpose of using our influeuce | miseries of a nobleman who ts hon’ with her Ma- | Guards and the Admirality; aud they all know how tower to a grand charge. Tho Prussian right, | tors and avas not tho consequence of a merely mechan- | to stay the horrors of war. And, my lords, I believe | jesty’s commands to form an administration, It is all | little justice could be got out of those (wo departments, meparated from its contre and left, would have been | ical advantage, The neodle gun added, no doubt, tothe | that influence would not be less ellicaciously exercised | Very wel to engage in an exciting struggle with your | (Hear, hear.) The {act was, unless they prosecuted Kyre, | Bomah proceeded direct to Cherooury, whe po yolled down inio the valley among the Austrians Pantene of the victory, but if the Prussians had | because it was attended by no menace and by no med- brid , bent oe Beating bim a co, ready be it would be better for them to dissolve (Hear, bear.) | #iX days, and was visited by Choursnds of the French and utterly crushed; and the Austrian centro and left | possessed no auch weapon the spirit of their onset and | dlesome desiro to give unasked advice; because we could | beaten if you must, but the pleasure of the fight must | A® to prosecuting him for a misdemeanor, Mr. uxton | people, to whom she proved as mreat a object of ear have been liberated’ to continue their contest with the | the skilful arrangements by which a part of theirarmy | have no seliish policy and no. desire of reaping any ad- | apparently \e its own reward, for nothing can be less ko of tho crime as if it was not murder, He (Mr, | Orily as Bas done to Soe Ragiio. | Biie left enemy. Moments were precious. The Prussian fi was brought on to the flank and rear of th emy | vantage for ourselves, except that one estimable advan- | attractive than the results of victory, No sooner had right) recollected at the meet ng of Parliament he dis. | boarg barbvor about orolesh On the eventing be:ame more severe, the wavering of the Austrians | would have effectually dislodged the Austrians from their | tage of staying the effusion of blood and restoring to Eu- | Lord Russell and his colleagues resolved on adhering | used this question with one of the oldest aud most | day, and arrive! of seetthiay the tines Sis aloes greater. The failing: of trees on the Prague road ition, rope tho blessings of prosperity and peace. (Cheers.) | to their resignation, rejocting with wistful glances | esteemed judgos in England, who eald—not in his (Mr, | Urday evening, thus w the rush of fugitives, the near h of the Prussian ES Pasring from Europe, I cannot but turn fora single mo- | the aid pratiered by Mire p alles 8 and bi ‘asao- | Bright's) ‘presence alone, bat before several persous-- | twenty four hours shells to the place, some o} them sun over the rail- Prussinn Movements After the Fight. ment to congra/ulale the world upon the cessation of that | ciates, than Lord Derby's troubles began. We can | that in bis whole lifo he had never way station, were awful warnings of the. state of the | [Headquarters Prussian Army (July 6) correspondence of | fearful struggle which for several years desolated the | very well understand that personally he felt no ambition | more distinctly of murder than the puting of A battle, All the roads were blocked up with retreating ‘the London pea) United States of America—(hear, hear)—without remark- | to be for the third timo the head of a Ministry, As the | death, Well, if that were #o—and bo had ne trains and wagons. Men were throwing down their arms Preparations are now making to transfer the royal | ing that though the position of a neutral is always one of | leader of the opposition he oxercised immense influence, | lawyer in public or private say to the cont and wading through the inundation, ¢ Austrian gun- | headquarters henco to Pardubitz—a highly important | Considerable embarrassment, is always one which islooked | and peruaps controlled the course of legislation ag | thought they would make fools of themsel mers on the causeway begar to catch a sieht of the Prus- | town—lying seven miles to the south, It is not likely | Upon with much joalousy by both the contending par- | effectually as he can in oifice. He had not, indeed, the | proceeded on any other basis than (hat of bry G the Little Nore during Sonday, and ow 4 by Vico Admiral Sir Hald Fr lo-Ghie: at or known a case She lay to Gordon to | Monday me or heard a | win Walker, K, ©. B., and a great number of offiorre © nuinbers of the townspe sited to go on board, an » greatont kt pe sians near at hand in the woods, and opened on thom jon until ver: ag | ties in a war, and more e*pecially in acivil war; and, tronage of place, and so far he was unable to oblige | for murder. (Hear, hear.) Whether they could try | Courtesy are shown by the officers, Yesterday a with shrapnel and shell. art ap ps a ae a tnterct the’ baitiodold ere tte ed | though our exercise of that neutrality may have been | his friends, but overything cleo “vas hin In taking ‘him for murder was another question, It was vory likely 3 slowly. (pio the hasbor end ipo up a. post PROM THE FIELD. by almost endless trains of provision and ammunition | questioned by ono side and the other—as Igbelievo it | office he gives up a splendid position for honors which | the grand jury would ignore too bill. His op.aiou dis. | Hons short distunee from Mr. Toerl's vew ir a clad the ‘Tho battalions ordered to advance failed to retake | wagons, fleld hospitals and telegraph apparatus, Fire | Was—I Co earnestly trust that the restoration of peaco | may possibly provo barren; but it is evident that no man | tinctly and cloarly was that, if Mr, Gordon Was willing | Lord Ward wn. cr rd low ds i, simon’, ie vel wit the Klum, and the enemy poured in fresh troops at the n- ‘ecommenced this morning uy Kéniggritz, | @nd the wise covrse which the President of the Un’ied States | can be the leader of the opposition aniess he ia willing | in ber own name to commence pri ig so incautionsty left, and ina few ainites a saeeak ee | - been broken off vote ie ga the. ‘an: oe Le taking, in seeking lo reconeile and bring back | to submit to the pennieladt oo victory, and Lord Derby | ecution of Mr. Eyre, the comiaitios should \ under army of the North found itself attacked in front, flank | pouncem that the fortress was willing to capitulate, | & the Union the vanquished meanters who receded from it, | had to choose between an abdication of public | collect funds and give her such lega! agustance an wo and rear. It is. not morely tho actual advantage gained | The conditions asked by the Austrians, however, appear | May terniinato any feel ng of irritation which yet pre- | life and the formation of a new Ministry. their power. (Hear.) But, if Mre. Gordon wae prove ‘that renders such a condition of things the precursor of | to have been such ag conid not be granted. The bom. | Valls among tho citizens of tho Un ted States against this ‘The narrative of events which Lord Derby delivered | ed by anybody from ng, wod was altoyet eortain disaster, To believe that the enemy are every- | bardment of the fortress is being carried on by on: hun- | Country, and that nothing will interrupt the friendly and | yesterday diffored but slightly from what we have al- | agamst euch @ thing as a prosecation, It would iake ty where around, as excited imagination suggests, prodaces | dred and twenty-one gnus, collected from the various | harmon ous relations between two countries between | ready given to the public, When it became evident that | position of the committes tore disicult, and @ terrible moral effect. Yet the army behaved well, | Prussian army corps, already threo miles beyond the | Whom subsist so many ties which ought to bind them | he Would have to form @ Ministry once more, he felt a | question would have to bo recon He » arp projecting bow of the fatter. Sho will re ness harbor for sbout & werk, during »ppor Peterabar yg. ‘The cavairy moved forward or wheeled as if on parade, % together in indissoluble union, (Loud ony My | natural desire to enlist among his snpporters some who es to bear more opinions expremed on the @ ' + need wt ne and could the infantry but have succeeded in retaking ‘An offer made by the commandant is said to have been | lords, it was also with no little gratification that I have | had not hitherto served with him. The defeat which the efore be gave a definite one of bisown on the matter, | Which hay acted ox her convoy acrows the Aten ium victory might still have inclined to our aide, acceded to. He proposed vo hbernte 200 Prussians con- | Observed that, although undoubtedly the latitude | late government had accepted 28 expressing a want of | but he thought they were in this unfortunate position 3 But it was not to be, Regiment after regiment, bat- | fined fn tho cltadel, provided, in case of the bombard. | Which is given in the United States to ail ex- | confidence bad been occasioned by adefection trom tho | that the whole of tho criminals mizht escape under the The Me ch of the Sens. tory after battery crowned the heights and shelled the | ment recommending 45 superior Austrian officers, several | Pression of public feeling, and to anything short | hberal ranks; it was notorious that many of the more | Sehirm which had srisen among thom. Ho thought, A whale boat containing several dead bodies, the mata. rear of the army. It was in vain that Benedek threw ory bi wounded, should be pormitted to return to | Of an actual violation of the law, may have | moderate mernb:rs of tho liberal party resented the coa- | however, the true way to make future Colonial govern- piers himself into tho hottest fire of the first line. The denth Vie he King has given orders that all pavnipoabr led many persons in this conntry to be somewhat impa- | duct of their nominal ebiefs, and Lord Derby had the ments perfect a# regarded respect for human life was to | Ye a wy ut Hfteen bundred to & thonsagd which he sought refused to close his eyes and ears to the | imperial officers plodging their word of honor not to | tient at the progress which that atsurd and mischievous | foro good reagon to hope that he might gain some | bring the Jamaica criminals as soon as possible to tho | tons, and other wreekave, had been washed ashor om sights and sounds around him; he could not avord the | serve against Prussia during the war may be at liberty to | con:p'racy, called Fenianism, was allowed to make im } recruits. Ie was careful to eay Inst night that ho | bar of sonnel court (Appia . i pacts the coast ¢ Ireland, suppoeed to belong to the i om explaned that what ho task of directing his army's retreat, which was onl; ‘themselves restored to health wherever they please, | America—yet us soon as the law was plainly about to ba | dered no ‘coalition,’ but simply to form @ gov- effected with heavy lost in'men, guns and stores. Yet Grwounded captured officers ok aIso in sore cases | violated, vigorous and decided measures, as Tackuow- | ernment om an. “nlarged. basic,” Wer agree with all was not lost. The rifle was not thrown away, nor the | been released upon giving a similar promise. The num- | ledg? with tho utmost gratitude, were taken by the | Lord Russell in thinking the distinction merely @annon abandoned so long as it could be drawn from the | ber of Austrian flags taken has now been ascertained. It | goVernment of the United States to prevent a violation | verbal, and the practical conclusion of Lord Derby was, feld; the wounded already on their way from the front | amounts to cleven, three of which are kept in the King’s | of tteir own laws and the rights of fnendly States by a | as he himself expressed it, that the old party names bad | aod confirms the resolutions pe $0 the sholter of fortresses and hospitals were still care- | apartments at the Castle of Horitz. The troops report that | Jawless band of marauders, (Cheers) I should hardly | Jost their meaning, and the time had come for a ree w- | Comznittce on the 26th of June.” fully carried; there was norobbery nor unbridled license many more might have been captured had not the ensigns, | have referred to these American Fenians, numerous as | struction. The diflerence between a iiberal conservative Mr. Gonerm said that having heard the eviden ‘ordue ship M the Fea, from Liverpool for it should be asked to bring the subordin to justice, Luptow moved, “That this committee approves ed by the Executive Stenmehips Arrived Our. yabtp o'clock on the after along tho roads that led from the field, and can their | when it became evident defeat was inevitable, in many | “ey ere, but whose organization has been that of a | anda whi is a difference of personel associations, and | the Jainaica Commins ol at half-past e mor he government but equip them afresh, the North Army | insiances torn off the flags, broken the poles anden- | Yast number of dupes, headed by two or three arch | not of poiitical idsas, Practically, however, the influence had no do Taking the over mude from Will be ready again to face the terrible weapon from | deavored to make their escape with the colors hidden | impostors, out of whose credulity they have obtained | of names and party (ies is enormous, and ‘though pool iy y which they had fled. to have expressed the most cordial good wiehes underneath their coats. The fullest Justice, indeed, is | Jarge sums of money for the avowed prosecution of garocarrived at Queenstown on the evening of the Loth innt By half-past four o'clock the whole army was in full | done by our men to tne bravery of tho Austrians in the | ® scheme eo ntterly visionary that how any ane man rnment, no ono outsice tho conser. retreat; its rear, harassed by the enemy, was protected | fleld and especially in band-to-hand fichting, could have entertained it is matter of astonishinent—L | vative party would join it. Lord Clarendon felt himself was not he (Mr. The City of New York passed Crookhaven at half-past by the artillery and cavalry, who are said to have made ‘The best proaf of the enormous progress mado sinco | #honld not, T ray, have noticed these Feniane, supported | unable to remain al the Foreign Oflice, and the Duke of | would be pi pion of raurder ch ; Mosk On: the morulae of ihe 1i8 4 the many desperate charges, and to have been mors than de- | the crossing of the Bohemian frontier is afforded by the | @ they were by a number af thoke los characters Who, | Somorsot ined to form one of the new Ministry, The | by the ruling of the Lord Chie? Justice of FB from New York, arrived at Youthampton cimated, The bridzes across the Adler and Elbe are few | transfer of headquarters, Pardubitz lies farther south | n the disbanding of the United States army, were batar- | jate Lord Lanstowne thought he could only feo | an instance of the atrocitivs committed ta Maree aud narrow, and the several columns meeting at Such | than Prague, and that city does not appear to be thought | Ally ready to join in any desperate enterprise which pro- | to Lord Derby when out of Lord | Gorrie referred to the cage of a pew who was exeented by 7 ant Ad inquiry, held by be at course of procedure av much at v: f War as it wih te principles of ju liberal poinis became confased and intermixed, Guns that | worth attention. It is reported, however, that afew | mised them a,sbaro in the plunder, if it had not Leen for | Grosvenor reported a could not be carried away were thrown off their car- | regiments of Landwehr Guards have been detached to | the purpose, in the first place, of acknowledging the vigor, | tmemb acted with him in de Finges into the river: many wero lost im this manner, | observe it, ‘The capture of Praguo would not decide the | mansures which om the recent raid, fir dcan cleat | government o rving under Lord Dut it is said that comparatively fow are taken. AA cap | possegsion of Roheinia, but the expulsion of the impo. | Nothing clr, were taken ly the Uni'ed Sates government, | thus left to his own forces, but in COMMERCIAL INTELLIGENCE. tain of artillery who heard mo asking about the loss speedy and, in the next place, of pototing out, as arnbject of | atanend, Th Le q ‘i ‘ guns said, “Out of my whole battery 1 have but one gan Pusnne hago pommel jak Te | the highest congratulation, that the inroad of these | confession lust evoulng that novne who had wt olution waa carried, there being but one dla. _ The London Money Market. and seven horses left, and many others are in like con- Tho headquarters of Prince Frederick Charles are al- | Marauders called forth throughout tho length and } could tell the dificully of plactug some forty or. fifey (Frow t dition.” ready at Pretane, a small town upon the Elbe, with a | Dreadth of the British provinces a unanimous shout of | tlemen each in the position most accordant with bis ; Poud ng tho re Another sud, “Woe havo no artillery.” ‘The headquar- | bridge across that river, just half-way hetwoen Pardue | lovaity and enthusiarm, and a resolute determination to | own wishes and at the same Unis moot cou-istont with Saeed the propered a Kina ters’ staf’ became sesttered during the confusion shortly | pitz and Elbeteinitz, from’ which latter place Praguo ig | maintain the rovernment to which they beloug, and the | tho interests of the country, There are thoes who ars THE FENIANS. What uv ettlat appearance, Upon te after the Archduke Wilhelm was wounded; Benedek was | only a day’s inarch to the weetward. By the possession | throne to which they owe allegiance loyalty and | dicappsinted altogether, those who find themsely wine of Fronen papers that the © ; separated from his escort, and no one knew where be | of Pardubitz the foriresses of Josephstadt and Kénig- | determination shared alike by natives of ail the provinces | offered an uniorse retaryship, Or even m post in the r i ut smediat ly notified ia the eur, gon, so aftera few vain attempts to find him, all | gritz are completely isolated and hardly worth special | and of all countries who had taken up ther abode to be in the Cabin h Report a » | th: funds adenneed ty to '{ per cent in the mor. Commanding pesitions being now in the hands of'the | attack; at auv rate thoir observation and slego will cer- | 18 Canada, and shared above all by persous of every uities is unrolled we to} Party in Amerien ing: the day parsed on, without any now foatore enemy, many members of his staif left the field for an | tainly not arrest the operations of the army. shade and denomination of religion, (Checray 1 thini + wh ch, accord- except tho t of tha manifosta of 9 Kenperor appointed rendezvous at New K ritz. Arrived there The presence of the King with the forces is of | it hae becn mort gratifying to observe the spontaneous & Lord-Lieqt na rom the London Timea, Joly of tri, Kote ‘ f 1, Consols, in which aftoralong ride, we fonnd the General was gone, and | extravrdinary importance, because it facilitates mili- | €bullilion of fecling which was called forth by that inva- thankful that at th closing round tt ora in | this wens th y, final y left olf My the weary hor’es had about an hour given them for rest | tary and diplomatic action. His Majesty tg in | son, however contemptible; and [cannot bat hope, also, fit mes bas beon pre per cont lower than y 9 downward mi and refreshment, Every head was hung down, every | constant communication with the chief of the | that this universal expression of feeling and this 1 ty tho pablie, ment Was promuted Kt frome spirit depressed, It was not merely a battle, but anem- | siaff and the War Minister, and receives direct | imiy ich prevails throughout the British Noy Upon th » future poliey of his admimetration Lord Piro lost, unless diplomatiets can at Inst unweav. the net | reports from the commanders of both armies; so that | American provinces may have & material influence in | perhy maintained a wee and hecoming veerce He “ bardiy like which bailed them before, and which the sword has | theentire chief direction of affairs 1s in one hand. Une | further ng a sehiome wich the more it is considered the | took ome plus to eile willy jon that ac: ov vil continue, but, tn the * failed to cut. fortnnately, telegraphic communication with Berlin ean- | More] think it is felt to bo essential to the well bemg oryative gov ornme be warkke—m: dent and Pht, It bs clear that Penaite TEMPER OF THB ROUTED MEN. not be so revularly kept np as the extraordinary zeal and | 404 unity and strength of Canada—namely, the cenied- » evidently unfou! cerialn new bly meana of rectifying ‘The soldiers knew nothing of all this; their only tron- | self-aacrificing activity of the field tategreph siaff would | eration of tho North American provincos nuder a vy'em uct of .be war they f peror'a manifesto om ble was the fatigue from which they suffered, or the | Jike to bring about. Even the march of our own troops | of the freest possible government, af the same time | contentte appeal to his own charwter av biset profe. voraby, for, though it ape thought that the day’s battle would have to be fought | and the endless trains of vebicles often injure the lines, | Maintaining unbroken thelr ailogiance to the Crown. TE | associates, There can by no dowbt th parenily pointe in Lialy and toa good umd over a ain before they could reach the ph i f the Frenel, » firm al sant plains | and when the damage is done in the evening the remedy | cenuot bat hope that this conioderation, wich is ear- in this inedorat and reap the benefits held ont to their imaginations in | cannot be applicd nutil the following day. nestly desired by Canada, and which {s certainly in my proved, The hes t Praia, The f Yo) farther Benedek’s proclamation isaned but a few days ago. The | “The fugitive Austrian tclogranb oficials, now roaming | JUdement infinitely for the benesit of the other prov. | jy deciated that lus succonurs 0 ay large borrowings Mpom etowk, Gnd I6 night was chilly and bivouac fires lined the sides of the | about the country without occupation, and probably | inces, may take from what hay recently occurred afresh | (ure their i obliged, by 1 ! road at intervals, withont means of subsistence, are in especial the most | mpulse which may lead to a successful termination. | questions of foreign, of eolomnl or of domestie policy, | openly ‘di 5 Had it been an advance “instead of a retreat we might | dangerous enemies of our provisional lines, Hear, bear.) 5 it was, in his opinion, but just that they should | meve- py fore have enjoyed the pictaresqne sone, Rovnd fires of | ir Hail Rorskiz. after complimenting Tord Derby on tho | be allowed the bevinning of next gesson | they have elven peeviiady | Were wate ip Lain, bet ty ~ wood, flaming hich above their heads, stood or sat tho temperate tone of his statement, proceeded to vindicate | to mak their preparations, without being called upon to | edi ws Lau bores ar rnvrald or tudine | We t ft io Di to Brave fellows who had labored so hardana fourht so | CHRONOLOGY OF THE GERMAN WAR. | the course ho bind purened upon the question of Paria | dectare what is the presisa’ corsa they. tiean to parvue, | qwsed to plese any vir. k pon them, cea. toma wuts | MB)" he 8 continue in requen, with am gallantly on that dav. Some stood warmifig themselves a mentary Reform, justifying the introduction oc the mea: | ‘There are, however, teading prineiplos of policy, which | geitles everythin in the cure’ elty. = ; upward tendenoy ‘ by the blaze which lighted up their bronzed faces to as Ce heist HEALER ANREP A Sure of the present sision by the general demand that | may always be stated, and Lord Deroy did not hesitate to | ing for in oll tne other ere The divcoont market te all IPA enced by the payment red aglow as that of the pine stems that towered oyer | | The following calendar of ovents, published in the | was made throughout the country for some euch exten- | ayow the considerations which would gaide b N of the d wHich tne cat ned Werowee Im. « A bervay elt market, and them; others sat resting a wounded arm or leg on the | Memovicl Piplomatiqne, shows with what rapidity great | sion of the franchise. Having been defeated opon an | 7) ey world mainte a eriet new ralily in ‘he ‘bet of branches plucked for them by their more fortn- | mililury resnits are achieved ‘nm the present day:— important point the late goverment felt it to be their | fut at (he same tine be ready offer Cieir good uflces ¢ n that they will nate comrades; others, again, lay about in every atuiude | | Juno 14.—Fedoral tion decreed by the Germanic | duty to resign, and he was glad to find that they were | jointly with any cther neuteal Power if ¢ app ared jp verb ito ble or long Dente ef exhaustion. Diet. to be sucereded, not by @ government ona “broad | ‘that tiey might lead (o the reetoraium of pace, “This rf 2 x a ¥_brevking down (ined June 16 —Entry of the Prassians into Letpsic, Giessen, | basis,” which ‘he could not distinguish from a | indeod what. would bo expected from auy English I taken teattly to 4 0 per THE ENGL: sd, Coneal. Occapalian 68, .acae: coalition government, bat by one composed of mem: | Ministry; bat as long as Lord Stanley ie at th fn ooen Pred at BIC AS LISH FIELD REPORT. June 1T—Entry of the Prussian General Vogel into | hers of ‘the great’ party who bad mainly con | poreign Uilico every one will be baited that a | nel Avra pion s tana nthe let the Hanoverian capital, tributed to the present go of affairs, A gov- | profeaion of neutrality ty not a cloak for’ pre} @ver Wall a Million of Men Engaged—Extra- | , Jane 18.—Occupation of Marionthal, Ostritz and Lan- | ernment so formed was entitled to fair con. | of propossmssions Tho warm languaye of appro land and A c nen A erdinary Valor Dixplaved on Both Sides—Th bau, in Bohernia, by two Prussian regiments, and oecu- | sideration, to time for maturing their measures, and | whieh Lord Derby rpole of Lrecieat Johnron's ngorow. heve to beat down on Irieh conepiracy beet arnonmt, i te ai o etal © | pation of Bernstadt by Prussian cay Occupation of | they onght net to be called upon before next semion to | mesenres for the represionof ine ads om the Canidian | rean money and ey have found that they de acy was ra ane) wat ‘ Seience and Endurance with The Prussians. | preston by the Prussians. declare any partie jar course of action, He added— | gem ier co responded o(lvrough'y wih what Lord Ruwell | ceived Wemvelven m thie # jov, The Ameriean | 2X Lill ' From the London Times, July 10.7 June 19,—Fvacuation of Fort Wilhelm by the Hanove- | Neyer had a Colonial secretary to deal with a qu stion ing aso giv an azurance that ur re- | poople hat yi cept in great excitement, | eft curition, which tad heen 83g per the ‘The details of a prea! battle hike that of Koniggritz or | rian troops. Prince Willinm of Hanan mad» prisoner. | more iliatrossing, and, apparentiy, more difiewtt, than | jarons ih the United Salen will remrin wnafletd iy the | and when the whoie country has been eae (ee | imcrning, ruce to 64g io tho aftern vm Sadowa are not quickly arnt. Few have an opportu. | Cavalry encounter between the Austrians and Prasgians | that which aros out of recent events in Jamaica, There | eiinge of M nivir relorm, Lord | agitation, sach seencs ay have recently by wilt i w, duly 12, ive Rity of seeing the geveral plan of attack and defence, | upou the Rumburg road, was no opportunity afforded during the existence of the | perhy and hie oe a im the sirects Of the Weet.Bod are unknown o Conente BT AAT, United 61 a and stil! fewer can understand it. In the magnitude of June 22. —Nixdorf occupied by seven thonsand Prus- | late govbrument ave that question fully dixeuaseds | abram altourther fr mony They that if the yp | OTs. . wet the armies engaved as well asin the importance of the | sians, e t Tam persnaded that the course which my right | when list they hold. offic twat roptie cused yestenlay atte 1, ox div., ‘Mtoerests at stake the late battle has seldom been sur- June 23,—Ocenpation of Romburr by the Prussians, pase, Nearly a quarter of a million of men were ar- | June 24. norable friend tok in reference to it—thougn he was | which has just befallen Lord Mnseell'x admuntstration§ | nay poribly istice between the Hanoverian and Pras- | blamed at first by many persons for having supe has tanght them caution. They do not deay—indeed, | their own inte forubng Sie to af 0 Fayed on sither «de: they oxtend A great expanse Governor Eyre—in rending ot a ik 18 impomsibie to deny—that there are an malies | ean t ‘ ef country, and were led by ri erals Who ex tion near Jungbunzlan bet weon the Aus 11 siation and great experie in our present system which It ia desirable to cor. | of the eivet alm pentent commands. AS military | trinns and the Prossians, ‘The Proeeian troops oceupied hesitatingly be admitted Wo have been the wine rect, be tbat thate f persons now excinded 7 Distorians have disprted for half a century about tie | Reichenberr, Traawnan and Aicha (Bohemia). he could have adopted. I think, moreover, that in from the frarchiee with , re we incidents of Leipsic and Waterloo, it may be that June 26.— Engagement near Turmau. ing out Mr. RK, Gurney and Mr, Maule ax seve silt xercise it; but oandom their enerprive this battle, which in magnitud> ‘equals Leipse, | June The army of the Crown Prince of Prngsia | Sir 1H. Storks in the inquiry which be ordered to be : reseed or the unonfran cit society ia t 4 and far enrpasees Waterloo, will for many a year be tho | fancht the battle of Nachod. Engagement at Oswiecim. | instituted, my right honorable friend sid an equally be admitied to the su%rage mast remain an | it cannot be uterty dimolved on os subject of controversy, But we are happy in havingst | Fight botwoen the Prussiaus and Hanoveriana near Lan- | wire thing; and 1 am coniymed in that opinion by oo. ‘The exp ‘ weaton hes mtv hes been tivally 0) \ the seat of war a correspondent who is well qualified to | gencalza, General Steinmetz throws back the Austrian | the report whieh they have made, Tt appears to me | 4 wafficient proof of the diitien upon Cunad form a judemen' on snch operations, and who has pro- | corpe @armér (Ramming) upon Josephstadt. Engage- | that apreater amount of labor was never more intelli- a fi tock , duced a desripiion whieh, considering the circum. @ same corps with the Pixth and Eight Aus- | gently expended in a difficuit question; nor war one main 1. Deniihion Btancer under which it was written, is a marvel of accu. under the Archduke Leopold. more efiie ently trent, han the m has | sion sh | land ever ! a a pr om Fate observation. It is not too much to say that we learn —Action near Trautenau — The troops of | been by those three Cor dinte oul sacrifice There mount n ‘ from his letter more than was known of the action by | Princo Fredonck Charles engaged nei nehengritz, be easy to have taken fn re which have no rease elements of biof . ina ¢ ot the great majority of those who took partin it, Tho | June 20 —The Hanoverian army sorrondered at disere- | to have instituted, for instance, an i Tbek. reform ean be burk aie cat BO ~ public fs, indesd, well served by thove who narrate these | tien, Capture of Gitechin by the Progsian army. to have ended by inflaming angry passion Neve alter the agitavon of the qnestion; thatit ie | now t ague idea in A I Cotten Market. wonderful events of war almost before the smoke has | — June 30,—Actions at Kort, near Tarnau, and at Chwal- | maca and in this country. The course whi fo pressing that it must be vetted foriiwith it iaeqnally | there existe a gecret whtels Lay eleared away from the batile-teld, We learn so speodily | kowitz, between Kalitz ani Kénigshot.’ An Austrian | well pursued, however, ended to ailay those vawions | idiot arsert when tho lengilt of that agtauon is re- | will eadicnivy make i ‘i t P t hal then’ hore and with such" comparative accaracy the general plau of | army corps ondor General Clam-Gallas compelled to retire | and to prove to the mass of the populstion in Jamaica | membered sore keeps Lie lower clase and fms been ew 4. vb an engagement that we are apt to forget how recent these | upon Kiniggriia that theif interste would bo fairly dealt with, while | "Thor ure qnevilons of social and commercial tacistae | any. Thenn aro ovite wt hee pews of. ar advantages have been, and to undervalue the assistance | July 1.—Action at Gitsehin. order and authority would be supported. L must iderat 1 i the admtnwtre canis roiress, and pated which the narrative of a competent eye-witn’sa, written July 2.— Arrival of King William at Gitechin. June. | at the same time warn tho noble iord, tho present ress them in the recems ‘ t we * on the very field and on the very day of battle, gi tion of the Crown Prince’s army with that of Prince | Secretary for the colonies, that, althougn I think neir postion, Lord abous 16 r £ Rot only to his contemporaries, but to fature histori: Frederick Cbarles, the late government made a wire slecuon of a nkruptey, and we sup: “tare of Trade The grand{avhers of the present generation were very July 3.—The battle of Sadowa. new Governor for Jamaica, the diflienlt questions demooratic House of | selves opnox wt . ‘ — poe womed fl aut to the battles whien openne eee with it ned far oem be ng sol Commons to settle the law of | may tke ap ¢ »@ for’ the net | toler =A istingnished the early part of the present century. it may require extraordinary measure bankreptey than the present assembly. No question ix | ther votes, the Prendent will iueu ey CONE Hh HERRERND, moon When Naroleon erushall tho two Emporors at Ansterlit? THE MEXICAN QUESTION. reliof in order to restore tha’, island to u healthy state. | more aol pee ta sane, open, to. all bfixing We provems ther Ureaking 1 | mene of pre . ‘or broke the power of Prussia st Jone there was no sueh ctv bailirmninie ‘The rabject, Ie, at all events, one which is worthy of tho | comer: nry'# act of IS6L has certainly | thisit would be most uuremmenabie te look Ws bin govern. | Liverpoo! Brendetaff Morket. clear conception of what had been Jone. A reference Lo ‘Attention of a statesman, omer m of how pros | not realized the hoper it excited, and tho bill brought | ment for, No government in Amerion would consomt wa | Flour thw and nominal, where « les were eff cted the press of the period will confirm what | Mission from Secretary Seward to Napoleou— | pority inay be maintained, not only in Jamaica, butin | iq by. sir Rounde Palmer this seanon escaped | pat any restrn Soon the Pat an feng anthey | te, tower Friday. W and we 2) most of us have heard from our elders concerning Plan of Settlement for Maximilian and | some of our other colonies, is one whieh I would recom- | criticiem in the preee of the reform debates. | stopped short of overt nets whick brought them wathun | ea! Indian core pr wT tale ab ta. dectine on the the suspense which prevailed during the great cam- «ei - mend to the noble lord's notice for solution, There # | or jt must have been condemned as & most retrograde | the jurisdiction of the law week, an paigns, A deciies vicory was widam announced {From the London Shipping Gazette, July 9.) another colonial question on whieh the noble carl whe | and imperfect measure. The principles of the law of present administration has Gone all that we enwld Liverpos! Pravidden Mashot as such, and accepted by all the werld, within twen'y-four Mr. Seward’s (Secretary Sevare's son) visit to Paris has | hax just eat down briefly touched in the course of lik | bankruptcy are now #0 far settled hy jadicial decision | fairly ark of it, ‘ Pe ri < ‘eg a hours. Stil less did people know the number of men | opened with several interviews with the Emperor and M. boa L refer to the attack made ‘by the Fenians pon | that i+ would not be diffien!t to draw up a eomplete code | to, to pareue ike own course Hefot Becl foit and oasier, | aciat, Retier qualities engaved, the dispositions of the grnerals, the conduct of | Drouyn de Lhays. Cana On Cat mt 1 may state that beth the Sir Hogh Cairns may win fresh iaur- nend bave rather low Doecon ine rite request at bercty late fates, Lard dull aod nominal, Tallow quiot Wut memdy ‘the soldiers, and the various details of the action, News ‘The object of these conferences is understood to be | derpatches and private letters whieh have | ely in directing such a work. Whether Mr. Gathorne @ilk act in good faith. Ou ) the Governor General of Cauada Femmes by dopeivina erpoal Vreduce Market. came straggling bomeward that the campaign was goi the solution of the difficulties whieh impede an immedi. | been received from Hardy will be able to reform the administration of the | Americau govermmont by depriving the | against the Austrians or the Russians; # great fru ato settlement of the Mexican question, One writer | show that, in his opinion, the invaders would | Poor law witlout completely recasting the government ubiLy Lo Free the inviduons ery that | Ashe Srmer, Fotedin, Hager unckos Cotte ‘the city had it that Lonaparte had won another vielory, | gtatos thet Mr. Seward i endeavoring to “bring about | never have been evercome and put bp ab Of the metropolis je more doubtfal, but |t isa metancholy a ae tomas of preseire from Knglont. . Wiles ae I 4 4 dal quiet but sady an «that au armistice, and then a peace, was likely to be | an underdanding between France and the United Stasex | had it not been for the iyat comduet of the lent of } satisfaction tint he cannot make things wore if he fail | leaders understand this better than other detailx of there | Me Oi Spire of turpentine fnactive nt 4 Rown, the result, But somebody contradicted this, the public | with regard fo Canda.”” It ie, Lowever, hard to seo in | the United States, (Hear, bear) One the most | t make them better. Io such labors an end in | plot, apd hence they wake periodical Bo sels, Petroleum firm. Me@ned ta 194. per eailon war warned not to believe sinister romors, and it was | what way Freneh interes! are concerned with British | distingnished generals of the Unived & was d- | the re establishment of constitutional government in Ire. | can kympathy, on the xround that En Sho Base’ Marketa shown 4 privri how tmpore ble it was that thecombinations | North America. If Mr. Seward hax any arrangement to | spatched to the frontier. and vy sending ack to their | jand, the Ministry of Lord Derby may wel necupy itself, | coerce the Luited Staten government into a eouree w nick r jab raee. Of the allies should have faled. At last, after a week urten | make on this subject he will probably do go with Lord | homes those Fenians who wero arrested he at once dissi- nd, be its tenure of office long or short, it will not be | in repugnant to it Tho readines wth which o ee ‘ | Lavengean, Inty 42. ; days’ snapense the worst intelligence was fully con- | Stanley, to whom and to whose government he is searce- all the hopes of that revolutionary bedy. Lora oat reward for faithful attempts to accomplish | of politicians accept theme fabrications in shown by Laid achenget. Bales on Therniay firmed; bat even then the public no acount of the likely to be so strongly opposed as he would be to a lonck, at the same tine, say# that he never saw a several recent incidents in Cohg aoe pani eoory atom of fre egatnet the Prev den ¢ finde coheviom, the extreme sid ‘ 1 iy * matter moro. trustworthy than Napoleon's bulletins and | Ministry of which the guiding spirits were Lord itussell | greater duplay of en ray anu promptitude than character- Scraps of letters from officers or soldiers whieh might and le Ghanene. “ne Soa th pon RA of the people of Canada when sup pubieane have w find their way Into the French papers, and then aflor « porting the efforts made by th.# coumtry to secure to them wiih the Pen aker of the - time penetrate into this country. Even the subsequent the free institutions which they enjoy. (Hear.) That is "i bs A” Robe " - - Yictones of the allies were very inadequately underst%0 4 THE ENGLISH CABINET. that the relations oxinting between us avd the ie oe at doe Snore Dae (MPORTART TO LANDLORDS AND TENANTS upon the floor, aod General Ban for slong time. The campaign of 1813 was only known in character; and this cir. It | good office for several others of tho fraternity. In the — a as a series of tremendous baitien in and about Saxony, 0 | geet Derby's Minlaterial Statement—Hie Ene of the noble earl more onden—Ex-ieverner Eyre to | same chainter a rowl tion ties been brought formar! os ee Ce ee which the French, sometimes victorious and sometimes: of and Thank: “2 easy than it otherwise would have been. We havein | be Prosecuted for the Murder of Mr. Gore | pressing 4 eapproval of (he orrest of Fomans by tho es wiges Daly, Meaty aad Cardona, ofeated, wore at’longth overpowered at Leipdc, and | @orsement of a inks to President John | tis a proof alro that daring the last thirty years, or, at | Gon Mrs. Gordon's Demande—Jehn Bright | thorilen, and there iw a siren, probebility (hat th» opps Renjamin i. Hike, Pak D, Rothe hin a an epmpeel. compelled to fall beck on the Rhine.” The | seu—The Foatans and Canadian Question. | aii events, fora quarter of @ century, the policy which 4 Mr. Charles Baxt Vartance om | ston Will be reinforced by the Insh vote at the weat | from the General Term 4 the Marine Lourt, air . telegraph and tho military correxpondent have changed In the Hous» of Lordy, on the 9th of July, Lord | has been pursued by this country towards Canada har ~ | elections The good set c » balk of | sdesinaas dia ng the plabesil's exenghates. She forts all this. We probably know more of the battle ot Ké- | Denuy, who, after expressing hin personal desire that | been such ax to increase the attachment of the coloviein the Sabject, de. people may bely to counteract nigeritz, which was foneht this day week, than the | the onerous task of forming a new Ministry had been | to their institutions and to the [From the London Times, Joly 10.) and, wa * , a "ms it mother country , follows Price ww Apr duty, and are. | indeed, I have heard more than one distinguished citizen of A epecial meeting of the Jam: 4, doroph U. sonee British public knew of the battle of Leipelc three months | spared him, declared that « sense of pal ‘ a Committees, called | Exeentive in America ale meat + tie defendant, Reet, the whate of € afverwartn The forces engaged, the commanders, the | gard forthe creat party with whieh he had acted for many | the United Stetes declare that there i@ mo country in the | chiefly with referenon to the letter of Mr, Charies Bax- ae lithe na may be the coentriciies ver 2 es Station of the different corps, the natare of the round, | vearr, left him no alternative but to attempt to carry ont | world where freedom is mre complelaly enjoyed than in he | ton, M. P., resigning tho chairmansh|p of the committe méeguided members of Cor ween > ome . ties for Wwe) eate frow the ine the manner of the attwek, and the re stance tt net with, | ta iavion with whieh the Qneen had yntrosted him. | Britih prownees of North America, 1 trust, therefore, | was held yertorday, at Radley’# Hotel, Bridge street, mitting. One momber of the Kenate har ventared io | © fobuwr t sven hunined datiars per aasum, are al! described by our correspondent with an exa fr po'nting ont the forbearing conduct of the censer- | we sball never bear that we ong lt never to agsint Canada, | Mr. , A. Tayior, M. P., in the ehair, A those | appent in the Chamber with « Fenian pow bis arm, bot | papable q " AL or choat the acne time thé ) pes: wnich assares t that we have the main incidents tive party dering the lifetime of Lord Fanerned, 6 that we ought not to yield & proper support to one of tho prem weve Sir t. Yowell Baxton, M. P., Mr. ht, Seal Of the Padicaia Khow thet (< te tacve Fe | Of (he battle, AN that he saw he telle, and Ae wilvary | procecding from the sense of the pablic service brightest jowols in the crown of Britain, The state of | M. P., Mr, John Stonrt Mill, M. P., Mr. Charlew Buxton, | totesed alont wh le ts lack eure ware ‘ Bo! Woe retninme (0 Ube plaid knneledgs enables him to form a correct judgment of we | a great constitutional party could render to a wise | our reiations with foreign Power geveraliy is a good | M. P., Mr. kdmond Beales and Mr. J. Burke, of King: | ie done elsewhere. a Well Koon procom it of May ot the rem of rations which tere beyond his own !arvey. and prodent Mir And what a battle it wae as here described within afew | that eminent + ter, be observed that the death of | proof of the abifity displayed by my noble id whom | ftom, Jamaien, may be “enginaered” inta very a ran “inant Wad greatly changed the | the noble earl opposite (the Earl of Derby) baw already | The Cusin As said that with reqpect to the prosewativa | moxent, aid the tauks of the Presiden » m advance The datondoud on waathe, 1 hours after the Austrians had been swept from the field, | state of affurs, A vow Parliament had been complimented am persuaded that ed the | of Mr. Kyro for murder, a urged by Mr. don, Mr. | dered mora ompart and f oa eam, we se Vwiulo the Prselans ware still pursuing their retreat | vutrary the optuion which had been exp complete contidence of the couvtry—(hear)—and that ne | Buxton, the chairman of the evmmittes, tonk an'aito- cae eheumeen '@ oe od im the premises be bad fing leciens! There hae been nothing like it in or tine, ord Palinerston, a Retorm bill wae introduced in ite | would, notwithstanding the difticulties which may arise | gether diferent viow (rom the majority, and be called on A ‘ b Me HIM ref wed 10 pap yee im the great war of the Preach vmpire has | firet seeston—o eo whole | faith that the a coees, The di Andon hoon wh a contest and swha carnage. T 1 I! imetity ane crudely prepared upon tho | in connection with the rertiement of theaMirsof Europe, | the public, in a te\ver publihed in various newspapers, inal liberal majority would insure tts | have been # ccessf | in restoring peace to the continent between bie opinions and those of the majorty “sous which followed bad shown that, | @ manner consistent with 0 welfare Of tbiwcountry, 1s ie ommitier, With regard to the course taken armies were engaged; all that by merce: e hice, fresh trom the repore of | standing the large ministerial majority, there | imposeible not to-agree with tho noble that it le not ton be (Mr. Taylor) thought he wae undera Sppesemaien of the ¢ Mewltier of wae 8 Jong pears, n the field was there. The de | any of the ordinary sap of the late gov. | wise to make too many comments om the wate of | slight error in wating that the Jamaica committee bad | jmay cos grievances aul ke Jay «! Bone od thotwo main armies of the | ernment who were pot pre to adopt the measure | Buropean affairs, For my own part, T trust that oat of | decided by a majority “that Mr Eyre whould be prow® | goprect them in lus oan way ans, cach one of them ® natiown! Low in iteetf, to | im the shape in which it hal berm presented to Parlia- | this bloody war a state of things will arise more favora- | cuted for tho murder of Mr, Gordon either through the These complications mur be kept in tund wien the | ‘atid, av their lowes had pot been Jergo In the | ment. The late government had, a# ho thought, amnece- | ble to tha freed mf Germany. Many difieult qrest ons | government or by Ure Gordon, Peniane arronted by the | cited Kates covernmnnt are us @ptounters, they contronted the enemy artily, made the adoption of the bill In fte integrity a | witl dowbiless arise in connection with the negotiations Mr Bernr, MY Prom what do you read? brought to trial, I they are comvieted they wit _ aay Me I ony 000 etrong. The Suvtriane are apposed to have had | question of confidence, and, having been defeated upon | which it may be expected will take Miter the cen. | The Covina said bo read from Mr, Hoxton's letter an | jee iment with their dovoris, bol thie Commtey oan peewee of hin fan cqual nomber, A survey of the Held of battly with a | one point, they hod resigned thelr offices, Her Ma- | sation of hostilities; and, a far asl am concerned, I ti-hed in the Times, Now tho fact was, the resold | ay reason tv comple’ if iw Coert he que good wap will show the extent of cround over wi Josty having requested bin to form @ government, he | trust the noble earl will not bo tw or undoly went no further than this-—that the committee | falture of juntice. We do ae pond Avene san thene Immonce levies of men were eprod. It la, indeod, | had at titet ondeavored to do 90 upom an enlarged basta | pressed in any way in connection with egotations | thought the government ought to institate « proseeu- of the y of caatying ‘eto wondertal tuat mich extensive operations should have | & ‘ding arnau, tho mewbert of the party with | which he may think Mt to carry on. The noble cart haw | tiom, and that they would pies upon them to do | mitts tase ot meu The Provincial. hot ran and cormpleted in a single day. Where he acted other gontiemen who, alt! aid very truly that we are not bound obligations |, and that in the event of the ernment inced ie | ited Mates omen! seseiy atit a mnilon, Of ten, und 1,000 guise are In the | rassibers of the party, afl, might, srithout aac arising Out of recent treation The wpa ame ot deine 0 they would give Mm Gor | gran with the eoorriraccrs wilh gremter pont & fleld we might expect a cont: jong a Leipaie, But tnciple, be enaplod to join it, He at Vienna be'werm Auatria, Pressia and and thea | dom every seswtance if she prosecuted. (Hear, od bet te le net the be ‘f fhe irveriaiste wae fe Prevetone and the dell of their Pred to the Doke of Sonerwt aml Lord Lurch betwen lapery a and Lay, ave pe) The course taken by Mi Barton wae one not 22 toon mage snd bes a yA, 71 calls : ‘ age \ recover trom Reed the mid ec veils ~ bd fe gd oe eae to the late Lor! Lansdowne, to aeaiet hum vata wie “ A Je ye o ‘asinine oa the cire prey Mey A, Barton Jomify. The Prendemt Lew heen pleced in « thing an 004 for mack fag pest for ben tive of le incidents given by our corres — \ " wan cated on betore Jue ¥ whe eee foe 44 the ‘obetinacy and cours ¢ of the Anstrians, that I never alluded wo treaties. T said that the was w to my; 9 would admit that nothing Seetataenen ret pees an pg nay acti vaiaiee e ente, rod moved ass he pul eure Dot raines hichor our estimate of their opponents It by evi- which were likely to arise were euch an did jute Recessity could haye justified it. and that eFVeR | in wien throochout hin CRreer, Bo far ae t cot paint be dimmerd, ae the om teem dent that the Anetrians Were very etrong!y posted, and that Yolve the honor of this coun’ ry necemity otisted \t wae most anforunate to have ~ ‘uo to pee what they awe to | clattned was inade yor: ily “4 a, net the suiboriiy ft was a work of daring and trance to dislodge theu, ented us, adopted the course he bad ported. The rewult of thet the inegnifcant prison. | Of MY Reed. Ped A Thompern and T Mit, ation Lap tan bem ae Va ong Lg poets Kart Reesers—Perhape, odte wan to Fy peter A Lad ee me toore we wy | coon for Ht aed the one A etal et iP traops enter. mind degree enemies oy Werians wt that the « Awe kl ba A 4 Srna need or op wake nya geben bor and it was therefore abwiutely necemary wo Se or askin toy = ty wt fag sd gg beg og S'sek oo the ol the war ng up bis ‘po 0 treaties prevent meets whe "0 renied the tet Wel postion.” The AuriHane could not, ty holding wore im existence; and vader Tur Detory, MP, said that Mr Barston war quite at sa any Ohe enaept Svornt aed Vhs ens ui | predated Jutgueat tor ths auvedea T= ew groand in —d Meer Sneath te pa A oy 1 Pa a on J to differ Le ng whieh juntly helone« to the | SPretled to the Cewers! Term befwre Jomsons Asmar oe hi thoes conquest# ian to opinion « arisen. how a mater mportance witletra whe od the jodgmem eo reer which were to enable, thent to cede Veneta with grace treation ean thad of 1816, ite TENT to Poland, tbe | the committer But be bal wot done that The ere Tes covers. | eee the paint thee approted tue Genera Taran, Frat it ther design bad beon merely to” pro- other wan the treaty of 1882, gard Wy the noble earl | miter did oot even diviie, and he (ir. Bright) wont a todettnn kde XiTe | of tus Cours of -pmanen Fess, wen enaatmeaty va) tect their own territory, they, perhaps, could not opporite, with rexpect to these | ewey from the mretion under the Impression year, lke the com of | YOtred the jocgment of the Serine Court with coma, have done beter, They bed @ position well pro treation were threatened with Vielation it war not con- | Buxton, seeing (he «reat major ty of the commaten tee on on arement | The effect of (on tection # net Wr Hall avoid the page fected by sl and wood, and they made , th maintaining the hovor and dignuty of thie one vide, wight provably fork himaeit ably too Camp; tes avageh wan aes ee mumden | Oth of ony > Hined 109 the wae eid Goempatiom 088 OF I. 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