The New York Herald Newspaper, September 4, 1866, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

4 ‘NEW YORK HERALD, TUKSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1866—TRIPLE SHERT, — $$ wn Minister for Foreign Affairs of France, 8 Con- | and not aliowed communication with the American bi Minister or any United Statos official.” By dint of porso- Armed. vVerance he sugceeded in sending to Mr. Murphy. Con- account of the unfortunate result, for Austria, of the war, | and be the jomt fagoelio agpams ang silvery as ever, while I think you | cult certainly to find another example of a similar Bun mombor the name, but that is immaterial—etated that on | hold by « mixed, garrison of Bavarians and Prosslans, | middle of September. You wil find the voice of tho old had no power to release themselves. B woud be din and the difiiculttes she is now laboring under, she would | So! sits ‘ observe that he hag profited much by his Euro- | force, and beon uthern Bund. ‘ sul General of the United States at Frankfort, an account | Not be represented next year in the Paris Exhibitio “AMERICAN NONDS ON 'CHANGE, pean experience-in the study of “style,” and that he has {From the Paris Union, A\ @) 4 The Marquis Moustior has appointed by the | Cr'nis case. After some dificully the dector was allowed | This etatoment e relulod. An oficial novioe tater tier, | American securities continue to be in good demand on | gotten rid of much of that stifhess which formerly de- | _* © ® For Count de Bismarcic ‘oat Brperor to the vacant seat in the Cabinet, to live in a hotel under guard of two policemen, he pay- | notwithstanding her late reverses, Austria intends to | ’Change, and in spite of numerous romittances from Now ag much trom his performances upon the lyric | above all, and he names it “with pride, the first in the ie ing for their subsistencs, &c, Eventually }'r. Murphy | compete in 1864, just as much as ‘she would have done | York, money stocks are gotting scarce, The higher rates ce, civilized world.” He adds that “in all were, whee the obtained bis release on bail. His case camé on before an | bad not the peace been broken. But affairs are not yet | of gold (152 on the 16th) have not influenced the price, THE PUBLIC HEALTH. int is to strike vigorously, the Berlin army ghown ENGLAND. inferior court, and he was discharged, being sufficiently settied to make it certain that Napoleon will | which remains firm at 7134. We hear nothing positive about cholera, which is said | itself firm on the field of battle.” | That is to forget rather Dad evbtivesiovil free from military duty or compensation. He returned | be able to eut his pet project to the extent of in- THE MONBY MARKET to be on the decrease. | The fuct, however, that the gov- the, ‘Dot all sufficing in es, to the United Stat and there employed a lawyer to draw up & case for prescatation to the Minister of For- eign Affairs The petition and demand of $15,000 com- pensation for loss of time, (rapemontoen Ke., &o., was forwarded to Mr, Seward, who despatched it to the American Minister at Berlin, with directions to demand the sum, Mr. Wright did go, but at the time of his promplly Fi war, cluding every European nation at his fair, ‘a mere drug in the market—discount at 133; | ernment does not yet permit’ any bulletins to be pub- | as others may be found firmer still; as happened in held at all and stranger things have coms to haves | persed. “The harvest boing tiddling, and there being | lished would lead to the opinion that such is not the | 1806, After Jena and Anerstaedt the Prussian army was Say Austrian wiseacres—than would be the postpone- | some apprebensions with regard to the potato crop, in | case. Last year, ani indeod, at all other times, when | struck with such a stupor that all the strong places opened ment or even extinction ot this Napoleonic idea, But, | consequence of the continuous rains, wheat has some- | the cholera has visited Paris, the old-time policy which | their gates without resistance, and General Lasalle made in the interests of peace, industry and humanity, we | what raised in price, and is now at 13}¢fr. the 200 weight, | rans through everything in France, of treating the people qn capitulate when he had with him only a regiment must hope that thes» prognostications are i-founded. At thia price tt cannot be exported to d, but there | as children, has induced the government to keep as mounted chasseurs, Napoleon even wrote to Marshal THE KING OF HANOVER—HIS UNOONDITIONAL appicaTion | is some demand for France. secret as possible any statistics of the progress of the | Lannes:—‘‘If my ca’ sets to work to take fortresses The Retuforcements for Canada, LiveRroon, Sept, 3, 1366, Two steamships of the Cunard line have sailed for Canada with troops, pation Mela oe i demand—quite lately—Hesse-Cassel was occupied by DEMANDED, disease until there was a sensitive decrease in the num- | I have nothing to do but dismiss my infantry.» But ‘The London Te ‘graph says the only object in sending | bitten troops, and considered aa annexed to that pred T telegraphed the information that the King of Hano- ber of cases, when daily bulletins have been permitted | Jena is sixty years old, and Sadows only six weoks; and those troops to Cavada is simply to moet the spirit mani- | ernment, He therefore ted the case at Berlin, and | ver, now resident in Vienna, bad been notified that FRANCE. to be published. As near as I can gather, the datiy num. | M. de Bi who boasts of @ man of progress, . was Prussta's decision that he Id ber of cases 1s between two and three hundred, the large | hides the checks of the past under the laurels wf the to resume the sovereignty Be LD roped OUR PARIS CORRESPONDENCE majority of which, however, are not fatal. . : peas fre the Ayerenye August 21, | bdic ato—: assurance ——— is regretted ¢ int e King of Hano- ee deste neve reas 508 —_— ver, that he has found no foreign court taking such a as Russia and England have Would be allowed to rolgn in his atead, This ls not gene- Parm, August 21, 1866. NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS. lively interest in his fate presen! was offered. $3,000, which he refused to accept. He was then asked for fourteen days’ delay, so that the matter might be more fully looked into; and there the case at present stands. (osted by the colonists in the late Fenian raid. THE DANUBIAN PRINCIPALITIES. BISMARCK'S CONCRSSIONS, OOS, x Wiubons doubt Schonifeldt will recover the $15,000; The information was communicated to the King by a UNEASY FRELING RELATIVE TO PRUSSIA, fst for oe cane Duchy od — Per ineg ‘the SPECIAL TELEGIAM TO THE NEW YORK WERALD. | [AM Sofa involved Coast Bate were: | Aatover hes Doon searing shane Seeabi acme | Te 2a very strong ands very unewy ‘wot | THE PRUSSIAN ANNEXATIONS, | Aiccender, walle the holt presumptive lx sono-am of ; clined to be very liberal on the subject, mad the purpose of obtaining Prussia’s sancti tl France, not only in governmental circles, but among tho Queen Victoria, He might have kept the whole or part Reception of the New Hospodar. ibject, le, @ fow if Pi 1 On abalone “< a = = — to the King’ : peers of his kingdom; and his people would not be at present months ago, the first conceasion on this question that has yet been obtained from biepndic that for the future all men whoshould e they had attained the age of seventeen, shall, if they return to Prussia after be- coming citizens of the United not be liable to mill- tary duty or to pay compensation lieu, unless they settle into business in Prussia with the intention of re- maining there; or any man who should leave Prussia after having attained the age of seventeen, but remain in the United States ten years and then return, would pot be considered liable, Bismarck has lately con- sented to reduce the term in the last instance to seven [ecw and the Minister at Berlin, it is said, urged on y Mr. Seward the advisability of accepting these terms a8 a basis for the final settlement of question. But in the last document from Waslington Mr. Seward states his wish that Bismarck should write to him on the ques- tion, fully stating his views, so that he (Seward) may have the opportunity of answering the uments in favor of the arrangement, Thus remains the question at the present date, If lam Se informed several papera, the Chicago Tribune at the head, have roundly abused Governor Wright for wishing to accept Bismarck’s proposal for a ‘definite number of years,’’ and advocate the principle that once a citizen of the United States any man can 1 r Sri] people, regarding} the ibeld; snd. Gahame-oomee, WRIOD. | ‘of Absorption and Incerpo- | reduced to sovest the (ate ineposed on taem by ta accept the old blind man’s abdication, but does not uing. Without the. slightest regard to yy! jessage o~ luc accept the fate im} on m by the con- promise to allow hls. #on to” succeed i; Indeed, Der ee een ane Onn nica’ and consultation ration. queror. In fact the Grand Duchy of Besse, contrary to views on that subject are kept quite in the dark, the Tmperi Subjoined is the Royal tan Message which Count | What was believed at Berlin, not only will not be dimin- ‘The old King was at the theatre last night, and al- | of tho wishes of the people, PrAssta, alleging no other | go Bismarck read to the Chamber of ‘Deputies, in Berlin, | ‘hed, but will even keep the ince of Oberhessea, Chase aie biaeaearons: ment: tie fe lowing any- | right than that which conquest gives to the conqueror, | when reson the Annexation Bill aaNaaes heath Erase wiles of taiemasitnins C ipreapectiod vehement russ! > (pense applauded as huncelf, It would’ bo dificult to belies | and making no other excuse than that her interests de- i Pt teed tiege laid | of the Bavarian Palatinate. Prussia ill be ‘ontented him blind did one not tively know that such was the | mand it, takes to herself at one swoop a kingdom, an The governments of the kingdom of Hanover, Elec- with the rate of Pome Heatan which fact, His manners—bis movements would lead one to | glectorate, a grand duchy and a republic, blotting them | torate of Hesse, Duchy .of Nassau, and free city of | the Grand Duke | has recently inherited under supposed him to be an interested spectator of all that from the of Europe and without consult Frankfort, placed themselves, by their participation in 1@ obligation of leaving to that little State its passed before him. He does not seem to take his pres- | O¥t from the map pe vonsulting | tne hostile altitude of the late ‘Diet, in a state of open war self government. She wil! also reserve to herself the ent unfortunate position much to heart. them, and even, as Count Bismarck acknowledges, ie ey declined neuirality and alliance right of Kesping sapiens: ne Marence, As to Bavaria, PRUSSIA AND BAVARIA. against their will, denationattzes between four and five | with a guarantee of their territories, soveral times offered | jt Spears that she also will not ‘ogo the whole of U The news of Bavaria’s hour of trial having como, of Tm taint them by Prussia, and n again at the last hour; they ‘ranconi ut only the town and district of Hof, with respect to the negotiations pending between her- | millions People. This certainly was never | ‘ook an active part in the war of Austria against Prussia, | *P0Ut 300,000 souls, considerations bareis- self and Austria, {t does not seem to atrike the in accordance with tho programme of the | and they api for themselves and their countries to | SPired Prussia with the wish to keep that position, it being here with much’ concern or sympathy for thelr lato ally. | Emperor, amd when, as has been seen, he | the decision of arma. By the will of Providence that de- | Be key of Havaria between the Eragebirge and the moun The Bavarian popular feeling was strongly anti-Austrian. ae aie ae occ cision has been acoinst them. tains of Upper Franconia. In the same manner the Austrians look coldiy on the | has been obliged, wi aed ays, | “Political necessity forces us not again to restore to them people whom they affirm might and should have given | to completely abandon the idea of receiving from Prussia | their governmental power of which have been deprived The Profit and Loss. them greater help during the war, and to whose inactivi- | any territorial compensation, which shall tend to main. | by the victorious progress of our armies. By their geo- [Berlin (August 20) correspondence of Paris Temps. tia! King Bt Ganetar ouaht Sartaialy te cotriatn gr { tain in ite equilibrium the balance of power, it may | raphioal situation those countries could, im case ‘heir | he acquiescence of the Bavarian and Hesse Ministers should be maintais with an attitude hos- . Bavarian want of decision and promptness. It was | well be imagined that he and France begin to feel, that hopes equivocal of priv tide ey pre] 1 Ot etn oenine Pleas tape lly ppt pare plainly in thoir power to have helped him when almost | this now nation which they have permitted to grow up pains policy and military action of Prussia difficulties Jassy, August 31, 1866, The new Hospodar of Moldavia entered this city, the capital, to-day. His reception was triumphal, and be enjoyed public ovations along tho ontire route, THE OLD CABLE. SPECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE NEW YORK HERALD. The Great Eastern Announces Its Recovery. Lowvos, Sept, 2, 1866, ‘Tho officers of the expedition on board the Great East- orn charged with the duty of picking up the Atlantic cable of 1865 have telegraphed over the old wire the fact that it was recovered by them yesterday, FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL, penne claim her protection, whatever his future course may be, | surrounded and Just before he was forced to capitulate. : obstacles which would much surpass the measure of | UP, 0% the articles of peace. The Grand’ Ducliy of Heese The London Money Market. Tcannot but think that these journals are either wrongly | _ Bavaria’s troubles aro not at an oud, soomingly. Tne | 00 tho ruins of the German States, may yet prove to | thar power and real importance, wil cote to "Priana, beside the count Of, Hesse, Hom Loxpox, Sept. 3, 1366, informed on the points in question or that they enter- | greater number of the lowor orders havo lately been de- | them a trouble and annoyance as great as did the mon- It is pot the wish to acquire territories, but the duty | Pure ir va Gi ° Tho opening prica of consols is $93 for money. brerlaiehpeener geared of the rights of nations over | Cldedly acainst sho Van Pfordten's, policy, and strongly | sor which Frankenstein created to hit. of protecting our hereditary States against the recur- | (tants, and three prinepal towns, Giespen, Friedberg and AWBRICAN SEOURITIEG, Hg ao Cesena Te Chips ce Cee te oan | ohanen of caiaiatre ia’ Manled ie Gee, ecemeaion or THE LATE DEMAND, Fence of such dangers, and of giving a larger and more | “Bavaria will lose terrttory to nearly the same extent. The opening prices o” American securities ar y law al ry as p solid base to the national reorganization of Germany, | ne tclograph informs us that the Queen of Hanover pleases; why, then, should she refuse to another country the powerof framing laws tor the government of her sub- jects? If I rightly understand tho cage, and I believe I do, rian offer is a liberal one, " Does the writer ia United States five-twenties, Frie Raiiroad lilinois Ceatra a small party the great masses of the people are ready Nobody puts any faith in the theory to which the gov- | which imposes on us the necessity of uniting forever to is still at g 5 Chateau of Hérrenhausen; she bad even to do anything to conciliate Prussia, to enter into her ent organs give color, that the demand recently | our monarchy the kingdom of Hanover, Electoral Hesse, i views with regard to her North German Confederation, | “ment organs gr 2 the Ducha of Nassau, andthe free city'of Frankfort,” | come to the capital to walk in the streots with her two and indeed to enter the confederation itsolf if allowed to | made upon Prussia for a cession of torritory—a demand | "We sre not ignorant that a partonly of the populations | Gaughters. Tam old they she replat tte, Monee Loxvon, Sept. 3—P. M. do so, But the feaaph ya op to the Prussian con- | abandoned because Prussia firmly and decidedly refused | of these States share with us the conviction of that ne- and that she would not quit her capital without the know out of every 1,000 men who return to The oficial closin ‘© of consols was 89:4 for money. | Prussi: ind various ports of Germany after a resi- | Cillation policy are the higher, richer classes—the mad ity we spect and we honor the sentiments of AN. SECURITIES, donee in the United States over 600 nto the cause of | great holders and movers of Prussia, Yet it is not sup- | ‘°Cousider St—was simply made in order to get on record | feels. | Ti Cote te which attach these. neoples to | orders of Se ee ae ceccee Seer Tho following nv \e quotations of American socuri- | correspondence between the two governments, all on that Bavaria will go to the length of resisting | the desire of France to roturn to her boundaries | oir Gynasties and to their ancient institutions, But | More tenacious than over. only © wool ago te to ties at tho close of business to-day :— account of the ill-defined nature of the principle and ssia's demands, hard as they are, if Bismarck follows | of 1814. The fact undoubtedly is, that in the | we have the confidence that active participation in the | ‘2 deputation, com from Hanover [J abdi- U. &. fivetwenties, Frio railwag share Llinols Central sar The L+yerpool Cotton M Livenroot, Sept. 3, 1966. The cotton market opens quiet at 134d. for middling uplauds, Salos to-day are estimated at 8,000 bales, up his claims with the obnoxtous needle gun. It is lopment of the national nit; cate in favor of bis son, that “he held his crown from dimcult to understand why Bavaria shouid be so much | Sfusele for advantage between two excossivoly clever {iy pens Rp biaors ier hina Teyien thate lebisitnese God, and would only give it ack | to God on his death harder dealt with than Wartemberg, especially as Bis- | men, Bismarck has proved himself the clevorer. Itis | private interests will be treated, will facilitate the tran- ot bie tage: yr are his own Be marck must know that he will find no firmer allies in | py no means probable that the long and frequent inter- | fition inevitable to a new and enlarged union. capanising my ary t ahall resume ee cae acon South Germany than his solid, heavy, beer-drinking late | viws which he and Napoleon had together at Biarritz, | We invite the two chambers to give thelr approbation | form. "Twill no longer allow m™ ra reer a atk morph if ie ident devoted entirely to discussions upon | &8Teatiied by the constitution to the projected union, | the Prussians.” It has been calculated at Hanover that resisting the demands Prussia wishes to enforce; but by | last summer, were devoted entircly POD | ‘and to that effect we send to them the acoompanying bill. | there will remain to the King @ private fortune of Atty herself it would be nonsense to attempt it, and shoe can | the virtues of sea baths in goneral, and their value to Given at Berlin this 16th day of August, 1866 regulations involved ? But it is believed this question will soom be settled between the United States and Prussia. AUSTRIA Liverpoo! Breadstaifs Market. ‘SPONDENCE. py millions of thalers (three trancs seventy-five cents each); Liverroo., Sopt, 3—P. M. EEL Oe Sere eo aa marien ae erica Tradl his Majesty in particular, or to sentimental nonsense | os es by ait theinisters, V LUAM: | so that you seo that the last of the Guelph is not too The brendstuffs market 1s unchanged, ‘Viewsa, August 20, 1866, I witnessed the review, by the Archduke Aibrooht and | about the effect of moonlight upon the sea, or the music | The Yoilowing 1s the toxt of the bill :— much to be pitied, Liverpool Provision Market. IDEA OF THE RESTORATION OF AUSTRIAN POWER IN GERMANY, | the Crown Prince of Saxony of 12,000 infantry, ten | of the waves, which come dashing up against that We, William, King of Prussia, &., order, with the Tvrol Liverroot, Sept. 3—P. M. Everything that I have seon in Vienna lately; every | S4uadrons of cavalry and nine batteries of artillery of | 4 india boach. asgent of the two chambers forming the Diet of the na- Austria in the Tyrol. eight guns each. The spectacle, as a military scene, was SER Inte The Governor of the Tyrol, General Count de ificent. | Nothing could exceed the brilfiancy of the | When such men as Napoleon and Bismarck meet they aces 1, We take forourselvesand for our successors, | lione, has addressed the subjoined proclamation to bl hr , the repecd bearing, Il eee omg Cried uct talk business; and in view of what has since occurred | in virtue of article 55 of the Prussian conetlletion, the | army :— ee) the Austrian troops in precision; the French | last summer, was the bloody work which has desolated | (vrs OF Hesse, ee re Y | cunw—The enemy which has dared to menace the Tyrol probably equal them in See Se but neither | the felds of Bohemia and Bavaria, and made aslaughter | Art. 2. Tho definitive sottloment of the relations of | has completely evacuated your country to escape nation could presont « more enchanting military specta- | ouse of tho Quadrilateral, That’ they havo both been | those countries with the Prussimn territory, according to | the destruction which awaited it Ou three ocowions t sity of unit ee aor ote There white to | disappointed in the result there can also be no doubt— brite Sy al merci will be fixed by a special calles, you unten srtat, logal Mas fesnrel Sieh, 008 geet forms, trasts disagreeebly. , x Pr rg cg ap re prem ee a ed abipaliy eno eer ge ene 'y- | Arr. 3 The Minister of State is charged with the exe- | up the positions assigned to yon, Jovfuly leaving your oj tae, tag erontont hora of the a and | qu tint sr sockrtehng be woud bate | ons me sama sec uber es Mado host ots i juine hours that after a w eek’s ting he woul ave 2 porcine amor page on pone Sil Germany prostrate at his fect, and ‘Napoleon, count- | Count Von Bismarck upon Prussian Policy. | *24 valleys to show to the rach enemy thal time hse nog did not manouvre much. They merely moved from | ing upon the varying chances of war, hoped to show | at recent sitting of the committee of the lower | impaired your conage, 4 the position they occupied previous to the appearance | himself a friond of Prussia when her hour of need | nouge of the Prussian Legislature upon the address to on. A Sayenso ef the Toviewing officer by a whool to the | Should come, and derive from her thore for a substantial | the throne, Count von Bismarck gave the following ex- left in close columns of regiments, then spread out to OT ane dierety che i aetdetite which § es a as to the policy intended to be pursued by There is no change to note in the provisions market. MARINE INTELLIGENCE. conversation that I have held with persons in position to know and understand the popular sentiment; every expression on the subject from men in civil and military employment, and the tone of every sheet published in Vienna, confirms me tn the impression that the govern- ment, the army and the people anxiously look forward to a time, perhaps not far distant, when the complica- tions arising out of the present state of affairs may give them the opportunity of re-establishing Austria’s former power in the German part of the European continent. As a well informed gentleman, with whom I have had along conversation, remarked, ‘The present position is not tenable, Austria, with over eight millions of Ger- mans under her rule, cannot suffer herself to be so Laverroot, Sept. 3, 1866. The steamship Tripoli, from New York, has arrived. IMPORTANT FROM PRUSSIA. OUR BERLIN CORRESPONDENCE. Relations of the United States with the Eo- Jarged Kingdom—Minister Wright and the Cabinet in Berlin, & emy rovoke you, but has not had the co and faithful soldiers of the Beri, August 20, 1866. He said:—Little difference exists between the 8 completely counted out of German affairs, civil or | CO™MPAny distance, and marched past the reviewing stand | 126 been refused were granted in advance, but that the | authors of the various drafts of address, or between the om The late war botween Prussia and the German States, | miitary, imiommapeny, frome Geek, Hite Wie Se ieee sean | woes of Wostpnatia, with the Rhine as the natural government and the chamber, a tothe object to whic | tn sae. tne att ued ataee yeok < Moerininihe ice Se io eum gcarm 08 PUBII0, FEmzve, ; onia'who carried {oait rides af tha shosliee, The Ponnae vices T have, faye po doubt Tae not | (he,POlicy of Germany oUgut Lo be direc a re ver; | hs acquired” afroeh’ in all the battles and encounters to a crisis many poluts that up to the present time, The popular sympath: infantry was only composed of the line regiments, in 7 tion eternal glory, so 1am also \d to be your commander, y, in sentiments very openly claim to be infallible, but I know that in well informed | pe atta’ _ Government has been forced to itself P coun LION! though partially understood and occasionally discussed, | oxpressed, notwithstanding the present enforcement of | Jerse incay orth neon tieincs mad. hats ent black. understood to be the pro- | within the limits of possibility, i.¢., of what canbe realized Nr bE CASTIOLION, have been, so to speak, “lying perdu.” Prussia’s pro- bable future position as one of the great maratime Powers of Europe has very lately much increased her cordiality Jagers green fac! bats with quarters this was perfectly a Alert te infantry toe te artillery and the me long before the war commenced. Now, that | without enormous sacrifices and without compromising Cavalry, the latter bringing up the rear. The infantry com- | Bismarck “by the aldof the «zund-nadel-gewehr”’ has | she future. Wo should have run this risk if we had TURKEY IN EUROPE, panies kept admirable distances, step and time, and pre- | found that he has no need of France, he breaks faith } ‘crossed the limits we have marked out for our policy. Sented aa {ine a front as I ever witnessed. Theirmarching | With the Emperor, and places the Emperor in a position | We must keep the engagements woe have contracted $n this martial law, plainly delares itself against the terms of peace tho Emperor allowed to be forced upon him. This may not be very wise, as under the circumstances towards the United States, and it is through this closer | in which he acce; where he is not to charge him with a violation and, above all, confidence in our word. But we pted them the conflict could not | Was excellent. The artillery followed at a foot pace in of his fs respect, I. 5 Critical Positi: relationship that some important concessions, which for | have been continuod, except with every chance of | ‘ivisions of four guns abreast. Unlike those of any other ce aN: remy do not think it would have been useful at it to go French some time past the United States, through their Minister ici vm ay ation, tha Austen gun cartlighs ere yainoh A Wroten- A GRAND STRUGGLE FOR FA further. ‘The Prussian government {s suificiently ani- the greater, perhaps total defeat of the Austrian army, and the imposal by Prussia of terms in comparison with which those now offered are mild indeed. There never was an army so ready to sacrifice its very existence and that of every individual member of it as that of Austria after the battle of Sadowa. There was not a man or officer ta it who would not gladly have gone out again with the almost certainty of defeat, of death (one cannot say dishonor), for the purpose of having “one more slap’? at the Prussians; and it is fortunate that there were wiser heads in the direction of affairs than in the execution of them, else the extinction by Prussian needie guns of a noble and devoted army must have been the result of the rash de- termination to try once more the Goddess of Luck and “cold steel.” The gentleman who received in Vienna the despatches from the front during the battle of Sa- dowa, informed me that up to 2:30, and even three P. M. on that day, the only messages received were such short telegrams as the following:—‘All goes well;’”’ “Our ar- tillery are behaving splendidly, and overpower that of the Prussians whenever brought to bear on it;’’ or, “Tho greatest enthusiasm prevails, the army feel the day is ours;” or, “The whole of our left is advancing and driving back the enemy handsomely.” When sud- denly, without any previous message to denote a change of affairs, the following was received: ‘Heavy cannon- ading is distinctly heard in our rear, our flank is turned, wo are lost!’ Such indeed, waa the fact. Sadowa, : mars If these two men live ten years longer, the race be- | mated strong ambition to render it advi to ‘From the Paris Temps, August 22.) Baten eee ort fofloery poping Then | tween them for advantage will ‘be an interesting one. booth yathet’ than stimulate it, According tothe | °° ° One Montenegrins are asking for:— came the cavalry also at a walk; ten squadrons, the two | They belong to the same school of diplomacy; are both | peace -preliminaries the North Germans will fave the 1. The demolition of the blockhouses or detached Tending ‘ones, being ‘composed of Poles maguificenuiy | @mbitious, bold and unscrupulous, ready and’ willing to | Charge of regulating the na‘ional relations of the South- | Constructed by the Turks on the frontier of mounted and dashing looking men. As each furtherance of | orn at Berlin, have been pressing on the Prussian govern- mont, may be gained. * ‘The last treaty between Prussia and the United States, concluded nearly forty-eight years ago, has naturally be- come an almost useless, if not obsolete, document in viow of the many points daily arising for decision which cannot be handled on the old basis, on acoount of the progressive nature of the age and the constant occurrence of cases which are not even referred to in it. One of tne most difficult of these, and one which has completely occupied the attention of the United States representatives at the Court of Berlin, arises out of the liability for military duty attempted to be enforced by Prussia on all returned American citizens born on Prussian soil. Some politi- Olans and journals published in the United States—the most inveterate on the subject I may say is the Chicago Tritune—argue that once a man has been admitted into the rights of the Union as an American citizen he cannot be made liable for military or any other duty by bis mative State under any circumstances, Now, it is all vory well to pass this law and proclaim it and argue it all over the world; but bas not the State or kingdom of which the man was the original subject an equal right to pass and enforce a law directly opposito? Suppose Prus- sia, for instance, passes a law enacting that every man born under her rule 1s liable for military duty even if he does emigrate and become nataralized in another coun- : F iment | Sacrifice anything and re Aa Mra federation. To carry out this task we shall have | after the last war; fi marched past it was into close column, thes into | their ends, Thus far, Bismarck has certainly — to ‘examine whether the want of this organiza. | 2 The restitution of some} portions of territory am- column by fours, and thus marched home to its barracks. | himself the less unscrupulous of the two, aud the Empe- | tion js felt more strongly by the populations of | nexed by the Turks; The review did not last more than an hour anda quarter. | TOF will have to make a big strike to “get even’ with his | Soqn Germany than by their ments, as | 3 The cession of @ port on the Adriatic, The Montene- PROGRESS OF THE PEACK CONFERENCE. pupil. it now happens that we see Prussian soldiers, who ‘pass | grins complain of continual violations of their frontier The Poaco Conference goes on very smoothly at | THE RUSS0-AMERICAN ALLIANCE IN 4 FRENCH POINT OF VIEW. | beyond the line of demarcation, exposed to the popular | by the Turks from the blockhouses and of acta of pil- Prague. The only point on which there has been any The Paris papers, even some of those which have | animosity, It is for us next to impart solid foundations | !age committed by the latter on the territory of Monte- difficulty arose on the ‘huestion ‘of the retirement of | ®!Ways been very friendly to America, are not all pleased | to the new union. J believe that in trying to extend them | negro. They declare that the presence of Prussian troops from Austrian territory, Prussia’s repre- | With the evidence of a close and fri alliance between | to9 far their solidi'y would be diminished, We could not, | those forts, instead of intimidating the population and sentatives claiming that the troops musi be permitted to | Russia and the United erry exhibited by the recent | for ‘instance, submit a State like Bavaria to such condi- | Preventing further conflicts, only provokes the people to travel on Austrian railroads free of charge. This Austria | Proceedings at Cronstadt and St Petersburg. tions ag we intend now to impose upon certain States of | revolt still more. With respect to the claim of portions would not accede to, as it would have been impossible | , The Opinion Naticnale, a journal which was originally | the North. Let us try first to establish @ Powerful of territory annexed by the Turks they offer to for her to ascertain what amount she might make herself | Drought into existence as the organ of Prince Napoleon, Prussia, 8 powerful crown domain of the directing | exchange & compensation in Herzegovina, liable for to the railroad companies; but, in lieu, she has | bUt which is now to all intents and purposes | State, tie of a close union by which we | # agrced to pay a certain sum down, in consideration of | ® g0vernment paper, ix particularly severeupon America | mean to form Northern Germany will not be so | the necessity for them to have an issue for the CS which Prussia engages herself to pay to the railroad and Russia for the evidence of friendship afforded stropg a8 an {acorporation. Nevertheless, there are | tation of their producta, which could not fail to companies the regular military tariff for the transporta- | ‘he recent fétes. Calling attention in its ing arti only two or three modes to prevent allied races tion of her troops. of yesterday to an article in the New Yorx Herat, en- | comerained by their governmenis turning their arms an excellent means of pacification. ‘Such are the claims AUSTRIA TO FORTIFY TUR TYROLKSE VENETIAN vRoxtien | titled “The Great Powers of the Future—the United | against ws The first of these is incorporation and | of the Montenogrins and the motiv ‘A leading article in the New Free Prest—as you know, | States and Russia,” it republishes, as an evidence | complete fusion of the populations with Prussia, and in | _ The conduct of the Porte is, with respect to them, the a very liberal and advanced paper—remarks that, incon: | Of similarity of optmion, the following article | especial of the hostile functionaries who will’ remain | same as hitherto has been employed towards the tence of the loss by Austria of Venetia and her well | {rom the journal of St. Petersvurg, which says:—“The | attached to the old governments. The government does | of Candia. They are led to believe that a fa Gefended and defined {ines on the Po and Mincio, it will pene | = peomelseras odie eos and a ant these reoly wi A a 10 8 ar ot the whole of be necessary for her to build on the Tyrolese Venetian nsequer ae, mere! at a single leap, as is the custom tin peoples; mands. decisi layed efforts frontier strong forts and a line of were, bebind which | ®0 artificial entente cordiale, The visit of the American | put it will penned in the German manner, by humoring | made to concentrate in Bosnia sufficient forces to sup- she can resist any future attempts of Italy to swallow up | Saltadron to the port of Cronstadt does not resemble, for | the institutions suited to these populations, and accue- | porta refusal if necessary. Probably for the valley of the Trent. example, the meeting of the Lnglish and French fleets | tomisfy them gradually to their new situation. The | Omer Pacha recently left the army of the Danube to ‘THE ANNIVERSARY OF THR EMPEROR'S RIRTADAT at Cherbourg, during which the French papers alone om | course is the partition of the rights of sovereignty, prsoend to that province, The Ottoman foverament has was very quietly observed. There was no demonstra. | “Spread thimselves’’ in official compliments, We, | that is, the establishment of a military s@vereign and a | however but few ti disposable. Its he tion, no enthusiasm, The Emperor passed the day | ‘® mutually shaking the right hand do not hold | civii sovereign. Compelled by circumstances, we must | Danube, which was wi ‘compariso @ concealed dagger in the left In America and i "4 its effective, cannot be entirely spared from that line. Se tn Asia, there iev'inpd. enough to prevent the two | cndeavor, to apply this system in Saxony: | natod: | There are besides the Principalitics to watch over, Servia mor bib Page les, even ina thousand years, from being crowded. from | aad Bulgaria also would not remain quiet ifs GERMANY. Even in their exterior arrangements there Mastriking | the ‘reorganisation. “of echleswig:Holstemn “I "ain | took place in the Greek provinces or 1a Pie erst ence resemblance between ths Kussians and the Americans. | afraid such a ayetem would become a source of collisions | Thus the situation of the Ottoman Fayed ia i ‘ g! i Ee try. Who can deny that the man emigrating under this | go nearly won, was irretrievably lost, and the House of Neither they nor we are the friends of the old Western | which might lead to a coolness of the annexed countries | ¢tremely critical, and we Jaw with a full knowledge that if he returns to his native | Hapsburg humbled to the dust. QUR FRANKFORT-ON-THE-MAIN CORRESPONDENCE. Europe aud the uncivilized of the other parts of | towards their new mazicrs. In reference to this point I | Sclave populations, which are ee Bs agen bya country he is hablo to military duty? Whocandeny | As I, havo already stated all the peoplo composing the “sisal the world. We have no hatred against our western | have been met with the remark, ‘We don’t wish to be. | servi come more and more , Will Bot | second-class Prussians.” But, independently of | aliow the offered by ‘would not provoke us at cach favor- | {hexe imprete-ons, this aystem possesses the inconve. | escape. oer eaattr, Saey hase Prussia’s right to entorce the law passed by her govern- ment, if in defiance of it he chooses to return and ex- Feanxrort, August 19, 1866. neighbors, and would willingly live m peace with them 4 ‘ it ‘they themsel: 5! PRUSSIAN EXACTION® ON THE ALLIES OF AUSTRIA. » able occasion. present Austrian empire, if at loggerbeads with each 1 Fi i Hs we are more powerful than they de- | nience that one of the two masters, the military sov- | chains Prnssia, however, with a view of keeping on a friendly other, are united in the hope of oue day avenging their | Prugsia goes on ransacking the weak allies of Austria '+ | sire, we divide this culpability with the growth which oreiner, comes forward from Athens a few days back that y the in- pons himself to its action ? late defeats. Tho fooling is unanimous that the peace | eft by this perfidious Power to her tender mercies, she | follows upon years of strength and power.” Tris by the | Greig who is a foreigner, Hiway coer terran influ, | habitants of aixteen vil refusing to pay a x which withdrawn to the moun- expected shortly to be signed can only be « temporary in the bands of the old soy- | had been imposed on them, aries natural tendeney of the young for the young, and by | ences remai footing with the United States government, knowing she | peace; that the past campaigns, heavy as they were, are rv cee a errr ee the not less natal inditeence of youth for age, wbich poi Senet | have aids than te ore compensa vain the Pacha, ihe Governor of the provines, bs J lores al lope of @ future, at is | (ex ‘¢ ‘Last endeavored prevent from extreme will require much assistance from it when she raises her | but the protude—the prologue, so to speak, of the great- Thus Wartemberg has been mulcted for eight million | our friendship for America, as well as the di culties 0 cue oul Rete cintds the Cateastan 2 oe measure by convoking their chiefs at the seat of govern. navy to the point it is presumable it will attain within a | est Kuropean military drama yet enacted on this con- | florins, to got rid of the Prussian invagion, and Baden, | Which exist between us in our relations with the Western | have been hitherto composed. We did not wish to | mont to come to sa endeemanding wen them These fow years, does not attempt to enforce this law in every | tinent. which mode its peace terd: " ally 11 Powers.”* make a much diminished Hanover and Saxony. We | latter replied that the tyranny of Agas bad reached end the reoulh 1¢ tak a-core pessuure, le applied Capecuh Ih 10 exittons. to nots tho avidity. with which the die: ith regard to Bavaria, which s! clipt rench. None of the French papers like it; none of the | in 1815. The portions of that country which were then | ¢xpoee themselv of some valuable tracts of ter th French people are at all enthusiastic about this alliance to Prussia have become completely fased with | treaty of Paris has devoted herself to panslavism, able tracts of territory to indemnify the | soiween the two yous powers of the West and of the | Fir‘ hurin tue portion that has preserved its autonomy | i& said to have a direct hand in the affairs Grand Duke of Hesse for his province of Oberhessen, .. ber, Dut ID the Portion ued tovatds Prussia. Forths | of Montenegro, We cannot deny her influence created by Prussia, negotintions are still going on, and | The Opinion Nationale expresses itself in this wise | reason we have now completely departed from this sys- | With the Sclave populations of the Ottoman empire, for as the realm is situated south of the forbidden line of | ®bout it:—‘Thie monstrous alliance of the most individ- | tom, which was suggested to us. We hare placed the | We were the first to call attention to it; but, we cannot ee tel, ak ha bo 16 on eo a eee val democracy with the most concentrated despotism; | éutcrests of the pepulaions abvee the interes af dynavice, | SAY 10 what extent it may have weighed in the couneije 4 mate on the French frontier, | the West ot Europe has arranged it, the West of Europe | J¢ is true that this course perhaps produces the impression | Of the Montenegrins, so far as the present claims are where Prussia will hesitate to commit hostilities, it 1s | bas prepared it. If, instead of following up the chimeri- | of injustice; but the science of politics has not the mis- | Concerned. Whatever be the case, and whether likely that the Bavarian government will escape by about the resurrection of the Latin race on | sion of Nemesis. Vengeance does not appertain to us, | any foreign influence is al t, the fact is indis~ incites te wth, ter ta eli eee n continent, we had remained in its dark | We must do what isa necessity fer the Pruarian State, and | putable that @ fever of independence soch as was never ares Se sige bigeaetesy y hful friend of the United States, which | must consequently not allow ourselves to be guided by | before seen is at present agitating all those populations Will be swallowed after an independent existence of over | counted Lalayette among the number of its founders, | any dynastic sympathy. People bave always learned to | Sgglomerated under a common oppression, and that for f thousand years; a shadow of self-government might be | ¥¢ Would not have veen obliged now to have bad such & | appreciate us even in those very countries, Hanove- | such a state of things to continue without leading fo @ left for the present, to dwindle down by and by. misunderstanding. In presence of such @ lesson, will | rans have already said to me, ‘Preserve our dynasty for | %ution which has been too long dferred, 14 impossible, bi gins bearar'y' they believe it policy to make enemies of powers which | ys; put, if that is not possible, then try at least not to = trians seize any slight indication of foreign intervention, or dissension among the great Powers. It wos amusing to watch the effect produced on the receipt of the news of the French demands for concessions, and laughable to note the lengthened visages at the intelligence that although Prassia had notified the French Emperor of her distinct refusal to allow France's rights to any territorial demands, the Emperor had calmly received the intelii- gence, and stated that on no account would the “entente cordiale existing between the two vations be: inter: rupted, Nevertheless, Austria has not yet given up the ghost, and may some day, with the aid of Remington's, Spencer's, or some other rifle, show that ber material for the American Minister to force her to make large con- cessions in these casos, which will probably be granted, and subsequentip@ead to many amendments, jf not toa total revision, of the oxtisting treaty. CASS IN POINT. Tean explain the case more clearly by giving one or two instances that have lately occurred, neither of which have yet been decided, but probably will be shortly. In the first one I shall mention, a Prussian of the age of twenty emigrates to the United States, serves one year in the army, obtains papers of naturalization and The following i# an exact (not yet published) list of | are growing. parcel out our territory, but take it entire.” As regards " The ‘ebeliion. ; ned A ire. a cir Rebellion. roturns to Prussia, all within fifieen months of lis do- | ‘an army ie a8 good as any exiting in Hurope: icay wy. | the exactions we have been submitted to from July 16, | | 400,the whole, this journal comes to the conclusion that | our allies, they have only been few, in numbers be eae = beneath addressed by the parture from that country. At the time of his return | MAKKCU-LOAI Las when the Prussians entered this haven, to August 16, viz, eat Ting FTANCe CAD dO Ot Peeeerae to be the | re, Tonks but duty no less than prudence ordalos | i habitants of Candia to the Consuls at Canca, the capl- TERPRISE, Apropos of rifles, T called yesterday, by invitation, on Count Graff Bylanat, Colonel of Artillery and President : quiet and do nothing. This, indeed, seer that we should keep our word, even to the smailest For barracks and hospital expenses, 112,500 florins; for | opinion of official and non-official journals, and that | among them. The less hesitation Prussia shows in military stores, 183,100 florins; requisitions of the | France for the time being has really nothing to do. sweeping her enemies from the map the more is she active recruiting and enrolling for the army and militia fro in progress in his native town, where he bas again J, to justify their taking up arms against the Turks: — tal, to justify 6 nnd oy August 1, 1866, up his abot enters into b f of the Commitiee appointed to report on the best changes NAPOLEON GAYD £0 BAUD SCOURING Gi WER DUAI weeping her enemies trom the map the moro is she | ‘The undersigned, representatives of the Christian pop- taken up his abode. He enters into businoss, with the | of the Commitioe appointed ta renroope, the best breech | soldiers, 166,000 florins; provisions and forace de- | The most alarming reports are in circulation about the | Bound strictly to Keep her word to her friends Jpoliteat | Uiation of Candia, met together in a general assembly of Ovident intention of remaining in Kurope, and when | jouding rile to adopt, and thecheapest and quickest man | livered nt the stores, 242,000(r. ; pay of the troope of the | Emperor's health. It ts said that the excitements and | Joyaity will have great weight. As for the constitution | the Cretans, think it their duty to make you witheases of Auostioned by the enrolling officer as to the date of his | ner of converting the rifles at present in use Into desirable | vain army one year in advance, 5,747,008 florins; for | ‘isappointments to which he and his policy have been | of the empire of F510, will only be one of the forme | the violence which has agit gp to Bac nena won Probabie return to the States, answers, with some im- | breech-loaders, From him I gained much interesting | 50 404 4. or poots, 370,000tF. ; for cigars, 100,000fr. ; for | Sublected during the past few months have developed @ | through which the problem I have just pointed out will aves, Ama thy 3 maple yh go aes ertinence, that “it "s business; “he w information on the subject. It seems that the govern tebe dette . pine ais net. disease of the brain, either a paralysis or a softening of | find its solution, I admit that im theory that constitu. | Hellenes wears et € Guuing tho Wake Pr a was no one’s business, he was a | went are now having constructed in Vienna come four | hotel bilisrun up by the officers, 70,000(r. ; supplementary | that organ, which rendere him utterly wnfitted for any | tion proceed with more strictness and consistency than | COMPANY with our brothers , ing tt coe citizen of the United States, and not answorable for his | or five thousand rifles on the Remington pattern, with | provisions, 250,000fr.; for three hundred horses, | intellectual labor. The Emperor's health hae been the | our schemes of the union, because it makes, so to xpeak, of the war of independence, without ever having been Conduct of movements toany Prussian authorities,’ The | Which they intend to arm a few regiments to ascertain | 175.000/r. subject of #0 many false statements and absurd specula- | of tho different sovereigns the subjects, the vamale of (he admitted to enjoy = re onnoael ~ yet, -y as Seides ellen: whi a how they will answer the purpose required of them. The The exactions are not yet at an end, and the officers | tions during the past few years, during which time bis | future Kmperor of Germany; but these sovereigns will be | embling in this place, we hed necor dared to wae oe who would p bly have been satisfied | great difficulty thus far epcountered has been in the | continue to live lustily and to treat their frends at our | Majesty bas been charged with almost every known and | “more disposed to con rights to an ally, afunctionary | *2ything beyond the rights whieh the protecting pot ~4 with an ov auswor, of a lie if it gave him to under. | fcanutacture of cartridges. The manufactory for small | expense. Stil all this amounts to nothing In comparicon | some unknown diseases, that 1 should be disposed to | of the union, then to an emperor aud suserain. I shail | Nad guaranteed to us by treaties and provonole, we tad ftand that it was the man’s intention to return to | afms andammunition, best known and most in use, was | with the injury inficted by the threatenod pursuance of | place the present rumors in the same category were T | have to enter more fully into the question during the de. | OBly DF sumed nd clare ave! ae eats Rae cam America, could not stand | formeriy in Prague, but that town being now cevupied | the Prussian tule. Houses and landed property are quite | not informed from a source in whieh | place great conf- | hate upon the bills I shail bave to lay before you to-day, | "ad spontane ee eae , snd his impertinence, and had him | by Prussian troops, it i# impossible to tarn the advan- | unsaleable. ce, that there ie something more than mere specula- | and the bills for the elections to the Varliament EE e ee eee Chien oa nuk proseated SuGMaaaan Sale Seized but afterwards liberated on bail, The’ man's noxt | tages found there to use atthe present moment With MOVRMENTS: OF Tan ragenas TROOPS. tion in them, and that the Emperor's nervous and intel. sagan hamble re woth 4 nwo proswated peel ea ¥ a step is to apply for protection to the , oe | much diffiealty, therefore, a new manufactory bas been | — The clouds from thetide of peace baving passed away | lectual system i# ina really dangerous condition. la ae jew | ine fot ener ommises. | After wt Bertin, Me, Wright hee cea pare American Minister | Cerablished here, and although the workmen turn ents. of troops in the direction of the Rhine | 1 saw him day before yerterday when he inade his first | French Opinion of Count Binmarck’» Policy three. months he bas “now at lat obvained trot $8 sas examined the case and opened | ou. very excellent weapons. @ /a Remington, the 1. Still the increase of the Prussian army by | vieit’ to the Empresé Charlotte of Mexico at the and Powe the Sublime Porte a negative and menacing reply nd & correspondence, the result of which is not yet decided. trouble found has been in the making of cartridges, | twenty-eight regimente, to be drawn from the annexed | Grand Hotel, and it seemed te me that he looked oy ‘ oy Paria Déoate, Angust 22) : gaa himself before us in arms to oppose force Now can any one deny lrussla’s right, under he the metal ones vsed with this riffe presenting diffeultios | provinces, ie unimpaired, and this alone will increase the | more careworn and {Il than I bad ever before seen him. ° he acts with which Prussia so eroelly re | rivh t 4 to force thit man to serve tne tore ae eter Het 18%) | in choir manufactory that the mechanics have no chance n force by 213,000 men, The order to muster the THR VMRKRS OF MEXICO, Pronches the governments of the countries she is goin Ih making the Consuls of the Christian Powers wit. ‘storm in hot army of pay | of overcoming for want of previous experience, none of | res in provision of @ French war, bas not been | He remained nearly an hour with the Empress, She | to + ate are so recent that every one knows them; | nesses of tne tho usual compensation in lieu thereof? Is it pot ev: this kind having ever been made in Austria a has b living in @ most quiet manner at the Grand | the soveregns of those countries were, like the king of n defence and a dent that when @ person, like this man for instance, The sue hae however been, thus far, very fair. RENEPITS TO THR HRSRIANS, Hotel, and maintains a# far as possible her incognito, | V'russsa and by the same title, members of tl ermanic 4 of the civilized world, for a a ae leaves his native country merely for the bene « Colonel Bylandt has led objection to metal cart The only country feally benefited by annexation to | she goes out but little, takes an occasional afternoon | Confederation; they were all united by a solemn com [signed by the representatives of the Christian populae ing by a year's Hence in the United Sta ridges, because of tb weight, and I think this objec- | Prussia ie Klectoral Heste, whose prince Wag one of the | drive in the Bois de Boulogne, and it fs now said will re- | pact, and the confederation was represented by an | tiem of Candia.) iit turns to bis former State with the intention of living | ton to them will infuem greatly h recommend. | worst specimens of this barberous race.” The ancestors | main here til the latter part of this week, when she | assembly instituted to direct and govern their* affairs, to MATL PACIEA, THR, GOWERSOM GHNERAL thors, enjoying the benefit of some of her inws, and | ing the reduction of the bor the rifle. He does not | of ihe inst Elector, though they sold their aubjects to | will go either to Brussels of Vienna, but which does not | maintain order amongst the co:federates, and in case of | feened the following proclamatwn eng LJ receiving her | iy en on while in business, ho ehould | Nke the aanal paper cartridge either, on account of its | England during the seven years and the American inde- | eeem to be yet decided. Thus far her ‘mission’! js said | becessity to cause the rights of each to be resp ected, | day:— m J) are aware, from 0 pre- be liable to all her laws, and would it pot be injudieious | lability to be damaged by damp or broken by care co ware were still his betters, at least they leit | to Lave been a comy lure, and that the French | The Diet was even invested with a sort of judicial power Ismamranre o” Canpta:——As oll are awaro, from @ pre. to press the argument that because he has been « natn. | unskiifal handling. I am not_at all confident that he hing time when it was peace, while the last Elector | covernment has not yet manifested the slightest digpost- | and, in certain determined acted tribunal | prociamation, the imperial feat the Assombiy Falized American subject he cannot be wade lable to | will report favorably on the Remington—indeed, I am | thought of nothing short of petty annoyances which were | ‘ion to incur the risk of war with the United States by | The decisions of that body perally taken by a | animity, deigned to onder that Me dt that ell Se. Talk, sory conty pes wwelined to think tbat a very slight improvement in any unbearable. Then Hanes, the firet Industrie! ation of the promises made to your government | majority of votes, and wer ‘alike pow all. the | should be enjoin cmd to ho is case, I think, very clearly points out the error | other firearm over this rifle would decide him at once in | town of the Electorate, was deprived of telegraphic com the time of the withdrawal of the troops, nor | system being acted on during filty + at once i/ | persons should be de es Dep olys oy ome eommitted by some of the statesmen and a part of the | rejecting Remington's nt, Here is a good field for | munication; the promenades d the town were cut pored to accede to what ts said tobe the principal | pleased Prussia to find out and a ganicatien | and their homes, Those w' gett mae: ge = of the United States in advocating onivereal pro. | our American inventors. Now 's the time to Come out | down through sheer wa strongly urged request of the Empress, to fur- | was worth nothing; that itwas necessary to introduce pro- | bly, and some who styled, Mwins Sat tern adeatent 0 teotion in all cases to @ ci-dovant naturalized citizen of | with a good rifle, All the world will buy 1 ‘Either | piliare, which, without nish funds for the dilapidated treasury of Maximilian. found reforms, and she made known ber projects (0 the | pretended committee, dared y vs ~ had poe howe the Statos. invent something better than the rifles now so much | npa much frequented th Certainly nothing could be more unpopular with the | Diet, It agreod with Pruvela that there was a necessity | these bemevolemt and wigwes omlers, Mae piel tee In the noxt one, which i# more Important, as it will | spoken of-—-Spencer's of Remington's—or elee come | to be pulled down. Peop' Freneh people just at present, when they think they be- | for reform, but it also said that the plan ought te be | foolish conduet cae mur cvnsere thelt comme, gerve in all probability in. bringing the matter to a } out with a substitute for the copper-covering of the cart- | gainers by any cha gin to see a prospect pf France disengaging herself en- | moditted; both sides got iritated, grew obstinate, and | for they have now cles nig nee Gefinite sottioment, the man's native State is in the ite weight and retaining its strength CRY OW MARAT. firely from what they have al eneidered & most fool- | tenaced each other; rumors of war spread throghout | local governinent will ‘coat wrong, and Prussia, to whom the State now presum. y In the Duchy of Nassau public opinion e divided; the | ish enterprise, than tbat they should be called npon to put | Germany, and all tides began to arm; thon the Diet | arms wherever it may emcounlk teak Ane Reis ably belongs will probably come to the terms asked by | Count Byiandt spoke in the highest praise of the A government, Though not agureserve, was bad enough their hands in their pockets in aid of Maximilian. Still | strove y the storm and to prescribe the mvasnres | \utriguers mnd the clials of the tee be eT of the United States trian artillery, ite efficiency under ail circumstances, the | patronized every abure, provided the same was of Kmperor himself i# loath to abandon | which it believed necessary to the maiutenance of peace, | \1s power a Bo pony ft AM ‘the age of fifteen a boy born in Hesse-Cassel emigrated | great precision of ite fire, and the rapidity with | standing. The people therefore do not object to ti entirely what has always been his pet individual entet- | Prussia thought fit to see in those stape « declaration of | any way assist oF Join ven bsilious, sed suitably pun: fo Amorica, went out West, graduated asa physician, and | which it was served than that of the Prussian arm, | change of governm: prise; but if anythi be ju from public feeling | war, assumed the offensive and suddenly invaded those | orders will be consider Wits omer hand with for a number of yeare—twenty years or forty, 1] Every one seems to concede this superiority, and it Hrs VIRTTORS. And expression of opipion, he will continue to give the | very States which she is now going to incorporate, With | ished. The loon governngeml, oh Win ollkk Niet tag ‘not sure on that point. This physician returned to | appears range to me that an arm which, during the The spas In our neighborhood profit by the re-eetb- | Empress only the coldest kind of consolation,and it | Whatever good will we are anim towards Proesia, it | protect, to the extent ite ability, ~ like a good house- } does not seem to us possible to find in their conduet the | property of peaceful myn. All pertons are cautioned to om sccount of a weakness of sight, which | American war, decided so many batth 4 played eo | Tish: , wind vielt now more numerous | hy "cimortmumegint cy afler io arrival eel Seetaieg tn Stvtons manner 1 vetone Crowards | than hitherto, particularly. "at Hambourg, where tae | wife amt soe dad invendnto couinee, put in order the | slightess motive for destroying. deepor!ing nd conte. } purne the owen oee pations srithout lstening to — ° © ‘i precept: \ eae governments of Hanover, homes of bis ve, ae ys paign in Germany. of This past cam. oy Dpere Madame Vatti and Signor Benet at s ae the Adriatic, for the ton ort Fs eet a No sherds wn warn tema mi nora te iar “a ie tyson: RE | tome coer pubtned io bom ae Wi to the fortress of Mente, ations are MNIGNOL, THE TREO. as they could, the orderg given them by the Iiet within | fami , — aa rion Dublished ia Paris—I do wot just now re | gaiag on for making it a bulwark against Fras, to be | You are to have Brignoll back in New Yopk atjout the the limits of Its rehyy and from obedience to which they Governet feomeat of Cunt, "

Other pages from this issue: