The New York Herald Newspaper, July 21, 1867, Page 7

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NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, JULY 21, 1867.—TRIPLE SHEET. things are facta which defy all contradiction, No | civies and those which Mr. Jobnson has so firmly ang ravings about Juarist savagery sud [udian monstrosity | conscientiously professed. But it is very obvious thab can get rid of any of them It would be well fur Engish | during the past two months public fecling bas beem readers to think over them a little. We ao not say tooy | warming again @ little to the President. People are Justify the execution of Maximilian. Io our eyos noth- | aps to think that be had been suilicieatly reproached \ng whatever could justify sucka deed. In our evos it | and anathematized and caricatured. It Is a land of must always seo a dark stain on Mexican republicaa- | suddea changes of opinion, particularly with regard te wm. But these things at least show (hat there was a | moa. Nowhere isa politician made or unmade #0 ee deal t bessid apon the otner side, and b and sometimes for so slight @ cause, Toe basty judg. uman nature being what it is there is nothing, per- | ment of one day is overthrown by the unreflecting opin« | steamboats, with broad aod long hurricane docks, and ' are already seriously questioning what they are MAX:MILIAN’S EXECUTION. todo for a living, and say ef shane, indved, are begin. epleudnl cabins on deck, Lave besa placed on the river i ning to reg: © depar.urd of tho P-ussmns, WO% | Lb tweon tore aud Cologne, I came up from Cobients ia a | | | however much they bated them, certainty did furnish | ougg them yostordayeund im mmmon with every one SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. teen fhe serene of meyeinonce, | Posies sonen ul be oise 93 boara experienced an additional pleasure and ™ rt ry a feet The Bim Meww sf: aed Mentone Sonnet: he ter. is indeoa trendy ‘agitated, aad { think the project | were eiehean ae os ee ee, sicclaion an will wi rat oubt to con et y lom—A Severe | different wile Derrek ae aero ceo wena, | “Yih the English tag w earri d on their prows, Politically speaking, Mayence, which is with the Bl the E: rors Prestige. ories, and offer them, rent free, to any one Who WIL | exce) of r BY THE CABLE TO JULY 20, manthiatesietesiies Panis, Joly 6, 1887, | introduce any indusicy [oto then. 1 ea feartul thas puon of Luxomburg the strongest fortified town in | Germany, occu to-day precisely the same position 2 whom | lon of the next. But Mr. Johnson has fairly recovered haps, very surprising im the fact that mei three years of civil war—and such civil war—had been | a part of his lost ground. Io his tour South, and now re Ne live on their ows account | towant P; r th The grand ceremony of the distribution of prizes, tb® | Lave rathor @ hard time beloretnn Inv the territory of ine, Gand Duchy “of Dares: | forced” by an again hore, ho bas, as @ rule, refrained from maki great Exhibition, the presence of the Sultan, and the ; ae principal revenue of the towm, amounting to ® | giadt, it was, during the existence of the Ger- | “umph have speeches; and when ho could not refuse altogether ( it an a forgotten to be merciful. it is sometimes very difficult in this country to escape ; the obligation), he has not uttered word ep eee A Point of History te be Cleared Up—Marshal | 'asonably give offeuce to any one, or that cou! Bazaine’s Military Policy. turned against him by all the ingenuity of the republle hae The Journal de Havre of July 8 has an editorial under | Seribaity’ “ie her uncon e the above caption which calle attention (o the ease with i whic the French forces, unaided by native troops of Py oadck coy ee ee ack one, eee Mexico, Foon ped Hmong Puebla, Mexico, Jalapa, Guar- | png anger and estrangement of the people which one ene a See. &eo., in tin {he | witnessed iast wintenhave hence undergone a diming. = 4 ae places and ports, and, in fact, tho | tion, and it would not take very much to raise Mr, Johae whole Mexican territory to thé Rio ¢ de, Juarez was | con toe fair clevation in the public esteem. driven fo the wall and the ompire in full possession. | “rhe road along which it hac been announced the pre- pry hejaypee pg) Fotakeo all in an incredibly short Cossion would pass on Saturday was, as | have said, lined yi , in most a, without having had to sirike | with people. The Mayor of the city sat by the side of a@ blow, It is trae the resolution of the French Rovern- | Mr. Johnson, and Mr. Seward and the staff followed im ment to abandon Mexico was the main cause of (his other carriages, It did not appear to me ‘hat Mr. Sewar@ change, but thore were circumstances conuected with was so generaiiy recognized as the President; he rode with tho cage that call for attention and examination, his hat of, and occasionally acknowledged salutes which ‘The troops of General Doual, far inétance, during theit | were unmistakably meant for him. The cheers were retrograde move towards the capital gave the liberals | pot general, but they were loud and frequont, and from some rade lessons; but those under the itamediate ordors | the windows of houses ladies waved their handkerchiefs of the marshal commanding do not avem to have acted Presidont, who repeatedly stood up im the car- with the same euergy. iage and bowed in return tor the compliment, In Bene They did not defend the provinces which they ooo. | Gow treet, where the crowd was very dense, and 50 te Pied, or which they could easily have protected with | wards the hotel, the cheering was very loud and enthusi- tte same zeal as Gencral Douai's division did. They fre. atic. The President wi vidently mot alittle touched quenuly allowed tho guerilleros to overrun the country by these kindly manifestations, He afierwards end levy ratcom money on towns but a short distance | sqi7 that he had never im his life bem of, Sometimos they were movod in an opposite direc- | so affected Just opposite the Troimont {fom fostead of in pursutt of the liberals, It seomed a8 | whero rooms bad boem secured for tho party, if they wore not to treat the latter as enorios, but wei T hoard for the first time a somewhat determind hus to lend themselves rather to the development of entor- proceeding from a knot of men who stood together Te seomed to mo that they came from the rooms of the rec Bosion Young Men's Chrtian Association, which are op- manic Con’ ‘ation, @ federal fortress, ocoupiod by coafedorace troops, the garrieon just before having consisted of tour t Prussians Same sumber of Austrian troops, When the coniedora- tion was broken up, although Prussia did not claim to Annex this portion of the duchy of Darmstadt to ber territory, sho still, az in tue caso of Luxemburg, claimed fmol Of garrisoniog the fortress with Prussian ps. She has no more right here than she had at Luxem- burg. The people of Mayence dotest the Prussians, whom they took upon as intruders and invaders upon their soil. Prussia, however, does mot pay much atten- Won to their complaints, and instead of withdrawing has Strengthened the garrison since the war to twelve thousand won, and evidentiy intends remaining here and making Mayouce her great stronghold. The gues from Luxemburg and the war material are brought over here, and the fortifications about the town are being rendered atrouger daily, In tims of war tho garrison would consist of thirt) thousand mon, and military men affirm that they coul behind the wails of the fortress, stand the assault of two hundred thousand, Although not so near the French frontier, and not m So (avorable a position as a menace to France as Lurem- burg, Mayence will afford Prussia very important ad- vantages in case of a war with France, France would like to see Prussia disfodged from this powarful fortress, and now that the Luxemburg questiou has been settled, what w to prevent a Mayence question from arising whenever France shall feel disposed and pre- pared to raise tt? a When it is raised it will mean war. France, if she opens this question, wil! not do so til che is betior pre- ‘ich were to bave been given in nis hundred a Ofiy thousand fraccs a year, FRANCE PREPARING FOR WAR. | en ine ension of the budget end the on. | 85 been collected trom the ocuens or munipa duty. Ronne—-4908 Ee levied at the city gates upon all eatables and drinkables elaught which has been made in the course ef it by some | taken in. This will have to be abolished now, as the of the opposition doputies upon the government, the | People cannot afford to pay it, nor 1s it probable they can approaching trial of the would-be assassin of the Cuar— | *ord to pay any taxes for some ttme to come. Russia Dissatisfied with the Sentence | rrrerne cea canors of miuor import, have giv tnclated Seren ak einen: in: Canin, teeanms i be better for them to belong to some great Power, 4 piace during the past few days to the one absorbing ~ p hather ve ab ° Qc of the Polish Assassin. theme the execution of Maxima te tonton teint” Tr autououny sxe oto. and dia It is now positive that on Sunday last the Emperor | only in name did they belong to Holland, The Duchy * but | 18 governed by a Chamber of Deputies, and by a Vice- was woll convinced that esa nae pind saacberide' Toy appointed bythe keine ae pon plone Prussia Choosing a New Fortress and | ea ania it an ceecncree ns | Tyince Henri, the King’s brother, who is now bere and a is to credit it, it evidently being carefully kept as secret ag be cone. the Chambers @ few days siace Kink a ‘little speech,” in which he said very little, excepttng Battle Field on the Rhine. possible, The Emperor did not feet Lie enateging we Beck rbich be, said. vere the, exuemiing ' > [epee inteiontion coremeny on anonunt of 14, am through the trying circumstances in which they have was officially Ignored on that day. The absence of the bien. Lyne = my oheeeration, Prcageangea ch a Flan ribution leve that this sentiment of loyalty 1s sufic ? hocimadlrrpew pc gpk’ a cae me pes when it | 8¢fong to deter them from wishing that they belonged to Wapoleon’s Treatment of the News | coremony excited a good deal of remark, some country which would aid them in developing their was known on Tuosday morning that the Princo de Met- | resources, and which would infuse more life and enter- from Mexico. ternich bad not been present at the Sultan’s reception on | Prise into their veins and arteries than those stolid, that day, the vague rumors which had been in circuia- Pegmantla Dutchmen have ever done. br tion began to assume form, and when on Wednesd ‘were weoms to bo a growing feeling in favor morning the Monile France, oo Tpe hate the Prussians and like the French ; How Maximilian Lived in His tomsding oll the Je feaieh were im peepesstion for the.| , Jive peatle. nave ie, Fromlant ant Iie tie Rrenellj ‘consternation, sadness and indignation hangs like a | Persons in different conditions of tife, most unqualified Ranetan Rainee palover Varia, I’have mover ween. teso 60 plainly { €*Dreasions in favor of Franco, “«Will'not tbo Prussians, depicted upon the” faces of all classes of the commu- foroed to evacuate, require — to gity, never heard them 60 forcibly put ini» words as lortrossea?’’ Lasked of a very intelligent now, since the news of the assassination of President | tradesman, “Wo will arrange that matter with France, . ‘f “ " tal ~ » opt ite the hotel, and f ft here hangs a 'y aw, English Repo: Presi 2, like aclap of | Was bis reply; and ‘sho Will bo here im a year from | pared to back up her demanda than sho was in the Gace Pos and from which there hang i ae eee entry Web ne wa caneal for iis than | HOW and want the fortress,” the significantly added. | bf Taxowborg, and Prussia, having yielded in the tatter, that the ind on With am invitation written upon it addressed we to Boston. that. Ail ihe reporia from Mexico. bad tod ws to believe One Perhaps apparent!) unimportant but really #ig- | means to nold on with bulldog tonasity to Mayonco. shal Basaine toward the Hasperer Masinaiisn cont sion |: amass BY, to apmatk in to tbo prayer meouins.". |g a‘ that Maximilian, having abdicated his pretensas to the | Diicent (aot attests this growing fesling for, France. | iho + Aayence question” thea, may in all likelitood | Targely toward the ouictiacet of Dates ot ae cad | banner is 'always seo dependent from the ovina . Mexican turone, waz on his way to Europe, Here aro 7m Luxemburg three bookstores and in the | be the one which will bo mude the pretext for atrial of | the wervice of thot Lines wore extn aes ree it , of 'k aro evidently mindiul of one : dow of each one is a life-size Jithograph of Na- | arms, which will porhap: Jo the various oth+r ones 6 postolic injunction, though they forgetothera) There FRANCE. Tho French peoplo must feet this blow keonly; for | window of cach 3, wi Porhaps settle the various oth»r on aid have been better defended by those who brought | was a temporary lull, I presume, iethe mrecant deen they know the responsibility of their government in it, | Poleon tho Third. ia have laid | Whict Me at the root of the dilferences betwoan Feauce | him to Mexico. A ead reflection preaents itself vo our | any ommborary Lull, Peggy hap dr jae An evident soreness towards the United States is grow- e doctrine which both France and Prassia have laid | and Prussia, minds as we write theso lines. Have uot those brave | tie good poople wiiist Love acy teen ee aula and Making Ready for War. ing in relation to it, even among classes who have | down of “agglomeration” is tinding favor in the eyes of ore compatriots of ours been stricken dows, perhaps, by the | at tse head of their goverameut, The eles esate tee < ; - Panis, July 20, 1867. | always becn opposed’ to the Mexican speculation, Hud | these people as it is turongh all Europe. Tt must dail The Emperor Napoleon still phonation yf buy large | it oh pent ls govervmoent, they say, Maximilian, | Win converts to it. Before it the petty powers must . ay-i r backed up by France, would have beoa firaily seated on’ | Sooner oF later disappear and become fused according to ‘aumbers of hornes for the use of the French army, and | iho theono of Mexico. And oven after his capture, the | their sympathi mighty ations, " the military workshops in France are ovortasked with | Unitod States government ought to have saved bim at | And then, perhaps, wh NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS. MAKIMILIAN’S DEATH. orders of Juarcat May they not have, ero this, paid | which they had hoped to produce. The thousands of with their lives so generous a devotion to the Priace people outside cheered vohomently, with clapping whom they would not consent to abandoa t of hands and shouting of hurrahs, and the Boston yang * * * It is especialiy affirmed that, in tho last | Christianz returned disappointed (0 the practice of forbear- tried tha othes pees fable auch as Luxemburg hes bees, shall have béen grafted %@ grand council of war at which the Mursnal was presoat, | ance, charity and brotherly love, having work, Bo ae eee rn Gh wane Exod Core. (abun the body St egrpeien tininaer Powie: tem Uapee . and at which the Emperor's Ministers, the majority of | fourte and made nothing of. Later ie the night there Effect of Napoleon’s Proparations. ell pasts toag are no longer any littio duchies and kingdoms and terri- | ‘The Church Party of Mexico Resi the high functionaries of the tate and 4 great number } was a serenade, and such persistent elamors fe the tnee OF meee ae Bat, will | Accoraiug to the Indép-ndane: Helge of July 6, even- | Of the Mexican notables assisted, Marshal Bazaine for- | Prosident to appear, that at length he consented, Ha Frangrort, July 20, 1867. The journais geuerally express great indignation, Among Page to Ars ing Shon ond fight for, then jperhai i Tuo remarkable dogres of activity noticed ia the | the dmericens ite (iat iho Mlexioan ropubiicen Kovera- | bearded olden. prophets saw tnrourl the dim viata of French military worksnops and the continued purchase | ent uo entirely indebted to us for ite existonce to-iay, the (ar off future, when “swords should be beaten Into of horses for the uso of the French army have created a | has so slighted and cast ssrte og intercession for the | Ploughsbares”’ aud the ‘nations learn war no moro. ee ies a Abeene 18 Mnnsiniel cityjon Dace, aad toape | NAS! Oot ere ee kane eneftaae eave: serningh | GUeMUMEAa lob anithe Riséasseceiba WE Tice: that war is approaching are openly expressed. reprisals, punisument or avenging will be made. ‘The | jand—Prussia Casting About for a Substi- The market for all kinds of government and other | melancholy termination of this drama will not be an in- tute for Luxemburg—Points for a Centr securities 1s extremely flat, United States five-twenty | ducement to any more Europoan speculations IN| yoosiee Kortress—The Battle Fields of = mally advised them to separate from the Emperor and | was obliged to make @ few romarka, chiefly expressive of ‘snier into negotiations with Juarez. compliments and thanks Theo Mr, Seward came fore We meroly relate facts which have boon pointed out | ward and hazarded a speech in which he said (what he to us by witnesses tn whose good faith wo are bound to | has said many times. before with as little sincerity) that Dut trust, Wo draw no inference whatever against the | tho day would come when over every portion character or conduct of the General in Chief commanding | continence the Stars and Stripes would wave, pp ny | the French army in Mexico, Nor do we seek to make him corse, thal Mexico and the British possessions would evens respousible. But we think that, in presence of the re- tually be States in the Union, Neod I add that the spoeok sults that now startle the public, itis weil to inquire | was tumultuously applauded, and that Me. Seward foe whether that General, in londing so weak asupport to | pve minutes was a popular man ? ing, the French governmont are preparing tie publica- tion of documents in order to prove that the clerical party of Mexico nro really responsible for the fute of Maximilian. We find tho following ia the Correspond- ance Bullier:—Whon the French were about to leave Mexico Maximilian was at Crapultopic, on his way to Orizaba, aitended by six bundred horse, His begguce was already at Vera Cruz, whore he was toembark. At this time, which wag at the oud of March or beginning of April, Maximilian appeared to have decided on vonds are quoted at 16%. ‘Of course the Emperor and Empreas of Austria will | Comiug War with France. abandoning the strugcte, and two Austrian ves- poietic ley mperepary ‘a bets eRFasnlG wick: as: jam In 80 burried a visit, and with to many tedious engages not now come to Paris, and all the "grand proparations Comtusrs, Prostis, Jane 29, 1867. | fuk, were anchored in the | Foadsiced of Vern | fetes, actal only" conformdiy sollh the enders. cod | manu prepen pena por ey SUaiiave oteeseed ctoe ie ENGLAND. which for peewee ere aura ak eee, Thirty miles, a Uttle more than an hour's ride from | touice thot ha was On tiie: perme ar qakiine waxes iane instructions of the French government ? ingight tnto tho character or the habits of thought o€ } ne hae leper irr petri being removed; for in. | Luxemburg, “on the banks of the blue Moselle,” the | a court oillcor wa cent to Gibraltar to receive the falten Pe ea ey Lod ap hireycl Legislatif, There the question | the people of Massachusetis. He cannot even bave din « Hy stead of gala trimmings they hav been changed into | frontier town in that direction of Rhenish Prussia, lies the | Emperor. But a cruel destiny decided otherwise. _ a lexico is soon to be the —. CR spiaigi debate, | tinetly noticed tho peculiar characteristics of the princt- i ‘Tho Reform Bill in the Honve of Lords. - 8 | = ings they 2 » When Maxirilian approached Orizaba on his way to | t© 4raw ont explanations on this nt which bears s0 | paicity, and of the villages and towns, or the rural dis Lonvox, July 20, 1867. shrouds and pall pi sean ancient and celebrated city of Trives, whose existence | vera Cruz he was mic! by the Rev, Father Fisher, who | ©sely upon delicate questions and interests of the most | tricts of the State he has seen nothing, He has, how. The tories ia the House of Lords sustain the Derby THE GERMAN QUESTION dates back to a period when Rome was not. When | socrusto have communicated ieeesation of such fm | momentous kind. TED arate serves many ieee he coanet fail to’ make Pruse’ ortance asto induce him to alter his intention, The upon Fresh from coteran bil. prabisi QUEST! ¥ iia asad sper loadinin bcseeoacn i fev a pa bishops and their lay scp- How the Emperor Lived tn Mexico. Journey to North Carotina, he must have remarked the Earl Grey opposes it, Luxemburg it was supposed that she would trans- | Horters, offered to the Hinperor, through Father Fishor, A writer in the Varis Figaro, M. d'Auvergne, who ay ‘Universal indicatious of prosperity and comfort and en ee SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. port her material and men to Treves, and | a sum of 20,000,000 piastres and an army. Father aa ipa i ol ie reeled fen 4 prion ip peneennand dice ai ae eae eee ne Fisho tw ha Drese] t joie 4 a ow 1cu! with the cheerlgasness and poverty joven THE ATTEMPT ON THE CZAR. The Prussians Mov! ishor,soome to ‘havo Fopsetented the situation in the South there establish a sirong hold, converting ‘reves, into «a second Iuxomburg, to be held as a key anda menace to France. But thie project, which undoubtedly was entertained by the Prussian govern- i Panis, Jaly 20, 1867. ment, has been abandoned, Trives, without the outlay Late Russian journals recoived here evince the utmost mr could never be sicibiision tk Ga vecai in the caso of Borezouski, | Condition and Growing Keeling in France. piesemnty aces of jal nicer It panels end the lenity of the sentence imposed upon the becawpakya: rppedarsanes from Luxemburg and respecting him, M. d'Auvergne says:—Kverybody will | as has knowa the South before its remember the portraits of this fair German, with blue | upon it. In his mind there must have arisen the plo- eyes, light-colored whiskers, and hair dl up the | tures of uncultivaied wastes, of an immense tract of middle of the forehead right down tothe neck. Not | country kept poor by « system of forced labor, of un- only bis photograpn, but his bust by Danton, resembles | thrifty imen sifting down contented with a part whem hin exceedingly, they might have gained the whole. If aever before, Desbarrolles was struck with the elegance and delicacy | here he must o thoroughly anderstood and appre of his hands, with his long and tapering fingers. He | ciated the witat differences in the disporition and hatile read in him a taste for science, an unconeern for the | of the people of the South and the people of the most favorable colors. Maximilian yielded to the femptation, returned to the capital and organ- ized the means of continuing the struggle. Ue Was supporied by Miremon and Marquez, the generals of the clerical It was arranged that Miramon should adyai meet the Juarists coming from th ‘as to defend Puebla from Portorio Ii Smaperor, with ten thousand men, to proceed iseebedo. In face of tha #1 Messin Not Pleased with the French Verdict and Sentence. Scenes on Moving Da, Around the Fortrese—J - i" no natural advantages tor this purpose, lying as it does | perior numbors of the Juarists (his was a tnost rush | Sifts of fortune, a decided tendency for illusion, atove | and he must attempted assassin of tho Czar. Ct pares Meu compeners. segne, 1 sheald way hue upon a broad plain. Upon the other aide of the Moselle Besides, the clericals did not keep their pro- | | Power and pageantry, and, above all, prodigious | qualities which srr ot chien che lodgers are treving om May day, Tho | the Dias rise steep and high, and they might, and I ua- ie, 29,000,000 plastree: wore--nok: forth: | SRT Ris wnaueasiGuaciy” Neelenea on tao coe om | ae aenne tte eounley eat of which 9 lodgers are moving en fe 7 oy etna THE BRITISH VOLUNTEERS. ‘notice to quit" which, at the iustance of France, the | 4ersandare to be strongly entrenched and fortified, Be- lear from these circumstances that she Eiperor | the Mexican empire. A.—The Paria Reposition: Maximilian's tas for science was.so strong that Le was accused of ing himself up at Chapultopec for | of New York, have been awarded the purpose of ing birds. He has teft, in fact, bee THE ViRST ® hind him some remarkable collections in natural history, which were the ouly things that the poor Arciduke od side the natural disadvantagos of Trivee for a fortified stronghold, now that it 1s distiuct!y understood that the fortress of Luxemburg is not to be demolished, the forti- fications of Tréves would be comparatively useless, took a sound view or the situation in the first mstaace, and that he only changed his rerolution to quit Mexico through the pernicione influence of that party who make even princes their instraments. Those who first invited Maximitian to Mexico retained him there; and, : London Conference gave to Prussia, is having its effect, Marien eats toes = Fup'so'iser, | and Prassia, ike poor Joo, is obliged to “nuove on.” Loxpos, ‘the review of the Royal Volunteer f for } 18 normal times, before this question of the ri,ht of oc- . classitied first in order of mortt and plaee@ cupancy was raisod, when the Urucsian gurrison was 2 2 2 ag thoy deceived him when they said that the whole | ‘ought of saving and sending to Europe at the time the ‘of Amortcan exhibitors by the ‘whioh extensive preparations nad been made, came off 7 in enlabed 4 por Luxemburg | 224 would fail entirely in their purpose, Between country awaited him as ite saviour, they likewise de. | French army took ite departure, INTERNATIONAL JURY. ‘to-day at Wimbledon, Twelve thousand men were in fireal; Prussia and France, between Trives and Met” and the The Emperor rose regularly at four o’clock in the the oly tribunal determining the e ceived him when, at the last moment, they perenaded ‘was about the dullest town of its size in the whole Ger- him thai he sight noid the country by force of arms, morning, dressing himself in a litue gray suit— line, and were reviewed by ‘his Majesty the Sultan of fair vine fields of Champagne, rise and stand, and will RINWAY PIAtOS d | ters to the hat—sat down before h: Turkey. aan endian endl tie dieuectionene ey tive certeona | CoRtinte to stand, the impregnable fortifications of Lux- githoagh fhe Drench, thecneelves: admitted thes {his wal abd oulg resigued. his pen when at ates | ya aauciot’ tMt,nend and ,8bOve all others. The precision with which the field evolutions were ow saa emburg; and with these garrisoned by a French army, ‘ ls Scat valet announced to him that his breakfast | Arts, of Paris, have, after a careful examination and come pecformeds much comy!i mented, commenced about two weeks ago. Out of jive thonsand forfiied Trivas would bo of little vatue to Prureia, Fears Cor the French in Mexico. was ready, Aftor partaking quickly of a frugal mea! he risou of al! the musica: justrumente exhibited at the Parte returned to his interrupted work; this, with an hour's xpusition, awarded to reading, one or two audiences and a council with bis Vrussian soldiers who were then here twe thousand have So Prussia has adopted another plan, ‘roves will not 2 i Et Ww it SONS pans ministers, suificed to fll up the morning. At three nei brad ighrory gto FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. ected fone eran it | be fortilied, bot stronmlygireisoned;:’ Mike; ihe’ sitting {Paris (July 7) correspondence of London Herald.} Tn spite of semi-offici ssurAnces considerable un- gran nas, eee Chee copay it Tear _becomess Tees | rortress on the French frontier, between which and | reridenisia Mexico, "The enrages whe dia ner nenecs otelock, the Emperor dined SR ueee ae ee Piston heer pid - ene om mpany wi ve; #0 is * , * i and rerooms first oor 0! im Hall, East A. Hounar ox *Cmaxcr —Loxpox, July 20—Noon.— | COmPeny after company : Tréves, Luxemburg lies about equi-distant, will also ve | '¢ lay violent bands on an Emperor allied to all the | wag atmost citizeulike when he and the Empress were at | Fouricentatscet, Now Yor ay crowned heads in Europe would, not be very likely to be swayed by mere considerations of humanity towards ure traders, It is to be hoped that they may not added tourder to plunder, but it is impossible to di that there ts good cause for the apprehensions of the public. To-day being recognized holiday “on the Stock | expected that in two months from now not a single one range, ne Donines i beng transacted rae of the brass helmets, the sight of which the peopie so [VERPOOL COTTON RKET.—LivERPOOL, July much hated, will be seen in the streets of Luxemburg. 2nd Oe ee ate Cirle” FOF middling uplands | wow thoy aro filled with soldiers in their working garb | beuonth whoso frowalng walle Wels by no mente unlike Liverroon Basaverorrs Marki Jaly | and teams of horses and oxen dragging heavy guns and SS ee Dattie between France and Prussia 20.—Breadstufls remain unchanged since noon, when the | mortars and loads of shot and shell to the railway | "'the yarréon of Trives, which before the Luxemburg Loe white California. Barley, Sn Unts, 42 Peas, 40s, oa; | station. Some of these guns are of an enormous.size and | dispute, consied of bat ures thousand men, bas now s¥ongly garrisoned with French troops, and at the first signal of war betwoen France and Prussia a race will commonce from Trives and from Metz for Luxemburg, Chapultepec. In the latter case there were usuaily three orfour priests, the F tenon of whom ~ intimate, An-* aed ei cm Se re The Emperor and Kmpress sat side by side, and UE . the gees took their seats at pleasure, each striving | To prevent or conquer disease is a grand et toro ences tht arin, who id thn howors of | SUH dena igh od yee Sey a oir with an amiability, a cordial and a good 4 . humor that charmed every ous. Three domestics only | of the eteongeey melts ae period of the, a the dinner, at the conclusion of which the eens. mi ENGLISH OPINION. KET! that creased sand, nake ae a ests smoked without ceremony some exquisite cigars Beef iy S0-—|] calbca, aad 2 if ald that hore wore in all about two || ISS er tas cones veemscuy ertiar Gad dueieieel gent | bcbicions coe puerta ee {nade at Havana expressly for the Etaperor, who tone roman, beco ed and pr AR soar Beef, 140s, Lara, Bacon, | hundred mounted or ready to bo mounted on the | soncin Prussia, {was wate hing this morning a bat- one storical Importunce ef the | seit handed them round. society. It is to prevent the evil consequences to which ent—The United States Bound to Watch ver Junrez. (From the London Times, July 8] The death of the Emperor Maximilian has, no doubt, created a for deeper impression in Karope than in the country where he suffered, for those who killed hiin had probably no idea of the pity their act would excite else- ‘The people by whom he was surrounded were a most braced, depleted. debilitated organization is Hable, despicable set, and as { should have rich to reconnt to | they are fecommmended ase summer tonis tor kote their disadvantage did I teil bn know, 1 will limit rae ‘ bet ntl es angle her f day, who might ha myself to two or three anecdotes, }ixample: The opt deat iy for years to coms Emperor had on his table a revolvor darnaycened with | tere er ae arn ee ee. werkt gold, the hi of which was of ivory, and which dis- | continually; if their hands are unemployed their brains ay day after a ceries of audiences at | busy, and hea 4 i work is as the ig t=] which the lowest io rank present was a Mexican | as muscular toil. But tone the system with Liaverroor. Propvos Marxer—] July 20— | ramparts and in the fortress, and the heaps of shot | tation drill upon the great square, and i hare never reen. P. M.—In the produce market tallow has declined 4, | and shell piled up in all the barrack yards show | ‘uch Eg damp gee cc marae ome probe ser er eo gry tle senpehann en Pe. | the extont of the preparations which had been made | troops than the French. In France little atteuvion is paid pee ram Trg standard white, 1s. $d. Clover. | bY Prussia for resisting attacks im this apparently | to the little details of military mechanism. A French dls. a impregnable fortress, and for pushing over, if need be, | Tvéiment in marching does not profess to pay much xi- weed, ¥ * | tention to step, while a well drilled Prussiau one treads Lomow Marketa —Loxpos, July 20, 3 P, M.—No. 12 | in case of war, into the rich vine lands of Champagne. be a Tod ‘0. 12 % the ground as with the feet of « single man. The | Where, or of the political importance which it would | ¥ o c pate standard ongar, S60. a; Scotch er de; linseed | Tt enld that during the two monthe befor» the meeting | French soldier has more dash than the German, and | PORE for ihemselven. fess | Ganeral, The Kezpraes,, (00, eljowed bereeit 0: be | Surety gute. coon te Usaien operesive wtaiiee, ie Mal on whale ol eon, £122.” of the London Conference Prussia threw into this | te stolid German character requires this striet disci. | > ' 1a a few years (he recent history of | To udion of honor, andthe seine Colonel Lopes | {auuot wil be experienced, for as Tastes ihe vital forsee i 4 } Sperm oil, pline and mechanical perfection to make {ts pec j- | Moxico will give @ vague and Cloudy background to the er own les jonor, an sam net Lopes | are expended will be ‘recruited and renewed Pernousum Makxer.—Loxpox, July 20.—Petro- | fortress ammunition and provisions enough to serve a | ties atailaie i the soldier Mach ateention is now } @Xecution of Maximilian, The lone figure of the galln who has just immortalized himself at Quorétaro by be- | healthful restorative. Ae a summer invigorant i te Jeum closed at Antwerp last evening at 423 francs for rrison i being given in the Prussian army to exercising the sol- | Emperor refusing to abandon his friends and his party traying his chiel volunteered one day to the Kmperor to | peasable to young and old. qandard white. ane on, acetateen ina edieroeinay ones Genk gymaneation, and on the sqenre here this after. | standing firm when those who placed bin om thetarone | #eat from Ait, bureore in, lets than a couple of hore ‘Sold everywhere. New York office 36 Dey street. Marine 1 when it had become evident that war must ensue, You | 20on are hundreds of them engaged in leaping, juinping, | “deserted the cause and calied on him to follow them, } ‘me any objec’ that might be pointed out to and this _— can well imagine that the removal of all these stores of | Vaulting, and exercising upon the horizouial bar. | botding desperately w his stronghold of Querétaro, with the intention, if driven from there, of fighting his without being detected. As for the bureau itself, Lopes <sAaParts Expesition—Ometal, — Gruso, July 20.—The steamship St, David, from | material and provisions ie no sinall job. The guas co vy | Cymnasiics are now considered an tmportan’ portion of mate wage io remove it whie the Eperct mas oat | XA-BINRENES doNPiire tern Qumaried s PRO 3 ‘ their MEERSCH AUM PIPES, AMBER, &c., and we invite , 4 y 1 a Peeedan centserts ofeention. Way to some’ over place and beginning a second de- | for hin daily walk, and to convey it to avy other apart- . i i we eee eee ‘ poh a eee ee ‘teorttens ~~ Trivee li is one of the sreat strongholds of Catholicisin | fence j anally, 3 the Moniteur save tre, betrayed oy pomecrh on Ye gor Seartarserts “nun = acm tine ‘eae haa ay hose in the ay, ae Satine Meeroehtn. intends to make entirely impregnable. in Prussia. It was bere that in 1844 the “poly ooal,”” § One Wnoen De ad raised, rewarded and intrus faaghed pyro yar yet Siena? Gee anaes Every pipe | arranted to color OF. reuare it Repairing MAIL DETAILS to JULY 9. These departing Prussians are as sour and ill-matured | Which was a seamlene garment. purporting to have been | with the Uighest functions—will | stand in, fone’ | now the extent to which oper has since pushed tuem, |v” “ as bears with sore heads, They have stayed here | Worn by our Saviour, was exhibited for the adoration of so many months, without any shadow of right | the faithtul in the magnificent Cathedral of Treves. Our special correspondence and files from Europe by | and against the’ wishes of toe inhabitants, who During this pe ed oe by no i than one steamsh land, - | bated ‘them most cordially, they nad learned | million one haw thousaad people; pilgrims who the ip Deutechiaed, contsia the following nd te tater enjoy theft eedavene position, and mow | came from alt parts of Europe, and who were permi tind teresting details of our cabie telegrams to the %h of | that they are obliged to leave, feel humiliated and die. | (0 pase in files benind the hign allar and cmt a single July, additiond! to the mail reports published in the } gusted, and m anything but a amiable humor. What. | glauca at the sanctided garment. Now it le walled in At Mexico the imperial household was placed on a tnost Address Polink & Son.—Manafacture ¢i liberal footing. The guard of the Fmporor, knowy as | fin eouine dlock Meerschaums at low prices. Sieres the Palatine Guard, consisted of forty halberdiers, | 27 John street, near Nassau, and 692 Broadway. Alse re- clothed in a splendid costume, and was tinder the com- | priring done, ' Boiling $1. mand of Count de Bombelle, friend of Maximilat Pechiape distort, the ideas of the world concerning that repnblic. Who wi ,orcire to know, anylhing of tts miserable annals jo will convect aay clear his- torical notions with the names of Santa Anna, Carera, Alvarez, Comonfort, 7% longs, Mirawon, or will know anything of benito Juarez himself, except that he com- La ad anne his infancy. ‘ ‘ : wbatcholer’s Hatr ze. Eke Mest, in the fa benind the altar, being placed in an irom box, which manded or permitted the murder of tho wduke? If, The Emperor wore ai all times the unt ‘orm of @ Mexi- : hy rmless, netantanes Sua at a Gowan i Lambeth nee oases smn Gouna point in a teaten, aud that in torn in a wooden one, Ss seems alino=t Certain, the Mexican republic is doomed | C40 general—black freek coat and gold epaulets and | °* iractory b1"itarcay street rrison of 1 % , Baron de Talleyrand, French Ambassador st $1. Pe- | YS nothing betier ants aid ie heuting hee’ te tne | itis only to be exhibited about once ina century, ae if tersburz, in bie despatches to Paris, 19 snid to «peak of | death. it Were made toe common it Wou'd jose its attraction, S List vi The London treaty required that the fortress of Lnx- | and perhaps its efiicacy, for the bare sight is wap- ‘the Gzar's often-ropeated satisfaction concerning bis visit Pe .. should be decolisuea. No one who bas not | posed to have cured many diseases of tlone. black trousers tucked imto long riding boote. Ho usually owen woro the Order of the Golden Fleece round his neck, Dr. J. H. Schenck, of Philadelphia, and Intterly the Ribbon of the Eagle, an order of his aan Co TB Kew set — own creation, together with that styled of Merit, When im this generation to be absorbed by the United States, it J8 Rot foo much to guy thay in future times the one cole- brated event which will be astociated with ite aubappy existence will be the tragedy of 1867, dese rip! 7 to the Emperor and the French nation, ee te r Travellers in Europe miss one of the most delightful | While we deplore the fate which hae befallen Mexi- | the tnstitution of this latter order ohne paper ‘akea and Confectioners. A correspondent im Paris writes to the Brilich Medical | from wich thes aye visite “ine wendertel works wats fos deg npn do ee try on th we sights, 1 they by ? ri at ‘cplalon thes bis devertainatiCy ato Preah Emperor Owe. otto ed 10 the. cory color 4 psticeans 7 ‘ u le, fi re m ation . eel P Journal — take this the strougest inland fortification yen hd r onc é ec Cad Se gy ra Bar pen Ed creditable rather to his courage | bon as that of the Legion of Honor being adopted. the world, can’ f t During the last week there has been @ good deal of | Means, and whal conquer eiee, alition | milen, between town, mituated on the crest of a» hill, is fortification, | mit# with vines, for the entire dictan We would desire to avoid anythin, Whon the arguments had been brought to aa end—the | pbilivtic, Leckettich, owing Machines. ce who, we can see, felt himself a igh banks covered to their very sam. digcussion, tt should be remembered, :ook p' elute tousions Séjestablo drop feet. ee. These serabb: ‘Wneasiness at court concerning the relapse of the £m- Napoicon into the painful eymptoms with which } 5, ; , od ‘ever th: r sntch of arti porters, refused to abandon them, } the mediam of a written correspondance—th press py last year affected. Ybe aitack of renal colic, veleg, Wie Cet ot ane oe ee ote Woot and rege cummins t “nad, growing t which is so often predaced by the | gummed on & pioce of paper three leaves of the flower of 3, Fr Qe) Colbugm, Doctor of Denta® Which the Monsieur officially described as lumbago with | risg Searly two hundred feet’ Om the other side ig | sometimes apparently npon bare rock aud peeping out aininent of supreme power, chose rather to be | the wild poppy, énd wrote beneath them thes words:— mark, 51 The Populer Dentitrice known aay Readache, has left behind further symptoms, which ley, nearly as strongly fortified by aatore of its interstices, aro the ones which furnish those a crushed than to yield. But as the choras of invective | “I ba for my order tho tint of this —— which was ‘ee ab. mamagempeing 8 TP eaneees omen o> pron Nee i wg te on ee 7 aan ther end {he entrances to the | licious wines for which the Moselle is celebrated the Lal ee loa seainst the Emperor of the aes = [pow That pv n of Honor. I my. po eg ea to the State reasons will atlow me cour elicate Brant , With its rich bouquet, the Gron- o me and in Germany, itis only fair an nt? h b. be Hes, tm order that ho may have the benebt of | {a the deawbridgen covered naga neem ces cations | Helneer, the Zeltinget, and the creat varicay of sperkiing | state sat the French, according to ihe mowccrecibie | lection of autographs of the Empress Carlotta, ““Soware of initsuons. festmons by mineral waters, Meantime, he ie for- | standing upon 106 glacis and’ looking nope wc ackes | wince which are eo well kDown, The boat leaves at sccounts, informed Maximilian in time of | their { By Didden horse exorcise and the pleasures of the tabie. 0 the morning and Cobleats is reached at se" error wn deinsiow. The French Emperor nas, THE PRESIDENT In BOSTON. Geuraud’s Orie: tal { The report of the London ax Brazilian Bank for the | ley, one sees fortress rising above fortress, escarpment | in the evening. indeed, much cause for dejection. He now knows that ls MACIOAl Sexo iriin. a led upon escarpment, one overtowerit 4 mand - Coblentz lies upon the right bank of the Ruine at ite | bis emterprise wae from firet to last = mistake; or at —— Italian Medioat Soap, curse ts (ae yee Cading. Ce, Sis of Decseaiver, 1008, chows 0: | ee eee cima GOntOd OF Rms at en ne | couhuane. with Ue Morlia, ond, seus. ot tanckiey | foam Wane hs pommitied est of blunders when, | Fngtisk Report of Mr. Johnson's Reception pM ayy UA ; \met balance te the credit of previ! and loss of only £3,806, sel lon which under the “rectification of frontiers,” when | instead of contenting himself with tho sd yy : i loses itself in am apparently inextricable labyrinth. or order in Mexico, he f and Relations to New Rugland—Secretary old depot, 458 Broadway, and Druggists. r ‘which will not allow the usual! interim dividend. “domolition’’ of this fortress would cost millions of | France Sat, Ht ae over does, oxti : le geen pt d vues’ i toe Seen ‘pourty attend feo Cow vr ‘ A geaccel evart of the Governor ant seopeiatoes of the | EON: St, Ue tne tae e atest atic en eee ee | Snrmotip ea treat of te aus the commute uate at the States of the New World. The result of the revolutions President's | ,Grever & Baker's Highest Premium “a j ‘i ‘Hudson Bay Company was helt at their houre in Fen- } jn their great wisdom left on om lagty wise loop- | is the frowning fortress of Ebrenbreit edie ta ane + gehen de ad | that bristians ” pat sehurch streot, London. Sir Ftmuand Head, Bart, pre- | hole in this connection, ‘demolition’ is a matter | DOW been placed in & thoroughiy good c Tepubiican, Such a tendency. in the march of events SaeriiyeAimense si gided. ead. which is left ‘o the discretion of the King of Holland, | Of money baring been expended upon it by the Pru: Were! ips cer deimpereee tay son ares fora Grand Dake of Luxembarg, aud he is mutorised in | goverament. @ moving tts adoption, said the falling off in certain furs | carrying it into effect to ‘consult the interests of the |. There ie no French feeling in Rheo. ‘was to be attributed to natural causes, which occurred bon PN Now the terests of the city’ are certainiy | have been ate to discover, but sat certain intervals, and the present diminution was Senere te tae te bth A being sailed pen to 4 — pceas OS + more particularly among the martens, the skin of which | being blown A in the “demetinon’* eas fortress , | to te death any encroachment of n foreign Dower upon swore very valuable, The deprension of trade and of all | Tne “demolition” will then be no demolition at all, and | their soil, and confident that in a war with ‘fnteroats in the Western cologics of North America was | Will be a perfect farce. France Praseia would come out as gloriously triumph - : : This is what it will amount to: When the last of the | Amt a# she did after the disastrous day of Sadowa. War severely felt by the company, The cession of Russian | the brags-helmeted Prussians hae marched through the | ‘hey do not want; for they are an eminently practical America to the United States, while putting an end to | gates of Luxemburg, the drawbridges which give en. | People, and thrifty and ind ae, but aaareas: the rights of the company to trate over certain lands for | ‘ance to them are to be taken up; the port-cullte at | readily be accepted and sustain pe ep eotes Werna- each one will be removed and the moat directiy im front | tive rather than abandon one inch of the soll of the ‘S consideration, would not Ye proiuctive Of any positive | of the draw bridge be filled up with eartn. It ja | Fatherland, Still, wherever I have been in Pruesia thy injury to the proprietors possible that some of the unimportant outer forts may | far I find no very amiable feeling towards France. The The Holstein ship Esther, from Altata, Mexico, arriveq | 08 taken down, but you may rest aseured that nothing | People evidently feel @ little piqued at the cold reception [Boston (June 26) Correspondence ef Londén Times.) The viele of Premdent Johns an event which everywhere and = curtosity. express = pur- pose of his ney to assist at th opening of a Freemasons’ ball, in Tremont earees, a Johnson — Seing one of es fraternity. we “i the city au jes four aceap' ine Vitetion of the Masons they sent » request that he | ‘#. eid by droga ‘would become their gui and to this proporition the i President readily consent Thea the State authori. ties considered that {t woul in them to let the chief magistrate vr: Boston without any re- cognition on their part, and so they tried, iate in the day, to get aahareof him. Thue these three bodies have found themselves contending for the price, like the three Kings of Brentford over the cél rose, and not ought not to have been misunderstood, even by one who reigned over what had once been # republic. lowest and moet material mankind have their ideals, and a people who have all their lives boen told to pride themeelres on republican institutions, on the poeression equality, and on the absence of orders and titles, are likely to acquiesce in the prerogatives or delight in of monarcby. But it is just to say that the French, whea they found that the restoration of the Amorican power enavled the Juarists to continue the war, or rather to renew it, and tbat they themeeives hope to maintain their porition, do seem to have urged — the Archduke the abandonment of his enterprise. It would be well if the French government could tate how far this had bees done officially; buteven if no such communication passed between Paris aod Mex- ico it i# certain that the ebief French officers believed and are to thie city was her rise to much er, OF any ott Praesia, that I people reem on + Parisiang f Praesia, and the; we dl it machines in competition for Pam, Haga, J ty eum Nee | Sra btn aoa wha woe | uy bea eat ho ae ne Png ei | sod ha Mason, herentaed, muna | nae aaa Taatceaurcraca,drae man | foie skewer eal ce dine aware Ree scan doltars for Kngland, aud {woa'y thousand for Ham. | the strongest inland fortification in Purope. ceme 10 an undersignding, there was almost an open | Gay at the mercy of his enemies, The war which bad | 1, "sng Freemasons the President of right The exact wor ttvg of the award ls as fol vy one See deed OY ect ee 1 a a etireiee neers | Tot wore: HOW | Tre peror pubrated. bis proclamation agatoet armed | fMacecber were the rt 10 ‘ask him but the city an a . than wo 80 State have contri: to steal much of hit The Disciplinary Tribunal of Prussia bas fined Herr | thing” pF ener enmagoy that higery py ‘arvega well The general belief, indeed, is that war will come next | bande, Tevived through the’ srmpathy end support of seeunte under the circumstances, and they have unde- Dromoteur d ‘Lasker one hundred thalors for # specc’ wade by him | marked natural channels, that the Grand Duchy of Of thie there is, I think. every probabinty, | the Americans; and the French officers perceived that it acceded each day in wearing him out, and ‘Oficial ‘list of those who Luxemburg must sooner or inter, all conferences | The diplomatic mont of the 1ith of May has by | would be a coptest between @ party in Mexico isolated ing him fain to withdraw to his own room a soem | Legon of Honcr, a8 40 the Chaindor of Deputies. and gnarantess of trality ' to the con. | Mo meane d*siroyed the facts which created the antag. | from all help ani ‘he opposite party fighting under the | Sy e'Couid make the harbor of the hotel. Mons. Eli The Council of Citizens of Bremen bas eanctioned tbe | trary notwithstanding, form a ion of either | oniam of france and Prussia, It has eimpiy amothered | auspices of the American government and drawing con~ success of the visit bas been, f think, « sw q@uilitary convention with russ French or Prassian territory. co and Prone | & match which throatened s conflagration. Hut ail the | Smual resources from American soi, Cahappliz. Maxt: | to every one concerned. ‘The antagoniem between é prey Meteo sia, each want it, and each need it as the safeguard of their | inflammable ma‘oriale remain and the fret spar oo ey yop gap i lon those | ident Johnson's policy and New ‘rom thie tt will be soon that the medal awarded te = re Correspondence publishes the following | own and the key to the other's frontier. France and | Aiy time set fire to half the continent, fe whom he knew the usu Oo eee acavor bia | #0 6t0at heretofore as to render very friendly relations | wheeler ¢ Wilton was fore toirnntete tae juished was resorved. He elected to stay and fight for bie {brone with the inen Who placed him on it, and whom hie fi would consign to déath. The French limperor, the {f responsible for Maximilian’s ruined career, is not immediately Le gr bye for bis execution, Among the roproaches whic! despatch from Hanover: — ’ Prasei Queen Amolic has resolved to jeat 4s im confusion at the Castle of Mari for her departure. Her Majost; mext few days, her destination bei each hope to have it, and both understand that the country. All | the presout patched up peace is not of long duration, | American Steamboat Models on the Rhine= arg in preparation pny Bh great problems, anennien malt ene The Fortified Town of Mayence—Distike to — ie | or inter be calved ty the sword. Each coveting Luxem- ee almost impossible. If anywhere in the country the | for the sewing machine, Presideot might naturally gs to find bitter and un- ————$—_____. rolenting enemies it is here. | was, therefore, astonished, Prizes © , estos etm alt i ace Wt Roney Se aa i every one else was, when on Saturday | roformat iou give: Prassiase=The Wi sflernoon tens of thousands of persons turned out into | ers wil, yicadh touinn Town=A Now the Mexican expedi bas LSE, 1985, Gi h atcee?, 185 Robinson street, The local Liberal Astociation of Bristol (Eagland) held | VOTE, cach Neplag te hoeress it neither paryy, there. Frances | brought on the imperial name this last indignity ought a <2 sont = é @ mecting to choose & candidate for the seat which it | |iberal conneuciien — the King, Grand Duke, will “teva einer ceed country, ated “4 Petey sand, at Mie Teception, and C 3 we hy v Porites Qactal Drawe ‘ras thought possible Sir Morton Peto would resign owing | give to his privilege of ‘consulting the interests of the Marewce, June 4, 1867. | gwait the course of events, and the changes which will | Das since chee. "came eamronen t ae O0., Boravors, 18 Wall atest, %, Te to his bankruptcy; but as there appeared two arpirante | “ity” i the matter of the demolition of the fortress. The world does move, and American improvemente oo sod | the Lg tg Many | Siapeerey, aay, Pope Y depend upon it for the honor—viz., the Mayor of Bristol and Mr. means esr the fast of Edward Bowring—it was decided, im order to avoid a | but that this fortress and town are yet desti B Myo eg ae who have thus abu: the rights of victory. Only ons ernment has now apy duties to perform towards ico, The United jublio =—acts, yet shower every = sie / and inventions reach even to the quiet banke of the mark of hospitality and kindness ypon him during the a 4 Howe, aching £52 pate Ses lay ® | Rbine and manifest thomselres among these slow peo- time he is their guest, It may be anid that the Ameri- Suing mashes Pr Sad eletdirar, Re tere States, havin Jwarea and his partisans again in division in the liberal party, to requent sir Morton Peto | Byttn' Ss must some botwoaa Frames and Presse 7 | ple, bub litle inclined to novelty and ranovation. Prom | pacer’ are. bound t t-- that the rule cenbluhes ¢w meee | Cat People Neoesiany et ther senate, thett Despair _ to retain his seat for the present, ‘The “interest of the city’ will require t should sup- | the time that the magnificent, vine-hedged, easteilated | "42 #iow some rerpect to humanity and morality, and so forth; but there are stormy times, Party fealit age Oe and ,Orqgmontal Males 4 movement 14 on foot to obtain & university for | pose come very active measures to enable the inhabitants | Ring has been navigated by steamboats to within a A tow Weil hee dn Sea oe en oe 10 cae arenes ee re ‘dood streok i ‘Wales, the basis of which shall be entirely treo from all | which occupied the town. Ths Prusslans, indedt, sines | FW Weeks past the boats have beon of the most inole. (From tho London (‘voning) Star, Jaly 0.) here an ‘8 favorable greeting for the Fe: ‘ political, sectarian and party influences. A public meet. | their sole ocou ation, are gant and entirely inappropriate deseription, clumsy and * * * Then Maximilian the unfortunate de- | As it ts, republicans, a8 a Class, be Mes & ing has been held in support of the project, and it is | ® million of dollars a year slow, with but little room for promenading, and with | Crees of which we pubiiab « ‘and the Paris | whose official juions compelled them Antonded to obtain £00,000 for *ho entpbilshment of the | Bix" Trundred Luxemburg. soldiers “There. %jy WA, | cabins below, Within the past month two fine boats university, 4 built exectiy after the model of qur Missiasing) fi ncipal Juarist geubrais, aud commended the strong He terere poljor of the pow Keperor, Now, these 5 : : : : Fs aride private inge and society ase whol pave bes Kew

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