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NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1867.—TRIPLE SHERY. 4 i o s ABR UN ournal Bp oque has | ment from New York, o sudden rise tn | taritt is, as it alway been, for protection | ‘arms—and wore received bz Syne Sotimt, nit Deviher | Cooling whieh with ongpeat onimenty Rehwoen, thes gaits tees toe Sears, Cat erat rea fh tor] tae Premtints 2O Boil, Vtlee’ Ren nonead tin peas at | Sar all’ ab tan’ seneaen, anise “autiee toms tagt Aud about ten of bis ohiet Ho ia quite tall and’ uatio us for gouerations to i E U Rr fe) P ® Gay for baving given. publicity (0 tho rumors referred {een aeine tains mere ven, Wee teoaey | sp lens ofiee ey Sees ae eesseeees | Ce eae sestloas ore, sopulsive oxpseesien.end CIVILIZATION 18 CHINA. Apna Meo cpening of Sele letter There is not much to report pan tn connection | inland revense, Am to Amencan patriousm | gown, plain, and aif way dowa to his bare ~~ ~~ ace aaa with tredo mews rince the Ceopetele at - last lotver, | would at apy time Reowatnaes ‘acquiescence in an ia- jon is head wes & dark turban, while bis terday, | come tax, or sufficient system of stamp duties, But | feet were bare and without even the usual sandals. Hig per for Write of Proptncie tows | protection was) maintained ia realty at an engine of | brother is 8 fino looking, bright boy of about fourteen, ape Ses Mossor Tuna a Nesieoes Bone” a ~ - shillings per quarter wory money, while floating cargoes | Siateand an instrument of empire whereby the Nor'h could | and wore « dark, Pee ee ce bee The Foochow (China) Advertiser translates from the SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. realized futl currencies. | Core of all other descri yan pera tty talons = ee South. eee en reaching around and down to Pekin Gasaie an lsaperial odich, Im which the Emperor ——— dear, The London ave 0:— 0 ercial was sel Tho Revolutionary Disturbances In Florence= quarter; barley, 434 Odt'onta, 28m, 8d.” | ou erlot politcal ‘and military genius of the South and lamenting the prevale of drow aghh,_direots (Bossures Threatening Pop jem x- ‘The fallin cotton at the close of last week caused a at the higher soctal nce of the Leper pend = ng tensive Military Preparations of the Gev- | good deal of attention to be directed to this staple, as the eodiossly high tariff was simply a black mail sul has memorialized tne ia the beaevolent insti. Tl Speculators bought to a certai: xtent, which bad (he | mitted to by the Southern and Western States, The crament—Hayonot Charge by the Natlonal | ioc of raising p he frat portion of the spirit of thous older tariffs survives, and a scale of dutioe fone, recommending reform in the benevolent ins i tt al . 4 wi ons Sennen Formnor, Sept. 26, 1367. Mienaty a. nv nike ‘thea that of olay aeee po Ble foie for ~ Seetection of ‘Americad pores, ik of amicable and friendly relations be- Emmpe coe Remnss | a ior canes us. The ‘At the time of despatching my letter yesterday the | can declining a farthing per pound im tho middle quali- | tudustry. The result ta that American industry sinks | tween the countries was tame, formal and only un- y more thas r) iT protect ‘correspondent pointed | derstood through an interpreter, The visit, which was | [Usily deprived of the rain so grateful to the c popular agitation had recommenced, and there appeared | t!¢t. pies fey eral tg anette ous the pape the pel age " short and occupied less than an hour, ended by a treat | aud that though our prayers for it Deon fr qieat it was sent up to Mark quantities, and obtained ITALY. tnouty todora Revolutionary Excitement in the Italian Cities. Bayonet Charges of the MWational Guard in Florence. fully five pe to colfee and rose flavored ‘king i | 894 earnest, yet no copious showers have rew . be ry probability that the scenes of Tuesday t enough to create failure and com- ‘A New York journal undertakes to reply, and does so a Y sherbet, While drinking Political Rumors in Paris and Wild 9 ‘f gales with greater violence and moro mis ine prac bonne ny tuong tho circle engaged im | by abuslng free trade, by charging upon it everything | the ok ier eee eee of he in yy ve performed aad a hes eocaekann But the overpowering military tho trado, and there are very discouraging reports from ber ap or Cerone ay pagers yy Saperirnet he bat pau or with Sane most confdent air thi ae ef Heaven. ow the chievous con Liverpool, and by assert x rade canno! ages e X the Bourse. force displayed by the government overawed Garibaldi’s | “Wo yhail be going in for technical or trade education | conalstently, and is, therefore, a hollow hypooricy. Our vy 3 pode aed Exeltement on sympathizers and prevented excosses which certainly | In this countey, t oxpect, after Parliament meets, a4 | agricultural laborers work like slaves for a pittance, our ence which Syad try, | aay jrsguedlar yin ia ate, The | John Bull bas now become thoroughly aroused to the | women and children mako horseshoe nalis, or traverse that Syud Turkee | hae Kled oy Regge ges inotonannnnnnnn Garibaldi himself would be the firat to reprobate, extent of the growth of foreign competition, the tacrease | the country in gangs such as would disgrace the king- nd expected to-night, a tl fF r - ‘ead im the towa, while the party were at the aspect of Florence was that of acity in a state of sieg® | of which is laid to the door of deficient education on the | dom of Dahomey. Our shipyards are idle, our work. | was spr f + 3 - art of our factory managers and operatives, houses full, and the most repulsive and incessant toil | palace, and the people are wild with exciioment, Thit Soon after: Saeki ame aleey. sne-cavalry patrols recon. | + Toe wt recolves-wages just above starvation pomt. The English British Commerce and England's fa his Majest; - Pate earth, his 7 rects the high provincial authorities to take measu: 4 Pow. 7 menced their rounds, and strong deiachments of laborer pines for protection; the Irish peasant for any pos- | p* nd perfumes in Arabia, will probably be the Power of Production, troops were brought out and posted in various parts of sible conepe from the alicziaace and laws that keep him | scone of deadly strife soon, perhaps to-night. The nar- thon cane gh nd ‘aouneion = Rove the town, There was a batiallion of the line under LOUIS KOSSUTH. poor and degraded. | Meauwbile, when the pinch cores, | 107 street oe area ce ne nostoes, “The deory | 1@C% Agata, the families of the uidiers who are slain tm Boe nant rade, “ rade, t 5 arena ‘between the. Duomo waagiibe Baptistery of St. a ae see tctinee knowuhat it &%, and probably does not eareto | to wost of thelr Nouges are open, and some resurresied | battle, and who give up thatt lives for their count John, another bofore the Miststry’ of the Interior | Ht» Alleged Complicity with Ryssia< Know, Ib ig tats @mancipaisd from all restrictions | weapon of warfare is brought out and being prepared, | © toa miserably poor, and are still nore of and @ third before the Pitti Palace, At tho Interview with Napoleor. ~at of all the | old guns of antiquated appearance are being fixed up, | compassion. His eG therefore, orders the (From the Naplo, of Posth, Sept. 23.) peep eter that bad ee ere obo parton | old swords, cuttasses, pikes, spears, knivos and dirks of | foy# 400 governors of the various provinces to Palazzo Vecchio the National Guard wore replaced by | On the Ist of August, 1849, Batthyany{ and Szemere | Against anotuer, ove class against another or one nailon | Various Kiadw apet out; covered wish rast, Whh | OF esos at galaltg = ltglinoed! to asrioe. seme aieeen: scar Lee St a bersaglieri, while in tho colonnades of the UMzi Gallery, | arrived at Nyiradom: to proceed to Ape, by order of the | against another, As it is in the interest of common hu- Many | of keeping them alive, Moreover, thougirit ts punish+ C\AL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD, close by, thore wore four hundred mom of the same | Eireaie'mariiy trom the accror kaente he, had ine | MANY zthak Is, of all the world—ihat the destitute, | of the tuereanle ate sending thelr speck able by Taw for people to caat aoray of drown cheit obtld. SPECI a oe corps under arms, The courtyards of many of the great | oamp of the latter, that that goneral sleke pages Renata be batt 19 peiey tee eee sen bers od v4 in hoe: Seog, sd Sane jet as it had begun negotia- | shoitd not be worked above their strength or left with- | while others are packing rs Bagi > palaces in Florence wore also filled with troops, National | tion# with the Russias, This explains why he took | Su, education: that women and girls should not be made | are running off with the bundles to some of the fortifica- no hand ata ot ee be eontiae tinea poet Guardsmen and police; and, in ordor that no arm of the | {2t? bis own bands the peace negotiations, which he | mero beasts of burden or reduced to eavagery—theso | tions above the city on the rocks, Business is gua- more may be received within their hospitable wails. sar. tid ayia intrasted to the (wo Miniaters—Badihyanyi and Sromere, n or not free. Little | peuded, and many of the people, seem to expect the ’ “ Carty are not questions af urade at all, free or not thermore, in disturbed districts there are service should be wanting, the government Brought into | The basis of Koanuth’s negotiations was neilker more wor | ay Monadnock" seems to be aware, he is himself inter. | worst, During several days past all.the chief men and ee fobs ant caaticed ehadinan. oe pH aif Florence yesterday morning m battery of-ertiliery. They. | {4s than ts affer of the Hungarian oraen to Rusria. Tho | ested in the maintenance of human nature at ite merchanis have been wearing the long aor Soe aes cues te temporary rest-houses,. had the prudeat forbearance, however, not to parade the |: otioay with harohat Takionich, whens on {ha Sth of geo ay Gas thee aphocoee poe ae Agbi in a momest tae’ hassaren bere tm ee city |. orders the local ° ‘authorities te } latter through the city. The people were already irri-’| Augudt, 1849, in the house of the Bishop Brom Y | the -asntimonts of . benevolouce without. having it | some are opposed to Syud Selim, but 1 have been fg eed Leprers ps ae eae Re tatod yesterday by the offensive prominence given to ype Rrra ae fry ne cin gait np poet imputed to them that they do it on protective —thas peng hele ipeil tee or numbers. excite. | fr and be rea yy eel | y 4 ry crease » M., the military element, All tho measures I have men- | forine oxohange of the Ru perigee s pe cane ae Bot . 4 is that Byud Turkee, with bis army, bas made a balt, pect this, tioned above wero taken previous to any romowal of dis- | the Hungarians. That no free trade that has produced the scandals which protec- | only three miles from the city. Bri { must close, as the eee turbances yesterday evening. The National Guard, aa I | Paskievitsch, did not offer tl tion, this writer says, is invoked in vain to witigate? | steamer to Bombay sails in an sour, and tbe mail is THE COTTON SUPPLY. have already informed you, was called out by a procia- Russian dynasty, but its purport was to induce Russia to | They all oxisted, far ‘worse, in the days of protection, | being made up. . make a separate peace with Hungary, Those negotiati They are the evils of « crowded country. The popula- mation from the Mayor yesterday morning, and during | w: 7 ole cia i But ce the ae bp aeoe Mi tion of these isles has doubled since the beginning of the ‘The English Report. the day two drummers went through the streets beating | ©! tbyanyi sent ® second not use century, but it is impossible to rescue an acre from the be — the geverala and followed? by 4 police olcer aud a | Tal. That note was submitted to General Posltenberg, | Strroacdeng seas ‘except generally at an oxtravagant | _ 72 Bombay Gasdie, of the ath of September, says sergeant with bis guard, in ordor to refrosh the 4 ries or stimulate the patriotism of those who bad not | Captain Joseph Bethien, and a dot Feaponded to the Mayor's appeal. the Nicholas regiment," While the latter w 3 Political Cannrds from BlarritzThe Public Mind Unhealthy and a Dangereus Excite- ment=The Great Issues which Hang on Na- “poleon’s Lito—The Revalatiennry Grounds of the City=Muntcipal [mprovenrente A the ArtePlal Sewerage Werks—The Chame ‘pngne ‘Frade and Supply. Panrs, Oct. 4, 1867. The various rumors of # political and personal deacrip- tion which have kept Paris so long in « state of doubt and dread came to @ culmination on Wednesday last, and threw the city into such a state of confusion as it has not seen or felt for many a day, Men ran up and down the streets with elongated countenances, each consulting the face of all others he met, hoping to find either confirmation or denial of the ter- rible ramora that were flying, like flocks of canard: over Paria, At the Bourse, which was the centre whore all the terrible stories concentrated, there was great fright. Renters went down sixty-five centimes, and all other government securities fell in proportion, and Seneral desire for a stampede seemed to seize upon the sollers. Tho stories in circulation, and to which thou- sands of people gave their firm belief, were of the most ‘horrible description. The Emperor had suddenly be come raving—stark mad, and was obliged to be straight- jacketed and kept a close prisoner in the Villa Eugénie at Biarritz, He had received an apoplectic stroke, and was speechices and dying, At the same time, General Fieury, after an interview with Bismarok, at Berlin, the London Herald, Oct, 4.) emo. | Who was accompanied by Colonel (ge tal gd ag cost, oreven to reclaim an acre without risk of loss, | We learn by the arrival in port yoatorday of the United Mr. Taylor, Britisn Consul for Kurdistan, in bis report ol are The land wou’t employ all, and the surplus must do | States steamor Iroquois, Earl English commander, from | for 1866, writes as fottows of the cultivation of cotton im vi what they can. America, on the contrary, has millions 3 that province:—10,000 maunds only wore produced last About soven o'clock a very largo crowd collected in | ‘ng to the Russian general’s quarters, a ministerial | Gpon millions of the beat laud In tho world to draw upon | Muses which port she left on the 23d ult, one day | year, of which 60,000 maunds, valne £40,000, were the Piazza Signoria and raised the usual shouts of Viva | Councillor replaced the others at Arad, on tho 10:h | ag fastas she wantsthem, She has ail the charm of | /ater than the steamer Comorin, that the greatest con- | exported to interior home provinces further north. ag 4 Garibaldi ! Fuori Garibaldi! Abasso governo! This eet iase a was drawn under the presi- | novoity, ay well aa, ite more golld advantages Till her sternation prevailed in thatcity in consequence of the pear pg (rest roe Seay ies * Sipe assemblage was more numerous than any I observed on 4 citizens fell out with one another in the mere excors of done, Tuesday evenin; and composed of ore rospectabie | _ In that third note Kossuth formerly offered the Hun- youthful energy and the more exuberauce of wealth | ©*Pected attack by Syud Turkeo, The inhabitants were | and the great value of the new colony at Ras-ol- Ain as @ class of men. yes Procosded down the Via Calzaiuoli, | garian crown to the Russian dynasty, on the basis of the | and power, they had no need of an army to | busily engaged in concealing the valuables and burying | means of encouraging and developing its culture. The their numbers swelling as they wont along. No mischief | idea of secunda geniture, Pooltenberg had not yet re- | call an army or of a fleet to call a ficot, It is folly, | their money and treasures, and as many as could escape | Fich soil about the old town and along the river Kha- of auy kind was attempted. Nervous citizens may | turaed, and it bad beon decided to send an embasay to | if not mockery, to compare such a country with Eng- | had fled from the place. Our two war steamers were | Door has not been turned since Tamerlane destroyed the have felt some alarm at the formidable shouts of the | Conclude the peace. The person chosen by Kossuth | tand, as if the circomstances were equal and laws re- | still in the port, ready to take off the British residents if | site inthe ninth century. The ground for miles about, multitude, but they suffered no other ill. This assem. | for that mission was Peter Csenovica, fapid course | sponsible for the difference, A septuagenarian may be all probably hoar by our next advices | Uneocumbered by stones or elevations, checkered by lage passed on to the Duomo, where a strong body of | Of events brought the negotiations to a id, Komeny, | healthy and strong for bis years; bis activity of mind maum and murderer of bis father, | 2umerous cross-cuts, deni & former extensive sys troops was stationed, who, howerer, remained passive, | i the same article published by the Napl», asserls | and body may speak well for the moderation of his diet, been defeated by his uncle, | tem of irrigation, sloping gon ‘away from the Knaboor lwaving the task of dispersing the people to the civil | ther when he met Kossuth, a Switzerland, they | tho regularity of bie habite and the calmocss of his | Syud Turkee, and made to share the 8 ‘that he | to the southeast, is varied wild prairie of fine power. A police officer accordingly made the usual | both spoko about the Bact sdininisiration, aud | tempo What would be thought of 4 young man of | iaiieted on his own kinsman, and which is only too well | and bright flowers, completely. ander the natural tn- summons, which after a few minutos was obeyed, and | Kossuth told him thai Teleky was going to Zurich, | twenty, of remarkable strength and starcre, who | meried in his case, sy Be pion eo eget tes a eae amir, the crowd gradually dispersed with loud shouta of Viyg | Where the diplomatisis were just negotiating tho | taunted the old gentleman with his inability to carry @ thto It, &nd sumerous ott a from es Gartoaidi, The evening was not, however, to pess off hae The conversation naturally turned upon the | sack of corn, to throw a cricket ball a hundred yards, to of Mount Masius, For — eens region with such comparative tranquillity, Another assem. | {talian war, Kossuth said to him that the frst} rine mile in five minutes, to leap over his own height, THE FRENCH IN ASIA. been unavailable for agriculture; {bo worthless Sheniy necessary. that fe asurpit bad quittcd him in anger, The French fleet was all | biag very rough mob {n fact—~gathered in the Via del | time he paid a visit to the Emperor Napoleon at Villa- | 9 walk twenty miles in @ day, to eat a dish of raw fruit Arabs, in the absence of & controlling government, ready to eail from Toulon for Civita Vecohia, and the | Proconsolo about balf-past seven o'clock, and made for | {ranca some one was already waiting in the ante-room, | org quart of oats without indigestion? Should the old sas aaa plete over it % bch res forcing the unwilling Romans were on the point of ristn the National Bank, which, however, they found very | but that Kossuth had the honor to be received the first. | gontieman even confeas himself unequal to such feats, | Steady Marc! expatriation of aa fndueuione ry, mpable te ie strongly guarded, much too strongly to allow of any coup | It was only after bis interview with Napoleon III. that | that would be no disparagement of the habits and plan| I comply with thelr exorritant stinguishi ‘These were some of the principal ramors which occu. pied the Bourse, and spread through the city on Wedni day. The Moniteur took them ao much to heart that, in its issue of Thursday morning, the following note ap- a de matn, They then visited tho Treasury, but here also | he learned who was the person who had waited till his hfe which have made him what he is—healthy for requisitions. The site has lately bee the government had taken similar precautions, and the | reception in the ante-room; it was the King of Italy. | nis time of life, strong for physical frame, with 6 | and Burmah in Danger. location of the immigrant Tchetchens Wei) Russia, baffled populace, in very bad hamor, set out to make | Then Kossuth went on telling that a senator had been | cood heart aud with duly cultivated mental powers, {From the Bombay A 16.) Barracks have been built, the —_ concilisted; while a demonstration of dis; ure before the headquarters | Sttached to person, and that that senator was M. ‘The ting colony in cf Gazette, of whiod all ane the nucleus of a new town and advanced LA go | of the National Guard in Via Maggio, on the south side | Pietri. He also told that the Emperor Napoleon had Cochin China, Freni lishment are fixed, to curb Arab encroachment eee ‘ re spoken to him of Lussin-Piocolo, and asked if they would men are so proud, and which with the isiand of New | insure immunity to proprietary natives who have’ i ¥ peared Raniccy nich bare: bese Telly cinkratictes” | Fee Ara ie reneh she cans Coalts DeMgeAnay: | Trice coal eauaee aE aS Ce ASIA. Caledonia and few spews of Yerdure in the ‘Pacldo | ingure imm Having vaited tue apot I can speak with oad have been put Inetreaiation in Paris, and r polled to. make, 8 Jeng detour, belng several visible on the best atlases, constitute all P 9, Particularly | times diverted from their course yy strong detachments ‘emeny remembers als®@28hat the Emperor Na- Sed ocean, ay'be digut th ie confidence; yet, as eye witnesses of its pristine on the Bourse, to-day, Itis deplorable that the public | of troops posted on different streets. These they eluded, | poleon had informed Kossuth of the menacing position that may be dignified with the name of the French em- | and high importance are better advocates than tt of Pru ie a member of the SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. pire i ve net bes eee perpen!) nhoreasion of | travellers, who see only the long ranges of mounds ft erman Confederatton if the war extended to the coun- “ as, rr now marking the site surrounded by rich desert prairies ee pee imal ponies erties eens = trieg belonging to the confederation, “I will not deny," { The United States Steamer Iroquois at Bom- | General jubilant, and will make the bosom of the French | for miles, I'will let thom speak. for themecives abt and these were flanked by a company of regular troops, | Conttnues Kemeny, “that Kossuth did not ask guaran-| bay From Muscat—City Scei people sweil with joy. It sooms that the little patch of | Ighag-el-Istakharee, in his ‘Kitab-el-Agaleem,”” saysi— The mob for some time contented themselves with | tees for those who would rise iu arms if acoup were to} BP Civil. War Engag! subject terri in Cochin China, hitherto under the | «Its principal action is cotton, and eredit can be influenced by such manceuvres, The gov- ernment immediatety requested the judicial authoritios to commence an investigation for the purpose of dis- covering the authors of these false statementa,”? The consternation which pervaded Paris during Wed- ane @t length crossed the Arno and reached the Via | the King of Prussia could assume prod for A minati doubled in size kt I vaded hooting, hissing, yelling, by way of expressing their dia- | €ucceed on the confines of Dalmatia; but Kossuth, in| doos, Arabs and Negroes—American doi lon of France, has been actually twenty tursuke (sixty miles) on the Khaboor there Pronabiy venting ufae'ng foustattar wer ones actly | Rlemure, Prewaty ti acer in comunnd tammooed | his taro, will Rot ale, deny that ihe Emperor ofthe | Srerce=Ualted Staten Onicers at Court. Buings have been brought’ thereby under. the fisperiat | {,ijagea and cultivated lands; among the most celebrated J ;, but to i — wi ona very sinall’ scale of what will 'be witnessed when | stones dangerouily wounding Ons soldier wad intieriog | Prussia should think of attacking me; you would. also Bounsy, India, Eept. 4, 1801. | away. bis petty increase of the Freneb possssaions | road being ‘ined with vilinges on the banks of the Kia the time eomes—as, in tho order of nature, it must | sevoro hurts upon threo others, ‘They were about tocol, | Put Russia upon my back.’’? The United States steamer Iroquois, commander Earl | Which Announced with great pomp and | ‘poor; and between Arban and Midjol, one da} cote; sooner oF later—when the Emperor's’ ‘golden | lect the materials for a second discharge, when & + day’s jou! English, arrived at this port last evening from Muscat, | Slemnity by Admiral Do La Grandiere, is utterly insig- | aii the land is cultivated: There are’ vi ‘pon wt bowl’ shall be broken; and, instead of its being a ia- icant ia every sense except as indicating the drift of ‘Taban wentlon ang levolont rumor for stack jobbing purposes, the truth ere dager Fleer li gar eth THE EASTERN QUESTION Arabia. The ofcers and crew are all well on board. | French policy iu the Eastora. seas (already well enougn | 60% Pag Bae there ype sear pair y rede Se Nae irik ek Fees Teak We RA DOoE Enemy tobe muader: betere’ the, ted als QUESTION. This morning at eight A. M. she fired a national salute of | Understood), and giving a further promise that the naval procured.’ “Arba is the depot % custom mouse, ‘e dead.’ Hopes of peace, quiet, prosperity, ban; che or: . station which France has secured within the last fi wih’ tho Preach people from thie dilapidated lite ota | Bo there, was, fortunately,» no, lone of 6 | eusstan Opinion of the American Alliance | ‘¥etty-oue guns, which was promptly answered from rota | mnence the of Mosul and Ikbiat bay their cottoa man of sixty, the cords of which are liable at any time to de suapped asunder, How different is their system, and what a different effect its workings have upon this ple, from ont The President of the United tates is shot down by the band of an assassin, Dat the mourning nation goes with a heavy heart as stab In the shi ‘Thero was no other blood spilled, | brium. . Coberm, was received on board with a | Crown her first successes with future conquests. So far | where there is a bridge (an iron suspension and with this (From the London Herald, Oct. 8.) uns, There aro no other war vesgois in | {ato the hysterical entlaseat which the occasion invites, | the knaboor; from it and Arban couton, ie prs ing the city " was perfectly tranquil, and at about eleven o'clock the ae rage Reterreyde are Soonees Nawocel Reale the harbor at present, and the Iroquois is the first Ameri- | that so mach more territory and so many Ne | the followa in the same style. Both more peop! troops who bad been massed in the Piazza Signoria, | and the United States, and the part the Intter Power ap- | CM man of war since the Shenandoah was here, about | Ar@ thus wrested from barbarism and brought under th six years at Saigon contains really the rudiments of a | and ex it 4o the neighboring town. On the showed a bolder front than bis fellows, got a bayonet The United States *‘ Modifies”? the Equili- | ‘%® fort, gun for gun, At meridian the American Con- | great empire, if eke ban the persisvency and goot lace to | river hg @ small but very productive me : borne out byother Arab writers, whose auxiliary wweual about its accustomed iabor; but when the Emperor | Plazes del Duomo and other parte ‘were distined af “blessings of European civilization.” French colonial | mation woeld need a volume, dies, everybody feels that there inust be a convulsion. Rare Dears to be ambittous of playing im European politics, | @ year ago. ernment, as practised at demonstrates that ‘mentioned eee wane Wo have inith im our system, but the French know that | ‘Melr ks. and particularly in the East, The Moscow jouraal is ees "bceats et aed ~ The Iroquois furnishes the following interesting gen- peiregiomry —— nee bs my ans Indi " only that matives pre’ ig foreign ad oe from Arabia for the New Yore ramen, for the French melbod of rule bag almoatd Ir tho ‘new toetoen oF Coane seorinar ae = wd julat @ luxuriantly el of the [exo Rergonn, by far ine Sreater Partare well known Garibal- | obligo Russia and Prussia to respect the treaties of 1856 Heer, which until the new aunexatiens ‘comprised the ph bail aren dont to have them in safe keeping while the popular | °24 4000: — " ‘i Muscat, Arabia, August 28, 1867. | whole of the French dominions im Cochin China. The | productive than in any other part of the Ortoman effervescence lasted, and thoy will very probably be set | out ine iinpropristy’ thers mould be In reeling Wears | This-city is situated at the entrance to the Persian | city of Saigon itself bas been descried by all sare the | Einions, “It will reclaim the. firest portion of, a at liberty to-morrow or the day aftor, should there be no | of the trealy of Paris. As to the trealy of Praguo, the | Gulf, on the east coast of Arabia, aud contains a popula. | Yeriest drege of the native population; outlying villages | tama, restrain the insolence of the Sheuir Arabs, whoee further disturbance. The aystem of’ proventiv tardy and fruitless demonstrations of two Powers who | tion of about seventy thousand with its auburbs, It is | delin which “wore seltivared. by ‘a busy” and: thorwiee | ‘oleraiion and subsidy aren disgrace to the Stata, and tne pepo poe ay ‘in fall foros bee oct pear taped wins Lumens Tae the metropolis of Eastern Arabia, and has an extensive | people before the gFreuch occupation, have, tiace | rrqtee Mami Orne Ateee ond cea Bron t anotent To that system, in faot, Garibaldi owes his arrest. In a'| Sedowa, cannot maintain the charactet of European | ‘rade up the Persian Gulf, to Bombay and other ports in ag “ aap gen we datrion Phin power onl en oo : cont george aay the Greats country strictly governed by law, and not by ministerial | gendarmes, The Freuch government has demanded | India, while some of ite vessels are occasionally soen | foMee J Commercial {nteltigense seleetes thie. route, by ag exists, known and atiil distinguished in the Ain. It is part of the plan now pursued to occupy t! Since Tuesday the Florence police have made at least | i; t read! he Fras two hundred arrests, without including those individ- | ‘Seeaern ‘questin as, wweehet pla ek ee ual Captured among (he rioters, Uf these two hundred | hat France and Austria have come to an agreem persons, by far theirs is only good when administered by the strong arm of personal power, it is terrible that the hopos of thirty-six millions of people should (hus bang on tho life of one man, butso it is. Nobody has the slightest faith that, in cese of his death, the succession of his dy- nasty would proceed in reguiar order, Everybody kows that sooner or later there must be a revoi and that for a time at least all would be turmoil an fusion, It might not come immediately, All the pre- cautions have iong since been taken to prevent it and to oppose it if it occur, and blood would ran like water in the streets io carrylug into effect the latter. ‘The facilities for this are much greater now than they have ever been before. The Little, narrow, crooked vets in the 'y beart of the city, which the revolu- Uouiste of former Umes could barricade minutes by knocking over an omnibur few paving stones, no longer exist, but to broad and beautiful avenues and kopt clear wit no 4 Soldiers need no longer t in their passage throogh the streets by c ‘olutionists from their windows. The splendid system of sewerage, which has been perfecied the reign of the present Emperor, P D Aaystera Of sewerage—one by aD be rapidly transported from one par: to another, unseen and unexposed. : A fow days s!uce I bad the curiosity to make a visit to these subterra tunnels with which Paris is under- bh which the drai he city in 49 and dirty water carried to the . We descended a spiral stone staircase through a trap door near the church of tho Madelaine, «i upon getting down ome fifteen or twenty foat under 3 in a large and well lighted of solid masonry, about twelve feet ane in hegbt. ‘In the centre ran a etin width, and opon found it about three egouls collecteurs,” ones run, At J @ Tulers was somewhere beiween 40,000 1 Hi Sek nad beta comminted $0 duality caveat: Laven oF Samer Dasabemmencely e canton vara ite in England and at Now York. This fine, large barbor is | and. 60,000 tons aunually, has dwindiod down. In | fas eat oe yee te ene erenthig bway between order at any price may, of course, object that this ten- | theretore, cannot become the deieuder of the treaty | landlocked by the high, barren rocks, upon which are | 1808, of 1854. to. about 2,000 epee Rate ae rs an der respect for law often clogs the footsteps of jus- | which sanctions those aggrandizementa."’ soveral fortified poaks which overlook and protect both | witote import of Saigon conaists of provisions | erty Ree Oriente ne Foods at the, tice, and that it is better to prevent than to x a punish, Italy, however, ia yet too young in the practice masea vknier tetas sae em eee the harbor and city. ‘The city is built mostly of low | for the forces, and such munitions and materiale as | Cate heae: ery ncee ee erare Christianity eveq factured in the government arsenals, of free institutions to estimate the liberty of the subject | duced the smoke that now annoys it. According to the | Walle of brick or stone, which are covered with bamboo | 87° , HOt manu vorable route fo Goidsmith’s famous couplet, therefore, is not real pT Accel Aap ag heer gle fhat cunes | writer, France and Austria, far from thinking of seeking | mata, reeds or palm leaves to protect the iamates from | for while the mou are Seoupnig bn ins quiet meee pe eater ints) Sra indeed, one, two or tures years, In prison before they are | Soitarel with Prussia, ‘are rather trying to bring heF | the gun, and an occasional sprinkle of rain about once | 8 mot accumulating, nor is it likely to accuinu- | “\ Yespatch forwarded by the Enelish Foroign q Found tothelr plans. “Only, it is vory possible that th late under the beavy restrictions which are imposed | from her Majesty's Comaut’ Genent ol the chue of a certain Praws. Dussitotn wie was ceca | Say desire to procure compensations ia the East The | in six months. The windows are square holes in the | on aii foreign enterprise, unless there may have been |S iones foot a) socotioc, Gentes nathan MH says:—| , bi for lass, rece! in July, 1868, upon a charge of atiempting to extort | Guest in thai quarter, Dut ahe will never, permis other | Tula f0r Ventilation, without window glass, but usually | gome recent relaxation of which we are not aware. | Country describing & now Insect. that hed caused mug p Capital is thus excluded from the colony, aud even if the | p, he money by threatening lettera This man's trial did not | Powors to seize the ‘smallest portion of the Ottoman | S¥PPllod with light grating, The streets are unpaved, Dert-sighted commercial probibitions were act euffici avoc In the cotton crops of Egypt during the last Come on until Juno, 1867, when he was found to be per- | heritace, Besides, an event has taken place of infinitely | narrow and crowded, The shops and bazaars aro ar. | $hor-sigh ‘cnterprise nad trade, the grinding eys jont | years, bi been reoelree 9 tae Coton Supply Ansee f fectly innocent; but there was no reparation for the | more importance than the Saleburg interview, and that i# | ranged much like the Washington meat markot stalls, | taxation which finds favor in (he ¢; m of } ciation, “ ~ ew, 7 5 F yes of the govern- | mo Foe end pent in Prison in consequence of false | the intervention of the United States in the Easiern question. | under one low roof and divided by narrow paths, each | ment, aud which, as tho wealthy natives have alinost to | Inventcano ty etary ett orders 3T pasedue; 0 Gee ccusation, fo much en pasani for personal liberty in | The great American republio remembers the way in Pr J ig , If possible, 4 by means of artillery. 3 Kaly, ‘nich Western Europe rejoiced in her misfortunes and | side of which are large chests or boxes used for holding | *, mae lef French territory, falls on the miserable | ver means to prevent in futare the losses Ponty A ny es ghibey in high ard mad endeavored to Interpose dire oF indirectly, in favor | thoir goods and wares, Those patha sre often crowded Sontiy tow st tes ‘Droeperiiy of the Solony “Nover, | {hls scourge, the following valuable communication amount of verbiage upon abstract political theories of no | Si wi Rucrim She has Vast presented. to the Parte a | 2d blocked with people, and the Herculean task of elbow een is yates Fura eta ae Practical value. Tialian her reflect the | note respecting the Cretan questiou, The system of | ing one's self through the dirty, naked, greasy crowd | Soiny, aichough their works will not bear comparison eee tee tae coe panties tar eer shi the mg ee eae cae’ an = of negroes and Arabs is decidedly expensive in the way | with the splendid _ vatgnagien by Cs the she of mi Loot cirela of Journalisia and politicians—particatarly for- | litical plans prepared hitherto, without baviug regard to | Of Perspiration, patience and good cloth. The palace | Ongcor, wiiich stand and magnificence of « by-gone see. structive to the eo flea, Politicians thas is, People who bave more in- | his grave evcnl, must bo studied auew aud completely | Dulldings and soldiers’ quarters aro the largest and dest | Without speaking of the siipbollding yard, aaa tne ar. | Ritherto an extremely rare inseot. The sud! reat of the world than of their « , appearance over so wide an area is in { own countey. ‘They have not a sperk of the vigorous | “Useeed- buildings, but they appear to be the dilapidated remains | scnal, and hospital or «cathedral,"” we way mention | remarkable phenomenci go, 8 r- | (he subject from Professor Williamson, of Owens Manchester, will be read with interest, and it ts serviceable to the cotton growers of Egy: “With respect to the wide and the muddy, turd founding it with feet doep. This or main eowers, into which the Lith mn. Thero appears to tached to arch overhead were the tolegraph wires | iro, nor that practical interest for’ th 1 of a thousand years, A high stone wail surrounds the | tha! they hare built in Saigon some strects at rignt an- | no remedy for it but that of picking off the larrm d water pipes. Oneltherside of tbe muddy | “° LA rest for the people at large, Jes; they have built a wooden bridge which leads any a little trottsir, or side watk, about a foot im | *™ch distinguish American and British journalism, FREE TRADE. city for defence, in which are wide, heavy gates under | fu9 wno passes across it over a canal; and to bo.quive | 1U,tuale Very tap Cen TOW wp eens BIE nny width, At the foot of the stairs whore descended were several boais, juto which we entered, and the doatmen then pushed us down the turbid river, which, upon seeing, with its surroundings of darkness, light: @ued by the flickering lamps, which threw a ghastly jare upon our faces uto the boat, and the unearthiy- ‘ooking bowimen, who live cown in these vaults, imme. Gately suggesied to me the Styx—the river of the ind the stone towers thirty or forty feet high. They resemble | colonial Itke, they bave built some fifty or sixty wooden | would be n ry tm th arate so beg as shops, in which « few Chinamen and Malays sell liquor | pitty ia tho pictures wo often see of the gates and towers of Mood and elothes! To complete the pet tal ity is that the plague wi! id Tienes og Ite Effects—Why | ancient Jerusalem. Outside the — aro thousands of poe arte whole place, there is the aad an ue of it camo, returning, however, 1 7 Commerce Show jo Free. wretebed n buts, formed by Apreading a fow mats | wrangling, disagreement and jealousy among the handfal SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD {From the London Times, Oct. 5.) over posts or into the ground Not « green tree or | Of Europeans, who are the represeutatives, of course, of Opening of the Winter Trade—Want of Busl- Free trade in this country has been the labor of sev. the much-vaunted European civilization; and the dissen- ness Energy jo New Specul n=Invie | @ral genorations of scientific and publio-spirited men; it | #hrab is to be seen, and the scorching air from the burn- | sion between the services is heightened in this instance fon to A Exchange=The Cotton | #5 been established on principles that have acquired | ing sands of Arabia is reflected by the surrounding walls | by the colony being under naval admipistration, to the eM a the force of axioms, and Is now proved and illustrated | of the towering rocks upon the city and harbor, a | *most entire exciusion of the military, ENGLAND'S COMMERCE. Our Charons pushed vs under the Rue Royal de la Concorde, and here wo were to leave the boat Silk Manufactures. by splendid results. It may be said to have outlived That France, under the régime of tte present Emperor amavis the train. 7 Teaching the. t where the Losnow, Oct, 9, 1967, prejeaion and to require no vindication. This, at least, | ‘emperature of 106 degzees is common here, notwith- expecially, is Siening ot an Asiaitic empire is no ager a Rae do Rivoli comes into the Piace de ja Concorde, at ‘The wholesale houses engaged in the Manchester and | ' true as the educated classes, for it cannot be | standing tho jatitude is over twenty-three degrees north, | matter of doubt; and in Saij as eecured on the the junction of the Rue Royale, we debarked and seated trades thi tthe city have been denied that lower down in the social scale protection and the nights are oppressively hot, finest naval stations in 1 seas, which will by ourselves upon comfortablo “‘plastorm cars," each hold- | £°8¢ral trades throughout the city have been very busy’ | jingers still, in company with many other heresies, su- and by be rendered: impregnable and will speodily be ing sixteen persons. Here the sewer, which emptied | 80 far this week, the winter trade having fairly com- Peraitione, and manifold forms of unreason. Free The inhabitants are Arabs, Hindoos and negroes. The | better ey with the means of maintal: floet in le into the main one down which we bad come by boat, qras but about six feet wide, The care on which we ‘Were placed ran upon rails fixed upon the very edge of the water, and were pushed along ata rapid raie by men who followed them at the sides, fp was nota particle of bed smell, the sewors being orougbly venti- ted, Thus we rode down under the Rue de Rivoli, past dashing cataracts of dirty water, and rolling foots of filth emptied by thousands of’ house drains into the sewers, and by them into thia Suddenly we & large light vault nearly twenty feet in width. under the Boulevard Seb was torped upot urntabie, end of our journey, Place du Chatelet, menced, the “turn” of October being on, when the requiros 4 man to look beyond himeeif, beyond | Arabs and Hindoos are mostly merchants and traders, | efficiency than any port in Oriental hay Keyes h 1 ic England. We ma te houses ‘date forward,” and every one expects to be cmnen sight toa wt sp aed this tonnes 0° oma with their shaved heads, turbans, loose dress, eandies— Sapien of ‘nem up to the borders of, China, and the busy. The weather also has turned cold, which helps | amount of morai education, But Mahommedan religion, and usual characteristics. Moat | entire kingdom of Siam, wit! be absorbed in the course the progress of business. Cotton goods have been —— Ne — to detect in a Of the mogroes are siaves, and only dressed by some = bmg hadnt J Ppl FPA J alg our tena falling slightly again last week, while cotton at | Over ingeniously disguised, ‘In the ‘United Sales, | cloth about their loin, The women are objects of | Sr'vencssorim. For the development of apowerful et. | tony Liverpool remains for the present frm, There still Protection still flourishes in | curiosity and wear rings in the nose, usually between ire tn gl om 1c could not occupy ® more | crop. OF course this could be well woaek continues to be a lack of anything like business specu- tatds tarifeand inthe press, It is still the favorable ition than the delta of the a | du the of riot, and tee toplo On which | 0 Sostrils, bub sometnmameneside. They aloo wopr drains it through ita whole length from the poh tg lation or energy in England just now, av? people in all the different and varied channels of trade condine them . y a the journalise ‘most | * Covering for the fees, wbiehyhas opeaings for the eyes, | frontiers of Burmah and China, The delta, of in other | moc be montdimert eae Been e regard it asa | but covers the ‘eG Uhieeke, with most of the | words the French col waterabed, beni wmalvee nimoss without exception to the sirietiy jegiti- | mat oo thas’ requires hamdil '| mate requirements that are called for by a regular de- ‘would thrash and winnow face above a line with Yhb'rHoutD, Thia mask is made | ! position could not our | the Cetster Valley produces as fine cotton aa New mand, The people Here are better customers to us for | ¢, Id, but any word ii ‘of protection ia with | Of bright tinseled work, and. gives them a singular ap- | neighbor the King of Siam, who holds the Key to the re- | jeans. our cottons than you sre on the other side of the | then tie pure ‘milk of tbe noepe that must not be quos- Pamranon, net gasily described, Polygamy 1s one of. the mont All we is in making the trip. Atlantic, and would take plenty of them from us and | tioned, and free trade a quackery which itis enough to | institutions of the country. Fruits and fish are abund- with England. One of the earliest acts of | year than our impoverished Possantry 1 third, maintaining his present close commercial | hundred skilled py do more o in a t of t send corm in exchange over hore. The exchange would || game sud abhor. The immenee self- nation of ant and form the chief living of all classes, The wages conqnerore after they had established | wans somebod: ot erianenayimmenise | suit us eapitally, whatever it int do for you. United States leads thoi ra themselves ag an Of & negro man is about $2. month, and everything is Mt Saigon wag’ an extension of | agricuitura We want $e tomvedy to set Apropos of cotton apinning, im concluding a paper on very cheap in the way of living. In a walk about town influence northward over een and thos stimulate us to . If inetead “covton spinning machinery,” read before the inetitu- hundreds of the negroes aro carry y f the Siamese kingdom, which they we now have, a whole list of honorary members of that the whole tion of Mechameal Eogincers at Birmingham, Mr. Piatt filled with instead of jars, They have some An ‘ere'gn lord, after erecting it into a king- | perial Cotton Commission, we had only two ar three able ads in descending and moun sated that the number of spindies now employed in | made England o Paradise, and is not, therefore, Arabian horses, but ——- ‘wagons, or carts are not | dom, placed \t under the protectorate France, wii salaried whose whole ti: (s and disembarking tothe | th@ cotton manufacture Great Britain exceeds | worth « bear! The very best American newspapors, | to be seen about the city, Thi ange used most is | th loge of probibiting the consuls of any foreign 26,000,000." Their produce of yara when in regular | and, no doubt, their readers too, are satisfled with that | Hindoostanee, but Arabio Is spoken considerably. jon from residing in the country, The protectorate work is 64,000,000 miles in ® day of ten hours, which Je of reasoning. The governm hy jong remained i isa preliminary to annexation, and when that ts ¢fected gives enough to wind four times round the globe every ES wens ago ouf*Amorican correspondent pointed | tranquillity jor the old King Imaum, bi the way ts opened for tampering with Siam or making Satpal," tor this nee Werk oF bubterrac: minut We stand much in need of a better supply of | out the unmistakable connection between a bigh tariff | rent with at, The dominions of Fresh inroads into Anam. ray lines extending over Paris iain the court yard of | F' ip this country, and it has oceurred to mé@ | and the present difficulties and depression of Ameri & thousand miles, and nearly tl The present King of Siam is an enlighted ruler, speaks Jato which fre thousand men could be | tat in some parts of your continent, especially | industry, Designed, of course, by ite direct operati gout = | const of Arabia, with most of the adjol English woll, and has deena contributor in afford for the tranep manner, they would be tin One of the outlets, one of thi ut of the growne , ft in Texas that quantity of cocoons of ceriain descrip. | to agsigh the workioan and manufacturer at home, in to the River Indus, About six months | lish (oan Bnglish journal He (s alive to the importance oe eee tnlegtapt | tions of the silkworm might be gathered, which would hief \s found greatly to outweigh ite dest son, Syud Selim, @ villainous-looking, | of opening up the valley of the Menem river, at the 6, of course, tay BO | find aready market hero, It t# reported that native All tl bas beon explained and prov: youth of thirty-five, took the prompt ‘and | mouth of which bis capital stands, by means of a rail- » bealth fr | slik has been found in the neighborhood of Graba: 4 over again ov iby erybody now of ending his long suspense by putting | way from the capital across Siamese and British territory | town, which t# the produce of a worm that feeds on ot 4 | the inimoea thorn, and is found in most eae ace witt show | mimosa flourishes, The cartoons are thr so in pogard to | size of the ordinary silkworm, but, while th n Tog | deficient in brilliancy, pid and zation 5 ether, out of t ately took charge bimacif hero the old king, named Syud Ty party, is trying to rev way, and immedi- | to Moulmein, thas giving his commerce Museat, A brother of | direct outiet into the Bay of Bengal. The a larg | Siam or of Anam, and the consequent establishmer @ French highway along the M able or at * river into Burmah, if not collision, with ‘Minister of Foretgn Affaits, the it te jugs ag strong a8 the mule | aaty overiays itself with mi ocesal and = take reins of brings France at once into contac’ i this matter notbing | Bercy wil aud 4 fine, If cocoons are to be ob- | fore ts has to be fi id by the go collected ships and capt English toteresta fm Burmah and Southern China, ag themaelves. AX about eight o'clock ced, as ih te now (8 | ad they would pay weil for the gathoring. Then, wi up prices, it cannot prevent | towns along the coast, when the If we ore to establish @ commercial bighway | Monday morning four of the men stood in the shanty high that he’ @ be, by — amugglit vasions of the revenue, Every- |«gunbor curtailed his briltiant achievements by | between China and the Bay of Bei We oan- | together, and one of them sat on the box containing the ‘the Margen cosage woold bave | Brisk Opentew of © Winter Trade—The | thing ip ited States, Everything is pre- | captu him and. potting him. ia irons, Subse- | not allow French influence ta. io Bare wiroerine, About Sve minotes after they lait the saat J & most idportan 0, meaning the ac: | Money Plethora and its Effects=Cotton and ously and ui ccouptably dear; but t P Quscity be paid a small amount of demagedend-wasre, | iah. Judging from all present and | —two of them going to work im. the dri and copiance, pure end plo, by France of the Corsolndestetal Bducation. ingfd nobody, & \pyards, itonworks, leased, With permission to do all the fighting be might | by the growth of public = it ts mani the | the other two going home—a most terrife events of 1406 and tne F possible contequences, Rbould | Coru-iIn educa * from the large: cetshiivnments to choose on laud. He has been marching towards thia | dostiny of Britain to add Burmah to the British in | took piace, r tearing ‘tah tm the viol ine the Margais de Moustier po replaced oy M. Drouyn de Lemon, Oct, & 1067, fry that minister to luxery, comfort or haa po Aeon Fp bate Frits sever five thous ous with chin cwe pe reid ie direct ‘come Stal shee tng pt eenourst the ‘ss it they had. been ‘Siten nid pean an oppositio catio The weather here bas torned very cold for the ti complaia of want of orapiogment. 0 | he if about ton milos from the " i na, wo provide a direct commerc! 5 laces. them Seles, 5 péaaute wertee y re-anpedelion'’ of | 6 * 5 “4 . Subing ts dear it o wand troo) rd hel of communication between Southern China and the the who were one hundred i 0 end stanaing | of year, boing erispy and tuclinod to frost (indeed, some | rules of political economy whi 4 pm | te bh kors then, by that American ships are well nted among the vessels | Indian Ocean, and pre; the for throwing a | tw feet into the drift, Had the men remained Soe mane. serie ‘we on ane.” with finkes of snow are said to bave fallen in Lancashire), Guaretun, onetoes Miele aed toteeael ‘ne pong But | fn the harbor, adhe Glare cad mripes have waving | communication wis Hone Kong.” Long before France min longer jn the shanty ali must have inevil ’ tendency to the former, A fewdeys Will, doavioss, | and all the London warehouses are busy ia disposing of | just as & disease; or the intrusion of @ foreign: substance | from two brigs and a bark some time There is con- | oan ascend the Cambodia river so ag to subsidize the | met with instant death, releve our anxiety | tb intor fabrica to (he swarm of country buyers who | Will disorder tho physical system and prevent the vari. | siderable shipping and dates aud salt fish are exported | tates of the Shans that owo tribute to Siam and Bur- ——— cs ‘ 1 am sorry to be obliged to be the bearer of hed cows to | ‘bein Win " : ir" ous from performing thalr proper functions, so 8 | by the cargo to nearly all parja of the world. On the | mab, porbaps evon before she can annex Sian, Burmah | A Porrrreat, Mucca.—Chicago has become & Mecca for fiock up to town at this season of the year to lay im | py, t American trade from right- | 26th the United States mer Iroquois, Commander | will bo British territory, But wore this interpretation | radical politiciang They are fearful of exposure from the nomerous drinkers of champagne jo the \n igh tari! seems to prove: t r Heel hroug bet joods for the approact sensom, The | ing tteelf by the sual processes, Tt cannot be disputed | English, arrived and fired a national salute of twenty. | of the signa of the times to fall, {t would be our duty, om | the former of our republi¢an court, Abram ™ wav tendstOligapaaen eaten lneouty ve ests dstess | prunser ah iemipeuasean wate the ence They have | thee the United States are inn condition to requires eon | on fons. the Amorioan flag, The ofieers and erew | the appearance of France the, tribatery. up there from Now York, 1 ts alc from Paris, and everywhere there is the sarne com. | Pr! 4 siderable amount of indirect taxes, They cannot raise all | are all well on board, The Consular Agent, Mr W, HL | 8 to add Barmah to the In pire, France have an equitable arrangement be he | been for some time past, With the exception of cottom want by direct taxation, Excise, too, is always | Nichols, from Aden, Arabia, came up on the Iroquois | herself will give the warning, as hor poeee will be Toe grapes ripeusd oe tate vant, i eddition to the foot | goods, which are slightly lower again thin week, tonemaiy evaded than customs’ duties, Buty im the fires | and will stay a short ime to eee how Cw [mes =f Preceded fs, the anarchy iy-F wpe help to that there will be but tom quarter of acrop, the ‘We ailll romain overstocked with money, which people there is the universal example of the civilized | troudies terminate. American war vessels seldom visit | croae, ith Burmab brought withtg the great Ly pg TE ine mad Which now selcots for indirect taxation, almost | this port, and tho [roquom ts the first since the rebel | line of British dominion we need bave no sorions jwite that Wigeuorat Hoke kane 77) la oow esle to tide out, | 8t@ Not inclined to wae fn business speculation, and as | Sxciusively, articles of luxury, or, at least, things that | steamer enandoat was hore in 1863, French conquests; but with Barmah Seabeerved Oy ged v aA won R Hon, Ages F for tie lest Ave years U. & Consal | opinion on this bend i# very onanimous the best bills | man can woll do Without—an example wholly disregarded A reception to Commander Engiah and oMfcors took | Britain and open to French intrigue, and finally to 1 not be mentions”, in any o * at Tunis, is to F bia way to the United States. Hie | are etlil discounted at 1% to 145 per cent per avoum, in tho United States; and, im the second piace, It | place at the palace to-day at ope P, M. Thoy wore in | Fronch emer ig Hy! gy out forever tay be written oF mae, succor, Mr, leap, is also Lore, oa Lis way 60 hig post | We tiud, ow tue ovatrary, frome telegraphic ancoun Qo disavowed, nor disguised, thay yuo Ameriona | Cuil dresa—white nants, cocked hate, opauleties aad side | diseos oom with China, we dual aly Gusge ® :