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Diplomacy on the: Easteyn Question}! aud Bangers of Tvirkey aud ~~ Her Enemies. ~ ins npn fanatao pela i “ Volcanic Osnyulsion of Vesuvius, ch ae i a ™ ' . vs aa ios : smeoda his Maja mig to CORY AR RA foe ek ames +8 is Symptatns and Pienomena. AHS A Biwes, Wynd pay . : iF fm mi ether om an. is PRUSSIA... ee Tecen| OO Fe Ass Politiée d Prayer in talon sp sta p ve, Gow? the Daycta -charelt Bern nomen rican an Wi lon of Da: ‘t “mt th n= tasbioa prevailing ane the bbtcure. baa recently or | mer Table—The Religion of the Constitution any. cores, Wey iA ye ane Ce Ficet service, 8 as Defined on the Mayflower. . ant i. Paria es I fquertam on Ss Preposterous as ft Spe = oa Siipee san The Lurie stgamebip City of Autworp, Captata Mire: present depiora> (reafurye wbteh i | relurmed from a jubllant celebration of Tiiakeaiving, 1 house, which left | verpeol at ton o'clock om the mora. t, * - re mi pi ‘ng of tie Ith rod Qucenstown om the afternoon of the of the ore atten p jo ne > owl a pie: 2th, airived b: ‘nt pert yesterday evening: Her mat) by fa cuba Arora st spent roporttad beep antipicated in all \tatleading features sy 1 went towards noon tothe cosy American chapel in rorning Atyet the arrival of the Ctubria, a ian "tor '26,000,000 sterling ee cer.p lation of dotaks publisned inthe: Manare yeu | OM ta Pare trying” to r Junker straase, vo listen to a Thankegtvingeermon. The @iay £6,000, with the Free preacher, Rev. Dr. E. G. Robingom, of thé Theological By the City of Amtwerp we have the following special | Générale of that city ; but tne terms demanded Semivary in Rochester, having taken. for his text the cor-sepondenceand additional mews itemefrom Europa | '@ be nineteen per So exporohant what areas | «ain and fourteenth verses iecladtve; of theeighth chap- The Faris eormeepondent of tho Globe Mys:— “meantime the government has pro ‘the ter of Deuteronomy, proceeded to develop as optimist a The resolution of the Emperor to pronounce for the ‘ing th®.interest on its consols due in January, which Popo must-have been taken very suddenly. In the | have been altendy remitted to Paris and Londoa Yor that | “course as any Fourth of July orator could have dons, speeches delivered by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, the | purpose. His grounds and reasons for this offering of national Sooner eanean Be oe intimate, sane ‘come ae fe has ‘nad ie teat an Larne op et ce aisiatst, an: 5 a 3 uF w : ef its being adopted, the conciliation of Rome and Lisly | drawn by the Turkish euthorities, ands about aL ee nee nen noma” ie being the theme be dweilt on... Italy will, of couree, | for Washington. Powers howe gued will ker gerertenagt toons, ast "of Ameri. owers o Kk rs whose forbearance it has Need-—kugland, Prossia. und . MOUNT VéESUVIUS. interrupted with Ruesin—will, to some extent, a least, be estranged. national, i f ‘Tho London Globe, speaking of Napoleori’s policy to- SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF TWH WERALD. wards [valy, says bis new resolution taken by the Emperor Vetenne Before “i will be productive of evil; it will increase the unpopularity "eigen Mecietambebeiataeet ne sy a eeeee cna ten (nessity of the £mpress—U’Eepagnole, as the French people call | suddee and ‘Terrible Upkeaviuge—The Sun m , aud thy her. As ber Majesty is knowifto take u very active partin |. in. Kelipse—Changes of Color of the Smoke— z and pi haet is politrealafairs, and, like most womon of hor nation, | General Alarm—The Fiame-A Torrent of pepe forgee she is avery ardent Papist, she will ‘beheld to be re- Sov and Fall of Stenes—Merniug Appear- eponeibie for what has been done. Alveady in the Corps cued Naruxa, 1867, Legistatif bas the new diplomacy of the Emperor been | yount Vesuvius has for some: penne & ys ebaracterized as Spanteb; and as in truth it is more | gyqojetado, and, from the xtreme frequency and vio- Spaniah than French, 't is pot surprising that the people | ence of earthquakes:.whieh. ocourred during the few | of Thanksgiving ¢ay sermons, 1 propose’ to bring to Should ascribe it to the Espagnole who sits on the throne. | preceding mouths, t'was judged: that some great move- | your notice the. grounds for thankagiving Which c:pe- “M. Thiers’ speech on the Roman question bas caused | ment or erupticm was portended, The appearance, how- | cially sirikean American tourist, ever‘compariog and ‘tho heart of Monseigneur Dupanioup, Bishop of Orleans, | ever, was not so immediate as to restrain curiosity or to | contrasting Earopean impressions with those of bis own |: to rejoice, Immediately after its delivery his Grace | prevent repeated visite’ to the crater, which visiteof | country, Wehavo reason to be thankfal, figat, tor the “drove to M. Thiers’ hotel, Place St. George’s, Paris, and | is: had been more numerous than at any former period | Protestant element underlying our mational life and “was mot on the staircaso by the orator, who threw him- | yp to inst Sunday, when two gentlemen ascended and | charactor, However much we may honor Jefferson, the self into the Bishop's arms, exclaiming, “The Popo is | remained there some time. Nothing upusuel was then | real conatitution of the United States. was mot createa saved; the cause of Italian unity is lost.” The Pope's | remarked, nor any external evidences, except rathera | by him and his Congress, but is. the entgrowth ‘Nunclo likewise called on M. Thiers ta express his appro- | stronger emission of smoke from the interstices of the | of the resolutions drawn up on board the Mayflower, Dation of bis ultramentanist speech. M. Berryer, moct- | conical hill at'the bottom of the crater. By the conatitation I do not mean the ecrap of paper we ing Ernest Picard in ope of the galleries, by way of con- To those who bave not visited this romantic and won- | call such, but the living principles recognized by tho soling bim for the Pontifical tramph which he had | derfut spot a slight description is previously necessary | people, ‘The articles of confederation,» artifically eclebrated in the concluding phrase of his own speech, | ang indispensable to form any conception of it, and to | crested, proved insufficient, because they had no root 1a remarked, “Que voules-vous, mon cher? 1 am eighty |. peter understand the account which follows; for'ne ove | the popular tifa Just so religious persecution fell to ‘years of age; 1 must begin to think of my salvation.” living can expect to seo it !n the perfection and beauiy | the ground from lack of popular support, and the tolerant The Duchess of Hamilton and Lady Mary have @r- | te which it wasion last Sunday morning. doctrines of Rozer Williams and otbers.at Inst asserted Tived in Paris, Their cousia, Princess Eugénie, daughter | @anout two thousand feet above the level of the sea— | thoir right..; These principles were more common to the - of the Grand Duchess Mary of Russia, is 19 marrys | getimating from conjecture—on the south side of the | whole country than wore apt to believe, for up to the Prince of Oldenburg. mountain, and rather more than two-thirds ite height, | last generation at least. threc-fourthe ofthe educated George Sand and Prévost Parado! have gone from | opens a circular chasm, somewhat exceeding haifa milo | peoplo of the South had been trained ia: Northern insti- Paris to Cannes, the latter for the health of Madame | jp qigmeter, and between four aod five hundred feet in | tutions, and'the removal of ministers and lawyers from Faradol, which bas long boon in « precarious state, depth, Kgactiy in the centre of this capacious bow! | New: York to New Orleans, from Charleston te Boston, The King of Siam has conferred wpon Sir John Bow. Tose a conical hill, about two bhuadred and sixty or three | was by no meane uncommon, As the sensef overseers wing the title of “Phraya Siamitro Maha Yesa,”’ for ser- | pundred fect in eight and ‘about two hundred im diam- | in Virginia were driven out by the exclusivencss of vices rendered to the Siamese. This aw the highest | ger, richly covered and variegated with shrubs, bush- | laudownersand high church men to become pioneers of tg : hi i ii i i ! | ‘3 i i a H i i gE | i i | at 8 SEs H i i F 8 F. > F i a 8 s Ff i i: 3f ie Te | id A i E tf i ae t tt ii b i i i i { i i i i i : He i L t Hi Fe ered anise tolwece, |_.,, Mraraniovs ‘Avrare—Svericions OF FoubPLiy.—The Bandai ar “Feaidents of thie lower wafds of the city were yeste alee he Halil) startled by rimmors of «murder having fe ; it i é if i ge iH iy i Es | ! i H | i i fl S i 5 F A & j : 3 i a E gi i Hi mi te chamber to render tho:r part in walize:, jon, &c,, and nimbie feet are perhaps stil! : 5 5 E i = j i F Premsed Thanks to speedy remedies appl now | dreadiul clash from tue mountain, with @ severe con- ‘tripp! to their tunes, pa prac ect ae y eet | 1 xen tote calgber hago? — B fheceapre inc a “9 preg = 3 stagreme Cours Genera) Form. = eas la seuerely | Suacenen Seer See eam, be Saree and smbued with the republican spirit which bas never - the fissures in the cone and interstices of rock # thin CHINA. . Adyouened for the Lerm, , era — ear ‘Thames, A correspondent of | ‘ite smoke was constantly emitted, occasionally tiogea | since those days died away. Defining high Bebe oss, lk Supremo Coart—CiresitParte 1 and 2. ~ tar writes:— with a sight bivish flame. The precipitous sides of | churcbism as the belief that any otber $PEi CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HE: Adjourned for the term, ° os On Friday night last, between five and etx 0” in | this magnificent amphitheatre were friuged with vari- human being or set of human ‘Beings were CIAL 3 ALO. Supreme Court—Cireult—Part 3. Crescent lane, leading frqgm Clapham Common to. Cl s ergroens and aromatic shrubs, flowers and many Experiences In Auiey~A New Tax nad the Held by Judge Baléom. bam Park, my brother was garroied by two ruffians, | Alpine plants, On tho north and south sides of tho | capable of conferring the right of sonship by Cour: opens at ton o'clock A. M. two. yhe robbed him of jewelry oney and everything in | base of the cone were two pieces of water—oue perfect- | manipulations, he declared tbat no high churchman | SPelts of Ofice—The Optum TradewInsular Ni ‘Hon, J my given to is possession. He isa tail’ and powerfui young man, | ly pureand tasteloss, and the osher strongly lmpreg- | during tho war had proved faithful to the Union, A |. CHfloaitles—Tho United States Consular He= 1 b Hane crosby ve. Hawley, | Rie Ot os apln ir ‘chance to defend himeel’, | Dated with suiphur ai This lonely and beautiful | turing preseptation=The Formenn War jarien, ae sane cd suddenly from behind (a thick | spot was rendered more enchanting by the sluguiarly Reporte from the Scone of the Rebellion. aeontn bys cairn Bn a “fag mn he nocked from his hand), and imine. | melodious notcs of a bird—an mnabiant of these upper ' ‘Amoy, China, Seph 7 1862, 1086—Grund et al, va, Ponda. | spplied to ; wilt diately rendered powerless, being bonaeted, throwa soittudes, but soidom seen bolow. : y kuewshe man to. whou , p Range bts back and get upon by a big man, who grasped his | The present erupti.n is one of the most terrivle that It is some timo #tnoe the Hyrap has been addressed ey On a Bre throat, stuffing » bandkereblet into his month, “to keep | bas occarred dunag this century, As the bells were wide bres, white, rd be ay the chicken from squaliing, ‘oh ningiug the hour of noon on we 16th am abrapt and mooi bye moto Vs =. ‘h are corner that while here @m Europe, and evon in Eng- recovering, but is much shakon, features. | Wand, sermous were vethes neips of dev; discourses: brick. The is clotted. ih DSS, bile. 0 e . on the bricks can be seen blood adhering ver Sy more aggravated cases of geting hore re- pret — vpn pol ponen te ee vast eatiestion from the sacred desks im the United wore more | 5, wth or lous familiar 00: parte up ges pol to cently occurred at Ciapham and rixton. On saturday | , binok, ropy » from mene | aitactic, instructing church amen more American tnereto. corner marks desperate morning, about balf-past twelve o'clock, a lady was | glasshouse, bursting forth at once aud rising to tho sky, ‘actiog church goers in philosophy Amoy, ti one respect, is probably the peer of any straggle, Then the pent tracks advance voward knocked down upoa Brixton Hi) and robbed of her | showering down sand, with gritiy, calcined icies of | and doctrines, aud developing ethical questions in «| cy; nese city, aud that is im respect to ite street odors, the mony ea apace covered onan e& sory ait of it purse, earth and favilla mixed, upon ail below. driven | way adapted to the plainost undersianding. Even - " " ents taal na eee the woods, bridgss | Yankee shre«dnose is mainly due to a habit of review. OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE. and bats with light gray colured ashes, resembiing snow ‘ when giightly covered with dust, As the eruption in- continued shower expanded until it had 3 i &: E i i i THE EASTERN QUESTION. SPLCIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF ‘THE WERALO, Tuo Wer Complications in F fh tf re i »88 i else | 5 3 5S § Ff a8 iE if See 7 thee : ij Ef Western Tour. i i [ man’s livery stable ta Washington wrest; near et, was found dead yesterday moraibg, the body lying at a ‘and Chi ‘offctala, It is noting 20 " N.Y. cl the foot of a fight of stairs lead.ng apto the § bayloft. upon the trade of “Amoy a# to cripple 1 In a great de- "Siamton., gree, and unless lessened or entirely removed i can re agra rors Ta depot for exports and impor. Cpon the article of opiam this tax, having neither 01 Constantine, Xov. 29, 1807. | {hiek'sud terre fur milon atound: the ‘ternal, Balt Enropean complications have of inte completely sonsed tuea casual’ eet bene’ o Cy rs thrown the Easier question in the shade, Rome and | quickel » o " " Garfoaidi have absorved the attention of the Continen- an yon ew aes so gerne ae er tal public and press to such an extent that the present | gioom ef the scene, now col position and future prospects of the Turkiah empire are scarcely thought of or discussed, Ruema alone Keeps a watchful eye on Turkey, and the St. Potersborg Cabinet, ever On the alert to profit hy any new move en the political chessboard, endeavors to make the most ef the present game, Tho great question here l*, what is to become of Creve, aud what course will the Eoropeas Powers pur- sue in regard to the contest now going on between the Chrisuans and their rulers, On this deponds the tran- quilty and almost the fatare existence of the Ottoman empire, Groeee, encouraged and abevted by Russia, has for along time been playing the part of the cat svatching the cbestnute from the fire, The recent mat. rimo1.ial alliance between King George and the Empe- ror'a uiede is looked upon as involving a pledge on tho pert of the later that, by means fair or foul, Crete shall De annexed to the Hel- ‘elo «government Bat bow t+ this measure to be brought abot? Large sume of money have been expended in the effort, and present apréarances indicate ‘that the fands of the Cretan Committee are exhausted. Fo long ag the sinews of war existed there was, no lack of adventurers and filbusters ready to join the teur- gents, but Bow chéy all desert the canse and leave the wofortonate Cretans to their fata If Russia does not hasten to comply with her secret engagement by render- ‘tng more material aid the insurrection will surely fall and ber infu tho East will be trretriovably lost. Great Britain and Austria alone Dave sbstaine! from advocating the Muscovite policy, though In the outest their abips were employed in removing the nom-combat- ant from the island, thus leaving the insurgente free to ect wiihout that embarrassment whieh the presence of their women and ebildren, together with the aged and ‘Anfirm, would occasion, The Rurstan and Prassian ship, togeiher wiih the Greek Dieckade rauners, have since transpor'od upwards of Sfty Chowennd ef this class to Syra, Athons and other parts ef Greece, Two months beck the Seliam, annoyed at the pro- Jongation of the coutest and the obstinate resiviauce of the insurgents, seut bu Grand Visier, All Pasha, to Creve accompra ed by three Christians of distinction, Invested with full powers to effect a pacification, Asus- Peo on of hosttiitiey and general amnesty to ail who wo. deadbeat were proctatmed, and delegates from all the disiricts Bore juried to mest him. This healiby oo sudh@retiFed a epesdy end termonious eettioment cf Lhe og iting diflgn ities, and the Heitenic government, tason nuawares, found \iself ins most awkward dilem- They jminodiately rant throe of the'r moss ret With inetructoas to fnyite the tosurgene and W conliaues devertained resietancs, promis the snpport of Roweis if they could oviy bold ‘| epring, The Rusetens conveyed the wo é i z E a8E i H i FE 234 i if j el ig jie ali? Ht afte: 5355 : int i 3 out f Fi] ii a Ae oP ; i if tl i i Hie il | | ; Fy : a jini i IH { f ni Ye i E i : 5g Fe : iy i i ef i i HL ¢ : if Ps ie 33 ; tee Fa : i a i { i i 5 8 I ; iff 4 : re i i i iy i z : i i i] 5, ie i it if it i f : E i : j tel i i i 5 ul re i sf? i i ! i j | ! é ‘ EF | i HH H aoe ghos S552 f i i i th fe E iE z 38 g A 3 £ : af z + = £ : f E j i : wed H if 1) 88 E A iz § i BF : : i aH a fe ze & 33 of E i i! : Fi Se aanbaadeatened THANKSGIVING DINNER. uss Nov, A 4 RAND HOTEL dD! Mw. pice de yolaiile, we & la fen Ps set | ere (vein cousel’s influence was exerted to im Bow mingled ia Power dol! , oma fiverabio recepiton by the ae of as witing bee wotll i Fires 4a boost yo) hot. } government, They furtheraided them to \emay Was @tmost turmed fnto I, Sauce p A protest ia reply to All Pasha’s proclamation, ime the irst earthquake was felt. a w bias Was commiin.cated to all thé foreign ta foliowed by showers of cinders that fen with | * a 4 con, . This was wold up by a threatening note from » branches Wissing for two hours, Oiecer chs Wrohantes D'rioce” Gortaohakom, The reply of tae -eblime Pore ad oa ‘yoots: ache tothe @\ier wae far from what waa expected, asthe | of honsen wi A la gantin, (uiterforegces of the Western Power) was firmy mage Aue fraivoe Ca other words, Rue & Cy wore poliely i . 4 | laneome 4 given YOU ® hasty retrospective view of | ter at thie period va ot Crete, 1 may add that the intext @ews from | The eyes were nd i highly favorable to the Turks, wie seem | the ears stun wed, ner tas the te hare a them (iiges, to carry Wm (he war wih energy. ttt nove and or By all the alt paawod, (0 £6 great dix Xoay of the insurgents, Tus vattern ‘agd weatere distrie@ Deve sent in their orbhmineon and Ube comegat amily ahow #1805 of roristance, The reorganization of (ne governmen’s of the tsi i - worl of (bt loharRents. . Sostarher ‘govern. bave boon | There, ry ‘vere ; ‘ coupe, and three " ASSAULTING Ax Ov-ieee.—Toerday aight, not lar from arte vite ee vy cnenter The (revan's are the Jews ered cote of bbe Porte (paying shout @ per twelve o'clock, officer Cutter, of the Twenty-serenth pre.