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4 “EUROPE. The Public Mind of Paris Uneasy and Excited. Napoleon Warned by the Re- cent Elections: Sketches of the Austro-Cis-Lei- than Ministers. Tarkish Legislation for the Christian Populations and Plans and Pressure of the Great Powers. FRANCE. SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. Emperiniism with Little To Do and Exhibl- tion Affairs Revived—Ofticial Pipeluying for Klections—Police Exertions and Public Dis- content=The Army Bill-A Kigorous Win- ter—Scenes in the Streets and Sufferings of the Poor—A Skating Carnival—Royal Sport— A Hat and Sword from the Pope—Hard Times. Panis, Jan. 9, 1868. Thesevere weather appears to be forcing poli- tics into winter quarters—at all events, state craft has produced nothing passing strange within these last few da; France has want of a little breath- ing time, Since the Tuileries became for some hours on New Year’s Day an Agapemone, and M. Goltz has arrived, in failing health, at Berlin, after transacting his little business with Napoleon, nothing has disturbed the tranquillity of affairs ex- cept it be the interview between the United Com- missioners of the defunct Exhibition and the Em- Peror and the Prince Imperial. This meeting was to make amends to the world’s agricul- ture and other cultures, by rewarding the successful competitors in these branches of human fndustry. One has read almost ad nauseam the continued incense-shaking that has been going on to Peace, Progress, Civilization for the last twelve months that we are inclined to exclaim with Fal- staff, ‘No more of that, Hal, an’ if you love me.” Indeed the Emperor seemed to be tired of the thing; nevertheless he said a few final words in honor of the cause. The Prince Imperial as hon- orary President of the Commission looked on. He seemed, too, very sedate; but then it must be re- membered he is contemplating matrimony, and this step is caleulated to make older heads than his grave. ‘The net profits of the Exhibition are reported to be some $400,000, but what will be the ultimate application of this sum assuming that the guaran- tors waive their claim for dividends is not known. It was rumored on Sunday that a good slice of it ought to be voted to the Algerian Famine Fund. M. Lo Play, the first commissioner, is the only man who has clearly received a substantial advantage from the speculation at the Champ de Mars. Whether he has received an hunorarium of $1,000 or no, or whether he will decline it, if offered, is unknown, one thing is certain, he has been appointed a Senator. The government officers have not added to thei popularity by refusing to be cross-examined on tho reasons for cutting up the electoral districts where the opposition candidates found ever a home. Many a place that knew them will henceforth know them no more. It was hard enough to wilh- hold these statistics till the twelfth hour as allowed by law, butto find what must have been the cause is sufficient to justify the indignation of the opposition. It shows also that the govern- ment see danger and disobedience in the nation’s eyes, and are determined to take time by the fore- lock. But it will require a t many acts of liberality to make atonemen for the new Army law. It is even qoeehonanle if an imperial letter was written ou ¢ 19th of this month that the widespread dis- allection would be removed. The people now are acquiring the inconvenient habit—to the authori- ties, at least—of demanding acts and not pro- mises; they want measures, not men; they want to clearly know what is to done, not what will be. When they ask for bread they do not wish to be given a stone. | The ink has been hardly dry on M. Pietri’s cir- | cular to his subordinates of the police, counsel ling them to have “‘hoarts of ouk’’ when the re- sults ha own themselves, is the | nasty affair of the Porte St. ¥ tre. A. M. Langlois disapproves of some incident in the representation, and seeing others appiand con- cludes he has the logical right to hiss, particular! 48 others so indulge theirdisapprobation. But had marked hin ior her own. ‘The claqueurs—this paid nuisance of French theatree—marked him, nd unanimously voted that he should be put out, @ change of scene M. Langlois showed no desire to embrace. Hereupon one of the garde approached, seized, almost strangled him, and carried him victoriously to the lock up. Now those who de- manded his expuision nev ed his strangula- tion, and called upon the mat to have hii readmitted or that they wouid not allow the to proceed. In this virtuous reparation for so brutal an outrage M. Langlois was brought back to the place from whence he came, and the ex- cited audience, having s Justice done, turned their glasses to the stage. The second instance of maintaing law and order occurred in a large open space opposite the Prince Eugene barracks. Here a number of persone were harmlessly sliding, as they had been all day, surrounded by spectators highly amused at the “ups and downs” of the performers. The authori ties—it was now one o'clock, the morning Mou- i day—seemed to remember possibly that there | was an assemblage of more than the twenty | allowed by law, and a sergeant in command of a | passing guard seized a citizen, who did uot get | out of the way fast enough. The citizen w rescued, the soldiers entered their barrack booted and stoned by the mob; the police then came and arrested some twenty individuals, ressicr has deposited his report on the Modifications introduced into the Army law. The minimum height of the soldier is fixed at one metre fifty-five centimetres. The commission still adheres to allowing substitates to t, place in the National Guard Mobile, after the well pro nounced majority in the Ohamber against it. This dec n Will give rise to some warm debates when the subject wili be entertained on Thursday next. ‘The government has received asaintary les gon as to what the next elections will be. Two opposition members lave becn returned to fill the vacancies caused by the elevation of M, M. Gonin @nd Conneau to the Senate—vaca which the government need not have created if they w certain their places would be filled by friends, the governinent desire not to be must be sincere with the nation, thargy of | the latter, even in the agricultural districts, is dying away Provisions for the army in the Pontifical States aud munitions of war ave ut this moment being despatched from Toulon to Ciy Vecehia, Paris hag rather suddenly been seized by the Figors of a Russian winter. Some learned assert that its equal is only to be found int whew Julias Cawar bivouaeked in the neigh! Of Paris. Others say that its parallel cun be found in 1840, ot the time wheu the reimuin the First Napoleon were brought to bh on the banks of the Seine atnong the Krench pe ple whom he so deurly joved. M. Lamver can console himself for ‘not being able to go to the North Pole on his voyage of discovery this season, as the North Pole seems apparently to have come*to him. The aspect of the city, in its unusual white mantle, is the reverse being cheerful. The snow seems to hesitate to cor down, but its absence is made up by rieuma mists and an alternate glazing of highway byways. The boulevards look positively dial the blewk and leafless trees, their branches like 80 many outstretched arms supplicating pity from the cold passerapy. The cabs half slide, half roll along, with that dead sound as if the streets had Deen muttied to drown the noise while nature lay Yndisposed. And poor eabby, with a homely choir swathed” round his ears, seems like atience On & monument, sitting on his box. ere are his gibes now and his The ood jue, ie gambols? family uinap, ‘'in fair round belly, bins t ii notwithstanding his furs, has a bi nose wxlahiod brow, King Frost, lik ds the Soins ts © netarel curiosity, It isan NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, JANUARY 26, 1868.—TRIPLE SHEET. Arctio sea in minintare, with its blocks of ice | descendant of ons of those ancient Irish families | the then British Ambassador, Lord stratford de | mutgnted a concession ' favor of all foreign 2 Gf,Octeben, OBRoF the most active men of the Carlbal- slightly lifting their heads toward heaven in | of gentle blood whom the Eng'ish drove into exite | Redcliffe, to send ‘to the conference held there ax mos ther: howe Fel one, saniast to She Mase ot 2 ‘The Pure Gacetiotes the following :—A phrase in the pictaraaase Fugandnen. It is as silent as the | in the course of the seventeenth century. Since | imperial rosoript, callod here a hattl humayoun, gon- ‘es bis own aubjocta, some of the | Speeeb sddrossed by the King on Now Year's Day to the aut this Aretic exploration, On Sunday particularly the times were dreadfully | of the constitutional party therein. As a heredi- ‘trafic was almost strects. At the foot of every rising ground a cart or & wagon lay strewn about, the horses removed, | tional principles, He is much liked at Court, just like ships stranded after a storm. Some | and was a friend and companion of the Kaiser's ia thrown out their sheet | his youthful days. In the lately dissolved Cabinet out of joint. railway wagons had e + June 6, 186% anchor, which consisted of an extra tarpaulin | of Baron Beust Count Taafe held the post of | soas to put them in complete force. Besides, exch | the obstacles existing against foreigners in Turkey. The + Kept. 5, 1 buses and ‘such public’ conveyances ‘beat | of Vice President and Minister of the Police. Ore tauitabions; snch, for. oe ae = i cla nae Prager ie ees ere atten mer ee April 7, 1868. funeral marches’ to their destination. The 15th | Count Alfred Potocki, who is the third heredit- | Dellevos fully in the Code Napoleon as a salutary reolpe | sccntnt of the diMoulties arising therein by their own March een ot January—the winter truly of Parisian discon- | ary member of the Upper Honse of the Reichs- | for all possible political evils. embassies, At the rame time that the Sultan's “ad. Sept 24, 1864, spr ae mencd bree | i pay See quarter’s a Ba a ae Ministry, owes his Posltioa, ‘The following document, taken from the Livre Jawne Mapas upon —— po ss lage reper hyo’ Pee rent, or go to find elds and pastures new, erein as iter of Agricul: mainly to the French govern: blished in the pres- | one of the same is willing to make a single concession ioe being Daas many furniture vans were doing theit | fact that he sa Pole Pig! was neceass ad ge’ wy phe play as an example it | Dim. Now, se Turkey ia a progreasive government it day, ome had broken down upgolting and sha | that the Poles shouldbe rwpreaentod inthe Gabe | 26 T™W U8, Oe tte semana nue | sea chuinh (etalon. pala fen bat fire me ane ae ering many a household god. Two dairy carts | net. He isa native of Galicia and o scion of a a 186%. past guts He ree ana . Bie of We aang, family which for three centuries has played a lead- | imperial reseript in question bad much wolght in the ree, ay Tated, Biatee chould set Pp Date The loss will here be more keenly felt, as the cow | He is also a model landlord and has beautified his with the iron tail is everywhere fr licia w ¥ carts could make no way, though bent on charita- | the most modern improvements. In April, 1861, ble missions, so the porters coal by the bag. The millennium must be at hand, | the Upper House of the Austrian Reichsrath. r. Camming classes as among the “signs | He was also elected at the beginning of last year of the times” the population taking in their coal | to the Lower House by a Galician constituency, since by the bag. The gay Parisians, never domestic by nature, | to retain his seat in the Upper House, he resigned keep titer rooms by circum- | the mandate to the Lower Cham stances over which eee have no control. Not all, Dr. Leopold Hasner, Knight of Artha, was however. To say noth’ out laborers aud artisans who have to go to seek | In 1849 he became extraordinary Professor of their daily dole of charity at some of the ‘head Jurisprudence in the University ‘of Prague and centres’? in the ois there was a crowd of rank | ordinary Professor of Political Economy. In 1861 jakes, more especially on Satur- day evening, when the fete given by the Skating | and was elected by that Diet to be one of its re- Club came off. The carriages commenced to ar- | presentatives in the Lower House of the Reichs- ght all that was rich | rath. In 1865 he was appointed professor of the and elegant of French, Russians, Americans, Eng- | political sciences in the University of Vienna. In lish and dwellers beyond Mesopotamia. The mem- bers of the club exhibited their card of member- | mian Diet, and by it elected as one of the repre- ship along with a lantern—the latter fixed in the fur hat or suspended from their co: also “displayed lights.” have been forced to and fashion at the rive at ten o’clock and brou; ing of the skates was a kind of holy numerous visitors as the sa park at @ race course. were like mice,” from beneath the sl i and encased in rakish Sonarofft boo! ons, usic arose, but not with a “voluptuous swell,’ from an infantry band, who kept time by alter- nately blowiog their trumpets and tops of their | whom he comes in contact. He was born in fingers. Quadrille parties were speedily arranged, | Brinn, the capital of Moray: and “dancing was kept up till a late hour.” The | was master tanner. He became professor of ladies tripped it on the light fantastic and skated | the political sciouc right heartily, their lanterns, not dimly burning, | Tn 1848 ke threw himself into politics and went so winkled like little stars as they moved throug! far as to address the people in the open air. For he mystic mazes of the dance. Three live prin- | this offe. ‘The electric light shone on | of his , along with bonfires, | from hi ups and pyrotechnic surpris: vi > till morning, Not a member of | ment and the other instittuions of 1848 went to the as present. In the matier of | bad he be coRses were present, fair wouen and brave men, Venetian one went li istence. How here to be seen, emi-monde their early educat on for young femules Platos. Dr ‘There was an imperial shooting party a few days The Pru head of game we the same time another baitu was taking pla among the Parisi: had been appear before the ju¢ did not kuo iguorance. constitution in giving an account of the precced- | same. His conduct as president ings in the Corps Législatif other than that sup- jal stenographer. ‘This in free trade times is very strange; still stra. the delinquents # supporters of the gov friends? These petty inte: ago, when plied by the o! ing you d’Orrault, is daily e for put were not ‘They had, one a e some of nd de ment in the case of the enterprising spirits endeavor to | thea the Taafes have supplied a noble family to cross; Some drop in, as in the passage over Mirza’s | Bohemia. Count Taafe is considerably the young- visionary bridge. Now that l'rance cannot spare } est man in the Cabinet, being only thirty-four years an enfant from the defence of the country, the | of age. He, too, first b ‘to play a part in rites prudently prohibit further attempts at | politics in 1861, and, Tike Prince Carlos, as 4 mem- The spo di ud M, Duruy’s system of secondary in- | was not allowed to become an advocate and there- , er, they contented themselve: pets soupers: aud the seciety of cosmopolitan | diploma in Brian, where he rapidly gained large multancously asked to come and | the German liberal party and a champion of the nent. ract rather than add ‘fhe Hon. lgnatins von Plover is Minister of of the Second Empire. Commerce. He was born in Vienna on May stor against his son-in-law, the Marquis } was ennobled in 1850.’ He studied law at the specied. Your readers wili re- | Un member that tlie old Marquis married an ¢ i y the ves of the army who had gone to prosent ‘him has excited some aflention, “The Temarked, “has su in accomplishing tue unity of Tuiy by confrontin; dangers and undergoing sacrifices of i$ further perils will have to be eacountered, and 1 am Sure that the army will fulfil its uy home as well as abroad.” xactitude of the above a ed by persons worthy of every confidence. ha Units Calc fice, the,elcned lst of tg Inister io it the 6th June, 1861, and tho 234 . t86T Ministries. Crisis, taining what may be here supposed * be expression of the changes and reforms which his ministers con- err gation arises ing it with another forelgn- tomplated introducing foto the administration of the | OP") anai'be tried 1m the consalsto of tha derendura or ompire, Although it specified these somewhat in de- | that if it be tried im a Mussulman tribunal (one of the tail, 1t Axed no period for thoir oxecution; and if they, pates at 2 Piomes sanlees), be abel be goritied, man o ation oF constilate; having been of rather slow growth, each and all of the | AaaUh is ine Sultan will not allow. Whether this, priv Powers concerned in that treaty havo sun sunt ilege re alio be seer to bis Presser bat pod from urging the subject upon the early attention e fenaetl fe Sreannen, ma ot if it be, the Sultan will certain- iboralits ‘d forel, iste present Sultan, They soem to boliove that the Sultan | {7 England, F " ihe doers feral een a than nae has only to prociaim the whole of them to his people | privilege of exteritoriality must be attributed many of ‘ons, however, ask still more, They demand that whenever one of their subjects owning real estate, r of the Bohemian Diet and an active supporter the spended in the member of the Upper House of the Reichsrath b( Sopi Buy pore thie liberal and ppsenrtvens ing part in the troubled sea of Polish politics. | conclusion of peace, for Russia saw in it the secds of ple to, Rasala and Greece, | and though thee, future dissatisfaction among the Mussulmaa and non- on thelr well knows agra brat rt a Mussulman subjects of the Sultan, and a wide fiold for bad : old out against they woul blis_ opinion to accede to the same. hor right to interfore in favor of the ‘co-religioniste,”” | Pro ent, Monat nas boon sald jar coher letters, Turkey the Greeks and Bulgrarians, big igo, peace Soe Senet final Agog eel oer . overni alone, 0) It is desired to show that the Ottoman gi iment {s ue i oe yt pair syrnves rofl fad etientl not retrograde in its action, but rather that it is, on th® | not te warlike purposes, and her subjects would have contrary, progressive. To any {mpartial observer who | fess reason to complain. There would also exist loss t animosity between the many peoples, sects and religions ‘Will refiect upon the reselts in Turkey of the partied in Turkey; justice would be dealt out with more impar- pare; she. former needs. no argmment, it ina | “ality by Mussuiman judges, and what is called “Eu. a slow, and vet the ease reflsotion must resu! ropean olvilization”’ would progress faster and surer in conviction of its truthfulness, an empire whioh covers so vast a portion of Kurope and ment; indeed, there ana, very yw gucl ly quaiified for employment, Since then many Ficoir Gad’ armenian fanulice have. sent theie ons to ¥ ee ee moecete ine: a Paris for education, Quite a large number of | 14.) ee rowith the prescription 0 great imps similar youths have been sent there for the Physician of France for tho Sultan. It en game purpose at the oxpense of the Sultan, Thore is a | ‘roman analvsis of the catt!-Humayoun, to which hav goodly number there now who are being educated by | Feferred, contained im the French official Yellow as “ 16 present Sultan, many of: whom will, most probably, bie Yellow Book, speakine of the vory points pans enter the service of the government, In the Sublime aod cepelaad, says:—What maay be expected of ins Porte (a puvlic edifice, and not a man, as some editors », both in its own interest and in that of suppose) thore are two burcaus occupied only by young | “Mn races, and also in conformity with its engazoments Armemans aud Grocks, Toera are also in it some be a may be summed up in the following others trom Syrta and Palestine, all serving as regis- pore: Mussulmans of the 1, The rest adyission of Christians to State employments, So ee a ate eat oe thin hand think shes | Tiiaay bo questhoaed phasors spttecs of ssorutting, based the participation of all nubj. in the military service, their own sons might be placod there in tion of these | Wiion Put the sume tems a thelr right, would Christians, Out of those bureans are the dracomans, | Int be a powerful moras of ming, tia Chelating races ia secretaries of logation, secrotaries for the Governors It own stim «tion and in that oF the Mussuimans, and of General of the large vinces, &c.; and even somo of | effecting a certain moral fusion as well as the formation of 8 public spiri the Ottoman consuls general and consuls reovive thetr spirit, rateraiof, taokractinn condlatting! . The organization of firat, in the encouragement and asmstance of educational ex tablishments founded by the non. Mussiilman races; secon tho institution, for the chief centres of population, 0} secondary Mussulman educational establishments, to which Christians will be allowed admission; third, the gradual Acvelopmentof primary Mussulman education, by the crea. cf jon of a corps of professors; urns undation of a Byenioes 69 geen uy univaratty for both urgulmans and Christians, where they United Statos are averse to the employment tn import: | sciences ‘history ndwetn e an ad Tae tent pub other Ant posts tore of ‘naturalized’? citizens. As a rosult | taught in any oxlating inatitition, “the conrequcnes betng of this ventiment there sprang up a fow years ago party | the impossibility of forming a properly qualified magistracy which, fortunately for the latter, did not receive much erat p oatablishasent cot apes ial Bre parators = Support from. Se. SUNG 4: eran.» Bemening: ae army, from which Christians are in principle not excluded, game exists among the Mussulman population of Turkey | and to which they would be admitted whenever the refurm against tho Christians, but the government doos not | Of tho military ayatem compels the employment of Christian favorit, Tho present Ottoman Ministers at Washing. | oMcers; slxth, the estiblishment of public libraries. Iti ton, London, Berlin, St. Petersburg and Atnens aro all | to bo rogrotied thit, owinz to the social customs of the em- Christians, aud almost all of the consulates are fillod by | pire there ix no uso romarking, except ne a mattor of fact, the void which fomale education presenta, which, how. tho same, to the dissatisfaction of tho Mussulmane of | oy lnc yond whl eanaidering ap ot eanential esnd- the capital, Notwithstanding this, some of the foreiga | flou'of all progress In w oll orgunizel soe ey, “advisers” of the Sultan urge him to increase the num- | "8 The exieasion of the adminuteativecand judicial ber by appointing Christians to the highest offices of the | system already introduced in some provinces by the now governmont in the capital and in the provinces, Thoro | vilzct orgamzation of 1886, This ayatom, which doca honor {certainly no. roason why tno’ Saitaa’ should | t tho Turkish gorernmont, and descrves, to be encouraged, : : rosts on a moro complete separation of the judicial and ade not appoint a Grook to the office of Cos Porte | ministrative orders, and the creation ot mixed. civil (Minister of Marine); but thore is Bo doubt | tribunals, composed equally of Mussu'mans and. non. that not ong in his empire is qualified for it; and it may | Mussulmans, for the trial of cases between Muastlmans bo added that few Greeks possess, just now at least, cufl- | and non-Mussulmans. There is, perhaps, room for inquiry cient loya'ty, ‘Tho tormer may be said of most of the | Whether tho mole of electing tho members for thos other positions of minister, As to the provinces, in ba or Ge age Om ego iene’ foe elena cage ap tell: Rem gees ener Christian Judges will be auch ‘ns to raise them to the height character—a mixture r Fi . | of the dutlos they have to discharge, Protesiant_and Isruelito; and should the Sullan appoint | °€ "Tho introddouow of real Publicity in the courts of fn individual from olthér the rest would bo most indig- | Justice, and the general and publlo admission of Christian nant at the favor shown, For this roagon, mos: pro- | &! bably, i€ for no other, the Sultan appoints neither, open of gemmarctel: isrioanaie endl re and alls up the places with one who 18 poutral, other- Sriting on ae this ongnt tbe eckvodiod. all the. articles wise 4 Mussul man. of the French civil code which are applicable to commerci Tho Ottoman government certainly offora no obztacle | matters. ‘Tho framers of tne Ottoman. code have, th. fact to tho tree education of tts subjects, Each oonmanity | confined themselves to copying certain regulations of our has tts own religious hoad and evon councils, composed | Commercial code, without reflecting that the general prin. 1 ' ciples were to be fund in the civil code from whlch they of laymen, for tho administration of its concerns. Tueso | Sugnt to have been extrested: aad put In Grow Peenee pose ate at liberty to establish as maay colleges, academies, | {nthe oommercial code. schools, seminaries for boch sexes, us they 800 propor; and | 6, A revision of the prison system and police organiza- ‘a great’ many such now actually doexist. The Sultan and | tion. his predecessors have established colleges for the army, 1, The free exorcise of the right of property by foreigners, ABYIS SINIA The Milltary Situation. In view of the near approach of a battle between the forces of the King of Abyssinia and the army of Queem Victoria, we.recapitulate, from the latest mail sources ef information, the position of the contending parties, RAB BRITIGN LINE OF MAROH, ostbitten. Coal | large possessions in Galicia with a vast number of ad to deliver the | he took his seat as hereditary member of but at the request of the Kaiser, who wished him ber. of pita Rh Seite otha 10. ), meatior (onpaioh of the Third ight eavalty, Teath, rogttoeas born those poor, frozen | in Prague, the capital of Bohemia, in March, 1818. he was clected a member of the Bohemian Diet, 1867 he was again elected a member of the Bohe- depart Zoulla ead, worl yoward Koomayles, the juarter wing of tho hin pative infantry eee ton Koons ioe toward Zoulla, wuile the left wing. on h the road to Low bina real” taking the more diffoult ry Koomaylee Pang, between Lower and Upper Sooreo, distance of about four mules. On the 3d the troops at Upper Sooroo moved on te Bayray Guddy, and the Third cavalry to Up; Sooroa, Tt was intended that the Third cavalry sw st, giart on the afternoon of the 3d for Ray: but owing to the mormmg’s march througt: 0 Page having beem more severe than was ant) (od, by which the horses wero exhausted, and tly jj animals coming up very late in the ds. Colonel Graves, Third cavalry, postponed the mar’ ‘it the following afternoon, the. march from Upp vored te Ravray Guddy is twenty-eight and a bai ies, and orders had been issued the Cavalry to bivousc af Guinea Fowl Pisin, where there ie a well, during the night, The march perme: commenced at 3:30 P. when thoy reached that place it was too early to more than a quarter of an hour—atore especially as the moon wasin tho ‘full, and so they pushed on another fonr miles, and then pulled up for the night. It was intensely cold, so fires were quiokiy lighted a one wrapped himseif up and made himself com( for the night, and at 5:30 A. M. the ‘‘mount” was again sounded, and Rayray Guddy reached at 10 A. M. Our camp is_prettily situated on of facing the nor'h, with the cavalry on the right, moume tain ia battery in the contre and Tenth Native im fantry on the loft, whilo the A division of the transport traip att od to the advance brigade is encamped om the slope of the opposite hill, A bird’ view of the whole is obtained from a high hill in rear of the and tbe sight, if not altog rimposing, owing to smallness of the force, is certainly very picturesque. It is supposed we shall remain here a fortnight op three weeks, andthen an advance wil! be made on Um- tatla, distantabout one hundred miles, and which will be post No. 3, ‘ d ntatives of Bohemia in the Lower House of the + The ladies | Reichsrath. In May of last year the Kaiser nomi- for putting on | nated him a life member of the Upper House and ies and had as | conferred on him the honor of knighthood. The ling and weighing | learned professor is the author of several legal The prettiest feet | works. He is the Minister for Education and Pub- peeping, but not | lic Worship in the new Ministry. ortest of Dr. Karl Giskra, Minister of the Interior, is the most imposing personality of the nine. The Aus- trian world rings with praises of his enthusiasm, his eloquence, his ascendancy over those with deputy govornors Whether thoir employment to “policy,” to “foreign influ or to “merit” need net be in 1820, His father in the University of Vieuna, . coupled with the advanced liberalism iews, his professorship was taken away . A Moravian constituency deputed him » No} tothe Frankfort parliament. After that partia- me an exile and took up his residence is. In 1850 he returned to Vienna, He ion has been much } in Lithus wae not theu in ex- } fore pr: i for some time asa solicitor. About th | ten years ag he at length obtained an advocate’s He wos Mayor of Brinn at the time of inn occupation of that city in 1866, and d the attention of the King and Crown Prince of Prussia. Since 1861 he has played a i | prominent part in politics, always as a member of bagged. About | atirae seventeen of whic what? At first they | rights of Hungary. He’ has represented Moravia long left to burst in | in the Lower House of the Reichsrath, and in 1867 and all, violated the | was appointed by the Kaiser to pre TAG FRIENDLY Curers, A letter from an Mnglish officer in camp in Abyssinia te the Friend of India reports :—Kassa, chief of ‘figre, has sent us most friendly messages; so also bas Waagra, Prince of Lasta, been for months in corre- spondence with us; these two being respectively the second and the third most important men in Abyssinia, It is reported, also, that Menelok, Prince of Shos, hag surrounded Magdals, Monetek is supposed to be friend ly to us, vation that last month, when the new con- laws were promulzated, he was forth- nsly elected by the Lower House to a deliberations. His acceptance of ¢ this back- | the post of Minister will compel him to resign this rferences make | honorable post. 3 the th ib MAGDALA, King Toodorus has bis headquarters n to Dis Dalatial stronghold at Magdala, Here he holds the prise oners. Dr, Bianc, who, with Mr. Rassam and Lieutem ant Prideaux, f ed the mission appointed to convey broken down coach | 21, 1810. His father, who was ®& judge, sity of Vienna. Tn 1834 he obtained his of doctor of Inws from his university. In quee ardin Mabile, who retired on 1836 he entered the government service, in the | t8¢ avy, medicme and the ordinary branches of e108 oie CR ee and the generalization Queen yea dottae abeatoren ore wag avings. | fire laid at the fect of the Mur | fiaancial departuent of which he haa ever since | Hoty.” Home of which Christians oven are admitted. | "A teform in the aystom ot mortgages. and the oalad- | oxtends from the time of his departure from quis, old father and mother cluimeri— ] been occupied. in April, 1860, he was appointed | Has the: a mit roqutate ceerantens OF eaatercing property, offering | ‘Aaen in duly, 1864, to the end of Auguss something be them the means of da pistol in his supply him with pocket mone; that the sinate the first Napoleon, whom Talle, tol N and i hat t 1 soon find vat a way of bi pension of $1 ble by the Mini pne item 0 from ov of rid of. ipo s just sword, ¢ eon must be dd from th ur he was th 1 Out to be a Fortau uns to a sense of the Pry visit to Herr Bis jon. n evidence of the ing may be mentioned the h hand at the on to-r Ger ing. bere that w There was nota great gathering, be remembered it was the night of King Fro-t's rinain an samp: 0 do in t p ileries this season; ti crow. ral aud Mrs. Dix receiv ball at the lakes. Sketches Leithan Ministey—Trade Repori=The M AUSTRIA. SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. ™ chant Marine. Veonwa. dan. 1, 1868, Having already furnished you with biographical sketches of the members of Cabinet, 1 will now pa: mbers of the Cis-Leithan x 80, howe the benetit of those of your r followed the march of events in Ang Hungary in 1867, nee er, | ough pi a common affair of the em etry. 3. The Mi mierof the Cis-Leith He was ing the look ofgextortion. om | Provisional M in his martiag ahappy as weil asalucky man. | therefrom. In 1847 he wi d with the benediction of his Holiuoss as being the foremost price among the Chureh’s defenders. His. 2, forge C # State of invincible ign sces, have not table mansions to receive. “Ma ‘ondition’ at there are now and will be three ministries functioning in the empire, to wit:—L. The Imperial Ministry for the cpendencies of Hungery. All roqutaite cual 5 10. ‘The suporession of the exiating prohibitions, which are AxoUrce of depreciation of thelr property to Mussniman owners, by preventing thom from selling their anda, or é. a diaposiog of tnem with entire Iberty, ‘hriations# can do. people choose to establish them, ‘The Sultan cannot do | “PINS creation ot Oredig, Foncie®: eatabllahiuents wien it. Av Armonian would no more send his sons toa | would recoive the amounts realized by sales of this kind, Massulman, Greek, (atholic or Protestant school than a | would provide for ther re-emplovinent, and would (aus white gentloman of the United Statos would send his | guarantee, Nussulimans against tho ruin Which is how onl 20n8 o 9 10 be obvinted by row ARnres ng st mee oo! for colored children, aad the DAY | indirect taxos ax are capable of it under exclusive govern. be said of each Of the commusives. Tvishot waerefore, | aat amministcation and the reforia of Wie AYSteiU OF ODL, the fanit of the “ultan if they prefer sending their sons | iecung aud Carmmmg our tne direct eens, to Paris and London rathor than to establisu academies | “12. ‘rhe suppression of Custom Houses in the interior, in Consiantinople. Tt would require a large amount | and of taxes on produce; and, in a word of all in: of money for the purpose of erecting an academy | jurions fisc os which kill local 1udustry, and con. and every sect and religion im ti ‘al impoverishment of the people. rad , eation of a budget, and of a general system of empire; and the present condition of tho treasury di pubite ork ‘comprising eres high roads, branes. 3 mn 4, not cerininly admit of it, ‘Tho Sultan has sont, within a | Pural roads &nd porta, eatiwaye, he great high roads and few yoars past, several youag Mussulmans and Chris- | ports to bo given to Europein indusirial azencies to Uans to Paris to atudy law (dro to qualify them- | stract under conditions which would insure tho oontra employment in the j departments of | seourity ane ogi f ioe a ie fade to be ce vernment, whero Ista jurisprudence is not y Stants from the Department o! Pane TP OER SERRE , with ioc! resources, used. 14. A general aystem of working tho minos and foresta French document in question advises the em- | of the State hy the aid of private. indusiry, preceded bv & ployment of the Christian subjects of the Sultan ia bis | real and thorough patting in order of public forest pro- army. Down to a tocent period all non-Massuimans paid | perties, eostides in te! ecginteaee a a orm signity _ he insti tenicl fn [ wien protonna to totale eek ogra sackeey | sheet waran tth gins eacourasunn; van $0 he Tsai role, as noa-equals with the predo WE ts sod auehete nee ‘budget realty 6% ‘hey were not, in consequence, ever catled and sinoere, together with special budgets, which hy battles of their oquntry ; and it may be ques. | hitherto not existed for each ministerial department. ‘The nd whether they would nave dared to do go if calied ato ition of megastires caloalate 1 to sive the gadjeoip at so 4 s terly ograd ultan as well as foroign capitalists coadtoace 1a the goo. el ng muatheae tn pth org bed Scents, employment of the finances of the State, pion from military service now paid all over ihe CANDIA. Tt was then understood tha: the government istePof Finence, and in December ter the formation of the Sohmerling finilively appointed M 1, I8G1, he was clected @ mem- 4 the Boheiian Diet by the Eger Chamber of of which was an an- | Gomucree, ‘the Diet elected him one of their Napoloon the Third, | represents tives in the Lower House of ty Reichs- the Int What | rath, last, and from this work we extract descrisglon of the place, considered by Abyssinians as tmpregnal a long siega, they say, cam force it wo surrender; but during the six weeks preceding the ralty season i] absence of water at that time ot Id com: she garrison to ask for terms if the enemy were in pow session of Salanga, from where also water could be oBe tained. The Amba owes lis strength to ti |08t DOP fect wall of columnar basalt tha: completely eu: ode it, varying in height from thirty to seven hun M Three gi well fortled according to Abyssinian moe tions, bave been erected at the weakest and most a& cessible pomts, The ono wo came through, at the northeast extremity of the Amba, is closed by two doors, separated from each othes by short and steep ascent; small earth+ been erected on tne flanks ridge is strongiy feaced and loop about three fourths of a mie length and from hundred to eight hundred yards breadth, It contains the King’s houses, a churoh, tl treasury, the jail, several large opon spaces and othera covered wi soldiers’ huts. Ihe garrison ordinarily of about one thousand two hundred men, of whom aro gunners. Tho whole popuiation, ao) many prisoners, must be between three thousand four thousand. Mngdala is about nine thousand fect above the level of the sea; the-ciimate fs certain'y not tropical. Though the sun is sometimes felt very hot, the tuermomoter, exe Posed to its rays, never rises above 105 degrees on thé warmost days, and the summit of the hign mountains fthe Falla country, only a few miles distant, ws for io moutus of the year covered with snow or frozem on had atready t (Professor Ldward) is the new Minister jee. He has just completed his fo h year, He studied in the Universit ms aad obtained his doctor of laws decree ppointed Professor vrispradeace in Lemberg, Galicin, — tn i858 cepted a similar chai the University of Prague. In 1861, he was elected to a seat er conduct is,of | in the Bohemian Dict, where he became irin aud youns, | known as one or the leaders of the German party ¢. Should the rein and one of the most formidable opponents ishing cap, and | of the Nationslist or Czech party. He has also and ifthe Shak of | disting i himself as one of the best debaters ir of seven league | in the Lower House of the th, where he irresistible. “He | has vat es a renrese f th mens Brestet (Rudolf Dr.) cep the thorny ion, Aud Poy | post of Minister of the Finances, He wa i by way of a nha ia (816. He studied the Uni city and devoted himself ehief nd inathoma ies. He vas appointed « f matvematios in tist | i ¢ Pope a velvet hat Sn ene nn a —————————— = : 3 2. FH 4 $ = : 2 3 3 5 that this, whieh e was clected a men After the reac if Tn WRG he » o receive somo of its Christian subjects im the ~ lu Tho locality on ihe whole may be considered as Yet opened their | g Credit Institute a navy, bat ee heada of ‘deir commantiion What the Revolutionary Delegates Demanded | healthy. wil! not do tures, a post which | pposed it. It would coriniaty be difticu of the Parte: rf ‘ : al at is Mabtaloash Yoriane om rgnnization of the Anglo-Indian Force—The re iv kee + Soceptieorar sale +o soon sof thie suateay treganioen ard. the Muscut. | By the steamship Germania, at this port, wo have . Bengal Brigade. he. city, azul. others bates OF the awh hese tan aloes of rank, who have worked their way {com | oe eer ee teen ee ety. | Que special telegram from Adon, Arabia, forwarded from the stegna- ich he was sent to the Lower House | {ie lowest po Mere cee nse poluimens of } to the Porto had mado the following damands:-—-1. { by way of London throught the Attantic cable and pab- 1 centre French 1864, He is @ good upcaker, & have, however, deen made, and forigners | #00 Of an important portion of torritory 1n tho directi lished a few days since, indicated that the British Gene n and Lilt ‘ : ev without # port une officers of the rank of eapiain, major, &c., | #1 Hormbgoving and of w port in the still oosupioa by vive | Fal in command in Abyssinia bad then learned that King rnd enl ree | pe Seve him to refuse poe melee fa ag Torks on the Montenogrin frontier, Theodorva will fight before he liberates the captives, sa al ode ite By Be hy ‘The Porte had decided on refusing these concessions, | (:nglish reinforcements were consequently being hurrie® eee " _He is the son of a Privates, are forcignera, ood, it might «ork very well id the Mootenegrius were about to arm, whoa new | from India, in illustration of our special despatch fied will erie | Steward of Prince Ceichteustein, He was early | Privates, are forign rexiendhte of Greeks, Armesians, Nicholas, lod to the | we publish il report taken from our ie fivet will come off | an orphan, ond his path in life has been a | frsstites, &t., formed, at Trast an experimoat. It jomont to bo reduced to that of @ port | of tne organization of the Angio-Indian ci aC red oue. te eacly excelled in mathematics, however, ba indigcrost to sond them against @ ee eee wits ts of | {Bed for this sor ed on Saturday even- became a lawyer, ond took his doctor's degree man revolt, and quite unfair to send them just ‘hia mudiilcation is said to be due to the counsels 1 Pod PS, sity of Vienna in 1841 now to Candia, especially the Greek recimenis (From the Times India.} 3 pen as aarnalts! e tand Another very important -subject is aliuded to at some Proparations for the Abyseinian campaign are | "MMe then bovame’ @ professot of | Wogth tn ihe French di t aforesaid, vin, the right made in Bombay with ait (he despatch and f He then become a professor of | leneth in the French documen' ” a! i i ri of foreigners to real estate ia Turkey, which re- for which the heads of departments in India, | se acct Ritter Academy at Vienna. | cuir an explanation to be properly uadersiood. There tored either by War Office or Horse Guards, have on all he was sout to the Frankfort Parliament | gre two principal tenures of land in the Ottoman em. occasions been noted. Though it has not yet (October} oravin, He uguished himself at Frank- | pire—one calied bakup and the other raulk. The former Rome=French Exposition of the Com- pore A ures vos peer ee by his wratotical powers, On his return to | is of vo noculiar a characiee ax scaroely to fad @ paral. Helty of the Cabinet—How Government | Mein | teoron a ack ihe eimoulty ot which oom an advoca ¥ tank tet in any other coantry, and is a matter of a em- Filibastering is Done=Cnbinet Crises. onl ale trasement to the wment, wh soem Gar cctiee fad [ailor Writ W occa. ohh The Florence correspondent of tho Faris Tempe giv e Vienan. Gol ‘oun- | Among the Mugsalman portion of the population. Ali I some of the docume: utstisin Dunine at shoo A, ey ote oe {he moxques, public libraries, the older public schools, bth nd med Chamber, and which relate to the ’ 4 ‘CUse OF ERG REICRSTRER. tains, imarets (poor houses), &e., are supported by | Gari 0 Oxpodition into the Rowan States: — ui-idered to be the best a,” lett for this parnose by various de- | te sxoRrTany Gaxenat or THE INERRIOR 10 THE PREFRCT OP Ny all he ix acknowledged eed or even living individuals, ‘Tnewe “bequonts’? CONA. laf, howevor, with ‘ondition,’ viz.: that the real actually ‘belongs to, owner { the ao works build upon it, oF well it, fe OCU eat i eee aor tne | nd efter Nis Ge her decease louve it to direct Leire, pay” er Of Aumthian n veneels te sicndd | IDR for the Use of ita yearly tax to the mosque in ques. ' 7 ng Veuve vo Py ion, und should she or be die without any direct boir tons, an’ that they yearly com- | i¢ ghoil revert to the mosque, which can then soll it to to the value of 000,000 florins | the highest bidder under the same couditions. Now as sisted in determining, not what regiments to take, bat which to leave beuind, when all were so desirous of accompanying him, The force, as at preset rranged, will, we believe, consist of four buropean regimonts— the Fourth King’s Own, the Twenty-sixth (Cameronians), from Belgaum; the ‘hirty-tiurd regiment, {rom Ker- Tachee; and the Forty-fifth, ana a large force of native infantry, the details of which are given betow. All the available Bombay native sapper: will also go, assisted by as many from the Madras army as can be spared, jadras was algo requested to furnish a certain number of smart commissariat officers, and the commissary gem- oral bes placed at the disposal of the Bombay goversa- ment the services of Major Bardin, assistant commissary general; Captain Hawkes, deputy assistant commissary Japtam Heysham, deputy assistant commissary hembers—TMhe ¢ speaker the He the new Austrian he one of the be: review, sevialini, the Mini ps explain, fur ers who have not ia and Seerewnen 20, 1867. The ministry insiets on Major @hirell! occupying himsalf With disconcerting any movementa in the Montifical State, It will not fall to watch hia procesdi time places at iis disposal alx t QUESTOR OF GENOA TO Ti ting particulars Before @ hao disposable—tet it be well udent amd reverved manner—and he ap. tion ot one hundred musk: | ts each). the Austrian ee conditions are of a private nature, and conform. Ht A Tawalt i Lieutenant Smith, sub-assistant commissary | mercantile marine is . Geir With ie Wieken.t ies Govieney: tee teeveromaut ely ge Tage Sigyt ore terge tg War officer will proceed in charge of five Of 1.304,541 tons burden, conveying goods | finds it difficult to break them. Of course the adminis | 7 SECRETARY GENrRAL OF THE INTERIOR TO THE QUESTOR bearers, and the officers bi the " " valued at 140,000,000 1 at Ventoe by 4.451 | 'ators of me do not admit of any departure from or aa. on Oct. 10, 1967. by lecting non-commissioned officers from pire. 2. "The Cis- verrly freight valued at | these com S und if on the decease of the nominal | Le: the three hundred muskets go: reswore the other hin of the communi 4 woe hilt Fits reight val owner any ono " dred; Net the grentest caution and secrecy be observed, The force from Bengal and Northern India will com nisiry for Hungary Hume by 6.218 Of | the ground of °3 coguize it, THE MINER OF THE INTERIOR TO. THE QUESTOR OF NAPLES $F See mountain (ele batvery, Cie, Marae Dee Feit of 96,000,000 florins. | eigiin th ‘Lomence, Oot. 12, 1667. Tenth Bengal cavalry, Twelfth gal cavalry an Ministry is Pri ir the eremen T have seen Topasso, the agent seat here. L recommend | Twenty-third Panjanb native infantry (plonecrs). Ie i a eet Se creasing the impor ta conditions of the Boqueste as to allow of bakup proparty | fov\\i,"st" anp™rances wih great care. and prevent soy | was the wish of the supreme xovernmont that the fore nt de: olding division: born on the Ist of medium of comme nies rend to indirect beirs ae well as to direct. This, | yuu wy Shouid be composed of two columns, one from Bongal : TER OF THR INTERIOR TO TIT OURSTOR OF NAl due accordance May, and tirat le play a partin poli nany and Daet by allows of mortgayes. Frorencn, Oct. 15, 1867. and the other from dombay teh in eo 4 4, and srt logy oa Biden “en wall the principal Geriaals Ti called ‘mul iy entirely a free tenure, ax | Grant at ouce what ie megossary. {roiura’ chi evening. ith the suprome fovernment’s aunt oad oe cal affa n the spring of 1861, He was then neipe t . 4 ad Staten, * : anjant . probu deoted by the “large landll “pHbiELator” oldie » Des 1 Hdropo foreigners are not allowed to-puemes | __APProved of--Peenant for the itnteter halt the force beng drawn from the most distant parte ¢ “ a arge landed prop rletor” el = in € to be cotnplet iy tom vemos an ‘ee atc THE DIRECTION OF PUBLIC SAPEEY TO. TH avaston, % ae of India seemed to recet: couftrmatio from s telegram Bubemia to represent them in the Bohemian Diet. | ning of Sueg can: re are, in every respect, amenable to t J bog you (o itmmediately provide gratuitous transport by | Which, im professing to eee the whe eld He at once became the head of the constitutional - ihe country, it eanvot be un y they ehould | raii for sd jon whieh will be indicated to individuals | the expedition, mentione or ak party among 0 nobility, ond this part: TURKEY not be owed freely to pu Prop ae, yuut eas out by the advocate Hearl Brusco and Sheen ore weld dae tance im wn Cosermxtie wns b £ he Bohemian nobility, «nd this party uKEY,. cave is different, AN foreigners | Captain Joa egal ariey bait the stare 1 ected oO} ! im c tion i i . ~ | e tO th 7 we of 4 ay, 8 Na the nicht if | THE SUB PRuYECT OF TEAST TO THY PRESIDENT OF THE COUR | noth goo, raphically and pol strictly pertains te has @ Hall important questions with the ~ ip leage Ot tase Gouwtey; Gm Ayia 1h OF MINISTERS, * oy, have been Fei rly set German liberal part i d SPECIAL CORRESPONUENCE OF THE HERALD. is givon them by all of the “old capi- i is num: Oct. 18, 1867, the Bounbay Presidency, have been very, properly & x @l party in Bohemia, as opposed both $ L ESPONUER THE . respective governments, with the Forte, The deputy (ign! senda you the following telegram:—No | aside by the Armness of Sir php on to the conservative and the nationalist parties. |) Phe Foreign Physicians of the Sultan—Grand no obfiection wi ver to any foreigner | mors y Geribaldl; let the frout ¢ croseed; | been nominated to the comman Y. aor ition, eof th r fir 4 ‘. d or other real estate in Turkey, in bie own | let Cleite Vecchia be ly oocupleds do not give [From the Bombay Gazette.) See ace empire he was from the first Preseription After wean WoreWhat od the gaine remains under the ‘dawsof | france time. Tue honor and salvation of Ltaly require it, piember 14, the first por institution of the Reichsrath hereditary mem. | Was Prepesed in the tlatti Unmayoun=The companying the said foreigner | TP? €'ory of your name fs involved.” round, ber of the Upper House, ana the crown ite President the Belcredi min's Christian € in the Tt doubtless would be a A report has boon addressed to the present Minister of Position from its quarters at (be Marine Lines, and a company of eignors could bold Jand in | Marine by the Moritime Commander of the Gu'f of La was appointed by the Twenty-first regiment native imfantry marched to kood thing for Turkey 1 After the overthrow of e their owe nam but equal a bad one if the | Spezzia on the ovente whieh occurred duriag the Carnac Blonder, preceded by the fifes and drums of the Schmerling ministry ond € Agi: mag ttc Boorse Svitan should thoreby toe ali jariediction over tlie nuance of the Ratiaxa Minisizy, The com the regiment, to the light and merry air of tho Be rg ty and during the reign of ate by sticna—suite for Property. | roa estate, thus posseased by th foreigner, Th ceived on the evening of the 16th October ry This company of the 1 try he resigned his seat in the Comraxnixorte, Dee, 20, 1867. does not claim jurisdiction over the foreigner, for this is | in cipher inister, M. Pescetto, containing the -one wen, and, Bohemian Diet. He was re beginning of last year (1:67) and took his seat It was iwainly owing to his efforts thet & majority was obiained for the constitu: tional party im the Diet in the spring and that Bohemia was represented in the Cie-Leithan Reichsrath at all; for bad the nation therein, lected thereto at the The Ottoman government does not want for “ad- | assured to hic by th and minere from iphrates ; altogether the number of board this fine ship wii! be about two hunared including camp followers, preparations for the despatch of the main under the chief command of Sir Robort Napier, img with urgent |, and ina fow weeks whole army will bave the shores of India for ice jarter of she world where the British ot sot foot, except a small detachment iy of hil government bus it | following instruction has ® perfect jurisdiction over his landed property, ‘Thie evening, it o'clook, and if it be trne thet some persone die ftom the | Which in reptuvered only we A Wonectine Kare Caiee ced | cette Cxening, at eight ager wil b application of too many remedies and an overpius of | therefore can nev: possibly, - Ta minis- He then goes on to ray: — doctors, it ceriainiy runs some risk of similar fate, | ter or cobs for jurisdiction, ail cases wherein T went (0 the station to meet the train fro Florence, It Each of theself-denominaied “Great Powers ot Europe” | P' inti id defendant are both, 9 example, Al Feached La Sperzia at about Ralf page seven, bringing O a w 5 tN the difference iw decid: their own co: dolint, preset have something (@ recommend to the Sultam in the viow | gai If one we an American wad.” the Sheer ne | (ain, Ofe@%0, who, In ment No. 2413, irate of remedying the ‘er of Marine, Qated October * which surround hie empire, | Frenchman, the derendant is sued in his own consulate inet of th party | Whether those friendly recommendations are really de. | PY, ry Grew But in sil cases where one of the 1s communieasion ordered mete, aid in overy way i outing the whieh accompanied Sir Wil obtained the upper hand no representatives would | signed for adoption, oF fer the purpose of what is known Iie pelt is tried ta the sefoueet of, the conmery, aad an b: srianaee ho tae then the uae The Bombay ‘engineers to -Shos in 104 have been permitted to go from Bohemia to | insome parte ot a country which need nos here be named, | the foreigner is thon amieted by hie minister or comsul, | Satis att sta? sna ant aluueckumelenel mechimees tes cocken Vienna. M. Von Schmerling dubbed Prince Carlos | under the Romely site of buvcombe, cannes be an: | 27,07 ihe dra efor him bey enes Dlatea wh the kingdom of Boa, “the first nobleman of Austria,” and this spigram | swered with any degree of cortat of the Tarkish the trial of all poteeee 4a b0n end Theo wen he will be tase ied bas stuck to bm ever since, @ fact which proven {race tb ety of pete of 200 wan made ta Pai, p- ET be foraer of amined thane >7,4.000 peg , which oan war, Sultan, : Zor Whe conyagangn et tbe Count Edward Toale, nm his name importa, fo a! avent Mae, won [sdueed Sy the pavice ef"! “Durna the areeset Same 100 tee Danes tng. ery Po Koa