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4 NEW YORK HEHRALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1868.—TRIPLE SHEET. ft the dripping with water ond 1 nrrivet at the | leat sh movement, ‘Those ramors CE. ment then do? Why, it itted the law to take BOOK NOTICES. “4 Tridge Of Aleoles, Wihora cre avalsing View the | Were SF Orsi resitiewd (0 Vague ai‘ustows in the titi FRANCE nd our, lat ne Tirther resection, 1 the ~ ° soldiers of tae Duke dela ‘Torve, ijga and of phic Ay shoots suplied by Various agencivs.. Bat ; \ [Peel a eae eset opuiae | ADSARAKA—HOMN OP THE-Onows, Being the EF: enthusiasm, e advanced gu ol Go bberating Wuish revolution is ait aecompitshed fact | Count Walowsk?s Funeral—The Pagennt in | have a of M. Rochefort, that embryo poputar Mience of an Officer's Wife on the Plain. Phi pe OT IRS army felgned a retreat, and that of the royal com: eer are oe rp ry coy Se labgeah ms the Strects and Services im the Chureh— | an who baa puted Aupeelt, into, nekogeay ue] Dulas J. BeLippencott & Co., 1868, “ é ing. a ; . P: : 43 — h Opinton of the victory. ‘the masked ba pories, wine enuiaded che | fering a coriain character of probabliity. For ox- Oration at the Tom)—The Coup d@Btat and | But, on the fn virtue of the law ‘This 13 @ good little volume of description and aa- French, German and English Opinion roateoh Hida Mophed thelr fire ‘on tie wo euuple, it a sald shat Prussia tas organized aud en- | Haton:o with Baglamd, ots Ninh, a8 1t does the Emperor, Ne remained | venture, 1% deals with topics of peculiar interest Novi 3, These lattor retured in disorder, k gomsagy rf @ Movewent fio. the commencement; From Gatignani’s Messenger, Oct. 6.! viol unt ae condemnation and jus! as aay character of the Indian country ana” Spanish Revolution. that che if Marshal ‘ano the conqueror | gno obsequies of Count Walewski were us was necessary to create for himself an unw ife dead rid, da ‘oops! Just now—the , number ctueainierve: pene of the Margatis de Novatishes, were nard by Prussian | on saturday with great pomp. ‘The persons invited | S0me reputation, That is what has taken place in the chances and changes of life in the attrition of r. es ha judy OW Bi meF the races of red and white men. A Second clare of the Queen's forces had a similar {d, aud that the new government wich hasissued | pegan to assemble at the Madcleine at half-past | France under the pretended rerine of personal result, 1s | tha pole tiwmaphans revobition will bo: inspired by | eleven, Ata quarter to twelve the clergy, followed. | Verument. Can any, man hardly belleve that it THE New ExoiaNp Taagupies. By Henry Wads- Commercial Interests Off] ‘Tuch the Marduis placed himself at the head of his | the Policy of Frussia, | What 1s to be thought of | by the'two sons of the deceased, Marshal Valliant, | like had occurred th any. other country the govern. | worth Longiellow. Boston: Ticknor & Fields, 1869, men for # third attack; but he was soon sittick by & ations lave they any foundation? | Minister of the Kmperor's household, and M, Gautier, i tg ani Here fs much superfluous labor given to telling . a. yeco)ed tor | Has Prussia really a haud fi the disorders of law quietly to take ? No; a hundred times France in Spain a ekint tins Agrcnade, and ey arsiat Berra nae Spas ite ee a have put such pamers: tae Bonrolary -Beneent of the Mime. Wl depited trom pee ant y pte Faye Whsre, 2p 008 fam pal eed pene bad Epo «nt ‘gat Be ‘ oo cosa the Whole cori si a ey we not tee what explana. , perso! ex! a r orsparkle of dramatic spirit or fire. Havi Wished to follow up lus woress, OF on compicily | WOM isto be given forte mellity with whic, they | wmenee the Lody was broughe into the church aud had enough of the Presbeterians in all shapes. laced under the magnificent catafalque which had | the contrary, Pe seotinan of national dignity pre: + feeling of husaanity the con- | Lave been reccived and propagated? We are, for in tl nd.sne- } Valls to the if M. Rochefort ‘The Xting of Donmark on American Sai ines tee cheer rf efiect his retreat with. | Our pari, deeply conyindéd thatwo far ay Prussia is Deen creotad ee ed aaa Ot ene Darn Sun ‘The | chosen. not even to insuit, but only to cast a reflec. MILDRED. Georgiana M. Clark. New Yorks i . The Duke bad the wounded | concerned the case ia the game with the Spanish ¢ H d editice w: with black, | “on on the Queen, would have been implaca- Politics and a ry ei eat Bits cao ‘hein with him to Gordova, revolution as with the Garibaldian agitation ‘rhe mole of ke, itera dy aa thouher, seestval Vi ae ble; the old _unrepealed laws This will be found an interesting story, The in- a cemmanne Ber in Cabinet, far from prompting that of Florence, | tne Marquis de Monatie , the Duke de Persteny, vived in order to trans} cidents are all well worked up, and the characters — s directed by Si kataazl, not only aid not support it, | qo Royer, Vioe President of the Senate, in the place vec, muner Baa Sa are admirably sustained throughout the whole tale. em fe ty le 3 Count Walewskl’s Funeral and the Ora- Losses paseoresy re the losses in | ™2Je the most reassuring declarations to his Catho- Fee Se age Sy ii i Eee pop eid in @ public house or in the street! The same thing | TH” SCRATCHSIDES FaxiLy, . By Jobe Carlin. New According to the eg | i@ subsects, Way should he now undertake, in | Were represented by G rand Kquerry, | Would occur in Prussia and everywhere else. In | York: Stone & Burrow, tion at His. Tomb. tie’ engagement, DeTsen ee es 2 ra tslies partnership with General Prim or Marshall Berrano, ind Counede. oT ena Et prince. aoe: | every, country but France M, Rochefort would have | This little book which fa illustrated by its author ts con isle hs ad 101 soldiers and fourteen ollicers killed to overthrow tie government of Queen Isabella? | jeon, by Colonel Ferri Pisani, one of his aldesle- to suffer the consequences of his acts, and every- | intended for the use of the. young people, and te . | where ho would have had to fear tho lex tailonis ‘The Inman steamslip City of Baltimore, Captain | or wounded. The pbeeal troops count 330 dead, 399 ee a oe pact savanes sy ree fue. comp, and Captain Villot, ons oc eget ono aggravated by the exceas to which indignation might | them it will be found intensely: amusing. Sth of October, arrived at this portiat half-past nine ~ * . ambition he should have destroye ones | empire and the deputations from the great bodies of | Sv! ie eed, 5 GMs cnet. copia amen te aie tat hatt-past nine | and put hors de combat, which were 9 barricr to his aggrandize- | the State took thorr places in the folowing order:—. | Yelgn than the Emperor the Tnvames watch the fe | A novel written tn the exuberant style of thia inging our mati report in deta’ waiaiyi ment may 0@ explained; although such an | The Ministers and members of the Privy Council; | Praved lmaginatloa le editor of the Lanterne th 4 in which the Waverley m of our cable telegrams, dated to her day of sailing | The EfectmAddresscs From French “Reds” | act may not be justiied;. but we do not | the Marshals and Admira’s; the members of the | Mvculed, SUEDE. AD) ee Bi isesspici from Ireland. ’ and the English. see what ho would uave gained by favoring the pos- | senate, the Legisiative body, the Council of State, figures extensively. There are kings, & ne re sible establishment at Madrid of a republic on the | the Superior Courts, the Institute, the municipality DENMARK. men, footpads, gypsies, Sir Marinadukes and tl ‘ ‘The Dean of Cork, Ireland, although opposed in [From Galignani’s Sense nearer taney Oct. 6.] ruins of @ monarchy, But, it must not bo denied, | of the city, the Generals and superior olticers of the 5 time of Charles the First. What more can romance Politics to the present government, has been ap- An address poe bene. resented to penne. of | what has probably contributed to give rise to the ru- | army and Navy, the President and members of the arene et require? pointed Bishop of Peterborough, in England, at tie | Madrid, signed by M- on behalf of the French | mors to which we refer 1 this:—Phere are in Ger- | Dramatic Author's Society. A special locality had | Speech of the King to Parliament=The Schlos- | Tax CALAMITIES AND QUARRELS OF AUTHORS. iq ” republicans, proscribed after the coup d?eidt in 1851. | many certam politicians and journals who imagine | pee) erved for the Diplomatic Corps. Ail the Isaac Disraeli. Edited by his son, the Right request of the Queen of England. The emoiuments | The reply has not yct appeared. 5 in Behe Diplomatic. Corps. wig-Hotstein and West India Sales Quese 7 gan ly yet ap) 1. that ie Spanish movement may vecome a source | foreign representatives now in Paris were there, on. Benjamin Disaeli. Two vols. Vois. I. and of the bishoprle average £4,000 sterling per annum. | 4 Ant tel Arann capltal, The austen was as | Qoee ops aneiety Wo France, and who, from that | paying at thelr head the Papal Nunclo, and the Am- | tens. Bis sa + tne thor oo. | He New York: W. J. Middleton, 1808, "7 - 1 g m_ Co} in. of i The development of a sturdy aud ial es follows:—The Junta, has read with immense enthu- | Dished beyond the Pyrenees. ‘That party and the | 9s Seng aero aae chanted by singers | tober reqorts:—The King opened tho Diet to-day witn | 4 Well meant, but not very well prisited now edl- ‘lemocratic feeling in Ireland is commented on siasm the cordial and very noble expression of your Jonruats which are its organs are greatly mistaken. | trom the opera. Salyoes of artillery, flred on the | a speech from the throne, in the course of which his | tion, intended to harvest the interest that the pre- the journals asa sign of political change. Fe baie Set a sen of § a in he pp aie ne zene 5 pans apranien aut ane Epes seb eiraee nay WoOrsay, sanoupend ie eonaluston Of the re- Makar Ads ihe NA ent, Bis 3 sent fame of the gon gives to the writings of the vades the northern part of the isiand, and the c! which, vivified ‘ibet ‘will cordially clasp the 4 gious ceremony as they had done ihe commence- russia respectin Ni Sehi father. Anew edition of the works of Disraeli the cumstance elicits the following notice from the Irish | the hand of the Engi dew to Jere in the auairs of that country, and to exercise & | ment. At hall-past one the cortége moved oif for | provided for in the treaty of Prague, havo hithe ple Who Knew how 0 | pressure on the will of the Spanish nation in order to | pore Lachaise. cen without result, Our views of what justice and | father is a characteristic literary sign of the times." correspondent of the London Ziies:— congast Saat Xo contntios ‘ago, ‘Tue | bring about ouo solution rather than another. Bx. ‘The whole of the troops were under the command | the well understood interests of both countries re- | Euiaorr’s LAWN AND SHADR TREES. New York: eS “ ts Austrian and Bourbon dynasties stified our vitality. | cepiing in that sole eventuality why should we be , oy § i ‘The growth of a strongly democratic spirit among | Weare now emerging from the grave in which We | auxious at the present matuality why should we be | of Marsual Canrobert and General Soumain. ‘ihey | quire in this matter are unaltered. We must | “yrancis W. Woodward, 1868. asl a pi . b ef first duty to co-operate to- tonto? tisier” oxmibits, itself tn. te ne ior | Neto buried. Our resurrection does not take place | quences? Could she new government over think of | fared by the cortege ium ie ndtlelne She ceue | wards, “no” arrangement. which, while not | 4 treatise on deciduous and evergreen trees an@ sentiments more in unicou with the popular feeling | {order to fall again into anctent errors, but to | attacking France? We sav this very positively to | tory a dense crowd, compriaing every class of per- | satisfying the wants of the inhabitants, might | shrubs for planting in gardens, parks, cemeteries, cincwhcre than we had been wut Recently accus: | ReePE and adopt all the advancements is rational | those who pyotend that, the events of Madrid | sods, and which probably numbered 00,000, was | lead io future dimiculties for tho Danis kingauim in | ge, Tt contaits much varied Information regarding foued to here, 1s one of the most remarkable changes | proken the chains uuder whitch they groaned. ‘The Erunda;. tare ba pOmAthlet cas mpite bo yor | Tanged on both sides of the Boulevards, and as the | its relations with a couairy with which Wo wish | the planting and habits of trees and shrubs, and is Fe eee ee oon ee ences Qeance | Junta thanks tue nobie sons of Britain. suxlety in the direction of the Pyreaces any more Mme ee mdm e ne” | winged: inas: Beiaate, approres these totves and vo pasha Tere PRs ‘onaar es nd. find! he te pan oath an beyond the alps. There is none; because, al- m4 brainiag tie lonz-expected set DN , by tie reform movement, seem disposed to | mye Future=French Opinion=What Will the : 4 f thi for th : oad, them in a new direction, our nelgubors, we retrain from ail idea of interven- | “he last prayers of the Church having been said, | ‘The treaty with the United states of America for | The second edition of this work for the present i rage ce of Berlin “e Octo- Revolutionists Dot tlon in their aimairs; because we have no other in- | ge Marquis de Movstier, Minister of Foreign Aduirs, | the Veasiol of the Danish West Indian tsianis, which | month contains, tozether with Its usual quantity of esi (rom the Gazette de France, of Paris, Oct.) | 2st in Spain than that of Spain herself, and be. | Galivered the following funeral oration:— has beon approved by the Diet, has not yet beea tter in relation to rallways, o vatied sclection of ‘The Spanish revolution hardly g} into exist. | Cause What that country shall decide in ite full and | “Gaited upon by a paimiul privilege to pronounce | dually sanctioned by the United Staies tn conse- | Te ctng reading matter.” ernment of the North German Confedera- P As ly sprang p entire sovereignty wil never meet with any obstacle | over this grave, 80 prematurely opencd, the last fare- | quonce of the state of political affa'rs in that coun- eto await the development of atu ra im | Co Yesterday, and already tt experiences @ ant | on our part. Botween Spain and ourselves there 18 | Wweul of the Emperor and the country to the eminent | try, and at theWish of the American government c efec it be any question. Such is also at the ° e, [should di: it a the term for the ratification of the treaty has been The Magazines. wu Witt feelings ef perfect mmpartiality, and will | Yoaern revolutions {t exhausts itselt in shouts nud not aug henire Zituation with respect to Italy; | 222 whose loss we deplore, I should desire, in order | the term for the ratification . x 4 - : bs ARENT voi the results springing from the independent | manifestations. it fancies it has deserved welt or | breseut moment our situation with respect to Lialy: | to pay to his memory the tribute ttso hixhly deserves, | protonxed for another year by the Davish Venipo- | ‘zne Art Journal.—ihe October mamiber of tts of the Spanish people relative to their na- | the country and saved the situation when {t has rea- | rather 1 Pi to describe here with tho fulness it merits the po- | tentiary at Washington. remarkably fine pubiication contalus two c'esant- ‘ i - jean \owards France than to Prussia, Let ; 1 ah eogenteane Broke Ngai, | dered iat beatiem with atoning deckiator | taareien boo Mugiou ooyoad, io Aue: |ho | MCN Sout Um a tuts df pes os craravingsone ented, WWaers ‘oy Crcivod it rou ail other Cabinets. There is, theze> | Chumoree wisn It has pat selena psecpiration | Pouch of renuce 18 uot wore, Incommoded ‘wad em | mit me to do more than sketch the principal features FORE.GH PMISCELLANEOUS ITE. Him” and the other “Venice—Tie Arrival.” ‘tue 3 t UI o. arrest sine Ure pal o Co! ro weir A net Te. ae preearaeee ea a aiearbalce of with promeuades and prosenslons. its aa ba- | Ic maintains, for all the eventualities that may arise beer ii een saninbon rin ‘The insurgents ta Madrid have stuck notices on | subject matter of its reading is equal to the geucral ‘ nd riotic, Accord lo the news which arrives from | in furope, a complete liberty of action, and remaims a! palace, advertising ‘This house to tet.” tone of the journal. spoan alain. the other side of the Pyrenees, Spain is about to | opeuiy find sincorely pace, while preserving tho Frauce, his first affections, his earliest eftorts, bore | the roya! palace, advertising “This house J ¥ igin, x b s rat fonthly Magazine.—The German journals notice the appearance in Ger- | parody, espectaliy at Madrud, ie Hrench Revolution | enire seuiiment of lis power and ais tig pe itd rere ort are ened Correspondence from Constantinople states that Ba est a Se S dees fe ay ty supeein 4 correspondence coming from Paris, en- | 9 !84s. ‘They have the same evolutions of parade, 5 fi the quantity of gold recentiy discovered in the bed | number for 4 ? ed J the same empty but resounding harangues, the same given the measure of his powers by manifesting a Juabl vesiions and useful vmania,” which 1s intended to keep up a = J Bat brilliant courage, remarkable firmness of character | of the river Ingure, near to Koulats, 1s equal in pro- | {s full of really yaluavle suggestions and usel Eo i Se dpegn br i of g a I" Pi ski, ng 4 The Workshop.—A repriil 3 , ‘A visitor coming from Rome to Paris, himself a | *lly those wio have nothing to do with (From tue London Post, Oct. 6.) later Count Walewski, naturalized a Frenchman, en: The station of the Midland Railway in London has | otra) publisiied In Germany and devoted to tha . that 7 * % © Serramo has been regarded asa Union. | listed in the army and distinguished himseif in Africa 1] the largest roof in existence, the dimensions Churesuzan, saya that Cardinal Antonelli and a | resident hero have seu one; the Enuish gnotnerrtne | fs! —thal wu wouber of se Livsrai Uuio., founded | Among the young oficers, many of whom at that | Peing'oo feet iong by vwenty-OVE feet Wide, in one | Progress of tho useful aris. It ti 8 tasaaine that ne ity of the cardina's have agreed that Plus IX. | Ilailans and Germans, if there are eny at Mudrid, O pounelis Prin 18 @ progrossist, bat a moderate | Per.od entered upon the carcer which led them tov! single span. » pes d , or lorious destinics. At about the same epoch dates Bs Stewarts Literary Quarterly Magazine has ® should take a more prominent attitude towards the bony wh Hectedamn AaAuhnr oh of the ph pest a tt toda hs De pagtien to is first dip'omatic missior. Sent as envoy to the The Paris Charivari suggests the adoption of the | number of really good articles. Though youaz ia Protestants of Chiistentom, and call upon them to | Greases vorms un casential partof arecotationary | the govcrainent., Marital Serrano has been opposea | Emir Abd-cl-Kader, who was preparing to attacx | Velocipede for artlilery purpoces and gives an excol- | the ticld, it shows fair sigas of achteving success, f ° r four Algerian’ provinces, he succeeded by his | lent sketch of a company of artillorymen maneu- | wo nave vecelyed from Brentano, 708 Broadway, F t_gether and form one flock with one shep- | prograinme, aud these are sacred things. ‘These | to Prim, and was calicd upon not very long ago to bay i itude = vriag before the enemy. Although but a caricature, r, et re Jata- um and concillatory attitude in averting this dan- Ys ick ps rycahin tote joann eee Ate eniets of the revolution do not iela in | laa hero Crores madiogener Jwntol, ine restless Cota’ | Gor Notwitistanding this successful commence. | itis far from bemg an improbability, the following London publications for October 4 4 33 a ; Stories and illus- he London Times of the 5th instant, speakit 1 e pposed to Olozagu, | Ment, M. Walewski, on returning to France in 1837, The revolution in Spain has rejoiced the hearts of | | Belgravia—A charming number; st of dirs Distacla election address: sagen” P*IME | them OF encourage thom (without serious motves. | ine utmost “that. they hive aimed ‘at “he: | renotineed a military career which hid opencd so | one family at least, amely that of the political efl- | trations ied wala ch chapahues Sete inte ing the dangers of @ situation which there isan in. | fore this year’ has beon to recouclle ths | hriliantly before him, During some time he took a | tor of the Democracta, of Madrid, who has been re- | , Zhe St. James—A continuation of eeveral siorles, asts that he bas found the class of eiectors terest in ‘concealilig: While reviews are being held, | Queen with her people by a change of Min- lively interest in the literary and political moveinent | leased from prison. tis sentenves amounted to one Ce ke, inot be calarged without losing the power of | acnesions sent tn and banners displayed there is no | isters, and it only the provocation and | o that epomte ho hiunselt faking part in lt. This was | hundred and two years of imprisonment. The St. Pavtls—Reviews, lege omer, & oe nition eis pasted He boasts (hat to these he | agitation, but parties dissimudate; this forced inaction | injustice that both have met witu at the hands of | 4 prelude to more important labors. Tho eveats | according to tho Gautois of Paris the French Min- | | 426 cearans Maguzine—sketches, reviews, fe tasttntions, esiablisnmnents, Inter. | iq mask caused by the distrust the oniere ay the | men like Natvaes and Bravo, who have siriveu ruth. | whlch agiiated the East in Isét preoccupied Surope. | gsfer of War has recently passed an order for | HOw, incidents, ke. Fe eee ea nee pe ge oF tals great empire: | movement entertain af each other and the srcret | leesly to root up aud extitpute their party aud all | Our interests were seriously involved In {hein | yo,y90,o00 sheets of paper for the manufacture of | fymPee Hin A FerAl hg ee ga Aa het ; “ it 7; " tuat remained of free thought in Spain, tat deter. | ud the gravest questions had presented them. | oinniages, ti th antity to be delivered within ty lied by State for the Church in ap oe a or ae oiten, in ae ph rerd mined them at last to alt ig death'watraagol tae | selves ia Fgypt. Count Walewski, despatched eee Teeny fhateation of peace ndced to | “isms, ew ine—Of the order of Bluck- 1isposal Roman Catholics count | nig, of the sincer! ity of their common aspirations, | dynasty, This important point setticd, all Spain | ona mission to Mehemet-Aali-Pacha, was abie M | tno List. : MacMilian's Magazine- e ‘ors, The work,‘be it — of their resoluiion to maintain this accord, for their | having “pronounced.” Novaliches defeated, Ca- short time to gain the coniidence of that superior wood, peng arewit) tn the charge or the | Felterated but always vaguo deciarstions hot to be | longe a captive, and tho Count de Chest a fugitive, | man and inducp him to observe a moderation more The Minister of Agricu'ture at Florence recom- | ‘The Fortnightly Review—Of the order of the suspect e reed 5 f a ” | conformable to his real interésts than to the vivacity | mends the cultivation of the £ucalyvtus globosus, | Edinburg. Bey ugmented beyond precedent by ayeuriaed SL Mey be ape th. ) 80 ener vonh tie lastiers. ot J egntan pe, diliecenee, De or Tie Fentiments with which that Prince way then | one of aie ee. wa! pies eae rpc tagt 9 ‘ihe Znglishman's Domestic mama first Pisracih hinigelf, | ot half that cousti:u | Ceciyaiscret; they ‘woul tell the Spanish people | had failed, would have been termed ‘a nefarious | aulmated. Appointed at later period Minister | marsiiy lands oF, those Infested by malaria. Tho | casa book of fashions, domestie amusements, pas- SE eee ae ee Other abpropria- | what is the goverument they advise. They remain | conspiracy,” but now that it tas succeeded, ia | Plenipotentiary to La Piata, and chai to inter: | Qupecially in unheaithy localities. Hues, &o, on Soolely—With an tie martes and Whowiil antares te gare nen» | quiet, they disslinulate, because they know that | characteriged as ‘a glorious uprising of the Spanish | Pose tae mediation of France beeweon the republics | spec Tug Holtaay Number af London Nooiety—Wi fie will be avery bold historian, a? ied ayo cory | each of them has in his’ pocket his remedy fur the poopie in its strength.” | 1t is always the event wach of Buenos Ayres and that of Montevideo, he reo. | ‘The mayor of Concasale,.a small town near | extra nuuber of pretty illustrations. tieaperate politica who Wil charge the five mie | diliculty different from that which his conpanion | distributes praise or blame in a contest Uke «is, | lutely accepted the task of proveciing the Anterests | Naples, has been arrested, togotaer with several per- Hon Cabtiolles alte mean for reclaiming the | #2 adventure would wish to administer, and cach of | Far be.1t from us, however, tie wish to snoor a. & of our fellow countrymen. Ly me ried ed those | sons well to do of the sano neighborhood, for supply- Chureh property from ils present hands. ‘They have | tem watches the moment when he can get his own | revolution which, if it goes oa as rogulary und | distant countries, accompanied, without hes heryeres ing the brigands with food and clothes, besides MUSICAL REVIEW. ft oonsclence, but It speaks very differently from the | pWallowed. Taepolatod whieh Serrano would wish | calmiy as it has begun, wili tead greatly to the ad- | by the devoted wife who has ever since associat giving them instructions of the movements of in- oie y y trom tue | f‘trevall ts €videhtly diiferont trom. thet whieh | vantage of tho Spanisa people. No excesses of w se- | Nersel€ 0 closely righ, his life and caroee.” Waring | ‘vended victims, <a icd@tRER WA RR LdLNE CORED teen Coen “ Admiral Yopete would prefer, aud tuat of the latter | ricug kind have been comuiited by either side in this | this t me great eveats were taking place raace, One of the royal generals in Spain recently con- fh B NT," 8 Mi mn Hughes, M. P., addressing the electors of | certainly does not with that of Prim, without | Short civil war, Now that all purues are agreed, | The government which Count Walewskt bad | aeraned a child ‘only five years old to bo shot as the acts nud nine tableaux, Offeavach, represented or Lambeth, Engiand, as a candidate for election to | counting otuers which the radical republicans wish | there is the leas excuse {or lawlessness. We urust, | faithfully served liad disappeared, and on | sonot a rebel. ‘The child not uudorstanding the situ. | (he, less tne at Menus—Viaisirs tueatre, Paras Parliament, said: to impose on the uation—tiey who have joiucd the | now that the defoaved party is in so tremendous a hus return he found his country profoundly disturbed ation, moved about and by extraordinary luck was Christmas, 1867. pacasteneiide aay train of the generats in the great revolutionary en- | mimosily, we shall have nous of those tusuindes or | and agitared, Associated with the great nattonal | no Touched. ‘The genera’ then ooolly threw iran | “Genevieve” is by far the most important, cdiive men wore running for two seats, and all must torprige aud Wuo are Row going to endeavor to take polltieal exovailons AM inyve disgraced query [ok | ole denatay, b cay iat Baal tes aaonon, orange, and while stooping to pick itupasecond | most pretentious and the most varied work Im only Wore tere tive Lberal candidates, but ‘there [From the Paris Debats, Oct. 6.) safety ts Wo bg fonud In the fact of the displacement dng, acclomation ‘oe the euipire, fhe Gount was soon aed Ljaiga ee ae cones point of music that we have yet seoy from the pea Was also & gentleman who called himself @ liberal | ‘The French journals continue io deluge the Span- } ffoui office of the hastily elected and inciticient Pro- | to have a wider fleld opened to hus aollvity, his pa- “5 he a argn Pons | of this iactie and popular composer, It clam conservative or & conservative liberal, or at 2 visional Junta of Madrid and the tosiaiment in | ttlotism and deyotedness, Ho kuew how to mike | de Vidil, who was accused some years ago of at- rate was in favor of the present governments povermensas amni wton oy have only to choose. power of the nen who by the logic of events should his eminent qualities more aud more apprectated in | tempting to murder his i, London, for the | bines, besides, all the extrayagances, brilliaacy g Weuian who did uot hold public meetings, where | We are of opinion that the fahabitants of the Peuin- be Tor tue moment masters of this county of Spain, | the missions confided to him—at Florence in 1849, | puri of obtaining the fortune which he was | and effects which opdra douge united to ld be asked his opinions, but one who was | sula ought to know better than we what suits them, | and who have a character to maintain in the eyes.oi | Naples in 1850, and London in 1361. In Eugiand, { | about to inherit. He struck the youth a severe blow | Black Crookism, can condense within the bounds represented by the tory papers as pursuing | and that they are quite as uly Couviiced as uny oue | the civilized word. am happy to say, the remembrance 18 still pre- | on the hoad with a loaded cane aud for some time | O° 4 singie piece, There are r0les for three prime 4 very snecessful canvass, and that Mr. Morgan Outside thelr country can be ofte necessity of putting {From the London Times, Oct. 6.) PN es? the aigni?, tact, tirmness and tie per- | his life was in danger, ie Penge nt he sufferc Howard—a very great name, they would see—was | as prompt an end as possible to the provisional order ‘Tho Spanish insurrection has ended and the Span- | [ct @ pro, which he gave proofs in order to | for this crime was one year’s imprisonment with | donne in it, a large number of very eifective sure to go in. ‘Therefore the only thing which re- | of things and establishing @ reguar government. | ish revoiution has begun. The signs oi the rising, it | Prepare an re-establish the close enfente between | hard labor. choruses, some fine ballet music and cancan music matned to be done was that some of the Uberals | We are glad, however, to notice that public opinion | js now clear, hud been read aright by Queen Isadeua | the two nations and substitute for the rivalities of | The Berlin Mititary Gazette announces that a fort | without end. For grotesque music, dialogue aud should retire, At this crisis, when five Uberals were | in France shows itself tically opposed to every | and her Ministers, From the first there was but | te past a generous emulation in the path of clviliza- | has been built at the entrance to Kiel Harbor, which, in the field, and some ol them were as good liberals notion] of intervention, ie Legitimist and Ultra- | jitth fe that Littl ic! as he believed himself to be—at this junction he re- taue ferent desire, Tha wuceees of Uneverets, indeed, Is. ceived the Information that their ouored membor The. ‘onde yforesawr to, piber day a coming cxly vanished. | “on and progress. His enormous diplomatic cor. | together with the fortifications now existing, render action there Is notiting in the other works of Offen- =‘ n a a The success of the revolt, indeed, has beon decisive Beryl “ Bor gery ae. ‘ is — tt epee en an fe a ane ay Ses ee bach which can compare with the rdles of Grabuge le foresaw the other @ contingenc, was 0 vigor HCATDC3S; be own. ‘The fort is arm ve rifled 72-pound- Was about to retire and that he (the speaker) would | in which France would have to interferes the ii corina Wee tis ¥ ceeian itevoltiann Of teen amatr of | and prudent perseverance, and attests the success of | ers from Krupp’s gum factory. The Gazette adis and Pitoa, hay Laced Bale rig Of course, in ro- be a welcome candidate in Frome. The result was | Univers insinuates, somewhat timidly indeed, that | ‘hora mere tumultuous Tush, like Garibalai’s mva- | “eloyal policy of which he was at once the represent: | that a monster catnon—a 370-pounder—has also | Viewing such @ work it is impossibie to give that they saw him there that day. (Cheers) Mr. | the imperial government would do wrong to | sion of Naples. The moveuent was comparatively ative and the active instrument, ‘Ihe ailiance of the | been manufactured by Sp, for the protection of | any adequate idea of the effects of some iughes then entered at some lengih upon the sub- | send an army tnto Spain, there to set up on the gradoal, and the impulse for a momen: or two two nations prepared by Count Walewsk: and cement. | the coast. ‘The inner barrel of this gun is made of @ | of the numbers, as the composer deals ject of the Irish Courea, which he characterized as | throne the descendant of Charles V.; after which | Was actualiy suspended. * * * We cordtally ed on the battle fie:ds of the Crimea, was the result of | single stecl casting of $40 cwt., and is stre: ened f th ~ alin and a badge of ascendancy over the Irish | the same body of troops might proceed to Italy in | Wish tue constitucnt legislators good apecd in | MS etforts. On tue 7th of May‘ 1855, the Emperor | by thrae massive siccl rings, Weighing 600 cwt. The | iN some of the strangest and outré orchestral people. He controverted Mr. Disraeli's statement | order to restore legitimate monarchy at Naples, Mo- | their work, but the hardest part of that work | Comfded to him the Ministry of Foreign Aifairs, | total weight of the gun is 1,000 cwt. The gun car- | and vocal combinations which have entered the that the question had been thrust upon the country | dena and Parma. This double expedition would, | is undoubied:y still before them. It witl be | Which be directed during five years unuer circum- | riage ts alsoof stecl, and weighs 300 cwt. ‘The sold | hain of any musician. The gens d’armes particu by the Iberal opposition, and argued that, on the | according to the legitiinist journal, consolidate the | ali the harder certain pecullariiies of the case, | Stance the inost calculated to impart brillancy to | shot are of stoel, and weigh 1,100 Ibs, cach; the contrary, it was the conservatives, by their proposal | imperial government in France. Between the Bour- | 4; -< “ his administration, Called to tie signal honor of | gheils weigh 1,181 los, larly must be seen and heard to be appreciated. The ro aon the Roman Caihoiln who) had Linh hous and the Honaparte family, unton, it ts clear, clustered 80, Obvious, eneUI be rejected st once apa cceiea tn of thadion meetin ke eon cea, muale of Offenbach, without being original m the w } ; ca oe reste cImEnaeT an ratat Tore, | Aud Indeed. looking back to the various events of | Sia breserving the great Tesu ts die Wo the war Ik BRITISH AND AMZRICAN TREATIES. slightest degree, and being of a flimsy and clap-trap would have been utterly false to his party and to his | cordial. “All this ie element and natural,” 8 ls country if he had not boldie met the conservative | fhemtiat we speak of, and. to believe it notin eve lusurgent yenetals’should have pronounced compre. | tHe East, to convince ail the members of te civilz. description, ouly derives iia popularity and merit proposal by @ counter proposal to do away with this | can be done to restore authority and liberty. it it | heusively against the whole House of Bourbon. But ing and disinteresied views of the imperial policy. from ita adaptability to the sparkling and in a'ten Church, adds in a melancholy tone:—Are we avie And will. uf Europe thenceforth reassured ag to the loyal inten. | TO TAR Korron ov THR HERArD:— Atelier to the London Post, describing the scene | ing to cccomplish it?" Aine { that people may not | such elrcumstances as the present, nad Ins couutey | Hons of France, ualved with aympaiieto eager- | Twas extremely sorry to find it stated in your | MANY instances questionable dialogue of the Ubretta at the wreck of the Russian te wish for it is something to be feared. like Spain, it will be a body on whose decisions it | Bess In the work of concord about 0 | naper that our Minister, Mr. Reverdy Johnson, has | *” e ludicrous situations and scones of the frigate Alexander will be imposmble to calcu.ate. The hope of the | be accomplished under our auspices, Pro- opera, which can only be interpreted by Frencis Nevsky, and tho saving of the Grand Duke Alexis, hation now resta oa the wisest and warlcst of those | iting by those favorable tnclinaiions he in- | agreed with Lord Stanley on ® treaty for @ mixed | Jigs py soir this masic is In general tachi reported in our cable despatches, says:— A French Plan of Settlement. leaders by wuom this revolution has been accom. | troduced Prinetgies poe. =. bg ot commission to sit in London for the reciprocat ad- | yy to the standard of some of our negro melodies, At length along of white calico was pro- {From Galignant’s Messengcr, Oct. 6.} plished, “If their plans are well devised, judiciously ve constituted an honor to France. It was great justment of clauns of American citizens and of | consisting of a potpourri of galops, wultzos, polkas cured ‘and the word. “boat” was written in ilfge | , M- Emile de Girardin, in the Liver? kindly under. proposed and patriotically pompcried, bf Pir po fortune for a s:atesman to have attached his | British subjects on the opposite governments, 1 con- | and marches of the most commonplace description, letters. This had an immediate effect; the admiral’s | takes to reltee the parpresity of tle Spauiords ae | fie: opposite event, ‘te lust state of that noble | HAMe to so memorable a document as the Treaty of | sider this agreomont unfortunate, because I remem. | ABY one Wlio glances over tie score Of “Genevieve” , cutter, which they had been afraid to send, was put | 0.9 ¢ Gan tt ke true ateit ct Comonniiinn maak | GonMMer amar br Naan the first Paris in the Distory of Europe ; i 18 a great houot | hora gimilar treaty negotiated by Mr. Webster t wilt find a succession of tiose popular forms of of, and to tiis the Grand Duke was coniided. He | o70em that “y! en ii. Compromise were | country may be even worse than tie first. to have been able to conciliate coinpletely the ad- a reaty nego y Mr. ir to- | music the haif of which are originally from Was accompanied by Baron Sebiiling, one of his | present tn Europe the following arrangement would | (From the London Standard (goveramient organ), | besion and esicem of #0. mauy colluborators, nll | watda the close of President Fillmore’s administra. | otlier Drains than those of Oifenbaci. | ‘La governors, Air, Veselngo and afr. Machin, two pro: | Mowstier and cout Biemarck:—"" ue Marae de Oct. 6] very considerabio by thelr repu‘ation and abilities, | tion and gome of its ieldents and resuits, away | fraud? Ructesso,” ola elle liMene” and “Barbe Sa cl perial Hight > ef m to have me be than Aneul — and the assistant surgeon, When the Grand Dune ee Eee eee P| ak Spaniards will go noted Eo hos TR obable that | gincority, which were given to lim at the cioso ofthe | fFOMNomeanimy books and papers, my memory | numbers, for this operatic Momus is in the habit of put of the men on the frigate lett off work, | Belgians with the assent of the Spanish people. oor | to their throue, thus {nitating the example of | Congress. In the course of this great negotiation, as | docs not enable mo to give you the namos of tho | repeating limseif in his works, Sill, judging the Fee Bong roy hg wy hy Saxony, Prosie sane: P eaxoay; the Ruesisn | Sweden, of Belgium, and of Greece in modern times. | throughout his public le, y Count Walewskt invaria | commissioners of tho two governments uniter that a aaaanet sonaey tne ae to je tuoderm - - . 7 ot oe x '@ influence € vere! ” , a oan Grand Duke was safe. At this moment many of the | PTovinces to be neutralized aud France annexing fabews nie priuewt emecuenye te, We coonsenre; ty ire cotdaos Ot iamortant a@airs DP dignity of | teaty, but It does the name of the solicitor on the | of the operas by tue same composer whiea have foe 4 men knelt down and all took off thelr caps and made | Bilgivim. this, M. de Ctrundin says, would not be ® | however, to speculate on wiiat the Constiuent As- | character, uprighiness and loyally. Endowed with | part of the American governmeut, Colonel Thomas, | 89 fur produced in tus city. Many of the airs aud the sign of the cross—a spontaneous act, showing pon fowaten te ‘opean problem; but wou! ® | sembly may do alier it has assumed its funcetons, | variod aplatudes, uuiting to political science the most | gt one time a member of Congress from this State, | CROFWSes are just as catcuing as those of the “Du. the devotion of the Russian people to the imperiat ? We can only trust that st will reflect the same spirit | briiiiant and amiable qualities of the mau of the 4 at another, and towards the close of General chesse,” and yet superior in character. The openta family. It was, however, no casy task to land. f of order and of moderation which now actuates the | World, a love of axis and leiters which illumined | 24a v2 b afer i chorus (the overture being a mere reha Every oue juunped out just asthe wave which had German Opinion of the Result. Spanish revolution, and tuat tt wit give no excuse | fine and delicate tasie, his spirit grasped ql thet | Pierce's administration, Assistant Secrotary of State, | Of two of the P ipal airs) “Fiamands de Tous cast the boat on to the beach had receded; but the | (Berlin (“ept. 28) correspondence of Independence | pr cny Proer tw tnierfere with what ts purely a | Could contribute to the grandeur of a grea‘ reign, and, | The umpire, in case of disagreement between the | Pays,” Is @ reminiscence of “La Belie ilviéne,” aad next wave came on so rapidiy that it completefy Belge.) maiter of domestic concern, in whtch the Spanish | during his tenure of the Ministry of Sate and the Fiu¢ | American and British commissioners, was, I belive, | ® good one at that, The burgomas:er makes lls went over them, The people on shore were, how- The accounis from Spain are generally considered | peopic oniy have a right to have a voice. Arts, fie displayed that elevated tact which discoyers r. Bates, bow with a baritone solo, which can oniy be made ever, on the lookout. They dashed forward and as- | ae of a nature to effect a diversion in the carrent of aud recompenses real imerit aud encourages all ef Among tho claims adjudicated by the Commission | effective by tue action, costuine and situation. It 1s sis.cd cvery one to land in safety. It was now three | wariike apprehensions created and kept up by the forts, This phase of iis life waa signalizod by two | were those of a number of British manufacierers of | Of tie same character as the “Pit! pat! pout! The o'clock. Sy this time a second cable had been se- | language of certain French journals, There was Fronch Commorcial Views. striking facta, He had the honor of co-operating in | broadcioths, who had for several years prior to 1360 | Pastry cook or page (soprano), has a pretty little ma- cured aud another of the ship's s Was brought | motutng realiy serious in those fears. No one ac- (Marseilles (Oct. 1) Ooi ne of the most considerable acts of the reign—that | been importing them into this coutry upon ‘raudu- | Zurka air, “C'est un pate,” which ts sure to become into action. ihe boatmen on shore, who had shown quatutod with the situation of affairs at Berlin or at SOce 3) Contesecudetice OF. B8 ZOUISH ee oy Which the Kmperor, ant:clpating the liberal aspl- | lent invoices to such au extent as almost wholly to | Popular. ‘The sercuade of tue same cuaractor whic some timidity at ae had gaiaed courage and the ris could have believed serious.y in the possibilty eet) lied the deliberative assem- | drive the American importer out of the trade. ‘The | follows is the agement de Paris’ with some H = - ' DG Pt + In commercial circles hero great satisfaction is | Pations of the country, - f i ay Cori backward and forward and tho curter “wee hauled | plained in these columus for there to be-any hesese | FOvolUtion. For so:no days past our relations with Taiy the eee and didloult question of literary pros | Hon, dno. Cadwalader, present District Judge of the | Tie song of the hea, Walch the Dako (tenor) sings Without rowers, so that she could carry thirty men | sity for repeating them. Thus the chances of peace | the ports of tho Peninsula had been suspended, and, romoter of the legisiation by | Eastern cistrict of Pennsylvania, was employed to | {8 one of the most Indicrous anu striking pleces in tae at a tue. ‘The inhabltants of tho litte vilage of | OF War cannot Le subordinated to those of the Span- | Botwithstanding the requirements of consumers ih | Pons the nonio works of tatelloct have found n new | aid the district. attoruevs, aud he penotrated the | opera. The orchesira and chorus givo an unttation Harboore and the surrounding hamicts showed the | ish insurrection. kven were that revointion | SPM, orders for that country had completely ceased. ? yperandi of the importers, and drew out by | Ol the cackling of a hen and the crowing of a cock. gcoatest kindness to those who ianded, offering shel- | vanquished, or did it not triumph for a long The definite trlumpa of thé insurrection will now | Security for tholr rights. Count Walewekl ener. pte cation lh He ‘admiseion “of the iraud from | Passing over tie chorases ‘of the aide of honor end : e . In public esteem @ persona! situation tndependen' 4 ter, dry clothes and restoratives. timo hence, the general peace would not be | Chable us to renew our affairs, which had been for @ 4 ‘ticipated in the - | thelr own agent) and witnosses, Verdicts were | Brigitie'’s very clover song of the toilet we come to @ The Parts Paye says:— more compromised than it, was | before the | Thar oassins satatastion inthe pronsuse wish wiien Reactor hts covnter atthe head of a ministerial | given for the United ‘States in all tho cases tried in | sparkling trio sung by Genevieve, Brigitte, and Dro 1 los, “Ah! de mon and tue “Couplets du the;” Charies alartei’s ye bass colo, ‘J’arrive arme de pied enzcap,” 3 oh rising of the Spanish fleet at Cadiz. In the same the great bodies of the Stat New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore, and the de. | gu&\ the page; Suroy’s tenor M. Grantor do Cassagnac, principal editor of the | order of ideas the assert'on may be made (hat the | OUT Men of business learned of the happy tasue Lage go repose, he ‘alway fenlants having carried them by writs of error to ; Pays, had the honor of breaktasting with the Empe- iy 7 of the present crisis. The impossidilt; con: y . r ror on Tuesday. Who shall sey iat journalism: le | Teconutom, when is eteiortous throughout Spain, P oF Mmade felt around him the influence of that consid: | the Supreme Court, the decisions of the courts be- ae is | snouid succeed in odtaing ia recognition in France, | Ciilating the French economical system with the th hich 1s attached to experience, to devoted. | low were by it affirmed, The illicit trade was dashing flaale, “Le clairon qui sonne,” whi h I tee ee the tater, ror more than one mative, would not think | Yira-Provectiontat theories af Spain had. created Sosa and to the dignity of character, “Tho Count | stopped. Now would 1t be belleved, but for tne fact y iike tho Gnale of “La Bele fiéiene,® are tie je London Post of the 6th of October saye:— of marching her battalions onto the Rhine. The cornenet 3 felaitone Oa the t ‘was filty-eight years of atthe moment his most | that notwithstanding this flagrant exposure | Other remarkable features in the first uct. It woud We regret to announce that the Rey. Ernest Taw. | 1act is that peace in the centre of Europe ts based | ii" ith which Se eaiuene at tmeaele ff unex Fedeath struck hin in the | of the fraud, notwithstanding the condom. | be impossible to describe the music of tue The situation in which French shipping was placed | S4dden an : siarme. ch oct kins, canon of Westmiust: “ ou too solid a foundation to permit of the predomt- midst of health and Ife, when ali appearances still | uation of it by the courts of the United | gensdarmes, which occupies the first part of the chayel, Mayfair pret FoF Ourzen | ance of what our neighvors the French call Seantey Waktu peeing sharcneee, Ga htt, Seow promised long vervices to the Rmpersr ant his coun | States, tho lower and “the. highest, — these second acl. It # ludicrous and extravagant. in the dence, in Dear’ rd, at the age of sixty-six. Ag | the War party. The diversion referred to has there: | Oo oot ornment Ps Temand Just equivalents; thua, | *Y, and to his family and friends many years of an | British manifactares had the effrontery to eet up | extreme. Those two heroes are the «principal Secretary to the Society for the tion of the | fore ouly taken place for the Paris journals, which, | i ete note coasting trade between the two | existence which everything contributed to embellish | before the mixed commission claims for relmburse- | characters in the opera. A Bacchanalian chorus Gospel in Voroign Parts for a quarter of a century, | fr S0.n@ Motive or other, prophesied a conMict they | Cointees was carried on by Spanish vesseis, they, ag | 2d render happy. But mea devoted to the duty | ment Of the value of theac frauduiontly imported | opens the next scene. it is followed by the “Ronde and as Honorary Secretary to the Colonial Biahoprica | Were the last to believe tin ent, ‘The eifect of | Wei as all the productions ‘ot spain, ‘were subject to | and who have spent their lives in the service of thelr | goods? Would it be believed the British Commis. ny infidéies” and a well known ‘fyrolienne” sung Council from its formation in 1841 to the present | thelr Insensate declarations was nevertheless to | reas aimorential charges in France one of tie in. | Country with so much brilliancy do hot wholly die, | sioner voted in favor of the allowanct of these | by two soprani aad a basso, Some of the best balles time, it was his privilege to take a leading ‘tin | Maintain @ certain uneasiness, to disturb credulous » One of the Il- | mney continue to live in the hearts of their friends, | claima and indeed in favor of the allowance of | music we havo heard in French opera comes the work wor extend ~ minds and to paralyze business, Thanks to the | Contestab‘e results of the present revolution will be raiitude of thoi fellow citizens and ta his- | every British claim and against tne allowance of | Nextand a “Farandoie,” which is by no means origt- pate and founded COLOHIAL ANd min CAE EPIBCO. | Gvents in Spain, the Sournalg of which I have spoken, {he reform of tue economical system In Spain. | That Bee Tate ot crdiah OF ail Grand recnllentions: | every Amerieat clsics ovfered? nai, but very Lrilliant and taking. ‘Pho page then ex- in alunost every part of the world. have seen the publjc attontion turned elsewhere, ry nily derive @ benefit from the May'that thougat bring some alleviation. to the heavy 1 Will mention another caso in the peculiarly | plains the cause of Genevieve’s nair becoming gray hunge, while French commerce will be freed from re and haye thougat adyisable, wich was a | © s ief of that noble companion of his life and of those | British line of fraud upon the revenues of foreign | in some very pretty measures, The hunting quart SPAIN Teal advantage, to leave |’ in’ peaco tne | “0ge fimpedimenta which checkea our relations with | Biitaren who Soe cea with aa mash atecronne | governments, During the Meslcan war and tne ove: | ti song of tie fava, the return from Palestine, und pce ORR a Md speeches of the Baden | Hr Tea has already been deciared a free port by | WhO 1 No more! In that catecr so adutrably flied | rations of Mr. Walker's war tartif—so called—on | Golo's complaint, tho two last being very droll, ree Dake ep Ministers and The pessimist rhetoricians there {s @ consolation and for his sons a lesson and 4 imported into Mexico, @ British vessel as. | are the principal numbers fu the last act. ‘The Battle of Alcolen. o/ Paris have changed their theme, that ts ail, We sarnes Wel for Un Where cblinarcat measure | an examplo which they are worthy to foliow und | conded the Rio Grande with an assorted cargo and | hunting chorus in particular, is very effective, rt. are now delivered some ime at least from their 5 ‘clal policy perpetuate, was ia Pee ed of introducing her goods, tu violation | When to this music are united ballet, mise en scene (Carpio (ent. 2) faa Of Mpoca of | sustidious dissertations on Prussian ambition and a This eloquent discourse produced a profound im- | of the tari, when she was seized by the multtary of the most gorgous description, rich and varied ghten orcoce sevice att the liverticidat of Count Bismarck. | No one, pression on the persons who heard it. futhorlites, Bent across the river, libeiled in the Ad- | costumes and singular stage effects, there is hardly ® Towards three o'clock yesterday afternoon were | in truth, will think of complaining, No reflecting The News in Rome. miralty Court for Texas and was condemned, Some | doubt that it shail make a sensation. pooner aM od of ‘te. aera. Nosed had tty Bom could have any fear of war. There (From the Journal de Paris, Oct. 5.) thne after the condemnation the District Judge, upon A. E. Blackmar, New Orleans, publishes the fol- ee | if We may so say, @ snperstition main- | We learn from Rome that the news of the Spanish Napoleons Personal Rule. & question being faised of the jurisdiction of his | lowing:— atier the artillery of the Marquis de Novaliches | tained hy interested parties.” War had, and no | insurrection tas nowhere produced #0 m From the Paris Paya, Oct. 6, court, opened the decision heid the case | “Ignis Fatnns,” capriccletto, Albert Jungmann. ed a well sustained fire on the bridge and the | doubt will continue to have, fatalist believers, with tion ad at the Farnese Paisee, Where ovety ining Bard What oak the Emperor do by his Sheotnie free | for savisoment, While the case was so held tho | Aligit, graceful Itttle walt of melody, with an ap- ned o it, country houses beyond Las Ventas, After three | whota discussion was comething dificult, and 10~ ared for ® counter revoluti f will? Where is the possibili of. tyranny, of sove- | mixed commission sat. The owner of the vessel ropriate accompaniment, hours anda half of afurious struggle the ineur- | crites who pretended to believes, Al ong toes idee beet Peers seeing thos ocese ‘of gt reign caprice with the ireistative body and its per- | claimed and was aliowed the value of tt and the ” BY has Come.” Idylic, A, Jangmann. sean suspended thelr cee and whe com- | must be placed in the first rank ‘the dispossessed | in Spain become more and ‘more certuin Fraucis II, | manent control, with the Serate, the guardian of | cargo; but, not satisfied even with this, he soon | not asthe preceding. The accompantun in-chief and ni rushed on to the oo German princes, They aiso are consternated by the ‘convinced that the time was not exactly fi Ierty, and with public opinion so powerfal a3 it is | after made a formal demand on the American gov- | in the last part is nonsense. to of “Vive le Reina!” They expected to | adults of Spain: . ee fo a Malet SOMRAey Moor ‘ “ Yo, 7. Frey. Exquisite Aout alten, Late yd troope ot General Ser- Hesse had been sane Probably, if the Biector of | gbie to his enterprise, and ali the Legitimist vountry | in Francs? If arpitrary role, or at least arbitrary | ernment forthe release of his ef thus seeking, ‘Pensees Melodiques.” C. T. ry: iu time of the explosion which ntiemen, Who for some time past had been re- | tendences, are to be found anywhere we must loo! after bet paid, to get back tho thing patd for. | little of Schubert school. ambushed aud by parapets, opened so | menaced the throne of Queen isabella he would have to Naples and Sicily, received orders notto | for it in the ranks of the opposition—the opposition | Such was the treaty of 1852, the prototype of the Schirmer publishes @ new ical method for the Fane ambush that their losses must have | stil kept in his portfolio that magnificent memo- Firat risk as there was reason to tear that the | on principle and that worrying, thwarting opposl- | treaty now reported in emory hen tile commis | piano, by Grosohel, wi excellent for ba- ft 0 the anti-Bourbon movement tn Spain | tion of the Srondewr middic classes. Facts 3) for | ston closed its business the British Commilastoner or eye witness who sends us | randum he has just addressed ty the European you Nod at ih night be folt in italy, themseives, Horo 1s an oxamplo which is still present | the solicitor (1 don’t romember which) Jocularly re- wr Sounds from Fairyland.” Gaprice. Wyman. Pris Hews states that both sides displayed the great- | courts, which are no doubt astonished at his poathu- He saw the Marquis fall wounded in | mous and ridiculous protest. ue Queen Isabella to ail minds. The personal government, as it is cal marked to Colonel Thomas, ‘We have got thro Hahed by W. A. ‘& Oo, A. characteristic ene Bartorius received ® splinter Lionel 1 esas ices’ trom iho Pope, in whion tee | granted liverty tothe est What ald that liberal | protty. well, and, conclutio bok pactios wit with a filmy dattering Svever igtt te * Geners: Garcia de Paredes | wise reance Th Sovereign Ponti ofera. her spiriiual consviation | concession produce? Has tt the discussion of tisiled. ‘The principles you contended for you | with its naine. Tho finale, however, at France Thinks of German Influence ta ‘s the benetlt of of t and exhorts ber not to give way to discouragement | ples? No. Wasitthatof interests? No, Itwasthe | have and we have the money, wnich, ag | left out or oh to oo Wand the both ermics remained quietly in Spatn. in presence of the deplorab.e events which are | discussivn of persons, The Lanterne aprung into life | your 4 fa rich, don’t care th = ittie piece of their oamps. (From La France of Paria, Oot. 6.) taking place in Spain. and what did M. fochefort assume? Why, ond it the p is carried into e! Lia r, but pleas bout, J. BK From of Madpid, Sept. 99.) Frequent reference has beeu mide recent , ij piace the Quirinal at the disposai of | that ot systematic inaulter, not of the empire, Wo shal come out, as We did before, at the ulat kind, anpreteat The es prigity de reste A fatigue’, | leged mystertous reiations betwoeu Bern Ay RA tas tidied toy of Spain. . but of the Emperor. What did this personal govern: | littie end of the hora. ’ Ine.