The New-York Tribune Newspaper, September 17, 1866, Page 11

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1866.—TRIPLE SHEET. rocols ro o8- order to —______.———-——————"!———"-——‘—_—"_‘__—r_-—_——_—'—_—— hat could harm an American iron-clad. took a hopeful view. An inter y tho young Murquis of who, during his rece Corps rewained in the ba attack, doing nothing, rotroatad; aud the where it wastill 1 received your reqest to be released from your present func- und drawn up to tions, and fu the motives which bave led"you fo ¢ I recognize the seatiments of faithful devotion to King conntry which zmchhunou whole spherv of sexvice you ow painfal (he thought of o separation from you is to me I the following morning, Before the Thls ns_could arrive | the enemry was off toward Meseritch. The Legion efter- ward marched to Pobl, whenee tho railwey trains took them by Oderberg back to Prussia, That Austria is able to act with efficient speed when the men who have to direct possess energy sud vigor, is shown | one to be accomplished al! &t once. ‘The conntries now to be annexed were the most convenient forabsorption asithey of Saxon fawmily, sud mostly Protestant, parts once orgauized under.Prussian laws, the country ition 1 respect to foreign coun- at which will make all Miss B's own fertile pon will be th the cry of the boys the money, and Birds of Prey who shall sell it on the strecis in October. Miss Braddon's'very just complai publishers, Hilton & Co,, for pu o fortresses t! {the Duke of | o nt American tour, iie described an American nt against the Awerican blishing as her's a book would oceupy such a gain lett outirely to itselt—wis attsoked by tho encmy with greatly superior €orce sud mado 10 suffes the time from fhe 2544 to {he 30tk of June, fomr’ , with detailed viotories of the foe over single do Austrian ‘G enerai oncs bis wnited concentrated forces an attructios on the minor German Btates that the whole question of German uity would be solved some years later by far smaller kacrifiecs, first week afier the conclusion of peace Count Bismark wus ceriainly still disposed to carry on the movement by widently kept his t 00t 10 be possible | tries and exercise sucl I in England, the respectublo ot o ven o always conducted by literary cosssion mistake was impossible, Longinan, Beutle: 4, are men who &re to be 1 Tt is rather a stigwm; blishing fraternity thut such an accident Probably when we huve an bouest ght Law between the two co burry and more aceuracy in rej tions. Ihave heard soveral authors, whose worl no noed to say. stood futthfuly by wy side in good iven we a5 opportanity of observiag bow 'maniike qualities, of becom! unshaken counsel wes always eouscientions and well considered; by tho position of thitgs and not by l:."'&'.“"‘ or daatly ; and an experience of many years ts beneficial influences. as 1 wos convinced that in the affairs y. of importanes cocurred withou! my knowk ‘where a difference of opimion existed bolween which she nevor wrote, is one that ougli formidable rem, which which were five inches m to the top of the s0 well made as were d the Washington. Xk, ond it was a broadside by the transport, within 12 days, orues, and 27 batterics from the banks of the the River Isonzo in Italy. They were It was the celerity against any American house. an_army of 95,000 publishing bouses aro nearly men, and men to whom a 1 Mossrs.Chapman, Trilbuer, others who might be name: the highest litera the American pul us this could occur. Iuternational Copy there will be less Dannbe to thoss o taken thither by two lines of railwa of their movenients which caused ‘the Italisns to retire beluud the Legliamento, und to accept the tuce of August 12. It was intended also to send a force of ry brigade from Carinthis to fall upon their anction with the Aumhntmor presence of these facts ¢ tit woro advisabie to retreat than to ris! i fm the botto alls. The plates were not the turrets of the Mo fioretwas only one fghting dec! heard Comtism deseribed as Catholiciem »d." There 18 no doubt that Comte shaped his 1y church withwhich bewas familiar. and bis followers ted with your scti whole tached Austrinu corps, info aciion, ¥rom the 26th ouoentrated torce wain viotnhl'l’l dotail over as all the Austrian forees separately bs boaten, ¢ né:{ mmn Sivee then, however, even his admirers must confoss that Lis cnergy and his decision b week it is evideat that be, wo, has sdopted is generally called. His old oppo- r other; heouly played with d its.sympathizers as with K left flank, and forin e ADS y0u | .:d‘uud uu‘l: “'.-vuu-:.-:.( st after that of the oul o vital personalit nents pretend ho nover had the Netional party o] separate corps of _Rirst Prussian A..,,...z vancing, our differont orps. on the contrary. dircotions would br atristly follo broaking up of so tried snd o y & eonneotion ot be otherwise than painfol 1 it 13 ouly on sccount of the important which yoa lay weight, requiring, as they do, answers as far as futernational Policy,” waieh the leading Comtists bave.recently put shich is exciting at prosent considerable atten! world, we have have an n which they might again be beaten. Had displayed in the North Lave Liad to Lument and wouder st the defent and the®Hungarian insurrection. Ho was willingto u them as a war messure, but aim—tho aggrandizement o humanity really mak Josepbistadt, viciories in detaii over the merica, express their regret th Y, whils as yot the not about mongy, but about the in- This was, a8 I have s caso with Matthew Arnold’s 1 ssays. ublishod in the Engligh been reprinted in A were not conaulted, trinsio getting v reason to know, t v them npha goon a3 b Cission and energy Prussia—had been attained. With all that, it must be admitted that for somo time mutters beve been handied 5o eagnestly, and are still car- of their books. i their plan for the K I T S The sanitary mesgures taken here G L% A Loyt oo I nd‘thither the mon were nt, . Under theso ofe- s * ure admirable ., At Kdul afte Soveral of those Esiays, 88 odition, were incomplote. W earefully his book, 0 which changes and additions we tieularly desired to add to the K ereble portion which had been which it sppeared 18 a review) as ! food for its orthodox readers. But when Mr. Arnol ied to the American publishers of Lis work for oppor- o andwedd, ho was told that it was alre t would have beeu a much wore valual he been cougnlted originally; and so would mary have prevented‘thesspread of the malady. TLirty-six per sons bave been attacked by it here, of whom 24 have diad. since a day or two. Twonty- two persors were suddemiy®oized, 11 of whom have diud, In Briinn it i3 on the inCrease. LJearn from Framkfort-on-the-Main that several of the groat werchants there 1ntend to have the place; some to sottle in Paris, others in Augsburg or ¥rankforters have no wish whatever to become They consider that they areno gainers by the ehange, and hato Prussia with the utmost intensity. f the world very clearly of the missionary ere should be sent men_of such & vied on in respect to Saxony and Hesse-Darmstadt in such great o, o mavner, thet it must be supposed Count Bismark bad givdgouithe; msmrange (kab my ing moved bithor & ulterior®ing, which be designed to purswe when matters B Were once set agoIng. Now, it is true, he seems satisfied with Great Pressia, ond even the conuection with the remaining Northern States by n Parliawont is deferred. A Confedorney wus only of value if he could operate by it on the Southera o furce the Govoerni, lations to enter into it lomacy and princely weeediog 0 your wish gratituge for the important sorvices yo: varted brother, and my sen! cere respect for your wmn‘:ul ighed respect and the sincerest attach inister of State, Baron von Baust, ovotod Schonbrunn, AUg, 16, 1898, e ON THE LEADERSHIP O% TflhAflmnn ARMY IN THE NORTH. fleur contains & paper s and social culture of oy believe that somethini ald be Mupl;d‘. and lhl; 1 e nations of Western Kuro] ne creed, ‘Hint instoad of trying the creeds whick bave ducts of the soll in what th the theological and social ize the creeds and suds as the basis of all education Ou those alone they should build, en Mr, Arnold examined be found several importeut things in re desirable ; and he Asay on Spinoza 8 con initted by 7% 7 ng a littls too stron At Posth it bes ehown its 1 remaiv elso under chavged h the 1sti sthotie spirit aud buma ainly as ondlesdy—to replace ap as naturally asth heathen lauds, ?omm waa gained more b for et The ing from Koaiginhof. which a s by their own ' ch and Prussia onship have made him renounce much more stron, than the A ian, were Sainst tho oomaidersbl i y B “The tatal bastls of X and Sax never taken place if the been bey are varistions of e ing; they should be journal tr late nm{:her of the of the ill success 2’ lo Bournof has an ime » behaviof of the invaders, too, has tended rather to incrense the detestation ghan otherwise; it was insolent pd supercilious in the highest degres. The carriage importance to a Parliament, as ing dislikes any such Government, and as it would still muke diffioulties for him. pressions of humanity; and g e oy i\m‘u) theme to the discern! avs, lie attache cobperated with. tne"Avstrianarmy of the North in the war with Prusaia in the yoar 1#65." The subject dit the “¥leros yon isin itsell so interesti Mr. John R. Thompson is on ne, whoso adventures, An article in or v wrcke” of Blackwood's Maga paper Ia 'fl?::‘ L'tl ‘r:;o (M'” bu.gm the of Fune, inbabitants have been taken by ond who was there a few fays told me he had only seen s couple gf one-horse vehicles in three days. The items, too, whic had to pay are considerab horses of the wealth “requisition,” and & gh kuowledge of the matter treated of, The rénforcement of the army is what he wants of i these $tates, and secks now to obtain by special treatios. 11, after tho eventa from L “This'is the reason why the conclusion of peace with Saxony and Hosse-Durmstadt is deleyed. After had obtained the continustion of these States, it was at ith | first iutended to coerce them by Parliamentary action into puipose i3 to es- 1ablish this conuection and the occupation of the fortified placesthy Prussian troops by stipulatiors in the treaties of 1f thig hias beon also asked with regard to Dresden, believe it hns only been done to have something to yield. Dresden will not become a fortress with a Prussisn kevwe des Deuz Mondes gortant hoaring on this v tiop in the East,” and punt of Brabawites, or taal ideas of Chri which the B thousands of years. Th eshiub Chuuder, geuius, who seews to be a Hindoo (earned man tinn the French writer, peL €O PAred Y < ‘Magazine there is an excoedingly futerest- or Church of One P. Cobbe. Sho_declares while 10 the Confederato service, are soou to T, was whilom editor of The Laterary Messenker ; but this will be his fir in a work of fiction. For though some pe pers in Mackwood recor ! South, those who are s funiliar Wi spondent'will remem- 5 confined his adven- itled ¢ Christian ives a profoundly interest- nitarians, who find anity & crown of the re- ahmins have been building eir leader 18 a cer- holar and a man of Renan, though a wore with whom he has ho Frankforters have From July 16 to Au for 60,000 pairs o ocT8 in the hotel, L odging, &c., of the floring; for sadddle-borses, 175,000 florins; 648 florins for a mout) he Bund} isdead. On the 2ith the members assembled at Augsburg, held alast sitting to pro- claim in solemn assembly,that.it had ceased to be. Fifty- since it was called into existence. From dny tosdny the'public is in_expeetation to see the law piblisied rexpecting the revision of the mew State hauk notes. The sum to be issued is 400,000,000 florins; but of these 300,000,000 florins only will at first be put in ions are infended for repayment’to rrowed, 150,000,000 florins for call ing inthe l-florin and S-florin notes now in circulation, 55,000,000 flonns for indemuifyiug communes and com- mercial componics who havo suffered 1o war; the remaining 35,000,000 florins is to be employed nsos of the State. ins 10 be paid to Prussia has already hanking houses here and in the provinces;#49 Vienna firmk and 5 Vienna institutions con- tributed; the firms, 16,600,000 forins, the institutions, 11,450,000 florins; altogether, 2%,050000 florins, Five provinciel fims subscribed the remainder, 1,950,000 J.R. T.'s phiysiognomy, & your cor ber, that the said little gentleman to London eince a little after the war began. 1 have not read Borcke, avd it may bo that he is the of somebody else's work, John M. Danel chmond) used toicall®2’he Messenger, “The Southern Literary Milliner, bad omen for poor . that every literary behalf of tho Confederacy, or by any mewber of it, from ,Spenco to Belle Boyd, hasb the Confederacy werc uncou; ublshor with & pistolgo his s than at a roll of they intended to invade Silesia, or to march through Bo- (Hy, tbls uncertainty obliged the enemy to divide his forces. The marchings and conn! twpen the Eibe and the Oder, and regiments in Silesia, prove the uncertain| other matters, 7,365, of the Prussians be- translator only of The*Examiner fnz account of this Brahma*Samsj Gied, from the pen of Miss F. 3 B T e that the church was established by Rammohun Roy, slknown friend of Channi; 3, who is now succooded by that the grand -melg The Prussians bad, 1t is truo, noarly three yollus theie belief ] rouds tor communication with, and tor with Darmstadt is going on in the Government feels re- sted from the annexa- o of Russian intervens The bargainin, closest manner, the more o as the served and ashamed at baving tion of Upper Hewso in conseq ‘ tion. Now, nofhing is intended by' all this ) with Darmstadé but to obtain the disposition over its army, and the occupation of its fortresses, nnd on this basis peece will bo oltained. ‘Next wevk, the unconditional annexation of Hanover, Hosse, Nassau and Frankfort will be prononneed by the Chumibers, to that the States will be treated as Prussian Provinces, and be brought, aftér a short delay, under the Th's adbosion to this weasure is favored evenmong the Liberels, because they thiuk it will cut'off all possibilityof the King's restoring auy part of these lands to their former prinees, which is semetimes hinted at in ministerial circles as otherwiso possiple. T not believe that their feas is well founded, after the King ays and numerovs entual union of, their vej between thew was so great Iine between Moravis and Bokemis, could have reached Lemia sooner than it wouid have been possible for the to bave united their se) havp been gained for t of thoea German troops on Literature and Present a London east, and he will trewblé onfederate manuseript, & Hall drop daily tears over the piles of Dubney’s « Stonewall Jackeon™ omtheir back shelves, dictum that the more people say a thing the they to do it, may account for the slowness reform in England moves. n for @ movement is at once taken up pnB_whose many arms are types, and scems te foel too much satisfied in getting itself’ realized on paj thefollowing listof phawmph eshyb Chunder, sen., who related to Roy a8 Theodore Parker was to Dr. But since the articles of M. Bcun tten, we have received, through 7he ncoount of a very Brahmaist apostle in the theater of lical College on ** Josus Christ—Eu The Friend of India naturally selects wmost or:bodox sentiments it can find in the Jecture. After showing wherein be differed from theorthodox Christiaus, cirenlation, Rixty mil 1he bank of alike sum bo: armies. 7Time. too, would thus ration, at the decisive moment, side ot the Dlet which were mo- 11,260 Austriars had chosen their first position at Bohemis, the great battle would Lt sopara- sion of the Prussian troops by takiu Eicotoral Hosse and forees; for thia dispersion related only to a If even the Austrian army, bad jmmediat hemia, the passage of the border-wmountains woul tsken considerable*time, durivg which the means of the numerous railways, could bave concen Miss Cobbe were wril Friend of India, some delivered by the young the Calcutta M recent lecture i £ for the current ¢ The 30,000,000 : : i t moral and .dhln Prussian constitution. FINE ARTS. “ Huw anity was groaning under a deadly malady, and w on the verge of death; o remedy wi Christ was thus o necessity of the o It was from no_sell mistaken fanaticism, taat Ho brave) ed by Farrah, N terial crisis ‘and the Hydo Park demonstrations Messcs. Goupil and Schaus have lately received sov- i aud oheerfally ture of their own: K - sdong v eral new engravings after eminent English artists. to whick: we call our readers’ attention. Two companion prints aftee. N Since & week or two a saving bank has been oponed here, the first of its kind in Vienna. Pawnbroking es- tablishments on the continenta: and 1t is such an establishment— —that has just commenced reesiving sums not less than called up quite a little li pronounce the words *“ annex- their forces end faced the A ust as they bad their choioe of concen invading Bobemia with ad the Austrians advanced has once brought himselt to ard ‘pdeposition of prine: it has been won I8 cortainly now stronger in his heart than his love for cousins and legitimacy, what he held high ouly when the interests of tho people wero to masclf to be crucified oo the cross. sod might be glozified. 1 bave alwi veautiful embiom of solf sacrifice his caleulated to quieken the higher feclings and s ofstbe Leart and to purify the sou!; and T believe y with superior num- hemsoly The enxicty to overnment institutions, Plandlcibgesellschaft A. Solomon; * Waiting for the Verdiot," and ** Alterths. Spe, Loudon,” a People's Natio i g.l i s et diot,” are very good specimeus of the dramatio school; Book of Sougs, 1d.; Tie Ragged Biivud the Great Reform Leagus e Demoustration in Hyde ey mummunmummquu“‘ scenes by a Bulwer or Miss Braddon would do; the characters are *stock * characters, and thelr autitudes and gesturesare | in accordance with the instruction to be found iz oll respecter blo manuals of elooution. Pictures such as those belong to the | theatrical achool, and will be produced just ag long aa there i trains at their command on the different railways, could sily bave concentrated six army corps at Fraukensiein and Neiso, ard bero again wouldhiave beer much sironger than the Austrians, who, in order not to exposs their left flauk, would have been obliged to detaoh consigerable forces to the border mountsius iu the direction of Glats, Sliberberg, that the position at Olmilf: brogght us the sdvantage of deceiving the enemy as to oor 1n- tention, foroing him to divide bis prinripal furce, and epabling us to gein time in order ying intercst st the rate of six‘per cent. It would secin that the so-called working classes have little or nothing to. put .aside, for the 19,650 Aorins re- hort time sineo the bank bas been rsous. This on an oposit ‘of nearly 540 florins per head, and unls who can save 50 much that savings arw specially inton There is much depres thears, how eallous and bard soever it may be. that can look with cold indifference on that grand And signifi- ol."v Referring 10 the martyrs, ho said: **It is suc devotion which are caloulated to dispel nds ail cowardiee. fickleness and tncoustaney, us teel that truth is dearer than life itselt.” Io \raised Luther and condemned Popery. He used: “Is there a single soul in this large assembly uho would scruple to aseribe extraordinary groat- nase and supernatural morel hereism to Jesus Christ and Him His Wisdom illumined, aud ood®Sufirage and the Bellot. 24 ; The Reform d.; Exteosion of the F ernl Situation, by G one lorin and pay The fear of the King undoing what has been done would not influence the Li ings of many lesser towns did not favor the ereation of @ Groat Prussta. The debate of next week on this eubject tant of the session; + H. White, 6d.; Charles Kingsley has, you will Lave observed, agai appenred before the publi¢, and this time it was t iet on Limself a heavier blow than Father Newwan when last the reverend flunky raised bis head. There is ot a sadder case of lapse in of Alton Locke, 1 Doprties if the ceived in the very opened have been avernge gives 8 d posited by 356 Schweldnita &e. We repeat, thereforefc will be the most in hut the result is already certon if 1 TheComission ins de mejority, but oply under the soob Iangusge us this: an fmmense numbor of peepls who prefer a theatrics! of montal treatment of & subject to & watural and mavly tre u that of the author "Among men of letters he Lus long since 1 among tho andieraftmen Count Bismark Was not He, who b t. Another engraving is aftor Faed, “Conquiered bat mot " gy gt R ond his faco is like a book nectior Bobemia wilh those able to operate with them How muct®Connt Bisiark wis here, no work bein, dispute with the Ohimmber was scen on the oc King's answer to the nddress, ddress had been slmost unanimov the Minister bimself*forced his par'y hnd been able to induce his suppe standpoint with regard to the persuade the King to follow the same the expression of bia views in th h therefore fstaycd eway from the presentation of pronounced slone hidhminis- oputies afterward ceked the ive them his answer in writing®for commu- e House, the Binistry declared that they had no knowledge of if, and thit no State act had been done for what they would assum The Kingconsidered itgproper foreiis diguity to declaro But the impression , and still more his manner, made inthe et that he wished to bo in good undor- he Deputies principally g el It wis rewurked that utation with more efrilit wicked world—n riceless legaoy of divine t such wouders for 1800 ye wot He ahove ordinury buwmsnity! Blessed Jesus, immortal t For the world Ho lived r «iate and fol'ow bis precepts 2 » wis an immense crowd present, which listened to \ously applauded theso views, o evidently come ver pious Christian capt powercd to go rou vastate all fore)) operations of the Austrian aruw: s power saved o dark s of the German allies, 50 83 to hius ot us such & whose Ulood has wrou, Tost all position onsaceount of the horrille litorary blup- ders which he makes, some of which any séhoolbey could Ho is_now dubbed wmong them the **10osd thinker.” But Kingsley’s sciolism might be excu; it bt for his,fanltsof character. He is forcver prating’of nopgmously and prencher, such & But, worse than this, the dificrent trades yor bave work; and & week azo, the only trades that wis et wll occupied wers shocmnkers and Bookbinders wero rather busy, w the time for binding and getting the new calendurs ready wus com- low many men " lluwn- , and been put in the leisure. He is & homel, d died. Msy the riors ® givo up their old hudget, bat ho would not ance toward Berlin, The Prossians therefore left d Sixth Army Corps to cover ored to couceutvate their principal force on the Elbe and the pluek, whereas writes heresy preaches it evasively. Thereis not, consummatg coward in England. ho has now suuk to the depths of funkyism. Wherever there is's live lord, there Kingsley's kne bend. In private conveisution be nauscates evesybody Dby his constant refereuces to ‘‘wy Lord This,” and to some consultation he hes lad with au ewrl or a du Fortunately, this wan has long since lost af infh the minds of the kEnglish people. speech in admiration of his ton banquet (whic lack akin) has raised & suecr on every lip. 1 the justice to ray that tho ban- uet t0 Eyre and Kingsley's speceh thereat have been which wust make all that set blush if eless, the fact remiug that The Daily Teclegraph singys out Louis Napoloon, Go and Andiew Johhison a# the three grent nistorie and n. claracters of thus cpoch ! Great as s the diffieulty of Awstrln, if only energy bo shown snd the wisdom to break entirely with tho old, worthless systems, all may y far from those days when furth from* British ports nd the world and slay, euslave, de- peoples ou the express w there is an extraordinary ‘s in all"cultivated lands togseek ont .a: tures and the rel when a few years ago Christ: Mohamumedan Turkey, Western Protestantisw forbade it as woll as as Freneh Catholicisin. In Lowdon Mr. Trilbner mself heart and sovl into the work of sup- ing demand for this Oriental thought jon of bis encrgy and of the waut resents that there has been lege & Monthly Journal devoted to Sanserit titeratare,*the first number of which has It is called in the English “The Pandit;"*but s Sanscrit name seems to be Kasiyidyssuddhaniddbi, « translated is *“ The Ocean of the Nectar of for an offensive movement against Austrian army did not go with its prineipal to B«h-:l-. but urmd'o-t the assombling of tne Olatlis On June 10, the ohief armyswas concen! This made the Prussisns anxivus for the fate of Silesis, and onused them 10 divide thoir forces. It ‘Austrisns were fu the strong position near Olmftz, with the resting onJosephstalt and Koalgy Cracow ou tho West, baate, aimost with no inteution of sttaci he Bth d‘::ll through Hiraeh] the Second Army Corps had to er Sile01a, ¢ Beside all the voe for the more speedy & requisition. Al moneys of the communes, and even of thrvughout'Bulesis, sert for safety fo the #s Posen, In the KFurtress thers unroofed, trees felled, &e., &c. cre entertatned for the eutry of the Ausirians in Bilesia. Tie Avstrian army remained inactive in Olmilis from the uie, This immovability cennot On the 10th of June the troops were but the iutendsnts saw there were 7th wight bo remedied or supplied for toe wobilisation of the German 1t was ou the J4th of June ouly thet Prussia declared its secession from the Copfederatio led for help from th that in Bavaris the Chambers voted a it for & Is0. betwosn the 10th and the 2ist of June, was of Silesis would be the first point of attack of the sccordanee with space and uumbers, S Lausitz in arder to be r well 83 to cover the address, and His Mejest THE FPINANOIAL SITUATION—THE XEW LOAN—COM- MENTS OF THE PRESS. Fiom Our Specia! Correspondent. i £ ons of other lands. Russia tried to oppr Virwwa, August 29, 1866, Yestorday evening pape:s brought at last the expected decres om the new financial measures adopted by Govern- at the document is most difienlt to 1l versed in such matters. says tho- New Free Press, * bua searcely been suticient to make really chear to us oll the points of this new decree.” At the same titwe th and semi-otlicial comm. observations of th clearest, and mal By tho nw of Juiy hoi laed to ruise & T the responsibility. R iz on the"East, and ik A mtri bad 2, & F33 L3 b byeu in the right. - £ E basgiarown hi ment. All allow g “ An sttentive st started at the | dealt with in @ wa Army of Silesln of trensport Dumerous w & Of Liie Lroops Were pul kS ust reached En- was issued, an official y also_appeared. ng, a8 they aro the ‘Ibis is wot mecent ¢ ¢ o ¢ cam of ago, b strength, He is now seventy yoam of age, but A ol e the deeree most ix 1#16, the Mintater of 300,000 000 florine. After the N: ad taken €0,000.000 of the loen, there stili . Of this sum, the financial The Official Gazette of #'lorence at last l“.fil‘ by whiek Massui s decius It comes rather late, Chillon bad at last **learned to love duspair almost disembodded spirit which a few meet*iu London, and must needs hitherto call by another name thon that which is his own, may well refuse the penuission to re- turn to his native land, even should il-—as it will presently —assume the tone of eutreaty. y decree i himself and t romonte offenders * brings anything but ple unctore of Italiza sffairs. upprehend that 3t 18 a conciliatory | for some contemplated Kumi Napoleon. Agp the French g iz now as the chiffonierggoing about to hook what territorial trifles he can, and as'(vide unch) he bas been warned off of Rhepish.premises by Bismark, it is felt thit he must get'territory somewhere, and Belgium and Ttaly wre con- e. 80 the amuesty decree is not wel- ‘comed by the Mazziniste, Mazzini is still in poor Health, The publicstion of the next valume of the translation of | tters and Writings b bee: elay by the suddeu death of his wife is its chief translator. of Mrs. Stansfeld, whose husband was hounded Tories out of Palmerston's Government on nceoun friedship for Mazzini. During the last Venetinn Revolu- tion she erossed the Alps in post-carringes, bearing money | and dispatehes for the Revolutionists, sewed dress. 1 have to-day learned that Mazzini will distely elocted to thie Chamber for M that he will take the seat in that case, it is doubtful wifeiher the Ki: him buck to Italy. * ht*Morgan Smith, & negro actor, ap) peors at the Olympic Theater, t is possible thnt some of | uffi a may, on reading this state minds those days when respeciability at Wasbington was shocked at 'F acting ut the eapital this wretehm] pieco of Shaksy and how the wative American newspaper he author of that play (O if caught in any=Sonthein State, be lyneh asfrom the ol paths that | to'see the play performed by a real blnek nma. has been but & short tiwte in Exgland, and las thos f 1 | appeared only in small that neither at whist nor in Yife was it | portant place in which ner. His great ambition, | where be was somewhat scvers 2 been able to witness any performance of his in though 1 shall be at the Olympic to-night. ever heard him read sowe of the finest portions and of Macbeth in private, snd was conyi wan bas a strong dramatie genius. despotic Franceor Kussia he would ¢ at present one of the wost distinguishe been born upder the ate viewity of Indepé phis—be was forced into the Finance was & ental Record there is an interesting blished, of the Kd ndoo work on rhefo; sbout 700 yeais 8go by one Mam: #his it seems that Hindoo Rhotorics a Prakdsa, the most which was written a Acharya. From Beience is mainly busied . with the powers of words (sakti), the sentiments mained 140 000,000 on th administration will 1se noles (Staats notin THE TREATY OF PEACE BETWERN PRUSSIA AND AUS- TRIA—IE ARRANGEMENT BETWKEN PRUSSIA AND BAVARIA—RESIGNATION HEER VON BEUST—CONCESSIONS TO THE HUNGARIAN LEGION—ENERGY TRIAN GOVERNMENT IN THE ITALIAN WAR—SANI- TARY MEASUMES AGAINST CHOLERA—THE MER- CHASTS OF FRANKPORT—THE L) THE FEDERAL DIKT—TilE VIRST S{VING BANK IN VIENNA. From Our Special Correspondest. Il the 17th of o and five Sorins ench, &0 18 | Loun s, 000,000 flurins,ee il isue fve of cent apecie bonds with coupons, falline due {a alization of this new loan a committeo will probably kave to provide. If it bo found it into cask at the warket price of similar bonds al OF COUNT BELORDI— failivgs wlich But to Mazzini and bis ‘Time, too, was gai composition [rasa ), gud its diction (guna), d ornament or figures /alankdra). Each n the Kévya Prakisa and not be umnteresting to give a oetry_from the most celebrated Hindoo writers on taste. Thus Vawmana defines Poetry as esod of diction and orua- ds that thé®words and meanings so whnicul; fault;” of these is treated of very fully OF THE AUS- Rbityo Dagans. Tt.mi few of the definitions of They huve 100 Wuch reason to pensure before the fuct, of Ttaly before Louis in odeculation, which now T SITTING OF INDEMNIFICATION— Aduriajstratiop of the Finange contigoncy—bas only in sucl case—to overstep this boandar 1ine; in cass, namely, the floating debt on w) destitute of “any a8 tho power un hojaydefines it as ** that which is fault of diction, ornament, and seutiment;" Vdbbate defines it imatically-accurato words and . meanings, possessed of diction, ornamemnt, and style;” ndin, s “a string of worde ;" Jaganndtha (4 favorite modern writer who diéd abont & century ago at Benares), as** a form of speech pro- dueing (in the mind) o pleasing meaning.” Butthe best of all the various attempts is the definition given by Viswan- rpana, * Poetry is that which has sentiment for its soul,’—other things, es style, figures, considered a8 more or less indi t s forming no part of the proper logical the First, Fifth more to the south, to Upper Silesia, uarters being removed esian_army, to which the First, Fifth and Smth Army Corps and the Guard belonged, and which was supported by a part of the Second Arm; C Silesio, had now the privcipal part a Army Corps in the Lausita bad Tt was slready on the 21t that alarmed by the fear of su invasion of N thought that the Austri Silesia from Zuckmantel, Jiig While thus the principal oublic an * Salinenseheine,” paid, and which ts known to _the hy law of 100,000,000, shoald sink _below the sum fixed new finaueial doeree, numely, dotermines thet the achaine” and the Gov & “Compositio tion of VIENXA, Aogast o8, 1664, The event of the moment, for Austria at least, is the of the treaty of peace with Prussis. The rati- , even on the part of Austria, has already terday the signed document ¢ the ratifications are to be ex ks of this fiual act, - sian troops are to evacuate Austii first week they are 10 go buck us fur snd in the third they must be across t plenipotentiary is also ¢“pected to L and there is Jittle doubt { regrrding o peace with It begin, Btaly seems 1o be aware that the poc ment and the war fever is over t o well as. Austrin, wust beghn 1o oce Nelune, the bead it of Neisse, The 8 mrlfl.@l’m publis! First Sermon,” and “Ophelia. o ch. :::.nn-m-fly never very much sought diluted variation tes are not to excoed the sum or example, the *Salinenscheine” 0,000, the Government notes in 0 Tise 10 wmount to 300,000 000 ver, that this is a case whichk will the new decree p) were 1o sink s low as clreulation might in that florios. Tt ls rn.hl-m,l esthe 68 seen 10 be. adame Venturi is the b; Black BAunswicl Prussians who adopted a black I} end crose-bones :’- their the death of tbeir leader, at Ligny, If It cost the 's picture we see one of these of his wistress before setting out. the manly beauty of his face is made sacrifice to duty, Sbe tarns spou bl with & and Holds the door od, aud she scos that uss the merits of Miliais's ¥ t of his | back to Pra atha, in his Sébitya uniform with the , in great foroe, were oy redemption of thal w5 will sbow preféence for this stock. We way almost with certainty wceept as a fact that the Ao “Salinenscheine” 10 ba isened will reech 100,000,000, and that fore the Governmeut notes bearin sum of 300,000,600 floring. 'l e Governiment does not concesl its conviction that the floating nativnal o bight which caunot be exce . Tn case peace be secured, which may now ertain, the promise is given th per money), the whol torest or not, shall not exceed of dorf, &e. 1 forces of the two armies remained , the Austrian army, in a well-ordered that within two days it where beve been brought together—advanced ja. The moveaients of the army on the 19th Gen, von Deedek was aiready.united with the ete., being rightly no intersst will not 1—80 much so, indeed, ne. Dr. Henry Mandsley, in the course of 8 brief memoir of ina; sud 1 think | nolly—tho distinguished phy insane, who did so mueh to reform the tras Jums—mentions one Or 1o Aew anec card Dr. C. relate conoerning old Dr. ot well bear eut the inpreswion, abont he old Whig. had come to habitu eguie poiut of View. debt has thus reac began on the 17th of June; enablod to greet the Saxon c army of the North, On the 2ist the beadquarters were re- moved frow Olwii z to Péhmisch-Trubgu, dotes which b :’.nn‘. which do e Quinecy, in his = f-m?l Yoas ‘from the Up to this moment lameless. On the excaption of the min: | ot the floating debi, first time in London. It | and in the playeof Othello. the last generation in Aui i in foreo; tho Fire Secoud army on i lesia; but nowbes where were the bor neither Prossia nor 0 throw difliculties n” the way of g £ the questions it issue., ) come toen ar- ints in the direction of Austrisn Si- divisions of_infoatry tationw furtified; the light eaviry on the look out retired; the couviction was obtained that no fears necd bo eutertained for Bilosia, but that the ehief force of the Austrians was concentiated fu Bohemia, The Prus 1 10 operate ageinst Bobemia; a few divis- xth Corps rewained to keep watch In Upper "course of operations on both sides entered now into s i &8 ed by hostilities . Care has been world at large from the, bis practices was,to bave his pipe brought to dinner, and to insist npon the prettiest young lady at the table coming to sit by him and’ light it for him. ing whist after dinner, and if not successful would become rude, and observethat he was doin, that be had three adversaries,’ bim be would 1 wall, aud onee he ecut this pict £l 5 in some of our mos taken to provide for the necessitios of the current year, incind- seut of intereat on the netional debt, due in Janu- udget of 1867 will no doubt show a deficit, and it necessary in thls ceee toform a new financial pro 1 a means of covering the expenses inourred L orenting a now series of money-tokens, 1 expressed by tho pres be journals say scheme than the one hat of cresting bank notes—for weeting the exi- i With Bavaria ( ‘misceginationis: remarked that nfelsn are to be ‘which has always seel b 80 far depa tail of the Black ‘!rulhnfidl;u"‘ o i doss the origini not wortby the sul her picture to the There 18 but one opi the difficuity of the M. they are unable to devise any provincial theates, the Austrian array, ploasaut to be the Doctor's which wes ultimately gritificd, was to have #®coach-and- four to driv® about the country in; and of this he was wouttto speak as ** Mus, Parr’s vanity.” exclaimed, “Sam. Parr, 1 Jove thee ™™ A few years ago the sensational jouroalists and nevelists ';::1 mlbm;;.-«flnln “Wild . 5 claws, ett, And even at she Emperor's fies last yoar 1 remember atent whiel favited 1 to come in and “gee the ' Wild man of Var”" In the journal of the Medico-Psyehological Asso- sgainat (hew: on the tion bat nuwmerically weaker, on the west (that Western Germuany) the os yet uvorganized forces on the,side of jhe Germa iple that when the fe st be maderto obtain vie st or most powerful shoul 1g force, it becume o uegessity for the Prussians 1o throw themselves first on the Austriaus iv Bobemis, The Austrion ariny should have acted accord ng to the samo its former‘operations in beep- (in the Lausits and Upper ndeayor ought to bave heen 0 lignidate the of the unweleome visiters, mark is (1t cannot be denied) o good manof business; he krows how to make Lis bill, und to ensure getting bis sum is peid, hw debt and get vid Yot De Quince; s rosorts DOW {0 the same flancial weasure Which it employed hofors the breaking out of the war. 2 As it procorsd means for co iy couverting 150,000,000 of bauk notes of th Government nof versary are divided tbe ovef the jorts, and e first attacked with Hud he been? born in It operates with G mation of Count | of Paris were nunking & wan of Var,” who was Beleredi, butwe an beside 60,000,000 doring Ministers stick unt Crenneville, the Girst very probebly soon quit his post, rhaps, gone beyond it, ol adeny b dracher. Ot ‘cour the flower-pninting—th that are scattered over d Stripes—and in ence Hall in Phil ery, forbidden any Tt bad sneceeded b o chiet force of the Prass| ivided, and now the pan indemuity, i ourt of Vies o ienua 1t few mouths by menrs of Goveram change of Ministry in G g s 4 i gi i + behind the scencs,” allowe 4 X no pruchice, and the is that for some time to come he will not be uble to compete with men-on whom opportumitios of study and ciation 'of London there has just ») red a brief aceount | entr, of DF, Meauet's visit 10'this wild 154 in his sylvan retrent | near Hyéres. Dr. Mesnet's report shows that the wild | int that this means is aguost per- ard it; and yot ns roke out, 1o one, in apite of this acknowledgmest, and white of the e retend, or who have \re Raphaclite work cousists in delicacy of e Cotint had much i cd that it was be who foreed on R R upon another part.” If groat activity is sbown avd the time i al of the t within a fortnight 1t of Lostilities the Emperor did not be. and 1 kuow from the very best the war with Pr opposed the wse of the Government note prinling préss, so sow the employment of the same ivsiruments will hardly find opposition. How sbuuld it be possiblet We man is after all only another somcwhat ragged edition of | Roussean or Thoresu. Lawrent, for flmfig the man's real bis follow-laborom in the for- | practice have been lavished, Flowevesy he may be better there is every ehance of u; roperiy employed, Fon maay, cas s which history has s 1rom many CEA0) wise Bonaparte suffers Apart from the beanty of 0% im0 | it truth to nature, the than ¥ dare hope; his carcer in E: depends on his effort to-night. way often iind & 8, it scems, wi lieve there would be wor phetis into the muddy oome, really make the pietare, She sinks slow), weans dangerous sod palnful, without being al Lor white, pearl sownogar that both Count Mensdoiff and Count Saurice s tho gase wlen ope bus no choice, or ouly Aud yet it took ! 0, Switzerland, aud so @ double circnitous mareh merely beomise the Austrians re- h hie ebooses to prese ¢ frie: o and delights in gossip with a iy S, 134 30ep7, Lc4omeh,of e 28 Charles in 1796 in Germi aixo some education, He labors now’and thes, but like h hls cabiu apurt from theirs, | ¢ were decided]y shiinmering splendor bo looked on in 18 facdamental principles upward b muv’- ' face of'the pool, and carols her suatehes of song with uiter v Saese of her ified bands seeming to be d inactive, and acted in reality costrary to the most simple rales aud lessons of ox) Austrian army bad tbe inteution to assemble vesr Ik of and wish the nomination of Herr von Tt would of course be a Thorean, prefers $5 labor when he requircs money foriany N v ular thing, wuyre‘ulnrewmm:t. n'i.fm'lx"& THE GER)IA QUJ‘ARTIO.\. 10 the Miuistry. of imperions necessity, and as such may reckon ¥ it still busy twiniug her fowers. these Englishy . apgravings ia thevery poor production, * Pis-Nie: or the 4tk of ved by Messre, Jobu Rogers andJobn Halpim, after & pleture by Mrs, Lilly Mar- tin Spencer. Mrs, Spencer has o certain talest which: we bave always recognized, but she is almost always valgar, sod ' was never more so, we think, than fa this very dissgreeable wrticalar tastes in food, and i Dirwiotan hypothesis. He 0 obtain for Atistrin the services of a man but I, for my part, do not t has shown hinself reso. » willing 10 allow that nnfortune au be brought sgainst the priveiple, an ceasity of the'moment left us no choice but the note printing pre . an l::firn:;l behever in the clieves tha an” perfectic Lility is 10 be atteined by 'an n-mihunn“:o v':nf‘l"hlo #azes call the state of nature end ipuceence, whatever restricts liberty, sud for that rty also is an incumbrance of wiieh b 8 hair and besrd vre nerqn;d' o carcfully :;enm all the hair that falls e weaving it into & garmen Tho “Wild Man of Var” wasa nativeof Savoy, ears to certain’ abnormal 'h Government to send In strikingcontrast to the excellenceof Koniginhof, to the north of Jose numlpl!n;omo;:lr toJ Ao & "Fhe Prassinos had caused toe 24 Co ané otrated into Bobemia with ‘with the 24, 3d, 4th,,and 8tk Corps, th Corps to the wi Relohenber, ardl- oD the 26th the head- to join the Fi rst besidon s division © by Jabel, Rum. Ewst of the Reisen) of Gaards by um and Reiserz towards like the late Saxon mi 3, wo are, boweyer, wethod in which the plan has been oul. To apsak leuiently, the decree as it les before um, Is one of the very weakest offurts of wodern finance. UNITY—BISMARK'S PLANS—THE QUESTION OF SAXONY AND HE¥Ss- DARMSTADT—THE ANNEXATIOS OF HASOVER, HESSE, NASSAU, AND PRANKFORT—FEARS OF TIN: LIDERALS—BISMARK AND THE ROYAL ADDRESS—w, THE KING'S APFEARANCE. THE MOVEMENT FOR nssisted by Samuel Hollyer, Teason is averse to Jowed and he fol w tht is not the sort of pere order of the day, and I do not belieys that Baron von towards Tuthun, Buest would Jend himself to their fultilliment, A change is working solved to mauke eone responsible HungariuneMinistry. from them with 5eb, Gih avd the Cor| towards Trasteaan, and by Lraunau ards of both Bad on the 25th reached in one case in the other tbe hights on the frontier, without THE RESIGNATION OF BARON BEUST. The following letters relating to the resignation of the Saxon Miniater havo passed betweon Lim and the Kiog: in favor of Hungary. sions; to give the Hunguriuns o T cannot tell you when ture, of which the ehief interest cousiafy 5'.&--.-»- bas falien to the ground, Wiose strange addiction of lat ng, aoid the jeers sbould ot be satisied re kindly farnish des to One is the ‘vexation of s portl dress an inattentive servant is pouri; a pair of lovers whose cool ‘who discharges & ies of fueanity has led the . Kilhn to investigato it. the sest of this malady (in U] it 1% to be, but I know that a most influsntial person is de- sirons that what it is intended to do should be done directly First, howover, goaranties will be 1t is obtaining that which is so difticolt; for vather than yicld a point on soine worthless matter of form, the Hungarian, by retarding a change Pwhich thie time and efreums | bring ruin on hi Prow Our Own Correspondent. Most GRACIOUS SOVIUE] "iod 80 lohg by fortioutions, destruc: roups in the narrow froutier otber could be attacked by the f the enemy and overwhelmed, Th had advanced '“Mlb:llhl wiles Dr. Kiihn vi%ited Morzine, pyér Savoy), in 15864, and has is the Hystero- idemie, The prowivent systein is that of ) _in incal possession, @8 the prod :‘.,rud\ eXistivg nervous derangement taking its form from tstitions taught by the priests of;the district. uese people live in wrvtclied cabios and Toed'on the poor- :i_fw 1. They cawe to an endemic belief thiit not only ves and their friends but all thefr domestic animals eithor foroe being retar tions of she 10ads, &, or by U or on the rivers, till whole lluml'lh et of the Pri of "-“:e d might hope to be united, a: srmy in its slow metliodical adva 26t Ita so-ealled n:nlqlc [ N, August 30, 1866, The movement for German unity on which We had en- tored by a successful campeign, seems fo Lave come to s stand, the only result so far being the aggrendizement of Prussia by 4,500,000 iribabitants. The Government did not venture, in detiance of foreign protests, to push mili- tary operations to the destruction of Avstria, 6nd was not willing to call ongpopular action for German ninit in the prelimivaries for o treaty of peace, thie favor Lowed many 1 ull doubt as to my willingness to moet the dif- {me, and to show that I wus ready to direct a nd open Government bad doue in supvosition to gain oauwbile. howe! Bow published his re t b g port on what he cal. the belief in d ob, to put what o8 inuke necossary, would truo light, and himself, and all befongin, Tt cannot be said that Huugary is ot this momen 1t has no especial nce had not completed o the ps. h a strategie march is undertaken, ly in your front, that di tae lauks sbould be cover: ings, need not have been cars {d uegotiations. tion in ther: Lus beon dectiucd at Berlin. graciously plensed to remember, r Austria or the ssion and discoptent which gland’expreasly to fin! " of_the cbief force. art. Add u:h'"' the publisbers actuslly offer * ot production, of which they promise to the general distress than During the war there was not a soldior ‘ransylvauia, and during the prescuco of tho Empiess at Ofen” ouly 207 men were there as a guard ofhonor. - When Gen, Kiapka, with his band fit essed. A pig refuses to go over & : here ariso , ind straiglitway is left, while:the wunmd‘tho is or o other ases. Duiag away some miles to get a priest, would have paralyzed all attempts at interventi ‘Thet the more “decided policy was thezonly one, after war had once begun, cannot be doubted. after the battle of Kiniggiiitz nobody helieved that France would have entered on a great nationd war, after the D d to Lo carried out in the present inatance, as the 1 \biny ‘What skould bave been ng to st » decisive blow with a brepond. force against the parts of the enewy's army. The t army nth: to have boen prevented from ad- possible means, wnd their second army—that algnature of the liminaries of peace be- et Prseis, 1 'had heforo Xour Maje ~— an understanding: sought for—my ¥ ue ouly a limited number, a promize lg:n:d démacd of the publie will give them no tewp! of things was quite hould bs driving it rushes vho eoraes and solemuly exorclses the evil 8. Ltis the only advautage that I have Leord of Savoy's consideration the question of Prussian Governwent belng more ove a hivderavee to i, und in Hangary or e CENTRAL-AVE., MORRISANIA.—O0 Jast Wednesday afternoon the Commissiopers appointed under and by the laws of 1863 to lay out Central-ave. in the towns of Morrisania, ‘West Furms aud Youkers, bad a final nceting for the purpose ',Ju which is comprised lu the jon, extending from thé bridge at McComb's Dam ta. A moe ar 1be. town. o -.d‘a‘ distance nl' ety e Andrew Findier yad od the estimates wore all in and opeied 3 mmissioners did oud 1abed 10 be woll aalis and ""‘:n ware- Prussian ermy had onge occuj Stuttgart—a result which, to ju. of the enemy and the thretened insurrection of Hungary, was certainly within easy rench, ‘The N lieved for w inoment thai the eloments opposing such & policy in the Ministry,in the administration andat court, ered; and thot the cuirent might #uch a foree that the remaining provinees' wou been swept from their thrones or foreed to adopt 8 posi- with the genera) interest. There it this Lope has passed; but the ed, Many t;-u"»u combined to el tonsbip are most; ~ they have m.n-;x-':?u m{ King to oll par- uny. | Namentary action end popular movement, Russian burcaucracy also prefers an oy the Shakespearia. of | sia 10 & German union; evey the Liborals of the same mind, and think it most desirable that the parts annexed shonld bcumu,-l; us pos:ible erganized in one Ty consider a federal relation rfi-m:m ‘u :h ':uthrm b'lll:; willing to enter upq it, 8 Genuany now only be accomplished hroveh * Prussign qonguest. The task wus too grest & ied Vicana, Muvich and ¢ by Prussia, crossed the frontier, no ono jeined b s by the disorganization deed, from my own experience, I know that the Hunga- riaus do not think of resorting to other day when he heard of Ko pk: “ Not by revolution and not by sanguinery force, but with mental weapons ouly will we gbtain our rights. Justice is the motto inscribed on our bannerghot revolution.” o mpoted of the lungarian , and equipped aud fur- nished with moncy by Prussia, has not hud much suceess, On tho 4th a part of (he Legion was in Karlowit2, in Hun- . On bearing of the ciascumstance the commander of gendarierie at onee started for the s of waking prisoncrs Lie himself was captul were under the commasd of Gen. Klapka, and were dressed in blue flannel blouses and red French foraging ca) were two Generals, four Colonels, al all they dolnkldnd—mut, nd medicines—wns paid for at once with P uddenly a trumpeter dashed forward, sounding the alarm. Some Imperial Flog gained by anncxationto France that--if Dr. Kii ‘h anthorities at once interfered with ero renderivg the jeir exorcisms, aud #o forth; and it to be owing to this that the malady has now s[‘]r‘!ll(d 44 au epidemio—though even now a traveler 4 “l’\o,r way find 8 young woman throwinz herself aboats o e ground in the well »klan:n manner of those who e #sersed by evil orgood spirits. n(‘kn,ud.mhla mlrl()P:ily' is unlfmntf‘umuffim: taddo's fortheowing ‘megsaive, 7%e Belgravio, That ific autboress bas mude enough b and their drewatization to tant aid; but it would be slmost ss much tation I8 worth to frat entioned iatimation from Berlin can only serve wition, and T thercfore consider the intended assembling of thisHt was intended maroh up vear Koulginkof, betw TpOse eparate COrps o oleventh corps namely—with the* the west, far away from the , ia the direction of Skalite, Trautensu. Both detachments, however, circumstanocos, instead of doing sny good, Lands of the bim for obtaining viotori ree, and Deak the vasion observed: duty I owe Your of gt 00ps. :.).E!:m {"u’nr Majesty my most bumble resignation, pataful s to mako the graud front ust at this moment nnd under hdraw from “'i" vioe of Your ational party be- it must be for we, von'tho Prussinn armics, and A debafr ‘ordered 1o cover the A winisterial sctivity of mfl: of awarding that part of the Iskr, and on the oast the sixth and the tenth corps towards end, are slike marked the line of the town of Morrisaui £,000 and 9,000 feot. surveyed the work, o on the 4th of September prisoners taken by the oanuot reproach mysell with baving the other, On the contrary, I am eo; in aceordacee itk the waster, defended Kigl Dagiye themselves tion wo longer conflicti ineiples and feoll i opportanty W without fear, and loased graciously to accept of resig. 10 the assurance that remembering under Your M, ‘s direotion to de- foa 1o the service of my country, wolf worthy of the manifold and never- confidence and indulgence that have 1 most profound respect your make the award at that time, 8 the fied with referen ) » movewent 1a o dch;;.“ Foreign most enercetic and dvoney, by doneyaby her wos warding the work. At their duty. May yoar Majest, ation. and :hn - h::m‘: foree of four Prnssian corps, which indeed n-l:m: of. -u.‘“‘ eral engagemen! eabof br : T L and Tenf wy of duc}hnv: roups. 3:‘1& Sixth Fourth Corpa at a o and o her, bave siriven Lo show w t0-be-forgotten proofs fallen to my share, most obediont, most buwble servaut, Pienna, August The stawer of ti Deay Miniater of Nevygriboless, it is said that C! Reade, uot. sensitfvo abovt muvly custe, :"ml“da The noxugl'::‘ i whon G, . Iwes bt made Of course Winw Fitggerald, and the like will towx'they encamped, and solid body with Prussia, i unsatisfuctors and sy would, any how, not be Fp. Barox Vox Bxver. 1864, n*llr".: thus: Saie, vou Boyyz: Fosterday eveniog lans were advancing; a3d news was also was marching against the invaders; Roznau, the place where they wers, og,

Other pages from this issue: