The New-York Tribune Newspaper, October 13, 1866, Page 9

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the formidable grow'h of the TThita? States, relin nflhd a8 40 1t topieal application in Mexico, mppun‘n onr paragraph. . The Latin race, the Teutonie race, the Sciavic mee, the triangular fight for the eontrol of Enrope, is. among those thivs, Napoieon would now--disappointed in ks atiemps to bar the progress of ouwr wilainous, shameleas, providential tondency and manifest destiny gobbis s Latm-rsoed Mexico—Napoleon wor's! now qHE FRENCH EMPIRE. - —— o PARIS, ‘ HEAVALETTE CIRCULAR '~=ANOTHFR = LET' EMPFROR ON THY NiW POLITICAL . peou THR : | SO QSGANTATION—THE MAXIFESTO OS RUSSIA AND | it Biguari's balp, su ppress all deradging revolstionary R by w_,"am-n INTENTIONS TOWARD BEL- ' ni'u‘ me;v:l-. wigauias o Central Fumpounfin D nnd:" up . T of four or five unparialiy ceutralized mationalities, and so —~ AND SWITZERLAND—ROW THE PARISIAN | resist the Cossack. : §AS BEEN APFECTED BY TOE PRUSSIAN As any i from 15}4 to 1854, I importunately bo; — THE SATIONALITY PRINCIP Tax | your read distract for a moment thetr attention irm n crEs — TH | bating 0d, and tura it 10 consideration of Michol 101y f gue O Special Commaponceat « ndly lts of the Prossian success is the enco BUSINESS — MEXICAN FINANCES—THE | Chevalier's two articles in the Revue des Dewr Monde on CHARLOTTR—THE WEATHER—THE EM- Mexieo, 80 now permit me respsctfully to remind the | readers of THE TRIBUME to thoughtfully recur to the quite 0! TZ. ar to the qui #908'S DEPARTURE FOR BARRITZ same wnter in the samo rev king thet, to rour eorrespondent's imperiect k Parss 1,186 | ;y 1ation’ of the sawe in a three months chief oocupation of political talkers and writers this | &80 lotter to Tk TRIBONE. estorday s Moniteur publishes a note from the Presi- the iuterpioiation of the * Lavalette Circular.” | 4 = tof th "[Fronch G cnt] 4 Commissron 1 4 ly, they are al! agreed that it reans peace for the Fronch Government] * Commissron of Mert can Finances at Paris” 10 the address of holders of say till after mext year. But, as | have had de- | ;’lrbmu houds, and to this simple sad ctfect that the v and repeat of late, it was ev t enoug) exican Goverzment has not remitted cash for payment i & 1 # 1w an bonds due It October, the which that Napoleon could bave none the Great Exhibitzon wi | uence, 15 ** adjourned.” To qualify the o the wond adjoorped, the President of 5300 of Moxican Finances at Poris” applies ce to that blister: ‘‘Mexican boudholders are 5 advised agun tiat 34,000,000 francs, taken from the siall sum of paywent on the original lowna, are de- | posited here at the Casse des drpots, the whiok 34,000,000, b yet another, w 5z away at an- | kept st compound intercst, will, in 50 years from now, r13 contemptnously as the worthless | hio entiro nowinal capital of the joan ! r's imaginative vein, The 4. who whine that the Own Correspond- adout Rustia and America ding to thelat sting in this matter, goand read the solemuly . ot to say conlition between tho Cr iuote of the very solemn, in thess dars, Count Yavkee—a parngraph, it is said, invented by N | Geming. hitherto President of the now dissolving com- own hand ou his st revisal of the Cirealar, is | mission of the disappesring funds of the died cut Hexican pting dike to some, who followed thus fur the pire. What keeps out this solemn, ministerial note of yern, which othors confidently recover even after r hested Count Geming is another just as solemn note, paragraph, that demands withoat delay an im- ) readable too this day in the Monitenr of 5th of Anzust od roorganization of the military force of France. last past, the whieh note warfaring fools of the Mexican foste Dow awaiting, with as anxions expectation as | bond-holding persuasion did hopefully read as follows: whieh preceded sue of this political manifesto, | The couvoy of moncy that left Mexico June com- prising $600,000 destined for the payment of dividerds on ¢ foreign debt, will be embarked for Evropo on the En- glish sicamer leaving Vors Cruz for Southampton July 1. as ! Whatever did becomo of those $600,000 between their ing Mezico City and not getiing embarked on the Ist | of July at Vera Cruz for Southampton, is a standing won- derwent to the little French bolder in Mexican funds, Jotter, supposed to be rddressed 1o the Mivister of which the Emperor will define and defend and | orgaiiaation. As the object of it will bo to the military powor of Fra without in- by more burdensome taxation the imcome of of which the wilitary expesscs already absorh ird; as Frauce alreacy Keops from the fields of pro- jndustry more thaa half & million of its most vig- —‘u. and yet canzot suddenly bring into the field | ingennous believer in all the t.uths of the official Moniteur #rdastructive purposes so many soldiers us Prussia cau | gowpel. i loss population, it fs assumed that tho Lmperor, | ° All that is known and all that is guessed of Gien. Castel- oking back to the views he entertained when an impris- | Deau's mwission to Mexico—be got off last Sunday, in spite ceaspirator at Lism, will propose for Fraues and her | of his recall for new directions and fuller orders—look Ln-mnm of saving her bacon (s0 to speak), a raizht to one only conelusion: Max. and Mexico are re- of military onganization partially modeled on toat ed. All that interests the patron now is how to Prussis. Bucb, at least, is the idea smoked Ly prophetic | litate the details of the process of getting, and gotting, {oowing ones, which othier as knowing oues ‘think will | bis protecé out of.the Mexican scrape. g o precious smoke when sought to be prac- | Ex-Ewpress Charlotte—twice the man that her well- fl"d in the Corps Legisiatif, rnd among | mesning busband, Max, is—has just left Miramar for - h people, to whose natiohal habit and | Rome; to door gain nothing thero for the condemned w1t s 08 foreign in nature as in origin. | Empire of her husband, but to do for the sake of doing, Pothat s it may, it is an assurcd fact tuat, in the last | try for the sake of tryiug, fight to the last trom chivalric guuibs, busy as the Empcror has been with mediating, | sense of the homor of fighting to the last, ing, frontiering, veering, lufling, getting out of | The weather is still eold, rainy and bad. A most destrue- and keeping in trim, withdrawing his troops from | tive bail-storm hay just been’ raging over somo of the acd assuring (what is not in the least danger) the | fin nelands of Burguady, quite destroying for the P personal safety and residence in R nging | Mewsom acres of the best vine-rards of the famous Cote | 4 Foreign Minister, and modifying , without | d'0 The cold weather is rofting sour admlly sitering, his foreign policy, to meet the new | grapes a is odium to boot; no good quality of and sick in | Wive possiblo this year, nud the potatoos are rotting fully, aud the beets, cultivated for sugar, arc d to leaf, with ill developed, watery roots. Stac the military power of France that ber relative | of poor quality to begin with, 18 hurting in stack in new Europe shall continue to be vs formidably | is ergo a8 of old—and that without crushing down the | has spoiled the cut bay in the fields and 80 the » o' plico in his for 80 or- | Thers iu the rye, the contiauous wet and cloudy time £ eroj dependert on good fodder is threateued as well as tho rest. Ther besids the call for besf from England rices of bread and meat and wine are still rising. Tho Winter opens darkiy for the poor and middle class. At last tiic Emperor did got off last night, poor man, from St. Cloud for Biairitz. Auy time the last fortnight his departure was anuounced for the next day by one or the other of well-informed evening papers, azd was nearty as often and as contidently asserted to be renounced or 1a- definirely adjourned. What mainly pushed the poor zentleman off at last was probably the need of showing by this net of proloaged travol that he was not ' a e 1 sad truth is, that he ea has not been a well man since. mortally ill he is not 0 her actual military organization, that requires | conscription of #0,000 of her boniest, most mus- Joung men, in the tower and productive force of \ wing partly to othor causes, but mainly to ah KDP" ntion is almost at astand-still. Nothing (s plaiver {n the futus¢ than that, if the Fronch and Gor- | ‘@ peoplo continue for the next thirty years their actual | =. inoreass, Germany, united by that time, will | far surpassed Franee in numbers, and that, too, while contributing to vur Western States and Territories rl-o the number of colonists that France will count A To roturn to tho Russc-American, intereolated para- @ph, the first and socond clavses of which are fexts —'.Iho wost fertile of improvement of all the Lavalette Ciroular Scripture. Clause first: * An irresistible foree it to ba regretted) urges the peoples to Pressingly, imm:nently, well, or likely to Lo ever again thoroughly sound, he is not. THE PRUSSIAN KINGDOM. te in large rations, blottng out secondary polisieal statcs. e tendency springs from the desire ‘of secrring great E = y the most effetive. guarnntess. Per- BERLIN. (uote the inginious, candid 8 80rt of providential pro n of the (manifest] deati- ;oflhk W;;rld." Cow: bis with tho third follow- paragraph, and you will ot find it strange that nu- werous I'.rlvkir-l- 3.:' te-day see therein whecls within wheels, tho felloes whereof ‘encirele in Liclgivm and the Froucli-spoaking parts of Switzerland—the nose whereof 8 Paris. The spokesmen nre already, boldly, several of e Biswark oreuns in Prussia, and Le Po $ore in Paris, Mr. Giranico Copaguac, lately becor mlns political editor of this last-named shoeot, fat direction, menaciugly, with the bruts @nokneas which is the distinguishing qua mlly abie, conrse, bullyis her of the crument waiority of the Corps tif. perchaps it 18 inspired | THE MILITARY FETE—UNTER DEN LINDEN—THE KING OF PRUSSIA—THE ROYAL LADIES—THE PROUES- STON—PRUSSIAN CELEBRITIES—THE SOLDIERY. Frem Uur Special Correspondent. BenLx, Sept. 20, 1966, All Berhin saya there never was such a Cto as this of to- day, and all Berlin is doubtless right. Siuce the battle of Leipsic in 1813, Prussia has had o great victory to cele- d | brate. There was a Schleswig-Holstein parade last yoar, | but that was a small mattor, and the Prassiars could ot | feel very proud of their victory over poor litt'e Deumark. | To-dny the peopie do feel protid, and a sense of Prussinn as well as German nationality auimates thess rejoicin thousauds. So Berlin dresses its atreets in flags and wreaths its windows with laurel, and a millioa of people welecome home the army which fought the great fight of Koniggriitz, Unter den Linden is one of the famous streets in Europe, & street not more than three-quarters of a mile long, reaching from the great Brandeuburg Gate to the Lustgarten, about twice as wide as Broadway, and with of lime trees in the center, from whicn 1t gets This is the scene of to-day’s parade. There are | mer 1 i Legisla He is the same who, from 1859 to past the coup d etat, was the encrgeiic sditor of the Constitutionnel, brutal, bold and resolute ad- | wmaced advocate of the coup d'etat, who at & later dato | wrote the memorable articles in that paper wenacing Bel- i syls (in the stipulati 1 impending | with France) unl us saw to it @at the impending elections in their country seeured o sonserrative majority in its Parliament. The ortieles, awing o their outrecerrdance of tone and the condition :-qmny excited by them in Belgivm, bronght down | sn aveane they | its n: on the governmental journal in which . the writer always boasted that they ex- | decoratious, good—not abundent. The Prussian colors, | the same tho Napoleonic idea of tho moent, | blick aud white, are not cheerful, and the ticc | the crimson of the City of played, are all noeded ‘to I orumment is the cannon. brass line the avenue, ren ongth of the street. Opposite iy b non lcok peacefully into the windows, and the 11 emibraciug the muzzie of one, and a boy of 6 ag another. There isn't a chiid i the s prosss] all @A bas afiico been at wll succeeding cloctions a_successtul Qoreroment candidate for the Corps Leguslaty). ® wo are to concludo that'N 3 110, purposes | t engobbling of French spen and i md ! Notwtall. Dutifitis abortish long-run, why then—we are but isone of the dircetest, direst mischie fom King Bismark’s Carlylean suecess and bis » . ®oral master’s consequent assumption of o providential Joesn't know the story of the bas 1g gobbling up his, cqually heed brothers into Beriin fi " Jl’}gfll{'l. As for the inhabitaa 3 e nden 3 %- like the other flocks and herd. passad e strangers geized all _the cabs— » ark bas been tho very able editor of a move. | drosehkies, they are called in town, and you coul ‘mmttoward German mifieation, that was already in | neither got a carriage easily, nor get about in it if you v | bad ove. The téte 1s pational in its dimersions. It is 4 trait of & German crowd, as of a French one, to be gdod- dy and the people put up with inconveniences very fatally sure {0 como out somebow, is 1ot 10 be Whether its issuo with o Prosian impr/matur, censorship of that mystico-foudal King of Prussia, ! | 80 closely that the square was a #es which thy | line, and the pront which wonld ari wind had broken into countloss madiant waves. The | est, stubborn, and amluent movement in this direction on review lasted an hour and a quarter, and ia | the part of American capitalista. that time 25,000 men, mluul?'. cavalry, and ar- Tihe Santiago is » spl d vessel. Well offcored and ullery, bad marched up the Linden, '?I"fi quartors | well manned, the vessel itself presents that stienzth and of a inile, and moved 1o maznificent reviow past the King | solidity of bui'd w sts so strongly with tho | o—at | TIHE SECOND DAY OF THE MILITARY PETE--VARIETY OF Ew-tuna vAILY TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1366.—TRIPLE massed of men has been Vcotemns. to which thare is a tachnical nams [ onght o ra- [ member but dont. On the left, s you entar, is the Roya! | Pavilion, unplifted five stepa from the ground, roofd withy wilk and draped with enimson eloth. ‘The cpown of Pros- | waa rosts on the apex, and the archiftaetures of the pavilon | 13 half hid with laurel. On the other side, and at the ¢ rearof the Altar rise the baleonios or tribanes for tha guests, the orohoestrs, and the 1, 0M siagers. A friead was | kind enowgh to send me & tickot to one of these balconisa on which no seats wars for sals. This part of the calo- bration was, indecd, dovised without regard to the publie sccommodation, and faw ettizus saw taueh of it, o ary | of it exeept &t & distance, from the windows on the furt! { side of the Spree. The hundrads of windows of the O'1 Palacs iew,and wes filisd with the rak toward ns. Thé ehoering of | 1kenad to many things, to tha far roaring of the e, to | the wind that rusies throngh a formst, to Muzirs, and I know not whate Tho truth ia, there is o sound i3 Datare | | whieh it resembles, and there is no way in which 1t eomes | | upon you-so unperiously as when it \us movesalong an | avenus, is heard faiatly from the distance, advances and | | grows, ana fisally rushied upoa you, and tiis the haavens | | wod the earth with its multitudinous voice. If you will | | look out of the window with me, you cau s the whols | length of this grand steeet. Tho Usrof Vietory on the Brandenburg Gute stands out against the Western sky: | | the tioddass and Ler eager horses seem to be sweopinZ | | along the tree tops, for the traes, which fill the ceater of | | troes aiso the street, nask the gate itself ‘lhe " | divide the street ioto two; the u storics of | and fi nion whea invitation: the buildings on both sides are visble, but | risked losing -my-plece in this selac nle by | ing ot my hotel windows 0 sea further side, not the peopls below. On 8 Al aud on tho pavements thors is eno mass of Prussian people, too thickly erowded to move sbout aud hitf of them quite unabie 10 ses the eolumn in the avents, bat all { cheering, swinging hats in the air, and endlessly tossing | a 1y the whole It ion _ pass—for tho soldiers u,u{u:nq ma ‘ moro than the singers. At the last moment [ went round | through the back strasts, al! pussage down the Linden beirg nmynumk, end underto k W enter by way of the Schloss Platz, through the Palace. Them for the first bouquets and gariands of laurcl aad osk over each oibers ! i i ble t throw | tume T #aw how vast was tho crowds o the Sohloss Plas heads. The strect 18 80 wide that it is impossi {m"ha there was 1ittle or nathing 1o ssa cxespt the Mn:&.\‘; a bouquet from the windows to reach the troops, m.ple in the windows shower them down o1 the ow and they are picked up and tossed on and on again till they finally perch on ths beimet, snd bayonst, and bolster. It is & sceno to be rememberod—the broad street ts lofty edifices on either side, its long linden forest in the center, the horses of victory, plunzing in the air, at the end, and w this swaying mmss of wen who bhids every inch of the pavement. The blue sky beuds over all Two things are wanting—the flags which foat from tie Lousctops of Brogdway, sud the sound of caunon. Nots gun has been tired to-day. ’ At a quarter to twelvo old Field-Marsha! Von Wrang's who hidos his 78 years under 3 white cuirassier's coat aud | stoel hetmet, rides down the Linden with siaff and escort Hao is the very head and front of the real procossion. Next | came five men rid.ng ebreast, who are worth looking at. | On the right, Bismark in_white uniform of a Mesjor of | ‘uirassiers; pext to him, Von Mottke, chief of-staff to the These sre the two men who furnisbed the braing for the eivil and military affairs. Bismark is the pic®; a dragoon officer, tall, broad-shouldered, straight iu b | dle, vyes Baming far over the crowd. Moltke is a gool | troops tuat filed theongt it on_their way to quarters, but it was filled from aide to side. The troops wers moving in three dircetions, and &) eros it seemad impossible, M crowd ntes wers precions bat 1 had t, wa befuro thero was the least a part of the mass in tie n I got to the Palace gat [ a1 oing: thenm an eddy gt direction for me, an brougzh tha graat conrt- tgarten and reached my balcony. ire eame 005ody uriess in uiform | or in e5oBing dress—a matter of which I had luekily been | warned beforchand, or should ne guessed it, for i Eagland 8 man seen “tia before seven in tho erening wouid have esc. 0 4 mhaps. agistritts Tribiine, i‘:{smong civ.lians; st everywhero elss thero were uii:forms. The Archbishop aud bus elergymen surrounded the al- tar. Tho King cawe with Queen, anl Princesses, and Generals, and filled the Pavilion, save ono comer resorved to the Diplomatic carps. Tha tnbune of evilians roceived tho King with a cheer, which the King graciously ac- knowledged. and Princesses od themselves on sither side Lis Majesty, Geperals in the rear, the whole be thougat dd iy 3 oty ntrast, slight, gray-baired, and quiet, but couspicuous e e viband of the Oor of tho Biack Eagle | party standing, aad ibe bright-iooking bors and girls of —the proudest of Prussian decorations. Then rides Vor | the Crown Princess and Princess Frederick Charles in the front whore they conld see and be bappy. King lifted his | heimet as al to the Archbishop that he might begin. There was an invocation, during which all uncover=d, and Roon, Minister of War, who is said to have something of the Stanton in his manners, but well understands military admmistration; then Voigts Rheetz, chicfofsiafl to Prince Frederick Charles; then Vou Blumenthal, | I believe all the ceromonics were the same as upon the re- ditto to the Crown Prnce; then an_open space, | entry of the troops in 1514 after the overthrow of Napo- and in tho cemter of it, slome, the Kiug, whose = leon. Tho cheirof a thousand voices sang th hyma, * Eia feste Burg ist unser Gott;" there was an ad- white mustaches smile benignantly on the cheering crowd. 80 strong 18 the loyalty of the Prussians that the enth asm seoms to burst out upon the King mainly rather t upon Bisururk or Von Moltke, but for whom tbere m have been neither King nor ssia to-lay. The Crown Prince and Prince Frederick Charles, who hunt in couples | as Lamnb said of Gray and Mason, and aro always men- | tioned together, rode next. All these greas personages | and their staffs are brilliant i scarlet and white and green | orr Gott dich leben wir.,” Like all opeu air attom| the mnsic was a disappointment, the volumo of sound being lost in the vast space, and the am atear musicians who joined in the authem being mors re- markable for zeal tusn for singing iu time. The best of it was, when the brass and ihe canzon joined with the choir, the cannon were 3 positive luxury % one who had longed for two days t hear their voices. Of the illuminations and many othor matters on which dross, and then the ** and gold, and all splendors unknown to our plain Amen- i can umforms. Their sword-hilta gleam with jowels tiat | T wish to say brief words, 1 must omit all mention. am acarcely more lustreus than the nocks of their horsos, | t0 Loipzig tonight. but I hope yot to write another letter and tho hundred or two genoral d high oflicers who | about Berlin, a city which I bave found most delizhtful, from which I carry away mapy pleasant rocollections, and which I loavo with sincere regret. THROUGH THE TROPICS. alligrss THE VOYAGE FROM PANAMA TO CALLAO—CALLAO AND IT3 PEOPLE—AARKS OF THE RECENT BOM- BARDMENT—STATE OF FEELING TOWARD SPAIN— ANOTHER SPANISH PLEET EXPECTED IN DECEMBER —BRAVERY AND ENTHUSIASM OF THE PERUVIANS DURING THE BOMBARDMENT—WHY THE TORPE- DOES FAILED—A GLANCE AT LIMA—CELEBRATION OF CHILIAN INDEPENDENCE—THE NAVY, AND TNE MOPES IN ADMIZAL TUCKSR—GENERAL INDICA- TIONS THAT SPAIN WILL TAKE TiE LAST FATAL STEP—WHY OUR GOVERNMENT SIHOULD “GIVE STBONG ENCOURAGEMENT TO THE 80U AMERI- | CAN ALLIES. From Our Special Cotresponient. lead the army go g'ancing by in such arrny as wakes aud bas made ana will long make war fuscinating to him who sees it only on holidays. When it comes to actual work, whon the armics go down iuto Bohemian fields, the gorgeous trappings give place to sobor hues, and thc dust of the broad plains settle alike on plebeisn aud prinea. Well, it isnot important to moralize, for hera isthe army of Prussia marching by, too much crowded in ths narrow avenus to keep a parade step. Walt for that till they reach the Opera Platz, just berond, but this is a good placa to seo the meu who are the conquerors of Kouiggratz. Not aman inthe line to-dar who did not hear tho builers whistle on the 3d of July. This rogiment at the head is the ist Regimen® of the Guarda—tho tlower of the Prus- sian army. It did not lase 8o hearily as tie 26th and 27th of the lige, but_yot lost 5o many that two of its hattaliond had o be consolilated into one. The physiquo of the man i3 superb; if anything they are rather big, but thoy mova with a quick, elastic step that has nothing of the grona in it s they reach tho rear of the great Rauch statn Frederick, the companics filo right and loft to the open #paco on either side, and thon from column foem at doublo uick to pass up the Opera Platz m review befors the }m-. ‘The movement is faulticas. 1t may bs very unpa- triofic to say 80, but it 18 idle to compars thnes troopa with ours in the perfection of their drill. Theso battalions SHAEET. been unjustiy people are at least ful'y equa general ajpearsnce and discipline o me farorably. Another Spauish flest is exnec Decomber, and it ia the general. heartfelt wish that the | sxpsetat on may be reatized. Tho fight at Callsa, of May | last, from wiat | can see acd bear, redoundod more 1a the favor of the Peruvians than they have received eredit The guss were ma; servod in the batterios, and stead of the Peruvian volunteors rumping away, s was | e fact is that they crowded down 1o the beach | od uch numbers, that a great ma. { who might h edoes fi Thers were two Americans—Capt. Lay and the largest Spanish Lan-of-¥ar ¥ the sunkon shelis b y the French during the might. one, which exploded, throwing up of wator ovor the decks of the frigal ely sheered off to a safe distance: and torpedo had great moral effect throughout the enzazement. ‘the present batteries at Callac are formidable, well manned, should ve saflicient to protect the city are four in number, and contain two guns each—e all; four Blakely and four Armstrong 500-pounders. Th Peruvian navy oumbers 10 vessels, two of which ars iron- elacs. These, with the Chilian fores, form qu*te a forn dable navy,and groat hopes are now placed in Adwiral | ¢ Tucker, who is now at Valparaiso, refitting and reorganiz- ing his foroe. ere aro At t, Iying at Callao, four American men-of-war, v .P'!::M! lp‘ Powhatan, Admiral Pear- avenport: the pt. T apt. Poudergrust, 30d the Lancaster. Lieut. Cushing, of the Rebel pam Albemarie no- torie is also an officer on the Lancaster. Mr. MeColley, the American Consul, is very popular, sud most | descrvedly so, I think. ‘] LI A 1 am stopping at Morin’s Hotel in beantifal Lima. The capital of PPoru is about eight milas north-sast of Callao, | d it is resclied by half an hour's ride on an exc ilroad, though the rising geade, which lasts nearly the | entire distance, renders the road difficult when the licavy | evening mists have mwade the rails slippery. Tho cais used are also good ones, but the locomotives have the | primitive, dilapidated appearance of thirty years ago. Lima itself is & handasome city of about 150,000 in. | habitants. I wish I had space to give my first vigue pressions of its fine Cathedral and churches, of its did Plaza, ita intormivable arcades, its ancient, but bandsom and statues which bespeak hand of of its we mountain walls whieh gird it like giant battlem: 1 must leave these another letter, when my sha!l b more definite and precise. Last Tuosday, the 15th, which w Chilian Tudependence, was general: served as a holiday throughout Pern, were all closod, and there was & grand display flags, which, by the way, are very beau: looked . very miich like Fourth of ‘July in New- a8 with vou, the sight-seers throng tho ough- and billiard rooms are crowdad to suffoca. | s of music are constuntly plariog. with pro | 1 ovidences of festivi d wo hi 1n this fins, eool, ra with the mercury—at this season at lea 70 degrees. Thers was 4 very creditabls display of firsworks on the Plaza in the eve The largs space was deusely neighboring close with Lima Parivian | al flags. It wl—wit form full company front, at double quick, and LidA Porn, Sept. 22, 1866, . M 1 o 1 ove’ 0 - 1 e . ghit the merry time to au end. it iyl gl tho Jino, wmova’ oter | [ had found much to iaterest wo in ruinous, dilapidated | Tiio 18th was a boliday, aud tho 1%th was o feast-day, Lo the the Seventh or other riei. | Panama, but was mot sor-y when the day approached for | though it would be hard to determine the differencs, as ment in America. The , the distance, | my voyage southward.” Tha enervation of the ‘h;.'l;' ‘r :'n ‘“fi""m‘" “m"“"‘l‘ of chu hhd‘t”"“: o "fi’l' are simply perfect, Imets away lorable Iasiness of i G ohd 16 ak 0 latter, however, was disi shed by a grand o8 ons in front of Svde | BIaierable: RN 0F, ShA NU0RYH; SR, S0 A tary roview of all the Peruvian foroas in Lima, by Di keen to detect the least funii. Dored 'h.{ » | vogctating existence, 8001 tires oae, and, on the afternoon | tor President) Prado and General Freyre. The rev) | Prossian Commandsat, at Coblenz, I thiak, said last Sue | of tho 10th, T bade farewell to my many new friends, and | 005 glace o3 8 plain two miles outside ‘of the city, and | was altogethor a very ereditable affs The troops, about stepped on hosrd small steamer which was to convey me (o Taboga leland, where the stoa X vassel in_the empioyment of the Eug gation Company. 12 a few hours we were southwanl-bound, over an ubusu- ally rough soa for the Paci ing tha season of ninostal gales. Beto hore, let we say rogarding the English Steamship Navization C endezvor to explin the i mer to a friend who looked on at a raview: -+ Thos: troops are as porfect as drill and discipliua oan make them, They need but ono thing, experience i the field.” That they bave now had, and they look as if thero was nothir Enropo that could stop them or surpasa them. Tk mets which thy infantry wear of leather, and the cavairy of iron and brass, give's most picturceque effect to the wholo squaro as it 18 filled by succossive rogiments, the silver and steal glancing in the sun, and the troops massed erSantiag, Steamship Navi- feast, thosp Amenean & on the Atlantic be buiit for rp sailing and pleasure- making; w! h m to be consrueied for the woar and toar of & quarter of & century, a: tae same time affording equal accommodation to passengers. and his Geuerals, Military readers will understand that troops must have been swiftly handled to do this. Non- military may remember that Wellington ones said there were not five generals in the British army who could take 10,000 men into Hyde Park and out of it. Tt does oot fol- low that there may not be good moldiers less perfectly drilled. ‘That French officer who was sent over in 1864 b the Emperor to inspoct our American armies said with all frankness “ You must-not expect me to afficin that in drill and disciphine your troops are equal to the Luropean ‘They are not, “But when I saw them in & campoign, saw their enduran ce of hardship and privation. and above all, saw them throw up intrenchments, I thought there were :nn really no troops in Furope that could bave doue hetter.” But the overbearing despotism exercised by tiis monop- or- R oly of the South Pacitic carrying trade, is most iat wble, Having 1o opposition - not oven the foar of o the Company pursuo a system of al e on, regard to both passengers and freight, which br into goneral detestation. The first cabin Panama to Callao (six day+) is $160 in gold, or neasly t with Beside this, there are nun For instance, there being irregular, or co: 3 13 P, of extortion, plicated, postal £3 {57 south Iat.) T was compelled to p MILITARY COSTUME—THE GUARDS—NAMES 0F | REGIMBY T3—RELIGIOUS CEREMONY. From Our Special Correspondent. of conrse—to send a le ounce, to Punama, T Office calls for 10 cants, iu{_m was probably & m hers is residents of the' veri is no shudow of doubt that such an opposition would " The carry- ing bus f the coast is swittly and steadily inerease | ing; and ¢! war between N, and Pern and Chili will, I am s eedented revival of trade in Only one attempt at opposition Las been mad though 8 weak one, illustrates the need aad profit of ono woighing less than half an alation of the English Poste Brrirs, Sept. 21, 1805, 1t would be a doubtful experiment in America to pro- long such a 1dte as this through two days: here, the see- oud is a wore Lrilliant day than the first, and 1o a stranger much more enjoyabie, because he has acquired a famiirity with persons and things, and can better appreciate what ho | sees. The King looks like an old acquaintaace—if one may be pardoned so much freedom—it is possible to recog- nize decorations and faces amid this splendnl tarorg, and to distinguish the endless variety of umitorms which the difierent regiments wear. l1ean imagine the review of two armies in Washington last year was monotonons in Do say advancement of Geiwan liberty, or of liberty i epal, is & much disputed question, nto’ the | 0n of which it is not the office of your French re- porter to enter. Tt is his business to repo:t » | doth bedge a k already mado in this correspondence, that not those who come . 7y repu ‘smopeous than the assertion frequently ves have batlied in a flood of kingly and queenly lizh ¢ 4 the offect that the “ emotion * of day tongz. My hotel is next door but one to the pulace of ~toward t My window looks on the Lindsn, and once, t Prussia, which her uston » Kin, + Saly excited in Frauce, was mainly o s e, thrice the king has ridden by. A fourth time be up hiere, by the ** Opposition ™ purt > n his baleony, and I could have tossed him a 8ia France, to say the least of i, as in b 1 should judge ths old me 0ns of party classes as with us; aud he at him to-d ¥ a8 clsewhere, vel enor of wreaths y quite o8 wantity of 8 the representative @ty paper is indicated by ity curealation. Any one who | his dreams as did Bimam wood the sleep of the Thase &kopts these premises, and will look over the files of the | of Cawdor. They bavo borrowed a name out of Englund political ~ daily vowspapers of Paris for tho | for ‘he king, and'call him William tho Congueror. 1t 18 ot oo months, caunot resist the ovidence | well enough . deserved. He has dove ercut things for tat the * cmotion which the Lavalette | Prussia—at least,great things have been done in his reign, Sirewlac was pretendedly issned to calm, was in no souse | and in respect of Kings, )n,wrf; . u;crumm of the ** Opposition.” Are L'Efrn- | facit per alium ma ’ _4ard, and La Presse, and La Palric Opposition journgls * ain. As ho sat his . are not Les Debats and La Liderte! Many—most | same wh g ®the journals of Paris, without quite deserting the po- | den, I could not be #usre he looked every inc Sitioas they held three months ago in view of the appear- | king, for 1 have not seen kings enosgh to 4ace of the case, have turmnod haif or less about, chapged | Le & counoisseur of royal but 1 em sure he looked 1t a8 the appearances of the case have changod—resei- | the soldicr, and among wauy wen who rod: badly King Bling if not suitating therein the Emperor biw self, whose | Wiiliam well—wh was a comfort, Kis ¥ Uth of June letter 10 Drouyn de Lluysis notably, the 1eft the palace at 10§, or with staff, haps, not very essentially different from Lis Lava otte | body-gunrd and dly up the street to lar. But & cataloguc raisonné of the fifteen Paris | theBrandenburg (ate, s outside of it, to re- &ailice is fmpossible hero. 1 can ouly refur those very fow | view the troops from in front of Kroll s Garten, aud then wio aro especially interested, first of all, to arrive at the ! inside the Gate in the Pariser Platz to be presonted with | truth, to consult the files of those journals for the | au address by the Chief Burgomaster of Berlin, and with E’nm months, 10 note the cireulation of each during | laurel by ung ladies, No part of this ceremony did 1 time, aod to keep in mind meanwhile their autece- | see,but'l know it bas all been recounted to you by ove of Seata. This study, pamsued with other closely connected | your coirespondents who was there. Lest” he may not ones, will reveal among other thivgs, this prosently aud | freat you with eatire frankuess, I will tell you pvately patant phesomenon that one of the immodiate re- | he assnred me that out of 34 young ladics only }:/.Ar wers pretry ! How fortunate the humber was not limited to W ud how in me to keep to-my hotel wizdows. Soon | after the King had gone up the street, the Royal and Prizoely fumilies drove out of the Palace-yand, following the King to share in the cercmony at the Pariser Platz. | The Queen Dowsger, the Queen, the Crown Priicess— davghter to the Queen of England aud wother te future Kings of Prussia—the Princess Frederick Charles, with 1 and noble lady whom I know vot by sight, | h gorgeous retinue. Fair readers will expect here & rarticular account of the costnmes in which these ith n the popatar mind of that slarming docirine thas | nccepy is thi final test of right; the real formula 15, wighe | wnght: the Cu!{:‘n formula is successful might for the time is God wanifest; tho F'Q‘:’ version i, with high . 28 much as with , to get what you want is | dostiny, Damu the nigger ! he is providentially we are providentially strong enough in an jm. Raculats whiteness to piously dewn hiw and wake or, Notbing counld be more intimate, in connection with s | i intercolated idea of the providential tendency | royal personages dazzled their admiring lieges. ! littls States to be gobbled by large neighboring povuz mnol’ attempt & description. A Qnend.'qum lw:pl:!.en{ than the relations of that jdes to the sequent propusitions | to do it, looked out of the window with me, and I under- | o the paragraph where itis set forth. These scquent, | $100d in & geueral way that the toilettes were very tasteful y. l'n:l‘ consequeat, sentences amount briefly to this: | aod Williant; wore I'will not try to say. There were bon- Rusia and the United States (we dote on ‘em) ‘are grow- | bets that looked as if fragments of fleecy clouds had stthe rato of 10toour | per cent. Their seemingisterests | floated down out of the blue #ky to cover tie beads—and more or less common, their coalition W-L most | failed becanse there were not clouds enough for all. There g between the wenacing combipation of border- | were ghawis all mist and mirege, there were exquisite | Eastern and too nesr Western . let 00 central | silks, there were endless elegancies, and charming combine in our simple national elewents to re- :!mnu to bewilder and delignt you d the dozen three or four effective wholes for defense, not to m‘ went .f\...hw.'.:";;, ladies bow- AD g offonse. The swashy speech-making and other boshy . swift vision all £ > '¥m-u, den-.h n the konuult.o!om o Frederick confraternal seatinents that 'al— wolng | b fed ey n&- the 3 J ox "' at ever so the two foxiet man, ing—ever since | litle girls of the Princess Ch , all in white, sh-u-& Thilitery scow, the Miantonomab, got | and looking as yroud and pleased as your two bright littlg %! across the Atlantic—do sggravate cer- | girls might Jook. Mra.Smith, when you drive up Fifth-ave. Wa Frech parties here. What aggravates the of sunny afternoon. On nnother was the little boy of 80 of the mindful part of them is, that all the the Crown Princess. The Princess Frederick Ci Md arrows of thisou us fortune are feathered with once of Saxe Weimar, is a celebrated besuty. The Crown w...u the French eagle’s wil “which,” as | Princess s very like ber mother, Victoris of England. says, “ho would go a-wouls ‘Q.‘iw“d“ The cortege returned in Lalf an hour before the head of the reat column of troops had appeared, and drew up ou the - Emperor fully izes the hopeless bungle he s.‘j(of the Opers Platz, between the two palaces, 10 re- 19 that Mexican business, and only asks to be let | view the troops. :‘.mfl:ly -d&nhfly as possible. It is a boj The ion came soon. Long before it emerged oo, Tocognize: it for two-thirds of Gate, its coming was 43d swollod slowlr failure. He renounces frankly | from the trees which But tae attompt, provoked by the seemingly | the.distance from the Branden! Mtompt, opportunity of our Secession War. of chogk.ug | aanounced by tho cBeenng that i its long procession of unehangig costume. Hero no two regiments ere olike. Classes of trocps were similar, ever the samo uniforms. The Cuirassiers Lave white of one eut, the Dragoons blue of another; hut h regiment is marked by a diderent collar, & © Hussars bave all the well-known Hussar jaeke on a vuster seale. This was the ease of the little Ameri- ean steamer ** Peruana, which, eightesn wanths ago, be- g0 to muks regular trips between Calla anl Valparaiso, | stopping at a few intermediate points. The runs wers ex- | eeedingly profitable, untfl the Eaglish com] the Periapa from her owner for $45.600. T pany bowght something that passes for & tail, and wl frogged and o than twice | bruided in lace; but there are green and red and b ber valne. The giant was frightened, and purchased | hussars, each more briliiant than the other. There are | tranquillity with gold. | loncers—( arlyle's Uhlans, that * jingled 8 from the | The onl¥ port at which wo .enpg.a on the vorage be- | | tween Panama and Callao was Paita, 'ying almost i field of Solir—in dark biuve, snd pennons of biack and white streawing from their speers—a showy and all but uselse arm. Regiments of the Line aro known in one the Guards is another; the sharpshooters cowe swinging on with their outlandish sheepskin knapsacks, a cap ia place | of the helmet, and no bayoncts to their dead!y rifles, The picturesque effect of tiis great voriety is brililant berond deseription, and you never tire of watebing the thic k com- vg battalions. T he Opera Platz gleams with kaleidoscopie which tremble and sbiver like change- i colors at onee. «d not repeat how the King and all the royaltics left ace, and marched avd countermareled on the Lin- | The ceremony was the saune as yesterday, except at | under latitude 5° south, ‘ILe ‘entire coast nd for many lsagues on either side, is siag 3 posse:sing. It consists of an utte; red; sandy desert piain, elevated about forty fi the sea, with an average breadth of sbout thirty wiles to | the mountains’ feet, where verdure begins, A ! Paita itself is & miserablo, lifsless hittle indentation of | the red deser bank, containing about five hundred souls, | The roofs and wells of 114 few houses and huts are so nearly the color of the earth that it is barely di | able & few miles off shore. But fruits, bronght from the | interior, are sold iu great quantities. Thore i3 030 Amer.- can store and seversl English establishments, while the aen. { the Pariser Platz, :‘Ld both yesterday and to-lay vr.|1 :ve e J cribe out reguiar correspondents. e sy Loou sl ot e s head wind sll the way down, and the bad a stron; Most of the troops pa<sing are still of the Guanls, who constitute the regalar gerrison of Berbin. Potsdam, and Charlottesburg—the three residences of the roral f Iy. There are in this corps, if I remember, nine full regiments 3 08 cac ch battalion of dizz, ‘1'[1:-1'3‘;‘,.".','" fi:l::; the n‘::u‘::‘:,*.‘g':u{: |:‘m! ;h {- room door— he sees the bow »!';no ship alternately aspire increased by one Lattalion. There are eight regiments of | 10 the zenitih and piuuge o the bottom of the trough, ¢ r i with an avernge engle, oue way or the other, of about 45 . st e n“m:‘l:fzo'o d ting hot Panama, the weather was an ugree- y\,\- rough for this proverbially peaceful sea. The Sautiago ts unquestionably & sea-goer, bus then the oceasional voyageur eanpot but be slizhtly slarmed when—weak an and clinging to his state. his helmet oruaments, and there are one or two regiments still wear that somber disguise. sharpshooters, one of pioneers—our enginecrs, qu be—iu all some :&m"mtn. and there ::e uo better troovs | E""Mm“fl'—bfl“s "{l: l"'fl;‘l:d H‘GVM"IM.I;H intae world. They sre marchivg to-day, as yesterdar, Wiater clothing even !':uur“i qh ':;' 1”:‘1:1 with all the equipmicnts of active serviee, kuapsack, cai- | Callao on the atiernoon of t - k.t b nl::‘ - s Dleaben” haversask, + the . helmet - without | most pelatisl in contrast vith eyersibiage’s seen ts nodding plumes. Much of the gay 8P | sivce my departare from bome, and Tone stepped upon ths arance of e troops at & distence is dus to the burnished | mole, bag and bazgage, mare Iy and gratefully ‘gln L | Peltuor, aud & fatal target 2t might be in basule, J.HM \ i{l:;j': Kfi'é'o‘ffr‘m‘,“}:ffiz:,flnf'fi'fm‘."“. o Callso when the Prussisn soldier goes nto battle, b bactits | A ps. The general air of the place is lively and | flonnmin(.d’rno hudouu“;n nv:ny .;ell bant‘,:’n .mrr‘yl R in bight, ane inted yellow; whi @ mol seve: of Berepeeh m: ,‘;,::2?, | foreign arebouses ot the bank of the sea are haudsome, y | durable structures. Almost everywhere are to be seen marks of the bombardment of last May, though they gen- erally prove the singuiar pusilacimity of the attack and the ease with whica the Spanish vessels were driven off. In fact, these Peruvian Louscs are firsi-rate omes to witbstand a bombardment. Built of adobe, or smooth- plastered mud, the balls make a clean round hole through them, without shattering the holes in question in the procession which It is avother peculiarity n by a name which it 0 1 the name of a sovereign or prince. srocession is the Emperor Alexander regi- | Queen Elizabeth regimest, then the Em- and o on. The Austrisn Emperor is hoo- Gred like the rest, aud he was beaten by troops, sowie of which bore his own name a8 & badge of honor—if that be avy comfort to him, They are otherwise distingui peror Franci: by numbers. One of the bappiest decorations in the city - . 0 i palace Prince, where walls | bave now all bee plastered up. Walking the entire :.nu;:‘n:\m.'ilh m:‘x:h-;c&-";v':u ot - ut which | length of the main street, which runs to the sea, the marks of only about 30 shots can be diseovered, and there were ouly ebout as many more which took effect in the city. I cannos belp noticing the intense batred to- served in bis army—all duly wound ut_with the pre- | cious laurel. Many of these bear the names of the countrics | or districts jn which they were raised —East Prossis, Pow- gt t eraia, udu:he mm“A’ regiment thus bas an ‘ikcnm! ward Spain which exists here, and mllhl‘hl: the same which it never loses, and by which is transmitted to every | time our owa 0id animosity toward our mother country. ofticer and soldier the Keeuest sense of his duty Lo preserve That rank, bitter, deadly spite, which I caa o it fame axnd its homor. I ;'w“:fl‘!‘u‘:mmmuhfl oll'“ The ceremony which distinguishes to-dsy is the Te | bord, 1can sec fenewed in """{fi . Deum in the L’ D, a great square st the end of the people whenever the name of hate “h Linden opposite the Brasde e o which thrve | meationed. Axnd, indeed, I cansot help fl-ua X sides are (nclosed by the Museu, tbe Cathedral, and the | measure, as | ses that Spanish corvette riding 0ld Palace. n.lmuuwm-mmu, h&hlfil?u- alled the Schlossbrilcke, or Palace bridge, over the Spree, the I S - S A . bridge which is guarded by the eight marble statues She -«:fi:‘mthnn'- "o 1ip Like every other statue and decoration 1 Berlia, thers ‘She flies the fag of feeble Spain. are milif dlaz;thrliu, four Minervas, and lulwm' L s bearing R IE) that never gleamed a! architectural splendor of mmglx?mu there Of thought, -nn..unu-“w are few in Euvrope so favorabie for an imposi A Toslorss of sunscl—aod that man tace. The preparations are claboraie. " Half the squat 'Was howsded dow tll shaned sad open for the troops and the people. In the oenter o8 4 vory conquests were inspired the other half rees sa wltag sunmoqated br i By last of goid—oo bigh omprza, | very popular with the poople; but, from past exp | From Uar Special Carrenpond giisk- | b 1,500 in aumber, handle t driiled in the ms tions brisily is siso neat and handsome, consisting of red tro: 10 oF gray Jackets, aud a freo-and-easy kind of and red cap, ressmbling in shapa the fatigue cap wor: the London Guarls. The forecs are almost entirely - faniry, The Peruvian fiying-artillery is packed on the backs of mules and jackadses, aud presents s very unijue sing appearance o the strapger. ident Prado, tho present ruler of Peru, has, in the emergency of tho war with Spain, beea endowed with lmost absolute power, under the title of Dictator. He is te 8 young man, ia thought to have condu the war and other atfairs with vigor and ability, und is, theref 1 opina that but hittle dopendence can bo placad u b gratitude of Rapublica, eapocially South Amorican Repub- T'es. Thare is a ganeral business staguation in Callso sad Liwa, on account of the war. —_— THE BORDER—IIL it TOPERA—A BIT OF KANSAS HISTORY—CURIOUS IN- STANCE 0F RATRIBUTIVE JUSTICE—A WEER AMONG THE FARMZRS—THE LARGEST LANDHOLDER IN THE UNION—SHFRMAN'S OLD HOME—INDIANOLA— AN ARMY OF GRASSHOPPBRS 150 MILES WIDE— POTAWATTOMIR INDIANS—PRAIRIE SCENES—TIM- BER AND WILD FRUIT—HOLTON—RELICS OF BOR- DER RUF/IAN RULE=PRICES OF LANDS—MARKETS MARYSVILLE—SENECA—RETURNY TO TOPEKA. ON ¢ Lawnexce, Kansas, Sopt. 10 1 ital of Kansas(Indian, Topeka ed by a log stockade whose | muskot loo 1 four dirac- tions. It wasbuilt after Quantreli's wholesale massierd | at Lawrence, g may the flag stream above, wiih tie | rifles unneeded This year Topeka baa taken a jumgp; briek and stone blocks are spi pging up like rows of | a tall libert low., young corn Thes far the vertebr aze ill defied: but tho | broad spinal street, whoso Jet-black -baked i | drout wn s | fair iie slope, then ¢ 8.1 om sank a3, whose rurther bi In 1358 I wa vegotation, to the sluggish K. traversed by the greas Pacitio Rtuiiroad days coming from St. Louis to itol House I tind Tus TribosE only nesian limes: I ! f operation; ihe town has & promising future and a site un surpassed in beauty. 4 ‘} Eight years ago, on the Marias des C er, !:; hroa, Linn County, 12 peaceiul Free-State ¢ from their farms ouds Fii i foil yud feigned death until the murderers bul masacre thiilled the North with bomor it the thewme of a siiming poem: From the hearths of their eabins, The fieids of iheir corn. soed, gone. Th o1 mado Just after the butchery I visited the spot, talked with the | wounded, and with widows and orphans of the martyred | dead. My guide, was William Hairgrove, au oid, white- | baired, Free-State G He aad his son Asa were shot among the other victi with their lives. | amilton, leader of the murderers, was also from he elder Mairgrove bad Geor ':\mrye;n before th Iped elect his futl ire, hel‘.I:u week on opeka I enconntersd Ass Dis face still scarred, a bullet still imbedded in hus skull, his lett hand still warped by the old charge of bucksbot. Upon the admission of Kansas, he was elccted State Auditor. His father was chosen Sheriff of Lisn County, and six years after the massacre, with & milita "he captured one of the murderers in Missonri, gmught him back to Kansas, and after his trial and eon- viction by a civil coust, hung him in the regular course of officiel duty! It w. curious example of retributive D the war, several of the otber criminals } i the Rebels. fell fighting for the Rel Lient Hairgrove, J. H. | f York. | f ough well | f he chief streat crossing | o | be appeare == tumblo-1own village o7 Todiinote 1 Kaiosmoodon bridge 9 et abors ' 4 ¥5 2Ty w 10 AIF sem the Soldier B3y be 2ate s mineof-wae, We met 8 CHin wot nave, grassioppers dakening the air like grest - v Tant crushol thom by buntodf daw up 50 thigk that he ars sboct an mob sad & vir most famitier Eastorm asshoppar, but with woss of the clipperbuild and car L Thay iy 4 Bigh a3 we can fing 8 r can stay ot like wild goess, What gonius wil s immortality by laardig from them to consiriot ® machmg, 43 Ser Samnel Browns invented the sage a brid m 3 spidor web across lis path. o go oo. T . and Ik lties coufounds the g their supplies They are bn»’s‘lfli . vas the shisiog T shred of tomats )3 cabbages, 1 that cabbagoes an i ligosts 108 wheat a8 8 sweet morsel foast upon the teud>r fiaves tgreen coru. But they am tod though withesses @ ar's cora, cob and all any fire-proof mufes, and 1 am Bave attacked the prisovors” or or mn.b::‘p Ta past you ¢ Miunesota, and again sod e 1 In the Salt Lake bisia tollowsd and davoured in fats by mynisie It was thoir last caranes upon thad authful still Jnonm?’lgn ham's iirici s sism? Whence come they aud whithee they oat laat CORAUIDI L id v E the Potawattomie Reservation, comprising B . ind and rolling praine, and sonetiinos frr @ ] peof learas ::’ greater clevation above 1,40 feat—is tho chiel cause. s9ad holts of cottonwood, bisel the sea--1t som Aloag the strea: , oak, S0t may 'y e order named are the most abundso® Bushes, vines and trees bon® berries, dark elder-berrics, the of the Indian t raip or j k- # a3 large as buc ;_;'?u' wnd ¢ snow-whito pig teging fruit ¢ daror. 1 And yot there are croajers whe a fruit cou mies number wildd e 0 Lthot J o lhe mpaz ost of the dozen in Kisas in 1857 a1 18 poor Joe: tly bids himMove on. Al Im:mn are pouriug in, ¢ ) M That region wus thois ad aad the common burial place fos tha first night at Holton, seat of justics fog Tae Boriar Rufian usurpors of L1 tirsk 5 ad the counties for thoms i vee ve State mou obtainad Douglas ¢ r adroeate by opposing the Lecompton . Douipian, Davis (Jefferson , Mrshally oy, Woodson, and Johason, a'l o yrating pro-Slavery loaders, are still retained. Oue Hotton Tiudlord vigorously depounced the ex-county »ffls cors of Jackson a8+ pack of d—d thieves,” and fortitied e apithots by the exhibit of an investigating committosy showing taat they Jofrandsd the county of soma $3,0M, anormos wheat and corn-fields, grosd olerable houses an wo prasad into Nemeha and Marsha 4 but fow sattloe i eas giwen sloped nov %ol 40 beay to me bofore, Here, 70 milos from ts ra.lroad—taough ous line from Atehison and an. ym St. Josaph will soon penotratas the region —u rote at §2t0 §5 per acre, and farms at §3 te i and eorn conts par b boen vory highy igrants, Now tho two citic Ratlrond. extending far wost of them at Fort Kearnep and Fort Riley, take away their markets and travel, whooe ul 0 turning 1o stock raiunf, P yavilie, faunded by Frank Marshall of Lacomptoq Constitution memory, and named for Mary his wifo, s @ village of 500 people, on the Big Blus—tho cleanest stream in Kansas, Hue 1) feet wide, with eonsidoe La fal 11 Lo establishod. night and day, supples sly the Kansas farmers shipp their wheat 1o St. Louis, and bought flour from 8t. Louis; h comos wisdom. Marysvillo was long the oat. ization; now Kansas settlements oxtend @ s wast of it. [t boasts a substant al hn.ls Blue, a fine stone school-house, and like woakly n«m o county seat emela, A plore ona of the very best hotels 1n the hin six wiles, and & wide-a Thence we i throngh mas vile va glories and farms with prosont thrashing wachine, run 7 18 400 busltels of wheat 3'day out of the straw. Horss raxes, mowers, plantom, aad guadruple * 8t olows.” begin to abound, wad machi r-fold the efficiency of stry 0 the SPring Aoa ittle like the ol farming of upplied need i3 the stoam tad op wild plams, and noses and tauned cheeks, Al the woe od Topeka, whence I eontinged » 4D R road a was tak SPEECH OF GEN. FREMONT. wstant, Gen, Fremont wis deiares hile waiting for tha arri7al of the wia soon Alscovered, A ousind people collscted i and cheerad for the General ¥ in company with G or Congress, and, having beeu ia- 1 on th candidat the Usion tmduced, said My Fi Low Crrizexs oF Ispiaxa: Tam ghal to moot with [ stances preveuted my at, 0e 1 then showid har 5 many of my ol companien; ava 1o doubt that there are some hefore You thers ae General” was responde.] yated that every man fn Indiina has bess the mervice. § | That Westeru aray, a short " v of the Misissippi and o Arov and when that amg inad 1 merged into the ( L granul review sround Washington officers who ad e as ) tyeneras. e (ieers for Fremo: : v will prove fitul and_patrlotic in the ficld of batthe and tuad predd on anondons applats: | the same success W METEOPOLITAN VIOLENCE. T the Bditor of The N, ¥. Trib ume. Str: 1 desire, through your columns, to call atten. tiom t0 th uce frequontly made mse of by the Police of this the stroet st fires, and on othes occasions bringing together erowds of people, O Ratunlay eveniag I was walking doym Breadewiy with a friedl, 2t the time of the alarp 67 fire at Mr. Gmnthers, On reaching*®® 8t Niehatas Hotel our progress was stopped aear theeotrance in platn clothes but wearizg a badge, wha ronghly Where .ase you goioz!" 1 replied, we had intended going as far sx Canalst.; b told us we would have to'go baek, at the same thme. We af ouce tagned, b remonst¥atel with bim for bLis uncalled-for rudencss. telling Lim we couid Bot go very fast ou scconnt of the crowd. He of ance seiaed 0s with great violenee, saying. “ Iilkelp you," a ided by two or three policemen, jammed ny into the backs X ut, among whogs were many ladies with gentle men retarning from places of amusement, although we wade ng ce, bevond asking them wot to be so rough 1 unwib y complain of any portion of a body of men of whom I bave an opinion; but they should not forget that A maaig & man, even though he s not & policeman. and that to be @ ieman does not reqiice 8 wad Lo be o rufiaa. New Yurk, Oct. 5. 1o, A Crzey. res ling o sull 10WA ITEMS. From un Occantoal Correspondest. ‘We arenow enjoying 8 beantiful speil of * I Yowa 17, Oet. E " € have been abundant and all i B eigie ol pield of cors 13 comsidersby Todaced by early frosts. The poiitical canvass of the ‘State is Muly. v ‘”J:hmbhe?‘h' more contemptis o lowa every day. Wyn‘l. iutz:moouldmim -.1 it will lican than T e il Tibe. niitobte O other champions The Wilmington Daily Commercial is title of new Republicsa paper just established at Wilmington, Delse ware, by Howard M. Jesking and Wilmer Atkinson. To its own words Th Commercial starts out as an * ontspokec. trammels or influsnces which of the right are g

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