The New-York Tribune Newspaper, December 26, 1866, Page 1

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. NewDork Chiemme, —— ‘“..fi_.—_—-——-—_——-————————-—— | oees ;.JVI..“...M 8,024. NEW-YORK, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1866. PRICE FOUR CENTS - . — —_— the Channel, to England nquestionably as | faled to change the Imperial purporo in rticular and | artisane. After 50 years of Protestant government CO. | o defeat for the Minlstor and quite the contrary of what - WASHINGTON. EUROPE in m‘l‘m:mr“;' vne:ir: l;'--qof the Pn{nh are utterly hn[’u.ku ol'n elr;; lnI::. him. e 4 :mu;‘;.;‘. :’"m“:’:ll' l(f:flm‘ I.nhsbiunui ‘All;dx“ono :'y' he jm flt other i We do &'Lm thie —— — peoplo—between whose Cabinet and Lis own no one strong Third: The fact that the Empress is ** booked” for woi y pnany. w '] i i Y i > Catholic place; but, whercas ander Epine Rgoverument THE NEW FRENCH MINISTER PRRSENTS HIS CREDEN- thread of diplomatie union remaivs unbroken—and whose | at Compeigne proves that shoe has not been induced by her fhe_gree m-'rwl o Aol o (,‘nho‘ifil(}dogu. it covmnz [Frrand iy ~ I # PLETED—A MOVEMENT TO ABOLISH THK BUREAU FEWS3 BY THE ATLANTIC CABLE TO DEC, 25 | people aro iving, in their Jate monster meetings and | spiritusl advisers to visit the Pope and proteet by her 2 o ’ b ! i celebrated Cathedral, was tottering into rwin By eries for reform, examples of the most dangerous teaching | prescnce in Rome next wclek against tho policy of the B amih . . {Drishin'! Q¥ . % Yhod o0 o S-S P ——— und of most odious cowaparison to his ropressed subjecta. mperor, . 3 GREAT BRITAIN. Everybody knows that Louis Napoleon wnowhf:‘plm urth: All the accounts o receivo from whatever souree | first e Wh:' -l mnr"“fllMfldh R‘:‘V!""“: :fl‘, DICTED METEORIO SHOWKR—REAPPBARANCE OF O STATISTICS, 4 4 3 A Dy the prestige of his name, and hold it by the prestixe of | agroe in this, that the Eu seeks with great carnest- | has, ind n the first promoter 4f the achievement of BY TELEGRAPH TO THE TRIBUNE. Loxvos, Dec. 24—E®misg.—~The Trades’ Union | his success, There has beon & siugular overlooking of | ness a compromise betwees Konie and nulyflvm special | thin coloss architeetural exploit. Somo years hence tho THRE CHOLERA—CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT 1§ Wasnmoros, Tussdag, Des. Jis city have decided almost unanimously to place | otber eirecumatances contributing to his temporary success. | plans he has suggested for Ulis i makiog up, " ‘canniot be | Cologne Cathedral will be finished up to the flowerets ot EGY PT—ROBERT COLLEGE AND THE TURKISH GOV~ | The Marquis de Montholon, the ret e s el o siledt 054 00 many of thve hresmotinose; the con fo cloatty stated ite t et pecial corre. | it8 mighty towers, and will proclaim tho wuperiority of ini . m'lantl“ thoir orgaization at the disposal of the Reformers in | tribution of Callfornia and Augtralia; 10 select avother: | apondents in what DI ey influential persous.® | our modern times over mediwval. 1t may also proclaim s ::"';:"' andii thenevi he Prosident hythe the coming political contests, the neod and greed which tho Church party had for an | The most infuential perons are likely to be at fault in t that the loss of temporal w"'mf'"( has been & gain to | From ur Specis) Correspondent. b * rthemy, were presented to - e #55 aotive partner. In 1852 all tho commoreial trading world | busincss. General Floury has somo sort of a mission, and Catholicism, though lhutowlt-l of,egclemasti dowminion 3 Cossravmiorie, Noy. 23, 1666, | Secretary of State ot 4 o'clock this afternoon. '2: o imugnee loss, much The Levant Herald, having having published letters | Joave-taking of the Marquis do Montbolon, with answer of the President to him, were of the bE was offbrod supply of meavs and desircd only assured | has, tentatively df courso, fo urgo upon Ricasoli certain | o in its time,pegarded as, el s T:'R;m E. quiet o aet; Ifl:zhumh-s(;;nq Platistio retrosetive woild edsures. Theto are not lkoly «:l b ultimatums; for m‘l‘:‘l,"n"mdfi."n A 1 ey iy Cnrt RIS, ' 24.=Tho Napoleon o losired only a protective politic political partnor. France cannat ndw mal im#, She must kee 1 WOl » - X d ’ E o o el veimbn - v apetbey corded | desired only a protective palito poition purtnor, | Prance canga niit Stk S 0% Sl 1o"Rad advise | olic inbabitanta o Cologae o sessoning on eccesiasica | condemed to pay 8 fine of 50/ storling for willfully and au sudionce yosterday to the Hon. Mr. Bigelow, 6x- | arey. sineo 1850, aro rather hostile than friendly to tho | with the authority of the first of Catholic. powers, and the | {0 lnical dominion, and there are only the most bigoted | maliciously publishing * falso news.” ‘The official paper {; 3 and stupified adherents of the ultramontano party who | \ oy o iformed the publie that the island of Minister of the United States, who had the honor of : u;p‘_!'?r.d m-n prestige bas ‘;nhxlly uni‘nhml in view of "'v‘fi‘ .»;:u?tnnoullolllul’y'vs]fv .-ml:i 5 b oo Sl presenting to his Majesty Major-Gen, John A. Dix, | 1aix'sindopendent triumph, of Prussia’s doflant triumph, e deslro that [taly ehull formally renounce ber elaitd | 50, (hag will rige from deca aid ruin. The campag- | Crete has boon subdued and the war onded by the submis- ' | of the United Statos unexm-cm\ trinmph—of the cumu- | npou Rome as the captal of the nation, is not a new one, na will be studied by able ,n‘inieu, will be provided eth Ameridhi solesine watiseg e from Crete not in accordance with official news, has been his sucoessor in the representation of the American | lated Danish, Polish and otbor rebuffs, and of the comphe | ard probably it has lost ncne of its force. WBut o Italian 4 s g i i fl'é’ sion of the insurgeuts. Unfortunately, each subjugation Govermnment pear the Court of the Tuileries. cated, superfetatod, luexcusably hopeloss, utterly smashed Minfeter ever yet dared to lay the proposition before an | Water-wo i ed by @ sturdy peanaotry, WL b | would appear to bave been followed by sharply. contested bungle of the Mexican protense. Ttaltan Parliament, and the present would be a most un- come a fertile country, as it was, from a desert as it 18, In | pa4i108 i gome of which the Turks were not vietorious. the mountain towns, the haunte of the brigands, whero | P 0 FICE G Tl declaration that all is over. ‘The Geveral Dix, on presenting bis credentials to tho | “Tho Emperor of France to-dny stands, s a politician, | favérable moment to urge the rej t 1 presentations of the nation h Bmporor, made & few remarks, in the course of ;{llhin wn[;%or'}m: 1t 13 & narrow zml nuwr:uvulfnol.huhl‘; to mpcnll n? .h" whiclh :;f n:'mnlyn hmlld the cmhum»lio ".‘:"‘"I:;‘:v.:r““g‘ ""‘;‘5“”:".':.“"0"“’“':‘;; E;“.':;flfi.,’":fl" ;m :mn onts hnva:l dllluid dolvnkghelr arms ex;:t-pl o few (.l‘- 4o 1 . . P i h i of ppi N ide, it could not 80 pre- e 3 < s guificant 8 who are lurking awoug the snow-| ] ) «hich be reforred t0 the Jang siacding anclent in- | 1Ll sine alo Suding him out. 'Hie unfortanstely-fedged | MBCI L VERIRS oo w'cord B0 pre- | ektivity thero will return iutellect; theso populations will e Danks | ST Which 1 briog to thia place svcere eEpressons, ] i re )} ) “ v ted a8 not to seem & new condition In the Scpjember y j $boso. popt car the it ount Tda. ."“‘ ppses uckens ere coming homo to roost. His “prestige” in | rente ot to new condition pj N over wouk, wheress, undet the. oppression: of elerieal | o35 ,w:.':l:';ufi.‘» ‘l( vt Ml e s m:“:o following is. the Prosident’s reply to M, Ber- nation fs governwent, they have been reduced to yegetating bodies | 5 T oy, [ B withodk hearts and braian. I Plus 15, is moro than | fhie declarstion to make 8 Joshizeute.. . WAD 93 Ses Hon:” Gt aeclon towa:d. tho Fronch amors tha amoere fanatie; if he has some spark left of the sentiment easlicat, the most profound and the most endaring sentiments 9o £ e wil ik q le | doubts to myeelf ; but the principles of lnw laid down by | people and the Governmwnt ef the United States. i youngecar, b wil Sy e ant eeonele | el vhch ndgod e Tpans gt do notone | (0 oty bl o 2 el ! . I v » courage us to express such doubts here. It was solemuly | SUFENICES on or antagon! iween merel Loresta te, uufl_w -mm* ternational amity whioh existed between the people | mainly gono. Stripped of that, he is getting to ba ooked hnrpl)ulwllhml l" [ ulwnlluiu l;ih probably :,mo that 4 on a# ouo that hath not clothing, and so his ruling quality | Gen. Fleury sounded tho Italian try on this point, sud the government of France and the poople sud | il doubitul, (Seo thut lute * eminent ‘peihcist | and found flat othing could bo doue. Correspondents Executive of the United States, asyell as_ the | Isalah, his article fii. Wo are not to have & revolu- | asscrt it, and it is intrinsically characteristie. Napoleon wany historieal reminiscences which tended | tion ltuu?nl:rovl. His lm osty shot ono d;ylhh;! k & fn:;vn | lll\“llll-im‘ugm:ilm in I?il By, n':dvlllv 0{ 2 : . couplo of hundred of his winged and quadrupedal fellow- | asking y to do what he knows she will not, is one ol » . g %o perpotuste the friendsbip existing be- | Grastures, driven into uarrow and futsl reach of his un. | the + B Al staty opition on the | jectured to be o fundamental prineiplo of Turkish law thut e R T oman question in the nelands, 0 XCCPUOI, | e hurden of proof always rerts ufii the defendant. 'The -q.nmm-an-hylmfi- the twoon them. The General expressed, in the name of | skillfol gun, at Compidzno; his personal malady is soothed | To get the parties togethior and indnce them to reeog- h ¢ P Vorld's Fai 4 i ch oth Fi ¢ relies, | perbaps, of one or two places, such as Aix-la Chapelle or shaed i il he In expresing tiis feeling, 1 what has for the motent; the World's Fair of next year makos it | nize each other 1s that on which the Emperor m;:- ies. gl“n_w‘ K vre the Dltramantane party of Hypereatbo- m:-:’ ‘-':‘.‘.'.'.,‘1.“.‘.:':.'.'.'.’.2.::'.’33.‘" be guilty untitho is | b o " wm tho United States Government, bis gincere wish that 1 3 § b : eyerybody’s intorest not to bother him till it §8 over. | Succeed or fail, he acquits himeelf. But as neither party | . she good undorstanding at present oxisting between 156t savalntiontiada the din.’ 3 can recognise ho 0“"}’ without nbating some of its pre- "‘:22{7.,.?{'.‘;".;:,“ ,?:::',‘,‘::‘,,n seeret to the diplomatio "Tho cditor of The Lecant Herald wan accused of pubs | cemer: the. Murgets ds Mohelon "o 1 was meaning by my l#st lettor to rid this of all politi- | tensious. & real negotiation on the main question is very wasld that the Kouan question, after the treaty of the u‘::l:‘{n flm,::fimtmxxnmm";h:.:u Mfi:"é;‘; vo eo'-::hmu- of u'-'n;q-n be. :‘u‘ ‘ g the two couutries would become porpetual. cal thowes; medning t be s wisely silent as tho Moaiteur | improbable, Tho Pope does not wish to assent to the loss . 4 s 2 . 08; 1 ¥ ely siles ” bable, J ’ . = f ing t I The Emperor Napoleon replied, thauking Gen. Dix | of Mexlco, and all *'sich.” Regard the above aa ponalty | of the Marcbes, nor to take back his curses rguinst Victor | 13th of seI""““‘h" being “""“"'“'"" is only a ‘“{;‘I’d' l‘" to substantiate bis statewments, Ko proposed that & com- 1 . intrigue, in which every actor plays fus part an well ws bo | LS00 TER00 Bt Yy expense, to investigate the facts, | evening dined with the Secretary of State. K cab j o | Taid to and by the fatality of tho office of your Paris ows. | Emanucl. Italy wishes, of all things, to avoid recogui- ue u or tho ngn';n ;e nm.:nér in wxl;“dlum‘ had o.p‘c.n?fi’rl:s B iae Ayt ':‘:"L:y( ho ofti your Paris own. | Boabhe X" aa King of Rome.— Neither party 8 in gan. lfl: Poy pe Iw;m 3;.'| wau, l;u:ll(n'“dln ll)n‘\ ine ldnLn- B b ety (0" ho ienity of th | . The Senate Finance Commitiee were informed mission to the French Court. His Majesty saic © | W ha great Parisian event, the loading fact of the day, | avy hurry, and events are likely to be left to- their own T ons. N e Rt 6 orduius, and Les | Government. He was theu condemnued to pay i fine of | day that the new Tariff bill, which has been in i ] oA £50 on the principle above wmentioued. This is law in | gration for some time by Commissioner Wells, historical reminiscences to which you allude as baving | 8 the debut before the real public, of a prodigious artist devices. N 50 1 Who Des had an overwhelming suceess at the popular con- | There is one element of the utmost uncertainty in all Italian as he was in 1845, but ho takes as his duty in | T 00y gud this i the freedom of the press iu Constauti- . sxlsted from carly date between France aud the United | b 0r AT SIOR O TE ot him. and | ealoulations about the immediate futuro of Kome, d that | bis position, to apply all spiritual and worklly means at ot . e P companicd by a very elaborate report, will be com- ) his Sisposal’to keep St. Peter's heritage an bo received it. | “*Ai'to tho real state of aftairs in Crete, T have no latey | Mubicated to the Committee to-morrow. States constitute a sure guarautee that no misunder- | he is the most eminont violinist that ever was heard i8 the ** silver-baired old man’ who 18 ot once a Pope and ® b o standing will disturb the friendly relations which pre- | ¢fect ho produced s unspeakablo; bo wibdued, erashed | an Ituliau, o priest with his intense class feeling aud one- | Liko Buperor ke g oL Knetie,topl ip Jpempe Umet | pown “to communicate. ‘The Grecks declaro that Ou the reassembling of (;::fin-.tl-fiu--hl 4 - e . Pre- | i public, be hold his auditors panting, dutoxicated, under | sided education, sod a very old and very impressible man. todo with Metierni b, ho leases Mousignor Atonelll | oyoryihing *in progrosking most fuvorably for tho | of the House will a resolutivn to repeal the law vail botween tbe two countries. The contiunauce of o | the ‘mastor charm of his fiddle-bow, notbing—surely, | Mony who waich him nlnfnul;- tell us that his pubtie :"f’m} :;:"_!};fu‘l‘,: "nr,.l.h.:’:i::",',:.":-n'"u.'.fl:{ 4113 s}:fi'.féx‘.# nsurgents, and that the Turks are further thau over from | nnder which the Bureau of Statistics was created, for beard | curses are as far from the spirit of hix private couversation p URAR B BEEEIRER B O BT e SAS ok e subduing the island. e = . the reasous that it has thus far wholly failed to accom- E 200d reason to believe that Russia {s now et- | pligh its object, and that, inits organization and infla- loyal and sincere uuderstandivg between the Govern- | nothing in the last tweuty yours— like this hus bee N Liberal thi ¢ And Job in Purts.” And a0 on, and'so on. My translation is fuint | with Liberals as were those of Andsew Johuson nine | B AR SRR S0 TECR RO SCe® o o Earopean ence, it is hostile to the revenue juterests of the coun- ments will bo a great advantage to "h_“ industry &nd | geho of the praise that i lavishied ths woek by musical | months ago in somewhat similar circuiatanecs. Thers 18 | ¢y yojy f e R A R Rt [T ged in moving the protecting powers to iuter- wwlmrca‘o( !n;‘l.hmcnn;lmm tt:o inhal ;m;“u of ‘wlh;h :::::“}::”.m:; 8::1‘1‘«#[.]::3;\01.‘:“ urs on the unigue, new ::‘:rl::-‘{,“ evidence of this fact; but it may nevertheless "Jish aod the Prussian Govern. e f th ‘f::::’:.::"be.: yr;l’fi“b“«-‘l?:e?:h‘:; "{'3 and to the development of the national industry siready astonish the other portions of the world by | “Fg ol voe o o n opinion, still icas to express | 118 cowmonly receivedthat the Romany will, in one way re striving to obtain an aceommod the Uaited States have sent. veasols | Which it was designed to foster, the Italian Government shows inclination to negotiate, | atants, bat, %o far g tho | Lieut. H, H. Wilson, Sixth U. 8. Cavalry, sou of ar anotber, dojore the Pope-King aud elcet Victor Emanc | (e Maa ot eht, oo though. the. ) 1 & e S ; i uel. ‘That they will do this peaceably, by some form of p ) S A o “mited States is cone {on has been only rec- nator Wilson of Massachusetts, died yesterday a¢ | g0 from other motives. The Bpanish Cabinet alouo | o nended, not decided upon. There ean be no doubt | Austin, Texas, ' < The movement for the Colored Soldiers’ and Blllnt' n annot I by no meaug convinced of tho heceesity fo upiiold of to | SEtERCAION BF L SO e humanity (0 Teseno theso Convention at Philadelphia on the #th of January, to this happy result by upholding, iu your official | [whoknew nothiug of music by esr, but, pehaps, know more | What if Victor Emanuel be then acked lo soud troops Teuary IOV Btten, o T A Jiplomesy vl e oen. 4l ehilron: from destriouon, Evon (84 | Lok ’“"""'ll“l '"‘K-‘-“""W‘?“‘llq";""" lfl:‘m eharacter, these good relations, to which I attach the | of ita purpose and meaus and powor and menning than any | Juto Rome to maintain crder! AVAat it the Pope bo | herdly iutefi¥re onco mors directly, as it did on the oce oh G overnment ought' tomesept/ it witheut: hesites |08 10 bo.a largs afials; (A elrogiat a8 been i highest -value.” The Moniteur of this mornin puml.flo ‘combination of dilletanti dress-circle fecblotons], | forced to this by the refural of all .otber powers lo of- sion of Vegousl s mission; at J Hliibner, the Aus- | 4o delegates, requestivg thew, upou their amrival in Phil & wdd e ORI | Wil lot bimeelf quote: *There is Lothing in which tho | fend Italy and thelr purses by a new m'l'nl'l'l"h' While | trian Embussador at Rouie, hae declarcd thin to‘oserybody | “Fe: 5116 1anths past we hase been promised s meteoric | adelpbia, to reportin person or by letter to Liet.' says that the French Government has never re- gower ofart 1 sown o wnuch 4 10 playing on the fiddle,” | but one hnal rosult éan follow from the Freach evacuation I e :;ul':'j,';:;‘:;_}lgf;g“&_‘:gm; shower on or about November I3 equal in extent to thut Geo. E. Btephens, No. 1,208 Komble-st. A'caucus coived the dispateh of Seeretary Soward, dated on d:;‘;f"”“{ ';;"K‘hl AL crmauy, hat lately takon Parisian | —tho ubion of 'm".'"‘m‘:"‘h""‘, e “;‘“,!"_';"d':,,:.’,’, Homan Court aud Ttaly; that at this monent transaetions | 2F ‘,’fi:« 1% Sfashpiisopieny e “'"""'h!“"{"‘ will bo held """.‘"gfi"“' on Monday, Jan. 7, aud tho 932 of ‘November, addressed to United Stat letauti by storm and surprise. y ) 3 are going on sbout subventions which the Governments of | So%4 compured to that, but on the 13th aud 14th of No- | it is hoped there will be & general attendanee. A November, addressed to Unite 4tes | The above-quoted laudation is not more extravagaut | Progress cannot bo s accurately timed #s the long marches {‘ L3 uieats of | youber,.about between 2 o'cloek in the morning and sut- | Workmen have been for several weeks engaged in Minister Bigelow in Paris, aud published with | thaa dosen otbers I might quoto from tho feuiletouivts | of tAn Molike's batatione on Koenegire. tho Catllic tatesure to frniah 4 so0n ut o Pot wil | yue, we b most besutiul disley of meteors. O the | ropuisng aud refittug the East R b et gt i the 5 talk ritic ¢ . ere 18 one bit of news on this which sonnds | Ficld. ) ROl 3 - % v . to offcial. correspondance Jush. sens in by tho | oF the wack: ulking critic have dioued lnto Ty su | it oue than any 1 haro yet mentioned. 1t that | Frunco had alfured u found s for thia plrpane, B o onih e ieal musabog o Gourse have beca gresiee: 06 White Houwe, repardtor to (o commencenment of the Prosident to Congrees; and in whieh Mr. Soward, | of Catgut. Talking yet of music, hore it an aneedote worth | there is a negotiation among the Catholic powers to (FoF do Cab officially joiued thix proposition— | 410" 14l the sky was obseared with clouds until nearly | FeCe ion season on the st of January. vecording: Villarei, tbe uctual firet tenor at the Graud | the Pope u civil list. If any Catholic power could afford e ':-:-""' gudediylaly, Suared Bpenil ILOK L0 | gunzise, but the display of moteors between 2 and 3 was at All the Government Departments were closed to- contributo to a subvention, Wo prevume this to be tho | RARER TS 0050 H60" o “hour, Ou both oceasions shey | day, and but Jittle business in_them will be douo 8- speaking of Napoleon’s new awmendment for the | & -+ - ra, bas now for two performanees filled the part in | the expense, one wight believe this story to mark & plun b |4 s Vit | eauro of all the rumiors about & Prussian intervention 0 | woio of il mzes and colors, J saw one brilliant red me- | morrow. The day was nugkmdy observed by & very, urches, the marvels of their enterprige. Such an understanding | one, ona so profoundly solemn und delicate question es the i X . | artistio meritof that last best gift ofGod to men, an operatio Y will do much to cveure and guarantee popular pro- | LR N9 CL T dontal fddlor. Of that daring, | plebiscite is i).m fow tho aceredited theory, ~But it is | & K Sl ol M g : gross, and the march of civilization. amounting to impiety, your dullearcd correspondont will | quite possible that a masterly inactivity may be fmposed "P","I';‘""'! ,‘"‘ {." e ol N ";: mercly | 4y (o the fecling of Americans on this subject, The rec- i outof deferénce for the Queen, Norwng, It is known, 18 | o ongation of Mr. Morris in this seuse must be ap- Your presence in Parls, 8ir, cannot but coutribute | never wnte himsclf guilty. But, bumbly sheltering biw- | upon the Romans by the National Committee und the self under the protection of that stupid old Sam Johnson imbecility of the Government left to develop itself. removal of the French troops from Mexico in :(.y;,t« . 1{.,-.41',“..,\..,.:‘1“.« Imnhnle(-yhvlnou sung and | put forward uhy;:-mhy D fret (5 l’; Tavor of the Pope Tod od the Spring ol Ny ol e sy | acted by the German Naudin. But Villaret bas qualitics | Wmoney enoug pay an‘army. It is probably, however, " X teor, whichjex) ed ot fur off, and separated iuto man e, Bty f W ol But tho Emporor | acted by the German Xaudin, But Vilarot bas aualifed | CI007, 018 cae Expedienta by which tho Catbolio sovers | The pattgal world has once mare bech soniaded ho | amalter po o et prar by M et I e S K s g T 8 ecision to modify the existing arrange- | ag he camo to undertake the rdle of Vasco di Gawn, the | eignn, Queon Isabella excepted, ofl down the fervors of "'"'“PA'“" "h"l‘:""',‘f.:l‘"r’l‘l‘;.:I"“"l‘:'j'"‘“""fjl"";Lz::',|.:“::" of lightuivg, aud in several instamkes they loft trails of | {10 Goverument in New-York pay respect to the ment without any understanding with the | musieal excoutor of Composer Meyerbeer handed to Opera ultra Catholie subjects. & 4 ‘1 | ight behind them from 5 to 20 degrees in leugth which re- | o ory of the late Portugucse Minister, by attending The Pell Mall Hazette bas & correspondent 1n- Rome— which opens & quite new development for Germany, au ined It i t i ticed b c Pl Mall Guactte bas .« whore I most prosperous condiiog, bas pot | Malned some five mioutet, Mot ol thont oo disap. | hi funeral in Neow.-York. Director Perrin o paj addressed to him, containing United States, 80 as to leave the whole French army | oteq alterations and variations of tho r6le, with this | very likely one of the illustrious Knglish politicians now ) In Mexico for the present, instead of withdrawing one | heading: * In case Villurct should ever sing the rdle of | there—whiose last letter is a good illustration of the ui- e iate building for tho seasions of its Tare | yoinicd in what I saw, an it wim certaialy unliko the di e 11 5 Vasco di Gama.” certuintien which wait on thié immediate conduet of the | Bament. The Suloon, where the representatives of | tlay S 125, but at the same time it wus a raro gnd start- MEXICO. ’ ther in | the people mble, which pays millions for caserns and lmg phenomenon. Not a few persons were alarmed by it e casemntes, 48 & dlsmal, poor, unhealthy place; which Soald not M been sore Mise Q3f 1t had | Der® believing that the stars were falling from heaven. A teat fire. ocenrred in the midst of the disgloy one night, | THE LIBERAL TROOPS IN MAZATLAN TO MOVE AGAINSY ment in Nove! current, as promi i g fletacbment in November current, as promised, is pow | T30 G Mol iy ie an not that this story in invented, | Pope. Ho says: “The demcasor of the Holy hood found in every way incounvenient aud exceptiondble. | just because of 1ts radic Whether strictly | very perplexing; ho speaks in monosyllables, niguas, We cannot scquiesce, first, because the term ‘next | historiecl or not, it s strictly characteristic of | darkly hinting ot approaching surpr and this gives 5 . . Meyerbeer, who wns a man 8o respoctful of his art, of his | Fise o a varicty of rumnors which aro too extravagant to bocu the Infdution to demonstraie < BT cannot say whether i cd by a fallin® met 8pring,’ asappointed for the entire evacuation, is indef- % imse -+ - b h o ? ot say whetber it was caused by u® meteor THE FRENCH, pring. PP work and himself that he would never sanction a repre- | be repeated. ‘Fhe idiost report, howe finds believers vd for & time, Count Schwerin broug] ornot. It may have beca, as the quarter was of wood. 3T TELBGRAPE Fo THR TAISUNE The italies are mine, | fubject in 0nd of the last sessious, and fi'"v‘"‘“ 0 eulargo "%.,,m.mmgn'fl,‘:};;::;flfl{:::& SAX FraxCi800, Dec. 25,—The steamer Panems, from ! on to & very grphic | the hous by wildiug a neighboring building to it, which is * | Mazstia po ity people, that we have mow a better guarautee for the | nily wmiscalled Academy of Music (fucus a non with & ut of the difficulties which besct a fair watithate of | 8t the disposition of the Government, and to gain by this m‘mfl:fifl'fi:{f‘fl: fi.:{;‘;{&,’:fi’:fi;n:?fi.fifl “’l‘ha Lli'gv:.lmt::o::‘mn g':f.“. that place on the 1ith P Aot vengeance) in New-York, would never have been seknowl- amael s Rome ype, the Cardi- | Smprovement u little moro room and better ventilation . r withdrawal of the whole expeditionary forcs in ghe | FERSMIG L e oult pever ha: shoiaf Brebyprees Jone, and the Enelish tourists, | A commities has been_ appointed, affer some humor wul‘"i::or:g::-v -'l:;lh'::v e SSede ':nfi';{‘m of mw in m& % French, Y 2 n 8 Was d their timo dfbfle.umnumnmn. on the subjeet. Tho affair | ol 0 B o enians, as @ chureh, that m iw S by L mn. = inite and vague; second, because we have no author- | sentation of one of his compositions except with the very | here, ecen in higa cireles, nor is uny so unfounded as not bes ropresentative means in all kinds, The so-called | fo be traceabie to some authorsiy ity for stating to Congress aud to the American | i% bVt wmierepresented ou the stage of your late fuu- | #id they are meant o eull atien Spring than we have heretofore bad for the with- This talk of wmusic reminds me of grosely neglected |-lei\-« in umul' of “l oK \lt‘huhllwylu o b o piae LB W in N or." duty as your Paris reporter. Some of your aders, fecbl n creating for themselves, and the eaut correspondent us, 08 the Noi jerman Parliawerit, 5 § ¢ o by s e o follow 1w own: 8a 0uly Goide, Tasy bave | never Kncwn wheh 10, eredit auy Matemedity no matter | convoked fopthe 1et of FOEpiE.is sk to smpmble b D Saiteiee. Deb abaret o ation e s cont | Seamer Suwance. v THE ATLANTIC YACHT RACE been misled to suppose that songs lower in sentiment than | Who may make it. this place. ereetion of a Parliamentary palace con- - that thousands bavo hesitated $0kve !\-w mill at Frogtown, Nevads, one of the finest ¥ . 2 = our popular. negro songs, sung by Thercsa with e A venient s WOTo GPPOrtune, as. pirrte s O | 12tk , was destroyed. LivearooL, Dee. 25,—Capt. Judkins, of the steam- b...X.... of wanner nx:ly cceptuble out- COLOGNE. “ u L "‘"‘“""“" - « ) P s N 2 ’ side of “the ~fifty odd satoons of New-Votk, | pyg xixg op PUSSIA AND THE POPE—THE FRUSSO- " to retain the Episcopal form t 3 Ay ahifp Beotia, reports west winds during the passage fo | Lory )0 grujle food of the Parisian musieal appetite: . this port. He thinks the New-York yachts will make | There could not exist & greaier ynistake. The popular ITALIAN ALLIANCE—COLOGNE UNDER PROSTESTANT ment bulldings L gratifying proof of the - A etn s very siball, aud the nmunver Issved for wuy oue per. VIAMENTARY SYSTEM IN PRUMMIA—THE WITH- | bates un the budgetin the seeond Chtmber, | It has | with protestant pustors aud _missionarice, and 8 THE CONGRESSIONAL EXCURSION. MARINE INTELLIGENCE. ;oml:(lice is nath foun ull‘nu 1{,00:1 1;he cnmp;lti;u;l per- DRAWAL OF THE ESGLISH EMBASSY FROM DRESDEN | urofoundners nor “'. Satovsats Jave. bodn. B duu;lnx up @ ereed “1 . hnik- ‘{or their party l~l> ;:"‘P""- P Lvereoor. Dee. 24—Evening—The Inman steamship City | formed aro the works of Beethoven, Mendelssolin, " T g o An Aruwenian paper this week deetares that “all the young & P —THE AUSTRIAN PROVINCIAL DIETS. wode has somo likeness to the committee d sy .mou‘mu ‘are joiniug this new mo"mm'_,{d pro- GEN. HOWARD'S ADDRESS TO THE FREEDMEN, Wagner, and that sort. The quality of performance of ;. » " English House of Commons, with the exception that the | 5 e B 8 e Goeed, . T am not 1““‘. 0 siire abont | BY TALTGRAPE TO THE TRIVUNE. of Paris, Capt. Kennody, which left New-York Dec. 15, arrived = : - . Y4 | the admirable orchestra, under M. Pasdeloup’s direetio, is, | From Our Bpecial Correspondent. President acts as such and keeps ower, Tt was first pro- Pé Bis powor, P nmediate suceess, for the corrupt ecclesiastical hierarcy | NasmviLLE, Dee. 25.—After the banquet last night to a8 Queenstown early this morning, en route te this port. 0 1 am told by | . . v, Nov. 20, 1668, Id by entirely competent critics (who aro not Corooxr, Nov. 9, th o o ¢ , T At i Drofessional), fiobly it 1n excellence to the compositions | The French pspers which are open to ultramontaue Peede ot e e e e e D O e v s 1 | DT pazty, Gen. Howard made an address s% 1 the Capitol to o large erowd of freedimen. He congratu- FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE. they have to translate in sound. i " 2 e influence, such as the Monde, La France, and tbo Memo- | for the chief icaders of tho late war s still in srrcars. . 2 - — 'l'rhe most read, the most readable, n“dl’ in several vial Diplomatique, keop 0 their assertion that the King | Count Bismarek wrote # lotter which has eirculated 1 the b:in:nm; this people back to the Bible as their only sure g o ot ity of thrift 48d ¥ house and in which he dosires to be left ont of the question. | EU\ o __hk""h v m“““" sdvance- C rds, the best worth reading of recently )’n:l:luh!‘d » : e 1 throngh the Summer not a case of cholera ocenrred erywhere among the colored Some of their schools, he #aid, wouid do credit to the B b PAES‘ booke 1 el volume of Lows Veatlor, Let Ocursde | of Prusin s wiling to help the Empross Eugenle and the | house and in whick ko derfees ta be Lottt ey ta ‘bo-loft ] o oo MEXICAN AFFAIRS AND THE UNITED STATES—THE | Pa uot myself “read French as well a8 1do | ueen Tsabells in u ing the temporary power of the iy’ s E . Joustantinople. Oue case wns reported an: bills NEW. MINISTER TO WASHINGTON—iupeRlay | EVElish.” T always feel very sorry for those of wy naive ;‘“ ¥ l;."‘ 5 ’Th"h'l‘lf" :'Iul iy '.o the Kin :"_‘f&‘:y{{’_:fl“:;‘;;:‘n ,",';i';“:.'l’l‘;"""’::"',:_;l""f ':":]'{.’o":,'{ « given for ten dags, but it was finally proved that the white schools in the country.. He earncstly exlforted all . countrymen who are constantly aseuring mo that they do, | Yope: La France even slates S1A5 18 bng M | T Raets B v g oral okl | person died under the hands of a physiciun, of @ difficulty -uh_om:{v. and to shun vice and sin in‘every form. PERPLEXITIES AND TROUBLES—A NEW MUSICAL | It soems such a pity that they should not turn their fecblo Y ol B/ g e T oL § g i e iy riniug | Which biad notbing to do with cho was listened ta with the closest attention, and at the ARTIST—POPULAR CONCERTS IN PARIS—LITE- | Wental force to the study of lh«!mper reading of English. | effet en 1844, le roi Fredorie Guillaume avoit mis 1a villo | gommanders i the war, and has gained the "_m“‘ " | Within two weeks some 2 cases of cholera have been of bis address resolutions of thanks to the gallant Chief 1 Learniug something of the rudiments in that dircction, 10 Miaposition do Pio 1X. AIl this talk bas | o0 e el oult olrcumatancas. It in, perbaps, in re- | ficially reported in Galste, and in one of (b villages'on the Bureau were unanimously by the crowd, RARY ITEMS. led to puspect at loust what is meant by reading English lu is intended to contirm the Pope in | rard to General Manteuffel, who is in M“;’P:‘ 'u.'u on. | the Bosphorus. The origin of the disease is uukuown. It | the least significant of the incidents conpected with From Our Special Correspondent. well, they would be set forward some way towsrd com- | Lis residenco tor all arrangewents with the Florcutine ool (hat s Botalio of e lattee e uside, | 18 uid that o Jew eame from Salouica, where cholera ex- l‘onrm!m’lll banquet was the fact of its being LA (el - | ated, to the vilage where it broke out berg, and ulthough | whelmingly attended by leading Rebel citizens. Pams, Nov. 0, 1666, prehiending the bardness of the roud they ‘must travel be- | Government, and at the same timo to gain ground at | Narteaffel 3s very well at court, but such regard is not - A v . 4 harnd ke | lebel Gons. L. 8, Oheatham and Maury, and Y ? e pussed several I uarANtine, un 0o attacl A “Where is Max? is, if possible, moro the question of the fore arriving at a fully appreciative reading of a first-class | Court in Berlin, French pa bave ¢ assorted of . - d 3 e oaitio I ¢ Zay than at the date ofp; last. We l.n\"(v ouz yarions | TTRoR aathr, late that that the Prussian Embassador at :::1': L’w;:"-l M‘f!.':, rheo--‘m:xu'r; '{or (I‘x‘:ymll‘l:iu of cholera himself, somo belicve that he brought the dis- [ Brows, made speechos coueerning & A h Ao o A Of the helf-dozen hest cotemporary masters of the | demanded guarantees from Ricasoli for the ma try. This fund is what " finds Ne | ease to Covstantinople. Others say that the first cases | and love for the Reconstructed Union. : New-York versions of answers, confounding confusion. | most difficult and delicate art of writing French prose, it | of the temporal power of the Pope. M. von. Usedom were in Praneo under Louis Philippe’s Gavernment, and | Were caused by eating poisonous mushrooms, others deny ———— ' 1f there bas been no invention by iuterested pastics, and | i8 quite generally conceded that M. Louis Veuillot is one. | kn not & word of such dewands, violent dobates in the then chambers | that any of the deaths have been eaused by eholera. PACIFIC CUAST. ! inly been en appearance of cholera in g As master of the high att of writing abusive French prose | need good desl of iguorance about persons re i i % English parlismentarianism | 0,0 of here o but it eannot yet be said that if the type-settors of yesterday evening’s journals made no violentl! . . oo y, brutally, grossly abusive prose, but ye er | and circumstances to give the plightest credit to these X & ein: ave . mistake in figures, we had yesterday, at 3 o'clock p. . | mere slang, mero Vulgarity, ou the contrary ' clasic, | rumors. Perhaps Pri kol neTs G Jabe fulie Mtice | Lo e R T T e 1 o o such | 1 epidemic in tho city, ‘The most absurd regulations Liave | GREAT FLOODS IN CALIFORNIA—PARTICULARS OF TAR New-York news-of the preceding day—the first instance | vigorous abuse—he stande ulone. And itin in this respect | of the wishes of her Catholie subjects, 1f such wishes were to' keep the. sonfidesse’ o 'ufl« House. 0ulprel(~n’t beew adopted by the Savitary authorities to prevent the RELIEF OF THR SHIP SHOTEMAC. of the Cable's bringing us within twenty-four hours of snd some others that bis last, and, on the whole, cleverest, | pronounced loud and distinetly in favor of the worldly | yiyiater of Iuterior Affnirs can indeed ot boast of being in | Progress of tho disease, Eve house whero @ case occurs | g\« puyciico, Dee, 24,—Advices from the interior . a8 well as quite most amnsing volume, 8 hereby respect- | reign of St. Peter's succes But this been th confl ) - is put in quarsntine, with inmates for ten days. d tel Tar a8 lines of communieution you. The fact that the Cable was taken up for long | il ded to the atudy of all those forei ) s - s ) the confidence of the House, aud the funds were not voted | | h E {" an , %0 far as lines of com sy ‘o : ly commonn the study of all those forcigners who | case. There is only the small party of t because his dofngs in affairs of the press were not spproved The doetors who attend the paticnt are included in this | the belief that the late storm has eq: in hours the other day with United States Government work | have fancied hitherto that the French isa feell zuage. | who aro agitating for church dom th of, but in spite of the pashalike siyle ‘u', his | quarantive. T absurd regulation will of course lead all of 1861-'62 and been atte by ."fi bas tarned the attention of numerous ingenious persons | One of the vry fow Amcricans I have had { 107 10 | been agitating for Austria’s hegemony, and are still doing | overument ’l.m,_b,y Count Tismarck. himself ia | PUYSicious o refuse to uttend upon ehiolera patients. A | & valley above Sacramento as far a& to the interpretation of our Goverument cipher. Start- meet who knew enough of their own and of tench | go but without ell success and influence. The great Ttogethe » . | wealthy Jow died in Pera day before vesterday, and his 3 pher. Start- | ) 1 iy but k # 2l A 3 3 . not altogether enchguted by this Cabinet of Counts, of - b 04 A anguage to know how to humbly but knowingiy sppre- | majority of the Prussian Cutholics are of opinion that the | which ho is the President, not mors than the country, and house {s now surrounded by His two physicians ing from tho postulate baso that the costly telegram iu | ciato the qualition, was sayiug the other day of Prevost- | secular power of the Roman Conrt exorcises cither no in- | it another Ministet of the Interior would e ufec. | Temuin in the house, but ta funeral was eelebrated question must relate to Mexican affairs, they have come | Paradol's last brilliant volume: “There are passages in it | fluence npou the state of the Cathoiie chureh, or, if any, | tions for the German Parliament, instesd of Count Eulen- | ¥ith great e Many huudreds collecting ut the house % these, smong other, results of their hermeneutic labors; | of Which youmust go back to the ' Provinclal Letters 10 | a pernicious influeuce. The reformation of Italy out of | hery, they would most likely turn up less opy ot thoal ve the body and convey 1t to the cometery. 'These | i, game proposed ultimstum;” “an imposed ultimatum ;" | find the peers. Junius? e is to Junius what a lancet is | political division and foreign dominion into an | ejyments than is to be ex "c,‘.d'“,,,., T Mu‘.m,‘ml_ ordinary proceedings are supposed to be the result of h'so.m-.mmu property Bext door but one to a final, amicable arrangement with | to jackknife,” Mr. Veuillot is a meat-ax. The lusty | united state hes found nowhero truer sympa- nees. Cousultations ‘“[:me wurihy(' e (.uh“'m. the now light thrown upon the cholora by the International (] Frauce for her liberation from the disastrous Mexican | butcher-boy vigor with which ho lays about him, regarded | thies as in Prossis, and especiully in the Rline the clections for the Parliament will begin Cholera Cowmission which Las been sitting in Constanti- [ At Tebuma the water was so high that the people west with Basiness—the United States voluntarily taking np where | purely as an artistic performanec, is admirable. provinces, everybody fees thut the regeneration of Italy e Ol 0 be hoped. will bo_ finished n the | Bople most of the Bummer. boats in the streets, and into stores. e o eave it " - the United Statesuaderiukes to | Some yoars ago, Mr. Veuillat wrote o work entiled | must of neceenity absorb the Papal Statos sooner of Iater, | e month g1t R o s e Moy g s R 15 enlly o fuct that the Viceroy of Egypt is about to | _ The ship Kiviuvible, one busdred and uineteen days Grm N. e the undisturbed retreat of the Fronch troops, and | Les Parfums de’ Kome. Mr. Vouillot is & very full- | and only Jesuitic casuistry can blind to the view of such | Berlin has 16 elect six member; ok T | make Egypt # Constitutional Kingdom & lu Ty | Tyhasiripiic, S0 o Aetole Mo stz e e i Governmont, set und | biooded, passionate, athiotic, fearlow man—naturly, to | necessiiy. Alroady ut the time of the first Ttalisn war, | ~Jiie withdrawing of the Engilsh embasey from Dresden | S0k11AS TEuR cannot easly be sscounted for. Those who | Jdasbaight s &re brokooutia lenge ireseiony ik SNy Daid op.by its pasronage, accept and fulfil the pecuniary | use s popular phrase that ho wouid not object to in the | when the South Germaus called so violontly for Prassii’s | yay b rogard o o Rt sty hand of Louis Napoleon in everytling beliove that | {iouy g5 0o, y o obligations toward French clsimants which poor Max | £ase, ““full of the devil;" fought his duels in his early | Lelp to Austria, aguinst Italy, iu the Rhenish Proviuces, count Wi “'m sospect b “m’ Sont ,’w", this is o first step toward replacing the present fawily of | “The Evening Bulletin newspaper says Stephen J. eatered into.” time; ‘got religion” many rears agn, however, and car. | the eousiction was predomiuunt that it would be & grest | England has ained by her mitiative s right on tJowers | Sultans at Coustautinople by that of the Vicoroys of | recently an American cltisen, reshling o Boskea hae et teanslation of the substance of the six hours | Tied over o the now eause i his brawn and pluck, and | wisfortune if Prustia wero to tight in Austrian vassalage e Gemmany: the whote' independont press sckpow. | EGYS- Bushs would 1ot be for the botter. a«.“lfuu A wore plausible suggestion is that he has drained the dom, und siders it as foreshudowing » d“M Kingdom, which kas heretofore long. $15,000 Cable telegram, is the work of well-paid traus. | €very ono of the devil's telling tuves, which he has since { on the Miucio border, and leave the Khine frontier opsn | jejees it, The ory of the small court disapproved the Y bl la 3 country until he canuot poseibly lay any more taxes upon Iaters, whoso interest in the quotations of the Mexicau | used and roared with stentoriun voico in the service of the | to the French, aud pay the expe after all, by abandon- 3 a | loan on the Bourselies deeper than soundings where the | other party. Iu Rome, everyt t wonderfully | jug her own interests us a great pow o German, | Measue very naturaily, and especially the court of Welmar, | 1y ogle, but by the devico of making the peopie tax | &%) “ Atlaatio Cablo lies, and isused a8 confirmation of an earlier- | $avory to lim. Paris recks wit Aro W11 & 31600k | 1o an for the boncit of ths Siapaburpil dynastio poiey: | or oo e e e oaun for 1ho. ks of 8 tholelves o hopes to grind something oo out of them. P e £ [ o Mg g i bort report-—# canard begotten by kiteson pigeons—origi- | in i# upturned nose—naso contemnere adunco—which | AttLut time there was not yet au allinnce with It pject of on e 4o T eared. but will | The pian was 80 absurd in itselt that it _was universally ‘l‘hgunmbmurkno'fl’hn :'vln water mark, B aeEog oes, 1a & Laiien newspaper | certainly’ han o wonderfulseent, and seciuitigly bas an | e frst gerin was 1ad at that time. The principal Pros- | K3 Vluae in s short e, A dedolt ppeared, bt Yo | Tewurded us @ cauncd when flist published fn tho | nd sill ising. last week, and nimch propagated and cherished here—so | unconscious relish for thein. 5 ho Cologno Gasette, before all, pro- | oo ioen (B8 ke 10 be accelatatod In aner to pre- | Andependance Belge. The . best ‘The British ships Dragon, for Cork, and Mary Aus, for Live, that the Mexican loan was wafted up, two days ago, frow | ‘The boak, apart from its peeuliar literary quality al- | nounce y i favor of Talian national | hoes b rorInee o e e e meaclatm. the prosegs | 18 Coustantinople _ridiculed the story; but sailed to-day. - i o iatoa 4 to 8 Bacourage by G ety tad | rady e o, varih, tadiog o o i, g | b aonut Auery 1 Aunies Ariinse oo o ot stios Shich migar e | {0, 0ot Sl Rt o sty by e R P his iuterpretation, the old s TUBS Again—is sot & run- ed, orous, frequently just, intentionally | cany and Modens, and the Bourbous of Naples . inment. It wi aftor the Fren i wn L 20 ; y P people iuto danger, as pubile opinion would wot pardon | JinTe oy oy Egyptian Parlisment. 1 have mot yet | Belcher wmllr, ‘l:l.v Ls teuders, 74. Corps, died st Be- 0 n i i itter, constantly hi i3 i Pi g eady ¢ the Goverment here will pructically assume r itly humorous satire upon Parisian men and | Prusso-Ltalian ulince seemed to be wircady ouly u guer- | FolGovariment for lentent measures in caso of any un- | *ill 1wl b un Feypian BRAenotL, b Ao orby | Col 4. nicia Arsenal ‘Minister Bertheany, late of China, the appointed suc- | end Theress and Viotor Iugo, through and over all theso | still to make the King now change his dirceti o . - “ cotsor of A, Alpntholon ot Washin e for | tho modorn Farisians, the corrupt. damnatie, damned, | soverance it & fundumental rot s charnoter, Prass, | e proeiling power in the Pedoracy, » Federal Conmivs | suund that these are the' most important questious 1o be {natruc tions.before starting for bis post. o yout carres- | Present age, are treated of and maltreated with a stylo, | therefore, will never weaken her alliance with Italy by '“':;,'dm i tative character will assist, und ‘,m'fi'm" solved in refereuce to the Assembly. pondent, & aere outside ubserver, not cheek by-jowl, as so | aud spirit snd huwor combined of “Torquemads and | favoring a power which is adverse to the unification o slested matabers, 10 be "‘3"'“""‘8?'““““"" will o Poor Egypt! The rule of the Sukan is bad enough, the wany of my professional brotheren are habitaally privi- | Rebelsis snd Moliere. Ttalian nation, and indeed acts s tho spiri the Parlinment of tho Fodoral State. Tho excoutive | i rorfhl'p ovinee is onough to melt the Leat, but ot oo e B i inters, # high quarters * an ‘otber | Ot comical festure, which tho suthor 4 evidentls un- | ccording to tho device, ! non possumus power will have to dispose of several matricular eontribu- | ;0 p, urison with Egypt, the Administration of Turkey “ariginal somrces " of muddied iuformation—tt does seem | couscious of, and so all the more smusing, i prominently | guarantees on Prussia’s part would not only trouble tious snd of some direct revonues; in case of n war, forin- | 1 G Ty e TR ™ Ad “now the Daked, tars- e paster a1 Compubgao in siso | set forth i, the introduction o this e ek S | e e T sl Do Drumts:] £1a50%, of the revenises of he Zollverels. s lonor o the | 1o eltlised and forpesiing. dsd now, B8 "t etbing, quite itke ho ret of us, for instructions frow the | suother is frequently projected to the notioe of thy reader | at variance with France, us ranc has ropesiedly der | future Diet Mr. Vou Baviguy s desiguated, the frner | vary much as though South Carclius had proposed. ten e e o msiniontions cf time and chance, | of its wuccessive pages. Mir. Veuillot asserte i the sol- | clured sho would never sufler forcign intervention ia Prossian Embassader at Frasfort. Heriin will of course | ygiry ago fo o constitutional government over Peipi here aro vexed nnd irritated—surprised, oven, | emucst good faith Uiat ha sends thie pre-pufied, bigh- | Italian affaics. That Prussia shauld let heraclf Lo enticod be tho seat of tho Fedoral Goversment. . Ter slave population, with s Parliament at Charleston. despite Ad expersence—at the istently eloquent gilence priced, nsnhun valuwme to the public he ises from | into Austrian labyrinths, and follow a direction 0 con- The Austrisn Provineisl Diets, at present assem- 1 alluded fn & h'u latter to the infamous treatmen Yo Bomitenr op Mexican affim. & wative of ubter, mausenting contompt. He will guin, | tiary to her own interests and tendencies, cannot possitly | bled: bave directed their attention chiefly on two de- | which Robert College had received at the bauda of the Dear, seuaive ganeral seader, sagposo you wea the vo- | betide much otesiety, some thoussuds of foaucs for it | be belloved, snd can only be adlirmed by tenduneiouy | ficioneios in the managament of the State, on the frightful | Tyrkish Goverument, sud exprossed my surprise that our epusibio editor of that enterp: shect, and suppose | fram this conteuned public. e reminds the reader of | untruth. The Jropmume of Count Bismarck fs | financial discomfiture and disord, on the neglected | own Government should allow its citizens to be trodden public education and obseuration produced in consequence I now understand that Mr. 1 4 d & sad hour in logki; that marvel- | What the reader is in constantd: of f ing, that ! ¥ were.to ng over el nt dangor orgotting, founded upon endly relations with France and B oho concordat with Rome. - The Diet of Lower Austris | Sewsrd has dectded to i o harigutoof the 11 ous serics of uninferrupted trinmphs and penultimate Viewllot, is 8 " Chaistian. Italy upon one side, sud upou the consorvation of good % aver was. thers, such a militant, prisedighting | intelligenco with Hustis on the other: s 1t the ouly | metions fo s eonvocation ofthe goversl Pacliament of the | The establishment of thia Collogey under tho Presidescy u 0 elaog speesees of your Mexican tion, whish you hase i.d ar sub-sitors publish tberein for the last | Chrietian before in priné ; he wields the Cross like u war- ranty for in Europe. 1f t ire ou ground of the Con f th Dr. Syrian e St would y0u ‘b in ulich hasto this 30th | ubi hut Be does make “/hita." %o the studeut of the et el B b LI G et maent sy, reacting the_asboes: +The ud: | Hetros uader s Rev. . Bo e Mg ilowophioal settlement of the finances must needs grow in a dreads | aud wisest clinrities over devised for the beuefit of the ning—th that recponsibility for the Mexican lean which, without | thivgs—snd women. The press, fine arte, belles lettrer, | tion of time. T post happy thought of Bismacek e aponilbie bt open and sedlous recomumeas | thosowers wud tho uniform streets, crested by tho present | £ persuads King Wiliam into ¢ T3 allintoe, and 1 1t was | Lawful demonsirations from Ahat oo earg the | the bustinado ot tLe cowlide, nor whethar ‘more hea ten | * il R BT AT dation, kad never caught & French subsoriber. oriratiod, 1he adminisieuticn 1tself, The thoater, | dithoutt to porsando him 10 it, 1t would be more diticalt | STfALISstiADof the North-Gertian HedettoTih Prasaia ae | Tembers will bo allowed 1o spenk et ance. By all those R 8 er will r of your renders who have traveied in Egypt will under- 3 £ of Noserbup g0 bring your Mexican pews down latar | capacitics of the French teugue, as to_ the the necessity of Papsl dominion as the Germans were thag Get. ul” That u{mn‘ Tespongible editors scde | Teader, and the student of actual £aris life, the ook offers | the 16th m'mry eo::nndnl s universal aupromacy, it | ful progression dutivg o & yosr of Govornwental | They are an _homor to America, and the Bope of consolathon BOW, 4s he J6oks okt of Lis dark. | instruction sxd entertainment in an unusual degree. would be folly indeed if North Germany—the cradle of | mansgemeny without budget” or control, as credit | merchants of New-York. But tho jealousy of the Jesuits eucd windows, is that his opponent and giuch beloved - ——— the Reformstion and predominantly Protestaut—shonld with unsurmountable f{mpediments, | apd the narrow-minded fanaticism ‘of Ali enemy, the y friondly ally of France, will THE ROM go in for keeping up, in_the second half of the 19th cen- total want of cooperstion of 8 roprosontation | gtructed the progress of Robert Coll plunge into the fobly ho is creeping out of, justify him, AN QUESTION. twry, what Gerioan men pronounced to be 8 universal evil and recourse was takon to the last exped; though a sit been bought and_pai nd ondems jeself by the impolitic, expensive, iniquitous | From oas Specisl Correspondent. already 400 years ago. But as regards the German Catho- otea-pross. The insecurity of the financlal | can meithor build upon it nor telad Pragtios of e popudia ;‘l fllllwll';!‘ of n:l«uunmn. g ighamaed <if WnO:“DW 9, 1866 l.llu. lgoy liavo experienced what Row in goivg on in Rome :flp:n P';‘:'“ ;::‘r;‘:,‘""::"p::'" .'l:‘l m'."h::"n‘l;:"m ll‘llflhsn I they Liold the permiesio low the windows e I we are ned— t r ol a8 wo ns . L ¢ t hLe pe dare: Putting tog besn sud done sbout | already ‘two generatiol Germany bad, before the ty of aomb ol 5 gmiucuon RS 208 hum o; :bh“ !‘“;Y&e'r; there g0 an :i’aflvi:: rlv,y“::n n:‘;"bg:”::‘;‘!:d":m ':;l.:fd I::;o:* Romo in thé 1asé theoe days, 1t 18 yéry Gridéot that the flmlm:m w«lffl:-vflg,xm& l{ m‘d foundations. No liberal progress in the depart- | fund our money or allow us to Froueh desd | that waste sdventure; "or south! 2o | uestion fs much Jess complicated then it scemed- two m"dm"”‘“.&w' bhhopnu s, | ments a{gmdminn, ndlnlnutnlmuknd 8 lonh‘-‘v;, ings. This is :!nnunly nothing more than justics, “ungratetal Ital,” united ia his u&u. and to Rowd, | weeksngo, with te soverejgnty by the dozen, ew; not 'fi‘&:‘”‘:"‘"fi}"&%""‘ :'d d silence of the | g not surprised that Mr. Beward has, at last, detormi: Whare ell for his cwedit) I8 woro questionable than ever; Furat: Tho protests of Prench prelates and pamplioteers Rhbsnd But undor the reign of the crozier the | 8red o bR onstitation. to fusist upon It. 1t is only streugo that he aliowed Khenish towns had dec! to & degroe that, for fn. | How mrfmlu&:vau of the Second Chamber ia on | two or three years to piss out taking measures to ous in t 05’ bring the Turks to their souscs. or enstwiid, to coveled Belgium, mockingly rfe from neghborly covelousaces; o Prussin, fatally feading Ger. | h#® produced no effoct on fho action of tho {French | yiyges, Cologns was redu'oed to Ialf the population it hed | some sotalan 1 doen by e waty 1 1 ire; or, yetfurther cast- | Government. The offiers of the army of occupation took | in medioval times, with o'e-third of its jzhabitants being | tlon motion of Mr, Duncker to the sum pro- ile this ente has , French to the Jeauita have recdived donations of lemg have boen mental R ries. ‘This has G, mighty emopi i il bey 1t d of th tu Intie employed for of govern- . f . o Cofi;; w: -::t"‘on w'#“.‘a:' bn?ill?. n:l‘ :{ n&.—%‘?}'&n_fi fl the | encournged to put up colleges and ‘his havin, 5 churches and uels lower raul mfil:, higher, The ‘tt‘: gl been mmpluflly uf: French !:i-um‘ vi?.l: scgouied : u oo "y h to the ses, and inevitable | Yeave of His Holiness on Thursdey, and will donbcless be magtership of the castorn e\ of that Meditorrancan, the | ooy frim Rome on Tuesday the {'.‘th. @ 1ocoguized apostle aud defender of Romau natgral Hights f ol renewed Ttaly comes now ; walls, Yo s to eegtial conth TEROFSS Y Napateoisy | Second:; Tha.wufsieudly tone of the Uligimontaes in whanv ‘were covering IaXge aroas where Mipister of 1ot [ Snd Bourty Al of busy wesvers gud | motion, ) wes s | in Furkoy, : #lbitions vigion; or nortk vard 8 Nttle, just acroes out of Franog teyard Nupolcon shows 1has jbev have | theye bad streots ¢ o b - .

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