The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, June 22, 1859, Image 2

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firanimioo; Itioo kit lookoloi: to
• •;,Ir.y*Olialtfitiw•Yout
..Tbe War Adviti , j,.e-bY, ihtLi!er s i n.
Ali 'doubts about titliiprOperisinad'of the '
Paint of victory at **o - .l,oiben',.cjearik
rip by the details of battle received by the
llingaroo and the•sidiatiiiiiint,'adllOCSA the
Persia. The Austrian generals have been
circumvented by the superior strategetie skill
'of the Allies, and the Austrian troops have
beeti.uOmpolied to yield to the invincible dar
itiglf
,the r Altied temierw , The simple at Me:
tehte, hee'lleVoniffalbilthoroughly establish
has fbllowed it by
4 .1 1 1, 1 444 01 .94efMet1ge e n , ee4 taking 1200
prisoner!. The Arintilantroopsare now retreat
ing over the Adds:- The wildest dresnie of
'thaAlllesieUld soareely 'have antidipated by
this time more important results than those'
' It has been but
'iveekic'aild 'yet has already
iLeenielithe4Pgeir.,by victories which' are rec
.:lll4 ef. H . ! :very ; important , lf not of a bril.
*sit character.,,Milin; has been, entered, in
,trinnipbby,Yrorcia If inwitrEiNsiOdproilipar,
•natwithstandingthe obstinate resistance of one
of tfittilitmepoWerfhl armies that ever existed.
IG.stritiibt has been thlly , sucaesefril in North
weptera
VtifithartY;', and , 'General D'USHIIOI
Ip ~iri{a` been : titainiet - edi and, : from present
41444404.1;1#040.110:k01ive,n0 been
epeso3 , ,driveatiemthafOitiortef invaders,
Ifet,4 l lee ‘ hei'4 l 4 leet neerlT, ll :XeetnhaxdY: in
'tend4o rely rather apart their strong felliftea
• thiniforpostecidon thap,,,Arpon , their prowess
Utile open of-battle.' ••• —' •- .
7 The iiiikirrectietiiin , Blibm and the north
-7w
rntowns of Lonibardy hero exercised an
linpereant r. influence Upon the operations of
the nenti,ading,..ernilek,'And the Alliefi have
derived ; groat assistance from the sinspathy, of
she: Peeplei, This : is :but. a. just retribilthin
:upon Anstria for her vindictive • and tyranni
oonduct.terrarda her .oppressed Italian sub--
jeeterisinTit'is a crowning' glory of the Attie&
'arislealliat Pointer icolititatione hail their ad
6100 / 040 that vidunterers rise nOlir every'
410,41111,0*,w0ideefforta to drive the
bated A u 'ont of Italy •
The • prospects of, a speedy pence• do not
appeario be stall flattering. The Paris corns-
Pendent of - London ,Times asserts that
lira - important :neutral Powers—we • presume
:Pinssistalid England—intend to - inlist upon
an adinistaiard
,by which Sardinia shall - regalia
V4,44lldlarodelai =Lonibardi-Vene
itan:Poilaaei,he detachedlimn the 'direct
rule. of !Anstria,.,and placed nadet the inde:-
pendent gevenunent of an Austrian arch
duke ;, but it is scarcelypossible, in the present
stateOf the war, that either of the belliger- •
entelvill consent to suddenly- suspend military
apqathins. - Indeed; another general• engage-
Mont Is ilia to'be even noir:anticipated; and
ItiaXfinieredthit primate li'aetively Preparing
tia:ensbarkiti r tha"war. , ' :
110$, Ri_ 3 01 Mth litry yes been defeated by
taabilty,,,iittliiitieri Au the Itonee of Aoin
mons s .: '•••'•• •
`thr'Wtif -* •
„The ftdl• 4410 i: front which we pub
-481( 14:the itesteer Hanoarso,
place oa r ri*ein:ln,Pesiesalen of an that was
known in England, at the latest' date, of the
Battle Of /magenta and the events whichlm
medlately followed It. : The accounts are so
- catteh” atvarlanee with ea:ch othet, that pethap,s
.'w4orreat idea'Olthe treat event can best be
= ionlkirint one account - 'with the
hive collected' and
tipoc.respective beads,
lieued, thehattle, by France
z on, one slde„.and by Minko
s .'
• . .„
theOthere:::. ,-1 •
Itis ble to-read these bulletins -with.
ont - belnifitionoiiced that a:great," but not de-'
'oistiO,-• MOO haitieei; fought at ' Xsients---
- did - the "Atietrteins'ted; b6ik 'eetiMelpd' to .l
ilverode.-nltten sod Divta,=-Ihat k on june'.6 l
4.!°4o.#;;lfteiPie..b"atile, the' Mitnicipallty
ittlanj of
. N M;prestmee,AP*o6ol6 had Worm
11,d7tcriort Eincamoit, -that the annexation of
titimbildr to:4l.etimonte had. bear , acqeinnly
jproetstitiOd's ,. .i . 4ttitit;iin-the:adinlssion, of.the
`l44l•oolloeriii' likeilettly pm-Austrian .en
itt' ha's' ihdtfd htm
-eidt tiii l tebidd;*'idttipat nolittOrf
)01;0,0P1#42,irM.,:inieked' en" both- 7 06i
•. „ ,
= "Atariatoit - '
, =< * tr l VP / 4 4 / 1 0 4 064203i4im donut l r atiOtt , :ta•
ifejklklice*Viiiirittonlitely, held In that
, i ‘ . griseihi..ine of ktomo tiosliderble_h ilYed
ssainceincplinimfa tri notice.; Kr. ,Maxis is a
t gentlettlim'ofrare<genitti, polished apedifer
144'*Iitei,"a:linishaVpoett, 3 and, orlihad
He tins hien identified With'the •De,
Itoniatla..roy a i,ktlii ! kitre - 4xeali of his Iwo
14:aithanOloliated. ins
S tale' In which the
o.ppe4tion party , brie been eVerwbelitaingy be
maMtaiiiidAhnself , anfi sowed oe
lidenee•of - his 'political frieadiy aad the aohni
radon and respect of his political opponents.
Senator Denoike his ricerberre More devoted
antillgetiTiPslippiiititicthati Mr. Saudi and it
liili4iittacCiAat the Convention which'
abniinB4ol4fai Governor 'elected tour de
iegatag ,tp, the .aharleston Convention who
are,Prowedly for , Dotrow, and adopted the
;folliterriagimpredslve resolutions , +'
` 4 14.41 - val, 4 That theDemooraoy of Vermont,,in
vial language er the- Oinoinnati National Demo
era* Convention of 1850, . , recognise and adopt
titeprincirdee contained in the organic laws eaten
liViiinehe Territories of Kansas and Ifebreska, ,
as em ying the only sound and safe Volution of ,
the slavery gueetion—nott•interfsrance by Co•
'gran iota slavery in ,Stato or Territory, or, in
its Dirrt, of
< Revo lved what, th ie was the basis . of the Oom•
arentise'lleastirsi of Dm, confirmed by both the
Dlimoinithi and N 71,4 partite in 1852, rightly ap
plied to'.the - organisetion. of ;Territories in 1854,
and triumphantly ratified by,the people in the
eleotbe of 1850, .
Resolved ' t
_mot , unyielding adheres,.
re, Ind wuirorat application of,'" this Democratic
Organisation •of the Territoriee,
Maytag the people thereof perfectly free to form
mid,regnlaMDmir domestic institutions in their
own yrev, snide° only to the Constitution, of the
United Statitiorill e °dually and forwier defeat
and puellown'seetieuil legislation and agitation,
preteet the "lOW of all -the States, and the olti
n•lnteo( Amity portion , thereof, and maintain the
prosperity, peace and harmony , of the Union.
A Cai' in iroint.
It id singuitribst the doctrines advanced in
;the (et erst,Gails 'f6 Mr.' LE OLEIC
eiro - tild t he'ff imOir 'pranticeili 'florin to be an
. iontt-fitieriona and inemind One during the
Adttlittistristion of /fr. Eltosons, in the vary
.:conirtrplrennoe) , ,to which the letter of Gen e
Uwitd :referred. Notwithstanding
the empty profanities toUthe - Administration
,of regard for aditittedfliftlneiril; seeres'to,be
Ignore - lin iiiipottaniprecOent
iestablished
r Ito apt op' ' during- the
' Mini Ural' '
gn B
recti chief of the
Amnion past y . ; 2 , pe 'New: - York . .Ezpreo ,
:o;tranielvAilliort;Air , silly" of the Department de
Ner,„ll.the.SoirtiS, otranste; left sa , ,darrag the
,tivielly air I liosashipt, 'units/es therefore
att tatty* de la eons cripisom lie arrived at Ifs*
Chleituthmiedi theaticakappliostien for oitisonenin,
'mad 114141nly,patitritifeed 1045, `Romeo sea.
easeful An, Weimar' 5,1, Liailsisci, and. tit
1852 rafter -in Amos of nearly+ fourteen yeas,
he'aterned ilia hitt, fanny in his native
end 4 under the riiffialll 'Pollee in Fro" ,
he ftras. artleted tventrfocir hours star his
reaps iminedietely, wrote to Mr. Hodge,
,thil nearest 4marioin"oenstd. The latter; thet •
ke inikht,' the beater attend • the Data;
finitedittelj-requested that • Mr. Allibert might
UV-brought r ' - to: which . , retineet
wasprompgy, Acceded to by the, General•in. ,
. oommandhig the military division. Ile
murtftereflosullit 'before the 'Trate:aide Guerra
es'ati:frssasesa, Ind eoedemned Mr.. Allihert
-has ailliiptio pt . ! four .thousand franc, for a sob.
arum, Mr, litylp *wild not allow WM arms
*eke e afferOma Audited s rehearing of his
6220 0 1 14 11 0 1 01 in pereCn before the "Difuttaf de
issidlpleirded theories ;- add after two tri
hclic,reild ids • monthe,, As was
ackno t esde f or,s t 404;!•tAatt cietgren, anareaers
carpe, fie ,g 414, Mint:Ate' at War at Paris, di
'tactics/ kir tydecd a. ' Mr 'Hodge give hint slam
en
port trhiehtlichisl hy the pollee j and with which
Ittiriuttitned liMmehulekimith his family, travelled
Aistainh , flrorcisa and embarked pt lane on his
litstitrie attl,Vaitod Meter. '
mesa on' Ste lke Department
I:4 Wet, ditaite of the cite, and bfr.
Acetate, thillierfeterrif State under Mr. Fillmore
tm thorn 'olirldareli,lB6B;(the last day be was I T :
wrola,acomplinatatary letter to Mr. lodge,
lemilieht=
oli o ; t was 'retitled to learn that
11,111betti telsoie *Mt aad Imptlmmotent as' turin•
entealt,altionsips a nettospesi cotheen. of the ;lulus
0 ,4 41 05 se-leestfassed to rat acomenteatlons, has
selseked""telleitoshtialr doe ta tfie t?sm ed
teeldaitalrh lailortalamt throughout the long coallo
yararpreerotace prp, ! at with the Inaba:l
-go em the objeat ‘ •
iehrshatth 10 betteeteml that this ease may be cos.
witotAlet.,seeetsteys, asA.osi oromote. cad that
A o y,, it iter'stateseesitsect assimee sit she Vatted States
may visit,Puess toitbosa dearer of arrest for mill.
nifessiritte*lsr.tinsevisti it nudist wee of. With
'lea mid Ofriilmo7,o,o4,ol,lolba.f.rul"."
• - el"-••••• `i• •• ,‘,, " "iiiifltlrratoist,'iold line,) now
-0 - IX4ll 'l lYl:4 t lll ` Ci tt" 3 4 l3 hiiiiafiTh . eirit l erlie Pennsylvania
uridaritae,illn- - -- - -- w- -- ---- - i. - IN In good, order,
d ~"Pteet theititiVoralinelee,
lc '
' - paiiehetialtd freight twithiess.
*red
. 46 filititItillf, ~-f .. ...- f-- • ‘d'; and the snort
ttli li4l # l'-r.4 " ,1 • ! '" 7-7 ' 'ld th ' il r eellifolt and
**-
11.1:illen ' t1;1111-4 ' ! Tie 406 at Wont
llittakiiollol';giclrautegf '''. 'AIM beerveto,
! '
ith IMO
tffe r UVektriinier, and' a 6 ged
any I
iiti rutliertBittnittitelitteolollllll6 coin , '
htudiera. •The trains. of the company lov
timer s
u thetr
Oral Eleventh and Market streets, three
4 101 . 1 7*
. . .
BY MIDNIGHT MAIL
.„ .
Lotto* iko , ..coasionttl:"
icorresporele*of The "yrass)
*A5110410 ON Imo 2E, 1859.
The next House of Representatives will assocs•
blein the new Halt on the first of December next,
ender singular auspices. The 'removal of the
comfortable desks and luxurioias cushioned chairs,
prepaied for the meuibeis at so muolt expense,
wilt give to the great saloon a vacant and echoing
Appearance. I confess that the innovation dots
not Strike - 6'e' favorably, - Mir do I know any one'
who hail full confidence is the success of the alto.
ration. In England, it it no uncommon thing to
see legislators 'sitting' on theft benches, with hats
on, and.the ministers only live tables and, wilting
materials before them.- Whether it le propOiecl, to
introduce snob practices Into - oar Congress remains
to be mark. A. true Representative ought Lobe pre
sent as mush as possible during the .deliberatiotts
of the body of which-he is apart; but this will he
found to be, extremely' irkoome, if he Is deprivesi
Of thierdinitio Means of , oorrespondeuoe. Here
after; If the present arrangement should be main,
tamed, the Representative will be forma to de his
writing, with other outside business, to the with-,
drawing rooms atbalied the Half—a
,priatlee
whioh may, lead to other practices not of- th e most
agreeable character.' But " we shell see what we
shall see." " •
The Charleaton'Airef:ezery—is warm. Administra
tion:organ—of a late date restates its position• in
regent•to the Convention which la to assemble at
that point for the nomination of a Democratic oart
didate for President. I Copy fot . the benefit a the
uninitiated
Ast for an & &Maude' with Dough's, we will here
elate that the , Atercury, will sustain or counts.
name him nadir no eiroumstancom whatever. Ile
is a traitor to the Democratic party, and a traitor
to those principles which nouns the South. Ile is
dangerous and designing. Away with him! Lot
Asia he 4 anathema maranatho, say we. Nor shall
the Mercury sustain any. platform put forth •by
any party whatever, ,which' platform or party
shall maintain or °adores, directly or indirectly,
by affiliation or omiselone, the fatal positione and
f r so st bat_polioygos t ged by Donglee with regard
to oar territorial rights.
~We repudiate the whale
'Aherne by 'which it is sought to tie our hands'
and , nnetrele as, tut with the folds of a snake, to
crush out or smother the vital power of our olvilt
ration .
" Finally, the Merialy shall sustain no man, of
whatever party, clique; tried or section, who
fhall•stand upon the platform of Douglas' princi
,plett-though he - ittotildN4 'nominated by twenty
Demotgatio Conventions 'For the party which
would permit , that tweed to an enemy of the South,
pad, we will war
_with it to the knife. For our
selves, and we can safely for South Carolina, we
will neither countenance, Sustain, nor submit to
any Welt party,platforra, principle, Or pelitiolans."
f Thet/tfercurw is not only the organ of the, Ad
*infiltration I. , Charleston, but believe its
friends are retained in °Moe by the President and
honored whenever he can honor them. I, do not
suppose thafthis renewed declaration of war, how
ever, will in the slightest degree impair the in
fluence of the Mercury with the President and
his Cabinet. ' The difference, mark you, is one
not of priesiple but of latitude ! Now, when
you of The Press stated' your; determination not
, to support a candidate, nominated upon the odious
doctrine, of intervention- for, the protection of
slavery in the• Territoriee, you were forthwith
handed over to the tender mercies of the horrible
Black Itepublitans,' but yen live In a free
Stete,•and therefore hieve no right to speak Inds
pendentlyron nth a imbjett: Who is this Douglaso
by the way, so ostraolted by. the -Mercury? A
man who more emphatically reprisents the messes
of this American Democracy than any other states
man now living, and - yet he and these masses, are
to beeheatelout of their repreaentation at Charles
ten and denied a voice in the deliberations of the
National Democratic &invention, by men who slot
under the authority Of the Adminletration, and
whose friends are supported by its patronage ! !
Should Mr filidell.consent - togo to Prange—,
and• that the project of fending him there feeert.
early entertained, 1 have now no doubt—We shall
have a very thorough and prompt trial on the Cuba
question. Mr. Slidelnisat the author of the thir
!pugilism bill of tbe Dub session; and /tit 'Walsh
ingtos in utter disgust when t,itat not over** in
vention was emesenlatad: , liik report, trogrreation
ably forcible. showed, how'anxious he was to, con
imamate the purchase or acqulaitipn of Lluba, and
thld report *int! the chart and" lotion should
he enures the piiitititi of Ammitan Minister near
the wean of the NoiParor of 'Pristine'. , Mr. Sli
dell •le a ine IffillOV lithely, his lady one of the
most accomplished and elegant swim in *Merkur,'
( whose vernaotdar is Prosiest) , and his fonsllY high
ly adulated. Poseessed.,of, Gnomons Meene;• and
Atetudomed to fashionable and public life,
Slidell would make a figure in the Printhcapitall
and tren,if he did noCessetteed le brieging home
~ eitti geho of tile - Antilles "In his breeelseit"pi4et,
Werild kenve !rebind him the reptitietleirW having
isierrednestresolute, ontspoken, and generous re
pfsientative•of MS rosintry. <; ,', ' -
Pan ope"eismiekt of 'the Buropettir
tiedWerAues
.ishiedi musVisreisently% ettriitt great Itteni
4 ilati,:ind 114014 a. deal of diatustdon.. hthitte
- tithe Gonna* - element. It is gppermittitaithe
Girtninle States it. rapidly coed:Mating against
iloilllarlil/ 61 eiln ,' , if not ist fiver of AUstrhi. The
begin to thew itself in - the
'United States among" the adopted pitissens of those
nntietelitiet, and I'o4ll not be surprised if oir
tain domestic farms divot grow out of the Bend
throws of these, who • think that - to support the
Fneua4.Nuipsiror in •his war of,deliverance, in
le to oppose (Ismail' interests, and ignore
Eieiffita helinge: Prussian' minister at this
point_ Li ta id, extremely animated on this
petition, sind,l harm* to know that 112211} , of the
Normans throughout our oouptry are a good deal
disturbed at the popularsiepronstrations in favor
of Napoleon. put: mirdetir at Berlin, Mr. Wright,
the 'late Governer of Indiana, 'represents to his
tudydepondantsl that the• people of Gerniany are
preparing for the contingency, which id , far from
remote, of opposing what they regard as the ten
dency of the Emperor of ' the Famish to place
himself in the position _ of the arbiter of, the future
destinies of Barone. -
The late articles in the New York Herald, look
ing to Douglas for the Presidency, do not give ea
tiefaotion at- the White House. his Buchanan
ought to write another letter to his satanic favo
rite, protesting against this , freezirtg,rapport.
Promote J. Grunt!, who has
-been luxuriating at
thereto of MS per day at certain continental wa
tering plates, is to be superseded, which will have
the effect of bringing him home to resume his old
relationship of personal hostility to Mr. Bucha
nan, The ssontinuird denunciations of the public
preys, in regard to this scandalous appointment,
have at last induced 'Mr. Buchanan to dined that
his bounty Should be' itopOd. •
The news from Misino, reoeived yesterday, indi
cates, that Mr. Appleton's State will go about four
to one against the Administration's territorial po
lity, and flat-footed in favor of the Douglas dot
trine of popular smereigutV. I have obtained a
copy of tne rendutions which have been adopted
by nearly ail the Demotratio meetings held in that
State. They are models of their hind, and I tom
mend them to the Demootatio party of Pennsyl
vania :
Restived; That the Government of the United
States should not forte the institution' of slavery
upon the'fferrileries against the will of the pro.
pie thereof, but that the people, of each Territory
ehould be allowed to 'determine fhb question' for
thenisselvee, without'the interposition of Congress,
and subject only to the Constitution of the United
bastes - '
Reeolved, "That Ibis doctrine is founded upon
printiplee as antient of free governtnent itself,
and, in &swo llen°. with them.iimply dotterel that
the people of a Tear-Soy, like, those of a State,
Shall, decide for thereseives Whether slavery Shall
er shall 'not exits Within their limiti."
1?(Jolved. Thit the new dttetrine, that the Con
stitution confers the right of holding Slaves in the
Territories in defiance of the Withie of the people
thereof, 'and that Congress should ` smut laws
giving Slave property higher rights than other
property therein, is a wide departure from these
printiplee, and'orouM renderthellemetratio party
jtudly obnoxious to the charge of deception and
dishonesty.
The Pike's Peak Gold Mies.
All - doubts about, ! the 'value 'of .the Pike's
Peak gold mines have-been dissipated, and
the extraordinary richness of many of the
claims has been fully established by witnesses
'of undoubted character, and, what is better, by
the arrival, in Leavenworth end' St. Lonis, of
'considerable quantities of the gold.' New
endgrants are constantly travelling
,to the
mines, saiteven,some of those . who bad been
wofnUq discouraged by the sad disappoint
ments of a first trip thither have resolved
:npott a second- experiment.
,Amateur gold
diggers, howeverk would do well to remember
that the emigration to Pike's Peak has already
been very , great, and that, if-they do not take
proper 'precautions, they , may be subjected to
hardships and d iisppoletia eats' almost as griev
ohs. as those the late disconsolate returned
Pike's Peakettifo'hitterly complained of.
Bra-Box Dontoavzow.—At eleven o'Olook, to•
snorrow, the dedioation of the Presbyterian
Ghttroh, in Atlantic City, will take place. The
Roy Dr. Charles Wadsworth will proaoh the Bei
men, and other elergYmen will participate izi the
services. Parilowlers of the price of tickets, and
the plume where they are geld, will be found in
the,advertisement in, another column This pro
ject is worthy of every support. ~ The design is to
furnish a people bordering on the'Atlantlo with a
neat; commodlowi house of viorsidp, (to seat say
five btindred persons,) free from debt, and which
may prove - a' blesslog, not only to them, bat to
snot& of oureiticens as, from limb to time, visit the
seareds for recreation. The profits on the sale Di
tiekets (which are pot at a low'prloe) will go to
defraying building expenses. - •
.d.. Leavenworth oorreepoodent of;the New York
:Epoosing Poit, wrltlng - tteder date of Jane 10th
exPrellaea the fullest eopfidenoti 'lri the late gold
etorlee,from Plkeie,Perk.
8211.7A31M B. Bnows, Esq., thei
sleeted Clit7 Tremont, be iwom Into office on the
Gib Or Icily. It Sc Atatifd that Blt Samuel Shaeffer will
be big book-keeper, and Smoot P. Welsh Ws paying
clerk.
THE PitESS.---MILLADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 1859.
The Latest- Enopean New
ARRIVAL= OF THE KANGAROO.
ENOI 4 IBIC VIEWS OF .THE BATTLE OF
MAGENTA,
NAPOLEON'S ' GENERALSHIP.
GERMANY WANTS TO FIGHT.
NEW PRUSSIAN LOAN.
RUSSIA AND FRANCE.
=CM GIIZA 03Str 0 WA. PIiIEIO3..
Lombardy JUoachzed to StircUaio,/,
Freud! ) Sardinian, and .Atistrlan
LOSSES OAT' D 0,27.1- SIDE:S.
NAPOLEON IN Tilt RATTLE.
,
Thb Austrians Leayst4 . and
Nanitileon . and Viatot;,Ei6;yOutel,in•-Milailt'
QBSIBA , Dl's IiatrEMEDIa!S.
The Markets; 'the Etinde, ete",
• The Kangaroo ateamehlporh lett le Live 91
"spC ,
on the Bthilist.;aud Coik on the 911iiiirtivid at
New York yesterday:, Mose Orbit newilia4 been
anticipated ,by the 4ngio-Faitin, svhfoll also left
Liverpool on.theiith: - • „:2•,• • ••
The Morning Herald gives a barifully-Pra•
pared list of MI new Roam of ilomMozio, which
divides' as follows : /1148 6 ,
pendent Liberals,ll6; Talmarattonlans,.lo74.ftna,
sellites, 148 ; Mr. Dried's fallaiverS,2B. • Oa
Herald contends that, at the vary, weist, mliiiiiters
will command a majority ` of 20 in 14 "cioufldinaa
motion: • • -
, •
It Is said that ca p ta i n " Mabel) , t o lb...gentle
auti;t4n,,
man -now • suiting ae,eotreepiondent fat e , ,Timat
wlth'the Anglian army.: 'lle ha* ear ' both
the Eivillah and Anstrian - "iittrietch , , iR. the
Tints: sorrespondrtt; , dating "thellat afar ,in
Lombardy. ~',-,
~ , • ,
~
The ohanner fleet will aboldw atiSpltheadyn the
241 h, and will consist of thirty penattta,lielndint
fifteen otter
.theline .', !- ', , ;',•, , :,,. , : •
res Tli pec e ttg lid te l efa a tt il ltYii l f
Piot that, tlet Austria's army • bed retreated frOM.
the geld, and that.the capital of -Lembardfisali*
in the hands of the Allies.
The Leedom •Pors remarks, that. ilnee Monday:
morning the public has been passing to and ftoin
the metropolis, with. its monthepen, restily.td. swat
low any canard that in its way.", and,
ter oensuring tbaxerilidoatlott of its ootiteinfove.
ries, indioates the (deer Mid marked progresainf the
Allies as follows: •• - .
They are now: in Milan. • PaiWis evisettated:
Cabinet 'Urhauli corps Is dispersed' iliaribeldt le
everywhere arboeeefal, and the main body , of the
Austrian army is felling beck,,.
The' Threw dean* heade r the *milt 'posi.
Mon in Italy, and though dose not regard Napo..
leon If I is having yet waved himself with glory,
sayi thit hitherto he has' made good Ms•
and worked out a steady stream • ' 4 ; -
The u loooti e r a it l Of the,/ , /titan tic!
ps
7FS PeetlittY. nett imastat eight
manibere ;eras •appointed, with antjterlVlAO 144,
four to their number, and to early:ear* infe et:"
Afoot, 'the 'averment ,of the Government .and -the
Islas of new £5 sharia" to the 'extent orteiltiio6o
wee de:cottoned, to,enjoy kprptfTenti, lll . llll rlctentret
eight per cent.
lawman Site 9 —Mon Deity Name eitk arti
cle of last evening sees: "Panda; this wirigh .
sheml 'borealis& etrearb, turCis-froder. Kit
*to t win Attlatitid— - • ••`
The news ot-," ticeline IA - tba-9:1,tr0 11 ei . "4
stoned 0.91111101 w hisk or Th a t- 0 --
by the ruiner thatt the $520,•,14441V.Pr•
vets *WC -- • - •
the market eloseci*4 7 klotsteitthelA
t. z ,„
Mt. allitticieres !or ,
hawse" of The gravest °tweeter which are to be
- hicesilvforth, emoted scgoOddeaboriticei,be
log total:toted as showing a GrissentiMA 'bran fat
tho War armament now on - foot. ' • 2 •
Tlist.Times s city, istdolli says the liniellee.Nof
news' from Branco has , faeliftased the - eitoulatissu
to-day, of a multitude of reports ea- severeitateck:
to the Ptenelerarsoy,` 'and Rif defeat 'Of Lthe *leg
of Sardinia has ' been iiisrfentlyleiletited. •
u It is oertairi, however, .that to the elate of list=.
doers nothing had transpired to ,establish these
statementa'i still.ther have hadihe'elfeCtof)seep
lug the stook Market in a"state of rixoltenteni, es
peel/gip as the prigieficom the Par& 'Eleatic show
ed a eline of 1' per oene:
"Tee eupplv of money hes not ea9oirietbred any;
diminution. Some persons are dispelled to paid
pate a further downward movement, in ltha Baltic
of Enclentl rate, whioh his been vedribed to 3
per cent."
Accord's:lg to the Gpposition stetementOo both
Houses of Parliament, Bevenmilliannounds must
be provided by the Government to bring the reve
nue up to the present rate of expenditure{-
The socountWill not 'probably prove quite e 0
di bunt:o Chanoellor of the Exohtoolereeems to
wish to prepare the public) for the corretdtdation of
tho subject, by announoing that financial measures
are in preparation, of the gravest character.
The accounts from I,stioashire, to day, show that
the last advioes . from India have given •,it great
check to the activity, In cotton geode. • '
In consequence of the suocassfal - 1414 'of the
IteniSets telegraph cable, the futatis telegr aph de
spatches from India may be expected to e trans
mitted in about seven days. • • .
The Times' Paris correspondent rays lt,is stated
that two of the most influential • neutrali Powers
have agreed in proposing an arrangement after
the first great battle, and, if neosesaryAnsistlng
upon the adoption of it' by the threthelligerente,
on the following principles :
lot. That the territory gained by the viebirlous
perty ebalt bo ammited • by all the Naropitoh Pow
:are as the basis of a Congress. _
2d. The entry of the French into Mnap, sup.,
ported by a popular:manifestation, !ball be eon•
sidered by the European Powers as a convincing
proof of the disapprobation in Italy of Austrian
policy.
3d. The neutral Powers will insist on an extols- -
Coe while a Congress Is assembled:
4th. The extension of the Kingdom Of 'Eternal;
will be deemed essential; and the 'Dollies of
Parma and Modena, with the fortress of plaoensa,
are to be added to It. .
sth. It will be proposed to feral the Lionbardo-
Venetian Kingdom into a Slate' distinetfrom the
Austrian Empire, but goreined by an Atistrian
Archduke.
The Poat shows thatth, posiiieti - of4ke Aus
trians has now become dobly critical . key will,
doubtless attempt reaoh - Lodi on 'Omit way to
Verona and Mantua, on - whiobAlls atundutely
certain they mast f all beak. _ Mat the Stench,
alrendy 'misters of Milan, will probably,emdeavor
to biteroept their return, Another mordeventful,
and, if possible, even more dadaist combat may
therefore take place in the neighborhood of Lodi,
It le stated In the oily ankle of . ilmilExpros
that doubts hive been thrown Upon the , reported
victory by the - Erenolt foram. • • ,
f
, limas, Taesday.—The Atoniteur of to ay con
tains the:following : The Mergats. Ant ino has
delivered to the Dm:pries the notiAcati n , of the
death-of Ming Ferdinand, Weld of the .so es/1 0A to
the throne. of King - Prehalislo . 11. .Tho 7 Margate
also!gresented " letters - accrediting hint " til envoy
`extraordinary: • The Nanproweirlit go into mourn
ing for tWenty-one days. •", .. . , , -
... ~ GERMANY..
._ •
DA.IIII3VADT, Jane 5 —At the .openidg of the
Members the president's of both brew aof the
Legislature declared In favor of war age 't
Louis
Napoleon. ,
1.4 . 0,5iA:
. , -,. •
.
The subseriptiot, • et.lietlia, for th ii 16an of
4,600,000 roubles, .11 likely to be soon tilled,
MUNGARY.
An offer, say s *l3'2W:tow. has beet' made of
'the throne of Hungary to the Russian Grand Duke.
Comtantitte.
RUSSIA'.
,
OcloAskoNAL
A aosreepoadent its Glll6OO (says the Pays) se
ems ae that,'at a farewell dinner given et Albans
to the Grand Duke Constantine, two toasts exolted
the loudest applause. They were : "To the mo
ms of the allied armies!" end "To the allianee
of franc* and Reads "
t Berlin despatCh:daTed idouday, WI a com•
ba has taken place in Bosnia between the Turk
ish troops and the insurgents, near Xolionloh.
Gosso has, it is stated,iseest destroyed by Thrbieh
Pasha. : -
rt&TlOli his appointed in ambassador to Naples.
The Neapolitan ministry bee been modified.
An °Metal deolaratlon of neutrality dies been
made, and a. levy
.of 2MIO men for the navy or
dered.
ANNEXATION OF LOMBARDV'..:
Tom, Monday;Tutie 6.—The mnidiality of
Milan delivered; In the presence of the taparor,
at the headquarters today, the following address
to the Ring :
"The muniolpality of Milan is proud of being
able to make use of its meet preoiotte prltileges in
being the intorprotare of their fellow.ettixons at
this grave oriels: •They Are willing to renew the
peace of 1848,' and to proolattn again , before the
Italian nation the great feet whieil has, regnired
eleven armies for Its full development in the 'lntel
ligenoe and tote of the people '
The annexation of Lombardy to, Piedmont
'has been this morning reprooktitned bfeis, at the
.very time when the artillery,of the e....,"pty °Quid
have thundered tigehist mt, anrwhila *debut.
tenons were even tn our The an
nexation of Lombapiy to Piedmont is the dratstep
ix the new way of publie right which allbwenations
to be free' disposers, of their own destirdee: ' The
heroic Sardinfati stray end our brave allies; who
insist ripen Italy being from as far as theAdriatio,
will soon aahleveAhe magnaninunts enterprise ,
"Receive; Sire,, the homage of the tolrn of Mi•
tan at our bomb, and believe that outhearts be.
long entirely to you. Stu' sery ; ll, the junk and
Italy for ever
" Signed by seven Assessors of the Altutialpality.
" Milan, 6th Jane."
N'IMILTqCI3EI.
YE A N C.E.
Constantine, Sir 'l4ngaiy.
REVOLT IN TURRET.
tine of-the Ratite.
Pavia.
GREAT BRITAIN
'MANOR
NAPLES
„ I. THE WA.R. •
TIIE BATTLE JO' MAGENTA.
TOM .FENNON ACCOUNT.
Paws, June 6 —An immenee effect hes been
produced here; and throughout :Pianos, by the
news of the viotory of Magenta. It is positive
that the Puna have taken thirtyairguns.
Generals Espinasse and Olero are killed.
The Paris correspondent of the Daily News re.
Porte tae} Marshal Oanrobert is Mortally wound.
et , ' MY* marshale or ; generals were wounded at
Paris littera state that the battle of Magenta be
gan-by a sarprise,, -Itia, said that McMahon was
the fi rst to tame to the lsiletanoe of the Imperial
Guard, who bad been fighting two hours, and con..
Honed to get to. the . rear of the Austrians, who
were thall placed between ' two fires of the new
French artillery. - • . . - • ,
The Patrie says McMahon was created a mitr
shal on the , field at. Magenta, and a' number of
oolonele were made generals Marshal Baragnay
is removed 'from his ootrimand, and re•
placed by General Forty. Marshal Valliant is
maperseded by General Itendoil and•the Ministry
of War' is to be Madded Provisionally to General'
Ositram.,
Napoleon le said to have been in the midst of the
I,lnmerialGuard dating the - stanA of two ithare
made °giblet the Austrians, who, it appears, verb
I Aware of the fut.
The Preaoh Met iinlY 'fife. thou Sand kill, and
wounded.' "
!The , Preneh , corps which suffered moat are'
the ,Zinaves afid : the - grenadiers of the•lsiiperial
At Paris,' yesterday, - there were rumors that
the-Prenoh lose was front- 9,000 to 18,000 men hors
els combat. , ,
Tile ; Paris Pattie says it Isrepoited that Gene
rals Nell,Meklaboa,aad Ganrobert Were wounded
-art Magmata., and states that the Prenohloil is now
eseraited at 6,000 to 7,000 hero ris'ion3ar,
~Tll,l6'ilerriteri Paris ,aorieiptindent says it was
repiirted - that the, Emporia' hadled the Imperial
Ilf usfd permit, and -was at due time under fire
and 4r/ edesiddable - danger. ' r
The Paris eorrespondent of the, fieral4, ob
servet I.bat any doubts of the military capacity
iff thel Emperor, Napoleon, are now triumphantly
auswered.: ,
The ?curie stateitthat :00,Altstrian form nnm.
bored 180,000 men, and the Preach about 100,000.
The Pays says thore wain 120 000 Austrians and
120,000 Preneh and Piedmontue etgaged • - •
There is nothing to confirm the newt Out Prank
fort,.-which alleged that in' a 4e/SOod great battle
he Preach had been driven across the Ticino. • ,
,
The Marseilles correspondent of the Tiotitis, says
thatdu less than .two rSontho, 120 liatliottomed
stun% gstn•boap will have been completed in the
French nevY Yard; each armed 'with a rifled-can
non, They are inOnded 'to Cot on -the Po.' By
thermioo . period; toirty /ream tralatiorts will be
liallshed 4
. each-. capible•of conveying 1,000 troops
iniFbigaite." -• • " • • .• , t •-
PAnta,•ffuesditY.—The Afar:Time. Pebilehre Ge.
neral McMahon 'a report of the passoge of the TI.
duo, at %whip°, by theAllieo on the Sd.Jutay Ras
,ofttbe surprise -of tbe..,enemy. at, Itobeelietto; by
whioh - considerable; loss *at infiteted on the,Aus
trians, The :French lost one etiptilin and seven
- privates killed ;' and font officers; ineluding a Colo
nel;'and. thirty- eight -
‘ privatee iitounded The
Emperor 'ordered the names of the killed and
wounded, officers and privates, to berdait to their
relatives. - - - - •
A despatoh:froni Trieste- say's an Austrian war
steamer had captured the French ship Itsout,
from Cuba, bound to Tecate . • -
• THE SARDINIAN ACCOUNT. '
• A Ttirin despatch;dated Ono 7th, *aye the first
private letter "from the battle.fleld . of Idagenta
bar been received, , .. •
• ,oThe Imperial and Sardinian Guards were alone
'Owned to the Austrian messes. They were at
tacked, by the Austrians, and• were -unable to
adtande, but, nevertheless, finally, restated the
enemy. 'The Zonavee and Guards • lost - and re
took their. positions, ard last Gen. Nell'S army
'assumed ,the Offensive, whioh ,was irresistible.
:!The enemy endeavored • ter surprise the right
wing of our army, but the movement of. General
• blohlabon rendered' the' attempt inattentive... Bo
the efforts of the enemy 'relaxed: somewhat for a
Monteitt k and die °culled was then resumed with
`renewed • fury. . • „ '
-
General • McMahon '
was,, triumphant, and , the
battle was won.
A Turin despatch,. of June 7th. says, there were
one hundred and twenty, thousand Austrians in
'the battle, of whom twenty thousand were pleoed
hors ds combat; and 'torten thousand taken pd.,
toders,f. , ••• • . -
iune 8 -The,oilleial bulletin of the Bar
.dlittnitil reads as fottoas :
That•juirt of Upper Lombardy' which INS been
freed from' the Austrians has, prostaimed Viotor
Emmanuel, Ring.
-Volunteers are rapidly arriving to join esti
biddi!e carps; which id pursuing theenethy beyond
Kona*: ••, .
'• General' Urban's army, after a precipitate re
treat from Varese, has been dispersed and is scat.
tered: - A number of eoldiere have been taken pri
soners and disarmed— • ---
A ,detaohment of disarmed ;
oorps has sailed
albeit , the skeins of Lago'lleggiere, - disirMiog the
,Andrlan• oustom•botts,e guards, and' everywhere
eerrYlun of ,the pabilo treasure. • . . •
•. The 'government:of' the King of 'Sardinia wq
already established at Como and Sondrio;:r- •
'THE'AUSTTFAN ASTOtINT:
ooaee•
.pondeoce contains the following :
Attar our troops bad, to:' wording to orders, &mou
lded Milan, on Sunday, the( . nubile funotiogaries
isti'relinquiatual their . °barge, providing fQr the
eicesity«Thsia thettrirn,..ridek was transferred to the
InUrditi Itf• • '
naperled Austrian smottanarles hive rSiti
dreSsirati 'Perdue. but it le, pothibie they rutsy're-
Mtntelheli.peeto end, fandOute to Itttetee.
ThilVrturs!PrirliboriasSpondeht saystkat
the moat influential Powers bad agreed en propos
ing Oft -arrangement after the firer great battle,
and If neosesary, hoisting upon its adoption by'
the belligerents.
Vanig.rA,Tuatday, dna.f,=-4mong the wounded!
lit the tattle of Magenta ate koissithisAtut,
three generals, and three ofileers of tbe,itiff ; two
e ears ottlie stiff are missing, and one major is
• k 114(1, 4 The loss on' bath sides ityary ,
-Milan' is entirely evacuated' by our. troops.
The telegraphio communication between Mi
lan, Pavia, and Verona is Interrupted. ' •
The Times has noised thefollowing -from their
correspondent at the headquarters of the Austrian
army: ,
Mowrsua. June 1 —Pive guns have been recap=
tared" frees the Pram% at itivoltella. The & inaves
stabbed the'wounded at .Riveltella, and at Castel
.Nouvetto, near Mortara, the wounded Auttrians
Were murdered 'by the inhabitants.
- The operatives of the Austrian army are be
lieved to have been directed id person by Marshal
Mess ' the ablest of the Austrian generals.
The real loss of the Austrians is estimated' at
from thirteen to fourteen thousand.
The - Austrian garrison at Milan, at the time of
the iturrreetion, was rationed to three thousand
News has been received that Prince Napoleon's
corps d'armes have tek
en up a position in the
Appeuines.
Modena Is occupied by a large Austrian farce.
The !'rimes thinks the battle of Magenta may
not be by'any means e 0 decisive as we _were all
prone to believe, and we must wait farther ao•
counts of the fighting on Sunday. The Auitrians
appear to be persevering in a determined' plan of
retreat. but are fighting'and not flying
' The Rvening Herald,in a leader, remarks that
the lode of Milan, is one which it will not cost
they Austrians musk to retrieve if they can
make head against the /trench in the Arid ; 1:i
fact, every mile the Allies- advance their dialoul,
ties inorease,'Whilst the Austrians, in their re
treat; only 'fall bask upon stronger irwitioils, and
draw nearer to a base of operations whieh leper- -
Costly secure, as long an they can hold the'north
western coast of the Adriatic. When Verona and
,Matztua are captured, then it will begin to believe
In the ultimate lose of Lombardy; and not till
then dons it expert that Prat:els Joseph will show
ilimselfso anxious to negotiate as tick represented
to be by -the pretended mission of Comic Ester.
hazy to the English Court. •
BilesTa; June' 6.—The of Mote( ) iNund
from Cuba for Trieste, with * cargo of coffee, ' hair
been captured by an Am:Wan war "steamer.
'Foteigii•Commerolal
June 9.—Tee Cotton =riot oboist qilet
,with the dootadoos hardy aostotehted. The males to
day arteidtoeted'at'd,doo Wes.
Brawhiteffe eontlane dull. - ; ;
UNDO'. One 9 --Coaeolp Re 'quoted at 02 3 on93X.
The hula.* in the Hank of kngtend hal increased
400,0p0 derinit the :nth.
'hie Site of the Battle at Magenta.
Thefellowing description of the battle of Ma
gents is token from Oallgnans , a Messenger :
Megentaoshieh Will henceforth beacons illus
trious in story, is a small town of about 8,000 in•
habitants, situated near Naviglio-Grande. It la the
grit stage on the road to Milan from Novara by
Beffalbre Three roads lead from Novara to ibe
hanks tim Thine.; %%Garet and Mast direct Piagel
Ili Clamart, and ends atthe bridge or Bufrelara; the
suet d; more to the north, passes through Garnets,
and desearldli to the river nearly opposite the vtil age
of Tarbigo; and the third, still more to the north,
passes- through flamed. anti Ploohelon, aild by a
curve - Joins the z loin° at some distance from the
Garnett) road' At'the Mentent when the Franch
troimeoroised the Vela°, General Gyulai, who was
evacuating the Lantallina: had quitted Garton°,
and tratuderrod hie - headquarters to Abblato Gras-
so, on,the left bank of the river, a few kilometree
*bow Butelara. The passage of the French
army was therefore effected in view of the Aug
trians, who endeavored to oppose it, but wore re
p_alsect with Considerable loss That took place on
Friday, and as the advance of the French and
Pledmentese' troops. had evidently, from the simul
taneousness of their late movements, been ski!•
folly prepared befotehand, and formed part of a
regular strategioal combination, we may supple
that the allied troops, immediately on the banks
of the Ticino becoming free, hurried forward by
every available passage. so as the neat day to be
In as great force as pissible at the opposite side of
the river. The Austrians, on their pert, seeing
that their opponents 'would march straight for
Milan, had conoentratod their forms to prevent
tam. and the conseouenee was the merles of eons.
bate of which the results are so briefly but elo•
gamily told in the telegraphic despatch. It is
known from late telegrams resolved that the ope•
rations of the army of General Gyulai were di
rented by Baron - de Agee in person; so that it is
the beet general in' the Austrian array that has
last been defeated in a battle where no tower than
100,000 or 170,000 men moat have been engaged,
the numbers being certainly the peseta , on the
Austrian Me." ,
Damage to Western Railroad Bridges.
ninaiao, Jane ti —The Rook Island Correspondent
of the Pun and Tribune says that the bilasiesippt
Nailrondbridge at Book Island, was seriously injured
on Haterday night, by the eroesiog of a heavy train.
.The pier ott the lowa aide of the draw wee crooked from
top to bottom, std two of the beacon that suppers the
bridge were broken. No trams laws erased ever sines
the ligeldent.
The hfOlfne drain, some Matinee, abet., Wen swept
away on gilds, nisht,nensing lam of property aro not
ing to several thousand dollars. The river fa higher
tfutdfir Liu been fot twenty-sin years.
Ena sperm 4o Americana Visiting Europe.
Wisuisavott, June 21..—Paloporta for perms visit.,
leg nnrope ire now hunted at the rate of thirty per day,
it may net be paoyahy known that the neoratury of
State alone Is anthoriaid to grant 'and isote paseports,
sod abuse ramparts to be granted ; Matted, and veilLtad in
foreign roanbled by such Amorlean diplomatic or con.
pular alters, iqd under, inch' Mem "u, the President
/hall (Wilmot!. and presorib*, and etuthato
or the Vatted Matra only. Tire Inning of possibrts
without authority is a penal oboe,.
THE LATEST NEWS
131( TELEGRAPH.
.ARArvA.L, OF THE PERSIA.
THEE DAYS LATER NEWS,
AUSTRIAN DEFEAT AT DARIGNAN.
RETREAT ACROSS THE ADDA.
DEFEAT OF THE BRITISH AIIArISTIIi.
MXPInCTEID
COTTON AND EREADSIDF,ES DECLINING.
CONSOLS,
Ninir Yons, June 21.--The .flonsr4 eteamobip
Persia arrived about nine o'olook this livening;
with Liverpool: dates to Betnrday,i the 11th Inst.
The Persia pissed the steamer eanide, bound for,
Liverpool, on the 12th inst. • '
The United Statee frigatcOniaborland was at
Madeira on,the let het.
The oteinishlp 'Arago, from Rey York, arrived
at Boothempton on the 6th, and the Weser on the
fifth inst. ' • • • - •
George Bailey, editor of, the National Era, of
Weahlogtoo, died'en heard' tie steamer Arago on
the sth Anat. : ,
. The Austrians have been driven from hiarlgnan
"with the loss 'of 1,200 prisoners, and the main
body of the army is reported •to be retreating
across the river Adds.
The British Ministry hall been defeated-in the
Housaar.Oontratms, and therresciation of a want
of confidence has been carried by a majority' of.
thirteiii The minbittiiirsineipietedlo resign on
the meeting of Parliament on Saturday, thelith.
THE what, prEWS.
Thadetalle of the battle pi* Magenta are receiv•
ed at London and- Pails vdry slowly, but they do
not change the first complexion. The losses were
nedoubtedly severe' oh both sides. :The Austrian
ofiloial accounts only acknowledge from 4,000 to
8,000 kllied`and wOunded,fandlay that the ene
my lost fully ball as maniagain.
It Is reported, but not confirmed, that Gen.
Gyulai has been dismissed, and Gen. Hen ap- 1
pointed oommander-in-ohlef. - . • - -
The Austrians have retreated beyond the river
Jidda. Their:headquarters were near Cremona
They were expelled from r Marignan by Gen.
Baragnav de Millers, who took 1,200 prisoners.
Paviti was evacuated by 'the Austrians, and the
Emperor Napoleon and King of Sardinia entered
Milan on the Bth in taut, whore :they were most
enthnetastioally received. They remained there
at the last eceounts. ; • • =
The latest adivieee that' the Allies were,ad
vaneing -from :Milan :bk.-pursuit of the retreatlitg
Austrians, and also that P,tlU*had'given indica
tions of aiding Austria, . -
GREAT
The motion, of a watt of confidence in the Bri
tish ministry, was carried ire the House of.Oom
mons by a vote of 323 to 310. "
Nothing was known as to the expected change
in the ministry when the Persia , sailed.
'At the meeting of the Atiantielelegraph Com
pany, the report already published was adopted.
The - Red Sea cable broke, and was /On, .whin
only sixty miles from Cape eider°.
The British elcdp-otwar Reran capsized in, a
tornado on the African 'coast. Gee hundred :and
seven lives were loot.' The captain and twenty-six
of those on board were saved. ;;
in the Honso.of Commons, on the gth, Mr. DX
raell,laid on the table-the .protaisedu correspon
dence of the Government on the Italian question.
The adjourned debate on the address in response
to the Queen's speeolt. war resumed.
The, speakers in opposition were John Bright,
Sir James Graham, sergeant Dewy, and others;
while thosein defence of the speech inoluded Sey
mour Fitzgerald, Mr. Seymour, and thuAttorney
General fur Ireland.
• - FRANCS. ' :
The Paris Bonne WM depressed and prices
were lower, closing nn Friday at 61f. 750. for
relates Dank'Of Fradoe hie gained 12,000,000
I
in specie durig teAND
month.
ND h IA ORINA.
- .
The galena& malls to 1110 ,6th, and Hong Kong
dates to the 28d of April , ha( reaohed England.
The,wews brought is not Important.
At Calcutta exolaanges were 'nnalternd. At
Shanghai) eterliiig eaohline wag 6) Bd.
- TUE LATEST.'
IBy Telegraph from London to Liverpool '
GREA.P.BRITA.IN.
The Bridals ?dintstrySid not 'resign on Saturday.
The House Of *mil:tont adjohrhed hver till :Fri
day, the 17th instant.,
It is reported that the Prissisi -army will be
mobilised, and Prussia will soon take part in; the
oontilot. ',lt is alto said-that-the Prussian GoSern
anent is negotiating for the
,passage of ttoope
thrcinghlfermany.- • '
The Mariana were M Lodi and the Blues ad:
eanoing ' -
General qatlbaldi had beaten an Austrian 'tome
ataresoeit
Five hundred Zouaves were killed and wounded
at Idarignstt. TWA Austrian's lost palm hundred
kdied and wounded; and twelve hundred made.
The battle at liarignitilisteenint lot is •
The &stela ware preparing for another gehoral
engagement. = • -
iitrwevitt
Villutta,lutie-11) -The Adel Austrian do i rres
poidenes of the loth' states that the Austrian
vow wallow:ginning the retreat iryand the Add e,
and that ite headquarterd were,at ()swath - omi,
before Cremona.
TiIp : ATISTIqAN.II . i . EAI . ) . QUARTERS.'
Truer says
A speolatdeepatoh to, the Londe,Sharon the Bth the Eleeend Austrian army had its
headquarters apOsologns., on the Adds.
THE' BATTLE OP MAGENTA. ;
/titans out , dist Ginnie! , Ganliert waswasnot
wounded at the bathe ro
t. of Magenta.
AU stooonnte•glve.thegreat glory, of; the day to
General fda&fahon. Be had no orders to proceed
to ' Magenta, but , heard the roar of the battle,
nulled on, add` tossed the army.
The Parte Manicotti. of the 10th inst. contains
the following details of the bottle of Magenta : •
The 0000eutretion of our trove on the Po de.
tetrad the enemy into the belief that weintended
to
_orent the river. On the morning of the 4th,
125,000'ef the 'Austrian:mere in.posltion opposite
the it'mpertm,' and the grenadier division of the
Imperial Guard was obliged to -light this dispro
portionate odds All our generals displayed great
energy in, the emblignent Lotion. 'The French
General Wimpfen was wounded: Demme and Mad.
hart,.oommanders. of, the grenadiers, were killed.-
-The ofiloisl balletfn describes the operations of
General Meld - shim, who lost 1,500 'men, but put
14,000•Austrlans,/tors -- ifs comLor, and made, 5,000
• The - Austrians had on their side Tour' corps
d'armio. -
The bulletin sums up the result of 'the five days
shwas the departure , from Alessandria--our :a rmy
hid three - combats, gained one battle, and'. freed
Ploduiont from the Austrians, who, since the battle
of - Montebello, have lost 25,000 killed'and wound
ed, 10,000 prisoners, and 17 ,Clllll,Oll.
The defeat of the Austrian s at Magenta is said
to , have produced an lmmensb sehiation, In Ger-.
many. , .
• The 'correspondent of the Daily News gives
' the following , details t
" In less than two hours the allied monerobs had
displayed 60,000 men against the Austrians, whose
force was 80,000;together with' a powerful atilt.
lery. They oompelled the Austrians to move on.a
most - disadvantigeeMi ground, as their left wo
men turned -by- Oenerat Oanrobert's 'sorpe, sup.
ported by General Peat's-division, and the Ana
trianirwere obliged to fall on their centre at Alt.
Mate Grade). - -The -"Austrian eantre beteg thus
swelled by the' reatistoolnolne Of their left, wing,
was Scitiain disordee, andthetwande 'fell, crushed
by theßreneh artillery: - . •
• - "General.6(chiahon had now reached the'sosne,
and seeing the: moment bad noose to breek the
disordered centre of the - Austrians, obarged4
an imgelmoslty .teldom witnessed, support
Durand'e difision; whioh . stood in reserve, in :
.was moving elowly beside Mit. The shock was
terrible, and the dead and wounded were falling
by thous/tads. The Austrians were finally routed
and the victory Won "
The lame`Writer says that twenty Austrian guns
Were taken ,
The Zohaves had seven hundred killed and
wounded. A brigade In General Oanrobert's
corps wen almost destroyed in the last charge.
" The Emperor and Ring were always in the'
thiokeat of the fight: • The military men ate utia•
nimous in praise of "tile' etrategio aombiriations of
-the Rospertir m • • n •
. At Matignen the 'Austrians were entrenched.
Gen: Baraguay d'Hilliers was ant to dislodge
them. and took the village with but little loss.
There are no further details. Gen. Benedlit com
manded the Austrians.'
Gen. D'Urban is said to have Weeded his retreat
by Caputo.
The' Austrians . have evacuated Laveno, aban
doning their material of war, and taking shelter
In vessels on the Swiss waters.
TO. Emperor and King 'Plater Emmanuel at
tended Mass in the Cathedral of Milan on the
9th, when a Te Dania was sung. They subse
quently rode through the atty. The enthusiasm of
the people was indescribable.
The King of Sardinia tied loaded a proolamation
to the Lombards, saying that their independenoe
having bean secured a regimen liberal and dura
ble will be established. lie eulogises the 'Empe
ror Napoleon, and calls on the Lombards to join
them on the battle-field.
The London Posed Paris correspondent says
that ever four thousand of the prisoners are
Ital
ianp, who took the earliest _opportunity to give
therneelies up. They were always Warred: in the
frro,t, and were threatened by the Groats in
the rear if they did not fight well.. Many of
than offered to j An the Allies, Put their services
have pot yet been aeoepted
'ThicSwile Government bee offered the immedi
ate fortiflo4tion of the Austrian frontiers
Three Austrian armed transports with vessels
in , ow have been stopped in Swiss waters, and
surrendered
The Roemer of Austria has issued a hroolama.
ties to his subjaots in the Ty rol and' Zorelberg,
calling them to arms to defend the most righteous
cause for ',blob the , sword W 44 ever drawn He
confides to them the' task of d&endiog the free•
tiers spinet the enemy, who has made himself an
ally to the revoleigainat the legitimists dominion
established by Q'od.
The Dachas of Parma bad quitted the Dacha',
leaving the'ilovarnment to the municipality, and
!viewing the troops from their oath of allegiance.
The munielpttlity despatched a deputation to
the'Xing of Sardinia, tegneating him to accept the
ooveriameht.,"_
A .011, , g,ititin legion was organising at Turin.
The debate was rearmed on the following day.
Milner Gibson, Sydney Rerbort, Sir G. 0 Lewis;
and Lord John Russell spoke against the Govern
ment., 'Messrs. Roebuok, Lindsay, Sir I Peking.
too, and the Sollottor General 'spoke in ita favor.
The ilaiide - then, divided for the amendment ex
presidng a want of confidence, the vote being 323
spinet 310, - •
The Ship Southampton, from Landon for New
York, sunk the Norwegian schooner, Emanuel,
in the channel. The crew were saved. The South
ampton machined no damflge
It la reported that a camp is about to b® formed
at St Omer. Strong detachments ' of infantry
have been gent trod Paris to Italy, and two regi
ments are being actively formed. •
Two hundred Emma's have arrived from Mein
to form third bottatio of tho Zottoves porde.
The London Tones' correspondent says that
great dissatideation' It:expressed by the foreign
g overn mente,Linotadineßinsitt, at the manner in
eshislitiffairearetlandnot e d in Tuscany.
Eleven Britialilships.oryrir arrived at Naples on
the 9th instant.
LO//n°o, B akrtrdsV, Tine 11.—The attendanoe
In the House of Commons was very numerous to.
day, the ripectation_being that the address In re
ply to the speech from the throne would be agreed ~
.0 as amended. '
The Rouse of Commons agreed to take the ~
speech into oonsideration on Friday, and
punted until that day. -
•
Dressings, June /o.—Prussian commissioners
were here yesterday negotiating for the transport,
by railway. of "cormiderable 'bodies of Prnealan''
troops.
_Asatbfaotory reault *as obtained vrititont
The commissioner" started for Munich with 'a,
eirollaipurpose. •
PARIS, Saturday, June 11..—General. Sohanint
has been appointed:- chief; commander, at the
camp at Chalons, where three ilvisions of ,oaveliy
are to be aseanibled.- • -
Five thousand aettriensrhopera have arrived
at Marseilles and Toulon.
TURIN, Jane 10.—Gen. Garibaldi «mauled Ber—
gamo on the Bth, and having learned that 1.500
Austrians were coming' from Brescia, sent a do.
taohment to meet theta; end thenterthe force sent
was inoonelderable:in numbers, they nevertheless
beat the enemy.
, VaitOnie.lune 10 —The Austrian 0 oa n e
tin sees; General, Durban. at , Canottioe, - and the
eighth corps d' arm is e, at Magnenena,wire engaged
in sanguinary fights:, • -
Theenemy, , in greatly iiperiar ferceSappeare to
he advanolog from Milan. and,the Austrian army
'has therefore passed the Adda in' &Waders' sad
.are.nearing- the reinforeemente in reserve, The
courage of our troops is ttabreken; and Way pre
longing - for a decisive battle:, „, -
,
' • Timm Saturday,Junell.—Private lettera frOlx l
Milan, respecting the,' haft)* of Marignan, state
that five,hundred were 'gut hors de drngo
The Austrlantt, Whit were 30,000 straits, antlered a
loss of fifteen . hundred. killed and. wounded, and
twelve hundred. prisoners:. •
The battle listed nine lionre " •
At 11 o'clock at nights a battalion of Hanger'.
ens and Croats, who intended to surprise the
il re
wive surrounded- and-difeitad.
he -Times' eorsperulettety,lenuessr
The official Austria *birGetin ' announcing the
battle of Magenta, produced an indescribable:of
feet at the capital, and every onet for a 'moment
appeared to be shinned. Milita'r'y men are Indig
nant that the finest army Austria' ever possemed
should have been entrusted to each a bungler as
Count Gyulai appears to be." -
-'• The European Markets.
[By steamer Persia.) •
rxrintroot, 0011 ON MaittlaT, 799 e 1 0 .—There
hit been &decline of oas.sixteenth'bfja penny. on Alm
week in the middling utilities of . Cotton. aid the fare
rfor gnelittes are d i Matitt tO staid ii deellisialenntlng
to one.elgith. The Wee of the week amount to 800)0
bales, of whinla only 1,000 bales were taken by speenta ,
tore, and 0,1.00 bales worttiortomOrt. The estimated
sales of today (Pedal) are 6000 bales, the ,m4het
Wiring with declining tendency, btaqulat"_
The following are the authorised!, gnetatione:
1946
Orleans air; - , 1111dalleft.
8 6
Mobiles , 7,a; 611 10
17olands6 9 19
The stook In port le estimated at 619,000 bales)
in
eluding 689 000 of Ameitoan.
OP- TRACI* —,lke adriessfroulllsnoletter
are of a moil firdiebtrohiractee T'ke" - Markite for
all sonde are rather
At drmer, Won qslet but steady.
HiCritik:Corretrer.KET: :eke 9.—There "has
been a flight advanc e nuall qualities of Cotton daking
the week, and New (Meant :roe ord weirs is quoted at
1081, and boost 101 f. The minket istoeed dull., The
males of the week amount to 8 000 bales, sad there's a
stook of 100.000 bales node unit • •
tavww,Pnot, 11118111,D8T118841 1118.11611,. - -Vhe
Bresdsluffe market eloeed - With a declining rename) , on
qualities Messrs. Sicherdeou, Elpenee,tr. Co 's eft
tinier reports !lour very doll, and the quotations
nal.ldeate Biglaud , Athys i tr'oo., quote a d 041140 of
81 in the prioes on the week. ,
Wheat eoi,thrtuiff ` very •4511,' 134 Weep are gdo3d
litwer than Tnectill'• ftentaft oll • — '
Conf,thereltstbemndeolleint_tandenoy, in all
guiltier •t" , Memel. illitlittd,Althytt *lb "00. report a
decline of lidteld on the week, and quiet ; mixed e,t Os
. ,
The'reltuwins are tbs quotation/: Veer, Amnia
10s. 9delBs. 91. • Whew,. Wrstern red, 8.0911. 101;
Western Molls; Southern. 16.. 6.16618 i.
Corn—yel'ow. Uralic 84.; white, 8a Be.
LITZEPOOL T DOVIPION-MADRlVD.l.L . The < eireit•
tars of MMUS Distend. athse, & Co.. Jamas Whillanry
&Co Richardson. Spoons & Co.. and others raper,
the Provision market with &dealt oDin tensleney. Beef
heavy and nomically quoted. York heavy sad 26 131 ,
lower BAKion .4%01 Lard drill at 130.. Tallow Ann: -
LIVIRPOOL PRODUCI AIRDIF.=•-.46hae_pnia
dull ; now to offered at 84ie ; Pearls oleo null at tide 'did
fine for rid. 'Sugar btioyent -and le Meer. Coffee
firm. Riot otrady. Rosin dull, at &ads ld for ions:-
mon Spirits of 'Turpentine heavy, and all quilt's' .
hare deollned ; tales at ele
Oita The salsa ere unimportant;
~I nsimped,te qrioted
at 39.029 i fkl -Ca , : • ' -
• • •
LONDON MARKETS —l3sring Brother* , • °kettles
reports Breeadstatridull.-'lreo—Weleh rano and .Ibarp
dull. Bogor buoyant and slightly advained. Men
draw. - -Turpentine Bald , * heavy and lower ; aides at
42S CO•ffee buoyant, ay, in some eases as advisee of
Id bag ba-r, 0bta10.4.. Mee gnist
LOOD. , tt MONRY MARK*? Friday —appeals
closed this evening at 9310694. Tito Ball Son in Os ,
Boole or Sogland Bat Inerinand .4:101 week
1191 000.
• *SUMO AN _PECURITINS -,llams.-43arlag
there, and Bell & On report igoed derailed for Mont.
eat seentritiesi ilbdthemitee bass aukfaidrarldngi too
down. ' •
TBX LAvesv arm intitatim itilitztu r cm.
—Lirmarooi. Saturday P. TA Cotton make wag
firm to day with Wes (estitosisd/ orB 000 96161
The BreadetOrti - aad.Protialcia ambit dontbiaa' s dull.
[By Telegraph]: : - •
„Lowman, BatiirdaYP. 3i l —There is no geoepilon of
.00 . 101111 5. r aLups..49a books belts Aleut k. for afsetunt
tbs. quo.ation fain% da9o., ezdfildatit. 01,*Elart i arliad,
oloaad Grua. ,
• - r
.
_ from .tbe, „ ,
-
1211-WaeoltanitiltitionvB--it4rLi .04,ktitramito--tio•
aIIAXLIITAT TIN Xpixil Asp 1188 98 5 8 8
Tent • 49COTXT. OA ' , Will 1481MIliltadatsti1111l Or
Tan " Disierimawsw'two *ea wiastloo.
. • savaarwenvit,it T..,Junin,Stip—The ova:lead ai
l:e'en' e apt ham inves Otty.'hia 'witted, brine.
tog a lure malt endilit SOO In gold dust' i •••
The melons , xtr•ontinary rapplant the distoieries
et Greg:wile; Jaehianea r itid other seining oomph, are
ifullroanannwd.l • , „
Manse tlierdere had thbiliorintr;bning
lees than *area dap on the route. , r• •'•• •
He bad'virilatt Ging:writ dlggingeoutd - sigued
comnrtintettion andoreint the Sl6OllOB tbitsl
Thouvands of porno°, were pouring into uewipineeie
• Thirty eta*" will soon be to opeTatiOn at 'drogues
- • • •- , • `-•
Tbeveault of the operations of .thirteen companies,
si given in Mr" Greelevie • petblielte* letter, shears the
highest day a yield to be vi 1 _
n company from South Heed; Indium, bad taken out
8 000 pennyweight.. with a alnico, in three week,.
Gewitut,'e two cutout were sold for- 11848P0.--
The other details were of s similes Awarder. ,
The returned emigrants are reitarning,Aelly from'.
Isnareoworth, bound to go through at allhesarde. The
excitement is hemming intense. -
Mews Jones h. Rumen oontempiata enlarging their
facilities, in view of the inereued demand for Men,-
portation.
Emigrants are charged not to start elthinit four or
six months' supplies, as the snow arts in on the moue
thine in October. and adequate provisiom should be
made by persons lessisg this lesson for wintering st
the mining reglett They will time prevent a recur
-1.8458 of the suffering, and • privation' of.the previous
- -
hegira.
TIM Steamer .Tennessee.
- Wlfintuatow, Julie 21—The New Orioles pagers of,
Thursday state Mat ► 000dluita. - with a large smouut
of Mexican suede; inn expected at Vera Orus 'on the:
16th inst.. sad. by: ell probability, the steamer Ten.
names, whose ty of depurate was died on the fah,
wee detained .for it, This aebounts for her being
The WAtern Steinke? "Morning Start',
Burnt. - •
ef lows, Toms 2l—The shimmer' Montag liar,
which has bean hid up for several weeks at Bisset%
Point, font miles above this oily, was destroyed by dre
last night. The loss is estimated at $24,000,
of 'shish is scoured.
Respite of Cyrus - W.; Plummer.
Weaning:iron, Tone 21 —The President Lee declined
to pardon oyrue W. Plummer, now under montane* of
death fee time murder or Oaptalulftlier, dthipg the mn.
tiny an hoard nisi ship - diaper. At the request Cif
Plumucsea eptritua the Prealdint 'to:da7
granted a respite until the Silt or, July. .
New Hetepohite,Legiolature.l:
Noncom., N. H., ;nos 21 —A bill hoe been read twice
In the Legiel ' to abolish the Closet of eimeonoo
Pleas, to tranater.the basins to the itoptsine Court,
and to !mom the number of ja.tlesa to six.. The bill.
is to remodel the entisti judiciary of the Matt: -
Arrival of the Steamer Ocean Queen.
NET Your, .Ttute 21—The steamship Ocean Qualms
stool Users end Southampton on the Bth Mistrust, sr
rived at this port this afteraoon. Her advicee have
been anttelpatad
The Wreck or the Ship Bolton.'
BoseoN. Jame 21.—Nore or the bales hid been re
onv.red irons the wreak of the Ship , Bolton up to the
20th Wet.. .
.
From L&ke Superior.
[Cormloondeoso of The Prom.)
POIMLAND, Dike Suppefor, June 1.7,
'Poring the-past-winter ruunws 'rosette& Tore
that the United States Land Moe, for the north
shore of Lake Superior would rrobably be removed
to this plaoo from Buchanan. , his proved true,
and Hon. Samuel Clark; the Righter, was 're
moved, and Major Watrorts appointed. It .is the
intention, also; of 'the departinent, I believe, to
offer the vacant and unooeurded lands in this die•
triot at public/ sale "neat' October—the minimum
price fixed by law balmier', dollar and a ?outer
per sore. -Among them is some of the , onolesat
pine and mineral landiin the world,';hieldies most
exoellent farming land:, These lands Are near
Like Superior; and about the -same'-distance, by
Water, from New York and Eurape, e.ethe Illinois
Central Railroad Company, whioh are sold,at from
$l5 to $3O per acre. The Superior farmer can
send hie grain direct, by water oommitnioation, to
Europe. Mr. Paul, fur trader at Superior city,
shipped about twenty;esght thousand dollars'
worth of fine furs, a few days ago, , to Europe.
vtd New York. Among them were ten thousand
dollars' worth or martin skins. ,
There is great opposition to the proposed public
sale by • the residents along the west shore, and
petitions have been 'forirarded months since to
Washington If the Cambridge land sale, and"
the late one at Superior City, are any criterion,.
the 'United States Ireasury will rather lota than
gain by the opers:tion. If Mr. Secretary Cobb
calculated to fill the Treasury vaitits pith the
proceeds he bas boon wefully mistaltati,,and Who
ther it is sound polloy to force Svelitindred tbori
sand acres pablia landslinto - market before the
country has recovered from-the late'oommereial
reverses, should 4 a serious:question with the Go
vernment.
The earliest viliters to Lake Superior were, no
doubt, well acqualited with its ?lob, deposits of
copper ore. More than one of their descriptions,
published nearly two eenturies ago, mention it.
Ohmic,* states that "snob was its purity, that
"one of the monks, who had been bred a goldsmith,
made frets it several saoramental articles." He
'mentions finding on the borders of Lake Superior
•-' large piece* of copper, whioh ate yet the object
of the superstitious adoration of the savages.
They' say that forinerly they have seen a- large
rook, all of the same mineral, raised much above
the water, and, as it is not now to be semi, the say
that the gods have removed it somewhere else
But there is reason to suppose that, in the lapse
of time, the waves of the lake have covered it
with sand and ours; and it is certain that as die;
covered,' in many places, a large quantity of this
metal, without even being obliged to dig much."
Tradition planes this rook on -the Smith shore, a
tow Wiwi Meant from buperior thry, and from ,
the oonstant:weiref _the idlArallibtad bIVTIOW Wa
rd fathoms Ander riiter:'- SOMeMt - lhe half-breed
voyageurs bellete they hayeaeen
The "mineral, range;'.' .whhih. !tea graduallY
back from life pace; fn'all Its , bamitY and gran
deur, 099.02T4 IrjA a,rhjok growth of plash spruoe,
maple, and othee tree* palikidni countless veins of
pure copper. Z presume tfiefe is not a settler from
Portland, ac figr , doirio . asl:Pigeon river, the US
liana! boundary, *holm not forced** l!Pigicif ani
of pure copper. ~,Iflverfline who has :visited mu. nu
trouVetrearas, *here the waters have warn
guar way through fandango rooks oan wltheut
trotible knock off pieties of numeeppef from - the
uncovered veins. These" Tandi "can - be 'pettehogssi
at Government 'pride:and are dfstant from three
tiMmiles trims, the lake.- ;
The specimens disoovered, a few days since, near
Superior $4 ware's ,
,orkmen, on the
surfaee„trere ,41gy ,extraordinary,..and.--,t-Ts g ret
beingl2B,l44l if) prOottre then'. far th e kiidemy of
Hatu ,ll
Phdiideiphia: 19111 and being
settled - ix ,relently, sna in loot' tbe north:o6re,
that we do not know as yet, or.even ford limy; des
of, the value - of our' 'copper m111484;4)1 ihccppo
site, shore - of the like, the nippe- z pinissals'of
Michigan, the trouble-is •hcrilte - oat np their °err
inonsmessehrof purteopoer: Bliistingdiannoiltat ;
you might Eli well Are off a brass oan con—andtou t
ting With the cold chisel is a tedious and expansive
way of working. • volt= tunas.
cotrimentereif tlfsi Leind'ou 'Times on the
Austrian Campaign:
-may.plue..implielt,rellaneeenthe tele
greet': whith wet - rpublish .this morningamintory
hai been idlifevEctitY the refinish . arms lehieli may
take Its plate beside the most reaturced pules in
the annals; of the First Stispot.—Therilittld.fown
of Magenta, on the Lombardy side of the Nino,
and about two miles eastward of the bridge of But.
falera, over which the Austrian levellers ad vanced
some-fiva Wiiiks'ibiolloetteettsoi tiontinelkef:Sat
dinia, is the seen. of this great detester. The
Preneh electrie message boasts of five thousand •
prisoners, and of fifteen thousand Austrians killed
or wounded; : and, irwe may bellevw,that the num
bers even approximate to those enormous figures,
it is Impossible, to doubt that a battle has been
fought which is deciaive of the campaign.
The groat invading , army is now become a
flying multitude, mote or loss kept together
by the ,habits - ,-ef. but Milan is
open, Pavia and - Plusenza remain like Aus
trian uplands in - a ptain. flooded" bp` French and
Italian troop', and there ten be no pause for seri
one teals tindercur tharteetterixeldee-of fthe greet
line of Austrian fortresses. - Morel mplet despatoh-
es, and detaile,, at which we cannot now even
gas esemay dimmish the Importance of title imposing
bulletin, sad may lessen the. number of the Arts:
trial:floss; or we may possibly heir of a' slatiliter
among the Frew* which may take from the deei
dye character of the notary. Sat as we receive
it &ewe give,it forth Thirty lours,ago a d ea
patch left thelield'hflidgenta, , and.annottnees in
London that 15,000 Austrians are killed and
wounded; - and - that - 5,000 - prisoners' are - in the
hands - 9f the -,viatore. - . - .Thenr areftbet tml.VAtretr
tatted faote; birtytetimeetitig them wittillfc state
ments of our correspondents, we era not without
some means of guessing at the operations which
must have preceded this decisive revel t.
The letter o f oar correspondent from the haul
euarteeslf the AlUae, ghiob We:publish to-day,
gives &perfect description of the position of the two
armies on the day whoa that letter is dated. The
French had been for some time previces mused
about Alersandria,and weremaking demonstrations
towards Pavittand•Piacenza, while thiSardialane.
supported by some &um regiments, were follow
ing up the Austrians as they retreated front theline '
of the Sesta, and were g aining advantages in every
encounter. This Wild scarcely a fair test, ter as the
*taatick of tim'Anstriesm compelled tham tot:retire,
the field of conflict neereertly reigned lit 'pos
session of the Allies ; but that it was sometimes
hotly contested wilt appear from the details of
the affair at Palestro, when they are sufficiently
authentioated- for publication , Austrians
appear` -to have- been -satisfied that,- - they hoe
no active enemies to dread at the mometit, except
only the Sardinians and Zanaves opposed to their
right wing, and Garibaldi and his irregulars ho
vering nponeheir sight flank, The great body of
the French were e titl; airthey -committed, stationed
about Atersandria, as they had been wben Gene
ral Stadion made his unsuccessful attack upon
them. To some enterprising generals this position
would havesuggested tke -opportunity for a great
bluff 'upon ihirapperentlidimnited "army:. Gen.
Gyulai seems to have seen in it only p. felinity
for returning to Lombardy. r; Sii xi • ig a as
Thitraditraight;thrAttentbtuwereintell'retreat
along their whole line„.-They.,,e,bandoneti- that
pesitbir( on - the line. eittlior 'Po which, eon
meneing:Miar-Maleass- Said- egleiedbigleirea -that
town' to- titer- jurietiontet 4 the Po yritis'ilb Ti
cino, threatened - the fortress of Aleseandria and
the right wing 'Atka Allied army. They evaou -
ated-Mortera which , eines-their retread from the
-We, beicome the antral piedileh of their
Mee; and the retreating r,ontte.is said:M.lrue be en
in aeautheasterltrdireetorotrtowarilit Vtgerane. Be.
reguarda, and Pule. The. two latter of these
towns are on the Lombardy ride of the Ticino,
and-thete.otraitatklitilmtionitehat&thenbjeot of
the movement was to ..etineentrate this - Austrlan
fore's in the tedgliberhendef Pavia and Flautist,
in order* to. eater those fortresses.- Theprealet
tancy with Which this itparatiOn was effected. and
the abendoneritit'eftleitUweiter-grain which had
been oollectekwere noterititent their import ; for
they indientedthittltheAdfitians had learned that
the preptrationeof,the Allies...ream complete, and
that they might be iyoirea krj y ,Fek iod
enume the toffensivet -- 21iirdietriatun - lkielefore,
had several dejti -.gnu -evict up their raid into
„Piedmont...- - It t : wee cemmeneed without any
admeette'objeet, and it wee, even:when the retreat
itupeared.opetr, neither advantageous nor glorious.
When Austria so pirosee'lY dotterel war and
lanendttale_neteT fervent. Eterepe gave he credit
for the Itoneelitleit df greed- inforprice:Od was
Urepowdlo munnurthkprecitilrapcx of tke atteole
on account of Olt etteteleiVVlete street & meat
ensues-and
,oVelliViiiitfaiktiege_tifri
:streak SW thiveneemert or the isampalke;
IlfbetiAtia utiallyeltiggisXtercer reirtnieden.
ex pertbiaty - wedescipected ler, few lier
movetrapidly l nnomTeitin, Necked& the peseut of
`the Alit. cut off the oeminuthiatioeswith Maslen - .
dria;and Matadi atterapt.trpen henna irkile3 a
gnat scheme for an Austrian imagination; but, if
Otero' irealo disigrt'ef thiliehermiketi aver, en.
asked what could be the object o fthis sudden
tit of military ardcr? "-IVitieliettiteeeritatur clear
' that there anunno..plan worthy of i leincealled
a plan: of - campaira,• that-there, wit nothing
-tatte r' th an -abt , - , ald • Plana *ltil:,:ittila`Constoii,
which Napoleon need-tali - ad fleit,ntirehlish the
Austrian geweralsufterwatds received and clum
sily carried ,out, The 'Austrians commented the
campaign of 1859 eritt r t srdireet: infreetitrzlef that
rule whilst'. is of equal euttiority in - thei,game cf
;Vie - and.: the , genre pf d ehese-tttAvoid useless
movei." . Their military polidy was in this neither
generous ',nor ehivalrous, =nor -.Aven-rerepedient.
They Wastedtthe open country wherktitere,was no
resistanee ; they, avoided the fortresses,-.they at
temtited'no serious attedk,tand- they retreated be.
fore the drstdemenstration ntedeiry their-enemy
in forte. 'Wereati them swarm over the Ttoino and
settle like locusts upon .the plain - al:we Ifeard of
them eating up all the resources of the townspeople
and the peasantry; we were told that they were put
ting one foraging parties. and exploring parties
here and there; and advancing wherever there was
rep resietance Then - they took Up a position upon
'the line of the Stein, and Citified 'llutalsalaas as
though they had Made rip their ritincia to - advance
step by step - until they had octinedied time country.
Timidly and cautiously they felt their Way l . - anea,
and ease only, they made an - attack, -not with a
greet object, but simply with the desire at knowing
where their enemy lay. Meanwhile the Allies had
actively utilised the-tithe - the - &wirier:a had been
wasting., The Frineh soldiers, as they arrived,
had beetle : tamed tp . th:iN t, and - the - supplies
bad been oolleoted in thole oonvenimit :drillers for
witioli the railways affordedeoplous facilities. The
Austrians bad tarried-4n -tbe plains while the
allied foroe wee 'groning they began to retreat
when they found Umlaute in strength: We have
.(ready severallimes painted the obvious oonsi
derationthatit would be Madness for the - Attatriana
to risk , a battle on the .-.Elirdinian, side of the
broad • and awollen frontier river TM tio.„.ll"t w' s
eulteelear that if they retreated eaten they would
retire beyond , that point.' OW Baturtie,krright they
had reeettedthelianke of the' river, and Were pro.
paring to arose it at the fordo and heidgatilbsy had
traversed when they name as Mirada/so To cover
this movement "ordered njelit upon Mor
tars, which they bad just berme abandoned, and
which was possibly occupied by the Sardinians and
Zottaves, ever pressing upon the Austrian-rear.
This was the decisive moment which. , hid been
foreseen in the French eampe - Mid which , the al-
Fed force bad been mantieurred to ni - t While
the Austrians were retreating, the...Fiettitilsolumns
that had-been: concentrated tin2the titt bank
of the Po, where they had -deceived t Anstrl
anti' IMO belief that the object of the tench at
tack was Nadine - it, were eu tdeoly -moved away
westwards and pushed aerate the Fe probably at
Outdo. The line then. joined the Sardinian and
Zonate troops, which kiged Just wen:o44'lmM* of
Palestro, and formed a complete line*rallel with
that of the retreating Austrians.. The right wing
of the Austrienvappears to-have been weakened
by the directienefehe retreetrwirich-trutated-to
have been upon Berignardo.- tipon this weakened
tight wing, engaged. in the passage of the river
at the bridge of Batiste* the French:attack seems
to have fallen. and the French and Sardinians ap
pear to have followed their retreating enemy oyez
the bridge and to - have - ultimately defeated him
-at the Tit lege about two miles °utile other side of
the river.'
Of course, these are speculations which detailed
accounts - Of this battle must either confirm, or mt•
dify, or destroy.' -We pat them, only as probabili
ties deducible from -the previously known facts
Meanwhile, Paris is bright with universal illumi
nation. Milan is welcoming her new master, and
Italy is rejoicing in a hope orrecovered national
ity We wish we (mull add, with some - Authority
for ita truth, that the Emperor of the French is
moderate in the'hour of via tory, and-that bumbled
Ariatria is satisfied to evacuate Lombardy, and be
at peace.
Later from Texas.—!The Murder of Air.
W. W. LOll. -"
We hove Galveston papers to the 10,h Instant.
The Neese of the' Bth Contains the -following
The United States surveying sobonner Vixen sr
riyed Irt - olir harbor this morning, on her way from
Matagorda Say, to Panranla, •Fioridai - to which
Fort she has been' ordered, that the ofaaers may
gtra.evidenoe in a slaver ease. about to be tried
there
We learn that the Spanish " Cork Acorns," dis
tributed from the 11, S. Patent Office among the
eitiseas of Texas, appear to glow Seely. At
General B B Nichol s country seat, on Diet (m
-ien's creek, near Grantly, In this county, a num
ber of them germinated months ago, and aro no s
groeing with a very healthy appearance.
Mr. -William Hill was yesterday committed to
jail by United States Commissioner James Love,
Esq., _ to await the verdict of a grand . jury com
posed of twenty men, etopennelted to inq u i re i nto
the charge of murdering .W. W. Lyon, on the
reamship Matagorda, on Saturday' night lest.
Co'onel Wit-lam T. Austin is foreman of the jury.
Should a true bill be kund the taiat•wili take
place immediately, before the Federal Court.
The beaoh has been saarobel as fai-down as the
West Bud, by Order of the, coroner, but nothing
has yet been heard of the hotly., - Byer: exertion
will be made to recover the body.-
The- &paten Telegraph, says :
The amount!, from the country are all of the
nest tlattaring character. Crops were never more
praratsing at this season of the year than now.
Everywhere the cotton and corn are - doing well.
There is tome want of Asia, bat it Is not general,
or of a serious character. except in a few lootaltiee.
Even dry,ei it is where "rain is most wanted, there
appears to be no fear rut . a lolerahle:,corrt crop
will be secured. - • ..
The Ban Antonio beraid of the Bth says the
steams
- to natohasi the otois-ties for tbe Ban An
tonio and uit Railroad have been firoiehe.l by
the pisaident or the reads