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Results of the Last Session of the Pr}xs_siau Diet. The Four New Churoh-Laws, and the New Departure, The Prussian “Union” Party, and lis Prospects in the Coming Campaign. ! Partly Thieologleal Charncter of tiio Cane vass---The Important Role of tho O1d Catholics. . Spsetal Correspondence of The Chicago Tribune. ‘Brauy, May 23,1873, Tho last sossion of the prosont Pruésian Par- Liamont has come to an ond. ‘The woapons have boon forgod by which tho Btato, this timo sup~ ported by all tho difforent fractions of Liborale iom, is to fight the battlo . AGAINAT ULTRAMONTANISM AND SOOIALISM, —two powors that, howovor (ntrinsically opposed to oach other, still unito in tho samo wish and cudoavor of geeing tho present Government— yos, tho Biato iteelf—pulverized to atoms, in order to profit by tho then incoming ohaos. Tho coming elections, both for tho Prussisn and Germon Parlinments, will, theroforo, bo un- ususlly Htvoly and strongly contestod. Toundor- stand tho moaning and bearing of tho groat strogglo soon to commonco, or, rather, of this now notof tho groat drama, & roview of thio Jat Parliamontsty action will greatly aid. ‘Evarybody recollecta the opening of tha groat Bismarck orusads againat tho Ordor of Josuits, onding with their expulsion from tho Empire. But this mensura was only tho precursor of othor far moro important onos, Though the Josuita had left, tholr spirit romained, or, xathor, their disciples, bolug in possosslon of all the high places in the organization of tho Catholio Ohurch in Gormahy, continued in their resistanca against tho Government, and fn thoir strenuous adhe- slon to tho Infallibility doctrine, andits (to tho Btata) dangerous consoquonces, This nudacious spirit on the part of tho Church-londors had to curbed, and tho sources from which it rocruited {tself had to bo stopped and choked up. To at- tain those onds, tho Coustitution of Prussia itaelf 4 IIAD TO DE CHANGED ; the principlo, *‘ A freo Churchi in & froo Btata," .| more or less embodled in the old Constitution of 1850, had virtually to bo doclared a failura; and, instead of s completo separation of Church and Btate, wo have got tho formor subordinated to the Iattor in gomo important rolations. While, according to the gld Constitution, *The Lvapgolical and the Romon Ontholic Catholie Ghm‘chou, a8 well a8 oll other roligious denom- inations,"” aro loft free ¢ to regulato and ndmin- istor thoir affairs indepondently, or in » melf- overniug mannor,” tho new smendmont adds : gv‘l.m(. thoy remain subjoct to the laws of tho State, and to tho logally-ordained inspection by the Stato.” » By menns of this smondment, tho Governmont hias beon enabled to bring in four bills, that havo il boon passcd by groat mujoritios, and that will form tha . QIEAT FEATURE OF THE COMING CAMPAIGN. ALl portios, oxeept tho party of (ho Right Con- tro,- tho special roprescutatives of Catholicism, with some members of tho oxtreme Right, unitod in tho support of thoso bills; and, in consequonca tlhioroof, we shall have tho spoctaclo of seolug Liboral candidates gotting tho votas of Counsorvatives, and Consorvative, or at loast Froo (Liberal) Couservativo, nud porbaps oven Now Conacrvativo (tho namo of & faction jusk formod) candidales elccted by moans of votes coming from the camp of the National Liberals and of tho Progressivo party. Tho political lino of domarkation will bo, thid snmmor and fall, botweon the ** cnomies of the Empire,” the Ul- tramontanes aud thoir allios of the Boolallstic, Democeratio, or exsrome Consorvative stamp, on one side, and the National Libarals, Lha Progres. siven, tho Froo Couservativas, tho New Consor- vativos, and the Conservatives, on tho other. The issuo has been forced upon the Administra« tion by the other side. ‘I'ho griovous faults of the renctionary }';!riod of 1849 and 1850 Lnd coma homa to roost. Tha former policy, of letting tha Gatholic Bighopa do aa thoy pleased, in order to ot their aid agaiuet tho terrible Demoorate, hid Eruught about a groater dangor than over Dom- ocruts wore, sud IT WAS SELF DEFENSE whon such lows as thut diracted against Josuits, end now agaiu tho four so-called church lows, bad to be passed. But the recent rofusal, on the part of tho Brit- ish Parlismont, to pags Mr, Miall's bill to dides- tablish tho Anglican Church, und tho incronsed ‘majority agaiust his bill, give proof that another ourront bas st in ; that the hopoful confidence in the eventual lying down of State and Church with each other, like lamb andwolf, haa suffered shipwreck; and that,in Germanyat lonst, theState is resuming again its soveroign aud self-assert- mfi position in regard to Church, school, and other establishments, and corporations genor- ally, The nim of the four new Prussian lawa is & two-fold ono : In the first place, the Bishops shall bo INTIMIDATED AND ONECKED in thelr procecdings against priosts and laymen ; the powor of suupending pricsts from offico on thepart of Bishops i coueidorably curtailed ; tho common pricsts are placed undor tho protoc- tion of the Stato ; aud 2 now tribunal is estab- lished to decide botween Bishop aund Brioat, betwoen excommunicated laymen and ishop. Tho latter i throatenod with heavy fings if ho acts iu contravoution of tho now laws, and be may, in somo cagey, oven bo himuelf sus- pended from office. But all theso flues aud punishments will avail little unloss tho Catholio mnsses thomselvos come to approve of tho new 1aws, nnd to comprobond the necossity of cor- tain- limits beyond which no Church can bo allowed to [ without causing the vory existonce of Bteto and socicty to be seriously endangored. The socond and principal ond of tho new laws is to procuro a botter, & MORE PATRIOTIO CLASS OF PRIESTS. ‘The frat law strikos o blow aguinst the present systom of finiekijng Cathollo thoologians by monna of gominarion. Tho old system ia now ro- ennctod. The Cathallo theologian has to study again In Gorman universities, whore he comea in contact with modorn sclonce, with atudenta of other faculties bosides thuolugfl, with tho groat now spirit of Gormen mnationafity und Gorman Fathorland, Tho boys’ sewinarics and boys' oonvlcts,—thoso nursories of future Ultra- montane priests and tools of Romo,—have to close up thoir business ; no new pupils aro fo be roceived ; but e who wants to. bo a priest in Prussin has (o go through tho public high- school (gymnasin) and universitios, ‘The artifloin) scelusion and one-eldodnces, the oharactoristics of tho prosent systom, hava to como o & mudden end, Iinally, no pricst can enter into his offico if tho officers of tho Btats (in this caso tho high- eat official of tho respoctive provineo, the Ober Presidont™) me againat it, and this protest 'may be justitied by facts. by which ¢the pro- sumption is sntistactorily sustained .that - the person [uominated or appomtad by the Bishop or othor suporiors] will rosist tholaws of the Btate, or counternct tho legal ordors of tho au- thoritics, or disturb the publio poace,” Iy thia clause, tho Government i endowod with f A TEDFECT VETO-POWER inregard to such ecolosiastical appointmonts as mey seem to run against the iuterests of the Btate, It is remarkable that tho Orthodox Prot- estant clergy, though also dissatisfiod with tho Ymflm Beorotary (Minister) of Publio \Vcrule. *alcke, has moroe or less given in its adhesion to the now laws, considering thom practically only intonded for the curbing of Ultramontano en- croachimenta on the torritory of tho Stato. The Evangelical Church (azello oven contends that, a8 ofticinl Cutholicism haa dared to assert ita in- faltibility, it I8 also the right of the world to as- port itsiufallibility, and that Ultramontaniom, firat of all things, lins to bo chocked, ‘Tho campaign will, under theso circustances, . partako of n pocullar charsotor. ‘Cho Prussian Cabinot, sinco the retiromont of Hoelchour and Itzenplita fnnusnd by tha grout ll.\mcplcfl of Laskor agalugt the Privy Counsolor Wagner), contalning a clear majorily in favor of the New Doparturo, will throw its woight againet all Ultramontano oandidatos, and all buoh ultra-Oon- servativo onos ay have heretofors acted, or aro likely to act, {n unlson with the Ultramontanos, The National Liberale—de faoto the ruling party, though not reprosented by mou of tholr own stripe In the Cabinet—are forming ovarywhoro coalitions with the Progressives or, in efection- districts whero it is necessary, with the Froe Consoryatives, ooo of whom, Ackenback, bag of Enminnrcb, n dat bocn Appobited Minintor! bo place of Count Itzenplitzs It is not impon- nb the" Natloual Liberala mby this fall A CLEAR MAJORITY in tho Prusslan Houso of Doputios—n rosult novor beforo attalned.yet, and promising great oonsequonoss, among othora the ceasation of such compromisecs a8 are made nccesaary by tho want The Ultramontaners will call upon-Heaven and Holly-thoy will appeal to, and orance of tho massos ; and, BERLIN. it of s majority. speoulata on, the i as thoy bave.a roliablo and activo viliage,—i, e., the priosts,—thoy wi ndda fow moro sonts to tho fifly or so whioh The sents which they may possl- ba logt by that olass of ultra-Con- servatives that doos not like Blamarol moro-Royal than; tho King himso! Thluabfl"loh"ll"'l therofore, new_issues, but ol polioy for the, futuro, but about the ate in itw assumed position. The ond will probably bo the COMPLETE. 180LATION OF T{iB ULTNAMONTANES, The allianco of political fcaotious in favor of tho prosont policy of the Government rominds ono of tho position of the Republican party attor the entotment of the Fourtoonth and Fifl Amondments § it {s tho dofenso of thoss Amond~ not tho laying out of neyw iwork, on the strongth of which they—L. o., —alaim ra-alaction on tho part of thoir conatits onts, The political pros foro, no new pointa. Tl campaign itself will bo tho combined attack from all parts of the Goyornmont partios (for in that light all the above-montioned’ fractions will practioally appoar) upon the dogms of Papal Infallibility, and the unheard-of assumptions of owor_based upon it, The importance of tha 1d Catholio : movement, bo tn'n ht, not on tho Liboral partien ammos prosent, thero- o novoel fonturo of the in promoting that movement. 8o intimato s yot the conneotion of Oliurch and Btate, or, rather, such a power is atill inhoront in religion, thal the eoming campalgn will nocossarily - DE NELIGIOUALY TINGED § and it will be the t: sk of tho presa to olronlato Iargely the idoas sat forth by stioh mon -as D luntsohli, and others, a; the new dogtrines about tho rolations betwoen Church and State, assorting themsolves under the pretonse of boing the authoritative voico of tho whole Oatholic world. Pope, and the election of o losa obstinato suc- oorsor, would, of course, greatly facilitate the yiotory of the modarn Bfate nud its ropresecnta- tives ovor mediroval dreams and strange anachro- I, SonLAEGER. PALMER AVENUE. v the Editor of The Chioago Tribune; 8m: From the standpoint of common citizen- ship, I desiro to call attention to a mattor of justice which Lias beon long nogleoted, but which should be negleoted no longer. 1 allude to an old suggostion, that-tho name of Blato stroot should bo forover orased, and the name of Palmer avenuo substituted in ita place. Btato street, a8 a namo for one of onr greatest thoroughfares, shouldceaso to have an existonco, for tho ronson that it 18 & namo common to al- ‘most every city and town in the country. Chi- oago 19 an original city, and should b original in small matters as woll as great. Lot.us not imitate Boston, or Now Yorl, or Nothing 18 more contompt- Thero is ‘not & man lingor, Friadrich BI London, or Paria. iblo than such imitation. on Btato stroet who would not bo glad to seo this name oxterminated. not only be a much finer name-in sound, but would, morcover, bo n graceful compliment and act of justico towards the gentloman who has stakod his all in moaking it what it now is, and what it I8 to bo, Evory disintorested citizon must seo tho om- inont proprioty of such action. citizons draw up a_propor petition to the Com- mon Council, and I entortain no doubt that sucl s ohange would bo sanctioned by that body. I'ho ontiro city would eay Amon. Mr. Palmer may bo called tho fathor of our now architectura. Ho, first, boforo tho firo, at large oxponse, erocted buildivy 0808, in which tho idea of ed. By so doing, Lo stimulated others. Wo wore all proud in looking -at tho old Tield & Loitor store, and in tel was built by a successful Chicago morchant, No one grudgod him his woalth, where he had mado it. Ho oxpendod his woalth “1iko o princo,” ss they say, but nobler and moro genorously than the nerveless Princes of modern times. Thero is no estimating tho good which ho hng dono. The new Ohicago, or the ideas upon which sprang _from ificent buildiugs * which Pot- d oreoted a8 tho fororunners He sowed the secds from which the presont pelaces of trade have grisen. strange it sooms that, I Ohicago, tha othoreal 1dons of bosuty in archi- tecturo should Lianve taken euch deoj Tho sorvices of NMr. Palmer elo enlly approciated. Losing millions b one Las hoard him utter a word o A moroly rich man is nothing in a community. He is oftentimes dospiscd. It haes boon said, and with o groat deal of truth, that **twenty first-class funerals * would prove of inestimabla beneflt to Chicago. Thoro aro millionaires in this city who are always talking of thogreat things thoy aro going to do, buk do nothing, The o 8 thoy evor do with vigor is ta opposo c improvements and to fight all taxea. Buch men aro & cureo to any community, and wo have thom in Chloago. But thero is & wide contrast botwoen these anda man of the stamp of Mr. Palmor, . Palmer {8 a workman, tho morning until § in tho ovenin him any day in tho vicinity of his g ovorything that ia dono, Ho has congulied many architects, and has porsonally inspectod the greatest hotels on the European but, aftor. all, he is Limsolf £ own building, e asks no oredit, but he doserves it, noverthe- lens, Lot tho stroot b callod by ] ought to, and I most sincerely hope it will bo Palmer avenuo would 6 for commeorcinl bonuty was em- our frionda that it He exponded it o city so practical ns o protty good crop o From? o'lock in no. Even on the score of interost, evory one owning property on the streot would b 'ho name, known now throughout the country, would add to the consoquence of the stroet, and would tend to add to tho value of its t Mr. Palmer s now build- ingl Therawill bo no hotol-building on tho face of the earth to compare with it in con- venionce, seourity, durabilit; eloganco and rofinod tasto. kind, *ono of the wonders of tho world,” All citizons of judgment concede this, unl chanca to ba the ownors or keopers of other dings of & similar naturo. ected that one hotol propriotor will go into ex- asios ovor another man's -hotel. a8k too much of human nature, Thia Pacilc i8 & grand affair; the now Tromont is a model of boputy and proportion ; tho Sher- man is an_elogant structurs its oxtornal appearanco, but within, Theso hoteld nro an honor to the city, and will, boyond _question, be ;nim)(l by tho public, o8 thoy wi 'hint & monumen| and substantinl It cannot be ex- unostontatious in ull of good things onorously suss woll desoryo to 0, Tow astonishing aro'the fruits of the great fira! The old struotures atood in tho way, and thoy woro consnmet in order that a Gardon Cily might riso upon their ruins; Values, 8o far trom being dostroyed, huve actuall ‘Thoko who lackod confldence Of faith. Everything hns an upward tondenoy. The world ronlizos that & city which could eo Boon recover from the most oxtensivo conflagra- tion of anciont or modern times ‘must be in- boen enohanced, efore pro now full An enormons physical powor has been shown, It romains to be soon whethor Chicago possossos thoso groat moral and Intellectual forcos with- out which no city ean be truly groat, howevor, numerous ita population or henutiful its palaces. How monn is dust, unless aminated by the shin- ing splrit or the inger elcotric_flvos! J, Esarag WARREN, —_—— The Kansns ¥lood. JFrom the Leuvenworth (Kan.) Times, June 8, Probably tho heaviest rain-storm that over swept over our broad praivies visitod the ceutyal and western portions of our Btateon Sunday aud Bunday night of tho 2tk ult, tion of tho storm eoems to have fallon in Morrls, Marion, Ohbase, Lyon, aud Osago Countica, T'he Burlington Palriol says tho Cottonwood and Noosho Rivors wore, on Tuosdsy morning, at Emporie, out of their banke, and the entivo val- ley ou both aldes of the Cottonwood, from Em- porla wost es far as Coledo, n distance of alout nino milos, was almost complotely inundated. Many of tho farmors wore compellad to move thelr tamilies out to tho highor lands, The Kansas, Arkanens, aud other treams haye been highor than known for years, oulverts, bridges, aud other porl has suffored to some oxtont. Wo are glad to learn, howovor, that the damago to orops has stimatod, and tho logy in this uarter s comparatively trifling. Tortunatel the flood subsided as rapidly as it onme, Interrupting tho regular routine of dal Tho heaviest por- beon greatly over- + | 1IRISH ALL OVER Tho Exposition Thoy Are Getting Up for -Augush It Will Be Irish-American and Tntor- COontinental, > In Order to Insufo Sucocess, Thoy Will Tssuo $100,000 Irvedeom- able Bonds. Tho Falr to Bo Hold at tho West Sido Rink and Thoreabouts, The Jubilee is over. *The mon who got it up have retirod as millionaires. The thoussnd lit tlo children who sang on Friday, and who then woro tho envy of thoir clags-mates, have become ordinary mortals, and aro cuffed and spanked Juat as if they and Gilmore bad not tnken part in tho grand glorification, Tho crowds who oamo - from villages and from' dorn-growing farms, havo gono homo, It hae been genorally taken for granted that sftor tho hurrah of last weol, o stato of quict would continue through suliry July and August, and until tho Exposition of Beptembor comes to onlivon tho Autumnal months, It Is nssumod that during the months which' are immediatoly beforo us, city pooplo will be busy visiting their country cousing, and will not oare about gotting up anytling which msy take the rural frianda from lomo. During ' thoso months, tha gomeater learns now fricks, the bankrupé goos through the courts, and gots whitownshed for the fall trado ; the young lady who has boen }ilted, picks up o husband and casts away hor willow ; the paraon finda time to writo new ser- mong, or tinkor up old ones. All lifo takes o re- coss. Bo it would have been “this year too, but for one of the elements in Chicago life which is so erratio In its movements, that it utterly defles all calonlation, It has 08 many moods and faces 08 the laughing Protous, - To-day it is sobbing at a'wako ; to-morrow screaming in & shouting Jig. It votes for Dan O'Hara niid Chnrley Far- woll. Itis never rhore it is oxpoctod to bo, and very of ten whoro It is not wanted at all. ‘Who but tho Irish would ever dream of organ- izing o jubiles to last through throe August weoks ? It tokon tho descondants of tho soldiers of Fontonoy, and Pleton's fight- ing votorans, to _attempt. such & thing, It raquires men who have a gonius for attomp! ing tho impossiblo'to undortale to draw a crowd hore in burning August to broak in upon tho tranquil curront of our lives, and drag us from cool homoes to the hot Rink, which from the 4th to the 23d of August is to be an epitomo of tho history, productions, and curiositios of Iroland, ond to show that though ‘;st boneath the Sax- on's yoko, *shoe lives, 6hc brenthes, sho burns." Tho nome given to this affairis the * National Trish-American Intor-Gontiuontal Bxposition snd Churoh Fair." It is undor tho patronago of tho Irish Litorary Bocloty, tho Feninn Urfiuuizahun, tho United Orangomon, snd §t. Jarlath’s Church. From this list of names it will bo scon that the millenuium is noar at hand, and that united Tre- land in Ameries is no longer n dream, If there is any Irishman who is outside of thoso organiza- tions, Lo must bo a traitor to his nativoland and o British irolivg. . Tho objects of tho Exposition aro o acquaint Chicagoans with the resourcos of Iroland, to promoto the growth of unily among Irish mon and women, and Lo raiss monoy for 8. Jarlath’s Ohurch, which is namod aftor an Irish gentle- man who was o Christian in thoso days when ono risked womothing by it, and who, heving boon captured by the Danes, was put to death by them, * undor. circumstances of pecullar atroci~ ty," s tho papers suy, Tho reasons for holding the Exposition af so Inton date nro numerous and satisfactory, A supply of tho valuablo relics and curicsitios ‘which aro to be exhibitod will Liave to bo manu- factured, and the moncy whicl is neaded for starting the onterpriso las to bo raised. ‘Cho noedtul i8 to bo raised in the usual way, by the palo of bonds to the amount of 100,000, Theso bonds, which will saon Lo ready for delivery, sro vory beautifully designed, and arc of nnusually largo sizo, it boing intended that auyuncertainty a8 to their ultimate payment shall bo compon- sated for by their bignoss. Neatly framed, the; will form an ornament for any parlor, and wil servo to keop frosh, in tho minds of their own- org, tho memories of tho Exposition, 'Thoy aro printed - in_ groon, illustratod with historical geencs, such as St. Patrick banishing the snakes, the battle of Olontarf,. Dnnn{bmuk TFawr, tho rolief of Londonderyy, tho battlo of Ridgoway, oto., and profusely bo sprinkled with Hitlo harps and shamrocks, It has been decided not to have coupons, sinco it would bo a constant source of troublo fo the bondholders to bo mending to Obicago] overy year or g0 for their interest. There is also some Tm.uun ag to the timo to bo fixed for promising to pay the priucipal, and it may never be sottled. 1t Is oxpooted that o market will ba found for thoso emong lovers of art, servant girls, patri- otic Celts, and Americans who want the Irigh vote. The Hon. 0. B, Farvell and the Hon. J. D. Ward aro oxpected to invest largely, and the Temporanco Buroan, whiol has lately” boon flirt- ing with tho Trish, and attempting to bring about s coslition of whisky and water against beer, will bo requested to provo its: faith by its works, and to subseribo to the Irleh-American Inter- Oontinontal lonn, which, o\\‘lufi to ils povorty, it will probably fail to do. *Still, lieved that thero will be any tronbla about dis- roulu of the bonds, ginco experience hias shown liat there novor woro bonds iesued yet that did not find purchasers somewhero. Tfmm nover was a mouth but what thiore was food for i, nor a bond but what thero was a simploton for it, They may be had on spplication at the oflice, No. 678 Jockson stroot, When tho nocossary amount of moncy has boon ralsod; aftor deducting all expenses for printiog bonds, for salarios, oflice rent, eto., the managemont will engago the Rink on_the corner of Ada and Randolph stroots; a building which s boon used for skating, for o menagerio, aud for holding Ropublican moetinga. It will also occupy the vacant lota in the vicinity, both south and wesb of the Rink, which it wiil it up in tho rhanner made necessary by its oxtonsivo and truly unfque programmo, A'portion of the va- cant ground will be uged for tho erection of o steam boiler, for the purpore of furnlshing powor neoded in tho mechanical dopartmont of tho Exposition, Asa genoral thing, (his me- chanical dm[)n.rtmanf. i3 a groasy fimrfl whoro poople apoil their clothes, and have to listen to nasty mon oxpluining ecoontrlo motions. Thers aro Inthos nud pinning machinos, and stoami_onglics, and printing prosscs, bigh- ]i utilitarian " and jmmonsely “stupid. fiut tho ~ Trishman ~ with his turn for sontimont, und Lis distasto for tho purely usoful, Intenda to chango all that, aud to mako this do- }mtmunt ono of peculiar intorest. Its prineipul onture Wil b’ bulf o dozon stills, where pura pothoon will be producod, with tho genuine pont rook in it, and will be rotailed fresh, at reasonn- ble prices. Milk from tho cow, and clder from tho press, will bo at a dircount, "There will plso bo & gonuine Irish spluning-wheel, run byu young lady from the County Connemara, where #uch machines still linger, ho nowspapor which is to bo publislied during the Exposition, and which wilt bo furthor montloned horenftor, will bo sot up hero, and the writors will nlxo do their work in full viow of the é)ubllu. Visitora aro requestod not Lo spouk to tho editors whilo thoy are ongaged in litorary Inbors, nor to prosent thom with bills. ‘Tho suceess of tho paper do- mands that thelr minds should bo froe from earo, ‘The porsons amvluynd in tho manufacturo of Irjsh rolics will also bo placed hero. A lnrga quantity of clay bis boon importod fram Ireland, and wil bo mado on tho ppot into swall bricks, which wil bo intoroating ourlositios. Trom tho oxaggeratod statomonts of some Irish {mtrlols, Amerienus have Leon lad to bellove that D10 manufactures of TIroland have heen cruwhod out by the digeriminating legislation of: Groat Britain, and that the linous and laces which hier wong and daughtora onco made wore things of tho pest, It istruo thoy woro unable to recon- cllo theso statoments with tho immenss quan- titios of “gonmiug Irish lnon™ offerod at roduced rates by peddlors who had smugglod it, "Chiu Exposltion will alo to corroct that (o, for it wlil bavo what in dry-goods slang is called *' a full line " of Limerlck lucos, linon popling, Bal- briggan hose, Blarnoy tweods, Irlsh frioze and corduroys, bog-oak fewalry, and shillolaghs of o {lltlum similar totho ono flourished by the Rov, \Ir, Bullivan. In order toromove any shadow of doubt from thomind of the purchuser of tho Jaut- named artioles, thoy will be manufactured on the spot by artistas imported for the purposs. Dublin tallors will algo be in attendance, and will make suits and ovorcoats of frioze to ordor on tho spot, Thove will bo nune of tho priveoy of tho " THE CHICAGO, DAILY TRIBUNE: T it {8 not be- .| thitors hw‘(-fiou’n}. \ Mo oustomor will o hl}nu-! nred in'phiblio 4. the coat will bo oub,out befora ! hig.oyoni tho oross-logged tnilors will' make.it in hin presonce, and Lo can woar his patriotie. gormont off on Lid badle, But Iroland is not riok in manutactures nlono, Bho i yich in an hiatorio, though au unhappy, past, From tho ramparts of Dorry to tho rocky, shores of Bantry Bay i from the Races of Gastls.’ bar to Vinogar Hill, {t {s all consoorated ground. 1ta rivors have boon roddened with blood. Its baro-logged Kernes hiave lald in walt In eve: mountain pass and thiokot, Dancs, Boots, Nof- mans, Bpaniards, Fronohmen, sud Enflllahme: i all have oncamped upon ity flolds and loft thelr momorialy thero. Tu order to food tho flamo of patriotism in tho hoarls of tho Irish, and apposl 10 the pookots of the Amoriosns, the following relios will Lo.on exhibition: Turf from the Pass of Plumes in tho Bog of Altan. This pasa was tho acone of & furlous_battlo. botweon ' the English and tho Irish,” and so much blood waa shed that tho turf which lma grown there ovor ulnco s of » doop rod, and will not_burn at all, differing, thorefore, from ordinary turf, ‘whiol in not rod, and bums badly. Ploces of -the . Blarnoy-atono,. an inoh squaro, which can bo sot na charms or carried fn tho ves! pocket, Tho mnarvelous qualities of this stono aro wollImown, and it Las long boon used by somo of tho politicians of Ohioago. Thoso who want offico this fall will find it invaluablo, In order that tho idea may not bacoms ourrant that thoso plocos consist of Jollet limeatone, it may a8 woll bo explainod that tho nmgnog-lano has s wondorful faculty of roproducing ifsolf, ' Onta E“m off-tho original and it grows sgoin, just ko & pornon’s toe-nall, -Bottles of water, from tho River Boyne, in pints and quarts. Its ox- hilarating ?unuuus aro romsrkablo, the more montion of this water ofton throwing an Irlshman futo & stato of violont excitemont, oro a ohoap substitute for whisky {anoodod, this is Invaluable, A numbor of ptnkes from the English Polo, which was con- etructod®around lfl:igs and Queons Connties by tho Snesenach in ordor to keop tho Irlsh from dovouring thom." Specimens of tho pikos usod ‘g tho mon of '08, Including the one with whioly jol. -Walpolo ~was -perforated. Tho original ourso of Cromwell, “cngrossed on parchment, containing tho passages supprosasd in modern oditions, A musket belonging to tho Quoon's Own, loft by Its owner when going from Ridgos VoY {o dinnor, Tho pastoral staff of St. Patrick Rooks, from the Giant's_Causoway. Collection of bones gathored on’ Irish Dattle-flelds from Clontarf down to Goray. Cannon ball fired by Cromwoell Into Roginald's Towor at Waterford. Matthow.Arnold says that tho Coltic raco has nover oxcellod in tha plastio arts, and cannot ob-, toin tho highest dogreo of oxcollonco in them. Notwithetanding this opinion of a friend of tho Colt, tho mnnnsnra intend to have a dopartment of fine arts, and, by the programmo, it will be o vory croditable’ ono, consisting of sculpturos, {mmfinge, and ongravings, Including copiea of ho greatost masterpiocos of Irish artists. Tho manogement hag to contont itself with copies, sinco Hiore never wero any originals, Thoro will olso bo a_complote morles of Hudson's Irish sconory, o fine collection of phntogmfihs. store- oscoplo views, cliromos, oto, ; & modol of tho hn‘rfi» which oncoslied tho soul of music in Tara’s Hall ; and olk-horn drinking cups; instead of thie Jacob's wall fo be found at most fairs, thoro will bo a emall lako of Killarnoy, with ochoes by gentlemon engaged for tho purposo. Thoro wiil aleo bo a National Wax-Works Galle nmbmcln%rnpmuunlnunns of_tho Duke of Wel- lington, DBrinn the Great, Lord Castlarcagh, 0'Connoll; Flood, Phil and Brinsley Bhoriden, Burko, Jumes Blsphuns, Cardinal Cullen, Presi- dout flnnmflmn, ames Stephons, cto, The department of Litoraturo snd Oratory will bo under tho immodinte chargo of tho Irish Lit- orary Socloty. ‘A nowspapor, ably edited, and woll provided withi interosting roading matter, will bo !;ubllshud woekly for o fow weoks prior to tho oginuing of the Exposition, and daily during ita duration. Tho gentlomen twho. do the oditing were formerly counccted with the Irish News, once publishad hore, and ara afectionataly re- memberod by the subscribors_to that slect. During the Exposition the Hon. John F. Scanlan will recite, In quarter-hour doucs, his colobrated oration on tho ‘Uariff ; the Hon, A, L, Morriyon will lecturo on “ Temperance,- an Irish Trait ;" Joln T, Tinerty on the * Daitle of Ridgowny au Beon by an Eye-Witnoss in Duffalo ;" Mr. Tiizgibbon on ' Roliglon, tho Dusia of Eduoa- tion," and 1r, 2oClure on ‘! Prosbyterianism tho Bolo Bafoguard of tho Ropublio.” In addi- tlon to this, Jorominh Mahony and William Fo- garty will, from timo to time, dellyor original pooms. it possible, pls{a of a national charac- tor will also be given In the nationsl tongue. ‘The actors will bo obtained from Connemars, whero Enffl(ah is rarely spokon. nnd is not logs renownod for tha bea ty of its daughtors_than the valor of iis sons. Tho * yellow-haired meidens of Erin " wore tho Goligh? of tho poote, 16 ibey liavo beon tho joy of many an Amorican houseliold. 8o tho Expo- sition, undor the hoad of *‘nataral productions of Iroland,” will havo a collction of cholco rof resontatives of tho verious {ypes of fomalo beauty to bo found in the old country. The short-potticonted girloens of Galwoy; the ro- fined dnughtors of Dublin; tho Spanish-cyed wemon from the Bouth coast; thoe graceful Inssos from tho Bhannon ; the red-haired women fyom the County Down; tho peasantry of Loit- rim, will all ba prosent. In addition to all this, tho Iadies of Bt, Jar- latl's Church will have for ealo a %nnmy of Eln-cnsmoun. slippers, dolls, smoking-caps, oaded susponders, ote. This department wil not differ materially from the ordinary church fair, which is too unplensantly familiar to all dwellors in this Christlan country to roquire any extonded notice. Anothor now and plossant foature is, that o banking offics, under the management of a sound and popular firm of this uil{, will be pro- vided for tho accomwmadation of tho morchants ‘ond others visiting the Exposition. All who patronize the affair can securo time-loans on rensonable torms without dupon“ing collaterals. ‘Phia fenturo alono will insure s large attend- anco. e Arrangomonts_have baon made for the impor- tetion of & number of inumlug-cnrs, that most prominent foature in Irish sconery, which will run on' Randolph and Madison streots. Each one will bo driven by n genuing Irish peasant, in his national costume, a contract having been made with Mr, MoViokor Lo do tho costuming in his bost stylo. It is guarantood that cnch_light-hoarted Coltio driver shall make at lesst ono bull ovory five ' minutes, TIn order to make it casy to'reach tho Rink, tho Wost Sido Btreet Reilway Company has agreed toput on an oxtra car. No Mftmxunnl chargos will be made, Invitations have bdon sont to a number of distivguished gentlomen, snd it is probable that the sceno will be graced by the preaence of the Irish members of the Common Councll, the Ifon, Mark Bheridan, the Hon, Phil Hoyuo, the Hon, 0. B, Farwell, and gonorally all those politicians who aro on tho anxions bonch. I'he Board of Management requoat us to call speeial nttontion: to tho immonso advertlsing medium oftered by this ontertainment, and we do so” with ploasuro. Not only will thoro Lo’ about & quartor of & mile of fonco available 'for osters aud signs, but the ontiro outside‘of the nk will bo divided off into squares, which will borouted out ot very low pricos, and opera- glasscs wl!nldbo Landy, #o that pagsers-by can 1and thae tisomonta which aro atack up near tho roof. Tho cost' of this kind of advertising is in an invorse ratio. to tho distancs from.the ground. The building, “when thus docorated, Wil clogely resemblo the' ourtain of n variotles thoatro. Mr, MaOluro has’ chargo of thiy @opnriment. Tho ticketw will by sold nt the following oxtraordinarily low rates : | Admission from sun-riso till 6 o'clock in tho - ovening, 25 conty; from 6 till miduight, 60 centa, that is, the longor you etay, tho loss you have to pay. Ben: sou tickots, admitting o lady and gentloman twico n duy, and ontitling onoto spocial bauking facilitics, avo &6, | During the ovenings n brass-hand will beguile tho 4me by playing national: anthems. Whito tho Exposition is in lpregrnuu it is undorstood that nlrlrlsmnou will bo united for the foray sgalust tho pookets of Chicagonns, Tho mec- tional anintositics, hallowod by the assoolationd of » thousand Jonm, will bo tem= porarily forgotten. Corkonian and Far Down will nbstain from porsonalitios. Men from Tips orary and Xilkonny, Sligo and Muyo, will dwell {’ogulKer tike tho lian, aud tha littlo whito lamib, on the millennial day, L'o soo this is, o8 tha cir- ous billy usy, ““alono worth the ‘price’ of admis- ion," : Theso are, fu brief, tho prominont features of tho Irish Exposition of August, Yo Amerlean voadors, somo of thom may ‘scem oxaggerated and absurd, but the Irishman has no common- pluco, mattor-of-fact, Anglo-Saxon way of doing things, “He gives to the commonest wmattors & glimmer which othor races canuot bestow. Ho poes all things through the purple haze of patriotism, which naturally gomowhat dis- orts ono's vislon. To 80 n ouce groab and utill noble raco gathoring togothor, on alien sliores, thouo seattored, brokon rolley, thoso ma- montoos of a dead nation, la pnmutln. not farcl~ cal. ‘I'oso who ave socking for thein, havo thelr oyos blinded with tears, and If thoy plok llg ntuun» a8 well ug Jowols, who can wondor ab it The worn-out 8hoos of & dond cbild aro a8 pro- olous to tho mothior as the corals that enciroled its nock, and to the Lot of an Irishman, tho old shaos of O’Connell aro as dear ad the foldun oollar of King Malachi, and the sposchos of John M. Tlountreo ns tho oratory of Grattan, 8o, though it will be vnrfl Lot during these :fmlng Auvgust doys, wo will all go the Lxposle jon. JUNE 19, i8y3: ' 'NEWS-FROM CITY: HALL. "\ | Tho Committeo of Soventy, the Mayor, and Saloon Licenses, A Oonfliot Between the Hackmen and Livery Stable Mon, The Court-IIouse Plans, Yosterdoy aftornoon, Mossrs. Willard Wood- ard, ex-Aldorman Thompson, snd Bonjsmin E. Gallup aalled upon the Mayor, on bebalf of tue Committoo of Bovonty, to auggest to him whothor, ag tho timo for Issuing liquor liconses for tho yonr s noar at hand, it would pot be possible to rofuso to ronow them in o hundrod odd cases whora the applicants. yore Iknown to bo violators of 1aw, or porsona unflt to bo intrusted with such pormigaion. They did not Intond thoreby to hit at porgons who may have violated tho Sunday law, but at all who havo broken the law by keoping disorderly, ill-gaverned, or disreptable places. 1t is to somo oxtent what Ald, MoGrath has boon trying to have carried out,~that licenses shall bo granted only to rospootable, rosponsiblo por- song, and which meets -with tho approbation of | tho Porsonal Liberty League, and noarly ovory~ body olse, ThewMayor, however, scemod - to be doubtful as to his powor, owing to an ambiguity {n the ordinances on the subjoot. The ordinanco ontitlod ! Liconses,” which applics to thoso grantod for kooping mont-markots and theatres, 88 -woll as esloons, mays llconsos mny ‘be lesucd to such porsons as tho Mayor in hiw' discrotion may deem suitablo snd proper por- sons! ‘But the ordinnnco cntitled * Spirituous Liquors,” eays the Mayor is authorized to grant a liconse to soll liguor, wine, orbeor to any Or8on -fiplylng in writing, upon his executing o ond with surotios, to be approved by tho Mayor, conditioned to obeerve tho laws,.and that on compliance with tho roquirements, s liconso | ¢ ghall be fsauced,” signed by tho Mayor, oto. Bince, under ordinary, rules of intorpretation, this ordinance specially applying to..'liquor liconsos is tho ono to govers, it .would scom a8 if tho Rlayor was compelled to grant s liconso, if theso roquiroments woro compliod with, and that his only discretion lay in approving tho suretios to tho bond. If so, | tho ravocation of a liconse for keoping opon Bunday would not debar tho saloon-koepoer from gotting & new one ; it would simply darrhu him of the value of tho unoxrimi partof his livengo. This mattor will probably be submitted to the jaw dopartment for ita " opinion, though if tho DMayor choosos to test the question, ho can do 80 by refusing to grant a liconse ta _some unfit per- son. Then tho applicant can bring & suitin mandamus to compol the Mayor to graut it, and tho gourts will decide. THE COMMITTES ON LIOENSEY yesterday conaidorad the ordinonce vetoed by tho Mayor, which ro;lulmu livery-atablo keopera to taka out liconsos for thoir vohiolos, snd to conform to all the requiromoenta made of haok- menrolativo to lamps, badges, oto. A dologa- tion of hackmen was prosont, to state their sido of the case, They aald they did not earo for the liconsing of ono-lorse toams, but what they did want, was to have liconsos taken out for all standing-top cnmn(fua used for hire, to havo thom lighted, and numbored, and 0 Lavo the driver wour o badgo, They allogod that thor own businoss bad bocomo unprofitablo by roason of tho compotition of the livery-stablo ‘men ; that tho ‘mb o proferred an apprrontly Trlvn&n to o monifostly public team ; that tho livory-stable mon had runners in tho hotels and cléowhers, and took faros on tho sbroot whon thoy could find them ; that thoso teams ran into othors, and not boiug numbered could not ba identifled, and that oxtortionato rates wore charged and tho haokmen blamed for it. ©Of those chorges, Rome aro probably n little exaggeratod. ‘o hnckmon liavo an advantago, in that they can afford to underbid the livery-stable man, for thoir estab- lishments are choapor. Tho lattor offers as o considoration for his highor rates o somowhat nicor team, which I taken for a private tonm, Porsons are willing to poy oxira for o little style. Now, the baokmen sook to deprive their compotitors of this componsation for henvior oxpenses in order {0 soo if thoy connot forco the business into their own hands. Xf both toams are numbored, and both drivon by men with badges on, tho cheapor will havo tho ad-~ vantage. Tho Committoo docided to report an ordinanco requiring liconsos to Lo taken .cut for all standing top carringes. Thoy must hiave amps with the namo of tho owner and the number painted on thom, aud the drivor muat wonr o badge. Thon tho Committes wont to aco what _the Mayor thoughv of their work, and found he did not agreo with it, \m\invin{; tho proposed ordinance would mook with tha blttor- est opposition, not from tho_livory-stablo men, ‘bat from the maswof tho public who wore in tho Labit of m‘rm;ifiueu carringos. If the ordinanco 1s possed, it will, therefore, probably fail to meeb oxcoutive approval. BTREET OPERING, The Committoo on Stroots and Alleys of the Bouth Division met yesterday afternoon to con- sidor the ordinance for opeuing Fifth avenuo to Twoltth strect. It waa dooided not to do that, bt to recommend the oponing of Shorman from Taylor to Twolfth, sinco it can be dono much moro cheaply, tho ground through which it would run being of comparatively littlo value, and sinco it would be to the wost of tho railrond tracks, and persons going down it to Twelfth, ‘ani thence westward, would not havo any obstaclos in their way, . THE PLANS, Tho joint committeo on Court-Houso plans held o meeting yostordny aftornoon in Xen- tuoky Bloclk, to which raporters were admitted. The object of . the Committoe was to oxamine the architects of tho six pluus * finally " chosen, Mr, Matz was the fiest architoct called, and an informal converaation with him, which devoloped nothing now, decupiod the ontire aftornoon. Mr, Goy was on hand to undergo a similar ex- awmination, but he was not reachod. It ig the in- tention of the Committeo to go through moro of the plans than they first intended, and probably eixteon architoots Will ho_ called upon to ‘‘riso snd explain,” THIERS. Xilfs Pre-Iosignation Specch. On Moy 24, tho sitting of the French National Asgombly commonced at 9:30 o'olock in the n;?&'nhxg. AL ‘Thiors nscondod the tribune and L} 4 1f any ono ought to givo cxplanations to this Assome Lly and to tho nation respocting tho polioy which was 80 nitagked yosterday, it Is cortainly mysolf, for i¢ I am not alone rosponalbio’ (und I um’ not), I cannot ro- fuso to the colleagues who bave, with mo, do- voted themselves to tho same task a respon. gibility which attests their influenco—if I am not solely reaponsible, tho prlnul{ifll culprit, if there ba any oulpr ay it Uefore 1w Chamnber and the coun- try—it fl L. res i " from tho Loft,] I was right ‘wihien, somo months sinco before the ‘Commission “of I'hirty, I disoussod tho question whether tho President of tho Republic ought to intorveno in the dlscussions upon tntorpolations, I ropeat that, upon this solenin otcasion, I cousider ns dirocted’ ppecisily against mysold_tho attack to which I am about'to only aid, altbough’ i my opimion it would havh been - mors wiso aud moro - pattloti t0 wait during anothor fivo wooks, for within that po- rlod the foreignor will have avacuntod our territory, I havo not hesitated to accopt the challengo of my ad- vorsurios, but I canyot accept u positlon ‘which 18 not my own,’ Wo have scon Ministers ondoavaring £o ro- tal powar up to tho Jast momont, and I do not blame them, for it {6 a logitimate ambition for men to sock tho trlumpli of & ¢ause to which they aro dovolod, Buch {9 Dot my position, I am nob o Mine Juter who bas sought ‘power under ordiuary clreumstances, aud who “desires to prolong his yossomon of it, T was called to powor in tho wravet oiroumustancea that huvo occurrod §n vur history, X il not seok It, I was alsrmod atit, It was ou my part au nct of devation to uccept ft. I oxoreteo it i Dittorness of spirit: I still rutain it for this discussion, But understaud wall, it s I to: whom your vordict will apoly, aud 11t gily 10 o Binuters o lsvo loy- ally soconded ' mo, I will oxplain the course wo have pursued with il lho fraukness which Wo owo 1o ouo mmoflier, [Applawso from tho Left) The policy which = was yes- torday- describod »w n doublo-facod polioy, ‘ade dremfug itsclf now to one sido and now to sudtlier, wlving words and nat doeds—thit 12 & polloy Wo have 0t belootgd; 1t wad iniposed upon ua by thy naturo of things, Ouf murit consiuts in having oboyed (hat nocossity, ‘Think of what was tho position of the country when we accepted power, ‘Tho country wae invaded by tho forefguer in tho Norlh, by tho domocracy In tha Bouth ; it was without o' Govern- ‘mout, without tluancos, withiout an army, "And tho grontoat of our misfortuncs was our di- visions. 1 was necessary to form n goverumont fron inntanlly opposiog partios, Just consldor what aro tho divisiona mnong yoursolyes, Do you think that governmont fs an casy thing 1 such thmea? Allow 1ho (o polnt gt your' position, which 1 net 1y the samo proportion” in tho coutitry as lioro, [Applause from tho Lat) Thioro fs,In o frat vt & grunt Aiviston, which would 'sufiice to muke 1t dinl oulbs womo wish for & 'monoroby, somo for & ro- mubtlo, T4 would bo sirange if, in a couutry whore monarcliy ks oxistod during contiiries of glory and of prosperily, it did nol rotain faithful adlisronts, T am far frow biaming them; but thou, again, otherd aro favorablo to a Topublio, If you hava resson to alarm yoursulves at thoidoa of & ropubllo, In & apleit of prudence aud ot of passion, tho partisans of that i1 tlo preseut stato of tho world,' whon U tho uitimate form of- government in - onp country. Wo ‘st under tho-- prossuro of thono olfcumatances, As poon as (hls gravo subjoot s foiichod wolinvon divislon fnto oqual parties, You havoseen the fact |llol{ when-snch respectablo names - an thoso of AT, Marlel and do Laroy woro in dispto, St tat in ol (o ouly worious eaving of divlslon, - Tho Ifouso of Dourbon haa beon divided siiico the revolution, That - forrible rovolution, ~which lLiss onacied g0 much good minglod with ‘fas orosted m third dynssty tho war. Upon thet sido of tho Assombly, thon T Qnd Consorvativos indood, but . slag thrco dymaaties, On tho othor Jind, s Ulere but ong Topubllo? ~No, thors aro mon Who ‘know thoroughly the conditions of tho Republlo, tha causcs whiol havo 1ed {0 ifs failiizo, who say thst for ihio Ropublio to suce cood 1t must be éno not fo canso alnrm, but to give sate infaction, [Applauss from tno Left.] It 1z sajd tho Topublio Is not republican, Yes, smong {ho highor clagsos, whoso first thought is of public” ordor, thers aro mpprolionsions, _repiignabco, but among {ho moases the Ropubllc has &n ‘Immonso majori- l{ of- adborents +[Denials . - from + tho Light, sppisuae from tho Toft) T wriah fo often o opinlons, but if the masses think as you supposa thoro 8 n0 ground for your slarms. Why do you trigiten -gousseivon, 1€ tho musaos aro with you? t m tho Loft.] Tharo aro among tho Ropublican pas mon who aro wiso onough fo understand that tho fato of tie Hopubllo dsponds upon fia satafylng ana mot elasming the country, Thess men 'havo sssor that tho Ropublio should romain in tho handa df: thoso who bavo s conservativo past to recommend tlem, But thero are others who think differently, ond who aro gravaly compromiaing tho Republio, Ine stoad of rocognizing tho necessity of patiance until timo has bocomo favorabla for thom, thoy thinkit de- sirablo that the Ropublio should be_ oxclusively in'the hands of Ropublichus, They also profess doctrines which alarm the country, Thus thora era throo dyasaiios tud (o xepublics, Hach of Hoso’purt B 10, 0} our oy OVern . Acobr B0t v Spior. Bies bkl & 4 thiero aro othior respeciablo smen, oqual in mumbars, who mak the samo soquost, Thoncs has gprung th pmmfixa which hns diotated my conduct and o my colloaguos, What tho couniry wantod was not o party Govornment, but ono which, inflexiblo in the Proimnco of isordor, when tho struggloms ondod Bhowa itacit calm,»impartint, sud _concilistory. 1ind boon o party oy loug have romafned undisturbed, [Applausoe from tho Lott.) There 18 no skopticism in this impartiality, I am by nature no skoptio either in politics or in phil- oaoLlly. 1 only bolleve that party government would bo disastrous for tho country, Our pollcy, thus do- fined, had a doublo task to fulflil to mako poaco and to relanse tha tarritory ; andataek for tha futurs, which conalsted in directing’ you toward o form of govorn~ ‘ment which aliall bo, 1ot eternal, but durablo, ‘Lot mo brlofly romind you of the position of offairs, . I maka 1o appeal to your gratitudo; I kuow mon,, T aak but uatico, 1 havonofoar of what will bo ‘sald of mo orcattar, {may be found waniing by s party tribune .)h}m I do not fear the dacislon of history,- the future? There ariaea tho queation of moral order, ‘but it is strange that thoso who call for it begin by dis- shiotild bo domoralized? 1t bas hoen said that it s do- vold of religlon, although tho throngs who Al the churches have boen o subjoct for congratulation. Thon ‘wo hear of nl.ofldohllln?, ‘which is said. to have cor- ruptod the nation, But look abroad and sco tho differ= onco, What is meant by moral ordor being disturbed? It means division mnong oursclyesrespecting the form of overnment, [ Ties bien,” from thio Laft,) Wo liavo con told that this is not tho question, %o nra not Monarohists : o aro Gonservativea,” Wo also claim-to ‘o Conservatives, and I havo €0 rosorvo rostraint ovor myself whon find mon youngor than, myncl, wio have been politicians In worda rather in deeds, venture ing o doubt_my conservjive spirit, [Applauso from the Loft.] When you eay, * Wo are Oonservativas, and not Monarchlata,”'sol must prepara for tho samo orit~ fclsm n whon ML Perlor, Waddington, and Dorengor B3y, “Woaro Conserentives,” Tho etatomont 14 not bellaved, Lot us bo sincero, That swhich divides ua s tito question of xapublio r monarehy, Thoro i no otlier, No doubt thicro may bo dangor In bad cloctorsl Iegiolation, but wo havo jntroduced a bill upon that subjoct, I hayo but omo merit fo_clim, that of lnving kopt my word upon'tho gucation of tiio Republic, and of having adopted o courso upon that polut. Yed, I havo dono 70, In s cabinot n pri- vato individunl uny have heblfations upon thaorics, but do you think it would be poasiblo to go on forevor with o proviglonal form of gavornment? Woaro but a provialonal Government, we aro tald, but why should wo bo chinrged a3 though 1t were o crimo with n condl- {fon which has boen ammposed upon us 2. When after two years and o half wo found that tho question was “about to be raised, and nll minds wors becoming agl- tated, wo sald that tho momont forescon by tho Bor- doaux Poaco bad arrived, snd o declsion must bo como to reapocting the destindes of the country by clear and satisfactory legislation, Wo had another reason for thinking tius, 1t was that practically moarchy ywan imposalble, You yanrsolves know that, Othiorwise, why do sou not attompt to restorodt? Why ara.you %o caroful to say thot you spesk not ns Monurchfsts, Lut a5 Connorvalives? It 13 bocruso you know ihat ihiero i ‘but ono throne, which will suflice for threo nspirants, [Applauso and Taughter from tho Loft.} Now, whost place is it to make propositions to the country? Itis that of tho Governmont. I regret sincorely tho loss of the two colleagues who havo loftus, I do.notdeny that T requeated thelr resignations. In order to aj pear hora with a complote Govornment I lind to apply tomen than whom thers worenone of gromter worlh or estoom in the ev\lntré—wllo!n viows were in accord. anco with mine. Tho Commission of Thirty dirscted us to draw up Iaws, but how could we do {liat if the vory principlo of {ho Governmontwas ot dofined? Whion thieao measures aro examined our pollcy can bo Judged, but it 1a rather unusual to docido upon them Svithout knowing what they aro, s What s 3 consorvative poiss? It oy bo undor- stood h{ cortain sigus, Iu the Trst place, inca it 18 the national sovercignty that §5 to bo orgamzed, thosourco of tho natiousl represoutation must be purified, Wo do not consider that it 18 possiblo at_present to attock tho principle of universal suffrage, I kuow itsincon. voniences, T was, Ladmit, ono of (e authiors of tho Taw of Ay 41 3 biit I hold It fo bo dmpoasiblo to repeat thnt attempt, 'Tam not tho author of universsl puf- frage ; it wos o legitimist writer who sbsdowed it forth ; it was tho Bopnpartes who a lied it, When thio sotrces of tho notional represontation Liavo boon purified, then we havo to' conatituto ‘tho representa~ Hon. ¢ must bo diyided into two assewblics, Xonly know of one Republic of clussical timea orin the mid- dlo nges which entrusted tho fato of the country fo a bingle Obambor, As to .o Exeoutivo . power, wa éonxlder, according to the oxamples of history an lessons derived from Americs, that by tho sldo of {heus two Ohsmbers thero should be, not a dircctory, but a President of the Ropublio, In case of a confic botwoen tho two pawers, how should the diffulty Lo solved? 1 appear boforo a single Chamber, Disputos Lave arison, and thero hava been occaslons whei, to it an ond to them, I have had to ascrifice’ mysolf, Tholaw of the Thirty was rovolting to all my insfincta of good sense, Howover, I accopted it, becauso I wan told it would produco harmony betwoen us, That Darmony 1 hove not alnco found, Tho pover of dis- solution muat bo placod somowhero, and in that los o real prineiplo of tho Consorvative Republie, Thess ‘measurch ar opposed on different pidce, Scme say, 'Fou aro constituting the Republio; which wo do not want, Wo douire that tha Assorably gliould rotain ita conatituant power.” The others say, Wo-do not want tho oxisting Assombly ; wo want a constitucnt Assom. 2, conatituto tho Republio they prafer, I reply to tho orgonized, and to thio othora that wo do not frust to 0 not conteat eithier tbo oxtont o tho duration of tho 120 thio Ropublio. o ductug the laws which have boon gubmilted to you, We say to the one party : * Mako the gacrifico of Vot~ ‘to tho ather : Inatend of wishing liko you for e diusolution of tho Assembly, wo dosir ‘that should oxist long . .euoug ‘havo not been of the most rm\nurlnf charaoter, I ‘Will not—{t would ba fnconveniont in the prosen ce of Sar now collsagues—disouss tho chasacter of thelr inims, nor of thielr clootions ; Iywill only say that I i far from sharing tho opinions of thoso who re- o cau 35 ranxim 2 thot wo should treat’ evorything sorious 1y, but not loomily, Ido not deapsir of the futurd of tho country, especially when I seo that it is our Qivistons which makea the reaults of univorsal suflrago g, and that candidatos who would ofliorivlso be e« jocted aro clioson simply bocause ux.x support tho topublto, Iam porsunded that when tho question ta sottlod a majority will declare ifself, and wo. Ly, second’ Ohambur ond tho power of dissolution, Whon hntfonst represontation, whou "you shall have iwo 11l bo overcomo, . uplllu‘;, inany ca ‘aay find another method, nnd X will disousa’ it For my own pert, I ges no other mothod but & dictatorstip, I know vory well that thoso to whom _such power might bo offerod wonld accoptit, Wo havescon n dictatorship liero, and Lag {teavod ua? You abaudoned to it tho solution of all quostions, What has it done? Tho country foll in 1816 with glory, but how did it fall i 18707 [Great applause froni tho Left,] Let us Lavo rccourss to logal moans, Tho dictatorslip of - great men leads you {ortins fhat of Witle men not auly rulne you, but ruina you inglortously, (Renewed spplauso from (o Toft.)” The Consorvativa policy {8 that which, standin Totweon tho two extromos, 18 inoxaruble toward moral disordor, What woukl bo eald if we hero were to {eatroy shops, as in tho_couniry of our conquors ors, Any one Who attomptad to break §nto a shop here waiild pay the pouslty oven beforo Lo had' completed e erito, Matarlal order (s, thoroforo, assurod. mny bo deapised, but it 1 sull’ somolhing to possess, Wo woro fold yostorduy that wo wero about to Locome {hio proteges of Radicallam, and o melancholy end was iradictod of ne—that wo stiould not_only bo victims, ut ridculous victims, That o mon Who, during & long 1ife, had yendored {o his country signal 'm:vkwi should_evinco such roverity, I voiild undorstuud, fhank him who eald it nono tholess, DutIyeturn him tho compliment, 1ie will havo nia more of & nia- jotlty ; _he, 100, will bo 8 protoga; ho will liave s pro- {SEH13,f rhioh »'rormor Dito de Tiroglio would. hive ro- Joctod with horror—ho will ba the protego of tho Eme Jire, [Loud applause from thae Loft, and gonaral ox- cltement,} —_———————— A 'Woxns Bondor=-Four MNon Killed “Whilae All;wn’:' s om the Dallas(Tev.) Herald, June T, . On Fflvxlny last & mox(nznozldluh murdor oconrrad on lm_Fork of Trinity River, near the vfllnfiq of Iead of im, {u Caok (Jmmtxirl Qua of the numerous hords of oattle bolng driven over tho form of governmont linyo aleo ihc‘rl ght to, thidk' thnt, ho-fall {id0 of ~domocracy fs running, ' {lio’ Tepubllo 1e: " Tyes bien,” at -our head and wo will follow youw.” I am thankful for tho ofTer, but I would remind thoso who mako it that thoy aro not the only persons who Lavo to coneldor ; that 0 it of X wo vornmont publio peaca could not | Thiers then reviewed the accomplishents of his admniatration, and continuod : What s the task for turbing it, What i moral order? TIa it that Franco bly.” Thoy think that it would adopt_thelr viows and first, wo know that {ho conservative Republic must bo 1l future interests which are 8o proclous to ua ; wo gembly ; wo deairo that it should or- B O e iblio. 2o 41d & conscrvatiyo nat in bic ing thie only form of Government which i possiblo ;* pasa o laws for tho consorvativo ropublic” The olections those electiond na moat alsrming ovents. I sm xglll‘)l;d\lund 1o tho daugors of the future, but I know that ‘ariis] elections oro often bLad. Those cloctions aro Ziiiod * bad ¥ by. thoso whoso convictions are over- ruted by them, becauss Congervatives aro upt to abe Blaln from yoting when tho clections are not ‘of ‘i Hance, T am perauaded, aud I have to Inform myself, that thore will bo or. nrpnhnn&lun In’a gonoral eloction, ho moreover, Tropatol & gnarintes 1o hat -ond—n u P you bayo endeavored to purdfy tho Gources of tho bers, ono with tho power of resistance, I belleve Sfl"inwnu'n ‘frm conservative govermmont, all dificule Ranens trall bind_beon corrallod for tha night, .and aftor supper thoso that wora not on dutg oA &m—d, oon rolled thomeelyes In thoir blakkels, ‘fot what littlo rost n 4 cow boy " cnn have. bout 10 o'elock a Moxlonn, who was ono of the hands omployed, nnd_who was ncling as_coolt; stoalthily proonrod’an™ axe and commoncod in cold blood to murder tho - unconecious sloopera, 1o snceoedod in ‘killiug* four, whon, just a0 he -was.In the nct of dispatching the fifth one;-the sloopor suddonly awoke, snd, dlscovoring his danger, gavo tho alarm and ho with tho romain- msonau esoapod.” A 0o of tho murdered mon had his hoad coms plotely sevored from his body, whilo the othora woro manglod ln the most ghantly and almost unrodognizablo mannor. Tho Moxican was not looked upon as boing dangoerous, and no cause waa given for this fearful deod. The only object Was to secure tho money and stock belonging to ‘the party, which the flond was only .provented from doing by tho alarm which was given, dur- ing the”oxoltomont of 'whioh + o procipllatel~ honb n}i]))sws fiAu‘RABRA?HB. cont MoDona ounty §8,711 to fonce °°“’E,u‘i;““ urd‘fz 2 bl o thy ~—The Northern Paciflo has thus far recolve 874,725 acros in'Minnesotn, & —Tho Holly Bpringa South aaye that at no timo I‘.:r;\:l;;mhln{;nry of North Mississippi hes the ar boon 80 numo; » fremid Loy rous, at no timo wo de- * ~—Tho Boston Advertlser, ono of tho oldost ::g la)flln’t {eupegl‘nb‘ln of‘l.lu: blnlirl](ul-sllpnll, Is n 0 turned into n quarto, with the ot il i s 0w Yor! soon havo to organix l()]l?lm;nmel:: of Buvnlnty.u 'mmg mnmqlnrs %: n&“:_ -ono haye nearly all got tha of ol ano y 8l g Meos thoy —We loarn that John Kinball and George Price, formeriy of Warren, wero lately hung In iNubmgh, !ufr ‘l;ouae ":ltc&llng. Wo "have not onrnod any of 0 particulars.— Warren (Il Em%‘fikfl flold Republi . —Tho Springflol ublican, in roferring to tho plan ngdfxuunnng it by nnmmhfim, romarks, by tho way, that ‘ the Greols, who know how ‘to do things nicely, ndminiatored a bumpor of hemlock, 1t worked 'well, too—they novor had but ona Soorates.” 3 —William Glaspol, of Dutch Nock, N. J., owna a shoop which gooms to posscas o greater propel- ling power in_ its uind parts than bofore. In _xunning, tho hinder parts invariablo outruns the fore part of thoanimnl, which makes it nocos- anry for it to turn around ovory 16w feot when running rapidly. The sheop has nover been in- Jurod {n any way, but from ‘its birth tho tail o ho animal bas manifestod s determination to koop at least evon with-tho hend when on & run. —Furious is tho Dritish women of cortain clnss when arousod, and whon govontoon furies, somo of thom with babos," set upon two mon with the purposg of " coorcing thom to join a Iaboror'a strilee, it is ovidont “that tho storner sex must submit or- elsa ignominiounsly invoke tho ald of tho polica, At the Chaddington Petty Scssions, in England, just the above-montioned number o womon word lately sent to jail for ton daya for thus striking terror to thohonrts of two men who wantod to worlc at o rato lowor than that fixod by tho strikors, —The Iato Dr. Marahall Hall, of England gald ¢ ¢ It X wero soriously ill of consumption, would live out doors day snd night, excopt,in rainy weathor or mid-winter ; then I would sleop in an unplastored log-house. Pliysic has no nutriment, gna})iun for nir cannot ouro you, monkey-capers in a gymnasium cannot cure you, and stimnlants cannot cure. What consumptives Sunt 18 Air, not physie—puro air, not modcated air—plenty of meat and bread.” —'T'ho niisories of a worthy paterfamilias whose family hag beou abroad for Bomo years whilo he had boon working hard ta earn’ the manoy to support them at home aro thus touchingly sef forth by an oxchango. flo met thom in Pniis Tocontly, and his childron sponking Fronch oulg, ho wes obliged to go to school to nequire tho Inngungoe in order to converso with bis offspring. —Tho famous nuctiouecr, Mr. Christie, onco, while aclling o colloctlon of picturos, having ar- rivod ot & chef d'cuvre of Wilson's was _oxpatri- ating with his usnal clegance on its merits, quito unawaro that Wilson himsolf lad just boforg ontorod thoroom. *'This, goutlomen, ia ono of ‘Wilson's [talian pictures ; he cannot paint auy- thing liko it now.” *That's a liol"” exclaimod tho irritatad artiat, to Mr, Christic’'sno smell discomposure, and to tho great amuscmont o tho compuy; “ ho can paint infinitaly bottor. —The Committoo hnviug in charge tho orace tion of n tomporary wagon-bridgo ‘:flminud Mr. Charles Emerson, tho Alderman and lumber mercliant, to go to Chicago Jast week and pux- chaso tho Jumbor. Ho purchaged the lumbot on Friday for 812.50 por thousand, n figure much lowor than tho market quotations for that kind the lumber freight frao, aud arrangomonts aro now completod for putting up the bridge in few days.—Dixon (IUl.) Sun. 3, —A lady writos "to the New York Herald: "I hnspnn to be the wifo.of an invotorate smoker, and do boldly avow that I loye the perfumo of his cigar bottor than nll the porfumes of Arabia. 1 think thore is nothing more delightful, and T am nover moro lm]apy than whon my husband is Dy my sido, with slippers on, and a fragrant Ha- vana botween his lips—a picturo of home com- fort which many a poor marriod man has nover seen; who is driven from homo by a cross, selfish wifo, who would rathor send hor husband to tha ‘club,’ or worso places, so s to bord of hia aftor-dinnor smoka.” —1\¥e do our vory best to belioyo all tho quoor stories that we find, for wo could not conscion~ tiounly prosont them to our roaders unless wa bolioved thom to bo true, but hers is ano_that, wo cantion tho public, socma to us a littlo doubt- ful, Wo will not say it is lio, but it is Improb- ablo. A horse _in &t, Pal, Minn,, dravk: beor till he was in 2 bonstly stato of intoxication. Hin owner, knowing that his provious habita wero exomplary, thought he was dead, ond skinned him. Noxt morning & ghastly stoed, without hido or hair, was found grazing on tho public common, and s gkillful veterinary surgeon is en- gaged in' planting his suporficios with Lair from & noighboring tannory. - - —A silont_but veritablo rovolation has takon luco in tho English fashionablo world. Hitherto [ Hae boon tho practico, when friends or acs qualntances wore about lenving town, to call on ono anothor; snd loave s card with tho ot tors, in pencil, P, P. 0. At present, if that ‘misgive bo left by tho owner, and no departuro takos placo within oight daye, no umbrago s to Do taken ; but if a fortnight or a month olapscs, and thero is no prospect of tho dopariure, the 9. p, ¢.i8 to ho accoptod as & notico to quit all ‘visiting—n daecision a3 deflnito and unchangea- Dble as tho laws of the Medos and Porsiana. ~—It is very atmms;u that o good houso cane not bo built in Lincoln, Neb, '1'he old " Insana Asylum was in dungor of falling bofors it was . burnt down. The Stato University was sbaly, nud it 1 supposed to roguira 290,000 to put it in safo condition, The Capitol building is now ‘in dauger of eaving in, and Gov. Furpas wanta 5,000 or §6,000 to “ropair™ it. And lastly tha building in which the City Council holds ita nmeotings {a reportod * unsafe.” Nothing of tha _kind has ever ocenrrad to buildings in this oity. But then, thoy woro not built *‘ for tho State.” —Nebraska Cily News. —1t would bo ploasant to hear the mild res ;alndor of tho mombor of tho Naw Zoaland Touso of Assembly, whom Mr, Antlhony Trol- lopo deseribesin *Lia"Intoly published” worl, i Australia and New Zonland,” "o gays of thid luckloss membor that he was *‘ 8o vulgar, eo ig« norant, so illiterato, so incapablo in his attompts, 80 nauscous in his ilights of oratory, 8o blaspha-~ mous in his appeals to religion, so fmpudnnt t) tho gentlomon arouud him, 80 wonkin his lans 880, B0 ntrauq(vin lis Billingsgate phrases, fi‘}ntlcould think but little of o constituoncs which wauld roturn him, and marvelod at hi pationco of o Houso whish would endure him." —Now London, which fits out and mans all the Polar .oxpoditions, stands by Capt. Buddington. Thoy don't bolieva down thore that Buddington would doauything ot of the way or that ho will foll to bring in_lia ship. Capt. Hnll mndo hla firgt voyngo undor Buddington in 1860, The lat- tor wae sfin tho first ncquaintance of Joo and Hounal, the Esquimaux, snd took them to Now Tondon, or rathor to Groton, whero they etill own land. Buddiugton ou ono of tha first voy- ngos with Hall eavod hislifo at the rink of hia own. But wo slall soon know what the Score- tary of tho Navy gets out of Onpt. Iyson aboub it. " BMr. Robegon, with unusual astutonoss, hos resorvod to himeolf tho mvfln\{u of first intor- viowor, having enged up the ,m ars on tho Frolio 80 cloudly that oven the Jerald man oouldn’t find out anything. Cupt. Tyson thinks tho Polaris will yob como in all right, but further than that wa (o not yet know what ho has told tho Naval Becrotary. —0t what possibla use moanuitoes could he in the cconomy of Naturo bus been an unsolved puzzlo to most of the human family, even thoto who huvanrmmuml fnith dn tho “utility of all things. But solonce hus answorod that question atlast, Tho infant mosquito ls discovored to bo tho best food which the trout-broodors can_give to tho young fish, Mr, Mather, of Iloneyo Falls, N. Y., o practical trout-ralser, ralscs mosquitoes also Tor Lis finy pets. With two barrels of stagnant rain-wator lhe croaten mosquitooy enough for ench thousand fry, and the youthful mosquito is strained out of its native barrel aud.. incontinently thrown to the fishes, Luckily tha fieh aro hun, r{v follows, aud devour these farvey roodily. lfi t wera not for thia way of (iuuml tid of them, dir. Mather'a neighbora might cons sidor this moquito-raising business a nuisance, i oflimbor. Jo induced tho ruilways tosendus _,