The New York Herald Newspaper, April 1, 1851, Page 2

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" c rich Englishman, who lives in the hotel situated Whe Mnglish and American Newspaper check Co. for” 1001: on EUROPE. tn the Place St. George’s, whieh 4id belang thee AE. Re eta for whlch pmopenn yeafs ago, to Mrs. Wells,the widow of the Amerieam | REVEAL OF ‘THE TAXES ON KNOW! oil —_. aT webs Our Paris * LE Des Lombe, a liberal Norfolk landowner, the donor of uring Pagus, March 18, 1851, | banker, before she {married Le Marquis de Lava | | Tact Publio mesting was held in St. Mar TE BO01. to the National Public School Absosintion, ject, in the All speeches monte) (ealusive of 46, whos hate Possible of M. Dupi voms of the | Wette. Mr. Tufton is milliousire, in the whale ep enall, Lo Acre to promote the repeal of Hy | Mr. Lombe viewed the abolition of what he ealled in brief, and, what is far worse, with | ing come from Mi wo\ been sent there at the © ee a |e te wrt en mn Hag | oa easy ge feat cetera gh ac | emt U.P, ge | ker eho —The New Ministry—. i lord an income of 50,000 sterling pounds @ year. to overflowing, and some in recommended this view to the consideration of lang for th t of the reader and with little ing to the seasor md Wee Meminations is the ‘This gentleman is married to a cousin of Mr. caused at the commencement of the the friends of national education. (Hear.) The object pred pny ay proverb and “ i mie any it canoes, bell coma u to Prefectures—Army Changes—Michelet’s Lectures the ‘pressure from without.” Po! i ‘iti i i is al- includin, furnish —Riotings—Events, §c., §¢. Blacque, the secretary of embassy to the Prince | Key took the chair at hall-past 8 o'clock. Among | by tcuchine every memiet ofthe community to gu. | moet a religion with tee whole cng) of Beith re. | ‘ith'the meee of providing forharna ne passeUBee ‘The Legislative Assembly has not, for the last Ealmsshi, v nn wie is Mee Chirin ve of Sew phe members ef Rasilomant presans wore ie Co derstand the laws he was called upon to obey.— porters, is unknown in America. If a man wants | ments on his landing. Thus, a sum which, in this ‘Week, done much for the good of the country, and Foran parties, on entertainments of t ype re- | Stamford. | ; r aay mete . repre is hws a ey eattteat ie aie pepe aye fe tant ae 4 ep pe =n! rhe if em) for “wd the amelioration of political affairs. M. Dupin is | fined style. The dancing soirée which he gave on | | The Cuainman, who stated that he presided in | tion of the only publications Nias tepated of the aa | versione sacl embellishments, he sends fh whale tos mod Pinan to America, i ie means of enablis 5 Ul; and for that, or for some other reason, a sort of | Tuesday last, was a very fine affair, at many | the absence of Mr. Grote, said that he had been for | :ninistration of those laws? Newspapers were only | friendly news; r, where ita asa separate | him te obtain an independent existence. fost Americans were present, and which gave to | thirty years an advocate for the repeal of the taxes ; diy newspaper, e eparat im te pel » Most. of dullne: igns the debates of the Assembly. ; 0 ik accessible to the poor man at the public-house, but | article. Even in the best journals of the Union the fi hi forwarded last ‘afte! es reigns over the agit: Mees mbly- | “111 who had been invited. Among the hed | on knowledge. He thought the present a suitable | what was wanted was that they Thould enter the | debates in Congress are given ina sketchy, uot to theve val t Bouthampton from ) r New It bas been announced in the political circles that who were present, I remarked Mr. Seribe, | 0 unity of expressing thi titude he felt to ‘i icles,” ‘he was on the eve of sending in his resignation to PoP curated jay writer, who accompanied his ep Rowtend Hill, as a lal 7 Eo this couse, whom come? He Sah Risasisar se the Deen See. e are aly, Tana vege ws Sor Sie Ona inenme eit Zotie, found prodiatle employment there the day his colleagues, but I do not think this is correct. | Wife, a very handsome lady, whose wit is said to | he regarded as one of the greatest benefactors this | Which ho did not wish to speak de But we should like to see Mr. Cobden get up und Poeptinas jegues, x Reneeal be incomparable. Madame de Lavalette, Madame | country ever had in procuring the penny postage | not come home enough prec! bjec int out. a single American paper which satls6es 1 was also told that, in such an event, General | Biacque, Madame Carnes, and many other charming for the people. chews) We had obtaiued chesp | Husiness of life, and the working classes would in ita modo Of treating political, commercial, 0 Changarnier would be chosen for the Speaker ot | ladies were present, and wore the most becoming | food for the bodies of the people, and it now be- | encrifice them ail to the cheap neatpaper, There | social dacations Such Senrnals may be amusing the House, or that General Lamoriciere would take | toilettes, ‘Xniong the gentlemen I remarked, Mr. | hoved us to gain cheap food for their minds. | was some reason for the alleg thee the higher | and cael i may be instructive to so1 Y ‘ote ‘assist his place. : All these rumors may have some foun- re ane Searetary of sad. pee Me qemanre ra ae could object to she sion of classes in continuing the fees on knowledge, na a pod t bey may very useful, cong they gs the Ania Hon of Hag. chageariioe of disposed - ° . es, former! + ee Soames ID S q “ war OF sinister object in view, viz., the maintenance of not pretend to the same faithful and historical 2 ation, but they must be confirmed to be considered | Phalen, &e., &e. The supper wes excellent, and | was founded poe frend ; and with them he had no | jitieal privileges and political monopoly. If eae bao vi as the daily journals of this metropolis. sue iam lhe py Gaiters sve true. The selection and election of these two Ge- | the refreshments equal to r. This party | sympathy. wanted was, not only the | the people carried the repeal of these taxes, it would | There really is no comparison between them. Berais would bea srt of declaration of war made | Will, ne doubt, mark it as one of Ube prettiest given advancement of knowledge, but. the difusion of | he by Meee ine matter ina theisownnaags’ He | ater ltaliing hiceasit fo the subject of prices in Shak being. conten woars, it fe wall. Koews, that this year during Lent. owledge. (Hear, hear.) It wasnot enough that | believed it to be within the mark that there would | the comparison between the journals of London and | whence (unlike the States of the poutinent of Dy the legislative power on the executive power; |“ Aé'the Elysée, the soirée on Thursday, are not | one class of the community should be educated, and ‘ y ¢ and I do not think that polities of that kind have | yet resumed; but those on Mondays, which were | the other half fg Tbadente- then; the people ns. apg gh deacon pole phpetploge pee se rapan Coben vex tarts te 9 mies hens rope) he is not liable to be driven away, at the will ‘ever been dreamt of by the members of the majority | Only for the diplomatic ee and an anes of ihe would make occasional advances, to be fol- | nerating employment would be given, not only to | temporaries. They represent the opinions A the ers toe Lager he foky shea | he of the Legislative Assembly. government, have nen 5 ecome mucl mere Sora J 5 y subsequent magawon. (Hear.) thy bore jomneyena printers, but to the whole literary pro- | people better, he says, than we do. ‘The daily | in g shorter time ge hy formecty te By a i : ul fow days | 02,07, the ladies, and, of course, Eee Tea ete eae, | tonne sak soeitten the intelligence of t! fession. The local press would be especially bene- | press is not the exponent of the wants and opinions babe ck svete P great emotion was felt in the House, afew days | were before. On Monday last, the President gave | towns was counteracted by the ignorance of the | fitted. The Russell administration to be | of the working classes.” ‘As far as I can judge, I passing from one extremity of Poland to other, ago, by the rumor that the President had desired | a large dinner, at which were invited about sixty country. It was also the case to some extent in | entering upon another lease of diy (Several a ate for so 8 the politics of the weekly arene sre | OF for travelling from Paris to Warsaw.” ie mi he elections of the National | guests, mostly American ladies and gentlemen. I} France, and in England too. (Cheers.) The | yoices—‘ A short one!) ‘The 1 = Sah pounce hice of the dali: 2? «7 | Several of the men forwarded to America have his minister to have the ¢ jons 0! om ‘bout of ) y jost very con- | m jounder than t! jaily press. Guard, pe he 25th inst understand that there were about 2 of our | minister of the crown admitted, although reluc- | siderably the confidence of the country. (Great | can only say that, looking at the Dolitios of the | Written as to the condition in which they find them- , Which were to take place on the inst-, | countrymen and countrywomen sharing the delica- } tantly, that the franchise ought to be extended. | cheering.) He trusted they would turn over a new | weekly press, the ‘tte asi to. tik ” | selves in that country, and the follo extracts ace s - 7 : . , they are written a3 m e pur. : made on the principle of universal suffrage, and | cies of Louis Napoleon's table, and inhaling the | He would be consistent if he also attended to | jeag. cA ery—It is too late!”) At all events a , and with equal talent, as the daily press.” will, no doubt, be read with interest:— not according to the last law of May 31, 1850. A | champagne wine of international friendship. “I am. | the spread, of knowledge among the class whom | general election was close at hand, aud, although Now, we will not be seduced by Mr. Cobden into | _ Extract from a letter, dited New York, July 23d, @ommitice was appointed, which demanded ex- | ‘til! ata loss te ie e meaning Of | be proposed to enlkench (Hear.) ‘The chair- | he was not favorable to pledges, he hoped the any comparison unfavorable to those whom he would | 1850.—“ Thanks be unto Almighty, we safely me “a Minizkes off the Interior, 3. | een tai cone .of the qusaie wen: Suva: fe Se Sce' | ait Ocndtaene: By 40aeing # ieltor from Mire HEBD, axes on. kuanlalge would bee admitted to stand | get up 48 our rivals, But ‘when he. insinuates, | arrived at New: York, onthe 20th instant. ‘There planations from the Minister of the Interior, M. thi oe — is invitation. mong the guests | M.P., whose absence, he regretted to state, was | as the first to be repealed by a liberal ministry | by comparison, that the daily rs do not write | is no more sympathy for the Poles than for the “Waisee, and this staterman, after hesitation, de- | was Mr. de Villeneuve, an officer of the navy, who | caused by indisposition, : and Parliament. (Cheers.) to the purpose and do not declare themselves a | Hungarians. ‘The ‘Hungarian committee ccased ¢lared that Louis Napoleon had thought that the | was the commander of the frigate on board of | Mr. J.Cassri. said that France and America had | “py, Lex seconded the resolution, but wished it | honestly and plainly as the weekly papers, we | to exist two months ago; the Hungarians, having National Guard was not to be regulated like the | which Louis Napoleon was sent to the United States, | their peuny periodicals and penny newspapers, but | had ineluded the duty upon foreign books and the | beg to ask him whether he has been himself | taken considerable sums, dispersed themselves in elections for the representatives; and finally, he said | after the affair of Strasbourg. This gentleman, at | in England it was exceedingly difficult to maintain | ocean penny postage. so fortunate as to impress the British public with a | different parts of America. 0 facility of finding that he was directed to postpone these elections to | that time, shared hi Tarsrebe with Louis Napo- | a penny periodical, in consequence of the tax upon Mr. f Ebwanps supported the motion, and ad- | clear and_ uniform fs of his own politics and | employment gives us hope that we shall be able to another epoch, till the Amembly should make a | leon, who told him: “Iam now very poor and un-| paper. | The Messed. Chanabers! weekly tracts dressed the meeting to show the additional employ- | “purpose”? We have heard the greatest variety malntain ourselves respectably. We have. found ision and vote the new law which is now on the gy se “tag cues taataanaeuiekt oni, Laue ition of 80,000, yet they did not pay, and | ment that would be given to large classes of peréons | of opinion on the subjest, and that from many | here some of our countrymen, namely, Karczewski tapis, relative to the National Guard. It is certain, r that the one to whom you are so kind, will be- | were obliied, to be givenup. They had since started | in the printing and paper-making trades, if the taxes | candid and intelligent observers. As to the wee Plinta, Chwalibog, Mass, &c., who ‘interest them- that if the ministry had not found such opposition | come, one day or another, Emperor of the French | a 14d. publication, but it had not obtained half the | on knowledge were repealed. London, with 2,500,000 | papers of the largest circulation, we very much | selves very much for ws, and’ we trast that, in s im the Assembly, it would have been passé owre, and | people.” This is not yet accomplished, and we | circulation of the others, and they would be obliged | of people, had only six mornin, apers, ‘while in question whether Mr. Cobden could tell us of any | week’s time, we shall be placed in different situa. another experiment of that sort tried for the Presi- | hall see if the actual President of France is | to give up thut also. The reduction of the taxes | New Tork, with a population of 500,000 or 600,000, | one of them, plainly and explicitly what are its | tions. Every place seems good where dential clection of 1852. Despite the assurance | really a good prophet. : upon knowledge would lead to the employment of | thera were thirtean. opinions on the subjects it usually writes about. We | America is Hot s0 charming's countey ae repre- ven by many friends of the President, it is certain ‘The grand masquerade ball, which was to take | thousands of persons in the paper and printing bu- | ~ Mr, M. Gisson, M.P., who was cordialiy received, | have read articles in them which, so far from being | sented to be at a distance. Materialism has the t his opinion is that he can be re-elected by uni- | place on the mardi gras at the hotel of the Princess | sinesses, and all classes would be benefited. The | said it had devolved upou him to move the repeal of | ‘‘straitforward” “and honest,” at the expense of | upper hand here; but those who wish to work can versal suttrage, whilst itis only lawful that the | Mathilde Demidof, has been postponed till the mu- | working man would have his daily paper for 1d., | the taxes ou knowledge in the House of Commons, | “ fascination” and “ learning,”—two qualities very | get a comfortable living, without any great effort.” election may be regulated by the law of the 31st of | caréme, and instead of being given by the Princess, | and, instead of being obliged to go to the alehouse | and he hoped to renew that motion, But amember | properly made secondary by Mr. Cobden,—did strike Extract from a letter, dated August 9th, 1950.— May last. “Well, there is the germ of a conflict at | who is still in mourning for Madam de Reding, it | and pay 1jd. for beer in order to get a sight of the | of Parliament, ina like case, felt in a most forlorn | us as “fascinating in style and learned in diction,” | * We arrived safely in New Yor! having been hand. Time will prove all. i Mee bef eg by the Duchess of Ms ager who has paper he would be able to take it home to read by | situation unless he knew he was backed by public | but yet cither saying more than they meant, or y days on Free and all those who had a pro- Mr. Berryer, the legitimist representative, has | adopted the entire programme of the party, and | his own fireside. (Hear, har) Where we had one opinion. (Hear, hear.) It was for the people to | meaning more thai they said, and leaving the mind got work immediately, with @ good ha made a demand to recall the tax of the forty-five | will follow it a la lettre, It is well understood that | newsp sper at present we should have ten, if the pa- | curry this, as they had carried other questions, and | in a painful state of uncertainty as to their real | namely,a dollar a day.” y> good pay, centime, which amounted to one hundred and | all the costumes will belong to the epoch of the | per aud advertisement dutics and the stamp duty | they must remember that no free knowledge, or any | purpote. sade bebiiini? skates feventy-six millions of francs. ‘This motion has | empire, and, though many dresses, particularly | were repealed. ‘The government gave £100,000 to- | other kind of freedom, bad been ever handed over to | Hut in all these comparisons, as well as in his | y5/xtraet from a letter dated New York, September raised much alarm in the financial department, and | those of the ladies, are not very becoming to our | wards education; but it ought never to be forgotten | the people asa free and spontaneous gift. (Hear.) | anticipations of a penny press, Mr. Cobden has left 15, 1850:—“ My Dearest Mother—I would consi nothing shows that it will be carried out, when it | present style of dressing, the order is for everybody, | that they took £1,000,000 a yearfrom the people by | fe was afraid there lay at the root of the opposition 0 i it, on my part, a crime to accept from youany . p altogether out of reckoning the most important i ‘i shall be presented to the National Assembly. and no one will be admitted but those who will wear | the taxes on knowledge. (Hear, hear). He moved— . a me oe Ny ; 66 »» | ance in my young age, with the health and strength ‘A project of law, demanding & revisica of the | the genuine copy of a habit a la Napoleon. ‘hat all taxee which impede the dtfusion of know. | fy He ORE Pe Oe er a sicead cf | sake calls ite wa tiees Gia Seer et onmoue te possess, and particularly in this country here, e: e Si 5 J Y ee iy v i: e % * ¢. . . " e} Alms tax, on the theatres, made by Mr. Sauteyra, ‘The three unfortunate fat oxen which have been ure highly injurious to the public interest, and are knowledge among the people. (Cheers.) It | are at in our foreign correspondence, in our parlia- roos peri geet A yb on ay BE in sapleyment, " , oa 2 ti << P; most impolitic sources of revenue, and that their reten- d H Fi soca he naam Tas reentad soettcad>| ioe egiaanert fi tangata ine Ree eae the legislature is ‘utterly inconsistent with the | Was said that the spread of cheap newspapers | mentary and other reports, and in every sort of in- | for s work’ is the vax populi. For mny part, 1 ha Tones wie'amanied le fpne ‘decgy: | ere cll gsc. "Phy prefaced a | go Save pon of ope | ld wate greet ecu; | SMR ears Cas, | toll erm tea an here we Gui Wy Pudertes, ‘by Mie Ceuainiee st the |e moet Ke ee re bs E aele, be Mr. E. Miaut, in seeonding the resolution, con- | government impossible. (Hear, hear.) It would be | however, is probably aware of the fact, that no at- fore) ver ee scale anne T de oj aie Hospitals, on the receipts of the theatres, is large, YPP i 8 ~ | gratulated the meeting a ie auspicions time at h better that our institutions should rest upon | tempt is ever made to protect that copyright from | that employment. Arrived on the 20th of July at but it is not so considerable as thought by many. | He nye anks to themembers | Which they were assem! ents had reduced of an enlightened public opinion. If they | invasion. Monopolists as we are, we allow all the | Va Nine per cent is vuly given to the poor, on the whole | of the press of Paris, who had been very kind to | the budget toa state of liquefaction, in whieh it | looked forward to.a period of universality of suffra © | journals in. the Kingdom—smong them Mr, Cob- | New York, after a. pretty prosperous passage; wo Der ar cn ncinks vane eoecneite him since he has had’the direction of the great cir- | the bud ; ? : ; ons fri ti Sider Nigga Bb on, ik paella seceipt, ai Aap ggasi age - ; ie 8 vdeVEt Acoardinalyth was melted down to its original elements, and had | nothing could be more important than that the | den’s friends of the ly press—to approp roniiged 10° ta Sa Eikaland. * Rvaevitide’ eaw at cue ahongs. of the ministry of eantition now | Sos of [ec iasions 6 has tiscary patrcns) pate While the Chancellor | great body of the people should have brought with- | much as they please—and freely do they avail them- | PrOMHN 1e Wud be compelled to at hiclicine ln with Louis Napoleon, is always the <atise of mech | mumsetons invitations to ls iitecery patrons, pad i chequer was pondering, he hoped the pre- | in their reach the meaus of understanding the laws | selves of this liberty. Our “overland mail,” which | Woy and we dispersed in-consequences but ecore gore. The following list, which was given to ine | a de ieee oe eeey ver and exbet. | et meeting would be able to set the stamp of its | under which they lived. The government wasafraid | has cost us £100 or more, arrives, perhaps, only in | where the want Perknowledge of the Rnalteh lec y a person well informed ‘in these matters, will no | vate residence. | ‘The repast was saperb and excel” | Purpose upon his new budget. (Cheers.) to carry out impartially and literally the provisions | time for our second edition on Saturday, and be- | Puage, which mone of us possessed, presented great doubt be the “ good one,” when the time arives to | lent, and though it was composed, for the most part gentleman upon’ the platform here produced a | of the Newspater act,” which, he contended, ought | fore it can appear in one of our early iasues, wo | fuske, which none of us possensod, prosented grea change the “men of straw,” whoare now “ driving | of it, of beef, gece bs he of dishes, 7 y of the New York Tribune, y paper pub- | therefore not to be continued upon the statute-book. | may have the pleasere of seeing it at full length | trade, went aslaborers to the nate, 8, whilst eaten eur political stage.” ‘They are:— ; Wines were so good that the digestion was made | tished at two conts (one penny : he | It might appear that, in asking for he trepeal of | in the Sunday papers, and a score or two pro- | ihtnYound a corresponding employinent, either in u “ Minister of the Taterior. Th 0 ie it fen At Templora, whieh. is still id, from fifteen to twent, spapers pul all these taxes at once, they were asking for too | vincials, not only with no share in the costs, but | town or in the po tort [Here ‘follows various M. Achille Fouid ances bathe order of Knight Templars which is stillex- | in New York every day. Almost every village had | much ; but they were all connected with each other, | often without even one woid of acknowledgment. | ricune used by the writer of this letter, and the de- M. General Rand : Ww pe ete cf the death of Taq es Mola} who was 1 and the consequence was, that the | and he for one would not be contented w Indeed, that is all the monopoly we have—the scription of employment which, as stone and marble M. Prosper de Chasseloup Laubat Public Works. | hurpt five hundred and thirty cht poe ander poe ty (ch ‘ed “at were well educated and | three Gathee vere att TeRheet 4 ane nis ~ ve me oe ne the oo bree mason designer, he has obtained.] I went, in von- 3M. Admiral du petit The Spe boty " a de instructed. cers. was set entirely free. (Cheers. e no dow ny Wares » Rneep Rae Tn te woe Daa i ist’ Mediate sates conten phapraero of felony, sorcery, and high treason |“ Mr. G. H. Lawes seconded the resolution. It | whatever that the tax upon advertisements was not ey. Now, supposing the metropolis to have Paneer cin tig Creech antialiy biti tone, “ M. Dreuyn de L'Huys is execution took place ou the same spot where | was eaid, that to remove the stamp duty upon means of revenue, but a revenue destroyer, since | what one of these gentlemen considers a proper | jy, paid me for the first week ‘aren dollars, like to , Renirst at: < panik™ticcn, | now stands the bronze horse of Henry the IVth, on ‘Another list, in which M. Faucher is Minister of | the Pont Neuf. The Templars, who have never the Interior, M. Fould or Ducos of Finance, | ceased to exist, held their annual meeting in their Mz. Schramm of War, M. Ferdinand Barrot of Pub- | lodge, Rue Notre Dame des Victoires, and many new lic Instruction or Foreign Affairs, M. Magne of Pab- $ nights were received as memb on that occasion. lic Works, M. Daru of Commerce, M. Charles Du- | The ceremony was imposing and created a deep i in or Ducos of the Navy, is also spoken of pression upon the small number of persons who were newspapers would be to make that class of litera- } it struck at industiy and commerce, the prosperity | proportion of daily papers—no: less than fift a ice; ceived fi tare “low.” But: the objection sscmed to him to | of which produced revinue. He vantared to say | Fipposing tbat allthe other towns in the ki pp npprentions Se tie sirent Seas | ceitived fone be founded upon that eternal “snebism” of the | that if this tax were repealed, in the next year's | are equally ambitious, bas it occurred to Mr. aida Ecuaees Leask’ Ges tobe aaieniies vere glish character that made everything “low” | returus of income the amount would not be missed. | den to inquire whois to pay for the original ate wall bequataiod' Wil thoteind ates, I that was not exclusive. (Cheers). They were | It was not, in fact, a consideration of re | right of the great mass of information, such as | (deded abote mae we. expectatada the “onl told that a good case might be made out against | that prevented the repeal of this tax, but a reports and foreign news? At present, “base is | Grawback being a want of x Peclition” Still a eerily ag thar os every tux; but the taxes on knowledge struck at | of extending cheap knowledge and cheap newspa- | the slave that pays,” and nobody even thanks us; | work being, according to the opinion of his own work« not think these statesmen have as many chances | dmilter m Loetr om f scat aseaill the root of all other taxes, for the removal of these | pers among the working classes. The Chance but even if we are to have fifty daily competitors, | "i theumclyes, worth three times as much ae as those whom I have named before. Ce ee ee setae eee ec eee hecceticg ur | t#xes Would so far diffuse political knowledge, and | of the Exchequer was preparing a new budget. Ile | some of them, perhaps, publishing at noon, it will | what I got for it, I felt myself hard dealt with, and A large number of nominations have been ma Ma oe ag nr ode Tok in the manufactories of | would so democratize the House of Commous, that | had no great confidence that he would come forward | be necessary to come to some arrangement on this | jor him in consequence. ae reviously obtained By Louis Napoleon in the prefectures of France. | Massachusetts, Rhode the people would take care they were not ‘more | with a proposition for the repeal of the taxes upon | head, as no newspaper can subsist long on a mone | a place eas febeemtas Gtinee anak.” Ont of "These changes are to fill the departments with men | guished ¢ pid tuxed than was necessary for the wants of the Knewiody ; but they must not be deterred from | poly of expense. If Mr. Cobden will just give this | those 1 pay three dollars a week for board, lodging, M. Fortoul..... devoted to the President, whose intluence may be | ted to the ; de nation. (Cheers.) resein estion by ome! H hought, he will discover that he has not em- rhe ivec! i een. 2 wf on this question by any statement that the | a thought, he will discover that he has not em: Miconven woem the. population, to.gattees the lncgnes 0° ; | Mr. Convex, who was received with great ap- Fnancial arrangements of the year were concluded. | braced the whole of the newspaper question, and prodigy cope all lag Biber gre; > gpg Heetiti ot ee in ey the penlonnation or | which was previously exhibited in Paris, by Mr. Si- | plause, next addressed the me Thee part ‘he | He held it to be perfectly fair aud parliamentary to | that the various comparisons he has instituted be- | ‘ot, by a little mandavring, three dollars wore D tion, P cs % , ad to take on this subject, in another place, would | Press all matters of this nature upon the attention een the daily papers of the metropolis, and other | than an Apprentice, and the expectation of an mounct, the ex-French Consul in New York, was powers to the actual chief of the power. much more The burial of Marshal Dode de la au which took place on Friday last, was attended by an immense number of distinguished people, and nearly all the regiments stationed either in Paris or in its neighborhood. The ceremony took place in the of the government, and he trusted that he should ting or imaginary rivals, are not altogether | (han an on of an hut nd other tag would | live to see the shackles struck from the press, and | air. Acicast, a8 Sir Roger’ expresses it, ‘“thare | ¢rease in my wi weet te veine iereet n assemblage; but | Perfeet freedom introduced. (Cheers.) s much to be said on both sides of the question. fault with it the least. You must know, my wl when they com- | Tbe motion was carrid unanimously. || — dearest mother, that this isa work which pays ui- ing it, it was, |, On the motion of Mr. Collett, seconded by Mr. | qhe Polish and Hungarian Refugees—Cu- | commonly well in this part of the world. e against the Holyoake, the following resolution was also carried, rious Letters and nions from America, every hope to increase very shortly my wages to render it um should trouble them Hed together this was a tax on knowledge plai were making wonderful pre approaching when the l tel des lides, and ficent. The | nothing to borrow from Euro, 4 < “ = vr Hite! (den Lnvatides, and wae maguitoent. | The | The Bishop of Cincinoatl, the Rev. Mr. Purcell, mental food. | *04 the meeting separated at midnighti— | (From the Liverpool Mercury two dollars a day, and perhaps to threc during the the bravest of ‘oblic®, Was given by Louis Napo- | has just returned from Rome, and arrived at Nante eon, an advo- wigs ce linen ong eee on ours ¢ understand that the government have under- ing. uth America they pay as much ag " given by Nape Mt these | Circulate a portion of their impression without stamps, | taken to provide a sum which will furnish about £8 | fh. t deie tapsioovent mao- his native city, where he will remain a few days, hefore returning to the United States. The Rev. | three tax knowledge. Of these tax jectionable was that of the 7 papers. It w Jeon to General Excellmans, another noble remain of our military fastes. It has been said that (iene- t yale Qudinot anid Baraguey d’liilliers will also be | Dr. had delivered several speeches, which ha favored with the marwhalat ; but this rumor is not | elicited much curiosity among the numerous au yet confirmed, and, perhaps, the nomination will not | tors whe congregated around him. A ‘ ne bg Rac n | te take place. If so, General Magnan will be named The theatrical news is not of much interest this | Proceeds, that it laid itself open to the supposition | ¢ ip. " Commander-in-Chief of the Army of P: aud | Week, and a few first performances have taken | that it was imposed not for the sake of the amount | the feelings of the pet General St. Arnault, Governor-in-Chief of Algiers. | Place. ‘These are the iteae which I have to men- | it yielded to the revenue, but for some sinister pur- |. oe nl iret rules of agita General d’Hautpool wil rn to Frane, for it has | tien:— pe The annual receipt from the tax was about | | Ome of the frst rues of 6 i aekies eae been cousidered as use 0 undertake an expedi- At the Italian Theatre, the illness of Maile. | £350,000. Not less than frou 60,000,000 to 80,000- er agp Pg © the table op Fs : tion against the Arabs. who still refuse to obey the | Rosati still prevents Mr. Lumley from giving the | 000 newspapers passed through the post offiee every a “butt” for your jokes. Mr. Cob dominion of France in Africa. public an opportunity of hearing, for the third | Ye®r. Now, what they proposed was, that every a for y - Ce The course of lectures on history, er rather on | time, the beautiful music of “ Lu Tempesta.” It | Pewspaper that went through the post office should politics, delivered by M. Michelet at the College | pears that the wound which the fair danseuse re- | have » (ueen’s head upon it; and that, their friend Se France, has been closed by order of the ininister | ceived on her knee is not yet healed, and this is the | Mr. Hume would tell them, would produce as large Sfthe Interior, It appears that this professor, in. | bly reason which prevents the management from | # Tevenue as was derived from the present system; stead of giving his pupils a real appreciation of MM. Halevy and | but, whether it did or no, the loss of a «mall sum on morals, and an explanation of the obscure parts of n losing his | Such a commodity bore no ane to the benefit history, on every occasion he used such language public, | te result from the repeal. He fully believed if we that it was deemed necessary to put an end to his hose voice | bad no stamp duty, and no duty on advertisements lectures. Accordingly the profession of the College school, made | OF paper, that we ne have ego daily news de France baving assembled, gave a vote against jay last, | papers with large circulations. A paper had been their colleague which was sufficient to establish the 1 «cated the New York Tritune, w steps taken by the minister. M. Michelet, in #e- 0 tds There were others veral letters which he bas written to the press, com- * turday last, in Doni: nducing paper in this country plains of his being persecuted by the Jesuits opera of “ Linda Thatnounix.” Ag it m: was as low asin New York—literary labor was as The anniversary of the twenty-fourth of Febru- | em, Mr. Lumley is not idle in his mana; cheap—all the adjuncts were as accessible—why, ary has been the cause of many riots and socialist | 4nd it is enid that his season in London will be a | then, was not the newspaper as cheap in Ae of wncellor of the : A denying the sume privilege to others; and by per- | ¢9 each of the Polish and I ; fuge h y ere in point of fact impediments to | *'t . comments to be inserted in | 10 each of the Polis ungarian refugees who | ther, that I have every chance of doing well, and thaps the most ob- tac catiaews peiieations of the se iecpite, wea sup | have just arrived at Liverpool from ‘Turkey, for the | the increase of my welfure will give ee ihe means nny stamp ou news- | pressing similar publications in the country, the Be | purpose of paying their passage to America. Con- | of being the support of your old age; 1, whom you e first place, so trifling in its Friend Revenue bes § | sidering the extreme difficulty which foreigners now | considered lost, seem to be the nearest to that point qually fo e | experience in obtaining employment in this country, | which will seeure to me as well as to yourself, com- the sufferings which the Volish refugees now re- | fort and happiness; for this is the country, indeed, sident here have already undergone, ,the difficulty | where people make fortunes; and why should I not their friends findin procuring for them even a scanty anneal ith my present assiduity and perseve- support, and the great demand for laber which at | rance? * 1, for my part, can assure you that im present exists in America, tho measure of the go- | three years at furthest, I shall be well off, if G Yernment appears to be prompted by the most hu- | pleases to grant me strength and health; and with mane feelings towards the refugees. It appears, | my welfare yours my dearest mother, ‘will be se- | Romavee, that costal, gantiaaion, hele: i, We | cured.” . | believe, to what is called the extreme democratic . s can be mentioned till they are provided with some- | party amongst the Poles, have taken upon them- | ,lXtract from a letter, dated New York, Nov. 5, body to be angry with, of somebody to laugh at, or | selves the serious responsibility of advising these | ihe ocition of oe to have some rd mae somebody to be beaten. They hare ouly to ask peer men to remain in England, at the risk of their rd [see no : = bea age in ow elgg Mr. Cobden, and he will soon find them sport. | being exposed to the most abject misery. It is not Palen pid = aig bron wit! — hes. Tho Now, what have the daily metropolitan journals to | easy to conjecture what motives may have inspired | Poles who, in 1834, above 300 in namber, wore sent do with the “taxes on knowledge,” ‘excep: to | the authors of this advice, but it is tolerably clear | AY Austria to America, arrived here under the tne pay them and wish them removed! But Mr. Cob- | that unless they have large and immediate funds at | PNOiTe 0 tee pe ee reg thie er 5 7 den ingeniously contrives to represent us as mono- | their disposal, it cannot have originated in a duc | frelechions Df the Biorious calupaign of Th pollste, * protected” by the taxes on knowledge. | regard to the welfare of those to whom it ix offered. | WONe Bie Auth bee ar ok £ ve Bl Nine of his readers out of ten will go away with the he following letter has been received by Lord | {QPani(in On ieee ieee with ua outhe t impression that but for these taxes there would be | Dudley Coutte Stuart, from M. Diosy, formerly loss ‘ h4 hay me par aha ith an enthusi ” ° such a competition as would swamp the fivepeany | secretary to Kossuth + porecrmm be hoy aa eo nt be neon fac ele papers. As for these taxes, it is scarcely necessary Universal Emigration and Colonization Company, a * Or dete na Be iy et chee w embeace that we should repeat our op ion of them. We ch 5. 1861 with @ sor rmination. But they were young, inj ing another time the opera of ) i But Mr. Lumley has not booaling “ the Par: 7 2 wt be ce db splendid affair. th , ‘ 2 ‘ - the country. The last days of the carnival have | 4 Very clegant denseuse, made her rentrée on the | that thi en tae he ae, sever duty, we should gain immensely by datis ceanavale | f vekt 46 beard tos hin ie the country. Thus the difficulties which were in| that there are other taxes | my countrymen what arrangements have been made for | their way discouraged them much; the most fa- aleo been marked by many scandalous masquerades | *tage, on Monday last, in the ballet of **Pa- | P their short «tay, and subsequent conveyance to Am vorable opportunites were lost, and a constant in-| made by the rouges, in which the President, Louis quita,” and received many plaudits. To-mor ory in the pes ges and it was not the exponent mpeg apt FT Demented the Night (Le Dower de Chee) Lat them lock ot the “leoken'™ ctees let andare conkent to allow ther | with which they seetord all highly -atisted. Bui thisday | ux of the Europeans has diininished demand for : iF. Stani Worce! his friends | hands. Yet there ix not one here, from those who} . ss tenana aae slice: | be performed. It is said that this new partition | d#ily press and their polities, and compare them 4 the question conceras US | from Londo = i isti ih in ine executive power have been repressed by the police ; ew partition | Oot the leaderd of the’ weekly Prmend om = ly, we would rather not take a prominout | fy. ecuntrym came formerly, who is oxisting, as it is mostly th he as he 20 We, nevertheless, th whieh press more on the comfort, well-being, and | t theless, the: > of the | Will meet with success. i r case in E 5 i i Peruption which bas-aiready. tainted and partly | The Theatre Francais has produced a new play, | Which were the better? (Cheers.) Why, no weekly thers aay” if they eink proper, and | in si cate in Lavoe: like » bied, wow ploughing and destroyed the heart of La belle France. Noble days | by MM. Paul Mercier and Edward F irnier, which | peper could live upon the politics of the Mornin 2 at Bay of 7, y cand fearing lost the pove | cations—respectable means of existence; man ) Hie | from our triple fetters. “But, we repeat, on no i these | tence whatever can the present daily metropol | ress he implicated in the question, inasmuch as it | Herald or the Morning Post. (Laughter. did not wish to constitute himself a jud matters, but he did say, that those who patron _ were the pretty Mile, Fix, Mile, Judith. ized the weekly press, ought to have the oppor- tegnier, Maillard, and others of much talent. tunity of supporting a similurly cheap daily press. fore the events, as well as a panujue after t tragedy of “ Valeria” is still “all the go” atthe | At the same time letit not be supposed that he ned ‘Theatre Francais. Despite all the critics, Rachel | Would say anything to injure any portion of the dai- | 94 ‘overnament of Spain has made a change in | is subliae in her two parts of Messalina and Lisisea. | ly press. He complained not that the daily press £; of interest, and written by talented | existed at the price of Od., as it did. He would been represented at the Theatre en | leave that press to its present customers; but still, he first ie entitled, “Une bonne qu’on | be said that they should have a press that the rest by Mr. Henry Berthord, and the seco of the community could patronixe also. (Cheers.) has been « wl; but the Duke is to be replaced by Militaire et Santionnaire,” by Messrs. Bi What a curious: ao the daily press was to the Marquis of Valdegamar, Mons. Denoso Cortez, Both will remain every other article of consumption’ It they wanted whose title will only be that of Envoyé £xtraorde- | bills of that theatre, for they are played a dictionary, for example, oy could have one at ‘ iraake by the beet comics of the troupe of M. | any price, varying from a shilling to a guinea; but ‘A plot wae discovered in Vienna on the 6th inst., | Thibaudean. if they wanted a newspaper, 5d.—neither more nor and many arrests have taken place. It appears At the Gymnase a comedy in five acts, founded | less—was the magical price at which it was to be that the conspirators had formed a plan to uaurder | "pon the novel of Manon Lescant, was performed | purchased. by Ae told that a cheap article the King, ari to sack thecity. We bave no details | last night, and was a real triumph. ‘This novelty i | must necessarily be of alow character. He denied yet on Rut affair written by Messrs. Fournier and Barriere ; and | it- The cheap newspaper might not be quite so In Norway, Marcus Theane recently congre- | Ma’lle Rose Chéri, who performed the of witty or fascinating, perhaps, in stele as, some of gated on the square of Christiana, all hie par- | Manon, was greeted with universal approb he dearer ications, but it still might ae tizans sveamhense the 1 anniversary of the Freoch |. At the Ports St. Martin the long expected tr ly | honest, straightforward, and direct to the; so | and will they assign to taxes on republic. But the pelive appearing, Thrane thought | in rhyme, of M. Latour de St. Jbar, called “Les | andif he wanted a good wholesome taste he Ahould | foremost place in’ our burdens Le oo nt to advise his friends to retire without utter- | Routiers,” will be produced on Saturda go upward; but if he wanted a meretricious bden’s own mind ing a single rhout. ‘Thrane was hissed, pelted, and The Ambigu comique rs the third part ¢ he shou! dit there. (Cheers.) Montes- obliged to throw himself in the arms of a policoman | of Monte Christo, whieh will be entitled “Le Comte | quiew had that, though mankind was re; the average cost es for protection. de Morcerf. It is written, of course, by Messrs, | bate in detail, it was wise in the gross, and he for every copy, we will venture to say, more N news received from Bosnia, announces that | Alexander Dumas and Maquet, and the drama, no | 0 doubt if the medium of literary and political in- | than twenty readers. Any working man may gets the rebels have taken possession of the fortress of | doubt, will be interesting. formation were made free to all, that the benefit | *ight of all the daily Fa less than a penny Panjalaka, and that the Turkish army was altoge- inité will produce, on Mon- | must be general and universal. He looked upon day without ering to. Soy int of beer at > ther disbanded. day next, a grand melodrama, called “La Muet,” | the repeal of the advertisement duty as the sine qua | Stine time. We wish J coul le y= 3 a A nephew of General Dembiski, the celebrated | (‘he Dumb.) which, it is said, will meet with | "on for acheap pross. In fact, there could not be | but so long as the ae A papers i. or ne in Hungarian hero, has visited Paris on hie way to | another triumph. acheap press until those duties were repealed. | ¢¥ery public house in ape EL a England, whence he will ead] for the United States. Before closing my letter, I must denounce the ‘They inust do with the press as they had done with | Yincial papers, borrowing much both in — ae z B. H. R. ugly trick of the Post Office of England with the | corn, and they should always find in bim a free trader inion from the London papers, are equally access! mails of the steamer Washington. It ie well known | in knowledge. (Cheers.) ble, it is hardly fair to say that our readers are not PARISIAN @ommer. that this stenaner arrived on Saturday last, the Sth |. The CHainsmay here reada letter of apology from | of the working class, and that we, therefore, do not Pants, March 13, 1961. inat., at Southampton, and that on the same day | Mr. Scholefield, M. P., for non-attendance, and | Consult its interests and opinions. We must add Lent in Porie~Grend yes to | the bags were delivered into the hands of the | another from Mr. Ewart, M. P. The lator hon. | that there is something sinister in this line of argu- vis—Grand Soires of Naples to | Fnglich postmaster. Despite this advance on the | member enclosed £5 towards the object of the meet- | ment. Under cover of @ crusade against taxes on Amer icans— Postponement of the Princess Mathilde | mails of the Africa, which, only arrived at Liver ing. (Cheers.) knowledge Mr. Cobden seeks to dis ¢ the daily Demidoff’s Masquerade Amerwan Fabrics in Par | pool on Sunday morning, we have not yet reeeived person named Suaw, who addressed the meet- | Papers of the metropolis. They may have sins to —Theatricals—The Mails of the Wa 4c. | 2 Paria the letters and “hewspapers forwarded by | ing amid considerable interruption, contended that | Santer Se, bas thie aot the proper openeion Ne. | to ebved euces ry bye Lesties na ‘ashingtom, ¥¢ | the Washington, whilst the mail of the Afrien has | the only way to remove the taxes onknowledge was | Calling them to account. failin pesto md rors dh ay Doody omer Hees po da ken care of by the authorities. begun with all ite “austerity,” ifthus may | peon distributed to all thore who had letters and | to struggle to obtain universal suffrage. The peo- Then, of course, comes the never failing compa | sons arrived within the last mentioned peri it be called the restrained number of dancing parties in it. The Englich newspapers have pub- | ple would have no power to obtain these or similar fh the American papers. «Rah would have been compelled to deny assistance alto- and grand balls. What we call austerity in Paria, feRea ing of the large of sal reductions until they were properly repre- papers in New Yo t ays one peal me ome gether, but for the generosity some noble sons fe to give no entertai . ny housene be by the Washington, and, sented. (Cheers.) of them penny apiece; one a halfpenny, and t! and daughters of Poland, who, being above the state 7 inment whieh i# like a rout, those letters are stil in enknown The resolution was then put and carried unani- | be*t, we believe, not so much as twopence. There | of indigence themselves, have either from their own | free trade, a moderate anti-pay measure, and of Louis the XIV., where are you ? was received with much aj hi Financial capital ie red 1 commerce has | in one act and in rhymes, is Marguerite,” and the actors who p false proxpects be | even have successfully excelled in various profes- ored La omen . 1 feel it my ony O- com een to mention here (ilowackil tim, or, haps it should be said, | Gt your lordship may use his w I-justified authority | and ‘ochman, lawyers, who seexs property; Limam. ith the Poles, Lieutenant Charles Szulczoweki'« pro- | Plinta, Mage,’ Miller, Ludwideki, Roxpukewski, As the working man, says Mr. Cobden, cannot | “hee here woukl doa great deal of good in opening the | jlinski, and several others; Kreiteer, Garnyss, afiord to pay fivepence a day for his paper, a daily | forthe Hungarians, 1 trast Mr. Pulasky's fetter handed | /0dbielski, who are generally known in ‘th paper is the luxury of ‘the hi and aaiddle | to them by me, will produce the necessary effect ee sieietiens tos — * + rag th es; irces ourselves accordin, t 1am, my lord, yours ver fully, » e ® lively interes classes; and we addrees ourse gly to am, my lord, yours very PEO 8 Gy Age the tastes and opinions of those classes, and not to (Signed) S ausiner Ga ana To the Right Hon. Lord Dudley Coutts Stuart, MP, &e. | considerable sacrifices. The Hungarian com the mother wit and unsophisticated judgment of " fi 3 “a 1; Is, he says, di vo i incide i ‘ mittee, established in 1849 by Ujhazy, was covere the working man. ‘The daily journals, he says, do We entirely coincide in the observations above | Mili i ceeaeticus. "Bun tet. coeeae’ venacen ne tt the feelings of the many, but of the | quoted ting the fate which awaits these brave 7 assertions, in our opinion, are more | x atriots in Eng and. Not that we should refuse | Committee was dissolved, the subscription: ade than proved, for there may be | Them that, hosptt which we are always ready | “04 the reaction in public opinion took yl much color, but very little truth in them. Does | to extend to every honest man who seeks a refuge | W#* exactly the time when we arrived in Aieri the House ‘of Commons represent the opinions of | npon our shores, but on the score of the impossibtti- the time most unfortunately selected for us. With. the many? Docs Mr. Cobden himself? He has | ty of affording them continued relief, and on the | OU therefore, any co-operation on tho part of th several times expressed himself very strongly of one | probability of their being reduced, for want of it, rabl opinion when the majority of Englishmen have | to a state of destitution. Our country is too full for ly, in been decidedly of another. Are his views on our | a number of foreigners to obtain immediate em- foreign policy and on the Keclesiastical Titles | ployment, as the fact that many of the Polish re- Aseumption bill popular? Nay, {poll the mob, | fugees, who are now suffering in London the great- ing thrown on the shores of America a grow nowledge that | est privation, because they cannot procure work, | Dumber of the German maloontents, considerabl. and in whose bebalf incessant appeals are being | imereased the difficulty of finding employment made, fully establishes. We can ‘cay, in corrobora- | Notwithstanding all this, a man, without even ¢ tion of our own opinion, with re ard to the refugees | Knowledge of the language, but able to work mode. now the guests of our town, and who, it would ap- | T#tely, is eure to earn alware Gres dollars per wee! fare being dissuaded from proceeding to in any manufactory. On t ited States, reproduce an extract from an ad. | *tructions of bui ry Association of the Friends of robust rtrep th are required, seven or eight shillin, ¥ jes, drawn up by its President, | ©" be earned per day.” Lord Dudley Stuart, whose devotion to the cause With these facts before us we leave our reade Poland is well known to the world, and must ent'- | to judge if the offer made to the refugees, for thei tle him to the respect and admiration ofevery .over | conveyance to Ameriea, ought to be refused. [ of freedom and a In recapitulating the oF, prefer being doomed to starvation for the sak exertions made by the friends of Poland in ¢ of their prinei and opinions, which we respect country in favor of the refugees, his lordship owns | be they democratic or anyt else? But th. that the sympathy for the cause, among the wealth- | honorable way of holding an pendent ier classes, has eo diminished as to make it neces- | rests in an earnest desire to work and main’ sary for the aseociation to appeal for funds to the | #elf, rather t! in being an object of . Poles placed in ciren ces, volence. We are informed, that this day the refa- _ “*Withdifficulty,” says the address, ‘has the asso- fy will have to state what course they iutend tak. ciation, during the last eighteen months, continued in reference to the offer made to them, and that be tal s in Paris and in several capitals of | Two pla Europe t has been said that the Duke of Soto- | authors, bh: mayer, was recalled frown P. ntes. attentive a tole to afford assistance to the sick and infinn; and to those among them who accept it will in futu or fancy dress ball. But one is allowed to off : has ite cause, hi mourly. oO y paper says Mr. Cobden, which sells | Polish homes, or from other parts to which their ctive measure of moderate parliamentary Petite soirte duntante to his private friend, with the | the mean” Of England towards America; | Mr. lickson, who was introduced to the meet © day. Bet on one poins be. ie | destiny tne tod them, forwarded to the paveciation | Sm, She tory protectionsaas, wie cevport condition that the party will not finish ‘and our commerce, in ite relations with the United | a# the late editor of the Westminster Review, mov . He mys, indeed, “ Your reporting | the means of ministering to the wants oftheir more | Hom serm law, a stronger anti- ies Pelion , ; ot finish too late. | Sise complains @ gread deal of the affair. I un- | the second resol as follows :— and general literary ability is to be | unfortunate compatriots. dified income tax, and no reform, 3. The Peelites, ‘This austerity has been observed thus far, with pend P+ yy ~ Te Le scant, tho | _ thst he caste om pines, the tas on atvemiements, hed ot as chesp a rate here as io Americas” but he es fame the feremed by Polish bey tte ba, - free izes, Keg ~ 1 nanan, t , and I Yt thi 7 end the stamp on . | forbears to say that tl merican it the last months, amount 5 incial policy unknown, at no reform " great energy, and I do not think thatany infraction | {nited States Ambaneadot, Me. Iives, rigned by a | 804 the stamp om newsps dey bares &f coe oyeesla whieh to the London dally papers. “The associat seseived ail eveh donations | radical and Manchester’ party, who supp with gratitude, and in enses where any directions | trade, no anti-papal measure, continued tie have given as to their application, has been | and reduced eettoe, cna extensive reform Irish . whi med a ee and afe divided on les trade, the beriget, aur Jn most inetancer, of lave, the aesociation hae | form, but with » radical iudency. bas yet been made to that rule. large number of Americans and merchants of Paria Among the petite soirées worth boing mentioned, | Tequesting him to demand an ¢: i tion of ihe Testriets the freedom of the prese by hampering it af the Gecata oes erieon mot iti ‘which took place since my last letter, i will | Pirentethe sail the Washington: Wo tall ove | vot te had roveinee thes ent om satestion | Comgeriovs, and, we s, Oe il . epeak of that given by Sir Richard Tufton, « ve: Sat will betbe anew er. BAR but he bad received that morning » communication ly content to let it alone. We will confine i gute ' + Hh T rom a triend of is bow nbroed in the shape of « | delves to more, tangible grounde—to mare mate

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