Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
#. ° al rR, 1906, he named pimse!f Stepson vice king; bis son an “ — ere oe, ' . a ke ei ek 2 NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, MARCH 27, 1859. 4) f tho compliment to Hubner, in the discourse from the | to be violated which unite Poland to her. Bagland couit | evidence, that it a nt too moth in her interest avoid | sallant wns thon gurrouaded by the fiends Mr, I whe SPECIAL NOTICES. MISCELLANEOUS, of ‘the Tuileries, in that of the but ‘well that one bet: | war do o took him into custody and banded him over to an officer a aE eo Frau hopal a tn etsre St pace brochures, in the iar berg of the capi Uta ofthe republic tat the Tiaae walter eee — ee ho carried ‘ni le Alderman Batis, whe hls ZSOENOION, DISPLAY OF FIREWORKS, AS Aap fn ino arrival of ine Africans, in the tainlsternal créular. | 1220" armies are betior than one’ shemow wintdrsws | theron’ sry away Aunia. "We hope tt the feng neue na onc cue, ected a ssace sth Free admiaanes. olee eas a ee mea ead in the augmentation of the pay of speechless legislators, | ner propositions of 1848, and preserves the treaties which | more from the austria ‘be oqually con- | to grow out of the proceedings in the case.—. WILLARD : in the fall of the funds, in the cries of Veulllot, and in the | give her the seas, AS t0 Austria, to cedeoue of her mem. | vinced of two iret French govern- |. Jownal, March 10. MATQMO {TEE EMBERS OF JOEN D. WILLARD | TURNEANS EXPRESS AND PURNI- torror of in the alike of hatred and | bers, it would be moro than an'amputation: it weuld be | ment wishes peace, since it has ‘acooptod the in| Haxp ro PLEase.—Two German brothers, in Cathoun | he louse soe rs ae i etre here wollte as | Bouse exablchment, 1 and 113, West Rlovondy foars—in the very nature of things, in Italy asin Turkey— 'y an execution, a suicide; she would fall to pieces. Af- | tervention of England, whose attachment to peace is 6s-| county, Ill., married two German sisters.’ The elder yy 7» Sith inst. at moon, for the purpose of aroet, and avenues. Hich furniture, fn the four paris of the globe. It is war everywhere, ter Ita'y, Hungary would follow, Bohemta and the remain- Pictedby sacene; the mecond a thes opinion, which | brother fell sick, and the younger brother ran away with | ibe of . , Jeremiah boxed to all parts of the chy or because ‘‘l'Empire c'est le paiz’’- that war is of the boer3 dissolution. A power of forty mil- ‘been 80 unmistakably expressed for peace, would not | the sick man’s wife. The convalescent brother them fol- | 4)! ips are invites. to pars, Sang Farpbareed uni oe, Pianos: victory; finally, because that + victory witheut conquest | lions of men ‘hot concliide to perish in this manner de indulgent to the that would aocept the lowed with the other now wants to swap back, He paey wu Bilended to post is fool'shness.”” without fighting, especially when she is sustained by | grave Fetponail having rendered it ble, | but his own. both, says neither of the 20. Daw, Bec'y, GRO. T, DOLLINGEE, W. M. 5 whe lee eae Another Laguerronnia: ‘i e » Bee mothers of France have now nothing to do either by. pride or by¥alse and calcu- | brothers is ay OF ain, t you canission, . With these two truths before her eyes, Austria ought to} _ ELOPmuxNr ap Annper.—On the 18th instant, It & int be dnd har oar to the’ exnorations ot ‘Thames Vite: paged wih the we experience nk God grant What the should "wo “toon “learn, of the confirmation “of ths oP o em nly then may Pere Gopeimecn sense. any? eater hia aalks, would ear ceakons! But the | despatches that alrcady represent to us jn a favorable the started from East ews in Yet us'examine firat the object proposed ia Itily. black army not less redoubtable than the blue? | light the ‘of negotiations entered upon by Lord 7 Rationality of Italy, without the revolution and Fre nolds on to both, If he keeps the ene, he will lose the Cay. (oat ate dae more of expectation and we Paptee ) Where the next 5 4, i ion under the +, 4 la bmne heure! | other, Bome him, Rome will unmake him. No, | will see di the last ‘traces of this un- | by the officers, who con ae ‘Tiat’s rational. Bat is it not revolution only that can im ried by the he will have in his fayor “ God, leasant apprehension bas heavily during | trial takes place next 4 respecta- pose necessary reforms —that pressed, forced the princes ‘and posterity.” Forward! the empire will last two months upon the mind of Europe. ble posttiens until the conamission of this act. 7 ners Shas wed So ts on 748, ce agro have its Beranger. He says so, and he believes it. He | It is then jogo than ereey, Wil be approciated the me as eae lar ‘er done: roe ee Neg.go much that he finishes believing himself. Poor | advantages of the peace Jong habit has rendered Tay ‘ATE.OF CAN. An ably n circu- sovereignty bas che Ra did whet peasants, you will yet weep over your votes tears of gold | us sometimes insensible, and which narrow minded per: | ipr 8 ued. in » and. distributed in thew ‘what, Bonaparte, rebuilt—tiat or Ae a bicod. Sons, in their ridiculous pride, despise. Is isnot only, as “numbers, sdamabae of Parliament (if nee We in ea Bat phen no me Is Ne II. powerful enough to vanquish those who | some too often affect to believe, [2 Aroterial interests thes ) the mew tariff ‘propose tm the House that it poke ares 4 ett Seman areca Bayne bae Beg Mar nad Nanoha C8. Sasi pee aemteen faa remnize peace is Mere tA i it see oie Gea ai ve all, en q _ om integrity of the Turkish empire and mutilates {in out revolution, wil beou thomas at cea , | Riches and security are great, things; but it is not only | Cansda 5 i that immiatiath’ steps be taken ‘OTICK 18 HEREBY GIVEN THAT AW hg eka lRecalaniahetvestIo madaioterceatiauayebete Biaek Sea upon Russia, aud opens to her ts not exhausted by the Crimean expedition as fruits cannot failto voting trees He Willen irc: ° Even ‘Upper Canada ' become: @ State of the United N {er ng Ditseorn ofthe American Atlantic Pacific | burners for Z amano Seek RET eee Ta See, NR ee aaa coraabic ts Waa eoataee ey cakiry icine ACE inthe ely oC New Work, on Monday, he'ad day Of May nox | tonported inca tod Sooke Hae aE, plyersel- ‘Lot us continue, Peroni let eutindly Wromth. paseea 0€ 125 feceics allay | chiotorione, is wouks ke snéhclont ts reasamten thet lited trem id Zovieck Pek, : wayroa hand, It is a recived axiom among us that the spiritual ought weakened aud betrayed it towards the end of the em- | ty bas never been benefitted by war, to make us wish for PERSONAL, P yy JOHN P, YELVERTON, President. 44 Broome stveeh, tus dese asa peer a pire; it bas in its ttoers all the aetivity of toad middle pee ind tile act f as the Condition and source of tho ‘THOMAS SMITH, OR GEORG mongering ae ‘New Youx, Bese Lice . mremel Bow Kock Separated from Sepa. ol no" ithout une, press: ecarce! lessings. ° their affairs PI n rate but by folly or death—as if powers divided wore not pre oe Bd than by raw? ‘But wiht ~ Buca ty cane at 8 Ninth bet ae NOHOR AN, AMNUAL ELECTION 0! MINE rave H™ ee SUNT RAPEIT EY SCALE, Bot proveties Unoes in eases i aa ages aah aes Cop ermnniana katce of ‘Sie Seotarnen ete, oar prandiog soem . ——— | ter silt Canal srt gr J rage gta the a METER Be Breet ay, New Yor nd Rus ct be emt Ny IN INCERNING TWO LITTLE , transfer booke where. ° fusion ome and modora, England aid Russia owed not {og ia wumber by bis genius and rep tuforiority | cnx trees pisuassxD—TaR JuDGR cout wor SEB | A'girs, named Sasen and lan, will been | be clog from, the dots Sh of sort inclusive, “By | —-sevle wanted everywhere wers—in a word, to union, to the Meeneait of Ge z talent. re 5 tg ness — veri el THAT THE LADIES HAD BEEN MATERIALLY DA- folly reoeived by thelr anxious sister. 1 Ada ‘Anderson, . 4 IN, President, OF BUCHU—FOR DISEASES orbiter: eer emoowend Petaaer thas ¢ e First Consul for this new struggle against the name MAGED. ‘est Fwenty fourth street, New oity. i ‘Wititam Witoox, Seoretary. of ciinars. Bravel. , £0. State. gest goveroment ver | enems’ Of Bonaparte there remains but the shadow, for ‘We published some time since an. abstract of the pro- a ‘’ Buchu, for nervous and debilitated ¢xisted—tho Conventiou—died from a stroke of apoplexy. | his work is not to-do Over again, War is co foreign to the pocblinet sme lpedisonan:s ia'San Fran. | (VHLD, FOR ADOPTION.—PARENTS WISHING TO OCEAN LODGE, NO. Sai, I. 0. 0. F.—THE OFFICERS | guftsrers, KMS OE Sk nuscare-apou a Deiter and am ataault et Zouaves upon | Ci#C0: 00 2 case fm which tiie two actresses, Josepine and | ply tothe wet murseat I Clinion stress, Brook | hie ee eee nee et ee ee reas | oc eembeitinertcect of bucka, for lose of Frm ~ vet ol upon a ‘y and an q ves upon 7 - fy ~! sgn 4 yrstrnbca pe bi Dlg gs Taig 4 bastion” Teat'sall Notatame hat Deen creat ore: tsinand ibelisd the Bark Glittae. for netiost aud, ter: | T)UNGAN—a [IP MISS. DUNCAN, or | M@broWer Jeremiah Richardson. BY OOF y yao, xc. | Mpiiude ot the muscular system. dott ‘The Catholic nations of to-day, on the contrary, owe | from, not even a Prince of Sebastopol. From that balf Set ee Sees gees ~ mi heed D Thefteval a by the jonny eteue: Tok D BANDS & OOo ‘ition olres {heir tanguor und their uueusiness to the divorce of the | taken city, ‘or rather from a tower taken by tho Melbourne to San Francises. Tue case Gecupial. the at, | sereweteamor Oty Of write to J. Bor FFIOE OF THR MANHATTAN GAG LIGHT COMPANY, | tailagents, No. 14l William airost, New York. Bold by om two powers—to their antagonism and disputation over the | meaug of the bodies of the: dead, we have had at on sof te foP 6 newater se Od a4 ‘on ite oon. |) a4, Post oft ‘Char will hear of something oO No. 4 Irving place, coraer ¥iNeenth street. drageits. bodies and conls. It may be said that France has two] most a Duke of Malakof!. [t must bo, therefore, to-day aon ee begs ethan | the meriteot |, (ber advantage. 4. K. B. snxiously expects her letiers from, TO GAS CONS! peed See ae Soveroigns at the present moment—tho eno at Romie, the | as formerly, that the Emperor be superior to the mar. | “lus ludge gave» lengthy pet bo ary ape tomers sean Mea, Tamme, ‘ Ges consumers who inlend to retnove on or before the of L“ MEO PORK, £0. a Wwieedi SHOE A arias the oe armed with “bulls,” the other | shais, The’ old ‘Napoleon had given bis evidences of | the case, the concluding portions of which will be, foun; MMA wORTON Wit, FIND A Lerter at rae | “iy Compiling wh fats reanen, they will avoid al! Usability oho Uhuabors rere ‘whan Grapceamsaseteonn tad. EM eet bates that they. | {ulent before Bramaire; the new-ane bas atill his to give | 877 To thus raviewod at length tho wearisome detalls of Berncway Post oice, ( for gas consumed by other pt perk, be.divided, since they are thea tess powerful. ‘So much, then, for the axiom of separation. It is in an especial manner rewiy important that when the religious government is still Worse than that of the politieai, that the law be atheistical, ag said M. Bacrot— the law human, the goverament faical, the power secular; in brief, that the Pope be not proolaimed on the mouuta\: incapable of reigning over Tego overall italy. bi thousand souis, and he ts tc ro twenty mil Certainly the federation of Italy is ip the condition of hor existence—io ber pact avd ta her foture, in her aspira. tions and in hor trulitions, in the nature of er history and Of ber territory, bot long and complicated, like Switzer. land; from her babics, from her spirit, more municipat stullthaa national, Nationality is a synthesis qaite mo- dorn, which the avcionts scarcaly knew, and that only as federation. Theeity for them waa their country. They Scarceiy ever rose to the great national country, aby more than do the present people rise to the contemplation of the great country of humanity. Italy ought, therefore, to leave ber rudiments,ans, without aay doubt, nationalize herse!f But fecera! vuion is only possible between ho- mogeneous parties, There is neither bond nor union be- tween heterogeneous, und even adverse elements. Thus observation and logic sow us that republics may con- foderate among themssives—as the United States of Ame- rica, the United Provinces of flolland, the Uuited Cantons of Switzerland; and great and small kingdoms may be united together, as those of the Germanic Confederation. But it is ridiculous to join republics with kings—Venice wita Bomba, and Genoa wita Victor; and the heignt of the absurdity is to remit ali this variegated temporal under the single sceptre of the spiritual. In tois manner it is conciuded to take for the keystone Of jthe edifice that which has always crushed it. Papacy is, 1m fact, absoiutely contrary $0 nationality, By ite purely spiritual character it cannot constitute a tem- poral power; by its Catholic principal. universal, it canbot constitute a national and local power. Tuc Pope cannot be a prince. Does be not call himself the vicar or Jesus Christ, the successor of God, the common father of the faithful? Can we conceive Jesus Italian, national, patrict? Jasus with an army— ‘With a sword? Jesus himseif cutting off the head of a Mal- cust No, The cross is ineompatthe with the sword, pas- sion with action, the gospel with the code, Christian resig- Dation, aboegution aud Lumility with national exigencies, resistances and defences. The tamb has no claws, the «@ove hasno fangs, ant the crucified cannot be crucitying tbe representative of the God of love should partoa as Ph id pumish as king; when the religious law pre- soribes (0 him to kiss bis evemy end the civil law to exe. cute him; whee he blesses with one Lund and panishes with the other, it appears absurd aud monstrous in to coptradictory functions that ciash, and in the shock destroy him at once as pontiff and as king. Besides, if the papacy bus not been ubic to constitute the nationality of Italy, it bas hindered \t from being const tuted. Italy has always remained in the'position of aa an- cient peopie—a municipal peopie arrested in uer develope- ment even under theskeys of her St. Poter-Aux-Lieos, To remit the care of ber natiouality to the papacy ia, there fore, to renounce it mis to abandon the sick to the dis. ease, and demand medicine from the poison. The pamphiet on Itaiy has reasons for being so stapid. The Pope is truly onby there as the borrowed mame of the Emperor. The priests must sot be made enemies. At the moment of gong to war the Pope is flattered with an Italian crown, bat which in reality is to be kept for the Emperor bimself. However, the Pope in that is not more deve ved than any other. He knows his friends, Le makes s difference between his two Gear sons of Franoe and Austria. He has Emperor and Emperor, and concordats anc concordats. He knows well | thatfor one, he is but a servant, good for crowning him some day and keeping hig priesté ja order, au instrument, | instrumentum regra; but, with tue otber, Le is rater aad | governor. Ifthe smailest animal has its instinct of self | preservation, bow. could the casuist of Rome not com- | prebend the insurgent of For!i? The same as tp 1848, Pius TX bad more confidence in bis son Bomba than in his soa Cayaignac; likewise, and with the same reason, be confides mgre in his dear son Joseph than in his dear son Napo lean. Edifying spectacle, notwithstanding! The two €reat Cataolic Powers disputing who will correct the | { government of the Popemo{ the Pope who i¢ in fgbible, of the Pope who is th spiritaal head of bofb, the boly father of those good brothers, aud who cousemus the one that claims to be. right and upholds Ube other who is reyarded in the wrong. Forward ! eldest 80a of the church, bethe wisest, since you are the oldest, ‘orjbe the strupgest! Take the’ iron’ crown or kiss the Pope's foot, and pe vone with it, t ient that the monkey will imitate the man, will age ibe Pope sooner or later, and crowa bimsoif King Of play. Neccasity or manis, be copies the model. sow, what cid Napoleon I. 'do for Italy? What he did fomali the peoplesefor Holand, Holland , Spain, Germany, fe ranceeven}-the empwe, When he was General of Directory Whabdid4bié ode! scourge, tuis protecting 40 10r rialyY olsbt ews look at nia acts. Without otper object than Biggdai! yw jhe shaped aod cut out repubiic bere and kingdom there. Che Iirectory had at least and coumistent plan, forming a8 mauy republics as * it could, in proportion as iz couquered—itoman, Liga- rieune, Visalpine and Partuenopoene republics—inteading, Without doubt, also the Italian republic. Bat the hero ol Rivoli, by the treaty of Oampo Formo, in °97, ceded the republic of Venice to Austria, that never hai possessed it When he was First Uonsui, the hero of Marengo—all powerful then—by the treaty of Lunéville, be restored . tue Pope, aunexed Piedmont to France, formed the king- of Spain, and named hin Whea he was y Of Prow dom of Etrurie for the pri seif President oc the Cisalpiae republic. _Emperor—the hero of Austerlitz—by the t cof ttalv, also be King wee; Parma, x Duchess of 1, Rome’ departments of France Nagles remained: ‘there he enthroned hie brother Joseph wnt \tbe arrival of big brother-ia-law Murat, and thus sowed kings w reap traitors, rowing conquest to reap invasive; {a brief, making thé [taliane French fur tne purpore of muking them Tee Viabs. (ew thug a'so tuat M. de Girardse Wishes them wo forget liberty: by independence, and indepeadenes by liber: Py, only great men could find wee quinte<oences!) Term! Uabing at last ia rendering them more Austrian 10 Anstria the very day when France was renderea ty the Roarbuas, origiual—judes tue copy. ‘The muster indi cates the scholar: satne prinriples same resnite A Napo leon musi be every where wocre there las beea a Bourbon and certaja a Bourbon will return wherev Napoleon. Wis ovrsuin (bat the nephew will t Crouching a8 te uacie, bar uot more gold, Piedmont, ois Copfederate, will be his first dupe, The cat Savoy draws the chestauts frum tue tire, amd will again make departments, The ogre witkeat them, Lat ain his foot inthe boot and be will draw it ow to the he. then Italy will be once more a victim likes rance Po the 14th of Jasuaryt'e devign wae trayed, The expiosion broke the mask; the truth went outor the bomb the traitor showed himself thea such ag we have de nopnced him to the worl! in allour letters. He jost al all prodence; he menaced his good friends; be broke the ice; Le wrote * Napoleon Til, and Bagland,” thea “ Napoieon IIL and the Rhine,” now “Napoleon and po soon ‘ Napoleon and Hollan ai’ Jescenids the deg ity, and to Anish, it will be “Rapoioon TT wad rope.’ The coalition is again forming. What replies the Pope wo the Urochures? He does not even them. What replies Austria? She aris and keeps silgnce, What replies Prussia? Sho arms like wise, What replies England’ She arms and epeaxe ; Queen and. ministers. tories and radicals, from io» buck to friend Palmerston, all are unaaimous in main taining the {aith of treaties. It would cost her afew mit Lops more to, break. cown what she had built ap ; how ever, she understands her business; aut agnimt the Grand Admiral Jerome she has no need of a Nelson to regover ber expenses ; with her ordinary regularity she wii take. Egypt or Algiers. What replies Rossa? No- thing ; Dut she thinke none the loss. She has torsatiate her vengeance. on Fra: and Austria; oa who attacked her and oa*Ausiria who did not defend ber. She Arms as @ neutral, arcing both the time to exhaust each other, them she will retornto ber natural afaities and reaome her pert egainst toe real danger, recoustructinig the holy alliance to Jt» tu. ent Tes all very weil for & arte to try and tranquilliza everybody, tocovor Lis curqueraor’s sword ani to exhibit ‘his coustable’s staff; to epeak of order, of police, of jus tice, and of honor; wil well enough vo indastrioualy etren Jate manifestocs, 10 swear that he only wants to his 4 to circumecribe the war to ths oppressor, to gave the Pope from aachiem and the world trom a revo. lution ; it ie ali very. wel! for him to invoke Ragtish libe ralism, to Cede Ville Wranca tothe Ruséians—evary one 4nd Austria bas the benefit of the apprehensions wie ep ame everswhere inspires ;~ she has against Ainge threatened through her. cleaves to treaties like anold man; ho prefers. to 10 RECPIDCOE eremre a Fontaiye- bi cannot permit treaties to be torn on the shores of the Po which guarantee to her the borders of (he Rhine, Russia herve! canuot seriously permit treaties after December, and unless the courage of Boulogne and the talent of ‘Strasbourg are sufficient, disastera may be feared withous the triumphs, Besides, the young Archdukes Charles and the nephews of Biucber and Wellington, will they be less than their uncles? To despice an enemy is uo evidence of vanquiah- ing him. Let us’ adit, nevertheless, that the Austrian arty of equal number, six hundred thousand men, but of pieces and morsels, of soldiers of diffareut tniforms, bos- ule even among tbemeelyés, army of bariequins, com posed of regiments belonging to every kind of nationality und kings, discouraged, weakened by its bad exauseand the remembrance of defeats, be nothing more, ag said the new Cambrounes, but a preserve that could be taken ata moathful. Let us admit that the army will find again suc- ty the Geids of Marengo, Austerlitz and Wage wards come the allies. After Marengo, Austerlite and Wagram came Waterioo, Let us meditate on this reminiscence. Look at tlie re- sults of this violation of natioualities. For having denied this rigbt to the sevenieenth century, for having detached Co#Sica from’ Gen va, France, in ‘69, attached this Italian isiand.to herself, fom which came shortly after a certain sub-lieutenant, a stranger, an adventurer, & dere, true goldier of fortune, destitute of morality, of conaciencey of famty orof country, hesitating, Ike Paoli, between | England and France, serving in Vendemaire those whom he proacribed in Nivorsey es; @ gallant lady in or- der to become a general; moved by his‘ambition aione— intemperate like his spirit—he in turn becomes jacobin ani emperor; intoxicating, binding France with smoke and roige; employing the vices and virtnes of his victim to enchain ber and to enchain others; leading her to lose hor liberty, then ber independence, and causing her to be twice invaded ! twice !-do you understand ¥ And this is aotenough. Those two lessons of misfortune and shame are notsuflicient. Here comes his nepew, his heir, cuma- ating the quatities upstart and legitimate, who is about to give the third. Yes, (bree times in Jees than fifty years, France three times invaded, occupied, profaned, restored, dismembered !.ke Italy—perhaps for the third and last time. Now and always for the same ambition and the game race, forever extreme, forever rieking al! for all— the crime tor France aud France for the worla; ever ar jug: rather England at Montmarte than the empire with- out Burope. No, this unbridled race is not French; this atrocious ambition ig not national. No, this scorn of the ‘buman fam this madneesfor power, is neither of our country aor of oartime. The genie of France has not this grasping after dominion. France fights for principles, for tonor, for glory; she fights for the pleasure of tight- ing; more warrior than conqueror and more generous than avaricious. Cesar is notaGaul. That is an exotic plant which deranges the sensibilities of our country—a foreign poigon to France, to every country, which we our- selves must extirpate from the Continent—or that others, to tiaisu tne copy, will replant on St. Helena. Let us not doubt the fidelity of the Garde, The young avenges the old. Victory ia ours everywhere! No more Austrians, Prossians or Kagliah. No more aay person. That ls good. Ttaly gaimed, will she be more Italian? Still less: she will be French. In changing the eagie the prey Will have but a enange of beak: and in that there is all the question. We kaow well that that noble and unfortunate country suffers. Avsuredly her right is incontestible as is her seifering. She merits all our sympathies. She has all (he titles to independence—language, manners, arts, genius—everything that conatitutes nationality; ‘why, therefore, should she not have her autonomie, when even | Belgium bas her autonomie without ae of those tities | which coustitote nationality? Italy is the instructress, and, “like the secoud fatherland of all civilized peoples, she bas taught them the idea of material unity by pagan ome, of spiritual unity by Christian Rome; that (s to say, the principle which she to-day demands for herself. She has, therefore, the right to retake it by every possible means; her existence ia at stake, and she has @ right to acer pt of assistance from whatever quarter it may come, That one iyraut should chastise another, nothing is } more just, and we should even aid in that task if he were not to replace the other—if he said not, “Make room for me”—it be did not cause the name of France to be once more bated and cursed, and sealed the bondage of Italy with the immutable seal of despair. It is becavse that we love Italy ag a secoud France, be- cause that we believe in) a fatal deception, that we cry mistrust and patience. How can Rome and Venice envy Paris that cannot even elect her Mayor? Gur misery, our | slavery are common, our liberty, our victory will also be common. Weare joined in success as in defeat. [t is for hav- ing forgotten this hoiy and sacred solidarity, that we make atunement in Our Cha'os for those that we have imposed upon our brethern, We owe io that Italy a great repara- tion. Let ug remember! For not having at once delivered it, we had to subdue and to subdue ourselves after, och ig the gradation, Instead of going direct to ner assistance as the people wished it at Risquon Tout and at | Chamberry, Lamartine said:—¢ Th jougs enly'to those who claim it,”” “Titan fare da :.” , Cavaignac said:— “The blood of France bolongs on!y to France.’ Aud, finally, Bonaparte sald:— The blood of France belongs to the Pope asd the Emperor.” And the i3ti of Juue we protested; but in vain sacrificed our right of fatherland to assert that of the Romans e accuse us of having deserted i fet her not join the patriots of tho Moniievr who treat us as exiles, we who are pro- bed even for claiming the right of nationalities, Avove all let Italy uot accuse Frauce, France js not under the yard of tricolor banner that foate over the Tuileries. France is not among those ps ds of despised dwarfs led on by a scoundrel, not aruopg the white slaves that the negroes have the right to ort palaces, | uto thelr places; France i# net im the he barracks, bor ia the oflices of warued and | roals. France is in prison, in exile, ia the | the, workehop. works and avfera, in the secret places of the Marin To poor France, our beiaved country, at this moment » rand decisive, we have but ou word to say: Be } bave nowther means of warding it of but to predict it; it is at thet hoer when France hax need of all her children | 924 of the most faithful, aud not to be able to devote our | lite to 6 iny our eyes, therefve, cloee far trom ber rather than see again the bor sive’ itis time,” Every. erime bringwits peualty. If soe does not puniss the double crime ot Kome and Paris, she will be ponisbed inthe place of the guilty. The ca- | faottopbe acvances where she may perish, even to her dume. Oh! f there be a mortal apguisb in exile, it is to foresee the cvenster without ability to prevent it, it {s to r of evehaday This last word—a word of afflic- as pro‘owad ag our love—for once that the sword is wid be live till then, we bave butto withdraw | and to await inan anguish worse thao death of a fatal war in both cases—victo: of Twit by Trance: defest—the the Kings, Orsmi was right on u FELIX PYAT, CHATELIN, Committee of the Revolutionary Commauaity. Loxbon, February “4, 1359, The Itaitan Question. THE PROGRESS OF NEGOTIATIONS FOR PEACE. {Tranei from the Joornal des Débats, Paris, March 8, for the Nuw Yor« Hrratp.] Two ‘@ ago we alluded to t was something near the propositions that Lord Cowley was Instructed to pre- tert to Austria on the part of his government, whose active and sincere efforts for the jntenance peace will be properly apprecinted by the whole of Europe. We do not with to return to the consideration of all ye ed positions, What we have already stated has doubtless been aufficitnt to couvey to our readers how, through the carrying out of these propositions, the exclusive influence of Austria inay be made to disappear from Central Italy, ‘thout containing any stipulation either irreconcilable Heh A ya's security or honor, “ In come to rale the Malian princes who havo Inade treaties with. her,’> #hé would ‘riot cease to protect them, bnt that protestionscombined with that of ali Europe, could no longer be considered by any Que a6 & suurce of Ganger for Piedmont, or as a subject of uimbrage for France. Th returu for shig concession, Aus. tria receives by the adhesion of the rest of Kurope to this arrangement the indirect assurance that her position fa Italy can no longer be thonghtlesely menaced, And she would have besides lesa reason for complaint, ag this po- sition would be found to free her from everything that might render it incompatible with the security or the sua. ceptibilty of her neighbors, There would, therefore, be no reason for coneeiv doubts of the successful result of the mission of Cowley, were we not always forced to take into conaide- tae human ‘passions and a be expe to fee States Jed on in every Circumstance by the atinbut® at tate ony “partienag’ (lore ut if tere have Ween no lack of evil counsels preseated w the French government—who has rejected them with 4 firthinéss so honorable to it—they have not the lees been préscpred to Austria; aad we are convinced that aue also Wilkvojectthtre It ienotronly onattix #ide of the Rhine f that war has blind partisans and nnserupulous inetigators | The Austrian government is no more than any other pro | tected ‘against unenlightened counsels and. boliigerent Sugerstions, It is represeuted w ber, ia defiance o verything that thinks, that | { the various conyersstions attributed to the master. . With the exception of the conduct imputed to him. when. leay- ing Nokaheeva, they appear to have been remarks ad- dressed at the table toa tow passengers in the cabin, which, sofar as appears, the libellant never frequouted,.or Private convereations to hia wife, which were overhear! by aservant. ‘The diligence with which these remucks have been collected and proved, justifies the inforence they comprise ail that the captain said duringa voyage of more than eiguty days, to which the livellent gould take exception. Whether they are suflicient to es; tablish the habitual cruelty, oppression, ant jasult, which would be.# breachvof the ‘implied stipulating of his con- ‘agt, will be more appareni When, tue;testinony as to his fener duct shall have been cons:dered. It is stated yy Mr. Rudy and Mr. Roster, and by -onie other witaceses, that the captaia treated libeliant and her sister with marked neglect; that he ever spoke io ‘hem, nor visited them, and that on deck he always avoised them by going to the other side of the ship. [tis pot, presume, élaimed that,with the feelings’ which evidently existed ov both sides, the lose of the captain’s society on deck, or his omission to visit the libellant’s cabin, was a grievance. Whateyer may have deen his manner towards her her sufleriugs on that account could not bave been great, foF sue’ occupied a cabin of her own; and it was not until four orfive weeks after the ship ‘Set sail that she came on deci for the firet time. From Honolulu to this port, it ig admitted that there was no- thing in the captain’s manner or language, or in the sup plies furniabed libeUaat, that affords cue slightest ground for complaint, On the other band, Captain Wisemaa tes- tifles that the captain was not in the habit of using pro- Jane language; his genera! mannor was’ ‘‘affable and kind. No man went to him) but he paid attention to him, and listened to him.’ He also states that ‘‘the captain did not habitually speak disrespectfully of Iibellant and her sister. He had no vindictiveness—no unkind feeling. Occasionally he would make little remarks. I don’t know that they heard them or of them. He was not in the habit of speaking of them.” Green, the steward, testi fies that the general orders of the captain with respect to the libellant and ber sister, were to ‘rive them every- thing on board the sbip; for the sake of peace to deay them nothing. He would often ask how they were, and how they were satiefied. His manner towards them was very courteous, for babitualiy he isa mild man, and he could not be rude toa Jady if be were to try.” More- house, a steerage passenger, states that the captain's manver was ‘gentlemanly so far as he saw. THe was not strict epough “with the 6 Tt is, however, evident that between the nt, her sister, and Mr. Eddy on one side, and the captain on the other, a very unpleasant state of feeling existed. Captain Wiseman himself, in the course of his examination states that the captain ‘may have shown some ill fecting to- wards them. But he adés:—They did not treat him with respect. He felt like a mian~-ve felt like a captain of a ship.” Green states that at Honolulu “tho libellant’s DWAvuer and ctr tathe captain were like those of one talk- ing toa dog. Her general atr and manner were as if all were slaves, and they were everything.” Without ac- cepting as literally true this account, evidently colored by the feciings of the witness, it Is nevertheless probable that Green's statement is not wholly without truth. Mr. Eady attributes the altered manner of the captaia to the couver- sation he had with him, and to the fact that he mentioned the contract. If the expression of the libeliant with re- gard to him was reported to him, it affords at lea probable reagon for bis ceasing to notice her. But the: ‘was one circumstance which, however disagreeable its de tails, cannot, im justice to the captain, be left unnoticed, It appears that Mrs. Dayton, the wife of the captain, was prematurely coufined avout three days out from the Heads. Her state room communicated with the cabin occupied by the libellant, her vister und Mr. Eddy, and she requested to be allowed to the water closet amebed to that cabin, instead of being obliged te r ttothat ured by all the cabin pasteugers. This re- quest wes refused by tbe libeliant and her sister—the reason assigned being “that thoy had as aright to that closet as to their cabin; that they wouldn’t allow any one to use it. They wanted no intercourse with anyone.” After guch a refusai to such a request, it cannot surely be seriously urged that the captain was to biame because he ceazed to visit them, and avoided their society, even if a breach of manners in those particulars could for’ moment be considered a breach of passeuger contract. I have been uvable to discover that the captain in apy one in- stance displayed in hia acts any intention to annoy the libellant, or maliciously to deprive her of anything which the ship afforded. (n the contrary, whenever applied to, be seems to have acceded to al) their wishes. He ordered, as we have seen, a sheep to be killed on one octasion—« pig on another—salmon to be furnished them on a third, He purchased at Nukaheeva a supply of chickens exclu- sively for their use, and when summoned to their cabin to look ata supper which tind been provided for them, be acknowledged that it wae unfit, expressed his regret, and ordered the steward to relight tue fre in the hem. thing called for by their The conversation of the captain with Mr, Rossiter at contract, and even more. Honoiula, though apparently construed by counsel as an admission of bis misconduct, seems to me, onthe con- trary, to indicate a disposition very different from that xt- tribuied to him. dr. Kozsiter testiles that the eaptain said to him, “that he bad bad his own’ troubies apart from ship matters, which no one could properly appreciate but himself—that he had suitered a little (rom ill heaith—that anything unpleasant which bad ocenrred had arisen in a great measure from his own peevishness, and that all ought to be forgotten.” As the captaiu’s manner and conduct from Honolulu are admitted to have been une: Ne, it ws to be regretted that this suggestion was not adopted. On a very careful consideraticn of the wuole testimony on point, {am of opinion thatthe captain on several oc- casions indulged in peovish, improper, and even abusive. expressions with regard to the Jibeliants, but that such cosval remarks made to a few passengers at table, or on deck, or in conversation with his wife, ia reference to paseengers situated as they were, viz: occupying a separate cabin and having but tittle intercourse with the rest of the passengers, cannot be considered aa proving “what bis whole course of conduct was op- Preseive and malicious, or that bis treatment of the libetiant was habitually crael, insulting and tyran- nical,” and that they are insullicient to constitute a breach of the passenger contract for which the vessel is bable. With regard w the awning, it ia testified that the captain refused on several occasions to spread it, aud some experts bave stated that in their opinion it might have been wholly or partially spread. It appears, however, that on several ovcarions it was spread, a circumstance not consistent with the ides that refr @ captain maliciously d to put it up, in order to render the libellant un- tabie. Captain Wiseman states in the most poal- tive manner that the awning was spread whenever it was practicable to do ao, and that he uever heard any com- Plaints of the want of it: a statement confirmed in some vy the fact that no mention of the captain’s mis ct in this respect was made in the !ibel as origi filed, It was only when the sufferings of libellant for want of an awning were alluded to by one of the witnesses at tho trial ~ her counsel moved for lenve to amend the libel, and this'cause of complaint waa arded tothe list of griev: ances. The malicious refusal of the master to do an act ‘80 obvionsly necessary to the comfort, and perhaps health, of the after cabin agers, would haye furnished o cause of coroplaint far more substantial than the hast; expresiovg, or the refusal of sugar for lemonades, whicl are vet forth ia the libel. The entire omisaion of it{s there fore significant, On the whole, my opinion ia that the libel Should be distnjased, A decree will be entered accord: gly. Matsimontal Items. AN Avrasn ix Pintapeivaa.—Yesterday afternoon & little aflair occurred in the vicinity of Fourth aad Walnat streets, resulting in exposing the details of one of those cases of conjugal infidelity which have of late years become 8) extremely fashionable, in thi “ great and glorious country.” Mr. Thomas Price isa young [or proeren employed in dr at Ni 19 Market street, is of ri excitable pao ment, and withal, an individual of good parts. Mr. Rich ardeon is also a young fen ee Seeereiery, of an insu- fance company. Price was oftentimes called to the coun- try, and ering absence it is said by certain knowing oes that Richardson would slyly visit the wife of the former, and encroach apon the honor of his Liao The Wife in question if tepresented to be lovely fu face and form, and just such ® womaa as could fully pla; the tars of etemizoon "Atall evcuta, Tree heard of tb alleged illegal attachment betwoen his wife and Richard gon, and almost itiven, to den ir, "Venter tay at noon he was furnished with what he un- considered doubted evidence.of Bichardson’s double depiing, aad at once, in an indescribable etate of mind, repaired to the office of thé inaurance company, where le on- countered the object of bis search. He accusod Mr. B. of having playeda aud cowardly part toward, bim, by seeking to bring or upon his name, and gaid, ia an excited manner, that be came torebuke him by physi force. Suiting the notion to tho C+ Wis, Price favo Ba very severe drubbing. A number of the gentiomen in the office interfered, and after some diMculty mccoeted in rescuing Lim from phe iroy clutwbos of Mr, Prige, Tug oa Ts: RATION WANTED—OF MARIANNE COFIELD, Tre aide atthe uve and sentto the. Bopital” AxCorustion of iter e |. Information ine wile thatituly recelvel by Wer pursety. “Address Pat rick Cofeld, 32 Mulberry street, N.Y. ™ wh, 1% [SFORMATION WANTED OP MARY ANNE MARVIN. jt ewaain Bouton, fany information ather willbe thasktaliy hecelved by her broker Heary: Mar: vin, She ig a native of Coolock county, Dubila, ‘Ireland. Ad reo 218 Kast Fourteenth street Boston, papers please.copy. y WILLIAMSBURG.—BIUE PAPER WOULD LIKE a.do.nee yousome day this week, RB, RALVADOR PATS OAN BEAR OF SOME (HING M to bis adveatage coucerulag qilwirs to Cadiz, by callug at 13 Minth CA. T. street, at apy tina. AMA RAILROAD COMPANY, NEW YORK, OT utara lection for ‘thirteen Direc tos of the Panta Rail ; 88 W. fre of the compuns, 85 Wal Fee pals wilopen ats gtioee 4b of 1 Onwud clnwe at 2 Jos. F. JOY, Secretary )y ROPOSALS —OFFICE OF THE GOVERNORS OF Tu Almshouse. Mareh 26, 1859.—Brick.—Sealed proposals wi be received by the Governors of the Aliashouse; at their oll Horwnda, Park, until 120’ciock M. of the 4th oy, of April next te tw and deliver on Blactwell’s Island’ heat quality Nerth river well burnt bard brick, required in the erection of ibe Iglabd Hospital. ‘The (lovernors reserve to themseives the 1) ht to reject any and all proposals not deemed advadtas te the Department. Blans form of proposals oan be obtar ved furtber information furnished on application at thele fice. MPHE PERSON WHO JCALLED AT NO, $50 WOUSTON street to taijitir¢ about thé Seward offered for a bracelet, Wil please call ngain same place. ars W ILL MR. T.8END A SOTE, STATING TIME AND lage wheurhe will betin thé city, as | hare something Jovy Important to con™umunicate tu regard to hia Jae Letter? THE LECTURE SEASON, NRY WARD BEECH From \¢, March 23,) ice gathered last eveniog at the eburch of Kighwenth street, vear Fifth the Kev H. W. Beecber's lecture on tha the Beautiful.” A hitle after the hour appointed, ev. Bidney Rue to hea of Wr. Beecher made his appearance, and offered « very bumbi6 apology for unfortunately misplacing and forgetting his mapu- soript, remarking incidentally that his forgetfulness" was the first intimation he bad of growing old.” aud then delivered his jecture on " Mizthfulness,” Instead of that anuonaced, which willbe given at the same ‘place on Thursday evening, March 31,commencing at 8 o'clock. Tickets 60 cents JPIRITU ALISM--MRBS. CORA L. V. HATCH WIul LEC. turein Music Hall, Brooklyn, on Sunday atterncon, at 3 o'clock, in the ttrance’state. Also in Clinton Hail, aator place, on Wednesday evening nezt, at 7% o'clock. Subject by the audi’ ence. Admission 15 ceats. DENTISTRY. Saas Pie NEW AND GREAT IMPROVEMENT. BEAUTIFUL, AL Dermanent sas of teeth on pure sliver, with coutiauont gue, only $10; without guins, $3; 0 gold’ or platina, with ggnurnows gue. $25, and warranted eatin! to any B50 sot tn New York. Decayed and sensitive teeth filled aud extracted without the least pain 50c. Dr. LUTHER, corner of Tenth street and Sixth avenue. i EMCVAL.- DAFLANOB SAUAMANDEE SAFE DEFOT lurray street, corner Vol ie) ionieeeent yer ROBERT N, PATRICS QOER'S SULTANA SAUCK—AS A TITILLATER TO the appetite this sauce stands alone. “It is a mosl valria hie nc junet to Osh, flesh or fowl, and should be placed on every Loodoa Atlas, ‘It ‘is ‘for sale by the (ullo wing FOURTH AVENUE. . OTT, RISH & NESTELL, No. 258. GAMPBELI ESPANA No. 404, Bs. Haviland, No. 43 0. TMRD ATENUE. D, T. STAMFOSD, fo. 56. H, BARTELS & 60., No. 96. BT KKKD, No 59. ANDFORD & GATX, No, 191. BANDE & LOSHE, No. 177. EIGAIM AVENUE. CARPENTAR & MOORE, No. 8. JAMES & SMITE, No 215. W.H. JACKSON, No 34. W. i. HASUATI, ‘No. 469 HOUSTON & STINLE, No. 391. J, BOGGS, No, 425. And by dealers in fine groceries « Sole agent, GG) YVELI RTIFICIAL TENTH. IN THE MOST ELEGANT STYLE of ip. ‘Teeth extracted safely, cleaned, regu inted and stoppei, without pain, injuring the enamel or pro: ducing decay. Dr, BATE, dentist, 835 Broadway, corner of Thirteenth sireet. ISTRY.—TERTH EXTRACTED IN THN SECONDS, seen, not fis elauithblo a} otou ts practiagd: by "ane only, Refere maces given if re . Dr. R. G: Sirwers 26% Canal etreet, near Wooster $1 (), 222) 310, 310, $29 ONLY, $10 “PRARL CORALITE” « ', Beta of teeth, warranted, ‘American gumotype teeth,” beauty Au ‘Teeth extracted instantaneously, without pain; all work satisfactory: elghteen years established dentistry. (Dr. MANSON, Sixth avenue and Twenty-second street. LOST AND FOUND. + JUND—AT WALLAOK’S THEATRE, TURSD AY EVEN ing, March 15, a diamond ring, which the owner can have by addressing box 1.456 Post office, New York. O6T—ON THURSDAY NIGHT, A CAMEO FAMILY head pin. A suitable reward will be pald with the thanks of the opener ou returning itto Joba Hopper, 110 Broadway, be pe IN THE TRAIN LEAVING ELIZABETH, N. J., at 2.40 P, M., an album enclosed in white paper, of ho uae w any person but the owner. A Uberal reward will be given by leaving it at 386 Broadway. [ OST S1S REWARD—A GOLD HaND, HOLDING A 4 diamond. The above will be paid by returning the same a! 61 Walker atreet, I O8T—ON SATURDAY NIGHT, CORNER OF BROAD- 4 way and Fourth street, a while poodle dog. Being at tached to 4 child as a pet, the finder will be liberaliy rewarded by leaving him at 196 Greene street, or at 34 Beaver street. O8T—ON FRIDAY NING, MARCH 25, GOING from Thirty-firat street to Maaisou square office, @ leather purse, stee! containing gold and ativer coin, firder will receive a suitable reward on leaving it at No. i West ‘Thirty-fourth street O8t OK STOLEN—ABOUL THE FIRST WERK IN March, a heavy gold watch, chain and key; alsoa porte- monnaie, containing a few papers of no use to any but the owner. A liberal reward will be pat, for thelr return, and no x queationa asked, Address D, 582 Post ottice. REWARDS, $1 REWARD.-STOLEN FROM 87 BOLIVAR street, Brooklyn, on 25th inst,a large black New fonntiand dog, with « smail white stripe between fore le; answers to name Of Jack. Apply to Thomas Shepperd, as above. $10 RRWaKD.--LUST, ON WEDNESDAY, 23D, AT12 o'clock, 12 coming from New York by Pulton ferry o boat tothe Flatbush stage in Brooklyn, a together with the chain and pin, and a pencil aad two keys at’ tachet, The atove roward will be paid by leaving it with A. | Jamison, Glove sivughter house, corner ‘Chirty-eighth at and Tenthagenue, N- ¥. REWARD.~LOPT, ¢ March 28, two ove hnodred dollar bills on the New York.’ The biils were dated Cot 1, 1858, rks, S11 Henry st. THE EVENING or ‘ben ix Address RALLROADS, 4ND HARLEM RATLROAD. WINTER ASRANGEMENT. r albany aud Troy; fare 52 ay, Dee. 6 1ASA, treina sili leave Twenty: . for Wiltams Bridge. M. for Milerioa. M. tor Croton Falls, fr White Plaine . for White Plain, fever White ant Centre wtreew, Mi for Wiliams Sritge RETURNING, WIC LRAT E pm. White £ lads, from Wittama L. from Wildame Lrvige toe White Pisius. i 30M. rom W Fane Fo We SSG worn, 8 > Enis i BATLROAD Dunuirk, and $8 ee Vo cand B A e ly uf Fan OB GRERNOUUE, General Agent PENNWiLVANIA RAILAOAD—TH® GREAT OGN trad route to the West. Time at least hort and rates 0 freight and fare a4 low, at all times, aa by any other route. bor paamare dekets or th comurnct for t any point fr the entre ‘West, call at the company’s office, No.2 Astor Nouss Joke ELLIOTT, Paasen; Agent, Fob. 22. ion & 00. Freight Agente And after the ay 10 between New York anc or Ningare TAME) YOUNG GENTLEMAN. A PORRIGN A\ 22 years cf age, of good appearaace, steady habits, and iv swased of aguflletent competency, wishes to cultivate the tome young lady, with a vie lated to make & howe pleasan agreseb| be ns addressed to H. 0. 8., Herald offiee, Bdectia ie JPSsle Witpin) MATRIMONIAL AGENCY, 1° Mat Forty, third. sizect.—Gentiemen fees, $1, Indies free, Hours from StoSP. M. Reference reqa! |, Letters at );_clty Jetiers not an- from the eount lone two aan} awered. by nrg [eased on \ geen proy atthe above of. er buainess confidential. Af ATRIMONIAL —BMILN VILLETTE WILT UPON RE 9 sn suc atts tae ae " therefrom, 4 : reas Emile ENC (LOOKS, fF SROKVN WOH ANTCAS LAMA, Bm 5 'aioad ot wt oct, of removin + Wty NESE RE Se ARON VET LN, Ab ‘ond wy. IP'YE ASNUAL COMPLIMENTARY BALL TO GRORGR W. Alien, tendered by his iriends, will take piace at Brookes’ Amsombiy Rooma, 361 Yraome giceet, on Monday evening, March 23, 1869. JOSRPE MURRAY, Obairman, b .6G, Buogmps, Treasurer, 8 gold watch, | HOUSES, ROOMS, &C., WANTHD. ROOM OR ROOMS We NTED-SUTC AN office of an advertising phy ‘ast ade of the ety déreas, positively stating terme, #. 0. & , Herald GENTLEMAN DESIRES TO RENT OR A. the interest ta a hotel, furnished or unforn’ Inodate 100to 150 persons situated about 40 « Mes (rom New York city. Thguire fe WAKD LE Ne FORT, No. 838 Broadway, ESK ROOM WANTED.—ADDRESS, STATING ‘Which must be low, Murk, box 105 Herald office: ‘SE WANTRD—BY A PRIVATE FAMILY. A ized three story dwelling, fa « good neighbor. » Thud wad Seventh avenues, and not abive iF yth street, musthave the modern Address, stating ention and prica, 5, box 2 100 {REF OR FOUR STORY } OUSE WANTED—A TH bouse, with basement, mtnated between Kighth and Thir theth #ireets aml Lea eton and Sixth aveoues, wits modern im- » desired; pariera atvided by 200. Audress J, 8., box 2, stall horse in New York, uot above Fiftieth strert for $400 per sonum or Jere? ‘The honse ahoult have bata and wa. ter closet. Tho vicinity of stablea or shaaties is nox consider ed expecial’y desirable Any landlord having aca @ hoes id.conler s favor by addressing, a tine ty PW box :.450 office, giving fall parUieulars ag to wumber of rooms, rout, Possepsion taken Ist of April if preferred Wan THOUS? OR PART OF A Howse, with provements, laa genteel neighbor: hood, not above Fi rent betweea $400 and esr apuum. Address C. A ferald office. ae. Offer to the’ ‘at the lowest prices for cash, ‘mess patos a lard, ha. "Donlere wil fad ito beds teescees 6S ee paATENt CARPET BEATING AND BRUSHING MA. chine, 138 and 144 Bank street. ets of all deaten and cleaned, free from dust and moths, by a new finest fabric. *; proved , without injury to the 4g BEby express tothe ament, willbe atended to witts eapatch, HEUMATIO EMBROCATION.—THIS INVALUABLE article for mustiem, Bpraina, Bruises, dc., £0., is for dale at 113 Third avenue. 60 cents x botile. GOFER'S SULTANA SAUCE IS WORTHY OF THE DE- S_licate taste of a sultana, the genius of a Soyer, andthe poe patronage of the public —Lendon Observer, It can. ia BROOKLYN, Of W. H Cornell, 8. Sution, Fulton’ street; D, Williams Tra Phillips aod emer, Court street, J. Thompson, Allas- tie atreet No 1 Fulton aveaue: D, 6. Powvll, Myr- it, Clinton avenue; G Von Glatn, Déan VW P street; Purgold & All Seventh street, Fastern District, J. Potter N. Cornell, 9 Pu.ton stroot; wong & Wi Is JERSEY CITY, Of Cee. 8 Ga Montgomery stra ‘echt, 191 York street: J. Loughraa, South &Co., Grove erect cons IN HOBOKEN, Of L. Wiedermann, 13% Washingtnu street, TN CABMANDVILLE, Cf iD OW. Ward aad », & Fay. Sole G @. VVELIN, 217 TATIONERY, STATIONERY. OH#AP, CHAP, CARAP. ‘The subvorther having recently purchased ut auction s stook of books and papece, lr retailing the aame at very low priogs. Good writing paper at 10 centa per quire, and from $1 14 to $I) per ream. Knvelopes 12 cents per 10). Blank boviae nd otter stationery equally low WiLlaM K HAWS, 995 Canal street. JEWING MACHINE WANTED —ANY ONE BAVING A D> Wheeler & Witson sewtag machine to rept tow family, or who would sell the same, may hear of a customer by - ing A. ¥. C., Cuion equare Post office, STANDARD ROS! tng out plants for Mould maoure and gardens lait out by WM FICZPaT- ist, &e., corner Twenty ninth street and Broadway. OVERS SULTANA SAUCE WILL BE POPULAR © wicrever the name of the inventor is known. Tt possesves double merit—exqnistte tlavor and digestive virtues. The heme Soyer «lone, horrerer, ts eulogy suaicieat.—N. x. Brew BOX, SHRUBS: irae thawing qionare hare Ih fue. ent axing grocers have It (or sxie:— DECMMOND & CO. Ni Jd. DEM (0. 316 Canal street. 8.7 SDAW & CKOSBY, No 126 Spring street. THOMPSON # UclOWEcL, No. Ll Niath avenue. E, ¥ SHER, No. 118 Bleecker street. ) MARLINE, 42 Hudson street, OULLY. N Hienry.etreet. J. MORRIS, No_ 59 University place, i No. 67 Lexington avenue. ON & McLMOD, No, 120 Water atrect, & W. GREKY, No. 203 Canal street . BRITTON, No. 3] Amity street, NDERIILD & WASTER VELT. No. 195 Bivecker streat, . CHAMBAES, No. 84 Rutgers slrect “BRIGGS, Bo 221 Ena Broadway. YNO 554 Grand street. Delanoe: street. Te ag TANTON & 0O.—STANTON & 00., LICENSED PAWN- brokers, 83 Canal street, second door from Eldridge etreet, novodee money on liberal terms on diamonds, watches, jewel property arey description. Entrance to xy the ry and personal tie private office HOW CASES.—SCHMIDT & BROS., MANUFACTORY and warerooms, No. 5 North William’ street, near Frank- fort, New York, and'77 West Third street, Cinciauati. Ohio, A. ge assortment constantly on hand. Old show cases takea inexchange. Ordera promptly executed. Wy ARzaD-& FURNISHED HOUSE, FOR A SMALi family, betweea Fourteenth and Thirty fourth streets. and Lexington and Seventh aveuues. Address. stating terma, | box 1,095 Post othce. ANTED—FOR A YEAR OR TERM OF YEARS, A three story and attic house, wha modern improved: betwoen Eleventh and Twenty third streets sod Sixth avenue and broadway. for such a house a fair rent wii! be gives by & respopnsid.c party for & pri family. address (iouse, box Pos! office, stating loeation, kind of house aad terms, which must be reasonable WANs ats tn amail gente! t N, RY A SMALL FAMILY, & house, with ali the modern im provemenis, ana 'u thorou, tee! excepting arin neighbor aw ‘alk from Wall | address froat preferred N —PARE OF A provements f rent ab amuall cottage and more. References exchanged adiress H. 4, id office. | box te WASTHOTBY A LADY AND GENTLEMAN, WITH: out children, three or four usfuroished rooms, suitable keeping, ia a plessant locality and witha small fa Brooklyn or hew York. Address Artist, box 147 He- terms, loeation, & SMALL HOUSE, WITH MODERN IM between Bleecker and Twenty fifth atreete *ax to Second avenue or west to Sixth are- Adaress fortwo days 8.0. Et, Broadway Post oilice. om 884) 19 $400. for how WA N1O pA SMAGL HOUSE, WITHIN TEN MINUTES! walk cf the New York Hotel, aia moderate reat; must hare Cr vod gas: for a reapectable private family, Very peat references given, Address Comfort, Union equare Post § BROOKLYN, IMMEDIATELY, BY A geatlemen and wite, withont cbiidren, part of ‘a houae, forglabed or partiy furniahed, ta agenteel lochlity, Address & A. p., Herald cilice, SECOND FLOOR OF A HOUSE, FOR nme Red pedroom, Kitchen Aud. bed nm 8; location within iz blocks . Address Cosmos, box Lit house, by ®amall family. where leasons on the piano veu tm pact payment of reut. Address Music, Brook: NEW PUBLICATIONS. TLLYER'S AMERICAN RAILROAD MAGAZINE, POR APRIL, NOW READY. Three dollars per annum. JOHN HILLYER, Publisher, Spruce street, New York One OF THE THE RITE® AND WORSHIP.OF J the Hebrews—Now pubilshed and for aalo at our oles, 4% Cenal street, and our agents, Mesars. sppicton & Oo. Broadway, Messrs. Williams, Plephenss, Wiliams & Co 853 Broadiva ; and the Key 8. M. Isaacs, Houston st Views ot Obristian Adwoeate and Jot —Rev. Max has tnaved an interesting engraving and volutne on the origin of the rites and worsigot ike Hetkews, from the Freneueet Rownterg. Ita curiove affatr, presenting & vact amount of Aformaivai and ‘he engraving’ ls good pario: ornament Tike Jewish views of divine truth, aad the symbols of thy. He- brews, are given with much minitencws and are exoredingly interesting. Allclergymen should getthis unique work, CLOTHING, &, AT 2 CFNTRE STRERT. WANTED, A LARGE uty of ladies’ and gentlemen's new or exst off clothing, Bechet cinerea hl ulktg ike Bo ora Steaning Wan, Welsh. 39 Contre ekroek ‘CASH PURCHASER TO BE HAD AT 9) CENTRE A ‘ere. where iat aot ga ct saree ir on Tieore, oretdconlag Wiliam Waiah, 30 Coutte pres % ° RARE CHANCE AND NO HUMBUG —LAaDIKe’ AND From $6 | Faget tor 0 $20 pald for eee 00 B., enth 3 from 's pants; nigo, ee e "ise Sere A note by post "punctual kod Twentieth streets, ¥. WAN. ren bewwerr ineteont Mende to by Mea, 3 \LOTHING—GENTLEMEN HAVING ANY NEW OR oe uy cant off clothing t dispose of cas obtain Ay per cent a ane by estan mt the store, or addressing COAL, diab. LARGE STZR NUT; Bt 75, nly soreaned, trom f | OYER’S SULTANA SAUCE.—WE .RECOMMEND OUR correspondent to try Monsieur Koyer’s newsauce, entitled the “Sultana Sauce.” its flavor is excellent, and i j reat aid in cages of slow and weak di .—London Lancet. Ho en ey CE ly approved of for hot or Cold dighes, can be bad ef the fol grocers on ‘BROADWAY, 9. 900 0. 1,008, N, No. 1.092, fine; eg everywhere. sore eae o TVRLIX, 217 Futon street | OWNERS OF COUNTRY PLACES. FERTILIZERS SUPERIOR TO PERUVIAN Vb table garden, and madreds who have ~ ‘used it for ten years. # Hy atrong new bags, 160 Ibs eace. Ritrogenized sup.phospbate of lime per bag $4 Mapes’ super phosphate of lime, Capote: * Potash super phosphate of lime. ete. rape A can of phosphate for experiment, together with cirontarw containing full directions for use, cam be had Cree of expense ow, ‘application to OH AN. V 148 Fulton street, ‘or sale at all ageic: ho) ge MAILLARD'® 03% MADLLARD'S Use MATLLARD'S OS® MALLARDS CHOCOLATE, CHOCOLATE. WALTARD'S bok MALLARDS Tos MALGUARD'A ss USE MaTLLARD'S. ‘ YANILLA CHOCOLATE. VANILi.a GHOCOLATE. Van CHOCOLATE. VANILLA CHOCOLATE. TUE BEST IN THR WORLD. TER GEST IN THE Wor! THE BRST IN TI WORLD. TOE BFST IN 5 BL oefinnntctory 158 and 16) Meroer. street; store $2 Broadway, wing 4 = Givcol. te DE RAN TE, te boeued: ATE DE F. CHOCOLATE PRFROTIO: CBOUOLATE ALA VANILLA, D CHOCOLATH: DOUBLE Vai GHOCOLATE FRRUGINKAUX, ’ CHOCOLATE CREAMS, OO CANIS OuOUOL ATE, _M. MATLLARD, 621 Brondway, VA BRUNT & WaTROUS, PACKERS AND SMOKERS, 20 CHAMBERS STREET, NEW YORK. Mess pork, lard, amd = full Astortment of smoked meais, at low prices. Dealer invited to oat). ‘Terma, cash invariably. ‘WANTED 10 LET LADIES AND GENILEMEN KNOW that, ir hey Wah Weepe alee ne ee ‘| rw, th A box of * George's Instantaneous hase f ye tort seven cents a box. an bes ee Y. CiArEYoraNce—Mns. SEYMOUR, | alld, SEBRING / AY 3. WHO 848 Nor HRARD OF THR 4 Nair EP ea be eae -% fone eonfident she has no rat, he holla the name or husband, also visiter. 1s hor a call at715 Sixth mrenun, sove Forty seoond lation conta, rentlomen Bi. é