The New York Herald Newspaper, February 6, 1860, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ou. I _$<$__ re NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1860.—TRIPLE SHEP. ufaotur: Deco dupense with | THE POPE'S TREPORAL POWER: | z j with | have driven ger pl chains unoly sland of Bas and we have a confident beltef that he ape seerreincinsecs Salk eens sie to dispense Bern Faataied wit ere A * leoeer pine foo the majesty a Sa neced fe dispute 3, a basis which ‘will be our guide -ir 2. ‘the different bills” |” St ene oe TX., what was i? pov meer no ose dh rod arbitration +g @istant day be va abmirted ‘ Reale the Pepet—The Gathelle ‘Renolgp arme-forign arms Abzoat, an stand and deliver, a determine, forther alludes See rity Peete an pomatole Lm A ie tous im . tain the inal government ly” by ie ‘bbe? dnd esp of «mano Bae Ket ny the probable and carly settlement of the dif. Mall remorabor, in soe interest, of our manuisctares and’ | Primate of treland-ow Rapetoon— Another they 18 cao to the Tniaas, sho every day cove! pe nian rng ny tea mnyiob eece person | feuitiey which have arieen out of the Batwor-Cayton . pende! more H ny, in an) one. A) t Louis Ni threatened '. 'e trust venme 4° facilities Sir national weakh, the Latin verse attribaisy toloul-}: Pamphlet Against the Pepe—A Vatican in Margy Re ee a ee troops, and leave his Holiness to the care of Ph eaforeement of ia nevérality ws, wil repr we iy require * dis pious and loyal sub system of fitibusterism, tho constant’ appre! ion of 5 Gui meliora patit caveat peccare novando. ng prmeeiveg, aha Ser ae mA ase im : = irsin rc peel et Mail, Jan. 17. which has completely paralysed the power of the Contrai | chanan, however, speaks on this subject with a {From the Paria Paya, Jam JO) oy ae., te, aa. teaperal Power, declare it fatal to faith, and would faiv | 1¢ we know anything of the Emperor who ‘or ro | Amerlean republics, and prevented, thos from making sn urpeney and emphasis suftcint y,indloaive of ia ap- fade the measures which will be gubmutied to the ‘Soe ~ ree ores, estzicwed within narrow Keats 9 \s nothing in which he more resembles bie uncle tha’ sary for hate own sectvity dad Waeyeetomans Bat wbial | chord i the tresete of hie teow countrymen when, in and eglslstive body. ‘The Emperor said on s solemn e0- | THE REPORTED AID pOF RUSSIA 70 THE Sella SEMA TT MRDOWUL SOT btbeieet ere. eDuoeescury, He a noe tobe turned from bie parpose | the language of i Fresieut Tienda conciliatory | order to capuade them from increasing the national dcbt casien, peace. i jous disturbance affects the equilibrium of Europe.’ » Whe who bave notoriously used up the judgments of Heaven | Wards England, France and Russia, an entirely different ime of peace, he reminds them ‘such @ system wi guage as elevated as ibis decided, that high thee (From the London Times, Jan. 20. ‘wrote these lines ip 1840? It ot Maszin!, bu y used ay tone is held towards Spein. Mr. Buchanan expresses his | impair their energies in time of war. eventa have paiva was a uv 1 ny connecting them with every incident, great and little P Pr - = Fen. fe poliden) citgaiion ea. t? cent events Baye, | Who pen Europe suppose ia the og ted fp chan most illnstrious adversary, M. d?azoglio, (Cari di WoW SY thu aay, time cnlerrnied Violate did vet scrapie to ae! | Tesret that the relations of his couwtry with Spain | Jn one particular the report, before. us. combits a popu. have not improved; and, aller enumerating unsatis- fied claims on the t of American citizens to the amount of one hundred and twenty-eight thou- send six hundred and fifty-five dollars und fifty-four centa, he adds:—‘ | need vot repeat the ar- guments which T used in my last Message in favor of the acquisition of Cuba by fair purchase. My opinion in that . pion of Fore! a). t mrs cas” at iy hh nega oar | fon Teast tty athe, | Ae brerument a oy xutag, canes got Srural des be‘tutlttn a, Sona country, public ity not ‘been After | obdurave and” so cruel? Since Austria has oMfoiaily. e- | dread all reform. Ir there is an: ‘country more ‘thay ano. fl i Usiwey_ Oiiere sek. coer Wie Gramaus' Was (uapsan it Reving coamplahed prodigies im war, wlan the clared herself powerless any further to back hersvmps: | ther where the p of tha citiecns tn) tiettaan. fo seme cub ct & Papal prownsion to the Holy Sopuinhre as Siete inch sacs tn ara ‘as | sort smns men tens ess | Scat tte can hm ce ey ae arg h yntiment no las profound of the wants of Our epoch and | tne bo coe Oe de eee ee eines Manding | Mal20f thechurch: There, if the administrators) of the I 'placently acquiesced in the Indian maasagre as dive to tho lar error, and ex) sound principles om.@ very inter- esting subject. The Americans, fe appears, age in some pens oy considerably disconcerted at the specie from the United States to foreign teem a te bape 4 The Femiy y= y ari 80) more & mere conninodie het that the country is deprived of a product 1 ublic busi do: oceed, f1 pation itse}!; is unchanged. I again invite your serious | more generally fe than a common article of com- interests, the rich and fruitful like Sister Ann. upon St Angelo, but there ie not 4 sign altogether aliceaiod trom it and ona by cess Fray Ts fuitciout number of orthodox chaplains of the | suention to the subject Without a recogaiuion of this | merce: This idea, as Mr. Cobb truly rewarks, je altogether & eee. ‘(rrom the Paria Patric, Jan. 16.) pr npotrmeda Bo mag Sean aly Kicked roy Dr On. ing themselves from it, as péssessoreiof another’s land | sures of tr Dien should penetrate into the Cabinet gf policy on their part, it ‘ate iaisenbas Piet | Ay Ackcaion Sodiene siiver are oli — > oo be Pt oat a ot only up ; Out: | The more it bebooves tt hems 8 tute ni with reason! of Buc- ought and sold like all others. Where. specie constl- We eppeare to us imposnible te propound more {en's lambs. "Mra. Bluebeard bas the stein of blood upon'| tical Weraretye hea Gee nee ake, tap ecplasian he Tullerieg, and tbe Emperor's care should tinglo with | C046 We here once mare reoognize the policy of the Os- | tutti the actual metallic currency of « country is export- apd sareinally p.pengamne oC pcikicnl, omnomy, ¥ her keys, and she must pay the penalty. There seemed | the, more necessary. ia it, for the ministre bf the # yourhan’ fro” the throat, of the Viear’of Obriet i” the | tend manifesto to which Mr. Buchavan, in 1864, had tue | ed, derangement of trate will, of course, ensue, but where Perhaps, ai frst give rise to some objections, But |"s9 be 1a fae ee steaes eat whee Mtstries weg | SCe0lar government to ” proceed from the» na J tchof. chat chrige of destiny will be msucer,, Tho { Dad taste to set bis hand. A few years ago the American | tho circulating medium is presorved. at its proper stan- Teptcnate interests sole toeldy or ce yenaraentyy | Predecesoor id forty-five years go, whem Austria waa | toa and be laymen; if not, tho. schism’ telween | (tO", tak chrine of destiny will be asuoer. Tho | Pv ramen instructed tee minister at Matrid to ofler tho | dard, and tbe heecous metals exported represent oly tha all legitimate interests while it adds to the greatness Of | the despoiler—to protest and At laat, however, | the nation and the Pope will be past all renedy. tombs areelgning, Frame fatignn are, d ‘uss Of $10,000,000 for the purchase of Cuba. Conside- | excess of production above this point, the traffic in them there is a faint ory in the distance that = champion i | ‘that the Pope should reign without governing; this is ? ably under one tenth of that amount represents the | 18 precisely analopous to traffic in (From the Paris Presse, Jan, 16.) coming. Never inind whence be comes, or what bis | onjy moue of solving the hitherto insoluble aitil The aah aS SRE Ae FORMS Be laims which the United States profess to have opon | Mr. Cobb aeks, conclusively, whether if she ‘Tao solicitude of the Chief of the Siale extends, as may | fain ray be; ifthe bring sharp sword and @ strong’ | Who spoke thus in 1645 ? Haliana, Ort , \840 Te Rah Urals of the 12th of January have arriv- | suain. We believe that i ts umeorthy of a yreat Power to | had retained within her own limits the 2100 worth ‘be clearly woon, to the ensemble of public life. There # | arm he shall’ be welcome. If he were a ant | A man who, to @ clear intel fibev abot bic | AoT Poapany to arsine yer ap hi ed & viclont Pat, | cmadge in this process of international hustering. The | of gold produced by her siace 1848 would ‘been rich- i ? rites 1 > of the ‘wou! ive them d ‘es 2 les the chief Boalostnebtetecronies wie crowning’ te | foyer ek, ni Yotemeds to'the church—tho Marquis Gia... pom is 8 pal 4 _* Thus, at he Catholia party has not ev'n ap ‘hat the gravity of its situation is imereasea by the fact t orehe ‘at ite destinies are about to be submitted to the decision | ‘Bdles, but because it would be the avirehouse from Ms and receiving usefu! commoditivs in return? The answer, none other than the | peared’ to suspect {t)—the revolution, in the best .nawn of is ¢ States the South could be conve- | of course, is plain. Gold is the. staple of California, as commerce and of manufactures; It) Gear of Muscovy, the high pricst and monarch of the | [or this terme, preoxieted iw the iy ot Pha IX; | Of. the ciplomatic aivinities of the Olympriy of | the ap- tently oe pti With African, megrors. We | cotton is of Georgia, and it would ‘notte ore toaaen tor i nestber Son fends, nor meets pad. coe chureh; the man'who hua such beret | it ‘had its root im eas, Pipers der camtrdd CP? a Pec veep tlie oy rycen of tagreater | @ not believe that Spain, even with an inglorious war | Georgia to keep its colton at home than for California to ‘aopire! botions Easter, pretende! claims i. cui » + i last and cep its gold. tes summary by articles, and the inst of thom: expreasly | the ‘guardianship. of the’ oly placen, the” rival who | {ett sou his rcbing wii hint, without Mus, or paginas, f GIvimty,” tho church will trusnph over all ts enemies, | OL ietorant poke of her once great iranpauianve. pos. | "Of the Roanclal afrs ef the United States we may say of ign nations. The far towards. holding the Pope i Aat- | him’ Being the excression ot tha rete wia ceiats | He, however, exhorts hie flock to pray tor tho Pupe, and | Mont imponant fob of hew once grows ets walker | in general that Americasa take ait os ities, but, fish Journals Dave already informed ws that such Toe head of the Greek schism is, according |’ rents’ of the country, N bad Ka roela is the tabelBcayoce °° 0 they’ cam to aasist him in uis present didiauities | Hive Ory Om \telciatments of personal rity aud aro uot | ave been hitherto exempt, from our ob .’ We fweaty is now being between, France and. Bag: | the Word, expected to come 1 the relief of tho | that bad preparec it, 1 thd wile-tnar were aeoiaie git [From the London Times, Jan. 18 } £0 utterly degrading as that policy which measures every- | have gone on for 150 years in the.course they arc only Latin hierarchy. The story is told with many circum- Well, thoee exigencies to which Piug IX., dui the re id bd * $ . a thing by the rule of dollars and cen. Mr. Buchanan | just commencing; indeed, we ahould be ju in saying (Prom the Geastiods Bienen; Tae] stances, and, although we believe that the Nord carly days of his reign, had pala honiage, were un yriess [| The Emperor ofthe French can have no motive for | knows bis position full well. He is courteous ‘and mode- | that we have arrived at'a period of mlagiving aud repent , bd Aa . * since lost that exclusive right to represent | imperious at the moment when the Pope was,ret irning } Keeping his troops in Rome, except to savo the Pope from | rate towards Fogland, but towards Spaia he announces a | tance which they bave yet to reach, advantage Ie ich aoe balne pronated wo theve beoate bu cunt, | Blobs which it posseased during the Crimean war, yet, aa | to'his capital under the protectin of the French arma me hancs of his justly incensed subjects, aud to prevent | pelicy which not even tie purchase of Louisiana af the | eunsisten this teat they have literally the world before which are being prepared on these bases; but what- | avery little seintilla of hope must be just now p Great | Could the system condemned in 1846 Become aguin a 1849 | tbe men who bave been trained up under the exclasive Peboile of this century will justify; and towards Mexi- | them. With almost unbounded territory, a.most produc- ever they may 5,5 is evident that the 0 be |. blessing to the bishops who, are dealing about thelr eccle- | the pledge of a reconciliation between the Poutif.ad his | £°xerDment and instruction of the clergy of Rome from | co he suggests the empioyinent of military, force—a | tive soll, a vast population, and resources scarcely yet en- ‘is thas they do not leave our fami! Gmetiey each ver inattentive audiences, we } people? An idea that Prus IX. had seconde? tint noi p ce7minating the class which has %0 long oppressed them. | course which, if taken in conjunction with other States | cumbered, they can add layishly to their before fo raw materials from abroad, and do not in that way.) wig tell the story as the Nord tells it. ‘The tale of this | Protea, for it wen independent of him, ‘whisn had | ‘We used to hear before the war that the Pope was ready | whore subjects have been equally outraged with those of | they will begin to feel them. ‘Apart from the violation, Yaia the national productions of ® similar kind. No mis- | soecially informed paper is, that as soon ag Alexan- strengthened or enfeebled him according as it was with | © demand from France and Austria that they shonld | America, might not be without excuse. Wo propose to | of economical principles, the addition to the custome fake must be ‘on that point; in spite of all that may | aor Ty. read the celebrated brochure, Le Pape ale | or him—could snch an idea be negiected 4 an in | Withdyaw their forces from his dominions. Is the Pope, | return to. the subject, for a message of such length and | duties which Mr. Buchanan coutemplates would penal be the advocates of free trade, the commercial | Congris, he set to work to ascertain whether Very | different force? In 1849, as three years previou-iy, war J Dr. Dixon, with all his violence, ready to make that | importance invites not ouly separate consideration, but | be scarcely perceptible by the great body of the végime which has hitherto existed in France has developed | terrible’ pamphlet had an official origin. Having con- | {tot the prima Pad thie siseation’? ? temand now? He calls the Emperor of the French “a | separate criticism and remark, American people. Their outlay is rapidly increas- her commerce in such ® manner as (0 render it one of the | vinoed ft that ® was writen, if not by the hand, | “bet the primary cause o Dok ee dP they at. || robber.” ‘Does ‘be wish the robber to release the ——— ing, but their margin s so wide that the increase goes for first in the world; and sow what is want to it ig not | 3+ any rate under tho inspiration of the Emporor of tempted to disarm it, but an idea can only be cisarmea § 'f°™ his custody? It he does, he desires the speedy, | Mx. Buchanan’s Policy Towards Mexico. | little. They are less economical than we are, but they oe markets the French, he sought an immediate Interviow with | by ratifying it” ; total and hopeless destruction of the temporal power of From the London Times, Jan. 13.) are more fortunately situated. We look with natural anx- fared a F bat there ia: admirable in the system of | tne Duke de Montebello, the Freneh Ambassador at the | "mis is whai the Catholic party in France has rot’even the Pope, which rests, not upon the veneration of Catholic | ‘The eordiion of Mexico is delineated ia’ Mr. Bacbanan’s jety to Mr. Gladstone's forthooming exposition, because ‘and of prohibition in protective sense is that, | Court of st. Petersburg, So important was the com- suspected, or, if it bas, has obstinately and auc «iousty |) Christendom, but simply and solely on the cannon and | message with such remarkable force, and the actual state | we know that outgoings must be balanced by income, and from rendering industry stationary, it developes munication made by the Em to the Duke that we | ignored. ‘Blind or criminal, it is thia party that v-tled the {| bayonets of the French garrison. Does Dr. Dixon wish-| of that republic is so entirely without precedent in aacient | that income can only be obtained by burdens of which, Dat meroly in proportion to the strength and by the Nord the latter thought it | abyases bencath the illusions of a biissrul optimis.a or th § that the French Finperor should continue his prowotion | or modern history, that we must once more draw atten- | though we can hardly support them, wo would {uin be ‘which it has hag: Fo Hypergene ae surely until by immediate recourse to the telegraph, to put Count Wa- | falsehoods of the spirit of system; like that othr party | ‘0 the Pope, and if 8o, what spectacle does the mau over | tion to the facts, and we do so, indeed, with the more | rid. The Americans ex nce no such solicitude. They the day when it obtain its complete enfranchise- | iewski, at that time Minister for Affairs, in pos- | which has destroyed. legitimacy, of which it prot-pded Uf) ¥0 18 content to lie under the heaviest obligations to one | readiness, inaemuch as the narrative will be indispousa- | are laid under contribution, indeed, by thelr State Logis- ment. ys 3 “a . seasion of the incidents of the interview. It seems, ac- | be the sole defender, it is this party which mas eaid auc) Whom he is loading with the coarseet insults? ble for the comprehension of events now likely to ensue. | latures, and are clipped and shorn by their ipal gow Ding on. 98 .00/008 6000: 0 ioustntay ra Neer omer, cording to this authority, that tho Emperor of Rusaia de- | repeated to the government itthinks te sorve—“Luy ideas The position of the Pope and his supporters has, in | That Mexico had been long a prey to anarchy and disor- | ernments to an extent of which we have little idea, but the » Nbject ganization wus generally understood, but the subject has clared to the French ambassador that he had seen with " tact, beorme wholly untenable, and has in it much more of public budget they can receive with tolerable apconcern. as those enumerated it may be Shought small great regres ile policy of the h goveramens Principles of 1789, chimeras and a vain threat. HKeformes v 9 veering we le the ludicrous than the sublime. Weare assured that the | now received that specific and authentic exposition by | and Mr. Cobb’s perspicuous report will perhaps be more are districts in France which would vee | “Ertan to ‘all points of the political oom; aoune et ie frye wba ey deeded sevice | temporal power of the Pope te eternal at the moment | which national intervention is usually preceded ©. «| euriaualy atudion tn aie country than among Americans swallow up in one year the sum devoted to all the | .o4 always presenting itself to the eyes of asto: fixed it in decadence instead of gradually impolling is into | When the greater part of {tis gone, never to return; and Most countries have had their civil wars, their double | themselves. ‘works over the whole territory. As to the | Furope in some new and unexpected phase. Tho Bm- | the Of @ meceseary regeneration; it is thid party | ‘he Emperor of the French is reviled for plundering that | governments, and their internecine conilicts, with the deans Yo manufacturers, idjhas been seen what they have | peror lamented that these things should happen just as.| which, three months ago, induced it to reject the compro | government which he, and he only, has preserved trom | usual incidents of domestic strife; and, as independent | Alarm ef Seward’s Friends Abroad and the past, notwithstanding the good will of the | 21 the Powers, anxious for peace and repose, were | mise proposed by French diplomacy in the name of the | plunder. A State cannot subsist by abuso alone. Itis | Mexico is not half a century old, we might contrive w look at Home. government, | It is now proved that privaie industry is in | looking to the coming 8s toa harbor of safe- | Romagnas; this party, in fine, which ty dereo tf) bigh timo that Europe should be informed what is the | without astonishment on these distempers of nation’s [From the London News, Jan. 19.) & state to satisfy all ite wants, and all that government | jy, he Imperial critic, in succinet » pointed | promoting mortal aniagonism between the chure'vand an | Policy which the Papacy means to adopt. Is the Pope | infancy. But the state of Mexico is ultogether witheut ex- * * . . * * * 4 eam do is to give an impetus to the movement, and by | cu: to the French Ambassador all objection- | entire nation, im tearing out by the roots every religious | ADXi0us to be left tosettle matters with his own subjects? | ample, There is no element of stability in tho people | It will at once be asked, “Why do not the Northern Sele meinasinnd, pele Ry] She tna able contained in the pamphlet, sod de- | feeling from the heart of ltaly, now comes, whe: mat } Does be still wish for Freach support, or does he desire | which could enable the State to survive a casual disorder. | men, with their vast majority, settle the matter at once? wd thaaurvitent ania oe re aire amcistance, | clared of Raseig would | ter of principle is in question,’ and puta in the Hol only to reign while his people shail be willing to be | In other countries great nobles or obstinate factions have | Why can they not constitutionsily rearrange the terms of yy Ee ; the habit 3 ‘Fhe Emperorp has, moreover, understood this, since he | Zeer, Nt ag he yl circumstances, be found aiding in the | ther’s mouth the wora ‘cragade;” and when it is cpeential | "eened’ over? He has lost the support of Austria; he | fought for years without much affecting abits or pur. the Union, cast out slavery from the federal constitution, principles. The very existence of back } J clings to while -he repudiates the support of France. His } suits of the bulk of the population, but in Mexico the | and leave the several States to keep or reject it as they gays tthe commencement of el nee pcre depends, we are told, upon principles entirely an- | symcm® aacea vs cere, bar AT er or owursubjocts he wil bot cbaciliate sud cannot coerce. It | anarchy extends to every’ mane’ hearih. ‘There is | think proper: but permitting, nove de for such a i Vredie nettle Ny ly which the of the French baa | ment of the sabre for a remedy. : is time all this had an end, but surely that end will not be | no protection for life or property~no guarantee for | reason us finding themselves out-voted?? The North hi gl ig LL Mle ers Hon ‘our- | ™mAdo the basis of his present policy. Russia is at this | «an! if thedefenders of the present clerical govern. | obtained by withdrawing from the Vicar of Christ the | justice or order in any art of town or country. | might ¢o this, its true; but m this caso, aa in al o vital a “i crest, iapetes( the | moment , by the reforms she is working out under | mont,” M. d’ recently exclaimed, ‘persist in ref onlyprop which saves Kish from immediate destructi@n. ‘Then, again, there is no definable cause of conitict, | conflict, there are complications. If the Northern men Beira Yee the eens of ETAS 8 aren LeapatNs an which always takes its initiative from the | peetity this chntires werd ae naar Tod teesion Sols no question which might be settled, once for all, by | had been equal to their duty, and worthy of their power, py er he ae Medias Donricai let Poris Czar, that she does not hesitate to advance with the spirit | Anda crime, pronounced by one of thelr orsrs tie Affairs in Sardinia. the final predominance of this principle or that. ’Tho | the question would have been seitied long ago. There the 'e, but do not enter into an: 4 of the times. — But with her it is essential that the impulse | siavery of the States is necessary to the Qatholic ‘THE NEW CAVOUR MINISTRY. only explanation we can offer of these interminable | are always some who perplex counsel and impede action eetie iiaamseee or tae tu? decodes The Vnien | Should come from above, and not from below. What is | church, then have we only one prayer to make, which A despatch from Turin of the 19th ultimo, states:—The | TeVolutions is, that the Mexican Church will not acquiesce | by misconduct at a critical time. Tt eno! Ito « to “ avn} to her salutary reform when commanded by the Emperor ‘that God 3 conn. | im the liberalism op the only kind of ment which has a | now to point to two recent incidents which il- makes no observation Whatever, merely publishing the | Would be an odious revolution if forced on by theipsople, | z.uat Gos in his meroy may deign to sava;religion and } slight ndieposition of the King continues, and in couse} Nance of duralality. ‘The Romish hierarchy in Mexico | lustrate the case. While Mr. Suoard is | he a ag RR ar ol , tobe consistent with himself, the Buseia |" This prayer ls alco ours. Meanwhile, if the Popo is | Svencs, Pe reception of Baron te Talleyrand: wh) was to | represents the only instituton deriving vitality and | for the most part salvos of cannon, with ~ aes yt think the Pope in the right when yj aadly, ogaings the inxpoesibti Pr 5 : strength from limes gone by. ‘The sole vestigo of ancient | “music, slags , processioms, and every form Fa bare raised our voice against the dangerous | 5° oog to come and Kill, hie snmurgont aubjers; | compelled to struggle sad) eg rcetiigentnat Tine following will probably be the list of the new, | Coutuon survives inthe Chiureh, but the Church in | s-loome aed eury caprescon of confidence, wey theory of free ‘The pre- | ita! pod Mage Ii according to the information of the | seumbling block 10 Furovoes poy? w Coupe at) toes | Ministry — Count Cavour, | Mexico, as everywhere elge, stickles stoutly for ite proro- | former supporters now draw back in alarm, and ask for a Seaton shet thie meplnnonbee) hot ware Popeared. fo | Nerd, the.last reply of the Pope to the Emperor of the | and a suffject of soandal io the Catholic world, no one inf yore” Atm -Count Cavour. | gatives, its endowments aud its power, and these are not | ‘candidate who t2 as yet um om the slavery question. at prohibit at ail Donat, a at fo | 27ensh bm pee hat he wil diy ascmmay, bat nevar | Ftare wl alto Koow whoee Tat We, py oye pe oe eg would be wiser to re} that system by sufliciently pro- | Poscis wi come to his assistance, and protest him in his | LETTER FROM THE PRIMATE OF ALL IRELAND 10 THE Finance copatitutonal experiment; but, apart from this obstacle, | much difficulty two years ago, has just. vetoed the re- SS a ee thee imO | perseverance in 50 good » cause. CATHOLICS OF DROGEEDA, agin eh which might be eventually surmountable, it seems ez- | vision of the statutes demanded by the citizens, and great princi ‘This is too thin a possibility even to whip up into a cup- | Dexcy Briovzp FRimxpe— ; } 5 Bidisy Simmor | tremely doubful whether the matertal for self-govern- | passed by the Legislature, in favor of the people of color. also as far from free trade as trath is from error, of hope, When, if General. Goyon and’ his | _ Onthe late occasion of ourmésting to express tympathy | For the Ministry of ‘the Interior mbrois, Signor | ment exists in Mesico at all. No cousututional | Such are the ebbings of the advancing tide, ad such are [From the Nouvelliste of Rouen, Jan. 18. Prothane shall go forth from the “Etoraat” City, and | with the Father, I considered it my duty to make Tastivant Signor Casailla, are spoken of, but nothing has | P07. rected by Mexicaps possesses any cohesion, | among the reasous why the controversy is not yet settled (admiring the leter) we are nei- | when the last Zouave shall have embarked from the | such of 8 on the conduct by the French topes ares. ‘and the country exbibite the spectacle of a commanity as | in a peaceable way. delay will be disastrous to the {her in contradiction with ourgeives nor in opposition to Givita Vecchia, the Pope may ‘eyes | Emperor since the epmmencement of the war in italy as | , Te Paris of the evening of the 18th ult. in men- | {a pable of sclf-orgauization as an infant cliool. ‘Tho | South if the citizens there employ the laterval in toaoD- new bi Tor n long lnse before ‘he ‘will eo tho Gueseek laseen | were bot calculated, I Trecly admit; wo create an tprew. | “0Di0g the reports on tho ministerial crisis in Sardinia Moire Grows by. the Amoriogn Fresieat ot Up ectual | ing their negrows’ $9: lorteroaviioaned.< abet os tard glistening over the Campagna. Whatever may be ise | sion favorable to his Ry, and that those ob. pl a mage dh ET Licekiea|eminae ea ssbnaiey ums Oe acravend: be eesn |’ wats sem hontame-eiioenentne eeamaion ante meas , RUSSIAN ge till OF THE COMMERCIAL poouliar notions FR n) as a sbetract Ponies pernatione meee eat disagreeable facings a yet known as regards tho other Ministers. a te ot a Riators ood A] mentor i aed ness of the instructors is almost past belief, Seyi ones } oe Mat no, SsmDAhy with ihe Pope vise atthe, bot hela tn freland-that tue only De en iy tines Valiquace ont aitw Mauey \ une mee | Cop ee Aw critters i iaped act | ns Abelitiom Maadlee mm ios . eland—t name wu 5 e which motives of humanity or eal- 01 4 te a, the ba aed Sroneh dsclares that "Casts loves sok the a irl ‘ead the Tata Garo Sie ‘at that meeting was the name of Napoleon Ill. The return of Count Cavour to office, which you may wan aay prompt some voyagers to asaane | We do [From the Liverpool Post, Jan. 20.) withstanding the uncertainty still prevailing on certain | not the Greek Church any more to-day than it did that |: 1 avail myself now of the public press to call your | remember I some time ago reported as imminent in the | not, of curse, forget the circumstances which might be A lecture was delivered night, in Hope Hall, by ts of foreign ‘2 ‘pacific solution may be cond | little while since when the two went to’ war as to which | stiention to the full confirmation whigh the events of the | opinion of well-informed Italian correspondents of my | presumed 10 ‘ailect an American view of the afaira of | Mr. Frederick of Rochester, United States, om Kenly foreseen.” Now, when his Majesty wrote these re- | should bold the key of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. | last few days have given to the j Of the sentiments | own, ccems to be properly regarded as an event eventmore | Mexico, but the experience of other countries, and certainly | the above subject. words, on the 6th of January, the “virtual | It is not with European facts that Russia is disposed to | which then found favor with you. indicative of @ satisfactory so! of the Italian problem | of our own, confirms Mr. Buchanan’s opinions on all sub- ‘The Rey. HS. Brown occupied the chair, and in @ alliance” with 1 to use the term adopted, only | disagree; it is only that she refuses her sgeent to the ab- Some, even among our Catholic brethren in this opuntry, thge Fon Spcomh rage Of Lgaie Mapoleon towards English | stantial ponis. We know that British residents in Mexico | short address introduced the lectarer and his’ subject to existed as a pi B that which proves better | stract principles by which those facts have been de-| were di to censure us as exceeding in severity to. |’ views on the subject Ot Italy. The dissatisfaction with the | are only safe under the guns of « British man-of-war, and | the meeting. The chairman observed that in this country than all reasonings the confidence of the Emperor, is that | fended in the Imperial pamphlet. Alexander II. claims to | wards bis Majesty on the oocasion to which I refer. All | weak and inceherent Ratazzi Cabinet was producing the | thatour countrymen could produce a catalogue of wrongs | they were ail very much divided upon many points in fhe object of his letter was to announce to the Minister | be Czar of Muscovy by divine Napoleon Iil., of | Such persons are now, I should sUndecsived. The | worst effects in both Piedmont and Lombardy, and was | ap grievous as that now recorded by the Americans them- | religion, in politics, and on a hundred other great social that peace was secured, that it was time seriously to com- | France, claims to be Emperor of ‘French by tho will | Em) has thrown off the mask. means of theletter | gradually giving Mazzini more hoid on the tmpatient clo- | selves, questions. He did not suppose there was any great wence on @ great the economical reforms long | of his people. Napoleon II. natarally argues that the | ¥! he addressed to on the Sist of December, | ments of Italian opinion, Cavour is the béle noir of Maz. ‘There is one feature about these transactions too singu- | probability of their coming to a decided Ugrervent on Promised. As we have incessantly been repeating, not- | people of the Romagna have a right, in the absence of a | [Published in Hxratp on -—Ep.] and whichibe has | zni’s party. They choose to represent him as an dme- | jar to be passed without special notice. What no Euro. | these matters; but there was one point upon which he ‘withstan the contradictions given to us, not 80" tolerable it, to choose their own ruler. Alex- | Published in the Moniteur, he stands revealed to the world | damné of Napoleon's, strangely enough, considering his | pean Power, however formidable, would venture upon ht the people of Great Britain had made up their ro, the prodtbittons til be Falta euabie ander nA Will, not, of gourse, bear of such a | 8® the imitator of his uncle in his treatment of the H vebement and unmeasured opposition to the Villa(ranca | attempting, is done without the least misgiving by the | mi point upon which there existed porfect unan- indi to compete advantageously wits the forcigner, principle. But a discussion about words is a | See. with which that le compact, from which he insisted on Victor Emmanuel’s | military rabble of the Mexican republic. Eng and | imity—a point which no Englishman in bis senses ever raw textile ‘materials will be sdmitied duty free, the tax’ different thing from a fight about facts. pene nll impose on none. j standing aloof, even at, the price of a renunciation of all | France would hesitate long before either gave the other a | thought of disputing, and that wag, that slavery was eu coffee and sugar diminished, and the toll reduced. As i © happened all ages of the world that] | Tofinda the advantages already won for Pisdmont, and of are- | casus belli. Great Britaim observes a scrupulous con- | wrong—grossly wrong, horribly ‘wroug, “daunably ‘agriculture, it will receive from the State the neces- | great Kings and great States’ have done, or tiave suffered treat beyond the Ticino. I find few practical politicians | sideration m dealing with the United States, and the | wrong. That was their beifef, put in strong terms, but wary advances for Gehl: a erer and pring. to be done, many scts which outrage all the i is; to embrace Cavour’s view on this point; but | United States rocognise the obligations of a nation in deal- | not baifas strong as what they felt upon the subject, eprenaibe of laa under the plough. The 1 upon which their own policy is based. ‘ardinal Richeocs certain it is that he not only urged this course, but de- | ing with Great Britain, We cheerfully convinceourselves | The chairman then referred to the theory of non- the remanet of the last loan—will be devoted to | while he put down Protestantism in France, fomented our nonnoed Victor Emmanuel to his face,in so many words, | on every occasion of difference that no harm is really | intervention in reference to the slave trade, and ob- iblic works. Such, in # few words, is the programme | ultra-Protestant disorders in England. Josie XVI while a8 traitor to the Italian cause, if he appended his name | meant on either side. Theother day, witha preponderance | served that the idea of mon-intervention did not Aes execution of which the Emperor orders his Minister to | fighting for hisown prerogative, did not hesitate to send to the treaty. Hence the coolness between him and his | of paval strength atour command to which Mr. Buchanan | exclude the force of moral s then Prepare, in order that the Corps Legislatif bave its | anarmy to ai the. Americans who were ‘in rebellion somentien. tu hi makes significant allusion, we submitted quietly to Gen. | touched upon the late Harper’s Ferry move- Ricention drawn next session to at least one portion ef the ot Ghett Janta Soversian. Eve page of ninety ts én the liolian bs barged peed be mh de rarei RiarTay s exteanabenen) wd. ralied sith ountanod on The: Seabed so the recensigaltiNg CAST GS Minister; pean? saws eaeaeatie beatiaanhetton ap aamece ae 1m some degree shefted their , Cavour admitting the Pees thipughout thie very period, las been to a lady of color. The Ministér might not be | asta THE NEUTRAL RIGHTS QUESTION. Dut he would hardly care to tell his own subjects that the gain from the course y followed by the king, the conduct of Mexico? The Mexicans at | responsible for this event. So much the worse for the London Post (Government ), Jan. 26.) | rebel cause was a good cause, or that ‘were justified | descei on your part, I shall guarantee to you the |. tor Emanuel overlooking Cavour’s indignant language ap- States. They imprison, rob, maltreat, and | the state of American law which encouraged such a state Wroreadity agree with too Manchester Chasaber in resisting their lawfol Sovereign. The Pope may de | secure of your ‘and your life. You may | piled to himeelf.. But it is not fair to. clase “Cavourre murder American subjects without the smallest ecruple; | of things. be that it is the duty of nation ‘to attenuate” | pend upon i that, among the ‘States’ which | range with safety for many years through these moun-'| statcemanship with Gartbaldi’s generalship. The latter | and, though they lie, a8 it were, at the very feet of their He then introduced the lecturer. bey ted jbl wethe Sella of we ” We further, | are round and watching A decay, there is | tain passes; and you will place me and the banditti who | has shown himself deticient in those elements of ‘the |’ formidable neighbors, uch ts the strength of their weak- ‘Mr. Douglas, on rising, was received with great cheer- ipushwie es pereus and pate a tha pai e | mone which fecls a more hearty joy én his misfortunes than | scknowled; maya boeneeay under ® debt) of gratitude, } stateeman’s character which are required in a great | ness that they setthe Union at deflance. A fiticth part of | ing. In the opening part of nis lecture he dwelt at se al Taye ele Foren Laren teen Int St. Petersburg or there dwells no | Which we shall ever cheerfully acknowledged. general at sucha crisis in nation’s history as the Italians | the provocation given by Miramon would, if oflared by: } length on the everlasting truth of human right and liberty, iad bee ‘delzed, during the late contest between France | Jove of Rome. There is no chance of the two great | _, It is such an address as this which the Eldest Soniof the | are now arrived at. He lacks that patience and faitn in | England, France, or Spain, have Oovered the ocean with | which no laws, Do no statutes;mO govern- and Austria, But the air store of the Manchester Cham- | schisms uniting in our day. Russia has, happily, many rch has made to the Father of the Faithful. (! how | time which gave such unshakeable firmness to Washing- | american privateers; but the ‘President Substitute” is | ments, no organization of men, could abrogate or destroy: ber of Com speaking through thelr chairman, Mr. | ‘other things to think about just now than to eatertain the Catholics over the world must be horror st-nck on }. ton, in the struggle of the United Siates for independence. | perfectly aware that’ in the case of Mexico the United | and he who took it upon him to depeive man o} Bam d Potter, ba raced thelr case tipone ground chivalrovs idea of provoking a war with all Europe for ing that Iatter in the Monifeur! You will admit with | It 1s this want which has rendered Garfbaldi an easy prey | States have but one metnod of redress, and that is by sc- | the right ranked himself with the moral monsters of his und Potter, have p! coieael with, public law must | the protection of her old enemy. She is at this moment a residence for its author would be the | to Mazzinian councillors, and so brought him within an | tual military occupation of the Mexican territory. There ees was guilty of the highest crime which it was pos- Uibich every peresn, soy 4 of 7 lam, rather than the Palace of the Daleries, | ace oi proclaiming a crusade agaigst the Papal States and | is no room for diplomatic menace, for there is no govern- | sible for one man to commit towards another. He wat know to be untenable. If we admit, as Mr. Potter as- | engaged in changing her whole social organization; she is I iP go" rt, that En; gland. Eu “ and American Power, | making hersclf presentable in civilized society by manu: I pity the chivalrous French nation lying prostrate | Naples, which would have re-involved all Italy in war, | ment to which it could be addressed, nor could any species | not there that night, however, to talkito them about the repiles likel} isan ane other “to be drawn into | mitting her slaves. This is of political coercion be felt by @ country so profoundly | physical horrors of slavery.’ The audience before hin quite work saoegh to employ | under the feet of such # ruler! ft and arenes, ri vagerly desired weet ie Vo ad oaampe ‘wars,’’ theret: exposed to a | all her energies and all her statecraft. Let But let us hope that a voice will reach him which, | to Austria, and, as the consequence of her interfereuce, a Toavle sak, we oe eg ctegreet to truth or | ‘Pope to the nations of his own faith. Surely he cannot be | \Dy the awe that it ghall inspire, will have the effect of pa- | new armed eee Wort . : ; fastice, eliminate from the question the consideration of | better off than in the hands of Napoleon ralysing the hand stretehed out against the Holy Father— Probably Victor Emanuel has himself strong leanings the views which the United States, government is known | once his dutiful son, the most Christian Emperor, and the | ! the voice of indignant Catholic Christendom, which, | to the use of the sword to cut every knot that hampers disorganized already. The Mexicans, in fact, are safer than the Mormons, for the Mormons had at least a solid establishment, though it was a long way off, whereas General Miramon’s constituents would elude the grasp of were quite capable of looking at the subject, and seeing it¥in ite true light, without having: ther feeling harrowed by such details as the slave irade 0 America presented to their view. The lecturer ther ‘4 5 . & gards private property ecessor rising above the jubilation of the enemies of the Chi him. The King is, above all, dsabreur, It is this com- invad fectually as the red Indians of Sonora. dwelt on the fallacy that was belicved in by many excel th high sens, on eee, rd that Leised f abesriog = ao ieee OF THE POPR’S POSITION. over the world, ot fall on his ear in some such words as | mon quality of eager, unreflecting martial ardor which ranenennyt; however, of this ‘kina Mr. Buchanan is pre- | lent le in this country, that the slaves in. Americ: fetch e sLBarens anthadonteteee Vadtekou meu. these:—Robber, take your hand from the throat of tha Vicar | forms mich a tie between Victor Emanuel and Garibaldi, | pared to recommend, He conceives, very reasonably, | were well treated, well fed, well clothed, and were wel Me ee er ar ata at eee - vy qhabeatnan eee ee: ania Tas thoena @f Chris. Tata, deatly beloved friends, your ever taith- | and which, bapply, ull resrains the latter from commit: | foat" the goverment at Vera Oruz would’ reosive wih | provided for i old’ age—tat some of the sleveho!ier Se Pathan eter adie Linton ecbacere jesarayrmcan rhage heir fers 1g eS + JOSEPH DIXON, archbishop, | ting himself without reserve to the Mazzinian faction. | alacrity the proffer of eo powerful an ‘alliance as that of Lita en rere hag cer ea peer grate dl Uepdor sere ron Be ean enone dene An the inte, | DROGHEDA, Jam. 14,1860. Primate of ail Ireland. Nothing short of the personal influence of Victor Emanuel, | the States, and that Juarez, reinforced by an American peeiemynicn Me, a y G Bren ar pneida tie : {n all probability, would haye induced Garibaldi to relin: | contingent, might not only re-establish the constitution of Powers of Europe in the month of Jaly of the samo | rests of the Sty ag Nog not a single statesman | THE ARCHBISHOP OF PARIS RESIGNS AS A PRIVY quish the presidency of the Nasione Armata, ant even to | Sepr, fwuty alse Phovitfeg ald semen tr tinaeicren sem ey py it eel gern ey egg gtd Meg pow bl Mp eg ee rcen Reo toon! Pint po epccrerae Gisband that threatening association within s few days of | of redress and indemnity. The conditions of co-operation npg ae oe cig MBSE, Tia [ mataeetinaticaniasen ox uacdieetcsee eerie a [From the London Star, January 20.] placing himeelf at ite head. The Ratazzi Ministry was | might be insured beforchand, and the brief announse- ponent intense Me opine sreeeelsicl the | and smacmning: te, ie peroem, of hoe dikiet.eipare rotthy Ancther symptom of the resolution of the Roman } no check ‘on Garibaldl. Its weakness irritated, itz pet- | mentin our American intelligence of yesterday, to tbo ether belligerents, except it be contraband.” The propo- | her #8. Therefore, in the mor situation t0 | Catholic hierarchy rather to brave any danger than sub- | tiness disgusted bim. In Cavour he will have en inflaence, | effect that Miramson had ‘procested agaissta coviain. pron is upon the assumption that Pervate power which the events which ig Smet ge ag 3 ue mit to the dictation of the French ment 18 Brepably the Italianism of which he cannot doubt, and the weight | liminary treaty , points doubtless to the previous arrange. sue ore Ee ng Ws aves er feta fou tne Fp the Arcnniabon Of | of which he may gubmit to without forfeiture of self're- | mente between ‘Washington and Vera Cruz. There is no of the American iblic itself disproves. It | Pope, when we search after the causes of the pro- Paris, Marlot, of his seat in the Privy Couvcil of spect. ‘but that the ri if they #0 piss Kind ie ‘reepoctod-that is, that's antag t teas is cteend: rat tas tenadies Oat mahieane | Cee {this other a chest Cpe eres Bs March to Mexion, nor is it to be doubied that thelr ed. seems ve does not seize goods and merchandise and convert them plied, we ask with anxious eee ‘Whose aul ioe duties imposed upon him by his clerical. office with those AMERICAN AFFAIRS IN EUROPE. Rorehe the be be ee with at least the temporary to his own use. But every operation which takes piace Frere 5 pasty, in Eranee , bas held in its — which he bss uadertaken as a Privy Councillor of tho pepe spose’ Hig east Sicncbi(faaiiont British expedition which went up the Potumas te” Wash, | Inte sabeen aver tee Seeanh el, Weave atten nes ano dite enitmteeiaddive! eke reve luiruaod, Went Lord Palmerston Thinks of ‘the | but if Mr. Buchanan's description of Mexico ia 8 fail Pelvais property; and the Uglied Bates citisous whe in: Penta; whic Fentoring the ee Pins IK. by force {Paris (Jan, 16) correspondence of London Post ] the London Post (governmoukSrgan), Jan. 10,] | fon te’ restore “tbo country to the rank of an organized vided Canada dh ee lg mylene contracted the obligation pero. by. A work is now about to appear, armed with the a message, Berk tes tee Faen dalizerod. by: State. crossed into British . More r 18 - | foresight; which was bound, because it ed gy hag which will strike at the keystone of the Vatican: ‘ . Buchanan, may, bon > bait ° | wimances of the United Sta: ritish sashes tere mithoct ietent, to fall upou the lahabitants; | eaxeite Boman goverament comprehend that the first | ‘Temporal Dominion of the Popes the Ruin of Italy and the | totally distinct aspects. With one, ¢xoeption, we in AUeL cad Hua Paimatany enaettben poe ist in Italy ‘the people. who had thelr | ‘with the principles of modera, society, and’ what at this | CHOrR,”” by the. suthor of Roma Lar oe tee eet | concern which the sttonlon of Amp oan otatonncn. Le on opt rere Feeble 2 1 fer Sey pins hy oe aces Brg Bigpond cosaiwena donk heaped by the tn | Sail be enabled to furnish the first MU ene | The exception, Sowever, 8 on0 with which 1s connected | ‘The financial » at Of the American government is gard with touch favor the. preacnoe of either French or Tas tonteah teat atl Gare peopel and oronepel ta pre berg pte be ange tol the welfare of’ & large portion of the human rece. We papapetion lcm wihalwars be serauetsed wit poo. Austrian troops. But we are told that Russia, Bremen, | Italy, Rome, and the whole of Europe indeed, by the colds & tag Loadtin Peat Tee ptiepeee at the bahaee mean slavery—the dawmoss hereditas inited ese const lands each the United, umes os ‘Haniburg, and, probably, France, are in favor of the adop- | spirit of 1789. A party that could and that was bound seript I may intimate that schedule of questions are put States—a question which the Harper’s For, et hae ie —? Cp peplegy taco Samy per eevee aA ae Seca ‘only be understood in gonnéotion with the right pau ped the throne of the bead of te cbuseh ti order 5 to the'Roman Catholic believer for en «a Hove thet ibe evenia a Harper's 1 Ferry, by causing the one nation affects the ‘other, but we are natarally inspired ‘Jetters of marque—a right which the American 28 at Rome the reforms demanded by Bu ponte setae onl ova ite to ‘Coates that Be as eto patso and reflect, will be iio taoans, tinder | with unusual curiosity when we receive the bataace sheet government bes invariably refused to aurrander ou this | mee Se6L, in; order to destron thers emaeemecd sours, | mubscribed to dogmas r to common sense and hu- | Provigenos, of allaying existing excitement, and'to pre. | of & government which is 60 frequently, and sometimes #0 Sfound' tbat the maintenance, of privatsering a noose: | eft iaGisions and catae es pretal Giewe ms nasar et | amNY. The work compracs «ler from Petrarck apon | Proy!en0%, 0, SIMI Soto cee TY fnvidiously contrasted with our own.” The truth is, how Eary 10.8 Salo which, whilst It ponsouea a large mercan. | What cost io prinipica tet cas lone Torta the bance of | 20,cbotmities, of the Church at Avignon, which, strange Joa ghon' the "final setiement, | by Su. | ever, that, allowing for the youth of one State and the {ile marine, docs ‘not’ choose to incur the expense of,w:| auy-goverumem in the nineweath coubary, ria; ivory of pln SS og eh ie oe ples rp ol RTT our of the United tates, of the question of ty lech aps proce "ae ars large standing navy. Let us tnerefore consider the po- | conscience, equality before the law, the separation of civil | Dendin rain of the Pontif’s texpersilty.. slavery. The right n estab! every citizen 7 neemorn tele: snapacts i, sreeetinesc ae tone sition in which England or France would be placed if, ;,@ party, in short, which had fall ‘The Diack party here have very industriously circu- to take property, including staves, into the common Terri- the two enc) es peg Ee ie acting apon the principle of giving imum to private | authority to say to the Pope, at the very moment he was Inted that the Pontiff will endeavor to eacape from Rome, Tpit, had souma ve it pesterted ences Sha federal conatite wabnatenre aro pr caters a. incon? tame Pane ie reper yp eg aor emg gene mall Ba act oe rake care! In spite of the DAd pas- | and this contingency has been very generally discussed Slave, the property of & Southers, planter ina free cucte; | Suntomm alone, bat except, for tneee pola of divergence Sieers. of the American ‘Davy in that case no doubt | sotunes a teeing tn webaormation of yout go Peppers, FHS Gea revel sadicipeted, te,_ insted into be treated A &, mere chattel or any other ple of the resemblance a very striking indeod. In both coun. ‘would permit every English or French merchant vessel | ernment. Leave behind at the gates of yourtvapital cicaehs aadaauar oisee aim have emancipated inanimate goods. excitement ts not allayed—it only | tries e a nrg crm Fenpead. to pass free. But the sea would be covered with a swarm hatreds, which are the usual of restora- tmcaahee tee eerie ‘adioe ive the threat | *umbers; and we believe that the opinions by Mfr. | principal ou! ra Netacrheth tent rie of American privateere a kind of lamious naval militis— | tions, the passionate rancors of the cast that environs | ‘ih wlerable unconserm: and ae'this portion ofthe Gardinian | Buchanan in his be vet Bly, lhe repting sue, 3 eee isha pategmnen ith) nosaatoons; i we rcad plander abd dextrey without the slightest ro. | Borecsey ene Nome, "NO Feturne to Rome, let t not | Gominions is the most Calholic of all Italy, 1 | Than at any previous period in the of the Amerioan are warned against contracting loans in tine of peace’ gard i dedrunge,io, the, orders or. iastrootions of thot!'| eae Rice hich bears the name of Catholic may be inferred that, should bis Holiness venture to 0o- | +outiie. We readily admit that Mr. Buchanan bas bad | butin both it seems the impression of the authorities ts peo gn Scene. oF Qaeny ing tote the Tight of destroying nae one, quette again with the faithful, they may be foand very | 1 moral courage to encounter and despise the opposition | 00 great retrenchment is likely to be accomplished. Tnplund and the United States, by being comparatively | bit Yolo tine of conduct; if, insted a tang nay, T have heard it very’ generally: remarked upon the | of te South by a vigorous execution of the laws sgainet | pily, we can add that aay OO AME unfettered by treaty obligation instincts ; ne rained pes am hon hae ay Bache Stns ced tame Ltarivecceeeen toes sil cur movorg instincts, and of | rabid demonstrations in Ireland, that, since they were eet gt ine vay “other contae, 7ckeek HMR Watuny or doub and we ehall do Well to-ne- Prnctited hand. I do not wish thet the buaglor, Whi Saiedaines cebtaion ts nitboan mice papertale ot Tal. A etetieta heel ak tee ee a tee Neen Why at ey indulge ia their | 2” manifest and ant departure from those | member that the Chief Magistrate of a republic frankly may be, suould be vieted with puniahunent; fat if Fata wes taeda isin seccoeabes aa, whe tive! | Heke need ands rane though at the same time a | Roby and build him a Vatican near the Lakes of | treaty obligations which, equally with the municipal | tells bis constituents that ‘trae economy consists, not in | unhappy person be subjected to official anger, it will "e ditieult with y rab tact and abilit rot ‘otlan irit, with whieb it must toa recicbala .. Jaw of the United States, declare the slave trade to be an | witbolding the means necessary to accomplish important | for the same reason that the Spartan boys were {la argued ncathlan ingens) See eRe te etaae wish aie be ay ag egal and prohibited traffic. Mr. Buchanan subsequently | natioval objects, but in-taking care that the money appro- | lated—not for having committed the offence, ‘but fo: Tomadity if Tey would endeavor to provall tpon the triumph; if, instead of to the Roman government, adverts to the San Juan diffculty, and bears 8 tributoto | priated for these purposes shall be faithfully and frugally | lowin; A gentlemar + * 7 x] Sid ), Str een an sero af Sar harniog wo erent pias. | iaroueh a ode ofa bop hance te ae deecrved. Mle eaysrc'"The British ads large navel | "Phe public receipts ofthe United States for tho lat Aa- bie extent; tbat We comtead that wre oeennt oa to poche the tran: ender durable force in the vicinity, and it is an act of justice to the ad- | cal year were, in round numbers, $88,000,000, of which the accompliahment of this bey I rete f ia rn If with the Italian national sentiment, and miral on the station to staté that he wisely forebore to | sum $50,000,000 were raised by customs duties, and wwerful maritime nation ke the United States Satasos to. | (ang j with modern society—secure youreell « seppor commit any hostile acts, but determined to refer the | about $20,000,000 by loan, the small remainder bein Rbandon a practioe which the ‘civilised Powers ot Eoepeah Sin taearanes adhesion of, yuat,peoplea;"t ith whole affair to his government and await an instruc. | furnished = ana Inods, miscellaneous sources an: Bare ee ie siconare into the en) tually stigmatized tions.” respect conduct of General Harn Treasury notes. raw been ma" nid f pe Re lls be! inn thy Regn me Hae to the Soe and a eens Cooper be advantageously con. Mr. uchanen infers, and doubtless with good reason, | of the envelope bad been torn, Heca: audio, the Imperial Assassi: Lt ved th tem wer of the Pope. trasted with the good sense and moderation which were | from the Treasury repert, that tho Union will not get | it a small portion of delicate, “ etd mes - im, | Tee fs thas. he beater of serving the exhibited by Admiral Baynes. Mr. Buchanan og) pays | throogh ae Cong} year without a ut bn Reta? | hoes har aoasee, marara’ Colonist of tae oe Catholic. party leegure tribute to ‘Scott, who, he states, | statement Financial show uriet | from @ indy 5 4 oonh bn Londen, Bia oa py ministers; for the te given or itd iets eal poctor nad his erin that dares aw sere. nets a oy pipet is ane ete L y r stituted reason to fear @ collision ‘between wo | ani 8 aro remaig um : Serene, 8 tr Ga8 Seo on cee be ara bor yom rma any Scary prod rer poe of negotiations ‘which | both ends may possibly be mato to meet tn June; 186 Me. for. sas are the Orsi plot to assassinate the iy tiene edad stnsinedsupured, kere are ee ited th be we Pi iti og Hd on Preaaeot, doubie whether ear ap conditions ‘t 2 4 , by the virtual rigidly , for, as , of the French, in Febraary, 1868. They were con-'| firm counsels; the Catholic thought it Naege a ae a i cae nema tateen tation, the Po ges : ‘= he! Boea on a émall island near me, Having mado | ter by urging on tho gentle an feeble Pontiff to plgce his inland to the condition in ras before tho forcible | tbe country | has scarcely, reapyered oh , freen «ae and put © alate the boven Tucy reached Berbios on. | then applaud ltr aasaiete maa keen ot ws orks bigbly creditable beth to General Sot and Mr. Bochanan, | tanght him thst the’ “easton Mg mny, out Sunday. Rudio immediately separated from his com- bed all events, the question will no longer be agked— the rg Oe Patan Re al hey one ane ie the [= seotore, 1 wi agg gp me Ee a we way for the Catholic God knows Fist upca the eupposed righta of bis country; but he mast | the method of providing additional means, and strongly ‘accom per Vice Cone! “ etl ° a ue ve La Pau to see and ‘be aware that ri the two parties cannot agree, the aid of | condemns the resort to loans. At present the American m her letter arse wil be Mngt i: pd fe tedig oy ahien Oe trouble, ao tae fe-caninh when the some independent Power as arbitrator must be invoked, | debt is insignificant. That is ono onda which the citi. 2 the ee Al nee op pgs yd ‘yf 7 doubt to tas final. We of the Union enjoy # very natural adv: over us, | tleman connec! & mercant wo rer | Pont throne was restored by the hands of France, to whose award both ought no a8 fe | zens Nea ee sorrel continued os ange in oe | try Ue. Sondhy of the basco on! which Intended to e- fod they waitin? | in. the city, who obenrved that the Tady't leter poy agen Mr. Buctanan upon the j and success of ly adopled in: policy which he has adopted in reference to the reach our standard of indebtedness in far less time ign aN ‘They still continued at largo ee Pees gendard ied Q rallibly (CONTINUED ON EIGHTH ye

Other pages from this issue: