The New York Herald Newspaper, June 8, 1863, Page 1

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THE NEW YORK HERALD. WHOLE NO. 9763, ~ 0°” aad EW Bcd woe ee os 9 smaseay ati: NEW YORK, MONDAY, JUNE 8, 1863, PRICE THREE CENTS 1), 1am sorry fo I think be would | ®eupjored in Rurope to be peyetcal!s w'ertor Thot forward, not disputationsiy, but with a view to obtrtn | eonetudod with Fr: nee, Pelzium, Bwedes ant Trrkey h better If he tok me or his guide | opinion, s fap at least as it applies to the tri ops met with = Mme More definite enunElation of ger inciples than | others are about to he negotiated with Faeliod ant ) There iw one ether obserration | along the route from Cu pepper Court How eto Richmond, 1 yet felt to have becn given, Meanwhile it ix to be We are proud of an Italian army, brilliant ak ke—for taiking so loudly in my weak | isa mistake Tul’, straight, mus lor, ‘he confederates are romerked that the trading world consider they have d wold jn ite dixctetine, cooler than ths, (Hear, hear” aud laughter) _The Diack maa, Tee es foollngs of fateh) Hig orn 12 We, country: he has a wise and childrew jy that coup!” ; and though be ie treated very ill in thas Country, “ure especially inthe North. (chocge and @>%ressions of | condition wearies me out. Though very well, 1 am very | im general as @ material for war as any men im the of a grivove) m the fact that, both in p78 Lhe renown the army has wt. dissent) —more erpecinity ie she Nostlns (Hear, hear’? | weak. That observation is this. You hould consider | world. These irginians partcwarly make a magn font Parliament an ity of = writert, ardent desire ie that the nation may be abe to 16 vy i % and cheers)—he has ngs tWSrds that country, | upon the present occasi n that you are simply expressing | sollicry. One of the most marked diilurences bet’ sbipowners and merchants who culeavor fo send gods wilh weurity upon the force of tts own RIVAL OF THE AMERI"', nD WA maMONTA. | 224 be hot wish to be bebished from it. (Hear, | an opinion. You dou't wish to eerce or judge anybody, | the two arnics ig that between the wm thr uph the Uochade into the Confiderale ports aro spoken | Europe rbouid recopwize this fact Sein et hea But Tresident Listoin has very peculiar | except by the light of that opinim, You must leave | countenances of the rank and Mle 00 eac! of as if they were engaged in some nefarious, OF, Liberty is producing its natural results of order and Preeperity tn all direetic If the public safety requires claring all the slaves free in the receded States, | cali upon achoun meas | I SO “ notions about slavery. He issucd a proclamation de- | Pai and he maintained slavery wherever his power extevded, | ness which Parliament ought to do for itself, Butl do | military posts E+ the “Raltinore apd Yhbio Rati and alo io the peat ality which it is wikbed to maintain. | will not fail my lament, as I gaid, to jedge for themselves. Ido not | much as to present a strong contrast The stlid ob’cotions ble, purmuit, apd ax if they we I do not call upan anybody, to do the busi- | exoression which One Ohgerves in faces at the their country by acting in opp witing to Inernational law, | po M4 weme daty. The Nalonsl Guar Agitation for am American | (Creer) Aud, therofore, 1 say that that was not an | know that upon many oceasions petitions have been sent | way compares asantly with the expression of The pa ties thus engaged comprie some mont respectable | who have alre ced $0 well of the evantey, will e Honest movement My country men here have kind hearts, | to Parliament. ‘ihose petitions bave asked for particular | the frank, veuial, i ch.bt#, who would certainly not enter int any trans contribute to thin objcet by their areal, With the same Arnaistice. and their hearts bleed when they think that men are Titive acts, Within the last few weeks | have had | of the south. the ned, and | view France 1s rete {> ste hevetf sole east the c faves, Tvay. cin England, by allu ing this horrible war | petitions vent Lo me upon matters in whieh I de not agree | one of class, put ad. ption “f milv'ary arrancrments whenever the pare ives to go on, can the, as © done—being thoroughly neu | with tie petitioners. [Rave always presented the peti. | Phe Celtic ane’ the reno 60 phavant tvlehold Ot be t.0x00n exposed to chcairage a7 Ane Oe orportum'y, Public work 4 on with ac tral be:ween the 1 wo—cat at Phope Parliament will act to the best of ite | as tha: of the Anglo Magon, and the Virginians, save so far, bature. Under what principle, they , ber own conscience, allow these horrible atrocities to t, and T ho} ¢ thove petitions won't be acted w only as they partakgof a Huguenot milxture, are of al- , OF Nd p-itcy is the attempt to trade wi ER. ROEBUCK ON INTERVENTION. | sinver on, 1am met with the ery—1 havo beard it he ‘and iaughter.) Bot still 1 de not complain most purely the sine Week as tha of Regiand. male 8 t0 be deemed censurable? Those «ho “slavery.? But what is slivery in the Soath as com: | there gentiemen should petition; 1 think they are quite | The Virginians itish in their Blocd apd im thelr | tide a/mut that they must submit fo the che 5 pared with the black man's condition in the Nerti? No | right 10 iors heard, Taunt understand | habits. Twcir sympathies have always been strongly coa- (Act iis and pers seised by eae bs gg Bane age hyp oer L aliny pan +f oh ae this pr a hele-and corner meeting. (Hear, | servative aud Fogiish In the time of Cromwell they pro- | & right to ran thts + ce ie) me appeal with and i Teould benefit the slaves—if L could do anything | hear.) ‘The world of sheffield is invited to.come here, and | tested against Ue caurpatio:s of the Farilament, in their , TikM’ Wo @acounter the risk o! | for an a debt of honor to reply ¥ “4 MR. MASON VISITS PARIS. for thelr condition by as.oose, making Siem a free people, J + dec! me ae ey Fa : aces in the ri Mnetion is a very great Aion of which they wuld have to feel Feforal ¢ partly to diteresces of race, they contend that it is « mistoke and a alle asts agent oo Uvity in wl the proviness of t n Your mi | Urgent task ix to eonsolitate th { the kingdom, Above al oft some a thege tie lence by our ver the necomary rm people, | the world of Shefiieid has come. How any bedy who has jon to support the Stuarts—the “uid Domivion,” | perl. The bl ckading Power says, We will keep You out | promptitude to imprae upon eure J should be preparod, as far as my humble power goes, to | made np his mind, and who fully believes he is right, | A stove and a spovker’s chair } resented by the home go- 1" We can,”” and isternational custom admita their right to | critees myee-y > confer liberty upon them, (Hear, hear.) But we did that | can say upon the present cccasion that he was taken | vernment to the House of Delegates o the Hritisn colony | 4980, and to © ntiscate all the vessels and curgoes they | To consolidate Mberty, with the constitution for ity bane. Ganong a smatler body of Uack pecple in the W.st Indies. | by sirprise, is what 1 cannot understand. How a man | of Virginia are both now realy unfit for use; but en. | MAY catch in attempting to pase the forbidden lines alter | and by liberty to win the evn, ete lodepende oe and HOOKER’S MILITARY REPUTATION, | We paid for them, and, as Fagjand always has be: | can be taken by surprise uj) on tbe Americon question i | shrined ns they are by their origin in the aliections of | the sual formal notiee to that effet #hall have been given. | unt’ y of the oom Such is the end to which we have baved in such cases, we dealt Mberally, not only by | beyond my comprehension. For two years past Bnglind | these people, motio) after motion made for their replace. | Traders, on (he o:her hand, aay, «We will try to get in” consecrated To attain it, enncord, windom and and, 80 far from such enterprires being lisbic to be looked neconaary. Italy ha be the slave, but by the slavehulder. (Hear, hear) Can | he® been ringing with almost that and that alone. pin-, | ment by better ones has been persistenly voted ) eat = - by iasaseenidiie _— Upon as an offence, it has always born Loid thatthe success you'’do that im Americar You cangot. (A voice, * Yea, | fons of allsorts have been advanced. If the people. are Regular uniorm the Confederate soldiery have not, A “Sto ” J, 3 Ni you can”) You say we cath; but you know | ever to be instructed upcm the question of America they | military cap with the crown protruding towards the | OF DOn-Ruocen# of auch attempts sh uld Borvo ax A tent | “i newall: ackson’s BME | nowtirg adourie. (Great laughter and cheers.) The mil- | are instructed now, Around me are miny gentlemen on | front i# the only pices of drees by which tho infantry may | Whether the blockade has been fairly established and | © raleod) and it in with entire Mons of slaves in America would swal up all the | tne othe 1 here, and 1 can- rally be distingwiehed from the civilian but even | 1 ui helt. If it were not for these adroit and bolt ad- | cipate the hour of the ae ge: and Fame. money in the North and in the South to bny thelr freedom. | not under Deng, takes by. | this is replaced in ftme instances by Tepuirers any pation might shut out an Antagonist from ‘You cannot do it. But the copneotion betwecn the slave | surprise. of their complaint shows there | light gray je the coler of the ‘re, pa trade by & mere declaration, but through their ageney the holder and the slave is one not so painful as many im- | ie no cause for it, yw, then. gentlemen, I bave told you |) but that garment found to ropreseat among the mercial world are protected from #veb « contingency , Turkey. gine. They are kindly treated. I know they are not | very frankly my opinions. I cannot reason out this ques- | @-m.cvldiers us many varietios of shade as those.of Jo. | {ho matter a svon brought to ctical proof, More: Private telegrams from Constantinople of May 23 st 22D POLISH REVOLUTION. treated as I should like to be treated, because I free } tion ax! should desire in the immense areal have to ad- | seph’s coat. Russet br wn appears to be a favorite | ° as recards the question of neutralty, it i ArKUed, | that the apprehensions entertained at Dorazn of the ° man. I bave been brought up in freedom: T have fonght | dress, but still distivesly I tel! you I believe the time iscame | color, but ove almost as much in vegue among the Con. | that #0 far from the attempts to trade with a bei inning io Albania of # detochimont of Mallon vo unteers for my own livelihood—they have pot. They like their | for an acknowledgment of the independence of the Feuth== | federute troops seems, by its blue tut, tu have beem we. | being a breach of neutrality, any fort on the part | have been increased by the appearance of Haian condithm, then, to this extent—tbat when they become | (cheers)—that England, by so doing, will be carrying ont | lected—without, it may be presumed, the formatity of ; Of @ Mewral gorrnment fo ducourige or obstruct | ganadron off the Albab old they are not called upon to maintain themscives. aud | the «reat mission she has > advance and alae man- consulting the wuthortsies of Washinytos-—feome the werd. such attempts ts directly inconsistent with the obser 7 ‘telegram frou Hocharest of May 24 aayee—( ~ + mat, SPEECH OF THE KING OF ITALY. | th savehoider treats them—unfortunately.1 musi use | kind: that if she do 80 she will benefit. not only herself, | robs of the United Sates The cveccats of the Souhirn | TANCE Of strict impartialicy, sinco It amounts, t | qtr and tws aides de camp have aerived hero b Py the phrase—as J should treat my horse. (-‘ Ob, ob,” and | but the worid at large. Therefore } should advise army aprear to have been contiibuled to an extent iru that extent, to an actual co eperation with the | princes Coaza on lis returo from ®@ tour of inapection “hear, hear.”’) I never overwork him if 1 ama wise | if my advice be worth anything you will take it, if nee | 2 feo by the "eh thing bureau’? of Mr. Lincoln. - Dleckading Power, by aiding them to enforce their Abrough Moldavia 2 man. I lament that any humag being should be in that | reject it—I w: uld advise you to say that, {a you qe atures talean fom the North by the Confederates | hustile measures against the other belligerent Tho - _ TH condition, but they aro in that condition; and, ag states. | the Confederate Sates of Amrica should ab onco beac: | must have reached an amount almit ineredibl. Negries, | Vian path of justice is for our government to avoid all Commercial Inte: E MARKETS, men, what are we todo? I fear that for many years to | knowledged to be an independent nation. (Lond cheers.) | men and loys, in thiscity and throuzh the country, on the | 9C-Fided references to euch matiers, Our people would THK LONDON MONKY come slavery must exis’. You cannot get rid of it on a mud- The Rev. J. P. Horr moved the following resolution— | way here from the Polumac, wear cos 8, yantalrens, caps, | certainty be as ready to trade wirh the Soyth aa with the | [Prom thy don Times (eity y Ree en ae den, Time, patience, and the education «f the black man ‘That in the opinion of this meeting the government of | and some/imes whole suits, which North, and we do not recognize that the proceeding in The Fnglich funds this (2018) morniog opened without ait must go hand in ant, and it wil te the reult of | thin country wou'd «ct wisely, both for the interests Of | lese an expocure of either eave can be manufactured juto a crime THO | gierution, but there war subsequent aca i time, of education, of patience, which will drag them | England and those of the world, mediately | keer.” Your correspondent slo} who can get goods into the South for @ fair equivalent, poem Ds agers hag eck Wechaiee, chien The steamship America, Captain Wessels, which left e he crndifon im which they mw are Ko wwe ter sto woyatiatlons with the Sea tecanet nie wa . pew biaiuet pared ie targd charechent oC a ur tn etuse, vadacon oF gold, render « pervice to Chett OS SSP aktis ‘alares chcteuneenste 1 te tarot rn * ‘y . 8 purpore ain acknowledgment them rel the morni some misgivings as to whether or further ut ot geld wow withdrawn from the Bank for Bouthampton on the 27th of May, arrived at this port | Were SPY man to attempt to Have would | ofthe independence ef, the Cuntedaraes States of North. | pot Be bad locurred herlag hus. sfeen te no title wo complain, vince the North has a perect | Gourteutimopie, ast auch moderate arrive ‘early yesterday (Sunday) morning. Her nows is three | fight Cait cheers strong | america. for a certain peceadill of © taart’s Rorse. Tight to exert all iis ekill and force 4 them. it | iitoly takou pines havo HOt been more than sufficient to ‘Gaye later than the advices by the Persia. man, but luckily the battle is not always to the strong, ag The motion was seconded by Mr. Yichael Beal. ular 68 the tinta and shopes of their dress are, tho | 1 Out of place for our mivisters to show, either bY | inet the orders for Ue Compinent we have seen between the North and South. (Hear, hear. ) Mr. Hopps’s resclution was carriéd by an overwhelm. | Confederate soldiers are clid comfortably, The men are | Siasion or by direct tneivility, that they e@vnsiter | poneras tendency to any inportaut drain, and if the daily ‘The steamehip Hammonia, Capt. Schwensen, (rom Ham- | Well, then, have things come to the conditien that Eng- | ing majority. ll well sho’. Pheir arms are of the very bet description, | Sem persons to be put downy, The rudeness mant- | weounts from the Paris Bourse were lees dull the ten ‘Darg 24th and Southampton 26th ult., also arrived at this | land ts called upon to act has been thronghont eo- i So grata nti m of thse has bem comrilnled by the | ferted by the Port Uitico to the owners of the Peter: | deney on this ride would probably be toward steadi Port at a late hous Isst evening. Her news has been an- Se. ut what hag been the result? Language Territorial Divi: for Beparation. United States that the outcry raised im that country be. | Hom, and the subsequent disposition ganiented br F0M0 | new. expecially on the agricultural acu from ail Gletpated by the arrival of the America 1s been used fo her, mot merely by tis scaple, but by t The Hon. Spencer Walpole, M. P., speaking at the an- | cause Jonn Bu!l has iacreased that contribution to even | members Of the government to treat the fact of these geO | quarters continue geod The first quotation of J government of America, insulring by cata escription; aud | nual dinner of the ‘Geographical Society in London, | an extent comparatively small is conceived in a spirit of | 'emen baving been participators provious:y * | eonsoin for money wan 3), a %, and the last ‘The Londcn News of the 27th of May notices tho sailing | &t last they have come tw sny, when describing them- | alluded to the probable territorial division of the United | the veriest ty. cenaful” browehos of the blockade, as if there br a. For the account the final bargaina ef the America thus:— felves,‘*We are reduced to that condition that States thus:—This he would say, that if that contest Dccmteadae Northis held here in con‘emp’. An old | Were to be cited in the fashion of “previous convictions” Y v land can bully us.” 1 want to know how the: whieh, agains @criminal—provavly arone inerely from the irri | ¥ The America, a new steamer built by the North Ger | pronght into that tonditiou’ Hy them-elver. (Hear, | pettied it should be settled vp moral eecialand politics! | late Union 'e-the mea supplied thom, thee Neck? | tation which is always excited th ofeial departments by | gaan Lloyds’ line, will take out the mail to New York | bear.) Anyth’ng more ruthiess never was heardof in man’s | considerations—by consideralions, too) of @ ical | having charged under bis orders @ party of | 8Y individuals who may be unfortunste enough by bo from Southampton to day. A new steamer is also build. | history. 1 meta gentleman the other day—he was a pa charaeter, for States must be free to choose for 1) joes the | Indians in Texas, was received with a per ois SM impelled to give a little trouble. It would be woll, how a Se for the Hamburg an American line, to be cailed the | tive of one of the seceded States—who to iM have, and the only setilemnt of | by which one third of the who'e was wnhorid. The Wd be thoroughly un sot Haney Pa stood that all | 4, Tate out of doors in ouly about an eightts that the ernments the These two lines will shortly bave ten steam. | federal army had come over his property and burnt | f te 7 t iaplays of the kind not meroly bear the eb :racter of par eh oA Bp ye ae i py ‘ere running between Soutbamyton and New York. down hie house; they didn't leave ‘one stono upon | treaty of Vetwaa, by which the preat rivers. de Iaing teaies | otite North ct of thy Boat Tolle stort et tbe Beepase Heanehip, but are sleo damaging 10 the Independence of | below, the Ttink ininimun tn the Sivek Prete ge ie The Furopa arrived at Roche’s Point, Ircland,on the | the other: they tock uway his furniture; they stole his | should be free, (Cheers. ) standard of-cavalry. hey very seldom we the sabre, Tho | We tradiug community per cent, was this elternoun 3}4 8 4 por cout ‘Mth of May, at six o'clock A, M. wiles garments and they sent them to their Northerners always fight dismounted ; but the Southerhers. . ‘ in foreign secur ith hiet movements have been an did) Subdidiabinbaohtied to own wives- (‘Hear,” and a voice—“England’s acne it | General Hooker = Critic and Come | fight sometimes in the saddle. The federal horses are ia The Slave Tri Cub of a hail por cont i Greek bonds, sailed from Southampton on Monday | many a time.’’) More shame for us, that is all 1 mander—The Results of His Retreat. good working condithm; but in copsequence of tbe THE NEW YORK HERALD'A RKPORTS IN HPAIN. elabibe iu Boel passive. Mexivan is dell, at evening, May 25, inthe place of the Saxonia, disabled, | can say. (Hear.) These things are going on from {From the London Times, May 27. severe duties of ploketing and sovutiig In the euemy's | (Madrid (May 21) correspondence of the Messager de wf an eighth her ahaf't having boen broxen. day to day. Evory mail brings an account ef | General Hooker has some claim ‘to the questionable | country during the winter, may be said to bo some Bayonne | te avout If per mille pre. horrors such as Napoleon himeelf never perpetrated | honor of boing styled the “Cleon” of North America. | what‘';oor.’” The Confederate horses, motwithtanding | | Accounts from Havana mention a great seand | which nge on London we 25.42!5 yor sot (‘Hear,” and a voice, “They have'nt blown them from a | Like is Athenian prototype, he gained a command by | their lighter work, are not ouly thin, butare so much so | has been produced Mm that city by the landing of a largo g these rules with the bugtint THE AMERICAN QUESTION. cannon.") | We did that in India, and I don't think we did | an unspariny and undignified abuse of men much tetter | a4 to be almost uatit for hard service. Forage in tho | S40 Of ne:roes, General Dules, on bis arrival at Cuba, gor. standard sold; je wery well. Now, it is all very fine for Englishmen to turn | and abler than himse'f, If the generals wore but men, | Southern army is It out sparingly. Abundance of it | *howed himself an encmy b slavery, and in bis pegro per cent dearer in SPOT E SEL up their eyes, and pretend to be #0 wonderiully good. | he said, they would not allow themselves t» be baited | may be obtained within the coufederacy; but with ouly a | Philo zeal be banished to the Meninwala, and on the ver Lond zi ‘ish Demo: ation in Favor of an pe rope T want to know when the peace party op | by difficulties so contemptibie as those before which they | few railways open fur the whole business of the country | Mightest suspicions, some Iuiuential merchants, such al fy ; posed the annexation of ude. Twant to know when the | recede, By these aris he gaind a command: but here, | the limit of supply at any point o! aggregated consump- prenpaners Of s fortune of K, ant the eben Armistice—Speech of Mr. Roebuck, M, | peace party opposed those othor annexations in India. 1 | unhappily, th: prrallel ends. Ni body supposed “Cleon? is fixed by the mens available for tte tranaporta- tthe celebrated general of 1464 | andard ave been formerly ation of Use int e ivity of the Southeru cavalry is, howeyor, | treats persons who The Black Horse’ —a trap sow reaching | engaged im the slave however P—M Wrench Offer of Meal: The Hebel Loan—Excitem te Mason Goes to Paris—Another | Want to koow whether tho Punjaub and, cinde have not all | to be @ great General, or even a valiant soldier; but | tion. The a Spoken Of— | Pet aciuired by force of arms; and were we not very | Cleon what wonderful. pok: much astonished to see the perfect quietude of the peace | great g ‘8 and aberut seventy, and made up of youog Virginians of con tom the Pe= | party upon those occasions? (Hear, Lear,” aud Isugh- | to do, while Hooker failed quite as ignominiously | dition—has taken from the enemy since the commencement ‘ore About 6 TOs per you Thanvare Filty thousand soversigon wore taken from the Hank to-day for Turkey torhoff Case—Generai Hooker asa Critic | tr.) Now, I we that, | and with mueh better menus at bis disposal thi averag: of seocn Kombay mail stoamer Delta t out to ths and Commander—The Rebel Troops as pega ine nuftered | any of hia Prodeccwsors, ‘Deveatn. are the fortune of dict = pi prisoners for ech man of |. 0 Sagas, whether with cw without reason, every ecu al Aileen: 0c eine co i pide lor Ales: dreadfully from the cotton famine, the masters in Man- | war, but it requires no military education to know that | “The fring of the Confederate infantry opeas by pla. | Persuaded that a landing o the kind could not take place | andria and Suez, atid £15 band £170,000 in wit Seem by an English Writer, de. chester Baye not suffered tothe same extent (Hour, | Hooker's movemente were so ilt-concerted as to leare him | tors. Alter tbe firrt round eact mao shoote when ho | Without iutluence being reckoned on in bigh quarters, 4 | Vor fur Houlay MR. RORBUBK ON AN ARMISTICE AND RECOGNITION, | De*r.) I can very easily understand that when a man | serrcely @ chance of succes. That for which a modern | seen , whether in or out of tine with the man next | Sandal arose, and the fact was denounced in larue charac | a wxMiCAN GOV Ki wmoomrriel, (From the London Times, 27 3 is bepry. when he is ing money easily, andenjoy: | general diligently maneruvres,the division of his enemy’s | him. The fr of the Northern bad—g: ters in the Nuw Yous Hamaty, A@ded to that, © very | Marytand b per co: = 6 » May 27.) ing all the fruits of the earth in consequence of this | army into two parte Detwecn which he may insert his ry in? ‘corresponden: warm altercation has taken place between General Dulce | Uiitod states b por veut wo la 5 por cout... -@ ol Argreat open air meeting was held in Paradise square, | war—{ say ican understand his objection to anything | own army like 5 wedge, General Hooker did for his ad- Fiche woente reamed by soldiers bere are in the | 804 M. Vavercucs, the civil Governor, im couse uence of | i reig. accord, bo @hofield, to . | being done to put an end to it, But while I feel for | verrary of his own thus the almat which the latter announced his determination to return se , yesterday, Rrrep code gethe yeepgs me: | the workiog men of Lancarhiro, I feel tor the autter. | incouable reall of the defeat of both Matted, tir | Comantione tesetesersa ris to Spain. The persons banished sre making strong ap- ' - ‘Worializing government to ‘‘use its good offices to procure | ings of the people of America, and 1 want to pat an | fifth invasion of Virginia, so far from an improve- | elevated or in clearing away tree branches hanging from to the goverament, to which they are sat to 14g 8 7656 ‘& sus; ension of hostilities between the North and South, | end to this war. Leay to » “If you new dep in | tient on any of its predecessors, was equally calamitous ta above the lime of the | have xivem information which may lead to the recall of 1), 9 its ‘WH a view to.an arrangoment of the differeuce between | M4 declare boldly wha you think to be repwisi—namely, | in ite results, and stigmatized by even greater tanita, | Roribern bullet General Dulee. he ae rig that the Southern States be at once acknowledjed as | McDowell, MoCiellan, Pope and Burnside may each of | ence to the ay egernne en. meeting was called, in pursuance of a requi: | an independent nation— (Cheering, and crics of * No, no," | them ray with truth that, though litte less fortunate, | under any circumstances, THE POLISH REVOLUTION. wition, by the Mayor (Mr. J. Brown), and was attended by | aud a vuice with great em ** Never.”) A lhetr ervers have been of 10 grossa nature as those of the | inexperienced rifemen 2 @deut 10,000 persons, including all classes of the in- | BAS. wae ie p tans oh) enue mete rgaatanty ageing in the : o sreporoas, « ex by the police. | loot i me. may be ‘The Cras’ Russian government endeavored to Mr. ~armerperaean tee vanes ‘Thus the Mfth invasion of of war suppress the insurrection ip the Polish provinces incor ‘The eatreme abolitionia party here, who have had small | the South we shall go to war with the Ne 1 say 1 do not | enterprises be doubied till ible trayectery porated with Rursia by means of massacres aod a social from time to time of their own party, and car it. J say there is no yO hag rnenpnge o ot pt before the: Bate wt compariae revolution. The » however, bas failed, exceyt in . of the ‘ desire ference at war as the pe them to bave compassion General lee some portions «f districts of Wasilkow and Zylomborz, whed favor federais, mustered strongly, Northern States themscloes. (Hear, bear.) 1 may state but on themsel: Dagyage to the rear. where agnassinations have bee committed end moved an smendment on Present occasion; but | one very remarkable thing We ieehed pen o wat with | tunately no ground upon Fortress Mouroe on The peasants everywhere fight ageinet the Russians. fe ‘were obviously net acceptable to the vast America With horror because it would bring about « cot- | the question If we look to ¢ templates fallin, Oreza, on the Dnieper, has been occupied by the insur. ‘sink. fund, 8 per cent, let me eae pt nso Weil sg oes Meme mg ng Vutied inten we find it said to be expectio gents. In Samogitis the insurgents have gained a victory Bo. KN. Indiana wf. 1656 p to % Mari ‘upon cotton rivus ; inary re. = ‘Mr. Romcvex who said:—Gentiemen, the question we | if we had war with America we should at once put an end | the plainest and pot lps en ereavem from Gornowits,f May 24, rays —News igh hao op aaa 7 HY eT ees pkeeeon sagt oy sa. | baie A as ltd peculiar cir- tune arenes Sy ce omy fuce to face has beeu received bere that Xamniecpodols& i in a state a % tence. 1 look English “question. | cumstance. The South would an ; ers 80 exorbitant, fn numbers, i¢ equal im Of inparrection ye ertinie {Week ie for tho ‘Interest of agiand, that we sbould Ge. | ‘oe show pe for any good from such a quarter. Even at the pre | and spird. Rucsian troops have been ordered to proceed thither by | {'s, pled shares Bet Wilae her icnare a ee aye Poh poe a Ly moment ted ea aonege some ou w ~ soldiery of the forced marchor. Panania Kit Ist mortyage 7 per cout, PROS... 101 tus ‘upon descr them, veico— the deluded | cop! every is going on well in x be o %2 ford fo Tacs agisben ‘pate tat weds wassny | tai 2 are and no anaey oie ok heey Ferm a “+ Gtone [Paris (ny 20) Correrwndenen of te Ln Tigra) Fe ‘Mik. te. 100 oor "T4es cont, “a *ts us , Lit Jt Reems an if last week's prediction, respecting tl wa thy Seemed; they ate bot orotchata of mine. They are the | an pot abuse which haye swollen the river 1a his rear,and threatened), {From the Lvndon Tivos, May 26.) policy of the Preach Cabinet towards Woesisy is testy | be. guochoressn erent are) result of kee consideration - A io ames y ol, bave we alienated ee a not oper breaepeg mre carry pe arheme tei wanes ths etd ci Chencefiors to be verified. Le Memoire Viplomatique, which de- | Phiiadeiphia aud Reading $20 sharoe » ams whieh quest: surrounded, therefore, South. ‘idger. state: matt conse. | vi mi | LJ cyprems. Vrobal bo dis rives ite inspiration from official rources oe lat iter acetan ienc arrears eGavis oon will con ciliate the Southern shail | lation that only three eighths of General Hooker's army | aster of the war will have carried auch grief to Tethers night Pian for the defiaite solution of the Polish ¢.n- ran TTON MARBET. went of care on Beate o lose friends on both sides. were engaged, as if any greater refleticn could te made | hearts as the death of General Jackson, who bas suc- | plecations,” which, | prenume, we may acceptan the de |, LisEarou:, May 20.-—Thore lms beew « good and gemeral for Patron” Gatner f rg hoon Tote — "4 against the alnlity af a general than th: statemnt that he | cumbed to the wounds received in the great battle cf the | Auite policy of M. Drouyn de Lhuys. Freoch diplomacy, | demand for cotton again to dey eo teach sy SNe wo Judge was attacked, routed and driven from pocttion te poriticn | 34 of May. Even on this wide of the «cean the gallant are told in this letter, has by a mort ingentous combi. | [1¥ 8,000 baler—one ballon specu a while I explain myself. a aad -) Many years ago} man. I do ll hehad to fake refuge im something very like flight, | roldier's will everywhere be heard of with pity and tion, found & way of at once removing the objections | Prices are withont chang @Qemseives up toa great They became three mil- pteken, ten reel cenathl ant even by joxth of nis diooes eee imeene ge ign. tthe fighting for bis | raised by Austria to the armisive propetel by Kngland— et on etae bee “gt * e o country’s independence bu’ ay one of the most consummate w writer Unb © seth — separate be right, but I pay them every possible deference. ke aumell ermy oquat to & large one. General Ia that (his cenlury has produce Fede oe teotoan cts, oh the’ sumae shee Ur naeen ea'tne sae Go not enened 4.000 bales if 2.000 on speculation and for export, Mriven are withwut ‘Stnewall” Jack. | formal than rerioos—and, at the rame time, by ad: ly been limited, cl to foseya | am willing honestly to listen to ‘them—patiently, con jeat has been, on the showing of bis friends, of an | son will carry with him to his carly grave the regrets of all | flattering the susceptibility of the Czar, of rendering vee when they They sup: | te wsly; I don’t desire to interrupt them Now, that is | opposite character; for he has succeeded, if this statement | “who can admire tnees and emi i the cenma' bie. Kart Ruserli, change tbat judgment fought Eng- | the position in which we stand. (Interrnption.) "You ai t : : it | lest da ler Sn conaploupes for the | ihe thon topomaaptine ter sistemas ection, adore: r ’ % ys of the war he has been conspicuous for the | witha to t dy) action, had yro | STATE OF THAD: oa yh beat England—(hear, hear)—they déclared | sv wonderfully impressed with the miseries of the sla most remarkable military qualities, mixture | posed o trase for Geetesr, ban while admitting the ef | M, | : you care nothing about my misery. (Loud leughter very of daring and judgment which i the mark of | Ianthropy of the ides, the French Cabinet conviders it of that is, that ple among | and cheers.) Well, then what is the reason why we “+ heaven torn” be mankind,’ and when tac geverals distinguished him beyond any | imperfect, ax not binding Russia to any defived terms, | But apinners venaterer that af a | should ot do itt First, they may, England ought nots to man of BA/time, Although the young confederacy has | or giving’ any guarantee that at the col of the year | UO last w | pore oo an [apap they | help siavery. 1 say 80 too: but we should not help slavery | others equally disastrour, if not quite equally dirgraceful, | been illustrated by @ number of eminent soldiers. yet the | Poland would be better treated than now. To avoid this | Checked oper ty oe oT .") As many | by acknowledging the South. (Hear, and “No.”) pon't | and we are strengthened in this impression when we re | a and devotion of his countrymen, contirmed by | unsatisfactory result M. Drouyn de Lhuys determined not | Merchants have ehowo _ frat AR, am merely stating what! | you interrupt me. (Turn him ou} nd a voice, “Iion’ | flect on the enormous power it wields, and the dangore the judgment of European nations, have given the first | to bring the question of an armistice prematurely before (eonively, bul at (he aivanoe penersily derma they Caton tee ae Nap see 9 France jh 80 much, Mr. eB.” Tam sure Mr Clogg bos not | with which it would be beset if that power were brought | place to General Jackson. The military feats he accom | the Czar, bat to wait Lill he was sure that Humeia was die, | bevitate. Netwithwtandiog the pa on escent se cae tao into an alliance with our re- a me. (“ He's only an agitator.”) New, 1 have | to an end. Peace ovce concluded with tho South, the is- | piished moved the minds of people with an astonishment | poured to give thore guarantees which the three Mowers | huwever, the tnarket clones very firm. and after the he Leg og we declared war against | vory | Me msare ety; bod want to notice one or two | sue would remain to be tried whether the government of | which it is only given to the bighost jue to paoduce. | decm indiapenrable to the “‘reortablishment of I dayn we bok forward ty a conmderabie nereake i ums France. We war. We were agaia beaten. that have brought against me. One is, | the United States bad permanently become what it un- | in a situation of inating pence." “ls it Bere, There line alan been mote activity in ibe cloth mar ‘We yielded the nape ened of America, aod we made | that we should be benefiting siavery by sckpowiodging doubtedly in now—a crushing miliary despotism or whe Le Memeire Dighomatiyuc, “that itu kot We bave bad « goed dem. mo peace with France. ngect the South. I say, no; we should not benefit sluvery, “iher there wa: any pour inthe land which could enact a Fetersburg secquieeces in the programme ommcerted be. | i Itabie to the Pastern mark rees have inmediate | Cully recovered fram the temporary ae tween Austria and the Western Powers, th | cemeation of bomtihities io Poland will be the ni J gical conse jacnce of h seoquieence” If once the Ma’ | Imperial comsent is gre to this programme, then the FOme exceed ingly laren cont - | pagers, yielding to his natural gond feelings towards Po | Hes thereiag Fo | , Will see that homapity and policy allke dictateto bun deel ond | | } } ai end — Atericnn mtv ice to hated in t ufactarers are akin) carly art of imal wonk Li rates, and we should resily beneft the slave. (ier, hear.) B tardy vengeance for the violation of all law cmt the orer- dome iy bey eda mde North we may do away with throw of all liberty by Mr. Lincoln and hus Cobinet, aud slavery, but at the same time we rhould d ith | whether courts of justice might not be found to entertain the slay And 1 must say that throughout the whole | the just complaints of individuals for the wrongs they contest there has been a curious feeling ov the part of | b; suffered under that plea of pecersity which gentlemen who the federal pow have | fails the man who has the power to trampic on th federates, ben ol bed nS wr tho ter’ power Rh ade oon: oO of bie bsantyf e Be ors? believe Mr. Lincoln and | of his army, path: North, , ay’ not a part inet are prepared to face there #, and wi ‘ener: | 2 a Dectrality; and Tat once ackbowledge that i bave mo | hove a fuse Saar speamecer'| ST B reoeves to hesioun oy 0 seth ona pote sympathy with the North (‘ Hear, hear,” and chee i A : i i i #5 the cenation of the slaughter of bis rubeets, The troope fe" pier will reomive orders to suspend hostilities, end the arrnts ham the better Lice # much desired by the three Mowerr will be grawtet elven an compared with that they carupied mom aest | Months beck, Many manwferterers ave oriers enh re Little hope of peace from their syxmtaneous | tomac. It was reserved to Jackson by a awift and recret action, Nor are we more ine Ae to any control to be | march to fail upon bis right wing, crush it,and, by an tt ; by the Crar bimself, withoot the buriiiating ‘Btates . 1 think my sympathies ought to go, as they do go, exercised over the counse'’s of government by the com. | attack womurparsed in ferceness and pertinacity, to drive ing made,or granted spomaneonsly, and on terme | will keep their mille going for ih word. and these the South. (Cheers.) They are a gallant people, fight. | mercial classes. Peace must be followed, of course, not | bie very superior forces Beck ious peeition from wiich | we'ugersl thet Kt Gill induce Tland vs Yiaten to the wher | aoe Re many ar five monthe. » tn — ing or their independence, and they have obtained | only by ihe cossation of very lucrative contracts, but by | he could not extricate himpelf except by flight serosa the | apd prudent advice of the (bres l'owers, wie are rewlyed | offering to day mort have rt * In ¢ it cheers and counter cheers.) The chance of | the collapse of the whole system of paper credit which war | river, Ip the battie of the Sunday Jackson received two | to: biain for that country “a future of pean and \iherty | theme wore commuted. Conn ft ually @ ms success ou the part of the North is a# a mil- | has created and war only can support. They weil know | wounds, one in the left arm, the other in tbe right hand, | under (he collectiwe guaranter of Kurope The provosition , hotkiay work bere, to day # market muy be regardet as A tome They ee hope to fe South, bat | that this must come but every day that it is deerred | Amputation of the arm was necersary, and the Soutlern | of Austria—s*bich contal " all en) woumaally active tog Hy Ae padl a a yo a here ta a texiy of | gives the meet prodent among them an opportunity of | hero sank under the effect of it, supported to the lant by | vastly developed by #0 skilful ; LIVERPOOL BakADer mp men ind vg hcrndh deg te doc al oe rs bane fon ayy mig ba Iaggete tho | bis simple and poble character and strong religious faith. — de | hoye— ' pant have a res 5 + | jor | Gnenviebie § position creti the govern great pains fo hat arse every meant of putting their hands into the public purse, | ment pelders of it ‘secmriien. or Ne "net & FARLSAENCARY FESUTE, Crorthas pogetiatins ot ‘They wi they are with wealth; and as long as th o st At the annual dinner of the oyal Geogrs; | Boetty | Hier look ; is gosom | Strange as jt may weem, the credit of the of tue 26th of May, tbe Ri hee | the conferences of \ of the ceria. ‘they endes they will wih the war to continue, But if you go into te | ernment i still supported by the notwn that the | Of Landon, om tue 2h 7, i Spencer | vary language of the Itonsian Ministers at Landew, arm ous, and me. sericultaral districts of North America you would flud | Cajon will be preserved, and neither the government | falpele, M. V, when returning thanks (ur the toeat of | od tenet ty apaak 4 nothing Wt the ond fenling of ay, reti things very different there. (Hear, hear.) There you | nor the ecmmercial clases are Wkely to be the first to | 16 ‘House of sald —Neod he a6d that, crom- | tiie master towards his Polish sublecte, and ef hia desire i § y would see sorrow for the war. there you would find hus. 1 this to the i nlent illusion, So ing the Atlantic, they fed also w concern themarives | {! ¢ frewh co , ey declared that they wore | bands to the war, You would And brothers gone | dupes ean be feend to saposs themestves 10 disease ‘und | WUD North Amerion? And in ansciation with this coud oe iapered eoverunenh tanh be fen |G . (Blavery!””) Till come io | there, Killed, wounded, maimed, made miserable for life. | slaughter in exchange for paper promises of payment, | 2 forget that lamentable news had to-day reached this | {he imierml guveunimaut Whar te plage fm fen! by-and-by; but don’t be in such s mighty hurry. | They know what the horror of tiie war is: they have none | irrogularly given and Imble to much further doprecia: | CCUREFY to the effect that one of the noblert descendants Pimms Oe eves all ihe arrangem- ote for tie ¢ separated and what sas the feeling in of the advantages of the contractor in New York. they | tion, the government will probabiy persevere in the war | Of the English race—Sumewall Jackson--was now no Poliah dienity, 60 that that eeuthn shade beer t P i 'y feeling was. 1 know therefore wieh to put anend to the war. And there is | with that indomitable resolution and unswerving forts. | more? (C al anether class of men in North America which xo bates | tude which g nerally characterize a man who is exercis- a ome me feel Gide Es Ont ae ee, ing A sraed qualities exclusively at the expense of his | 4, they ; rises from Kny- | veighbore been forwarded, with « log letter © Fend's bad emduct. "Tam speading of the tantshed Trish tn | "Ve bait soon know whether the American ono | Corer are ees cree a SOS Waring COSTS | tien, be ibe Overt of inane, where, ‘2 Amica (Hear.) The il comauct of Eng'and has driven | disponed t offor up ce last vestige of their liberties eet acane ae ke, Pied Ce es eneee | be aquaily accaptable, 80 fe ousande—nay, millions—from Ireland. They wnt from | the shrine of that Moloch of slaughter and devastation | 1" to the pit. Myine corte tor the trade, | wot think we are‘ out of th Ireland with their hearts burning against Kngland. and they | which they have set up t@ reign over them. There isnot | Civisiow for an army. tying curme for the mamed onl | Oa a ever, and the diplon have given that eating to {reir descendavts; and the greater | much reason to apprehend that any troopmucho have had ex. | P™n dy ~ hema Pe holcout Gnd the weck fas | arminticn ia to'be oblatved without be pare of the aluse that has been showered upon Bmpland | perience of war as i 4 organised by General Halleck, and | (oF bie tame, bat snore lite wad ew bie tenn warvellously cansing contrivance, ony Aas come from tanishel Irishmen. 1 | oke with sorrow | made ly Pipe, Ze , and Hooker, wit! be dispored Hooker's line at Chance a fet that at yet the Orar hor wot eran upoe that. I cannot look with wonder for we Bave be. | to fill up the large gape whieh are sbout to be made in oun favor, het even pledged bimeell t haved lil to Ireland. That inevitable Nemesis that always | the rauks 0! the North by the retirement of regiments the there are the [oles th Snes the id ders of nations has f licmwed ws there, ond wor period of setvice of which haw expired. There w nehing are devoted in the whee forever ome of the exsential comdions of the pes we. and 10. et demand expt ict tom amd of the weaee of the wor'd. reoowned general = hem wet (bree lien to the conteve ne’ of (he Mewar val are now For wha ur ancestors have done wrong to | for it wut conscription or peace. Will the country suhmit (o wee & "1 " 0 ba A even bees serunder . fuged Irtand. Bul in oyr time wood government has been taken | Comeripbicn” Will all the organization, f which we have | feruelt down the hie of Mi 4 widie manned aor pe thegress * leten v a (© Ireland. there is good government there now and we | heard s much, turn oat utterly futile and werthler? | 1eb of him, for whatever cnure he contended: the wise rodeut ® of 9 contohoration fh the . are Bow endeavoring to wipe out the misdeeds of our an- | WM the military dewpotiam, 80 fully establicsbed on the wr Powers me forty eybt years ago, agreed to edace vale dor cestors, But having d: ne that, baving ulcerated the bearts | eastern coast, be able 16 cceupy and overawe the vant The Hebel Loan. , Potend lrom the map o/ buto,e See a m, of the bani-bed Irish. we cannot hope—T have no hope | continent whieh tends to the bi of the | RUMORS OF INTERVENTION AND FLUCTUATIONS In | : nee “hear, hear,” and that we shail ever attain that resalt—to make them for. | Ricky Mountains’ That issue (8 about be tried f Say, they mate Comatives ope cte Sr Saat Raion has always bee A stepmother ty Ireland, | and on it depends the future of America. There die), May 98. | France. os at fall prion; 3 He i : 4 +A voice, wi r lesion brogue, Aye on a cowld ur hope fo e—the deme witir 4 d | fore.ce wee lately bale at Ul ee “4 . sts SL eruciy, corruption ana horror, (Cheers) That’ being | ome tr) (Great laughter.) That belug tue cinec drat | Tel ‘bas tetmaite Gy: aunealie. aormetaied Jad pene ee wrprae oh ot og th a: France f cane, my feelings changed: but J did oxpect that the | wonder at a great part of Ue abuse that has been thower’ | a iy ag ee aneeed Su aeons” bet o tale ance A laren if silnwance & tbe weight of vad an Great power of the North, their wonderful resonrees, | ed upon England, but still all that notwithstanding, noc, | that perty ts as veheme ee oe ee oe. ae ey coe Amcmunta for proms poy meat ‘would enable them to subdue the South, But the south | withstanding that the banished Irmb, notwithmtating bert nf the wer! em tics harment 10 HOF | place, aod the tinal Wrannections were at dietowut. ha pag tm pen ge ele hire wae SS ae ee aoe as they are, of Bmgiish- | thit the contract re of New York, notw: GWE that: | So te weld Rnewe. ME thio tahoe ber peal epbrioes, |) terre erence ned orbits of 6 prea af that the Fenpers . sof mem. (Hear, hear.) They said, “Wo will vindivate to | the ili advised peace party here are ali in favorot cou. | wih the true matinct of faction, tha demoerate perceiey | Oareneam firs ot maliaien between North and routh, 5 amp shortly aft i ¥ oe gereelves the right to govern ourselves: and we will Aight | tinuing this war, I say “No, and if England can | that the war, however injurious to the nation at imree m | Were aeamt very gemernily revives , po Bnew ng Sly. siitiee ood fe the Meath for our independence.” And they | move in such a way aato pul an nd to it, let Ber do wy | aimvlutely destractive to ihe popularity of the Retry |g (BFom the Lyndon Timew (city article presente © tenguifvent | © a (a thighs 4 tv Re : ave fought to the death. (Cheers. A vooe—'Slavery.”) | st once.” (Cheers) Wit do! ask thie meeting todo? which iccarryiog Mo, They ie art appareptiy heres | , The Cunfederate loan wan lil dort At Sppearsnee. The only apprebenaion entertained ie tat youn A009 bale hove been Clapwed of 66 Orm fhe have conquered the Nortn. (‘THear, hear” and cheers, | Do 1 ask this meeting to dicta riiementy No. in the establichment of a military despotien nyres | mt bat afier reguiag hours the an toin tney lrige the heavy wheat ay end erica ‘ven Writes hii myself if the time | Ali | wish you to say is what you t You mast teave | think that in a few monthe more dey will be to a omdy Ht appears Qa Mr Mason. te Comin There eon very Witle basimms tranearted in o Linseed, 660, 61. rape, pale, War, brown come hat we | the management of the whole matter to Verliament. 1 | tion to ove throw Mr Lineoin and his jorty. they de Hen etd een en ixeing (BAB) | Gave market io the week. Wee Parte core maybe wes "| ought to acknowledge the | don’t want you to tetl them what they are to do, They | por trouble theinselver Nuon the inerease of the debe be 4 conmequently ineraamed strength tine bene 4 1 and ihe rupply wanequal to the demand enrest — FF oe cheering, and cries of yg tid | are in a condition to know much better tham we what | cause they have made op thelr tninds ~ imparted fo the rumors lowly ‘4 rewited 6 garding the + fenton steasy and quoted at OOf. Be The market wan quiet Oday Prices cloned to come to the question of | stops should be taken I iwerely wish to tell them onr | They have the fate of Mr. Vallandighars betore Wilkin of Preneh meduntion From fedora! wourcen io Lom pea " ns tee, 404 a Ee eee ie . who are so anxivus | opinion avd leave them to doal with the matter for tiem. | sens, hts Ghiow ,tonamatean teat te don there wan yet, however, mo nym bom aleratum likens ee, eee = oom me nlent. The Northern states | sriver. 1am RO part Of this town; Tiorm no part of the | belwit oc & constitatim which they soc nore | am tome such an 0 eoenurage & be i rimmnoniary exten Yd 1505 wee oprecd cm the | Puivery yroterday 14Peasks, wo arrivais , Rat theres one thing they sta | Town Connci! here. weither am Tan iabubitask of rherbeld, wing. The wart of America immola's many victims, but | 82 CAF1Y ABM Feasonabe effirt for a : «toy aah te oon tos King = enn oie are art.) Now, Lkmow | bd as nme tative. (Cheers and comet uaiom seems likely to have few mariyrt, wet (rom | } oneming she. tay 1b know | « neative oe a, eaionen’e the want of perme ready fo impote, ut of pertoms realy to | thas you for what you have dene during the samt \wo Canrvend muutser ) lam Retther 40 1 desire to ve reoetor the enema of martyrdom THR SLOCKADS BUNWERY STILE AGITATED OW TIE years You have secu ihe rights of the oot oe [wg pong xg y+ y telling you wuniNeT. a how % manta (arm io do not compel obedience : | only use toy ye by am Engiicn- [Prom the Lieven Times. Mas 27 thelr integritg, thet of the forege Powers have rong T can, guide yours. You mumt gorde your own init. | (Richmond (April 3) correopenamnen of the Landen 0 Although little bas bene end & the iat fortnight | aise the ned Wingem. int voice wil! make Kant boat + . it am | om the subject of the HeterterT and other capture, the among theurt fr he triem b of « the 6e leet by the ybta you have. | would wish to be one of dard | | fouling an to the qommareial lenny tance © the eustine fearet the principire of Wheriy 0nd mainy. The test inge of my 60 ghee hen eometersind A one ence gat Tae may Bink me — no dont thet gentle Wormmorp, April 2, 1863. | hee were deg-ee -ebeided, (me the feanee 7 Cuwass wo treo woiea Trestiea of commnetes have been man dew mame Gry lain, note light, Team bene | The Southern ariny, compared with that f the North, iament it wik ageis, tbe SO EY OO ae NP aT RMON CE eT mR NT ne ASR TS i |

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