The New York Herald Newspaper, May 6, 1866, Page 13

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)

NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, MAY 6, 1866.—TRIPLE SHEET. u ; ‘Detng landed they proceeded to tho Shipping Companys? | 18 that Jei!, and it appears that another candidate on th | nation clause. France asks for much ims, | tralia, to bring to an end the prosont contract for the | is. cemeral one he was |: office, where they signed an agrestoent under which they | 84m occasion is now in jail. besides, certain special privileges which conceives | conveyance of the English mails, the hire A the totervst of Jmpany to wad. spponnd 1a at : P) will be veaaleas, wat x. enh apes to (oe aa PROPERTY OF FELONS. by sty ores position, aud there is good hope that Marlaption Company, Raving stutod tsar will.agness ‘would be 4 lower by the project. a - . current rate of wages, sal Such rules as 19 Attorney General’s bill for abolishing forfeiture 10 wi tain them, “ undert price considerably icas (ham | The Cuaron said he Was notin favor of opening masters may agree to. The Dex from Hamburg for treason and felony provides also for tho care and ad- | A large and important mocting of leading Quakers in | it How costs, £ the accommodation of railroad companies, and will bi ‘second company y tailors. A numl ministration of the property of convicts while under sen- | London and the suburbs has been held im thatcity, to | Chinese manufacturers of spurious gold are at work @ committee Would not take any action in the of Were in attendance in the docks on Satur- | tonce of dcath or penal servitude, by the appointment of } consider what the “ociety o! Friends ean do for the atho- | about Maldon, Australia, and some have boon detected |, JOMN H. Gauywrr raid it would be 9 great advan ‘THE ENGLISH REFORM BILL. day 0 rent the men beng. molested, 80 far a8 | acmipistrators or curators, to be ‘remunerated by a per- | lioration of the condition of the poor, The speakers | and punished: Tho component parts of the spurious | Carmen to widen the street, and ale to men doing ‘be goen their preseuco was unnocessary, centage on the property. ‘If the Court condemn the con- | were, it is said, all of opinion that the Quakers were be- | gow, which is an excellent iuntation, are gold, silver and | Wess on the street, He wait if the project was pla | whe German Question Snap tne cones aan eseerad | Means iced htt at ieee eentamean i | ied iageetansat siptea conic, cons tos | WPM ve a, or ne a oy a o VOrs: en elr rer fellow count H eu woes orth abot YRANOE SERIOUSLY ALARMED AT THE PROSPECT OF | "ay also pay the costs of his defence, may P pay his dobis, was especially maintained that the ladies of the society ed. Der ounce. This Substance ie mixed with genuine ae Cuarnatan, yee ae the coramiiiee would give the ++5. — Ne ay make satisfaction or compensation persons de- ought to do more than they do, and riwo speakers gold in such quantities as brings whole parcel up & operty owner ora interested a further A British Workingman on the] 6 er crrae rs PALUR AY SOORHING traaded by his criminal or fandalont act, although not J urged upon tiem wo flow the example of ative bene. | the value of about £2 por ounce. pom a iy of ing heard before reporting Wo Ue bane roved in apy court, and may make an allowance for the | volonco which is set wir sisters of the Roman © comuitiee then adjourned, Rights of His Class rir azis (Apri 16) correapondonco London Timea 4 | Support of his wife and relatives dependent on him. The | English churches eee ” er (llizing effect on the public mind, agi- | T@idue of the property is eventually to revert to the THE EAST Political News. é to produce a tranquilizing effect on the pt |) agit convict. tod felony is to Among the European armies of tho present day the . G . tated as it is by the prospect of an European war, was, I | Convict. A person convicted of treason or felony Ttalian Ninister declares that the Freuch army alone can ‘ovERNOR Hawiev's Srapy.e-Gencral Hawloy, Gew s have reason to believe, prepared at the Foreigh OMice, | Ye ‘henceforth incapable (unless he shall receive a free | 1,0 said to be equal, or superior, to that of Italy in point Indian Cotton and the Hopes of Mane | °F Connecticut, hag made the following appomte j y | pardon) of holding any military, naval, civil or ecclesias- wipe : ‘France Alarmed at the Prospect of aoe Neat dontinad forthe Moeiicur’ but | tical ofico or benefice, or other public employment, on | che military education OF the solvers chester. menty:— : alter two days’ deliberation was sent to the Constitution. | © ion forfeiting the same and any pension or super- The Spanish Ambassador at Paris ts carrying on ne- From the Ortental (London) Cireular, April 8.) Adjulant Genera! —Charios T. Stanton, Jr., of ” gotiations with the view of Spain joining the arrange- | Tndia, perhaps moro than any othor rt of the world, | ton, late lieutenant colonel ment entered into between F pe ate Heutonant colonel of the Twenty- wee, Belgium, Italy and | ig fitted to sbpply our markets with an abundant, good | cut inst Cor % annuation allowance payable by the public or out of any a War in Germany. fuel It has not produced the effect anticipated from it | public fund, Ho fa aiso to bo thenceforth incapable of sitting or Voting in either House of Parliament, or oxer- | Switzerland, relative to the eireulation of ‘coined money. cheap supply of cotton, Hitherto tho quantity of | | Quartermaster General —Captain Sullus G Haste —___-_-_*_—=__-__—"” Sie ath a ae ee ie the Pai cisimg any right of suilrage or other political franchise, This would necessitate the adoption by that State of @ | this important staple that has found its way into Livor- } ford, Inte assistant qu re mpeg i! veg They, indeed, soo often forget what thoy should re- currency of the same value as that adopted by the four | pool and our principal ports has disappointed the antiei- | formorly reginental quarierinaster of tue Twenty-seoomd F a a the Freneh |" pe Sori Maitre er era enon peng The Danubian Principalities. Powers just mentioned, pations of those best acquainted with its (immense resour- | Connecticut, & ‘ree Trade an reproached with this defect, Commerelal and financial SKETCH OF THA NEW HOSPODAR. Ha Dull Gort; Lamariok; and, ctr load ta Traian: 1 Pe fam crPai nnl cn alll th eo earetaceeadl wn ays Carre tees saigeae ar The toes men have a vivid and, T may add, a painful recollec Prince Charles, of Hohenzollorn-Sirmaringen, elected | MANY persous who liad been’ arrested under the suspen | Hes which bad and are still to bo surmounted, wo ry, Co ercial Navy. moninares Vivid rs Figg ompermrag ‘ "el ‘ ; How of the Hobeas Corpus act have, April 20, boon re. | Feagon to congratulato ourselves that so much bas already | Avds— mam Navy, f what passed in 1858. When,’ after the visit of Jo rule the principalities of Wallachla and Moldavia ax | sou ofthe Hateas Corpus act Lave, “April 20, boon re. | en ee ran at the liss of countrien |. ford lal Arese, the confidential friend of the Emperor, to ©t. | Prince (or Hospodar) of Roumania, in the room of the Cloud, which was the precursor to the famous Con: deposed Prince Couza, is second son of Prince Charles of Plombiires between his Majesty and M. de Cavour, } Antoine, the head of the bonee of Hohenzollern-Sigma- how that a very considerable | of Norwich, late major of th tity now imported | Wm. H. Maltory, of Bridg good belay’ tion that the governn This is wenerally regarded aaan indica- | contributing cotton will ‘nt are anxious as goon as possible | iercase bas taken place in the q oners who are only suspected, but | from our eastern eropire; and here we must in Justice | Connecticut eavalry otnajorof the Fins ‘4 the misgivings of the public were manifest; the govern- | ringen, Who renounced his rights in favor of the late | 9 release al! the jy ut i The Fenian Prisoners and @ Felon Property | ment aud the govorument press xavo formal and re. | King of Prussia in 1849, reociving tho prerogatives of a | Not conclusively proved to have beca connected with the | remark that this result’ is in a grout moasure, if not | dzecu‘ive Serctary—Charlew €, Fellowes, of Waritor@, 5 peated assurances such as are now given that there was | puisne prince of the royal house, and who, ag late as Fenian conspiracy. altogether, altsibata ble to the persistent exertions There remain to be appointed a commissary generale — Law in Ireland, ho cause for them, that the rumors of war were without | 1861 was, in his own person only, raised to'thd rank of | A report to the English War Ofico from Sir Robert | the Cotton Supply Association of Manchestor have | te our and on ald, foundation, and existed only in the imagination of alarm- | royal highness, The new ruler chosen for the princl- | Garrett, who commanded the yoluntecrs at Brighton, ex- | DUt forth to overcome the prejudices and hatural | Pa, . conseryatisin of the native mind, an to stimulate both New Posrmasrer ar Canvey, —Tho President on Friday 3 ists or originated-in a spirit of mischier. Yet at tho time | palities is the issue of the marriage of his father to | prossos great satisfaction with the appearance and steadi- x when thess assurances wore repeated tho government | Josephine-F'rederica Louise, daughter of the late Grand | ness of tho force. 4 Post Pescager roy rat A cultivation of th} sent to the Senate a number of appointments of pos was actively engaged in preparing for war. The | Duke Charles Louis Frederic of Baden, and is now It appears from an English Parliamentary return that | It has now’ been demonstrated satisfactorily that the | masters, among whom was I, H. Goldsmith, for Cam _ -<@omparative Merits of the Rifle and | Parisians, I repeat, have not forgotton this; and [| within a fow days of comp! ing his twenty-seventa 0f8,051 men who compl r limited service in landholders of India will as elsewhere give up the culty ten, N. J. Joldsmith forsneely @ peeeali doubt much whether the ambiguous aseurances of | year, having been born on April 20, 1829, The baptis- we netar tana. 4 a vod Go, M.. F,-- Ht Golem: wae: formovly & member of Bayonet in Battle. the, Constitutionnct, or even. moro formal doclara- | mal names ‘xiven to. his Hizhness’ wero Charles titel | $y w2ustel without, ¢roviows dioeatee, aed 228 after eae eer ot > | General Rearwey’s staff, and Inttorly has boou studying tons in tho Monieur, would dissina’e the appreleraions | Froderick Zephyrin Louis, He is at present in the Vrus- | Guccnarge. , by the dee of modern ggricultural, cleansing law in Mr. Seovel’s oftles, or inspire coniidence In tue maintenance by France of | sian military sorviee as an officer in the Second regt- absolute neutrality. With this inveterato incredulity | mont of dragoons. His Highness has three brothers— which makes the public believe exactly the contrary of | Princo Leopold (the heir to the family honors), Prine AFFAIRS IN THE EAST AND AUSTRALIA, | wha: their governnont tots them, the article, whether | Antoine and Prince Frederick; also a sister, the Princess appearing in the official or semi-oiliclal paper, would | Marte, ‘The uow prince is connected with’ the reigning &. & &e. equally fail in its object. It is not clear; 1t is not pre- | family of France, his aunt, the Princess Frederica-Wil- . ciso; and it affects adeal of self-denial which is not nara | heltaina, having inarried, in 1844, Joachita Napoleon, ral nor charactoristio, It reminds one of the humility of | Marquis'Pepoli, grandson of the Kimg of Naples, Joachim Ambroso de Lamola, of whom Gil Blas says, “he did not | Murat, An Irish paper says that one unexpected and eurious | 18s Machinery, = = means of transport Ui ng Whconaix Avromtiaats.—Governor Vairehilt, of Wie effect of the cattle disease in England has been to raise | We may confd’ntly look to’ our possessions in the ‘ 9 wt aca the valuo of gouts to an oxtraurdinary degree, These | Ultupaicly standing at the head of the list ag.a source of | Cosi, # In Washington to pustt Pe, Sepaminied ote hitherto despised animals are now exported in considera. | Supply radical postuaster for Foud di Lac, whieb office wiil seam. ble numbers from Ireland and have been, sold in several du all pees respects, hewerey, bow bape gw very | be vacated by resignation. ‘The appointment was lately lish counties at from four to five potinds each, the | Serious diss ages. Tho culture of the plant 14 carrior cing % : ordinary price being not over ten shilling mitive manner, and with implements danco with the Governor's views, but wae 'y withdrawn at the airgent request of Wie Picthabon ‘“‘Biackle« deuvered!. a: lence’ to’. ans andh: most antiquated character; the pro- | subsequ made in a The Reform Bill. seom to me like others of his class, who are generally ence ina village $-hoolroom in Scotland lately on De 4; frequontly no attempt what- | consin Johnson republicans, om the ground that the ag- GNIFICANT SPEECH OF A BRITISH WORKINGMAN | self-interested; be was utterly indilferent to gain, and The Rifle and Bayonet. mocraey. Allidivg to tho Reform Bull, ho observed that : i 18 or eee ae ° | pointes was not one of them, ON THE RIGHTS OF HIS CLASS. declared that he was a person who would be perfectly [From the London Times, April 12] England was now in one of the most ‘critical periods of | Pressure, cans Of transport a tn i Nanded: patna: ketene yeaa" tran ceiialaah’ a From the London Telegraph, April 10.} satistied with whatever I had the goodness to give him.’ | _ * ® * Twenty years ago it was still a current pro- | tis history, It wasa matter of the utmost seriousness A Oe arn eee meee bn, cia ee ‘The following speech, delivered by Mr. Crowther, a | How the self-denying Ambrose and Don Rayhact prac. | verb that tho true weapon of the British soldier was the | and conccrnmicut to every mau who had studied history | oriwn heenne i na he 0 te h tmportant loiter toa prominent Nebraskian, advising & orkingman, a few days sinco, at a reform meeting’ at | tised these magnanimous virtues is seen inthe sequel of | bayonet. Tho meaning, however, of the maxim was | and thought upon the subject at all; and what to him SMasd trout lcturice ooh ee nae alate of, 8 | vote, at th ning election, in favor of a Stato’ onus Jodmorden, ‘illustgates in a now light the “violence, | the story, vd this—that the soldier had then no other weapon to rely | was ma the deepest concernment was that anum- | TeOC0 M0Wn, IRINTIOF svt Miontion net merely of ty an au vo Dulery (tom: se' ink’ vadooslans 8 Gillen Brae ornes, drunkefiness and venality”’ of the artisan class It may be true that the Constitutionnel, or the Foreign | upon. He carried a musket, but he could not trust to | ber of people were pariertiy indifferent upon the subject, | Prevested deserving of the attention net merely of the | ration. bioesope ude sie: dead <0 gore: England. Ottice, cannot be expected to prevent ‘war always and | this instrument for sending a bullet to its mark. Asa | They 2,000 voters moro or loxs wouldn't mattor | ™¢roantile community but also of the government. } rado ts no pr ot for N ka to stand in awe @® ‘Mr, Crowther said:—If I were to consult my own | everywh try sgh Lignans King = niger pon be poe for propelling balls wie anything like accuracy } move. 3 not forthe moment or the year, but a Mr. Harlan expresses confidence that whe will slide casiigy lings I should have been sitting to-night asa listener, | aM agressor aud a conqueror, ts 10 have’ dec of direction or range the old firelock was atmost useless; | change only on one side was dangerous. England is at a in among the sisterhood of States, with Congress aldiag critical period in her history which, might likely be the | provosep CONNECTION WITH FPKANCE AND SPAIN beginning of the om: BY AN AFRICAN RAILEOAD, 4 Le Fravee remarks:—Some of the journals announced {Paris (March 28) correspondence of London Star.) Voto Porpnation of CoLonapo, —The aggregate votes that 3, Dizon will shortly Laks © prominent position in | Teannot quit the Algerian question without caling | {n Colorado werd :— Paris journalism. Ho is said to have purchased the | your attention to an article published in the dndepend se ak i J greater part of the shares in the Pres, the direction of Tare oe Uomuntina where med that Mt oe of oeing constituted a State which will, according to report, be confided to him, The: nand de Lesseps tu ne acai ss babi he hae Preve will thenceforth be devoted to the defence of the with France by verdment policy, under the chief editorship of M. oh will traverse Evypt, Tripoli aud Tunis, Cucheval-Clarigny, one of the editors of the Paivie. Ow: | 0: Tho sea passare which will connect this great ing to those changes, M. Ollivier is to retire from his | African line with the Spanish and ¥' railways, will presont post in connection with the Preste, and bas ale | be reduced to a six hours’ paseoge, and ecouomise eight ready applied to the Minister of the Interior for agthori- | Lours of sea voyage to Indian passengers. Majority against, .... zation to found a new journal, to be entitled Le Pup'e, — Tum Cuteago Couecronaur. tie political programme of which will be a frank adhesion Pn EN iy staal BPO pel We cabbies vee arpa jt Sees: “3 ee, 1] The Znatide Huse of the 34 of April reprodiices an | We vntorstand that « here are one hundred and eighty-nine peers of | article from the London Globe on the ev ip getting up testimonials as to bis fitness for the Troland—one duke, twelve marquises, sixty-eix earls (in- | taxing place.in Central Asia. After remarkt Collectorship. of Chi If we are not toutake cluding the King of Hanover as Earl ot Armagh), forty | Geucral’ Teherniaielt has never bad. twenty eee ian Ran tawe aauiae tes ater. akinne as viecounts and seventy barons, Oi the whole number | troops, as the Glib asertod, the Invalide asks the Eng: | radioale. If he supports the Preeident now, it must O® soventy-four have seats in the Houso of Lords by virtue | jist journal if it would have addressed the least reproach | @ late conversion. He in not a fit tan for the postion, of peorages of England, Great Britain or the United | to the British government in caso it had charged ite re | The Vresideut will do well to coufer the office upon some Kingdom, and one hundred and fifteen ate peers of Ire- | prosentative in the East Iudies to take coercive measures | republican who supports bis poley from principle, am@ land only. Eighteou of the peers of Ireland are creations | for protecting the honor of Fngland and resue i envoy | not from a desire to obtain office, ‘stead of standing hero to support the resolution which | that were he King of France he would not allow a can- | indeed, the reader may recollect, perhaps, the t |g just been read. But when it was represented to me | non shot tobe fired in Europo without bis permis- | given before a committes by a sereant of the ¢ at the co-operation of non-electors and electors was | sion; andthe King of Franc» of whom. he spoke was | who.eaid that if a man took no aim at all with bis weedful to make this truly a town’s meeting—and when | Louis XV., and Fleury his Minister. It is well to bear | musket the bullet might porli hit the target, but ¥ romombered that the chief promoters of this meeting | in mind that the resignation. affected by the Consti/u- | that {t could not possibly do so by force of adjust- wert persons already in possession of the elective fran- | timnel is not in accordance with the memorable declara- | ment and level. At that time, therofdre, scieatitle chise, and saw thom give their time and care to secure | tion of the Emperor in his speech from the throne be- | shooting was avowedly confined to one or two regi- us the boon which they enjoy—I felt that it would | fore the Italian war, (hat wherener ere was a jus caurto | ments inthe army, which were equipped with special eS: thankless return for their’ self-denying labor if we | defend there should the jag of’ France te found, It is the | weapons and specially instructed in the art of using Gradyally, however, aud in some degree from the uence of French example, we began to think that the her in every consistent manner. Jeft them to plead our cause alone, and that the working | first time people are told that France would calmly xe- class would richly deserve the charge of apathy or indif- | 8gn herself to evils which she miyht have prevented. ference which is sometimes brought against them if we | Nor do the public derive much confidence from tho erence between a iusketwer and a rifleman was a dis- refused our co-operation whon asked, except for some | announcement that, after all, France would, in the event | tinction which it was unwise to maintain, and that every reason, And then, s0 long as votes aro denied us, | of an European wat, “only uffer, like all ‘neutral Pow- | soldier who carried a musket might ax well have the best is only in meetings siich as these that we can make | ers, from its general effects, but would not be.exposed to | weapon procurable, and be taugit to turn it to the best ‘our voices heard in matters political; and, to my think- | the particular dangers reserved for those whose situation int. At first the old principle so far prevailed that fog, this is the time when. the. class of workers should | exposed them tobe drawn into {t,"" Tt would be more | wo contented ourselves with incroasing the strength of ‘apeak in language that gives a crrtain sind, Itis pro. | encouraging If the semi-odicial Journal explained to | the select regiments of the army, and making each of the to enfranchise a number of workingmen; and | them by what contrivance France would maintain nou- | two rifle corps equivalent to tour ordinary battalions. Trough they may fairly claim it as a right, wo are looked | trality, should the quarrel degenerate into war between | But in the end this distinction was dropped altogether, ‘on as supplianis for favor, and treated very much like | Prusslu and Austria. It is superfluous to observe that | and every soldier in the line became, in all but costume, ‘the way in which a purse proud man treats his poor and | BO man knows, or will venture to say what complications | a rideman, When tho bayonet was the soidier’s weapon dopendont neighbor, Ihave often noticed if a man is | Such a wat may not give riso to, or that any continental | jt was natural that he should hasten to employ it; In he is expected to be perfect, and whon some flaw or in- | goVernment, and France least of all, can assign limits to | other words, that he should got as quickly as possible to ity is found in his character it is regarded as | It, or determine beforehand what it will, or will not, do. | close quartors with the enemy, and decide the con- The Chicago Timer of ral 0, TL, Mann ts engaged on reason for allowing him to starve, because he has | It is not unreasonable to suppose that Italy would take | test by a charge. These tactics, too, were always ; #mce the union, arrested by some Indian prince, The Jnvalide then . Sean ‘not ben as points shoud be. And this is about the | advantage of the difltienlties of Austria to strike a blow | believed—at any rate, by aurgolves—to bo peculiarly | ‘Tie English House of Commons has ordered to be | compares Ynecomauct of the Engiish in Tndia to that of | EX™s Sxauon op rx lows Leamtsrons. —tt Is oat im in Contral Asia, and quotes Instane-s cited by | that Gavernor Stone will call an extra session of the ‘which the enemies of reform are at this time mani- | for Venctia; nor ds i ulterly impossiile that, acting clone, | suitable to our national qualities, and peculiarly Rstin en itis proposed to give us votes, all at | she may have the worst of it, and thot Austria would | conducive to success, [It is at close quarters that ‘once it is discovered that we are a drunken, thriftless | invade Lombardy. Now, Lonibardy is guaranteed to | battles are moat commonly decided, and whichever Italy by Franco, and docs anybody believe that in such | army was superior in that kind of practice was likely to printed a bill for the further amendment of the proce. | Rusy English writers of governor generals who did uot wish t | Towa Legislature in June, come into collision with their neichbors, aud who have | nue Next Govrnnon or M f etre z rbd sar ‘© and powers of the Divorce Court, The purpc now bill is to give the court power to make such an. lor \ipon husbands for thonthly or weekly payments to | found themselves obliged to do soby the f —The Hist of aspirants ord N olass it 8, id - ol Sitteas, pceaiinee:liviecmaeely ‘and Searetifan: circurratances France would continue to observe that | bo superior altogether. The troops who were best at the | wives as may taking all the circum. | stances, notwithstanding a total want of agitation p: for the republican nomination for Governor of Maine je and the country is warned in solemn tones of the | serene neutrality shadowed forth by the Constifu- | bayonet would probably have tho best of the day. It | stances into consideration. voked by the measures of the British authorities No | increasing. It now comprehonds the following namo: dang. tittle of | timnel? was not often, as experieveed oflicera said, that bayonets pol tical coeecrnn Sueke tat, their lecorpeinn is par. | _ Tho Constiutimnel reproaches alarmists with too easily | were actually crossed, but still the bayonet charge de- aly true of but too many individuals among us; | forgetting the “prudence and moderation of the sove- | cided the affair; for when it was made with obvious End if all the vices of the working clasa could be incar, | reign who has directed for the last fifteen years the | resolution by soldiers fitted for their work, the fated in some singlo person, he would almost realize the | destinieg of France.”” At fs certain that whoever forgets opposing line broke and turned before the shock of the : love to paint; but I} this ‘prudence and moderation,” M. Bismark assuredly | collision, These are the tactics now thought to bo super- one in Rusala, continues the Zavalide, has ever thought 2 4 phere, to bo s great national exhibition in Vienna, on | OP's conquest of Bokhara, and ai prosent lee than | Samuel ¥. Spring, of Portiand; Jolm J. Perry, of Ow : aha ever, na we have to resolv any questions of more | ford, W. A. P. Dillingharn, of Waterville, aod Generale A speech of Mr. Jonathan Pim, a Quaker, the liberal | gmportance than the extens: of our frontiors, the | Chamberlin, Shepley and ioward, mombor of Parliament for Dublin, announcing his inten- | jongth of which is already a rource of anxiety to ua. " tion to vote against the government Reform bill, has IntexvaL Hevevoe 1s Tue Rucvewn 0 hhideousness of monster they ig not the man. It is his confidence, real or |, 'n | seded by the new practice of musketry. The bayonet ts | caused great pain to the liberal electors of that city. eYLvaniA.—Josiah PL Hotrich, editor think wo may fairly complain about having Mine | these qualities that has hitherto enccuraged him in'his | no fonger the special weapon of the Hritish soldier. Ho | They are indignant that thoir opinious ahould have ben PE hho a iheuasna Comae ick Scouse tes Clee Glass. It is ad enough for workingmen to be criticised | Carvcr of aggression and still allows him (o trouble with | now carries. rilte which will deal death at « thousand 2 TL gyetcorey a aga ted by one whom they made [From the Melbourne Argus, Fob, 23} of Tatereal Revesiuntn'the: Wiseebits ‘dietties ot! Peleas and lectured at (ag they have been of late by certain | impunity the peace of Burupe. : yards, and the fact is carcfully impressed upon his 4 In Parliament on the Zlat inst, the Troasurar mado his : - and certain polficians), without beng mis- mind. It is natural, therefore, to suppose that he will at u t fi ~ . cl See ee behocetuct, They tall urayar |?” 5 gate yaa mg His famous ritle is of ao use to bim if ho is to Tu Parig, April 15, boforo maas at the Tuileries, the | financial staomont, Ho remarked that alttiongh acon. | %!vanis, in place of Mr. BT. Foster, resigned ceremopy of christening the youngest child of the late | siderable deficiency on the revonue for the your A Netiosat Convention —The Chiengo Republican @ Duke de Morny was colobrated, in presence of the Empe- | ticipated ho wns gino say there was a sual balanen to | May 1 has the following:--A Wanbingion special sayin which are drawn from our conduct. They tell us that 3 ror, Empress and court. The little girl is about two years 4 st dahalenen m8 Two wish to gota vole we must show ourselves worthy [¥s ym. Mike tho old snusket and ‘neglect it for the bayo- | OM and was baptised atthe time of herbirth.. Theehitd | CAtyt0 1400. There was a nes detconey, of fay | “It is rumored that the President advorntes calling ® Of it by acting the part of good citizeny and oh : held over tismal font which was used al the | realized. That deficiency was tainly in the department | Natiooal Constituional Convention to selile the wae an laws, Wall) Ste) stiles advice 79 howover. wo must ask whether a change of ta6- | christening of the Kinz of Kome. The ceremony was | of customs, excise und territorial revenue. Ministers did | now pemdit aoe thiaee many ¥7 ‘ uayting long range shooting for bayonet charges, | strictly private, in accordance with an expressed wish Of | not intend to unite supply and appropriation in. one Dar rs neoessary meident of the improvement of | tho young widowed duchess, bill. Nor-would tho Taritl bil! contain the retrospective Arvournanst of Ivtaaat Revewue Cou.ecton von cmp —- > 4 are seen mili authorities that a dec! eollsian. fin ‘shock. Not only is Colonel MeMurdo's | bus t was intimated by Sir Charles Rus 5 | del tes, Sir Charles appealed to the experience of the 2 though ea uaaeia bad not | Amorcans have a natural aptitude for the art—did not Firty Lyptass Disticle-General W Ulam Grose Las beam appointed Collector of Internal Revenue for the Fifth Gia trict of Indiana, mice &. W. Harlin, Boq., resignod. Tux Caicado Contecronmmr,—The Chicago correapon@ ont of tho Cincinnat! Gazette enyer~The Intest rumer on, i forin annens, “The Minister at Floronce has addroesed 9 clause, which waa bo Jopger, pC eBATT, Obj Kmny on the state of the army, {been Giken to the preamble of the bill, bit ui which oo. that there are at present under arma | was the eat y 14,008 and 190,325 privates, or 204,229 in all, | Another objection might bo. urged, and it was one which. The reserve comprises 1,754 officers and 148,969 privates, ent could notremove, It was intended to forming in all 150.414 mon. Grand total, '354,743 men. ‘Of these it is stated in the report that 240,000 men might na was employed in the House o} wction of tho gold export duty in Tho honorable member went at length | ou+ #umm France to be able to contend with 6 mobilized ou the shortest notice, Moreover, 30,000 | the origin of this duly uvd argued that It could not | Bi¥es the Collectorsbiy of thin port to General 0. 8 Menm, .swor nations, expecially England. M. Emile Poroire | decide batties, but, on the no ect Me to ae having been called out for drill, these would be fit for | be regarded either as a royalty or as @ rent, but | late of the Thirty-ninth Ilinol»—Yateo' p 1 4 serne, | having expressed his dissent, 1. Thiers observed that no | Ary Carnage Wikiione Pa gpderen Seach othar | sevice about the end of May, The roport diso speaks | purely as a customs duty He quoted a minute hy sir Tax Powwertia. Camvamn Beous 1 Kannan the highly of the present state of efficiency of the Italian | Charles Trevelyan, the Finance Miniator of India, to army. show that if the duty were nena a, gain arining ijt Mirza Hues han, Pers water from the demand for gold for India would be enormous. Consoreind Ne, oper ts of payne tn He concluded by reintroducing the tariff of last seuwon, prownt to bis’ Majesty the decoration of the Vischane. | 40d justifying the action of the government in ao doing, Seltanad, gorwoouely set in diamonds, and with the blue | at the same time expressing a hope that the diaputes ve collar of tho Order. “Thiv de: oration bax never been given | eee the two houses would now end. by the Shah to any foreign sovereign except the late UM next day, at the im- Sultan Abdul Medjid, and is, on the present oc 1, in. Jation having Gret been tended as a tribute of special allty towards Abdul. vie dutane Azizas Caliph of the Sunnite “Faithful.” In return, the Sultan intends to wend thy h the Osinanié, set with ial richnoes in brilliants, and to raise Hairoullal . the Turkish Minister at the Persian Court, to the | Tea id. por pound < ove ute admiration of Et \ one could possibly reply to his argument. SEE ee on le wines te aan’ s Balory whe or “Porcire said Guat, on the contgary, the anewer was | {Tom long distances till both sides were fo ‘shine bright when the deeds of Vercy and Howard are | exceedingly easy, for M. Thiers was making the great | Weakened ns to bo unequal to the shock of Gli forgalen. But, lo and vehold! after we have done | mistake of taking the value of the exports in place of | Porscnal confiict, md so the battle was drawn, though the very by they advised us to do, these men turn | their woight. Tho value was quite a secondary each army had paid the price of a victory. No serious ‘Found and tell the country that we do not care to have a | gidoration whore freight was concerned. France be affair, it is said, was decided by fine shooting, and wo Voto, because we are not enthusiastic enough. If we | more freight in exports than England, since he had | #1 led to the conclusion that the old fashioned tactics wish to be received within the palo of the constitution | corn, flour and wine, which England d of the ba would have been more effectual than the fa any other capacity than that of taxpayers, we must | What this latter country lind was factured goods, | NeW science. Colonel McMurdo, indeod, ts not unpro- ‘have no rows, no riots, no threatening, such as forced | which took up but comparatively litte room, and ‘coal, | pared to revert at once to the old system of forming the last Reform bill into law; and then, because we tuke | Hut this last was not. mer handise, properly ‘so called, | Memen into select corpa. He does not pretend to de t, they point to our peaceable attitude as @ | and its frolght was from. fifteon to twonty francs the tom, | Preciate arms of long range and extraordinry procis on that we are content with our present exclusion. | ag in Franee, in skilled hande, but these arms and this practive may be ferity there is no peas some men. To me this M. Berryer said that he considered it indecorous for left, he think: ‘The great body of ol © time since nominated Charles Sumner for President and Thaddeus #levens fap Vice Prosidont, retains that Ueket at the heat of i> columns, and vigorously prosecute tho Vreaidential whieh rot 1. Mreriva ty Mikoom: A moating of the radicals of Missouri was recently beld@"the‘codrt house in Jegerson City, The meeting way adgren®4 by Gowers nor Viotcher, Attorney Gor man aud Hon. BL King. Th adopted from and after yesterday, unde ew Taser Opium, 106 per pound. thorizing the tollowing t | | evidences a spirit of determined opposition t reform ing a subvention from the State, as M. riny, the to bo rated, will | E r 4 100 34. por ewe, pn of Cor ee controversy with or. And first of all, with reference to the bill | prroce aid tor the Tron Atlantic packets, to atteck the little need of such n discipline.’ The | rank of Ambnasador. Dried fruits, 1d : action of Congress In its controversy w which has been aiready introduced into the House of | protection accorded to others. x real conflict will still bo ed at close quarters—af not | The Inbabitauts of Seutari (Asia) have subscribed Export duty on ¢ per ounce troy until stat | 2ent Commons by Mr. Gladstone, though it is admittedly but M. Rouher, Minister of State, observed that if the | by hand-to-hand giebting, at any rate by volleys delivered | 100,000). towards the foundation of a college for the | pecomber, 186%, 64. per ovnes troy from and after that Movwren To Maxioo.—The Newburyport (Mae) Merate the first instalment of reform, the resolution which has | Tyans-Atlantic packets did not exist, the merchant ship- | ®t Such short ranges as to call for no extraordinary skill vurb, in which a good secular education aball beviven, | gate to sist Pceember, 1 mn and after the 31st | ways exGovernor Androw is talked of for Micister tw ‘been moved and seconded, and which I have to third, | ping of France would be the first to ask for them. —_—— ether with tnatruction in the English and French | Pocermber, 167, the abd determin al affirms it to be ‘‘a wise and desirable measure of reform ;' M. de Forcade la Roquette, Vice President of the | The Prince Von Teck, Quoen Victoria's aves. They have petitioned the Porte for the Preserved fruits e «of all kinds (not wice. “wise,’’ because it is moderate and “desirable,” because | Council of State, replied to M. Thiers, maintalning that New Keiative. | nece “ary authorization including cocoa muta), butter, eb candies, bacon, The Philadelphia Inquirer (republican), alluding t the 4t lessens the magnitude of a grievous wrong. The op- | the present bill was the patural consequence of tree | His Highnesa the Prince Von Teck, whose approaching | 4 Constantinople letter, date? on the 11th of April, | lard, wams, stare, hoap. conveetionery, bieaita, com: | paport of the Heconstruction Commitier, and asswmbng re og aoa: "eteuprencaee, = ie” gt tit trade, and that if the, prorilacis Sow Proposed were not to the Princess Poy’ 8 oe | saye:—Uad news. comes Trom Trebizond. A series of | Gtx, awectuneata, suecader, Jams, macaroni, vermicelit t houses of: Chaipneen” tue oui ‘com sive measure,”’ as they | adopted, others, founded on a sunilar principle, must be on of bis Roy: 4 diy phrase it; but to me thero seems some wisdom | devised. mberg (uncle of | the Legislatures of the States sae fh the icy pursued. If it-had included the redistribu- ¥ —_—— lian of Wartembe: i ci ; : : ml Wart xielatnre le (np newton now, Come Ghrestanod’ would eabeotatingly have woted ageins. ity bald graedlp icy agate ngch Sein, Grantors of puede, nonaay nents AN: the: nea and, joincd with the conservatives, would have ensured | BRITISH BEMONSTRANCE IN THE CASK OF TURBARE | 10) onerat of eavalry in th | Maryland, Naot the defeat of the bill; but, by keeping that back till the (rere haba pl April 21.) vier, and, proprietor of tue of | A promptly, while Delaware em@ inciple of the measure o ed, they secure a lobe, April 2 us! ns co Fi ins Lon cw . wr ¢ iIconsidoration mr commultse, atrl as’ each claaso tg | _ The last American mail brings news of tie Supreme | Ate: suders who's about to bey sis the Frisco | ers apaciy. the, wiishe of ihe great Person |" fioorn 1s sé hy 9h -an dou Wika se een. SNe taken separately they have a better chance of success | Court of the United States having, on the Oth just, ad- | Sory was born on August 27, 1957, and is consequently | se from ite ald Armenian chanuel, Window salen, La per pair. anne Logistawure is in feation aud wih prompity when its enomies are met in detail than when the pha- | Journed until the first Monday in December noxt, with- | in 1)5 twenty-ninth year, His highness haa two sisters, . Fiate of gold, 8 per ounce, troy. fanx of opposition is united by petsonal interest. If the | Out having pronounced judgment in the long pending Princess Claudine, one year hie sen 4 the nal committee recently asembled in the Plate of Filer, 1¢ por ounce, truy, {illiterate farmer or workman of 1832 was educated | appeal caso of the British bark Springbok, which was “ 0 Hoheusteiy, who was married at | 2" . Eeypt, to propose to the Sd. per bushel. Minsoem Tear Oar Uscosprreer How enough to vote, then certainly the giving of votes | finally argued and closed in thie beginuing of last Janu- Paul, Baron’ von Hugel, « retired ations revidtug I Egypt to opie phn gor 4 4. per badvel. Jobn Hogan, one of the Mimaurl Conere ae orted for reductog of twelve wow president, #0 a much mor) enlightoned class in’ 1866 1 | Uary. Such delay almov amounts toa denial of justice but a bare act of jJustice—to bo desired, | A* some of our readers may remember, the above ves- ~ - sel, with her cargo worth upwards of 266,000 sterling, | {" Thowover, becauso the reparition of an act of wrong. mares ie S08 00D ONE, | aiyied rineriy the eldest son and Jexander of Wurterbery were enstein, but by fm ‘of cavalry. er of the Duke Count and Countess of Holi pery and all articles mate up from fabries of ville od with other materials, bs. per cable foot voude the package, or f in on Tuewtay night that he had 0 of the Juiger of the Univet Mata in a npeceh at Me. 1 amed by 6 olected, with the advocate Diaman- any package lees The doings at Totnes, Gi Yarmouth and Nottingham | Wa’, while on a voyage fi a to “ royal decree, dated December 1, 1463, they were raised In Sew South Wales the new ministry, February 22, 1c tout Supreme Court that the Miseourl preachers’ and law. 4o not give one any dignified notions respecting the ‘gw Providence, seized by the United states | to the dignity of prince and princess, with the title of 6 of coalition. This is not a new feature, although | Apparel aud nlops, and all articloe made ap wholly OF | yore toxt oath law was unconstitutional @haracters of some of those ‘free and independents. "* PO ee oe eaten. Not nuiy | Highness, The myal faintly of Wurtemberg are, ps in this Iuatance it is more strongly marked. Mr. | in part from fabrics Of Wgol, cotton, linen, OF mixed ma. | 7° M" rr Whna man sells nimnseif co both vides for £100 to each bepartment at Washington. Not only | course, of to Lutheran faith. Martin ie a protectionist, and in favor of State mid to re | eerily (except corn of Wool bags); booteand ahors, ho Misonimemat Sonn A. Lowa vo hon ree arty, and ten betrays the friends he has ned for, his | the vessel, but hor cargo, consisting almost entitely of ee ‘ie the Colowial der anda | gicey aid gloves, hats, cap aml bounety (butramned), | Concninn—T see of Perry county, Nitinaia, ‘are nol likly to afer much through any) connec. | Sty goods, was suinmarily condemned, along with six Miscellancous Foreign Item aid abolitiontat, — Twe go there was be- | fy hers id foathorware, 64 por do ‘ ‘ aka podetomyaet 4 he may have with a working man who pays £3 les | Other English morchant veasola and thetr cargoes, 28 | the importationa of merchandise from France into them bliter Bee! hostility, Now they have Watenes, jewels wiry ‘of ali kind notes. | enemy: be ~ 8 na gent, Of course you cannot help those; there always | Prize of war, by the District Prize Conrt of Now York, | Groat Britain, in 1905, wore of unparalleled magnitude, k the r personal differences, and decided not to deal | guros of silk, of of ‘mixed matorials of which the greatee | Peeoiutions the following Hhare been sich men and always will be so lyng as a svat 4g its single sitting on the Ist of August, 1863. Although.) their computed real value having amounted to upwards | wi) Stato ald aaa government question, or materially. | part je wilk, musical instruments, earrioges, glass and | Resolved. Tat baving fell faith and cowfitence im the 4n Parliament is an object of ambition; if Feb men are | the owners of the —— and her cargo forthwith "| of 311/ millions sterling. Compared with the aggrogat with the tari until the colonial finances are | gianwware, chinaware and porcelain, fury tur, toys and | honewty, interriiy ant alwlty Ling hed feow mean enough to bribe, willing 1 pay, and electors | eotered an appeal to the Supreme Court of the United | imports in the preovding year, aD increwe 's #hown of | in a more flourishing condition. {rocry, tosdcowerd. breshwnre ani wicherware, pete Aaa pone A ‘willing to vote for money, ho a:t of Parliament can put | States, ship aud cargo were. pendente lite, — public | tore than £6,000,000, the greater part being due to ad- | 4 man named Bray, of Molong, Australia, went about | enware, t otherwise ¢ ver Sorruption down; but by’ an extonsion of the franchise | *¥ciiom at Hew SOEs Soe, tomereae Casts cost vates ditional supplies of wheat and flour, silk and silk | twenty miles in the ‘bush some time ago. and in the | eept oily t joce, Kako, AFFOWTOOt, 4, the course of a few days obtained one hundred and fifty gal- | and ginger), woollen blankets and rags, 10 yer « ‘wo may 0 multiply the number of voters that this co The dexpoiled owners, afver innamerable delays on the | jagufactured, provisions of various sorts, at, and | jony of wild honey from the trunks of trees. The fla | valorem. gupt few will not have tue powor to turn tho scalo | part of the American law oflicery, in Sessions 1864 and | Ton, years ago the total value of French pro ‘as they can do now; and when that day comes | 1965, suscceded in getting the appeal heard by the Su- | iannfactures received by Eogiand was little more than | yor of the honey i A by dome te Couneil haa pledged iteelf not to consiter inion party im Seer sill Goasoy and ‘men will be chosen for vir in. | Dreme ~ pat Sa a ested: of, thle eer. The | 29,000,000; 20 that in tho last dacado the) angmentation that» aliens | pe enin pee om rot fam inom, to te claimed, mie ies ence, not their purso; constituencies sen Ms bas exceeded cent. nomber of shops me torial nae) b ed up with supply, wt eral to aerept the hemi nat the Sona ee fot reneencat inéae whtier rts or poor, | eek, aud tho. British claimants expected that French nationality which entered the ports ot tho United | . Te Rey. W. B. Clarke, the goologirt, hae publidhed | pi tase scr wll be rememad 0%. the eomsite lon bc: -ritina wing , as well ag others which I right the court rose it would pronounce its jadgment tn the Kingdom in 1866 was 3,905, with an admeasurement of | 87 ta rend | iat oF Milalet will Office, The Ceuucs, how Sy alta hth wi | it rv” Thny_ rn, hanes, row dros 0 | SG". Gutanan nr oes in| fot oe Cmte, tai wel De rp rier ct | Er. anual Wa setae nano = He ay tay pajadiions, Dax | case has been postponed sine dis. This procedure seems | 204 ‘ev ae! ee aolien burthen. The value of Bld | in this revort, incidentally states it as his opinion thai | doabt, will pass the Amambly in the meanwhile matical papers of Detre oT Of the Reconstruct: to the importers of roft u ” Government are now repay Decarse I bellevo it will tend most powerfully to consol! | most unjust towards parties who have had their property decrease ag against 1864 of £027,123. the red bapa” Marks occasionally found on the rocks | ots the amounts of duty collected from them under.) 7O“™ ™ Gate our nationat influence and strength. Whether tho | Sized on mere suapicion and condiseated for upwards of ar 160 the ember of public tunatie | 270,40 use of by the aboriginal natives as a charm | fits 7” tie Tecome law lant reer. Tnase | 0° enythin or * Ls > toe | cenet evil apirtie ours om ; + also | an unsetiofactory performance,” and the Post says —"@ \working class possess the franchiso or not they are the | three year The unfortunate claimante are precluded | | A! 18, Sot, way 67, of which one belonged to the Sian sine of te tat ine ry gmc | fm traf age Netconf nance | Sot, to, apartments sed to io bumpin There | 0% "botnet trans there mas at omy um, | wd, ruin the ah eprom cea fave made England tho hive of commerce, and by there | of condemuation prononunced by Judge Betts in the | were also 42 kept by privaie pa aes copper of New South Wales production that has ever | gon 140, aud to collect the bouds given In otticr cases for by among 60 departm: @ndurance have extorted the aduniration and envy’ of the | {fer‘or cvurt bas pot yet Leen dednltviely eootrmed by | Tenmen wire tithe ti Thee conetacily augmented | bern in that City atone me.” Over ninety Une of this | he’ uncollected moiety 9 tees dating ue od view of Che moderation thea o& on" arom, leetame —Stepe have ng to Jouxnon Coen oe Mew Soe TS the peeteenenes ee ee eee beer since 1835, The total increase from that year to | Yaluai: were received there within @ few works | 95,684 There in also a sum of £63,790 of unoollerted lakes 10 extahteds © Sehasen Union Geb competed tana bye at a Hence, a th The Fenians. the end of 100 wae 19,100, of am average, of rho each pe & Oe Poot Copper Mining Company, and ne the same articles, which they will be required peg pyortere of the President's poltey in Ind rear. is result wou! , i entation ‘n. " Bom fora share in the government. And itbrhoores woe oy Sith@mae Tero epreed equally over the ‘weaty cx Sears of the | | The Fried of Undiay peaking. of the ‘wenknen of te pe inuali ing armas temperate! Reta reatmont of prisoners in Cork Wes (he receran etiow tees teers ween v Oh Ss pginement } Saye:—This much seems + Proposed Widening of West Street. coon Peme on rae Coxcmmmonal Pas com Sareea usnemn tarsi 5 sense of iajastics pan} and Wwoterford jaa, pote ae te Habeas Chepes eo b pry eveyone wg el 4 on Cech mak etiaas tor man, = Cpe ee or THE aspemeante' wruxer commrrrer | pen wermecnow. ~All the [Richmond papers denownee the Sete nw coer ne ae fr | Seer a 9M ead | he grrnnen sat fe aah er a eal ce | bucana'To be enust eNO? OTN | reverie ea ear a ato ge wot Comer will own it oF not, we (the Gnentranch. | Mr. Maguire. The governor of Cork jail tates, in an- | The Paris journals continue to publish articiee on the | Tht? ‘ime Mi mae & muccesnen OF oo besos, un , Gabente of Wie Beard of Aitermce | “8 Sate ONS etnays 1 are as truly Englishmen as they are, and havea | *wer to the inquiries demanded of him, that the profes | crisis in Germany, but almost in every case of s com. those o' pee port duties and Bhootan, wit The Committee ow the ‘axe in the county as doar to us as theirs, Their for. | Sonal advisers of these prisoners are allowed wo have | piotely lative character, since no wow facts have | ‘¥!9 one day our Eastern empire. met yesterday, Aldermen Reilly and Melirien were Obreeery. Guecs may lio in broad acres and splendid mansions, ours | Private interviews with them, without the presence of Some to light, In the recent Journals received from Po and | prosent, Alderman Koilly acted as chairman WRATH OF BORGO, THE FRENCH CONJOREA. Sonwiet ithe wealth of love that centres round the home | @%Y prison officer, at any ransonable hour, and they a6 | the Gazdte ds France calle attention to a stra Singapore there are loud complaints raised by Britta Cue od the petition presented Part 1s ‘eunae ' wo call our own, and is a treasure aa preciously prized aa allowed to write to their friends whenever they like, and maly in the of the Paris pres, Wh mercLante !m thove porta, at the growing encroachments The Clerk of the Committee re ’ (Paris ( Apri correspendence Ove @hoirs; the revolution that robs them of wealth will | % receive books from them. They bave access to the the front page of tbe papers is filled with rumors of im. | Of the Dateb on the tsland of Sumatra, to the Board of Altermen for the widening of Wet | the jourmals of the Hague sonounes the death in thes ring inisory to our own hearth, and so is dreaded by us | (eercing en pat UL padaecTledhead yb sana ky ding war, theit ganeral columna are occupied with «| Among the principal eventa of the fionth tn Aus | street, by the extention of the bulkheads slong the | eiey of the cnlebrated compare Basen, who hat toon for dae much a by them; and having given the nation (he? | wilh “each other Mis miscomeg beers are ‘oat Peavy debate on the French navy. tralia i the death of Me. Kaines, at one time chief secre: | river about fifty-five font, which would make the street | goone tine hrving tn retirement there, having been dvvem Het? cod att ‘iefece auunerons conidence to men | welt cella, whidh are Aig arg, and wall armed, | It uneried in pole circles in Parie that M. Druyn | {277 gl awe Palitical career han exercised 68 Wapor: | iy cae handed and fifleen fost wide natead of wixty | in qinguat fran the praction of hie prevention In Para ail hey occupy seperate aye a circular respecting Moldo- ¥ g o breathe the eatno free English air, and speak the | 2h, occupy acherate, cella but om the 24th, of | oe rehiad eGalre which is calculsted to create a scnsa. | Advices from&, Louis, Senegal, to the 28th of March, | fet 2 consequence of (he great ignorance tinplayed by @e , So ce eee can tas tone on tn crite to add one more | of those prisoners having i to seventy: | tion. speaking of (be progress of the Petts 2h Of Mare | Toe Caammmay then wid that the Committing wore reety | Cotends im persisting to confoued him with Busey they * ae eee Tsar own? wr, | feven, it was necemaary three should Tt je again sought to introduce Russian arme into | ‘at by treatin concluded between Colonel Pinet- | to hear any objections that might be fered te the pro | tralian Genera! hat similitede, asve in asm,” B® wae wont to may, Conn exint between a teen whew fr sag : oop ’ ‘we love, and to this country we call our own? Mr. | TO‘ Nt rine coli, The return from Waterford states Servin and Montenegro, No less than forty thousand | 14? governor of the colony, and the chiefa of the Jeet, but that they would not go rite the eat @ a have never failed and one winuse tri ke have never | pam very of hu Spee, oe the copel cheers during the | that on ihe 17th of March there wore only Sheen of muskets have been forwarded, we are told, to femiin to | Kia Nunet and Rio Ponvo, tha cou ee ¢ the Fifth avenue it risoners in that jal. At first no one was allowed to soe \ thove atreama bave been placed under the sovereignty of | proposed extension f ; . <4mnid applause long continued. them, hat the slitor of vo of thera avin” made an Deremuggled into the Turkle provinons Hunan agenle | Yrance. A foftbed pont has heen etauisbed at Debonue | "yr G. Mauer eid that he hued wares on the pat. | fuceemfOll Pewee mas porn et Tore is, 1100 88 4 ee ——— application to the government on the 14th of March for | {nthe Danubian states, These facta, together with tho entre of prodection for these districts, near which | 4° i+ ue widenive of Went street of permone whom he | Wrestame on IAs, be was pent 10 Trade Strikes in Engiand. an order of admission, orders were issued that their dangerous condition of the Dea principatitien, | & Seamer will cruise during the continuation of com oy He 4: wor think that | It wae here ther re THE BIGHT NOUR’ WORK CLAIM. advisers and also theit friends should be allowed to visit | fender the aspect of affairs reey in Burope extremely | mercial transsetions knew t bo oppmed to it He en this ts wan hate & a Peso London Lang Png we them. ong Ch geod Ci Ltn are not | critical. be Englich Admiralty in shout to bare the whole of | the owners of property, Gt least © majority of therm, pony & meeting of factory bands at ton wee! ey | com to work, are allowed wear the Japanese coasts and rivers accurately surveyed. oot the improvement He aeid that if the atk, corkans Sane plea ade weeny soar, torbave such bediig of Weir own ot thay wish, and waaay oben yy} tie The total quantity of gold ex, ee Siiiibe pathy pha ter tony -vgpererettthrotte ia tay Na Dery ore, aA house’ play, | secre thar own fond, tree, Unis 2 oy, fom sate fomequeeen Ge tera Ta are evchammest cabes- | Australia for Une estony’ stacs the beginning of the your | [levine property hohgers ore beyoud & and grinders at Ashton have made a move in this direc | instanc@ abused by the secretion of tobacco sod whiten ane A fe 4 p-——-a oan naa are ie ee Sele hemes 1.208 ovtions, i, ball ring tha, soy ae te resalt from it would 4 ti Mca gresan CAO ete ds phe iin Ta o Without ex. | Zealand, while the total exports during the correspond. The Cusinmas stated that the Common Counc hed so | im hin presence The twenty-four ‘week from their presont wages siatont with their aafe-keeping has been shown | OPeans ®ay that all the o goon shillings, ref have most chosen Gs. ‘al red y ¢ W OTRO Charters Ww any rallrost oompeny The when @ panic in cotton is ru! many of Wheit | everything they could desire but their freedom. They ean the | ing period of bm ag! dedy the amount reeh pped see re bas taken that power from the Common from New Were 151,892 ounces Some of workings have rreentiy been opened at Moont Buller | Council A Gert teas who stated that be wae s lemen of 7 entirely to the eens of i Wew, street said that the fret to have the erent oun of tom A Oe Uy . ‘been widered, oe os = ee ae, x, Hasmtter, iy ed “ Ms ne ’ 1a stor a bas toads io Adige wad Srtuns, hua | Loguaiard vo vske te Fuirved it ihe Wworvvew’ at | ieee ae orton Cor Unait tmediate Nbr gt: a ee arent | racnfalls has swept away nearly the whole'of the works | maixeus, preserved meats and tsi, id. per pound Gat 6 wilt pee in yi railroad between that town and Ere age of that reputed we ght. ments on ite chance zerouin, destroying ina few days the result of sevoral . or ton. The Ma asm months labor aud au expenditure of many millions of J per gailon aaah @ postres, Thit great enterpris: ia thas again thrown Varnish, 28. per gallon beg oF back jndefinitely, aud @nother important start given ta | Salted prov. sions, including fish not otherwise enume. | Statey b « for their rival route between Pou and | rated au! mot caught from vessels owned tm tue colouy, ’ O nat with s military fT, dng ao the Rdiaburg nape for exercise has ly been exteuded to three or staiot heh radon Eatrtay even four hours, cagrente lgwed push morning cad wero it to py es ‘One of a foe ihe Guasave Wuraker tallore for magyees recommended, of turnkey

Other pages from this issue: