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— rmitan agitation that tends to subvert tho ] y) Peaplished political system.” It is doubitul, aobelthe h Standing, ‘whether all these measures will have the de- ! + y sired effect of frightening away the “‘partienlaints” or adherents of Hanoverian in dence, from the polls eer aud leaving the field open to the partisans of Prussia; vi on the contrary, they only seem to increase the exas- d Ext parniion of the people, ont ie aocnnes Gan ose ver are to trust) ie uni opposi royalis' North German Progress and Extreme | a mis tae eam wi oP on eens t. : such force that unless the lot boxes are subjected to oj culties of Austria. the same sort of manipulation which is ascribed to Financial Diflicultie Louis Napo! the oeman party will be beaten hollow in almost every district, anviele: ‘The collapse of the insurrection in Crete comes very ‘mal d propos for the iticlans, who are busy reviving the Eastern question. deceived The Union of the Peoples of Eng- | }y tie turtun eave’ so often been deceived attach implicit faith to their reports; but this timo it jand and Ireland Ratified really looks as if they had told the truth, and, to uso the words of a French statesman, ‘‘order again reigued” in at Manchester. the blood-stained isle of Minos. Bismarck's organ, the North German Gasetle, which has patronized the revolt 11 along gad depreciated the efforts of the Turkish gov- Rt a 4 he: John Bright’s Opinion of the Annexation of waral crashing i, will that (Beara situa Ireland to the United States. recom Enege wepeawornetan relay | 18 204 ibe how can the Christian Powers continue to look on ile their coreligionists are being massacred hordes of Asiatic barbarians ?”” ‘ @he Bank Zing) \—Ets Oharter Prossia is evidently determined not to let the matter a of seat and the effervescence of the Christian races inhabit- and Influence. ing the Ottoman empire has risen to such @ pitch that it i) little encour ment to about a ke ke ae Mate‘of things iat will force the. Westora, Powers to pane themselves with the Oriental question, however — they oneee —— to hevage Modder) more Tho malls of the China reached this city from Boston | Siivs opportunity, |The leageege ot ee ene aan yesterday morning, bringing our special correspondence itive that large masses of troopa are slowly collect- fad files, dated to the 24 of Fobruary, ombracing inter. oe raperarpee teaprey beer af cen peti ena ‘esting details of our cable despatobos. against Koonin or against ‘turkey. ‘Asgor Prussia, it is ‘The International Commission which has been sitting | needless to a pool iieiat te eae re mn ji emergency; in a semi- states as Parison the subject of the fishery convention be- many oti if oe eaten auaitt hex cna: rt tween England and France has concluded its labors, It | War now long it would take for the army to be ready for has been agreed, subject to the approval of the | action, the anewer would be “eight days after receiving orders to propare for it." respective governments, to do away with all/existing By ra bulletins the King wns rapidly improving restrictions as to methods or implements of fehing in | and appears now to be completely out of danger. His tho common seas between the two countries. The | complaint was a severo attack of influenza or bronchitis, i rom whiel @ population of rlin have been three mile limit is to be retained, and each yountry | rcing tnis winter, and his constitution must still be entitled to carry out whatever rogulations & may | exceedingly robust for him to wave got over it so son fit within that limit. The close seasm for | For the last fow days ho lias had daily conferences with panics: 4 7 rad reduced by the month of Méy and | Bismarck, and hus aiso received the Ministers of War and oyaters. ia to a y of the Interior, M. de Savigny, and many other persons, half of June being thrown open, and the restricion {8 | including the uew Governor of Schleswig-Holstien, Gene- to apply only to the English Channel, The policejrega- | rai Maustem, He is not yet allowed to leave his private edi Ay lion of order among fishemen | @Pafments, bus the frost having broken up and the ons for the pre ervation of weather become quite mild, ho will probably be ablo aro to be simplified and the penalties reduced. Thaprin- | ere long to resume hisout of door avocations. es ‘ shing boats 2b ty to | The Emperor of Austria has resc'nded the order by Rape cf sensation, oe Ate, Cone ee which those regiments of hig army tbat were callod af- the ports of the other for the purpose of selling \heit | TTX". ‘King and Princes of Prussia were to cease to fish, hitherto forbidden, is to beaccepted, and regulajons | Yer the names of their honorary colonels, This has under w S s withedety | boon done bythe advice of Baron Beust, who repre- Wgpeed to uniter whtcks this can te carted out wit nip senied the impolicy of @ measure which was calculated to the revenue laws, Some delay, however, may jake | 1,” Grend a powerful neighbor without Austria's de- place in carrying this out, arising from the duty lqied | riving the slightest venetic from it. There can be no 7 h g . | doubt that the King of Prassia was bighiy incensed at ‘on fresh fish in the Fronch ports. The French gowrn this demonstration, which wounded him in his tenderest ment had already proposed to reduce the existing (uty | point—his senee of military honor; but atter ft had by one-hali—viz, to 28, the cwt.—but as the Engish | once taken place, it might perhaps’ have been bet- mise) 0 vo | ter to let the matter fest than to revive the momory of Commissioners pressed for the immediate oF prosPedive | th salt by a tardy reparation which will hardly pro- abolition of the whole duty, and as the French comais- | Give the desired effect. ‘The auimosity between Astra sioners had no power to enter into an engagemen{on | and Prussia ts too dieply rooted to be removed by mere ‘1 04 acts of courtesy, ant can only terminate in a struggle this point, it will form the subject of direct negotiathms | acts of courtesy, aul can, only formate total oxtne. between the two governments. \ tion of one of the tvo Powers. Of the specie held by the Bank of England the jto- portion of British silver currency within a few wees, \ ending February 2, experienced an unusual increasc-a AUSTRI Ae circumstance due, says the London 7imes, to the prow- romans lont distress in the metropolis and the influence pf QUR VIENK. CORRESPONDENCE. strikes in throwing workmen out of employ and dimij- | Financial Conditiot of the Empire—A Gloomy ishing the demand for coin for wages. | Prospect—The Chnge in the Treasury De- tl wmimittee of investigation of th» partment—Movenmnt Towards a Confisca- Kren iad’ aN a os tion of Church Peperty to the State—Rich Atlantic and Great Western Railway Company, apporntot Ecclesiastical Pleers in Prespect—Grand at a meeting of interests representing upwards of | $00,000,000 tn Londinn ; © Meni, Ckawstiny ‘Bafley, a. Bj | © Dahle, emer ag eared ©. Borthwick, C. 8 Crowley, John Fildes, M. P., . Every one taking theslightost interest in European Larkwortby, Sir William Russell, M. P., and Messrs. G. | aiairs tuily knows thevery critical position in which M. Sandford, M. P., and George Worms, with power to | jusiria tmds herself at fe present day. This is morere- add to their number. markably exemplified won one examines the financial Fobruary.1,,Mr. John Stuart Mill was installed into | spuation of the empire, Paying ® Fuinoye interest for (office as rogior of the ‘Uriversity of St, Androws, Soot | ay enormous dedt, and Greasing. yearly the-stount of land. Abo&t one hundred and pinety students were |\)4, vapilitics, Austria aust fitda bersslf at the end of Lager rere mee t in aarink oon dagen rsragbar cra war adhoel : Ctlapceilot opened the proceedings prayer Decause thers is mo init, ‘because 20 fn Latin, and afterwards administered the University | ioqiviquat or dirm tools sficient faith ent rity for oath. ‘The rector was then invested with the robe of repayment offered by # government, it ts not likely office, after which the Vice Chancellor presented him lat ahe can contract outte any loan aufliciontly advan- with the degree of pede an Mr. Mill delivered | sacequs to be of the sligtyt assistance in this her hour has address on ithe subject a University education, | 9¢ perit, ° which was listened to with sustained attention and cor- | + count nariach retired tlother day, leaving the finances dially applauded. of the cow in the mo inextricablo muddle, and is Teioeen Thoms Madre comtendics the vtsteniont, ‘nhidh| Courganceeale yh Gabcet Wabtad Baath cer he has appeared in most of the French papers, that the | pojdness of his views an¢ho determination with which Spanish government ad adopted, or was about to adopt, | ne exccutes them than f-Ris former dealings in Stata severe measures against the Duke of Montponsier, in | gnancea, I believe the!@age means more than the consequence of certain observations alleged to have | general public yet apprate, and that Count Larisch Deen addressed by him to the Quoon on the acts of her | rerugod to remain at the Id of his department simply Ministers. because he would not samn by bis presence there or It is announced that the Prince of Wales, the Duke of | is cooperation a bold stie the government of Austria Edinbarg, the Duke of Cambridge, Lord | es ll | wilt actempt at the ee Boust’s ee ol the members of the English commission are pres- Tmay say at once ore is nothing positively sent at the oponing of the Paris Universal Exhibition. 4 | xnown of the financial stn [ am about to speak, that rumor is prevalent that the Sultan of Turkey is likely to | no paper in Vienna has © hinted at it yet, and that visit Paris during the Exhibition. very few persons speak of; at the same time I have been given to understanty very well informed men OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE. that there is a movement ot, or, more correctly speak- ing, a timid desire to set foot in high official circles, which will result in the .¢ wholesale confiscation of PRUSSIA. church property which mai Henry the Eighth’s reign England, Louis the Senth’s in France, and is GUR BERLIN. CORRESPONDENCE. tringitg down the Pope's themas on Victor Emanu- na cl’s head in Italy. Many Amstances favor the betief General Manteuffel’s Case—Resignation rrectness of theae.ors. Stamtseal_State Affaire in Hanover—The | |" pit Fird—Mr. Beust is a big' Protestant—if Protestants Case of the Christia: the East—Health | ever are bi a ‘ estantism is dly spreading in Hi of the King—Relations page ie Mat 4 ane ae coved we ungary, ‘The news of the day is the dismissal of General Man- touffel, once the favorite aide-de.camp of the King and chief of his military Cabinet, and lato Governor General of Sohleswig-Holstein. It bad been rumored for some time that the Court influence which he bad enjoyed ever since the accession of bis present Majesty was on the wano, and the readiness with which the King agreed, in compliance with the wishes of the House of Deputies, to his name from the list of generais who were to be swim’? that nothing but abte extinction can abase or humiliate her uneaviable pon; and in such a state a bold stroke, however unpop is better than none. ‘Fiurth—Through the ti dislike to Jesuitism and the unpopularity of the Emr's mother—the sworn sree sont ray i er destretld be accopica. with ures conti wit tive by the $j 4 eh yD look ca as the millstone roun eck, w him often from executing Pfor the xmetdeha ot rewarded at the public expense could not but be ha their condition. of tes who , as bighly significant. Various reasons are assigned for | scoul -y a5 yes ey a ‘Broveny tor his disgrace, the first symptoms of which, howover, may Fechner ae sie, a ‘ago, gow the two qualities are sometimy-existent—the plan is 20h in woll known, the chure wo, As is . ~ Austria is enormously rich, Lore more powerful through itsgold than in any'r country in Europe. A general confiscation could iy be managed, but it is presumed that such a partial ag would completely relieve the State of its presenkyy incubus of debt would not be so difficult of etion as at first sicht Be this as it may, orely give the last usible rumor of the day, Mtcause it has given De gaid to date from the period when he had to ex- change bis post at the head of the military Gabinot for the more elevated but far less influential office of Governor of the duchies. His con- duct during the war, when he sacceeded General Falk- onstein in the command of the Army of the Main, ex- Chad great dissatisfaction at headquarters, and his out- Yageoun proceedings towards the city of Frankfort anand ma little embarassment to the Prussian evvern- ment by the effect they produced ou pubtic opinion, not only in Germany, but throvgsout Europe. But what has chiefly conduced to His fall is his mania for speech- making, and bis going about from place to place in Schleswig, tolling the inhabitants that Prussia would never consent to give up an inch of their territory, and that be would defend it with his body aguinst all comers, although he knew that the Prussian government had engaged by solemn treaty to consult the population of the Northern districts on their reunion with Denmark. Whether Bismarck really intends to fulfil this part of the treaty is quite another question, but at any rate he has always admitted his obligation to do #0 in case the popular vote should be given in that sense; and it could not be tolerated, therefore, that the Governor General should openly express those viows which his — must be anxious to keep out of sight till 6 time shall have arnved@for realizing them. Ostensi- Manteuffel retires ‘‘on account of ill health ;”” but this fe the usnal formula — in such cases, and his Deing deposed at once all his fanctions for a ¥ year is equivalent to bis being laid on the shelf Altogether. Persons who bave seen bim lately affirm that he is as strong and hearty as ever—the ex-Governor is & man of gigantic stature and immense physical wer—and the fact that instead of going to Meran, or jentone, or some other southern clime, he has signi- fled the intention of taking up his abode at Merseburg, in the province of Saxony, the climate of which has ni been considered particularly favorable for invalids, i8 @ of it is known, and by #0 few—pbecause it is of 80 contdenily, and agony it is well worthy of thousand florins, for ini from a ‘desire of bel or even partial absorption Ghurch Joke to turn the tables on themeeltowever, and de. cree, if it were tell the correctness the necessi Sthec tu ee snforcent a sufficiont proof that ili health i almost invariably 9 sontet {n vhick the government Hanoverian off bi os oes ci Sonctders sy aeted ete nana Min ne it officers havin; al the ex. from their oath of dsl eget! Ar: popula9s in the mater & the elections of | figure promisorWe! them have now entered the Prussian army, while the elogaten for 4° ¢ hex ta, and that balance have either been pensioned off or have taken | while inclneds© Keep on, the 604 farting which they Service in Austria, Bavaria and the minor German stator, Ga wi 4 they also seem inclined to ‘Ve way more » thy ‘The Prassian government are highly sati sult; and maeed Of the oltcer—Lount iene Golonel Alten, &c.—who were confined in the oitad Minden for endeavoring ‘o provent their younger com des from entering the Prussian service, bave neon eet at Iberty in consequence. The civilians, however, in M. Sont re in prison, and fog | fone the stowaans for the ‘North Gornny be —. is feared, not without reason, that they would their influence with their countrymen to return ‘obably no country or m0 in 18 80 easily of anti-Prussian candidater The |@84 as that of Austria, StagMon in warlike | ter, Political news of ghy “on the journal that ventured to write, though Hanoverian le, against Pruscien, D¢ followed in Vienna by the more eag suppressed, the publisher threat home matters if be contmues’ | Fations puts Tise to any sensation here—it ¢ not do 80, so little such Wyformed circics, that tice. The conduct of the clergy in tast war has embit- tered public feeling against t. ‘Iger of two hundred B by the of Hungary, sounds worse as & 4 ironically than ng of Aince, and created just indignation io il class Tt is mecdicss to say that the govermme ghould it in- augurate any movement tem jt the total uw property in Austria, would reeeive the heaty.operation of the Jows, who are @ powerful body in ire, and influ- ential through their great wealth, not bea bad Fonte, a confiscation of property not in the ands of Christi Time can only or unreliabil more is waits for another address frot the gncommission of sixty-seven, which there is m 40ubt wihortly be forth- coming, announcing the Hu@"ians’ cqgence in their liege sovereign and desire * 8¢t itranisarith the other tngee of bie empire, + mist be remked, however, Bhat, although the Hungeitt Met has agpiod in prin: for ay — anization, tt ingary f- nt, Itbas lately Deon ea) 12 PUL, ard rested in the from Jules Andrereq, thd probable chief pected Hungarian Minisy, ppears: nag resolute antagonism of thatermane to 5 ed i Independence. the pastow days the press occupied ral questions tities of war are no longer favorite tople. At all events in scandal. abolish them. to guess at ion same period. tion when he on account of arrest him, for the gratitic litical hatred. proofs. cal differences the I on Sunday tibes legion. umerable and in the papers it must be great. Those m Inquisition, and that recoive back into the true and forwarded by a fit of jealousy than by a desire tosee the invalid, many stories are in circulation and bon mots in abundance amuse the Viennese cotcries dealing Some months ago I wrote on the subject of the govern- ment lotteries existing in Austria, to the great detriment of public morality A Rn is Dow @ movement on foot ™ ofor' as they are 4 source great revenue to the State, f think it probable it will ro- sult in nothing, Another sbameful, well known and, indeod, al- most recognized institution in Vienna is the ‘usurious loan system.” It is impossible even the number 6f men who are making their livelihood, perbape fortunes, by lending panera @ moat ‘oxorbitant rate ie Vienna; but from the advertisements and placards on the walls lend st any security, on pawn tickets, horses, om dreases imaginable thi iving in or |, recely: return’ the quiet little ‘of tan por cont ber month the amount this succeed the employment of . the rascally Jews who at present “‘acréew”’ the vory life’s blood out of many a victim will have been taken away and a bi classes of Vienna. a wo poorer Mr. Motley, our Minister here, gave a magnificent ball on Wi ich. crery divlomaule.slssga, in, Vienne.” Tho \aviaions e covered a list of two bi and the affair was considered the most it one or the season. THE ROMAN QUESTION. QUA CITY OF ROME CORRESPONDENCE. A Man of Progress on Trial for His Life— The Italian Missi and Ecclesiastical Ar- rangements—Frontier—Travel and Trade— Papal Authority—Art Commissionors from America, &c. ‘The supposed assassin of the Papal zouave is being tried by the Sacred Consulta tribunal; but it appears doubtful whether there will be sufficient evidence to con- vict him of the crime, All that is known of him at pres- ent is that his name is Luigi Napoleoni; that he is the son of a spirit dealer at Acquila, in the Neapolitan prov- ince of that name, and that having had a quarrel there with a man whom ho murdered in consequence, he fied from Acquila to Rome to take refuge from the Italian police, and found employment hero as gardener in the villa of Princess Sctarra, on the Janiculum hill, He states that he was returning into the city on the night in ques- Rome, Jan. 29, 1867, saw a confusion on the Piazza di Santa Maria, in Trastevere, and fearing the encounter of patrols his being a refugee homicide he hid him- self in a doorway, whence the Papal gendarmes dragged him, and the zouaves wanted to inflict summary justice on him by shooting him, whether guilty or not. It appears extremely improbable that the assassin should have remained precisely on tho spot where the crime was committed until the police came to and it now turns out that the Dloddy poignard was found on the ground, near the vic- tim, and only a little pocket knife om Napoleoni. It is totally opposed to the programme of the National Com- mittee to enter upon such a degrading course as that of assassination by hired bravos, nor can oue imagine what Denefit to the national cause could accrue from the death of a solitary zouave; and, therefore, as the defunct was not a soldier of exemplary conduct, it is moro probable that ho was murdered after'a quarrel in some low placo cation of private vengeance rather than po- If the Consulta tribunal basa chance of convicting Napoleoni he will certainly have his head cut off, out of compliment to the zouaves, but hitherto thore are no Signor Tonclio has brought his mission to a satisfac- tory conclusion, as lar as the arrangement of eccicsiasti- between Rome and Italy goes, and the re- sult of his negotiations is evident in the project of law eoneeed in. the Italian Parliament by the Ministers ra . ag and the lation of eoclestgatioal eg A 3 i 6. E g j fi Mauri, who has been sent here on a special mission to assist in this transaction, will doubtless tor- ward matters and facilitate the mission of his colleague, repentant schismatic him by way of anticipation the apostolic Yesterday the United States corvette Ticonde: Commander R. H. Wyman, two hundred and thirty-five men, nine guns, arrived from Marseilles and Vill cm, holds the book of Altar Service. The expression of his countenance is dignified and benevolent and the attitude . | mataral, while the dimfculties of lawn sleeves, great in painting, but almost insuperible in sculpture, have been skilfully cong @ sculptor. The model, now in wo “ioe ive ‘The Ui Ireland Present |. P., Mer. J. + Bright, ., Sir EB. Armi ithe Hi Mayor of Oltham, Mr. E. Beales! ihe. Eeot ‘The hall reece reed reais St oa, ty hour, the Cooereaes on we pcteeny wowret oo hey made thelr of his charming litle figure of Sans-Souci is Auished Cincimati. peapening the composition of @ fbmale a Jewish sept s e rivers of Babylon Mc remembered there wo sat dow, yea, we wept when we Zion, We hangd our harps upon tho willows in the midat thereof.’ =~ Glegance and depth of feeling this * BRINSH RECONSTRUCTION. of the Reformers of England and Prociaimed and Ratifed—John Brighttnd the O'Donoghue on the Compact and it) Benefits—How the Eni Rei to ty United States, &c. {From the London Times, Feb, 2. A ‘was held in the Free Trade wy for the purp’se of hearing the 0’ Dono- rish Question and the Importance of the between English and Irish Reformora.’’ The it was occupied by Mr. Bright, M. P, There were Biot, Roy A th a A ir, itwe . P., ir a h Sherif), Ly 00 rising, Was recoived With lend amd OEps longed cheering. He snid:—Although I am altogether | be v legislation. unaccustomed to take the chair at great popular meet- East Wiriy soa cibere nieret ctleewih cal cammed , yet 1 undertake this office of chairman to-night } that there were no legitimate caases of disaffection, and without much anxiety and without dismay. (Laughter | that the disaffected could o1 and cheers.) Iam not aware that I have ever before | tion of a character which been on this platform with a greater sense of ease and | Hitherto, no doubt, comfort than that which I enjoy at this moment— | the failure was to be asci {eneers)j and this is accounted for by two circumstances, § tion, being beyond the reac! ‘one being that I think we shalt pass this evening in | capacity of our legislators, harmony—that the meet will be very unani- 2 of Hous on tbe ceatimenta thas be offered to you; and teers slanted treats saws wih 8 the other circumstance is this, that ag chairman, keep- own. (Cheers.) In Ireland i = = z g i Sek z z f 5g rou had occasionally to stand on a. platform, as I have dian doe perked gas, loamiemaeie “2 a au ues Ireland tion, wi Ramat eames of responsibility, you vould’ find te that hitherto you have very much wi ued your | whom at the ‘as listeners of this (Cheers and laugh- | himself on the ter. ‘object of this meeting—the direct and imme- | sorape a few pounds ay tpt gene ey to my honorable | ship. They hav friend, the member for Sad 0 Bone 9. epenes tree. morn till and him, (Cheers.) I reed ly tell you that he is one of | proved the letting v: the most members that Ireland sends to the taw enables the the imporial Parliament, (Loud cheers) I think Inced | giving him scarcely not claim for him from you that courtesy which you will ‘were millions be sure to extend to him. F SSaY 1 As pone mivanlt Treland from year to rendered them that you will give him your approval, and, judging from what I have on occasions, I shall be \y surprised if you do not listen to him with admiration. The 0° hue is near relation of the great O'Connell ( chee: & man of whom English writers of this y—some of them at jeast—are accustomed to 5} of My honorable fri repre- sents.a conside of his countrymen, and, | self and those dea: veuay, Believe that depreciasion standing hore to-nigbiy 1 feel confident that 0 will be notes woul De impessible, for, if from aa increase able to do something to in the quantity of currency notes wero re nearer together for id ad- quired by the rate of discount would band be bi a rowers being able to obtain loans at a less cost months and redeem their. I will, and of an undoubted patriotism. 1 was enter- ation, would immediately be returned to government im ined there most magnificently ata grand public ban- it of taxes end customs, and thus would be with. oh and I had the opportunity the oe be! wn from circulation untit again required. ireland to speak to a considerable an: Your committee, ia conclusion, thelr propeal- assembled in one of the halls of the city. Now, tions to the sertous consideration of the Chamber, I venture to say, whatever may have been the com- loving that it adopiod, they would plaoe the. tosuse. of menis upon that visit, and upon the speeches which I de- | ing agonies of mind and body. They expostulated, cried | currency in this country on a more satisfactory basie livered in Dublin, I have some reason to hope that my | and implored for mercy; but Mr, Adair was wexorable, ‘by the act of 1 ‘and would be more labors there were not wholly fruitless, (Cheers,) Thero | and, surrounded by the soldiers of the Queen, his myr- | likely to effect the objects contem; by Sir Robert is, as you all know who read the mewspapers or asso- idons went forth to drive the people out and to level ciate with Lrishmen in England, there is a very consider- aheir houses to the earth. (Cries of “Shame!”) The able party in Ireland hostile to England and hostile to the | case was brought before the Lord Lieutenant, the late Hs empire | When speakin ct son {a Dublia 1 did not Lord Carlisle. Ho exprossad hia sorrow; but Sould not | to:remedy, rn lame these men; 101 My conscience interfere, It was broug! fore the House of A table is appended showing the fluctuations nothing can be more justifiable in Ireland than a dis- Commons, and the Chief Secretary for Ireland, in the | rate of discount from the year fsa” rahe yg babel tes ot i (eon Lea long akan pame ot yy) government, denlenne sie ee —— of the legislation of the imperial Parliament in re; to | could lone to rem it; for the permanent and just interes's of that isiand. (Ghoers) | the law on bis side, and ren ea for the ten- MARINE DISASTERS. tabi Wie en Apert for egrhepeed| es ip te con- | ants. _— it, ee ond poe Pes) le tad quered country, an sorry to say mn gov- | garded the law of Ireland as intoleral Loss n—O: Captain, drued with leas of wisdom and of justice in some striving | fenant farmers of Irsland desired (9 divelé tn the land of ily Bere MY " particulars than any intel!igent conqueror would show to | their birih, and they had a prescriplive right to do #0. Neate the conquered. (ches) There la a party in Ireland | ‘Tuoy wore prepared to toll iu its cultivation’ trom morn Portiaxp, Fob. 16, 1867. who think that if Ireland were severed from England, | till night, as no nogro slave ever tolled before, and there. A cable despatch reporta the loss of the ship Addison, 1 er were gover under” @ monarchy | fore he asserted, in the presouce of that great assembly | of Kennebunkport, with all hands on board except or under the form of @ republic, as an In-| of free and enlightened Englishmen, that it was the f dependent Sa'e, that if Ireland cnid be floated | hounden daty of the State, if they valued the allegiance | Captain Sloane, the mate, Henry Ward, and four sea- 300 shat ra items 4 ae crete become - Sortien of the people 9 af Taland, a cm — race of | men. Thecaptain’s wife and child were lost, No fur- 0} the great United Sates of America, the result w occupiers in the possession of the soil. (Loud cheers.) | ther perticulars igs been recei Wat tre and would b: governed by th: arty y of Wir own In conclusion he had one word to say with rexard to the = samba present ‘es peopl, ond wold ve directly rea ¢ for her von wel--| Irish Churoh. He considered it one of the health- fare.’ (Hear, hear.) Now, the separation of Ireland | ioat signs of the times to be able to find an assombly of Wreck of the Baitish Brig Derby. from Great Britain, from the United Kingdom, would im | Trotestant Englishmen eager for an opportunity toe The following particulars relative to the loss of the by DeObab Ly edgy, ye fe ae fraqewonptd pnd pe of Ra el = ae Eszabligned brig Derby, of which mention was made in yesterday's ne floating of land 2 mile 0 westward is Dhurch as an un} lel justice to Iroland. ben thing not physically poss.ble, aud. therefore in the dis- oa a (arepe | Hunazo, have bex furnished by one of the passongors, cussion of this Irish question I proceed trom the basis | reconciled with justice that seven hundred thousand | Who arrived in this city yesterday on ¢he steamship fat He political he ig Feit vgn and eae bv a eld aa Bes) gee) pare rics the ecclesi- | Eagie:— ing deci and fix for a long time, ani erefore | astical revenues ireland, wi an number of Derby sailed trom \veston, ‘upon that basis we should consider what can be donefor | Presbyterians and about four and a half’ millions of Ro. | ..700D"& Gol bio em Ireland, If Thad sufficent ume, orf it wore my duty | maa Catholica derived ao benefit at al from thom, | 26th of Jaausty, for Iguape, Brasil, with one hunéred go tully in e question here, my object woul (Hear, hear.) It was for this reason that the disendow- | and fit; rs OD anda which to show tuat tho pexple of Great Brtlain are not hestile to | ment of the Estabished Church was called for, and the | sisted ot Pals (eave and maa iron, ally wagons, oats the perple of Ire’and (cheers); that if youcruid poll ait the | application of its revenue to some purposes of national | cultural implemonts and provisions Tata ta stare the aan a Great Sriisia, bby piel Eogiaad, ane G2 at utility, In deboting the question of the Irish Church he | long voyage which the vessel was intended te make, all couland, you would not a majority of them ia favor of aid no regard to the numerous collateral i vali about maintaining ao established Protestant Church in Catholic | were sometimes Talsed. such as “Walch, ie the roe None of the oota on hee 4 Trelana, (Great cheers) Nor would you find them | Church?’ ‘What were the theological views of St. Pat- anxious to support a sysiom of Jaw with regard to land | rick t’’ ‘Did he renounce the spiritual supremacy of tl of New Orleans, for $3,500. After'the depax which perpetuates, and will coutinue to perpetoate, if pe and conform to the. feitgmen ‘Articles rookie poeta from Tuineasane pb nan» wea continued, many of the evils of U rat confiscation | (laughter); but he (The O'Donoghue) adhered to the sim- | blowing, but on Saturday, the ‘lous to the which took piace 'wo centuries ago; and if the Irish | ple argument that, no matter how these various issues | tho weather was fair and’ eve! Promised a speedy, ational and Jiberal party will join with tue natioval and | might be decided, the fact still remained that the Estab- | and uninterrupted voyage. Aboutthree P. M. on Sam Iibera! party in Great Britain I havo undertaken to show | fished Church was the Church of a small minority of the | day the wind blew mpeale from the north, oad ry that we can make the rule in Ireand jus: as gud. Irsu people, and therefore bad no title whatever to the | short time after the first shook eur sails it tneroased true interest} of Irishinen as tf Ireland were an ecclesiastical. revenue of the country. (Cheers) He ‘ent Sta'r, of wer, what we Kno fo be it that an- id nezed fo the epiliie of America, | More nae nousisoa Sepa ty otal the J ‘rom boii gba a refi Borge vor tho Irish Fresno fi aestion, ere uid ‘sometimes it wore “not SOG iran seaciocete sia feopeeia! Tavteomsent, batiam | dt: ‘bono « tt i 3 ; if ; 4 £ = there are in its nu: gh Ho ag ty gee capabis men lsughten); were mitted that there aro meee government } ag ftv ie i i ; : i l would really it le of the United King- — an aa oe of thet day, says:— pages: for oad | Se ira of Sorerarsyre Hoo and trouble he had ) opirialae and at the expense of Py od the mow ceaudent hopes 1 ihe agate ae The negrece on. the are allt oa frei to Sat Sa ae Segoe Saree oe sie il penat wore org, He nn They also aaveri thas Sir Jao, Peter Great, presided over mhecting callsd for a nobler ver | some disturbance there) vase thet Line or ae = bese “(la py Em are shot or bung. So mith for the lessons bem ig lH i York bas not yot met Pirehesers, and three ; appoigied to take, In consideration the Bank Charter | 600d sea breezes. There il bo. considerable ' ect. deputation from it had also an interview with . a in Vero, St Thomas ta the East fhe Creme juer about the period abeve | Trelawny. ‘crop of the mountains th oe teakel de tho of ee The lower mountains Rave gat. >See a? pian some, Semen bo et, SP oe atin oF | ee one uae wloney 126, the boating has beam, Beery the “welcome the had received, He wes | tho of the Beak <f'Reglond taste me id abandon ‘exop will be , er okiond 20 ries Dot took tte at of tncoun™ ie S tee even . pon, the reception he had ‘met. rth as, ‘peresual ampeutiedmnty ney whieh bas THE GUARD OF FRE ONDERWOVTERS. potas M9 coluions whieh ho held ta odenaeon with Te cata comer tshntecra Dianopreved of ‘tiase of his coun! Hie trought, thal the trae] gpZgrent he Bank, sot Tepesled and the gov. | A siémerously aitendod moshing. of tae Now people were the best ‘of their own grievances | °gmont loan repel. should Board f be cues ee Bnd of the remedies which ought to be forthe, | chert teh nea ontet shouldbe gold and. liver, oe | Pmt ne cna rithm age ous Aasegingpe Pass slopeed in Iivisad, ed wenet oplaion taps wes aay ee = ome ol Droposed ad in rates, So ie meen owing to class legislation that the country had been | oor poten of £1 and upwards © the extent of halrane | Were adopted:— brought almost to the brink of rain. The best guaran- ital rogente, not pagaie ga silver, bat re- That the rates on mercantile tee for the malty, power and bappiness of the apie | Gatvable for, Uxen P-; poet 2 {inline tad somtenay bo ubesea ty Sa riaka was the union of Ol the subjects within It ine secured by government stock. The Bank Charter Act of the viz, : now hood of freedom based upon and guarded by the inde- besides restricting the isue of sisieaion of haardy ndent exercise of a widely extended franchise, ste, tee Bank of Eeeiand: ty 8) at 100; A os GGhoors.) “The events of the iast few months had done | divided. 5 ie eat xt much to insure a candid and consequently a useful dis- | suthorized Pe tet, t cussion of the Irish question. It was impossible that | miuions (since Sit B cai be ptted 0 the sate on all Bees Dien dr me aantin mek toon! about the po- | demand, ew. ry ot iy to'candid dvouesion had Geen removed. The late Viceroy | Fold ‘0088 5 and sah utter all bo made ss to candid oa, ond by the allow of their the outside, and to be af- fated in the House of Lords hat here wae a wide. | are asuod ine manner whlch shall moet the approval sf the Ooms py the prewnt Lord’ Lteutenant and his advisers, who haa | PY,the veal, ‘The uso OF Tolling iron doors and shutters was objected Uaioe peek Caslss to coeenastves fee Raving prevented an one-fourth: to on She ound, tht such shutters and doors are the ' insurrection by renewing the suspension of the habeas | should be greatest the firemen have to contend with. The * Gorame aes nad aking. pope Od ey ee eared offered to it recent destruction of Messrs. Chittenden & Co.'s store An been le on disaffection further, that was instanced as an illustration of the fact thet where in Ti Eg ie as deriving ite | the London they are used it is almost impossible for the mon to r vitality from the other side of the Atlantic, That was | the issue Soeices een en prevens Ime cated. See Se i not teen and yranny. Ynereaiways hed boon protourd | 12 the samme ano tis ‘subject tue following rossletlon ‘wes trymen at home, but that sympathy had only | aot of 1844 ed, rm a ase of recently taken & political shape, owing to the | have carefully tionatle, and that ts Ihereasing facile of communication," and te consider any do, = deapaling band of hy and crouching emi; A resolution was adopted the Chairman to mteiitally gwelled into'a great nation, content 1k 1. To PR ge Oe ey yg thelr might and almost frantic with ine spirit of etal. | s¢)u,0 i lvey Senate Iasurance Committee to consider, what logulation ro Seainery ts smcricms Neto, but ot and ten are ner 13 Gr orang coat camer See a hae de senh ep eat comme: 2 . seost® ee eS eer ai Lene sed f te ainda ne tees geese | due acy, “Mt ee Seoine | vig ng, meet nn ee, les, Personally, he was convinced. that nothing could | Your oammitise are of opinion that, howover dostrable | at one hundred and fifty to two hundred and ‘stop to the combination unless a voice went across | the of the first two objects may be, the last ‘are now ectually encroaching on their the Ailaticsoncancing a new ‘era ot equal laws and | le the ome whet of paramount importance the come | ° swirtha Tran daaoctbn was the Torito forege | the hat anf! Important haa bon wcrifced ‘To aot REMOVAL OF BONDED WHISKEY. oo acaveciens sueiboes einen ries Gime | theo wery 0 Variations in the Tato of dance he wat ‘The following General Order has been received im thig oulty and of drawing the attention of the English | twntywo, Previous to the passing of the act of | olty by Collector Shook. It refers to the removals of Dh trom te. actual condition “of ireland.» He | 164, More t i z while the extremes of ex er cet daring to former poo, {Ray | tion, to which sttention was called in Sunday's Hens, the jod Church in Ireland the exist system of Jand wenure were mere bilads, of that. there was woe two fer cent and ten per cent during the latter, | in consequence of the facilities afforded undor the od covert attempt to rernoohane 35g buried animoni ‘Ypar contmitiee are of opinion that theee incerased flucta- | gystem to parties to swindle the government out of the 3 ES 2 = 3 i gi # ie friendshi countries. Having had a close intimacy aftected by the slightest indications of by | of his count 1, then, he could porto Lng ulty. They think that o tends 1867. ‘the currency at a time when there should es special coral enfe mae of withdrawing spirits om ry class lowed that no antipathy existed in Ireland either to or to Protestantism rey, a8 means of expanding it. The trade of the having incrensed threofoid since 1844, there should’ be the means at command of incronseci facili carrying it | because it was believed to be demanded by the nocom. Soke nights of ot h on ston > ties of the trade; bes there ent be be souu"ossunt hey unpopular whorever he was. A daily i fa bond from warehouse to another when festation of friendliness between New York or ‘and you are down that antagonism which was, no th instructed to allow no such transfers ture, frdvance fd no, ag fs the two commliies foe thet i eae an principle. is given by the Commissionér in ia advance new, bea gained and that high ratos of interest, i RK. A. ROLLINS, Commiasio: het tou ina ina fs wad ant re tandea to tnpate Soni | Gamesban Gnotk, Rw. Ouileoeee Fulkricnoees suet, ' caves been one hundred and forty-two changes whiskey for redistillation, transportation and rectifica- ha SCRA AL laa [ocr