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AFFAIRS IN EUROPE. | Hungarian Jubilee for the New Constitution, Royal Austrian Visit to the Magyar Capital. Universal Suffrege in New Germany and Resulis of the General Election. The Situation in Rome, Ecclesiastical, Political and Military. &, &o. &o. OUR SPECIAL CO? RESPONDENCE. HUNGARY. OUR PRESBURG CORRESPONDENCE. Magyar Rejolcings Over the New Constitu- tion—A Journey from Vienna with Huangn- rian Patriots—Hismorlc Scenes and Reminis- cences of the War—The People Astir in the Ancient Capital-The Emperor of Austria Expected, &c. Preswuno, Hungary, Feb. 20—Night ‘The news received 10 Vienna by telegraph to the effect ‘@hat illumivations on a very large scale would take place im Pesth this evening, in honor of the formal announce- ment of the formation of a responsible miyistry for the kindom of Hungary, determined me to be an cye wit- mess to the anticipated jollification, Il Iuck would so dave it that it became impossible for me to reach Pesth 4m time to sce the illuminations or fireworks, I resolved, therefore, to stop in here, the ancient capital of the ‘Hungarian kingdom, and see as much as was possible of Magyar enthusiasm. I was amply repaid for the trouble ef a slow journey by railway and for the disappoiatment OF not reaching the objective point of my excursion. When taking my seat in the railway carriage at the atation in Vienna J learned that the greater number of my fellow travellers were also going to Pesth, with the Amtention of being witnesses to the extravarant joy and emtbusiasm which telegrams and the newspap>rs {m- formed us existed all over Hungary. Such fabuious re- ports of the excitemont and universal joy prevalent in Pesth had reached Vienna that many persons hastened a Proposed visit to tho Hungarian capital, and others, like ‘myeelf, undertook a journey not before dreamod of. Leaving Vienna, the way lies through the Imperial and Royal Park, the Prater, and ‘passes through Flor- disdorf, where can still be seen the hasty fortifi- @ations thrown up to arrest the Prussian invasion Jest summer. Here also were a party of engi- peers superintending.a batch of a hundred or so work- men, throwing up one of the senes of detached forte which are in course of construction for the efence of the capital. The railroad between Vienna ‘and Presburg rons through the Marchfeld, the scenes @f e0 many battles; probably no other part of Europe, excepting perhaps the provinces bordering the Rhine, is @o rich in battle fields and warlike reminiscences as this vast plain to the north and east of Vienna, Hore the Turks were victorious and afterwards repulsed; here Ottocar, King of Bohemia, utterly routed the army which attempted to arrest his progress; here the Pro- testant hosts of Bohemia, under the leadership of Count Thun, encamped prior to their ineffectual attempt to carry Vienua by aseault; here Napoleon’s victories and defeats rapidly followed one another, and here again the Prussian army halted, arrested not by force of arms, stetneein pene ree th ils, the ri going down the rails, one 8 Aspern, the scene of Repolson's signal defeat; anda mle tur: ther on the train stops at Wagram, ten minutes’ walk from the celebrated battle field. Then on through a low, flat, uninteresting country, which at this time of the yoar is generaily inundated by ing of the river Mor, over which wo by means of a magoificent stone bridge, com; of at Weast thirty arches, three of which were destroyed by the army defeated at Blumenay, to arrest the march of ‘the Prussians towards the capital. Tue bridge has been paired, bv means of wooden piles, the oscilla which as the train passed over unpieasantly re- feet. Three miles on the Vienna side of Presbur7, among @e mountains skirting the northern aspect of the latter town, lies the village of Biumenay, the scene of a ge. Austrian vic.ory turned jutofa disastrous defeat ee en Prussian energy aod Austrian impro Then Presburg, the old capital of Hungary, where many of ber half-civilized, despotic but reverous kings were crowned. Few cities can rival this fine old felic of aonce powerful capital for beavty of the sur- rounding loge Bg pictureequeness of the town or the splendid et produced by the Danube sweeping through a deep valley and suddenly cumivg into sight with widening stream aa it flows past the town. ‘Immediately on driving into the town I saw that something very unusual was in course of preparation ; whole population was in asiate of activity and bastle quite foreign to the German character of the provinces I had just left. Flags were suspen from position; every window, porch, houso- ‘and lamp post ‘was decorated.’ The boats on teemed with streamers of oer color; the ‘beats even bad not ben negloc! ‘The won. here could they all have come from. It is trac of the flaunting banners gave a suspicion of manufacture of petticoats of various colors, und some of the flags curiously re-cmbled the hasty function of a colored shirt to a white pillow case or ofasheet. The stores were closed at three o'clock the remainder of the day given to preparations for night’s iimination. The zeal and readiness with which all went about their preparations contrasted sin cu- larly with demonstrations of the same sort woich it was my good fortune to ree in Bohemia soe months on the cceasion of the Emperor's visit to the scenes of hisarny's defeats, Long before night all was in readiness for the contemplated flare up, and military bands stationed in different 8 of che town added to excitement ‘formance of martial Before eight k the whole popalation of thousand seemed to be in the street, and from the crowded state of them, and the jostle, noise and shout- ing heard everywhere, 1t aa if the inhabitants Of neighboring villages nad, for the time, desor weir own homes and their strength to the demons:ra- tons of popular enthusiasm. e streets and main mae enna ta igh bef Mg a, sees it @ shouting, aud who certain! Grliseh tue Grave ‘iM that partioniar to the utwost, The old castle on the hill was the scone of a bastily bonfire, apon the spor of the moment with faggots and ‘old beams of wood withiu one of its courte, The filumina‘ions were good, but the freworks a fail- on account @f thotwind. All through the night, or eleven o'clock, telegrams arrived from Pesth stat- at the excitement in that town was intense, and such demonstration of popular fervor since 184%, when, be it remembered. the ex- was for quite another object aud took a very ™m, neh fegretted my inopportune ig, particularily when the constant tele- nounced throuch the night the unbounded ex. he Magyar enthusiasm in the capital, I was sate that the excitement could have been more rative than it was in Pres! parations are also being made for the recep- of hia Majesty the Emperor, the Empress and the fidven, who will stop in Presburg for a few hete way to Pesth, on Saturday next, the 23d object.of the Emperor's visit ws to receive the crown of H. ngary, or, more properly speaking, to go throvgh the formala of a coronation in accordance with ancient rites, The ceremony, whict will take place on the follewmg week, will cortainly be a most impressive one, and the temper of the Hengarian p puiati: just now is such as to lead one to ¢: very enthusiastic Ls i Letty 3 et oa ety id a is it Ses Ha i arag think one tay safely say that Dis reveption at P that occasion, if it take place, will be no warmer was five monthe aco. ROMAN AFFAIRS, we on nt OHA CITY OF ROME CORRESPONDENCE. Political Discordances in Carnival Week— The Papal Army-—Its Strength and Posi- tlon—Ecclesiastical Advantages in the Ne«o* ations with I —~Compliment ef the Pope to American D Minister—A' an Visitors, &c. Ror, Fe. 21, 1867. The Roman carnival of 1867 opens «tder unusually agitating circumstances, The libecs! party, threagh the secret committee, have prohibited the customary antuse- mente of the carnival, as ther prohibited the opera and theatres in general, in ord that the abstention of the majority of the populaxon may serve as a political Protest against the feigning government and thé foreign troops wh0h maintain it, The adherents of the govermfent, and specially the Zouave officers and enthusiaste will do their beat ‘on the corsfasp 10 render the carnival as brilliant as possibly to show the state of prosperity and brio in ‘Whit the subjects of his Holiness live under his pater- ae rola From such conflicting moral opinions some NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 1867—TRIPLE SHEET. actual pb~ sical conflict is expected to take place during thee nival week, and sober minded people have there- fore already determined not to stir out of their houses during the whole saturnalia, The government is aware of what may be expected after the pelting of carriages of obstinate frequenters of the opera, the explosion of bombs all over the city on the anniversary of the Roman republic, established in February, 1849, and the recent profanation of the northern frontier of the Church ter- ritory by bands of Italian volunteers or Roman emt- grants, and therefore the military resources of his Holl- ness are being held in readiness to check any revolution- ary demonstration which may be attempted at this period of universal license. ‘The forces available in the capital were reviewed yos- terday afternoon by General Kautzler, in the villa Borghese, in the presence of a large number of specta- tors, chiefly foreigners, which was the more appropriate asthe principal corps reviewed were foreigners also, such as the Swiss riffemen, the French Antibes Legion. aries and the Belgian Zouaves, who formed the princi- pal infantry force. With gendarmes, engineers, artl- lery and dragoons there were not more than 4,000 men on the field, but their enue was unusually good for Pon- tifical troops. The garrison of Rome may be reckoned at about 6,000 men, having been weakened lately by de- tachments sent to the frontier, especially in the province of Viterbo, where they are encamped along the extreme limits of the Papal territory. in wooden huts recently constructed, in order that a strict lookout may be kept on the movements of the Roman emigrants, whose armed return to their native soil is the more apprehended by the Papal authorities since it has become known that the Italian government, in replying to the remonstrances of the Spanish govern- ment in favor of the Holy See, protested that it could not make itself responsible for the continual main- tenance of fifteen thousand Roman emigrants, nor per- Petually prevent their just desire to return home, It is greatly to be lamented that, while the Papal gov- ernment is ready to display its utmost force for the de- fence of the Pope’s temporal sovereignty, it does not take better measures for the suppression of brigandage within the varrow limits of its territory. Occurrences are Preansot here and in the environs which would be astounding in any other country. A few days ago a band of brigands captured the wife and daughter of Signor Polverosi, on his estate of Gossa Muova, near Piperno, abont fifty miles trom Rome in the direction of the Fontine marshes. The ransom demanded for these two ladies is $25,000; but I understand that thoy have been released by the brizands on receipt of the first in- stalment of 7,000 scvdi. (dollars) sent by their family, their steward being retained as a hostage for the entire paymeng Fortunately these scoundrels do not always succeed in their rapacions enterprises, Three marauders, who went to invade the premises of Signor Pecchia, landlord of the Hotel de Russio for many years, but now living in a country house ontside the Porta San Lorenzo, met with their match on Saturday night, Their plan having be n revealed by an accomplice, they found the villa occu- pied by police agents, with whom they had a sanguinary encounter, The result of which was tbat the three brgauds were killed and two of the police agents se- verely wounded, The Pope bas triumphed in his nogotiations with the Italian Commissary, Commendatore Tonello, and having got everything his own way is proceeding rapidly in the nomination of bishops to the vacant sees in Italy. His Holiness 1s the more anxious to get this list of promo- tions compleie on account of the approaching covsistory on the 26th, at which he is desirous of publishing the names of the new ye ee annonnelpg to Christea- dom the important fact that the Church in Italy is no longer widowed, and the flock no longer deprived of spiritual pastors, ‘The anxiety of the Court of Rome is also allayed for the moment on the subject of tho Scialoja scheme for the liquidation of Church property in Italy, tliat pro- Ject having died a natural death by the resignat'on of the Finauce Minister; but the speech of the Emperor Napolcon, in the paragraph alluding to Romo, where he says that he docs not doubt that Eurose would not allow demagogica! conspiracies to menace the temporal power of the Holy See, has excited the suspicion of the ecclesi- al government, The Corre pondance de Rome, eviti- cising this speech, inqnircs “why the Emperor now leaves to Europe the care of not allowing the final spoli- ation of the Pope; whereas Europe was not consulted about the September ‘ onvention, nor intervened in it any mot than the Holy See.” ‘fhe reply scems se!f- evident that the Emperor bas had enough of his protec- torate after seventcen years’ duration, and is resolved not to assume such a responsibility again, Meanwhile his Holiness has increased the number of his protectors in heaven since those on earth are fa ling, On the 10:b inst. the beatification of a Capuchin monk, Brother Benedict of Urbino, where he was born in 1560, ‘was accomplished with great splendor, amid the usval ac- ¢ompaniments of music, pictures, draperies aud iliumi- nations, in St. Peter’s church. In tho afternoon the Pope repaired to the church, surrounded by his court, to pray before tho pictnre of the newly made saint. ‘The Americans in Romo have been very much surpr'sed and (ce! very indignant with the news just received here of a bill having passed the House of Representatives sup- pressing the Legation in Rome, apd especially that the oorasion has been taken to accuzo the Roman government of anfrien“lines+, when it has extended an act of courtesy tw General K.ng, who has bad no intimation to close the American chayel, ia which service bas been regularly co1 ducted On account of the difficulty of finding in an apartment with sultable accommodations for th chapel, owing to the increase of American travellers, Cardinal Antonelli has signified to General King that ho could separate the chapel from the Legation, by placing itin the room occupied for some thirty years by the English congregation, and adjoining the present English chapel. This may be considered as an act courtesy on the the gov- of ernment, as the Roman laws require Protestant worship to be held at the residence of the representatives of l’ro- testant countries, and General King’s predecessors were not able to obtain this favor. ‘Without entering into a discussion as to tolerance or Intolerance, it must be remembered that the Ro- man government is a theocracy, and by giving free worship to ail the differeut Protestant sects it would stultify itself; and while on this sub- ject it might be well to mention that Swe- den and Denmark permit no places of worship but their national chareb, and non-Lutheran Protestants as weil as Catuovics bave no places of free worship there. Th> mojority of visitors to Rome this winter are Amer- feans. cog * the hotels; they visit churches and galleries; they patronize the fine arts; they give soirces and balls; and they visit the environs in monstrous parties and at monstrous speed, as was the case last when fifty or sixty American ladies and gentie- men, in ten carriages, under the sage guidance of Father Smith, of the Propnganda College, lionized Albano, A Genzano, Castle Gandolfo, the lakes of Albano and Nem, Marino, Grotto Ferrata, .and Frascati, all in one day. The Moniteur du Soir, tn its late bulletin, remarks:— The janguage of the has produced the best tmpres- sion a: Rome. The public mind there is fully reassured by the specch which the Freoch E:mperor delivered at the opening of the Chambers; and the words of his Majesty have been received with @ unanimous sentiment of satisfaction and gratitude, The authority of the Roman government is nowhere denied. No disorder is to be regretted in the interior, or on the frontier, Money is becoming less scarce, and the arrangement relative to the snaring of the Pontifical debt will re-establish on a normal feoung the finances of the Holy see. Surround- ed with the veneration of his subjects, the Pope can now face the future with a tranqnil mind; and his Holmoss is now preparing for the grana religious fét whicn is in the month of June, to gaiher at Rome ail the bishops of the Catholic world, in order to celebrate the eighteenth anniversary of che martyrdom of St. Peter and St. Paul. OUR BERLIN CORRESPONDENCE. How Vote by Ballot Works In Berlin—Voting Early and Often—Prosec The Military Commissi pti Bens, Feb, 25, 1867. The final result of the election will not be published for a day or two, and must therefore be reserved for my next report, It appears, however, that it will tarn out exactly as I anticipated—the liberal candidates will bo elected in elmost all the larzor cities, while the rural districts will return a large proportion of feudaliste and moderate conservatives, The direct and secret vote be- ing eomething unknown In this country and city, some carious circumstances attending it may be mentioned. By order of the Common Council large placards had been printed and ordered to be posted up to acquaint the voters with the respective locality of the polia But the lessee of the public stands where such posters are fast- ened, being @ stout reactionary partisan, refused them on the ground that a police law prohibits ‘* political ” placards, and thus it happened that many bad to look for hours ere they could find the polls of their district. At each of the two hundred and fifty-three polls a regisier Of voters was kept, and those whose names could not be found on the list, were simply refused, though in some wards many names, and even entire houses, with theit numerous inmates and the owners themselves, had been accideutally or purposely omitted, there being, however, no remedy in such cases, At one of the potls a journeyman tailor appoared in the after- noon and offered to vote for his Excellency General Roon, the Minister of War. Being told that he had voted al- ready inthe morning for the liberal candidate, M. Las- ker, he replied naively :—“'That is perfectly correct. My landlord gave me tho ticket and sent me here with it; but I mot just now Major N., who gave mo this one with M, Rooa’s name, and I cannot refuse to oblige the Majon, who ia one of my best customers”? In one ward, where at all former elections wit open balloting the government enjoyed an overwhelming majority—It being the ward wherein the royal stablesaro situated—the secret ballot has tarned out, to the arent dtonishment of everybody, a majority for the liberat pany. At tho polls of another ward a Iady demanded to voto; and, on being told that it weuld be illegal, sho replied that she was acitizen, had kept s flourishing business exfablishment for the last nine years, and pays hor taxes thé same ae any othe? person carrying on & “and weeks, the men hav'ng advanced meanwhile upon trade. Sho consequently tnsisted upon the right of vot- ing for BY arnarek: ibnt was got rid of by boing told that a Dame could be found upon the list her ticket would T'ae persecutions of the liberal press begin to be more ¥igorons than ever. It seoms that Count Rismarck’s tirade xcainst the promulgation of the parliamentary debates has given the cue to all the petty government employés, who now busy themselves in hunting up cases, instructing the police to confiscate rigbt and left, aud ordering domiciliary visits in search of manuscripts at the offices or private dwellings of editors and con- tributors to journals, Even the humorous papers on the model of Punch are frequently pounced upon on account of their satirical illustrations, avd the announce. ment that their whole edition has been seized upon by the police is quite a common thing. That these measures are increasing in-severity is shown by the fact \Nat suits are now institated against journals for articles that were published several months ago, and which at the tine of tho issue het beon allowed to pass without molestation, ‘The injustice of such proceedings is stil more obvions in a ease that happened the other day, in which a humorons journa’, the Tridrne, was proseented for m picture contained fn its weekly illustrated edition of Jast December, representing the proposed visit of the Empress Eugenie to the Pope, and 1 which the Aitor ey General discovered an attack upon the Roman Catholic religion. In this case the journal in question was nitted by the conrt, but the K7addersdat ch, which was indicted for a similar.offence, has been less fortunate, the editor being sen‘enced to a week's tmprisopment Considerable sensation has been excited by the tral of General Prittwitz, ope of the most distinguished officers in the Prussian army, wko retired from the service some years ago and settled at the town ani fortress of Thorn, of which place he had formerly been Governor, and where he was generally esteemed by the inhabitants, Last year, at the time of the mobilization, ho wrote a short article touching the fecality of that measure, which wes inserted in one of the local newspapers, The paper was immediately seized, and the authorship of the article in question being traced to General Pritiwitz, he was tried by a military courtand condemned to a year’s Incarcer- ation in the fortress of Glogan, to which he has recently been conveyed, The General is seventy-one vears of age; he served his country with cred't for balf a century, ond had done nothing more then make use of the right which is, or ought to be, enjoyed by every c'tizen, to express his opinions in print, and for which, if he bat really offended against the press laws, he ought certainly be tried by the proper triounals and not by a conrt martial. Some of the reforms agreed upon by the military committees which are hotding sessions presided over by the Crown Prince and Prince Frederick Charles, have transpired and seem, indeed , to invoke a coinplte change !n the principles’ of war heretofore existing. The experionce gained in the campnigns of 1864 and 1866 respecting the armament, movement and supplies of troops Is to form the basis of a thoroughly improved systom of tactics, the details of which sre, of course, kept secret, But so much is known, that the expense of equipment is henceforth to be greatly reduced, as also the soldier to be rel’eved of a great part of his burtnensome accoutremonts this enabling him to move abont rap- idly without impediment from knapsacks, bulky uni~ form, heavy headgear, &e. Darmg the last war the un- wieldy knapsacks were thrown off by the troops before every engagement, aud sometimes not got back for days the retreating enemy, or the heat was such that the knapsacks were put upon teams and the trains thereby 80 formidably increased that they interfered with the movements of th troops, and in case of A retreat must have cansed infinite confusion. The heavy helmets were frequently cast aside by the men, and the coarse un- bolted rye tread in big loaves, which they were com- pelled to lug with them. shared the same fate, The writer bas seen atthe Prussian camps in Moravia and Bohemia hundreda of thousands of there loaves, ealied « commis bread,” completely monldy and unfit for food, it having been sent on when fresh and damp yet and spotied on the way, Heaped up in piles as high as an ordinary dwelling honso, the commanding officer at the station ordered it to be given to the poorest of the inhab- itants or had it sald at auction for a trifle, though each loaf cost the government one-quarter of a thaler. - Besides a thorough reform of these and other matters the transport of troops by railway and the sanitary or- ganization of the army are to undergo important clanges for the better, aad the improvements to be introduced inevery branch aim at lifting the Prassinn and North German Con‘ederate army to a point of perfection not reached by any of the European governments, It isan agrocable duty to report the improving con- dition of Governor Wricht, who has been declared out of imminent danger by his physicians and allowed to take anairing in his carriage. Fis friends inthe States will rejoice to hear that his complete recovery may now be looked forward to, As soon as tho season is a tittle more ndvanced he wi!l probably be sent to Carlsbad, the | waters of which will, it is hoped, complete the cure which is already progressing quite favorably, During the Governor's ilInees his doties are attended to by his son, Mr. J.B. Wright, who has lately been appointed Chargs d’Affaires for that purpose. Mrs Key Rinnt, whose last reading was held by the desire of the Princess Royal at the Academy of Mosic, an‘ drow a larger audience than the former ones, has since received an invitation from the Princess to one of the soirées at ber Royal Highness’ palace, where she treated the company to some choice pasvages from Shakspeare, Tennyson, &c The soirée was extremely brilliant, the Quecn and al! the Court being present, and the talented American lecturess met with unbounded applanse. Having just returned from tho Academy of Music, where this evening the mass compused by Professor John K. Paine, of Cambridge University, was per- formed, 1am glad to say that it came off to the satis- faction of the audience, Which was quite numerous and apptouded liberaily, The choras and orchestra executed their parts finely. and the solos were sung by Mesdames Strabl and Wuerst and Messrs, Geyer and Zschiesche, all of whom are artists of the first rank. General Result of the Elections tor the New North German Pariiament—Strength of the Brnux, Feb, 27, 1867. The final result of the elections is now ascertained ‘and ta'lies exactly with the anticipations expressed on the subject in my former reports. In old Prussia the lib- erals have carried the day in all the largo cities, with the single exception of Kinigsburg, but the smaller towns and acricultaral districts have mostly given the Preference to the government candidates. The party of progress has lost some of its leading members, for instance, Dr. Loewe, the last president of the German National A:sembly. whom his friends intended to pro- pose for the presidency of the new Pariiament, but who has been ousted in the Westphalia district, which ho represents in the Prussian Legislature, by a rival hitherto unknown to fame. The President of the Prussian House of Deputies, M. do Forckenbeck, may perhaps get in for Eberfeld, when there will have to be a second balloting between him and Bismarck, and the election of Urank, Hennig, Carlowitz, Trasten and other prominent liberals is secured, to whom must be added the six radical members from Berlin. The moder. ate liberals, a silent but influentin! band, have been quite successful, and nearly all their notabilities, two Vinekes, CountSehwerin, Anuswald, Simson, &c., will occupy seats in the new Parliament, where they will le joined by \f Froytag, the distinguished novelist, who represents the clty of Erfurt, and by Professor Vax Duncker, author of the “History of Grerco’’ and private secretary to the Crown Prince, who was returned at Halle by a coalition of the conservatives and moderates against the demo- crate, Altogether it is calculated that of the mombers elected thirty six are decided liberals, twenty moderates, eighty- five conservatives, twenty-two Catholics and Poles, There wore four double or treble elections, and in thirty cases ‘no absolute majority was attained, and a second ballot will bay> to be resorted to. Of the Ministers only Bis- marck and Roor have been elected, the latter twice; of the heroes of the late war, Falkenstein, Steinmetz, Moltete (three times) and Prince Frederick Charles, In the provinces of Sileria and Prussia the elections fell chiefly upon the great feudal magni like the Duke of Ration, the Duke of Ujert, Prince Lichnowsky, Count Renard, Connt Lehndortf, ke, who still com- mand the strict obedience of their retainers; in Posen the Polish element almost everywhere got the better ot the Gefman, which, however, «as partly owing to tho circumstance that every German Catholic gave their votes to the Polish candidates, M. Wagner, the presiding genius of the Kreuz Zeitung, was elected in a Pomeran'an canton by 9,100 out of 10,000 votes, the largest majority on From the above statement it will be seen that if the North German Parliament were composed exclusively of deputies from old Pruasia—i, « the kingdom of Prussia ag it was before the events of 1806--the opposition would pre be in the minority, expecially as the two seo- tions of liberals do not always work harmoniously to- gether, and the assistance of the Polos and Catholes can only b» relied om in such cases where their national or Teligions sympathies happen to coincide with the in- terests of the popular party in Germany. But the whole situation ig changed by the clections in theannexd pro- vinees, and ip the independent or quasi-independent States of the Northern Confederacy. Old Prnesia ro- turns one hondred and ninety-three members (one to every one hundred thousand inhabitants), of whom at least one-third will belong to the opposition; new Pras~ sia and the rest send ono hundred and five representa- tives, who appear to be about equally divided between i ind conservatives, but who, with few exceptions, wilt be anited in ‘one point—their antagonism to the Prussian government. ‘The liberals, by whom are understood such persons as are willing to aecept the present state of things provided it can be made subservient to the cause of traedom and national unity, will join their Prossian colleagues in their endeavors to amend the constitution submited to them by tho allied governments, and, if porsible, to replace it by the reich verfassun, jstitution of the German empire), drawn up by the National Assembly in 1 ba | Sateen adherents of the ancient régime will do the same from different motives—to ¢m- barrnes the Prussian government and delay the comple. tion of the scheme i t romothi by ft, in the hope that to provont it altogether. wrong in computing ly be Queipha an Anguctesbargs) ieee a over and force SBiemareether 1e without having be the Ly Lg ® con fn be he was better acquainted with the character of the great ma*% of 1i¢ countrymen who rated their rt gly than jt Bey oF t he was 4 populations of which are more weed 40 coustituilonal Mberty and much further advanced in their political edu- gation than the boors of Pomerania, East and West Prussia, Silesia, &c., which have only just emerged for Villenage, and itis not unlikely that this mistake will prove fatal vo his whole plan. The most objectionadie featare in the draft of the federal constituion, which was published the other day {non-officially) in 4 Hamburg paper, and which agrees with the sketch given by mo some weeks since, is the eTaph Whoreby the amount of the military budget Js fixed uvalterabiy for ail future time, entirely inde- pendent of the vole or control of Parliament, By this arrangement not or ly the Federal assembly, but the State Legisiatures, would bo deprived of the’ most impor- tant part of their tucncial prerogatives, and the rights guaranteed by the Prussian constitution to vindicate which in the object of the long struggle between the Honse of Deputies and the government would be virtuaily abolished, Now, evon if this elause were to pass in the parliamont, it would certainly be rejected by the Prassian Legislature, to whom it must be submitted before acquiring legal force; nevertheless, the consent of parliament would be of the highest importance to Bis- marek, who might then think the moment arrived to dissolve the Legisiature and 9 the system of Imited suffrage on which it is and which insures the preponderance of the educated classes, by the ple'icve which has just been found to answer so much better iu a country where tho people iv general are still fur ind in political eubshienment, all probability, however, the one bundred and five mbers returned by new Prassian and non-Prussian Germany, combined w:th the Prussian liberals, will form a majority strong enough to frustrate bis scheme, for on this question all parties, moderates and radicals, Catholics and Poles, will unite, and government can ony depend upon the votes of the out-and-out reaction- ists, The official organs assume’ a very high tone, and declare that the draft of the ral Charter having been epreed on by the allied Statos, Parliament has noth- ing to do but to accept it; but {tetanus to reason that the representatives of the people cannot have boen calted togetuer for uo other purpose tusn to say “yes” to what ever Is proposed and that the right of accepting such proposals involves that of rejecting or amending them, We way therefore look forward tw strong debates at the meeting of the now ‘onstitational Assembly.” The King and Crown Prince, attended by a brilliant staf, left Berlin yesterday morning per special train for Dresden to retain the vitit paid to them lately by the King of Saxony. The rejations between the two monarchs are said to have become quite cordial, Prussia hay- ing mato several concessions relative to the Saxon troops, which are to form the Twelith corps of the federal army, but the officers of which are to be appointed by the King ol Saxony, to wear the Saxon cockade, ec. Dresden is also to be evacuated by the Prussians, who even abandon the fortifications erected by them at so much trouble and expense, and are in future only to maintain garrisons at Leipzig, the Kénigstein and Bautzen This new-born entente cxrdiale, however, has not prevented the Saxon anthorities from agitating with might and main at the elections against candidates suspected of being favorable to Prussia, who wore stigmatized in the election manifestees published under the inflnence and with the connivance of the government ag traitors and enemies to their country, King Wilham returns to his capital this evening to det berate with Bismarck on his speech to the North German Parliament, which he will open in propria persona on Sunday, the 24th iust., in the White Hall of the Royal Castle. THE EASTER QUESTION. Med Accord of France, Russian and England, The Paris, Mémorial Dip'vmatique of Feb, 23, says:— me journals pretemd that there has lately arisen a very significant agreement of views between France and Russia in regard to Eastern affairs, The truth is that the Cabinet of st. Petersburg, in declaring that it tsa stranger to all the attempts at insurrection which may be made in the Christian provinces of Turkey, and in contenting itself with insisting, however it may be done, on reforms according to the sense of the stipulations of 1856, has itself op ‘ned to the Western Powers the way to a general understanding with her on the Eastern question. In fact in these terms the programme of the Cabinet of the Tuileries has many Pe wl agreement wiih that of Russia and England, In drawing néar to them, as she has done in these late days, from a French point of view she facilitates the ways and means of the accord which is being sought to establish, and which will be realized in a very vear future, between the three Powers, PARIS EXPOSITION, A Deerce Limiting the Time for the Entering of Articles for Competition, ‘Thé Imperial Commission of the Paris Exhibition havo issued a decree which Ifmits the time for entering arti-- cles to the 28th of March. Stalls and everything requi- site being ready to receive the ariicles, such parties who fail to have their stalls ready for exhibition on the date mentioned will not be permitted to compete tor prizes. The reason for this decree is that in previous exhibitions certain exhibitors delayed sending in their products be- yond the day of opening, cither through negligence or for the purpose of presenting to the jury products the most recet tly unpacked and in the most advantageous aspect, and that more punctual exbibitors complained that their stalls thus served as a model to their less diligent neighbors, Convention Between the British and Egyptian Governments. [From the Courrier du Havre, Feb. 18] Up to the present the despatch of British troops to In- dia by way of Suez has been accomplished under the fol lowing conditions The troops, on landing were disarmed, before being allowed to crosa the territory of the Viceroy, and their arms were returned to them oniy when they were about to leave Kgypt. For the future, by virtue of a conven- tion between the Brit nd Egyptian governments, the British troops, provided they do not excted two thou- gand men, will be allowed to retain their arms in crose- yptan territory. ig THE EAST. Indin. Bomar, Feb, 18, 1867. Cotton steady, Export of the week, 25.000 bales, Ex- change, Is. 11% 4. Freights to Liverpool, 40s. Cacerta, Feb. 14, 1867. Exchange, Is. 1144. Freights to England, 628. 6d. China, Hoxo Kos, Feb. 1, 1867. 1867. Exchange, 62. 1d. Exchange, 43. 5d. Swavomar, Jan, Tea inactive. Silk unchanged. Freights to London—Ten, £2. Japan. Advices from Japan say that an agreement bad been signed for a new settlement at Yokohama, CANADA. QUA QUEBEC CORRESPORDENCE. A Snew “torm—Kaii Accidents -A Direc- Murder—Cone federation News—The Fenians, &e. QvEnec, March 8, 1867. We have had another big snow storm, and the Grand Trunk is buried, and twice as dangerous as formerly which is unneorssary, The other day (Thursday) on express train ran over an embankment and precipitated us sixty teet down the grade, I have been through several smashes, but this was the narrowest escape from areally {rightfal catastrophe that I have experienced, And, by the way, a piece of justice has been done at Rebimond, which some of your Jersey readers might wnitate with advantace, A fireman op a@ train between Richmond and Danviile was killed by one of the four ac- cidents whieu happen datly on the Grand Trunk. the coroner's Jury very Properly returned a verdict of mur- der and indicted C. J. Brydges, the Managing Direc- tor, ant J. F. Barnard, the Engineer of the line, for murder, feeling satisfied that the deceased came to his death from highly culpable mismanagement ‘as regarded the siate of the line, This is a move in the right dtreetion, for the etate of the castern districts of this | ne is such as to make it absolutely dangerous for any one to travel over it. Quebec is overjoyed at the prospect of becoming the nd en pawant we he And then we are to ask over a of young Prince Arthur, after the fitst session, suckling monareh in tho eha: who is to be, dion, king of the confederation, How are you, Monroe doctrine? I fancy I see Cavada stag: geting under biack rode, gold sticks and ali the other vornfogleries of royalty. Quebec 18 fearfully dull; the moving of the soat of ovsrament 10 Ottawa has knocked all business on tho peal, and everything 18 at a stand still Ta Montreal, beyond the momentary excitement ovor the the Edson affair, all 18 quiet, By th biggest bully of our Canadian bar has been sweetly snubbed by the Court of Queen's Bench. T. K. Ramsay, a gen- teman who acta Prosecutor for the Crown, at Mon- treal, is as posi:ive as a bull dog and about as good tem- pered. He browbeais the witnesses and is impertinent to the Jndge most marvellousiy, He was pleasantly im- plicated in the Lamirande case and also in the Fenian cases at Sweetsbyre, Last term of court he had a wrangle with Judge ‘Drammond and was fined ton ounds, led to full court aud was upset, all is objections overruled and his appeal tothe Privy Connell in land denied. He, as the Chief Justice «will be learned his place,” ehave many rumors about the Fenians. For our part some eight volunteers are to be called out; and Wis time, we bave iton very good authority, the war will be conducted under the black flag, no prisoners taken, or If they are accidentally eaptured, short sbrift and a drum bead court martial. ha leave for Montreal on Monday and will write you thence, FLORIDA. QUR WALDO CORRESPONDENCE. Murder of a Lady by n Negro. ‘Watno, March 1, 1867. Mra, Roesin, Hving about fifteen miles from this place, im Alachua county, was killed by a negro this morning. Tt appears that tbe nogro was repremanded by Mra. Rose fin for cruelty tw his wife day, and he to be re pened, nee the ‘window of wer oom and shot her in bed AF cel thia morping Mra. R. died, THE ICE BUSINESS. The Prospects for 1867—Amo: Invested—Statistics of 0 Quantity on Hand Where it is Stored— Expenses of Guthering and Transporta- tion, &e. In large cities like New York a plentiful supply of ico is to be counted, especially in sammer, as a necessity of housekeoping rather than asa luxury, and any hotel in which this indispensable article for the summer, or even for the winter months, should be wanting, would bo likely to be tabooed by all respectable patrons, In the country and in small towns it is possible to dig a well, and thus bring up cool fresh water from the stroams underground; but even this is generally impregnated with a mineral taint, and is less wholesome than Croton water cooled with crystals from the wintry surface of some quiet lake along the Hudson, Even in small vil- lages, particularly along tho Hudson, tho ice trade is exceedingly heavy avd remunorative, though it is not until one has been translated from nooks and ehad> into the sultry heats and seething streets of the metropolis that the article becomes as necessary to comfort ay are bread, butter and beefsteak. To three classes of people ia New York, and in fact in all cities in this latitude, the consumption of ice in large quantities forms, through tho. hot weather, a material consideratien in the bill of oxpenses; and these classes are, first, keepers of public houses, who without it would soon find themselvos in the condition of the pro- Verbial poet, viz., in want of a patron; secondly, the proprietors of our restaurants, large and small, to whose patrons ice water and iced wines are indispensable com- forts; and, thirdly, our housekeepers in general, by whom, taken in the aggregate, more ice is consumed than by either of the former classes, Well informed persons reckon the ratio of consumption among these several classes about os follows:—O/ the quantity of tee con- sumed from year to year in New York it is calculated that the proportion used fo our hotels is thirty per cent of the one hundred, that used by proprietors of restau. rants being about twenty-five per cent in addition, and tho remaining forty-fve per cent being appropriated to the use of families of every caste and condition, Statis- tically stated, from these proximate proportions, we have the following table:— Per cent, ot Capital Quantity consumed by restaurants, Quantity consumed by hotels. .. Quantity consumed by families, &o. Total ..... 100 During the year 1866 tbe quantity of ice consumed in New York and vicinity amounted in tho aggregate to 250,000 tons, the quantity stored in the winter of 1865- 66 having been about 300,000 tons, and 40,000 tons re- maining in the various places of storag» along the Hud- son, to be added, of course, to the aggregate quantity cut for this year’s consumption, The estimate of 300,000 tons is based upon the quantity of ice in net after having been subjected to the wastage of shipping, carting and being hawked about the streets. The wastage brouxht about by these several processes approximates to fitty per cent of the whole number of tous stored, and, atding to tha net quantity of 300,000 the quantity wasted, which ie an average of fifty per cent of the whole, we elicit in round numbers an estimate of from 550,000 to 600,000 tone as the gross quantity which was actually housed in the winter of 1865. Never, except for one year, and that in connection with the business of tha late Now York Company, has tha waxy railed to overrun forty per cent of thé whole, and for one or two years it hai run ag high as fifty per cent. The quantity of ice tually sold will not, therefore, exceed five-ninths of that which is actually stored, and to make an actual yield of one-half is reckoned by ice dealers an exceedingly good sale. It is obvious from these figures that THE ICR BUSINESS is a very extensive one, though at present controlled by some nine or ten companies, of which the Knickerbocker and New York companies, just consolidated, with a capital of $2,000.000, have been for some time the mam- moths which have trodden under all attempts to emulate their traneactions in the trade, and have now gained the monopoly of the trade ip New York city and vicinity. For no single year sinco 1840 has the ico crop fallen short of 300,000 tons in grosa; for no year since 1850 has it fallen below 400,000; and for no year since 1860 has it been lesa than 450,000. For 1866 the quantity stored was in round numbers 550,000 tone, of which only 500,000 were ever actually shipped, leaving. with all allowance for wastage, 40,000 tons to be added to the crop of the present winter. For last year—tog ve the da’a of the above estiinate—the number of tons of ice stored by six companies alone atoounted to 643,000, in the foilowiag proportions to the several companies. Knickerbocker... New York. Washington, Brookly! Mepes, § Rausom, Total ......ceceeeeceeeee The amount of capital engaged year was about $1,800,000, distributed as follows: This am solidation of the Knic! nies, and the addition of $350,000 to their capital, mak- ing an aggregate capital of $2,160,000 engaged in the business, of which $2,000,000 is contrailed by a singio company. The exhibits of the two years stand, there- fore, as follot pita! for the year 1868. Capital for the year 1867 Excess of 1867 over 1866... MONOPOLY INTHE FIKTD. It is from these figures obvious that as we have a gas monopoly in this city, so we are toon to be burdened with an ice monopoly similar to that which prevails in Koston, where, of the 100,000 tons consumed in 1866, £0,000 tons was supplied by a single company, at its own hist of prices, Even now acry has been raised that the supply of ice for the reason of 1867 is too amail to fill the demand, and the varied difficulties of gathering, owing to the heavy snows of the carly winter, are recounted and unduly exaggerated by men in the business, Itis, in fact, certain that a strong effort will be made to force up- ward the price of ice at least twenty-fve per cent daring the summer, and this will be done upon the fallacious assertion that ice has not been stored in sufficient quan- tities. The fallacy of this assertion will be patent when it is shown by actual figares that the aggregate storage for 1867 exceeds that of 1866 by some thousand tons. THE SUPPLY FOR 1867 is distributed as follows:— e am Knickerbocker and New York. «389,000 Washington . 85,000 City... 2 30.000 Jersey City. * 20,000 Newark (ity. 2 12.000 Ransom, Parker & Co: * 12.600 W. M. Andrews & Co. . 5,000 + 55,000 ‘ pant bia Quantity lett over, Total on hand... Supply for 1866. Excess of 1867 over 1866,.......++.++++s++0+4+ 66,000 If; therefore, of the supply of 643,000 tons for 1866, 40.000 tons remain unconsumed and undemanded no just reason can be assigned why 598,000 tons should not ‘be sufficient to supply the demand for 1867, ing that the demand for this year may exceed that of any former year by ten percent. ‘to be more definite, this supply js stored at various points within shipping distance of the city, in houses the capacity of which, in connection with the quantity stored in each, is stated in the sub- joined table:— ity of Amount Howsed New Baltimore. 25,000 12,500 58,000 58,000 Athen 40,000 30,000 Catskill 40,000 40,000 Evensport. 16,000 12,000 28,000 21.008 17,000 15, 25.000 12,500 000 16,000 9,000 9.000 Fiatbash . 50,000 25,000 Rhinebeck , 20,000 20,090 Rondout. .. 10.000 10.000 Esopus. 30,000 30.000 Clearwater. 16,000 16,000 New Palts . 12,000 12.000 ol 90 000 £0,000, Rondont... 15,000 15,000 Kingston Point. 80,000 20,000 West Camp... . 40,000 Washington Point. , 12,000 Washington Porat, 25,000 12,560 MINOD. see ee eee 6,000 5.000 Totals. ... sees eee eae 11819, 000 503,000 Excess of capacity over amount housed.........118.000 To the quantity stored in these houses mnst be atded 55,000 tons stored by the Brooklyn Company, and 40,000 tons left over, and we have tuc grand aggregate of 698,000 tons, Which is the gros* quantity actually housed for the business of this year. Of these houses the Knickerbocker and New York Company owne sixteen, with an aggregate capacity of 452,000 tons; the Wash- ington two, ‘a capacity of 45,000; the City Teo Com- pany one, with a capacity of 40,000; the Jersey City one, with @ capacity of 40, ; the Newark City one, with Deapacity of 12.000; Kansor, Parker & Co, own one, TiS ebesly 500" ‘us aagents, gan with a ty of 5,000. e ice housed fer this Weta ite Knicl aan aes York ny owns 399, ns—an amount which ex- oowde that ot rf) the others together by 220,000 tous, When CB cS mans ike stook The Brooklyn Company gathers most of its stock from ‘a faba, eae owned y the New York Company, and recently made the subject of an investigation LA o Commission, and from pointe along the Had. son, the 55,000 tons gathered by this company have been — Tons, 30,000 009 5 greek, Kingston Point, Phineberk, Flatbush Sound), Turkey Point, Maldon and Catskill Point » Besides these |» \s quarried from several points on Catskill creek wisich bave no particular name, Most of these localities lie in Ulster and Rockland counties and are easily accessible. That . PUR PROFITS oO TUR nUSINESS are large may be deduced from the fact th mostly In the bands of single compare nine,trade bocker and New York), and from the further fact that corporations with monopoly have never been known either to be troubled with ecraples of conscience or to lose money. Ice dealers generally claim that the profite of the trade will not overrun ten per cent on the capital invested, but from the fact that the larger companies make handsome dividends tt may be argued that there is some mistake in the assertion, Lo settle this question, no more than a brief caleulaten, based upon reliabdio estimates, is ne . Theaverage cost of gathoring the ice and bringing it to the door of the consumer will eed $4 per ton, and may be distributed, if the estimates of men in the business are to be taken as cor- rect, about as follows :— ‘ Cost of gathering and housing, Coat of shipping, loading, &e Cost of distribution and delivery The actual cost from quarrying to delivery, U is not more than twenty cents a hundred, allowance of twenty-five per cent be made for exaggera- tion On the part of dealers from whom the above table was elicited, the average cost by the hundred, eoatng expenses of cartage and delivery, cannot be in excess 0! fifteen cents, According to their own estimate the Knickerbocker and New York Company expect to. supply to the consumer 200,000 tous during the summer of 1867, at an expense, probably, of $600,000. Grantin the company ten per cent profit on” its capital $2,000,000, which amounts to $200,000, and adding that sum to the original cost aud expenses, from these "200,000 tons, should be realized an amount equal to $500,000, In other words, the price per hundred demanded for this article of consumption ought not to exceed twenty cents, and no donbt twenty-five cents per hundred would cover, taking ico dealers at their own estimates, all possible io ‘nd expenses, and Include the neediul ten per cent of profi the above calculation omits to take into account the wastage of the ice in the processes of shipping and cart- age: but, even if this be reekoned in, the priee demand ed for the article ought not to exceed thirty cents per hun- dred—aifording the ordinary protits of business on capi- tal invested—or we Lave only to allow an expense of eighty cents per ton (instead of forty) on the net quan- tity brought to market, and. this item a duly included. The table then stands as follows :— Expense of gatherin, Shipping, &c.... Cartage and delivery. Total.....+. eal ons This allowance will not, therefore, materially a‘fect the validity of the former calculation; and no further figures. are needed upon which to base the demonstration that thirty cents per bundred is amply sutlicient to afford tho proper business profit, Of prices which were do- manded last summer and paid and will be demanded with increase this summer, and probably paid, nothing need bo said, for the reason that processes of mathematics usually render comment unnecessary. FACTS AND DETAILS, The number of barges employed by the several com- Panies in and about the city ia, in round numbers, forty, of which thirty are owned by the Consolidated Company, im Canal street. This company also employs three steam tugs, and has three barges building for the sum- mer trade, 350 carts are employed in the business, of which 250 belong to the Consolidated Company, and about five hundred horses, of which more than threo hundred are the property'of the Knickerbocker and New York, The number of pedlers, cartmen, railors, &c., who gain their daily bread in connection with the business 1s estimated at more than four thousand, and pensene: aueeceee Anglo company Ta weauannd are inthe employ of » pects to maintain an almost utter ot toe business, which, being gained, high prices may be anticipated, unless a second company, with equal capital, should be started by men of enterprise and tact. MONTHLY REPORT OF THE BUREAU OF STATISTICS. Imports, Exports, Collection Districts, &c. Wo have received from the Bureau of Statistics, Treasury Department, its monthly report, ending Janu- ary 31. It being too voluminous for us to publish in full, we give a summary of the matter to our readers: The number of customs districts in the United states is 111—fifty-eight being in the North and fifty-three in the South, The foreign goods imported into the United States during the month amounted to— Entered for warehouse. The free goods were ly K0 bullion, and rage, for the manufacture of paper. The exports, being the produce aad manulacture of the Uniied states, for the month, were valued at. $37,609, 743 1,187,153 year ending + $209, 234.081 180,415,994 i +. 222,867,028 From this it will be seen that the exports of the year afver the war were greatly in excess of those during the war, and greater even.of the two years preceding the war, which proves the elasticity of our commerce. Next follows in the report a table showing the current | igs jabor in various eecupations, December, 1866, in New York city the prices were:—bricklayers, $4 brickmakers, $2 to $250; blacksmiths, $3 50 per day; — JY ge oes matt cae miers, my a makers. $4; coachmakers, ; Coopers, per 3, carters, $12 per woek:: chairmaker:, $2 60 to $3 per day : bookkeepers, $800 to $3,000 per year. The prices of labor ran bighest in the West. The prices are put in currency. Consul Osterhaus at Lyons, France, gives a report of the exports from Lyons to the United States, They I 1864. 5 1965 51,841,156 The goods were chiefly silks and ribbons, of which New York took a very full share. Consul Warner, of St. John, New Brunswick, gives a report of the exports from that int to the United States. They amounted to $116,7! The article ex- ported was lumber. ‘The flour imported in 1865 was 205,373 bbis. In 1866 it was 68,000 bbls. Canada cut out the United States that year in the flour trade. Consul Kreismaron gives a report of the value of goods exported from the Berlin (Prussia) district in 1666 «The value was $3,623,104 in gold. From Switzeriand (Basle distr ct) the exports to the United States amounted to$5, 202,592. The shipments from the port of New York to San Francisco, via Panama, amounted to $11,744,614. A CASE OF ABDUCTION. A fow days ago a telegram was received from tho Mayor of Baltimore by Inspector Dilks, at Police Head quarters, Informing him that he had received int"8ence by way of Havana that a Spaniard by the «aie of Carlos J. Bariero had suddenly left the jsad of Cuba, taking with him secretly, and winout the consent of her mother, a young gir! #vout clevon years of age, named ‘Adela Aleman. «nd that in all probability he would arrive jm this city by steamer. Immediately upon the recorpt of this news, detective Wilson and officer Strauss, of tho Central Office, were detailed to work up the case, and they succeeded in discovering Bariero yesterday afternoon as he was ‘oarteenth street in company with the cae anc wich whom be had beea shopping in” Broads jarters, ab 1, and th .” The prisoner, on being taken to fret stated that he was the father of the gir fonduct of the girt herself seemed to bar him out this statement, as she calted him “ather? when him. However, he afvorwards confessed tha ho was no relative of hers whatever, but that ho at ono o lived and cobabited with ber mother, and states t irifrom her home for the mere reason that she was not well treated by ber parent. Bariero i# a native of Spain, aged thitty-nine years, Ho says that hoe is @ merchant by occupation, and was private secretary to General Prim du: ring the jale insurrection in Spain, and it just previous to his leaving Cuba he was employed 3 teller ina bank at that place, Bariero, to all ap- pearances, does not seem to had any evil motive in abducting the girl, as he seems very fond of her, and Adela herself says that she has been treated by the pri+ «one? with the otmost kindness and consideration. Sho prefers going home to being locked up in astation house; but, all things being eqnal, it is doubtful whether or not she would leave Bariero of her own tree will, SALES OF REAL ESTATE. Muller, Wi C Brick house and letawot tok Ft Heenan Four atory brlek store atid lot 122 Warren. st Three sory Ind lot 226 Frost street. Two lots @, #, 1 125x100, each. Re ion & 4 north sth strech 9 ‘Two lots 8. 8. Oth ‘Rirdel, HO feet west paint Ses gs Ohe toune se Brth entroek iy iat eee tein ia a esas el ec ua a a as Promises a. 6. corner of ah iets ing yee ith engine, Van EI