The New York Herald Newspaper, March 29, 1867, Page 4

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tW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1867.-TRIPLE SH@ET. , ‘ hon the good Lord who feeds tho | joct of the first bill is to given consticational sanction ta toteat reports from infected districts | lary in this quarter it is an offence now to emigrate, | iste leave the beaten track of travel to come | and how they live tl i tand- historical interest, | ®P@rrows apd the ravens only knows. Men whe work | the Miniatey to collect the taxes for 1867 which had becm 4," yet a decided feeling of uneast- | The third prisoner was less fortunate, for notwiths here, and yet, im point of h around the town in the pe te getting out and breai- | uncomsututionally imposed by the imperial government. =? e es to show & bes pervades the public mind Im this city to-day the ie be ah mands bo Sau selagegbie charges So in eos, | there is no portion of Francs eo mc. Every heather, | ing stone from daylight till dark, receive as Wages thirty | Toe second bili proposes a levy of forty-eight thousand nN AR 1 o Vend of | sous, or about twenty nine cents a day, and ordinary recruits. schon and preparations of the government were dis | tedy until a policeman was got to swear that he was ono | hill @nd valley in La Vendeo bas ite story laborers ‘pot more than a. franc felative every- | — There could be no reasonable doubt that the first of ened with anxiety, the general tone of opinion being | Of DAFty O° one hundred that atiacked come Poung | (BO bravery gucrifice and devotion of ite sons who iB | wing''ig in this world. Here, where everything | those measures would be carried, as ite reject’ that the proewnt quiet ts bot the precursor of a violent pyc een ome be abe Contre in this | the time of the French revolution, adopting for their | seems ao cheap to me, they complain of the | not fail to ruin the present hopes and Prospects of the lveland Amnexed to the United States | "er. ext eenr far mat the Fenians will choose their | city, was apprehended ‘by tho police and placed. in | motto “loyalty and faith,” fought valiantly for king and | terrible dearness of provisons. Beef and mutton | country; Dut there is an unscrupulous party in the tela f ! sake URS IN RUROPE, aun | | | | . cost sixteen sous the pound, a chicken ten {francs and | House who, aiming at revolution, do all they can to im- Gne paneiiny spate Gp extenans Ge Soe peg sain oxrigive me, BLEAY enone ve ‘oat yor | CRarees pees te eerie eras epearpocorcnag ons from twelve to tighioen sous the dozen. | Bread | pede a cordial reconciliation between ‘Ausra sad Bue. ‘antan | i It t& bebeved that the government have received pri- in! it . the two spirits of i—republicanism and irreligion. | an @, however, are cheap, and these © | gary, and it was portance now—now that by by a Fenian Manifesto. n uunnn an ee oo | ane sacl cormmnission for Cork; which will be pre- | Every ruln-crowned height is surrounded as thickly as ) staple diet of the Tanger portion of the laboring popula: | the sppointment of a responsible Minisiry the Hungarian tion of Napoleon Vendée, In my peregrinations I | Parliament is freed from ali external intiuenco—u deepatced auxiliaries to abd those already im arme, and | filed over by the Lord Chit tie opened £0 Common | with the vy which clings to its walls, with rich memo- | Siepped into one hovel, where on the mud floor a man | how many adherents this party could depend, oon this aepreetom Was comederably strengthened by the | in ‘April, and it is pow Baie “ sittings may | ries of the past, dating back to the far times when the | and bia wife and three or four children were sogaged a Pes tein the biehon. Goaere Mtistactony, On The “Men in the Gap” on St. Patrick's Bay | order for all vos ia commission at Portamouth to pre- | be prolonged for, some weeks, owing 0, the | Druids performed their mystic rites tm the pale moon. | {noe op te, thal Guterent Sick Satin, eathored | themselves iy favor of tho, goverament Bilt thisraree . pare for immediate action on the Frish coast. Already a | “iMeulty of identification. Considerable, participa. | Hight, Bat 1¢ was not so much to explore the ruins of | on tho vines im the surrounding country. This was a | claiminz to the world that the supporters of law and formidable fleet ie approaching our waters, The Belle- | tion in the late rebellion can be brought home. The evi- | Past history as to nee something of the present condition | man tolerably “well to do,” who owned é sankey order in the pressat Diet are omg than seventeen times rophon sailed yesterday morning, the Niobe, Stork and | dence will be for the most part circumstantial i; seaay od of the country, and particularly of the people, that I he eS Bas Fy WW on *. a 2, “Routes rae nies an aedingy a if two other gunboats in the afternoon, and also the Hector | {hose confined in wht oo ‘they were | 1Witted my warm bed at daylight and burried down to | gathered their treasures of shellfish. In the | The House inet at ten o'clock A. M., and imme {rigate to reinforce the squadron at Queenstown. found absent from their work. the railway station amid the falling flakes, eA e. ao. ~. cnet nl Pra peononand $0 3 er eek Five mentors of Others are preparteg with all possible speed for cruising | A Young man named Maurice Colter was taken UP om | But the fakes did mot long continue to fal. Before | no conid usually gather six or cight francs worth of the | ernment bill, proposing that all kinds of waconstita- on the southern BS we reacl rleaus the sun came out i articles in whic! i. While we were talking am | tional taxation, inclu coo monopoly, and western conste dered, the frat bloody scene of the ieurrection Was en. hod Orleaus the e out in all his splendor | articles in which be dealt, Wi kin ional taxaticn, including the toba ly, should One thousand two hundred marines are being armed | actod’. Colter was absent before and some days after the | and tinged with a richer hue the delicate peach aud | old woman came along the street, and, poking witty be immediately abolished, and that the Ministers should 0 atthe basket of snails, begged him to give her a few, | be empowered to effect aloan to meet the With the Suider idle for service here, sorae to be de- | movement, and on returning home was pountes poe | pear blossoms bursting out in this early March beneath | Stung ‘thet, although it was three 0 clock im the after: | financial necessities of the country. *patched immediately in the Himalaya, in company with both ‘Cork, will, Lunder- | the sky of France. Everywhere in the fields laborers | noon, she had eaten nothing that day, These poor peo- After afew words from Laszlo in support of the amend- the Sixty.sixtn pr don ee ee re ere trie Teen aa ti connaiow Ble | ween,as Werk teopeding the groned for culinre; sad. af ple wéem kind tocuch othet and ine teherman poured | mont, Tisza, the loader ofthe more moderate opposition. Every preparation lias boen taken to mect any demon- will be assisted by some of the most able men atthe | i; usual through most of Europe the majority of these imy mollusks in! spoke, jared, eerin, sides apron, the old woman went on her way, leaving | of the House, that the demand of the Ministry could not stration that may be made to-morrow. All the wilitary | {ith bar, by whom the prisoners may rest assured {BOF | very women, engaged in ditching, snading, wheeling | hor biocsing with the generous giver, be refused. He objected, however, to some of the de- and constabulary wil! be under arms from to-night till Although at every entrance of the town, and freanent- | tails of the bill. barrows and. performing ll opr NE at tes Neagle 4 ly along the high roads in the country, signs are pinced | The next speaker was Madarasz, a fluent spoken law- Monday. FRANCE country is only doge by strong, men. stating that “‘Mendicity is positively prohibited in the } yer, who in 1843 was President of the Equality Club, ‘The weather has continued sevese ap to this morning, od further on we saw where and how many of these Gonoet < La Le ety ol town and Sony, a a more ier gp aac —— Kossuth ge frost . arm” with beggars, nu streets squalid ol patural wv amendment. iene geatel con ee ed hes peek Maborere lived. For, miles auf ,yaikes beyond Toers, women, men, boys und mrangers partictt- peopie,” he ‘exclaimed, “could have no confidence im & and snow. fhe troops and horses have suffered very ris i amid rich vineclad hills and uplands, along | jarly for charity, and ath have same story to tell— } government which did'not diminish the burdens of the much by the late severity of the weather. An extra erinl News Report—Careful Avoid- | the roadside, large excavations have been | want of bread—and most of them bear ‘upon their thin pause e ‘amd then Deak rose. aud Movement of a Powerful British Squadron. NAPOLEON’S LOSS OF POLITICAL POWER. Destitution and Discontent in La Vendee. Legislative Progress ian Young Italy and Reconstructed Hungary. SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. made in the solid rock, out of which stone has been a rr "hear" a ee. &e. ee, | tomar of ean nm srved ot tis week to Ele scscee yep ic Gessptem cone wt | Seas oe ceases oe guards and pickets, ‘Troops quartered in wooden and | Sveech—Negetintions with Holl - | dismal, hundreds and thonsands of the farm and vine: | iny ucual tela” akoendaty Tet ue’ cocaine iron huts draw one-third additional, and those m leon’s Proposed Present to Victerin—Health | yard laborera along the route live. A little boarding i | about Ni ther handsome looking man, | Any effect that might have been produced by the ‘The Fronch Transatlantic mail steamship Europe, | 70 DY per | of the Prince Imperial. Tun up in front, with alittle bit of glass fora | Greased ike ian, sontited’ gia’ a’ te road! | treskysneboric: of: tact preceding eratop. A00R¥RS Captain Lemarie, which left Havre on the 14th and Brest on the 16th of March, arrived at this port early yester- day morning, bringing files, in detail of our cable de- spatches, to her day of sailing. The Europe landed twenty-six passengers and the mails and brought a full cargo, Captain Lemarie re- Ports:—-On the 24th of March, at five o’clock in the morning, we were compelled to change our course, in order to avoid the floating flelds of ice, covering all the horizon and not allowing us a moment free passage. We were mot by the we in 50 degrees longitude and 45 degrees 45 minutes latitude N., and they disappeared at 93 degrees 20 minutes longitude, and 43 degrees 30 miantes N, latitude, Onthe 25th, in 60 dogrees longi- tude and 42 degrees latitude N., we passed a steamer, supposed to be the Ville de Paris, going East. On the 26th, in 63 degrees 30 minutes longitude and 40 degrees 30 minutes latitude N,, we passed the City of Baltimore, going East, Tho London News thinks that a measure of electoral reform which falls short of housohold suffrage, but which is plain and simple in its provisions, will please even the advocates of household suffrage better than one which concedes that franchise in name but which loads it with conditions which would neutralize it in fact, and produce constant irritation and agitation, taking, moreover, that form of feuds between classes which is the chief danger and evil of our times. The solicitors of the Jamaica Committee have written a letter to ex Governor Eyre’s solicitor, intimating the course that they will be obliged to take in consequence of the refusal of Mr, Eyre to come to London to be served with awrit, Mr. Eyre’s friends considered he would be depriving himself of his legal advantages by acceding to the proposal of the Jamaica Committee. Accordingly the committee have no resource but to apply for « warrant against Mr. Eyre at the next petty sessions held at Market Drayton, in the neighborhood of which place Mr, Eyre is now residing. This proceeding 4s much against their wish, as they are desirous of ayoid- ing the great expense and inconvenience of taking wit- mosses and counsel to Shropshire and encumbering the Shropshire Assizes with a case of the kind. manent barracks one sixth. A military guard for the Panis, March 15, 1867. | window over the door, and here in this equare hole iu | and, politely touching bis hat, said he bad agreat favor | before tho irrefutable logic of the “great commoner.” Protection of Smithfield Rridewalt has been mounted | te evening Moniteur publishes every week a sort of | {he Fock, huddled together, live a whole family. Some | io tek of me. "He was going to Napoleon,” be sa'd, ‘‘in | Two more members of the extreme left spoke in favor there for the past two days, and will continue during P fi fe ta tices nat | Tern eee Lae ne teens See one search of work, and had eaten nothing during the morn- | of the amendment, but Tisza’s declaration, and the argu- résumé of the general "political situation. ie of not ‘oura, and the sight was really sickening, and tt was | ing and boped I would give him a few sous with which | ments of Deak had already decided the fate of the bill, the present disturbance. badly written, as far as atyle goes, and seeing its official | sickening to think that snch misery and poverty should | (o ye: something to eat. “How did it happen that he | and it was passed with the before mentioned enormoes A man who gave his name as Fitzharris was arrested | character people are apt to attribute more importance to exist beneath thia beautiful and in the midst of | wd was obliged to beg ?”” I asked; ‘‘a healthy, strong man | majority, ‘The deiails were then discussed, and several Jest evening im Dame stvect. Oe being taken into agricultural wealth and under the supervision of this | jike nim.” “Oh, mon Dieu, Monsieur,” he ren ied, “I | amendments proposed by Tisza, but finally the whole ing 5 ing it than the matter generally deserves, “paternal government." Since I have been down am a carpenter by trade, and have been “at work for | bill in its original form was carried by acclamation. custody he drew a loaded revolver from his pocket and This week the summary is remarkable for the con- S my seen spots of this be ad of pee a a or three months at Les Sables, I got podea —) a Cs ed ‘The hail in which the Laon. Hones Ce 94 pted jiceman. . | sick of “paternal governmentism,’ work ; but what cau a man save out of # particu- | Diet assembles is spacious, wel vege papers soe ” Lad rag pd spicuous absence of any notice whatever of those sub- | which I shall give you later in this letter. asick wifeand ten children | one end is the President's chair, aud beside and below is sate sn ales © ae. eg Ssaiotance, | J#cts about which the public is really anxious. There is | Since the contaminating inftuet f railways has port? Besides, my work is finished there now, and | him are the seats for the oflicials of the Housc and the conveved hive to Obansery tine stihion: » | not a word concerning the Eastern question, not a word | spread itself over Europe, and by the introduction of | 1 am going to N: in search of some. Idon’t like | tribune for speakers, Moct members, however, speak ‘apoleon : well fil has , ‘A despatch from Nenagh this morning announces the | about Candin, not a word of the Russian despatches, not ee one oe Teat teetae ee “eb to beg: bat if I starve what will become of my poor | from Sa se it this morning's debate only Mada- ae eee eae eeise ed ala farmers hhowee, | ® Word of the famous toast of the Grand Duke Nicholas, | places”” which we formerly heard of have been abont | "'Was' I doing night in encouraging ‘‘mendicity,”” and | for buncombe, as an American would cay—ascond’d the within afew miles of the town, and en the information | But by way of compensation there are very long | as difficult to find as was the fountain of youth, songht | what the mawworms of England and America call “in- | tribune, On each side of the ball the benches for the f one of the local constables He was remanded to jail | details touching the happy understanding between | $0 lone by Ponce de Leoa, Napoleon Vendeo is ne vet, | discriminate charity,” in Yielding to the impulse of my | members are arranged, the adherents of the xovernment of one of the local constables. He e ie PY however, an exception to the general rate, principally, | heart, and draining my pockets of all their loose change | sitting on the right, the opposition on the ieft, of the pk - exam! Te ots aan eal he sabi France, Russia and Turkey for putting a new roof ona poet, from the fact that travellers bave not a and providing this poor fetiow with enough for half a | President, The Peers who attend the sittings uave seats vant toa farmer, and was supposed to be a Fenian, | church in Jerusalem, From this trivial fact the Moniterr | learned its merits in this respect, or are not sufficiently | dozon good meals? ‘Tears flowed from his eves ashe | a: the end of tac hall, opposite tue President's chair. was murdored on his road home to Rorrisoleigh, Carroll | draws vast conclusions, It would have its readers infer | i™{0Fmed of the beauties and interest of the surround. | thanked and blessed me, and he and I both ‘went on | This morning the House was unusually full, and every war-aitesinascaith'hammibiste® etieartmteretans ie 0 a 2 ing country, or are not sufficiently desirous of seeing | our way rejoicing * Ws ipa tals tis tnipertaiow of Garsonmataa:’ Wal tne eae te Bercicletete ‘The authorities thought ae | tt because after innumerable protocols the French and | the ruins aud the battlefields of La Vendee, the scenes | “And yet with all this poverty there isa great deal of | alinough animated, proceeded with the greatest recu- pens A the captives but the deceased, who was re- | Russian plenipotentianes—it would be perhaps more | of some of the most heroic deeds over performed, to | wealth in this part of the country; and the soil is rich, | larity and order. Atmost all Magy@rs have a natural gift te ed. Wetng sop poset od to have eee his liberty by ture. tt architocts—have agreed to rebuild the roof | tn the tide of | travel in this direction. | aud yields good crops of wheat, buckwheat, hemp, flax | of cloquence, which they fortungtely seldom abuse, ing informer, » perty of Fenians lay in wait et nesdeded | nan’, Last January a railway. however, was opened | aod the ordiuary garden vegetables, and wine enogh to | within the Diet, for the parpose 6f making loag, set, Lond preg) ba A poorly nde tee alive, | 1a question between them, the peace and concord of the | trom here to Nan a distance of about | Sinply the wants of the people; whiic in minerals i'pos- | prepared specebea. The speakers [beard spoxe flusauy,, Barn hort e: ined." His throat ‘was cut by asword | World is assured. Talk of the mountain bringing forth | thirty miles, and it is greatly to be feared that ere long | g.osea ead, antimony, iron, ochre and coal. | without ever hesitating tor a momént, sometimes with ‘oiber similar sharp. instrument, and the bead almost ! ‘Thisisacase of a mouse bringing forth a | Napoleon Vendee may he designated among the ‘cheap | Bur, unfortunately, the moneyed classes seem to | lively gesture, and generally to the purpose. The longest balla nipoeneg rag ov 4 t, amouse! This is acase of a mous ging ® | places” of the past. But until that tine arrives should | faye “no ambition or desire to dovelopo. its | specstethat’ot Madarusa—-did not Inst more. tham © eeTho Dablin Gasetts of Inst night contains notices | Mountain. M. Thiers’ speech, to which M. Rowher is | any of tho readers of the HrRaLn desire to find in France | ich resources. Scattered through whe whole of 1a | quarter of au hour, ; the a iT ‘to grant licenses for | replying to-day, tells a far different story. a town with an interesting country aboupit—rather dull | Yendce are many families belonging to the old nobility | ‘The national costume, worn without exception by the the poestenion ot comets tar Queene oped i I Deputies with whom have | & itself, to be sure, but where excellent French. is | of France, the descendants of the royalists who fought | members, gave an additional oriyinality to the scene. A the jon of arms in Queens coun! ¥ county It is the opinion of several Deputies with whom spoken, and where, compared to any other of its siz@ | ayainst the republica the revolution, These, how- | jong dark frock cont, more or less embroidered, with Meath and Louth. It also contains a proclamation offer’ | 5 oien that Thiers, thi 1 ver, | that I know of, living is exceedincly reasonable—they k rs, thongh he is as eloquent as ever, at I know of, living is exceedinely reasonable— ever, devote their time and attention principally to | tight fitung pantaloons and bigh boow 1x the cosume ihe arrest of Goeries Bourke oF Kilerol Koageoyeendh nara made a less effective speech than last year. I do not | could not do better than to come here bunting and riding, and enjoying themselves Peco ll now universally adopted in Hungary, both for morning . House rents are ridiculously low, Awhole unfurnished | Sut pas put little attention to the mixery an, ya Benen, pee eae rary, who, with others, net fire to the house of a con- | wonder at this impression. After wading through the | nouso, three stories high and. contaluing nine rooms, | 2ndpay but litte attenth ie gt eae See orang oe epeeuaae wool, witheet a'eunen ood Re aed iui ig thas demribeds: | enormously lengthy report in the columns of the | may be rented for 6Of. or $10 month. Furnished such | footing still oxisting in these proud” families, most of | {stse usual subsiuace for a Dat, for all practical purposes his | # house may de had for double this sum, and a friend of | whom are legitimis To-night the Diet has assombled for'an oxtra sitting, aT Rae 7 NOLEN ATO OT eee I nie dees. pea aan . soe ss — oie roves deed, | mine living hero pays thiseam, 100%. a mouth for ix bed- | “tye condition of the raral population of Ta Vendée is | and alah ree aes segounnled er eee light''browa fairy wore @ gray friege frock coat, tweed | [P0ech Was ws ¢ P 4 2 + | rooms, two salons, a dining room, kitchen, cellar and | pad enough, bat not so bad by any means as that of the | recruits will be discussed. The number is double what Lenesoe tweed Geety eugrexed “to have a tallitary | Very conclusively what M. Prevost Parudol bad proved ina | large garden, containing ar and apple trees and grape- peo Jom these dead towns and villares. Much of the | the country could be expected to furnish to the army pearing green cap, with gold band, pamphlet before him, and what everbody knows, namely, xitte nahttnaantaa fer Atty theese a aeomtac Oates, be - is sae ¥ large oir ad th kere but the Hungarians Sp zioUmy Gey wo etd = lacett- \peror y f “ hoot from on world that the re-establishment of the constitut simiar toward Tor such intormaice av hall: lead tothe | tat the French Emperor was completely befooled by M. | and the cooks her» are excellent, may be had for from | franca the nevlare (two and half acres cach), | fore desaiating ihe material power of the empire’ will arrest of Captain Joseph Gleeson, “who, on the 6th inst., | ¢¢ Bismarck and has lost his prestige in Europe, and he | twenty to thirty francsa month, and ordinary “hel and much of it is beld in very small tracts of ao | incr the resources of Austria, by placing at her dis ‘accompanied by armed bodies, murdered a man named | launched with damaging effect, just as ho was sitting | from ten totwenty. I know one case of a han ad need acre or two by the people who live upon it Tho small posh ype gor and moro willing suppiies than Hungary Tracy, and committed other outrages, in the barony of | down, the irritating assertion that the French govern. | *t Which an old woman does the work, receiving for her | farmers, however, do not usually live upon the land. but | could or would uave beeu calted upon to provide under Ikerria, county Tipperary.” Captain’ Gleeson is thus | So"D: the ritaling : ‘i services the enormons sum of five francs, or one dollar | yatuer in miserabie little villages where the houses are | (ue old absolute régeme. ‘There is no doubt the bill will described: "Twenty years of age, six foct high, slender | ment in its foreign policy had “exhansted all the month, out of which she boards herscif. Thi so-ms | Vary much of the character a that Ihave described in | pmas autnogi for corm’s oake, at must, be rst reieered. make, fresh complexion, fair face, blue oyes, ‘straight, | takes that it was possible to commit.” Asan opposition | incredible; bat when I describe, as I shall as 1 proceed. | Napoleon, with the usual addition of a heap of manure | to « commitioe, eis a ¢ hair; dark ‘blue sack the extremely meagre syle in which all the piled up against the house and a pixstye alongside of it, | Two other bills, very important for the country, well shaped nose, black hair; wore a ch calculated to increase the want of confidence of 1 d obli ti , , supposed undress uniform troneers, black vest, specc! classes of this part of the country live and are 0d | and without a single cumfortable look about it—every- | not of Kuro; ean int have been laid belore the dark green cap, straight peak and gold band; hair out | he French nation in its ruler, the philippic was, no | to live, it will not appear so strange. But of this here- | thing cold, wot and dismal, In the country tho small | House, and will lio tn the course of next weet. short, no whiskers or rd, small dark mustache; | doubt, powerful; but when, leaving criticism of the | @#ter. At present my Object is to show people who have pais cede houses are all of the same genoral character, | hey seiate to the re-establishment of the muni i ize it how they can live walks erect, with a amart Yankee step; rather youthful | past, he took upon himself to recommend what should | Money sndidesire to economize lt hon ster, con HES | being one story and about eight foetin height, with mad J ties and county Jurisdictions om the basis of th { i Ey uy The Manchester Guardian says ; generally holds bis head down, ttoors, dark and gloomy both inside and out. The peas- ¥ ‘the re-establishment of the press laws a Tait i Fe the Edinburg Chamber of pera paren di metre thas relatives ia tii | now be done the audience could not but remember that be cnr dpe pe regpr gt ayeer feat iy de- | aatry veho owa, these litte tracts of land are compara- AAS: which prescribe arial by jury Ser. o&enees aus ¥ or ue? ¥ M. Thiers was never a very safe guide to follow. When ~ ‘dang t overy | tively bappy. They, hike borers in owns, Can- | mitted by the press. Schneentalton of "eleerante oy uli the distrbation of bate ee joeeiains tho names of twelve military officers } he tells the Emperor that he has by his own fanit no | fort fale fresh eye bo port 4 gee aie not afford to cat much meat, not usually touching it letters, if it has mot yet borne frait, bids tairto do so, | who are appointed to thi allies, it is a poor consolation that he should recommend | ‘#ut from hero about eighteen miles, more than once a week, but feed princi upon cab- wort) land ro ‘to form an alliance with England with the object of | are sold at exceedingly reasonable prices. bage, onions, milk and eggs, and a cake made of buck. e oe] with: Presinpeartnned open pment nal pina the peace of Europe. Napoleon knows very The hotels in their prices are abated aera —_. whout—and salt and water—not very closely resembling there is a very marked absence of other crimes, well that England will never agam joia him in any great | ud at the first hotel in the town where I am stopping | the. delicious “buckwheat cake’ which is considered : ei wice ce Wena et The J ‘are at present on circuit, and their expres- | war, because she cannot trust him, and an alliance to | the ‘able d’hdte is the best that I have over seen at @ Pro- | such a luxury in our country, but sodden and ‘ soggy” | (iaribalds and Assasite sions, in almost ‘county, are congratulations.to the | keep the peace would be nothing worse, unless the | Vincial, or 1 might almost say at any metropotitan past Upon the large farms laborera receive as Ou the Cabinet Policy. inhabitants om the absence of grave crimes. In some | contingency of war were provided for as 2 an in Leyes by gu hig a Tarwaen ‘wages from to. twenty-five sous. day. At pre- ee Suh Socrenpiomnee Leadon eT ket oiltmeares Pe HS, Slaves, whim de; FS $e. ote the chenontation of ive semy if it's | round the breakfast and dinner and serving it in Catan bene tn te resal dloutine, asome te Wig Beg eel men ane jesian ot tne wnecninese whch the’ pecjoot, uns ex ited powell microwspe ey “ Nan the ‘able ia each year removes from the field of active labor the | nj, mt one may, porhape, rogret it, because he congratulated the Grand Jury, and deciared that their excl he old i sh ee vane, count compare advantageonsl: country. There doubt that when it e old-fashioned American style, and the guests | very ‘bone and sinew of the country seems to bave which Pg he S aie ae an ot we tae pa om rera other, | Perinitted to help themselves to their full. Let me give | rammed this portion of it of ite wen men, and the ee See Outta tis copeenoe fa the <oeee — The quesiion has been seriously considered by the late ‘and present governments, with a concurrence as to the dosirabilit: the proposal. The Post Office authorities have prepared a scheme of operation, and it is under- stood that afavorable finaucial opportunity is now all ‘that is wanted to carry out the project. La Frane-, of Paris, confirma the report that it is pro- posed to present a sum of 400,000f. as a national testi- monial to M. de Lamartine. The proposal, the France Gays, owes its origin to the Emperor 4 f ; HF ae of ey you alist of the good things placed on the breaklast | new 1 for the increase of the army now before thinking men. His conduct last summer, ‘Te Cus cet a says property i repacted." "Similar expressions hare boot table this morning, and which T took down as a matter | the Corps Logislatt is excessively unpopular through | Tder'avyq provocation aud under very unfair treatment, Goan! Mgr va and Cariew, pepe po) counties. of curiosity. Itis rather a formidubie bill of fare i= | ont all the agricultural districts of France, ‘was 90 admirable for pradence and jadicious reserve exile. If the is anxious > * Cold veal, fresh clams, sardines, salad, cold chicken. Farming laud seils here at from eight yt to two | that this sndden raid into Venetia and the strong | i mr fulfils that task {et it publish his letter—writinge paint the man. As tothe noise which that journal reproaches us witb making every day about the said letter, let it only accuso the unanimity of the opinions of the juris- consuls of all the French courts against the circular of M. Vaudal, In the late discussion in the French legislative body on primary instruction the term “letter of obedience”” ‘was more than once used, and many persons reading the ‘st. Patrick’s Day. ham, paté de gibief, matton, two kinds of sea Msb,ome- | thousand fraucs the “ nectare,” tand seemed ead | cryge he bas used on more than one lette, mutton chops, feet, beeisteak, sausages, fried ling through this strange mixture of bili, sappointed many. Deawis, March 17, 1867. potatoes, walnuts, obiee’ cakes, three kinds of cheese, bad lating a phan and seeing the miserable ive, just after he pormeorty Venice, that Ricasoli bad also Up to the time for closing this despatch, no disturb- remain. i seals hhh rail ous ren silty SS ee . a manner ta sito the titers of the pena eutiaes live, | arrived there, he is - been recei: To-day t llertes in tho Co: égislatif are as most quality, to think that in our western country are mi upon « to have that: tunity of em! he ann Sain tia on Ean ation of areply from | style that would do credit to Delmonico, and all in the | millions of actes of broad praine aud wooded ot | Beak tacrooll” batt mat be ownes of a demonstration from country districts, Molster Rouher to M. Thiers adjourned de- | sreatest Such a breakfast in Paris, | smiling valley and pleasant upland, which may be the Baron. personally, as 8 minister be shows him little Hitherto Patrick's Day has been the people's festival; | bate was opened by M. Garnier Pages, who was followed | Could it be procured, would cost from fifty to | forthe asking, and which is waiting only to be “tickled | favor or ‘Yhis Ca by M, Emile Oilivier, and at the honr I write it is under- with @ hoe to jaugh with arich harvest.’ Any Ameri- | cierical who woald distribute the wealth of the mirth abounded, money circulated freely. Troops of | bY i. Rouber will net. he tendencies, can who can travel through Europe and see the poverty | church among the supporters of brigandage rather than bright eyed peasant girls flocked into the city on the ‘beard story p bill: and misery e: bere without having his heart of the ‘anmis- Feport of the proceedings were pn ib eve with baskets of verdant trefoil, their shrill cries of int Py. Perk French government i in | Soup, Pact aoe of fish, [ne amtinn stewed mom} heiy marted with fre for be om he Sa beni ieied stthowe have brought forward aaa ing of the ‘jon. The is re | ” anxious and hourly expectation of negotiating a treaty | Toast a ‘matton, roast cken, beans, of the tui refuge the arch joniastical Property Haart cbecee that "the queries of the | crete shamrogue’” surmoanting the bum of business. | Snz.0G tee nowy EePection fo. France ofthe own, | potatoes, apinnarh, and for desser'—appice, pears, ra | usd downtrodden masses sf Europe and the world, ts | f° Now, it really were folly to attribute to subj q It was the occasion on which the people were received | fortress and province of Luxemburg for a sum of money. | *ins, igs, walnuts, cakes, aud three kinds of cheese. unworthy of hie birtaright and bis colieagues a desire to favor the Churchat: letter of obedience, generally but little known, dominates | by the representative of majosty. Military bands as- | Three or four days ago, when M. Bouedetti, the French | This costs the enormous sum of two anda half francs, | fhe of La Vendeo is a haray race, in spite | Sxnense of the state and of the people, They may be ao entirely all leqislation relative to girls? schools in | sembied in the Castle square to play national airs; the | Ambassador at the Court of Borin, arrived unexpect. | or less than fifty cents im silver. But if regular board is | o: ihe meagre stvie in which they Ineglected 10 | fmltaten, and the vast majority of the Italians bobewe live. im Paris, the rumor ran that be had come to conter | taken at the hotel, these two meals are furnished im all | stare that wine 1s 0 cheap, being sold at three or four France that, according to the solation adopted, their in- | gates were thrown open; Frople, without distinction, ad- | With his goverament about the didiculties raised by | their Tuxurionsness for three francs, orate Lees thas | fous a bottle, that inost of them are able to indulge ia that they ae 20 and that their propowed measure was & is Excel 7 great for the country. Nay, there are persons struction will proceed on a par with that of boys or will | mitted to walk before hii jency as he sat with his | prossia templated annexation of Luxembu: sixty ceute a day. this luxury, and this undoubtedly tends to keep them in it ‘information who are com- be delivered up to the religious communities, that is to | family on the balcony, or to hear him speak to them of to France. waithe semi-official journals made haste to]. My ‘oom at tee hotel, the best in the bouse, costs the | goud nyateal condition. Their habits are primitive, T hasdean tanpoeed ages and led away the pi ity of the country. declare that the sole object of his journey was to pay a | 81m Of one and a balf france, bin pbwr git cnanick | and they are very industrious, as indeed they are Giways shnon hm ay, to retrograde tendencies. The writer adds:— Gent the contrast this year! Shamrocks decorate the | visit, with his wife, to Madame Lavalette, who has been | cents day, and this without any of those swindling Obiiged to be to live. ‘The universal dress of the men |), the Tutlerves amd At it a primary school for girl can be opened or | hats of some of the poopiggbut many seem to wear them | |, ‘and between whose family and that of M. | ditions im the way of “service” and “candies,” which | js» jacket and trowsers of home-made cloth, a broad Takian agents in Plorence—for vt has kept br y woman belonging to one of the religious | with fear, doubtful hell this mark of nationality | Benedetti ‘there exists a close intimacy. They indig- | in most French hotels usually swell the vill to about | brinmed hat and a pair of wooden shoes, approaching 1 terest in this capital—has had bodies joted to instruction and recognized by the | may not draw on them tho notice of troublesome de- | nantly denied that there was any shadow of foun- | double the amount for which 1t is understood the room | jn their mze the hull of the Great Eastern. Tne women public dream of ‘State. How ts the capacity of this person recognized? | tectives. dation for the report touching Luxemburg. ‘I | wasto be charged. It will be seen from this that at the | gre strong and hearty pesbing,: some of them very ‘preserve to the Solely by the letter of obedience. What is that letter? | It is the Sabbath day. To follow the old order of | however, believe it to be quite certain that | first hotel, and living like a ord, a man’s expenses need | pretty, wearing a short kirtle of homespun, a colored | Charch tne xreater portion of its wealth, and to the Pope ) Nothing else than the order given to such @ woman to | things, the public ceremonials would take place to-mor- Napoleon has been ‘trying it on,” and that if he does | be but sixirancs, or a little more than a dollar a day. andkerchief thrown over their shoulders, they in the Emperor's r ‘and keep school in such @ place, an order to which | row. But they are shelved altogether. Instead of open | not succeed it willbe because Prussia has put her veto | There are other hotels excellent of their kind, consider: | aiso wearing wooden shoes, not quite so large epee suspicion and = sho owen obedience. Certain communities are said to | gates, the Castle entrances are closed with bars and | upon the transaction. However this may be, Luxem- | ably cheaper, and there is one where most of the officers | and clumsy as those worn by the men, but coming bad feeling here, Those persons—and are not few have instituted examinations; but how is that proved? | plates of iron. Double sentinels keep watch; within | burg wasa general topic of conversation in the Corps | of the garrison board, having two meals a day anda | gown irom the Great Eastern, more nearly | _who fuliy believe that le bides his time for a war wit Who are the examiners? How do they proceed? What | and without is fear and anxiety. Legislatif this afternoon, and it was said that Rouber | bottle of wine at ench, for forty-five francs, or about | the graceful proportions of the Henretia, while their | Prigsia, and that he cherishes a plan of alliance between ‘s their programme? Nobody knows, What m the was holding back his spoech tilt to-morrow iu the hope | eicht dollars a month in gold. heads are surmounted with some one of the many | frye, Austria, Italy, and even Spain, attribute to him reason for this privilege? Simply that they are com- | phe situation in the Sout —Qui on St. Pat of being able to produce the treaty of cession from The climate of La Vendée is usually delightful. But | variewes of the cap worn in La \andee, Some of there rt pene Brom pers to maintain the satus quo in all that re- ‘munities of religious women. y, then, not have re- ick’s Di Arb a Creal ban 1 | his pocket, and by this theatrical cup to cover Tuiers | little snow falls 1 the winter, although there is usually | are asimple cap of white stuff, fiting closely to te ustria and Spake. stored it to the communities of men’? oo A nyse thn wel Course ot | qith confusion and demonstrate, amid the cheers of an | some irr, and the mildness of the atmosphere may be | head: others rise up from the buck @ toot long, at wu pov e te nd The R officers in Poland bave been ordered to | ‘He Police—Fimigration to America im- i indeed fYonf the fact that yesterday I saw camelias grow- | angie of forty-iive degrees; some end in a flat wp piece, uke’ Albert's e Rassian peded—The Revel Prisoners te be Ably De- ing in fall bloom in the open air, and that now, in the a others, the most beautiiul of ali—i hose worn by Lhe promoted by the call in their mon on furlough by the Ist of April. It 16) fended, Ke. must say it seems to me very unlikely that Prussia will | middie of Mareb, the peach, apple and pear trees are in | peasamiry near the sea Consi—are dell sbaped, @lubo- ‘obvious analogeus view. expected that @ southward movement of the force will Cons, March 17, 1867. | allow Luxemburg. which tsa fed d was | full blossom. ravoly trimmed with jace, falling in rich fords over their eb Garibaldi’ journey may not benefit his repe- take place about that time. Although the insurrectionary movement of Shrove ‘@ federal fortress expressly as a protew be Manheim pe rea abiaege poke browo free. The cap ix the article upon which | if be injurious te Lady Frauklin, widow of the celebrated navigator, has | Tuesday has been complotcly extingulaned the govern- | Cormany against France, now to fall into che hands of | Orie lve tihng Aol eo cee hd py dons — Vs elo ie Normasdy sad Brittany expend it snecid give arrived at Rome. ment are in serious apprehension of another attempt at 7 pone deal of laughing is going on in the a — and bn ca ea oye ape Bh me Leen og a ‘Among the ‘inatitations” of Raa reseed a likely oe yellow prim grow! lor rt he wi whi! ie A French commussion bas been appointed at Toulon to | rising to-day. Accordingly precautionary measures have bg — er oS Doct py wo a. “4 ee P — snl i my! Li of wild flowers of see Cs ia a En, Matsag set ae 3 1 benefit that cenarivche te reusetag ia carry out a series of experiments relative to submarine | been taken, and the military, who have been placed in day, ‘and discussed with him the speech he was to make | every hue; and all ‘hie in the middle of Marcb. harch, creates the ae ‘admiration, cahoweae , en “seen cages a mines. It is expected to commence its labors by an | the most convenient places, are in readiness to answer at against ‘Thiers, = ae whispers tome ~ 4 Sen, top eieeatenspeco 2 to Reeeticte Venace’ 1] among ths tabahtente, She hare not 3, Sete Pally Cf sly, will be driven to do the same; examnation of the different systems of torpedoes. & moment's notice any call which may be made for their | few friends be has left about the importance of his m: cannot consci recmmnens > gles . " to comprebend what it is doing there. ones awakened from ‘Tho newspaper called the Jithme de Sues says thatthe | services, Up to the time I write (noon) no intelhgence pay hy Ay can aamupenarie ahaa -_ Bostte and society for it is Probably, ‘without exception Wodovedne she ineurigr of flamboenes pated of —_ od a | French contractor Dassaud has entored into am agree- | bas reached here of any disturbances in the county, | and so give Rouher a few hours more tomake up his | the dullesttown inall France. It is a town built to | p, The duties of the am' accomplished ‘and broken ‘would “no call’? f eoey . ment with the Viceroy of Egypt to construct two mew | and I bave no reason to believe that any will take Siti was founded by Nepelee a ob bs M4 tepporine . the consti root porta, the one military and the other commercial. They . tablishing a Napoleonic town y Which he does an bee will be separated by an immense jetty, traversed by a ‘The Fenians are too much discomfited at their late anti-Napoleonic, Vendéo. Jt ts laid out in magn’ ith « consular ‘absence of real tailroad, The works will cost fifteen millions of franc, | defeats to take the field again. They have learned a cont ro np ee ee Sree ene i a rant of pats; or $3,000,000, and it will take six years to complete | little experience, and it isto be hoped they will profit = Seadiemon” Wate ih hes beh twerve, Dow. whe contingency of the spt 58 opinion and them. by it, They bave seen that the power of England is not = of commerce and manufactures, it is States from Sabies ‘and—in eae so easily subdued, and that a handful of men armed ia + Lg dey bed Soe Sue tess i. cea eee na rand the | rather a less degreomia the general election — THE FENIAN WAR. with pitchforks and clasp knives, cannot achieve any- locked up! foran hour in the black longing eye toward the thing but certain failure. Of all the attempts at rebel- p+ 5S eee apiece out of each open eg ped ed. or PERSONAL INTELLIGENCE. swapping jackni own aed SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE WERALD. ee ee pad gigcidher There is, necsenars * ms deal Untortunataty, how. | Lieutenant General Sherman has obtained Genera? dom, none present iserat misery here. About justry probability of o —— p=" Pepe he te aS ur che exhibition as the present, In 1848 there were men of tare of a cheap kind of Jace, which 1s made by women po they, in all their | O7AP" upaeoeentecboyent wee er aad va heron ' Feet of the Galtees, &c. standing, men of'position and of gonius—true patriots, Tae ina tarde of the other ince . tune of France, eables an menid of June. Dratix, March 16, 1867, | Who were ready and not unwilling to sacrifice their lives | vhether the imperial government considers policy to ex were shi to a of the University of Peas ‘The following important manifesto has been largely’ | for thelr country’s good. But who are at the head of the | royal family pend with but little other Kantes, and the ‘invoices of | At the tate commencement ters Fenian speculation? Persons without either or | elsewhere. than a Regine laboring classes srapleye a merica verified there. This is di. | syivania the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws was coa- circulated in all parts of the country within the tast few | standing in the world—men who have nothing to lose, ad the lip. The order to their = minds from consular regulations, but | ferred on Major General SW. Crawford, United States days, notwithstanding the precautions of the govern- | and everything to gain. ‘The loyalists here can afford to | in particular have been making « great stir in the mat- | ary ideas. Se eit? ar nee very much to the detri- orm. General Crawford is an ciumnus both of the mont officials, It reads thus:— laugh pe are vce tee wee tke Mayor exa the curé—for ail of whom the Probability in good years amoun toa ot nara pemared C1 col | “R heaitooee, ot the United Sétee army; MANIVEFTO OF THR IRISH PROPLE. effect that the statues are not the Em; wo rural districts have the highest considered | qoliars, if he could get in his clutches all the sardines | w. Betsy, of Georgia; C. EK. Jerome, of Jackson, Upon considering our nt ion we have come away, that are national property that mothing sufficient, ea todas wr arte mee which are shipped from sables to America, Miss., and C. L. Gorton, of Buffalo, are stopping at the to the following resolation on bebaif of our country- Dut an act of the legislature can alienate them, Ii is | known to them in the shape of the tax gatherer. | "Seriously the position of am American Consul here is | Metro Hotel. * ‘men in Ireland, in America, and in every other quarter unpleasant doubtless fora sovereign to break his im- | In this town itself isa A Goal of poverty; wae avery bard one. If the government desires itself re- Grhovernor Phin B, Tompkins, of South Carolina, is Of the world where they are now dispersed. Perial word to a Queen; but the rumor is that in this ies ae me how the poor manage live, ted at Napoleon Vendee it certainly ought to con- sopping at the Bt. Denis Hotel. ‘sh government has become absolutely intolerable case the Em) Pressed by public clamor, has made | even in ‘miserable manner in which they do. ibute to bis su When the office was created a Chandler, of Baltimore, Md., \s stopping at the to us We cannot endure a state of society in. which up bis mind to write with his com that he is | The town ie about equally divided in point of ‘of Atteon nandred dollars a your was attached tos, | Woaunaner Ti ‘the commonest liberties of all men are suspended. very sorry about the statues, but he had mistaken | habitations between houses Ses. and ing several the Consuls here received this Colonel Anderson and G. M. Benjamin, of lowa, are We are unabie to contend with our o in arms, his ble and comfortable and the mi jovels | annual amount Al ‘the time of the are of the | st at the Everett House. and we turn to the hope of mankind, the great republic 1 Just beard that the day before tho | in which the reside, These are low, one | present incumbent the salary of this was taken rage clifora, of Poruand, Me. is stopping at the of North Fo nee ip our difficulties, Emperor offered M. Benedetti the folio of the Min- | story houres of », containing usually but a single | away, and now, asl have betore stated, it is an office | Firth Avenue Hotel. : We ask to be admitied into the American Union, as & istry of the Interior, but be it room, with a floor of the native mud, in which father, | @ithout either salary or fees. The government should Colonel L. B. Piatt and HL Bigelow, of Ver- ow ame, termes son tet kovernment, but send- ‘General Castelnau has arrived here from Mexico, mother Saat cess tn sas eee children of Mas either abolish it at once, wie ee een mont, are ing at the He ; a ont. y it most promiscuous . rain Hl Paris week end- “we Let hy Prono oTk a8 Washington, as New mares for tve aapestier Tart tal had Dy fasion, “In. some of them three or fear squalid, dirty a ree require ail ihe sardines, causht x Marche 16, 1867 :—| New York—James’ Mel Shoreaghiy Aupericanised thet sosaticn tea eee bow been admited by the Monvrwr. Fue oll jcarna | looking beds are placed upon four rough, wooden poss, | in his auiice which are cen o America to pace throngh | Wintam H. McKaye and wits, HG. WeKaye, W. We a9 iouger tolerabie oF brane, _ conduct on the part of the officers of Justice. ho uature ot the dlosase te such sal eaortheg to yen, | ment a bie ibe wie relly seresch themasives'at | "8 canner, in ostice to myself, close this letter without | Hvaverer, Be Kmoedien Jax, Willeos, Dr: R.A, Crane, ‘This is « Onal jemn resolve wpon fall deliber- Daring the week there were several arrests in Queens- | and it betokens a bad constitution, The lad is betier, | night to catch a aegis d and yo the cares of | returning to Colonel MéClure, the Consul hereto- and G We solicit our countrymen throughout the Union im. | Swe ccdeeata et parts Secaetmtaproen movement. bes ‘ouatens ay a who Is permanently aude sragh te sol ever ater hairs, ~4 po eg et i seatictony to amen Ck. avy, (his, tes Rie. ‘The most innocent person in world may be ae, gngaged ‘at the Italian Opera, bas. made ‘a very successful | In the winter rant. most Soir tortiay, fe (= wood sgjonrn fe Vendee. No gentiemen is more pop. Promdeat and Conereas of the United States aad LU i J PN. ceo * ta bee ins and the | this part of the spestey “San bs A ee one bey ngned o@ belal! of tbe Te ie loft unturned to secure a conviction. I was present a ta ts the genet be better able to perform the business and social PA SARSFIELD, ae he ha De te Bone om: tied (nl Se ro of am American Consul—no one more attentive WOLFE TONS, ho hed been arrested under cireumsaness secommodations. | and considerate toward his travelling countrymen, were RDWARD FITZGERALD, | te mtntaiog with Ficeees tobe The ub. who told that ter labor at ‘toaveming, and | Be Pinca se enerone, than h ii pga SMITH OBRIBN. SLovterer a the pohee anopetner the fanc. | Towa—Poverty and Misery in La Vemdoe— | 1500 making yielied ber from ven t0 sous a'day, | U0 called into se oe Foor on wae Gaurms, March 12, 1867. Caner sane he police altogether Ca'bemeetves the | How the Peer Live in Tewne-How the wea.” abe replied, “Tuy a caboage tn the morning —— deciding of the case, There was no evidence against | ‘Peasantry Live—The Young Men All Taken | for aud two, sous worth of broad, and th THE HUNGARIAN PARLIAMENT. Saint Patrick's Kve-Anatety on All Mides— | ‘wo of the men, and although according 10 thelews of] Away for the AfmyThe Peasant Men and ——P ibe day."" _* Do you never get meat? penetrate Locking 0 * American Allies and the | this ‘giorious constitution every man is presumed 10D0- | Woon thelr Dress and Cap of La “ About once s week,’’ the “1 buy Brition Fleet in Motion—A Belligerent Pris- | Sent vntil he iw found guilty," the revorse was exactly | ¥ @ asd) ee Title piece of beet make’ ® aod eat the of the Free Legisiature enee—Aa latermer Mastered, Sc. practised in the cases to which I refer. Another great endos, &e. aseasen Yerore meat a next A Ned apt oe at usual | Animated Debates—Scene in the House and a Dosum, March 16, 1867, mnt yatey hia ae he crowe,” wae we Deranrunee of 1.4 Verses tare 29, 1 | mm okt cannot be ener. Masons. and b 1 2) correspondence of London Times.] Seldom ban the anniversary of the patron saint of ~’ violated, inasmuch as the prisoners, against The snow was falling in thick, heavy esos. — ond such ren, Cote Oey ean got work, a to the importance poss Jritamd been loo.04 forward to with so much anaiety as | 20 ice Catt BO proof of guilt, were obliged to pro- | days since, Tieft Paris to make a little tour through # a emal more thas (renee, of the debates which thie morning on the Ames. torah ~4 192 the present oocesion There is no decided foundation | wny they were cone to nan one of the least known aod mort interesting | SbOWE thirty coven and s ail conte 9 day, and. 0 Bitar Rng Tet reatng wo fhe ot © Laws gud wife | Canrornla—cenee RRatler J Gor epprepeanen Weal the peace of the coumtry willaa | the Darrow Views and disiorty: of (he ancient provinces of France, Fe" Wt | feenesntiy fo dave ned weeks they haye ae ‘ = - = &

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