The New York Herald Newspaper, April 26, 1867, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

é NEW) ¥ORK HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1867—TRIPLE’ SHEET we been foresd to dicegorge Alsanfand Lorraine, _‘* We wilt | igallant Colonel opinion that an amond- | ® larger a settled now and settled well Br artnet Bas sworn, wye:--T ame ecqueinted with John Bendel; IMPORTANT FROM BUROPE. show the haughty Goals thas Ute relate poli ts not he | meat of wineh ME Hibben haa piven note, wight De SSF a se oar nd 1% ia my duty to, distinguish oa Fray evening two weeks aon tesa ahs ot be- favorably entertained by Lord Derby and tae Chancellor | Uniess you put the interest which the of the t honor. o'clock, | was at the above It fortunate that the sinister intelligence from Paris the Excheq: . Osborne jonel gentleman, ‘is the leader of a party— 5; We were up tho first of stairs aud pa eessh Reriiacatanunsnenram eleLuaee MEA] fetinr tak Cae thee ee ste | lee ‘against tatrant fod in i night “abe oh," and Sheen 7 Os pert | las ames Eocey fimee Fgh ‘he an unfavorable eflect upom the atutude of this Dill Gr yon a (Oh,) The hon. gen- ets. the house and the government 1 felt & man pear the _ wall meat, which was Terbsering and miacahaepenay calls out “Oh,’’ but I believe now that you must | upon ‘question of reform there was an understand- on; was phoning. wei when Bendel APRIL 13 Tho debate on paragraph Afty-sight Of the settle the question by's low line, and I would recommend | ing that we were by mutaal confidence and co-operation the man the latter in the abdomen; BY MAIL TO * | stitution, fixing a normal military 8 line somewhat lower than tbat of the right honorable | ‘to carry, if we ‘@fair measure. That is the un- ‘hame of this man is Leonard Spiegel; when nite period without the participation of the gentioman, }. In. my own bill of 18581 pro- | derstanding which T am Teady to fuifil, and | Kicked Bendel he knocked him down stairs and cursed wee was concluded on Saturday, with the result Posed that line should be drawn at £3 rating or £4 |, there is no suggestion which has made which will |, Rim; I identify the prisoner as Leonard Spiegel. owed by the resolutions of the previous Fental. In speaking on this subject two or three weeks | mot receive frem us all the consideration {t deserves, ‘Tmn VeRDICT. strength of the federal army, the term dui agoTenid that I thought that it was not necessary, if Tih an anxious desire to Or modify it, But when On the above testimony the case was submit: pedte ee Tho Luxemburg Correspondence Between | sunuai expenditare of 225 thalers honorable gentlemen could come to a general ight honorable gonticmian‘opposie cones: forward Bry, who rendered the following verdict:—That i) e ment of 300,000 mea) is that we should make a fight for a pound in this matter, | suddenly with a counter propositiun to the main came to his from a kick in the breast P ia. was limited to the 31st December, 1871, but I do believe now that you might settle it on that fyppesition of the government, it is impossible ood, seas See 0. in. daw ot France and Prussia. estimates are to be voted every year, and no prizetple, removing ell that irriation on which my me to close my eyes to the fnature of that 1664, at ons can then be made without the sanction jorable friends near me aro relying for getting their | movement. I cannot in any way to the prisoner was ‘committed to the Tombs by Coroner ment, The motion to thie effect was, like might own pure and simple household e, and giving | sition be bas made They ‘entirely Age segrrass te seratt of Bendel’s injuries. Bendel payed Ae Cy re eo sto in the iMfattwe, T will Seip ES “i ae i RO a party, always excepti Ay trust oD leon’s Demands, and a “ Black Je Vincke, who surpassed even tho alte reaction: of the youngest men in the house, but in. the understand that | Broome street og ame py isen to tay abo " Mette of most of us, there will be no farther demand Day” on the Berlin ’Change. Rot all the ey ee gery sage ion of who it was that said this eveniog, 3 some gentleman have it ladstone. 2 . the it expect; and you will recollect that « similar comprom! at nabs at siamese pet, te See sip aie ical cobeosibtine /ACHTING. Pasliamentary session. At any rate it ‘su; of mixed up in ourdebates—and I think the lor have acted i Note princi; ‘Partiament cont over ces, formers— uals. spouted of the juer approves of it, except when tations: t Bismarek’s for “Instant Sessa ted practical athe eatainned ean 4 ae acted. “uct Pudaluc” before te House was it totorferca ‘with ay. own prejudices at it were experienced pay PA The Brookiyn Yacht Club, &c. ion” of the Fi h Al t. but little harm, there is much greater prospect of | to.get a bill in the course of the present session; and, as | not for that Spirit the measure the govern- consideration, and we The followmg gentlemen were on the 2ith inst., elected tion” of the Freeh Armamen the expenditure for military purpoess belng increased he belioved the beat may #9 aocompiah hat object would | meat, have | brought in would have, been sup: snopeine Wt) caveats wea cate an in the next four years. It ts asserted, | be to support goverment, he would give ve ak ney “ee ees . (Cheers) Fate Brooklyn Yacht tm that government will aot acquiesce in this altera- inst the amendment, ton ob thele Oria ee eee eee aot not | “hn ious Barcut av;—I shall not do much to try the | been something’ else fear, oar.) Now you are a ott of the right honor. gucceed in having it rescinded at the third reading or fence of the House at this late hour, butI should | im favorot this bill, which isa strong figure of speech, | able ferred 80 ly to The German Watchword, ‘« War Now | dnai debate on he whole constitution, thoy wil dismiss | like to make s few observations vetore the debate enda, | but the President of the Poor Law Boart must be sup: f elther in point of courtesy oF ‘candor, ond euch i the Parliament and octroy the charter in its pristine form | The right honorable gentiomaa who has just.sat down | posed to be an enthusiast, He bas made a very onthusi- , in toone: assurance he conveyed and in Paris in Three M ths. ” on their own authority. To be sure, if by that time | has made himself metry on the faci that last night the | astic specch, but it is not tong since thatjhe himself. that ee, ver no it will that be ee oaths. the difficulty with France has assumed such a chatacter | noble lord the member for Stamford agd I rose at the | with all his colleagues, the noble lord’ “posite (Lord | the subject, I venture to assure. bim that I to.) Wm. H. Pogg, E Hillyer, Jono M. r feirorie sa rupture, they may ern same time,‘and that I was willing tog! way to Lhd eee year varied Ke ole ne Pan with feelings of the. iy implatt beliet. | 2s Woot’ 2 ri wi wile ‘ai gentleman Patriotiam of the Assembly to waive all’ other | and as the right honorable gentioman says, he was for Beosteglon tf aneral. Feel). ny eaple na tate eines often | “The Zist of June (Tuesday), was appointed the day for is & . ¢ {i and considerations and to accept a dictatorship which cir- | ing to give way bem Page blige engaged in i Prost | often dogin sharp fick bus ision on fs [geo rp inevitable; but if this is nut | the same cause, ‘ig mi a dent of tho Poor Taw poah-apenan in terma of ulter | ever charged him or ,e ot Divis: the Reform Bill, and | tho case, such sotlon would Only ‘reitate the opposl- | advancement towards my | Bee. (chin a eon of the abanndlige of aueh Rr ceppesltion: |. by fealings of oor ot annual regaite.. The. follo sem Alico, Mystic, Started Fawn, © hope, | com Speeches of Bright, Disracli d honorably made some--(renewod taughter)—I | (Hear, fear.) The right honorable member. for | satisfactorily disposed of. the. explanation concerning and Gladstone. an ony ey that I should welcome fim not — Leagues expreesed ud fi by sed Tregrot Ingealt peceen ly Apa Mil be Scales to, make an Pariton est Chnee reirhe, Bouma a hag ro i any good use, one hat the isappeared, persons yoserv ular declarations that bave pro- Restless, Car! Cabl &e. &e. &, Ch Re teats coutedtapaniuty reetire: who aro not over fair in their interpretation | cee‘'ed from him. He says he has had afair understand. | sauteed, Isaac ratio, arr Fanny, oem, ay Bird, Mariqus Seconp yi ater, |, | (Hear, hear.) The noble lord and 1 have never of what the right honorable gentloman says, have spoken | ing with tao House, and has given it explieit assurances, ana he must be sure that no Parliament ‘lected by unit | Cpenced a word in private, but Ttake thisopportunity of | of lum asif we wished to bave a £0 frauchise, when | aud that by theso assurance: he Is bound to entertain Raitt Aree Weta i gine omett ancy, depeghine, e Ie of thi versal suflrage is ever likely to prove so moderate and | saying that J listened when he was in office toa speech | evory one who recollects what passed last year mnst'| fairly and consider candidly any suggestions he may 1 Gnd tacé ts expected: The mails of the steamship Cuba reached this city | conciliatory as the present, Onasudject very forcign to this night's debate, on a | know vory well that it was quite impossible ‘The right | recive from members of the House, provided they do not a pee from Boston yesterday evening, bringing our English Manday was a black day for the Berlin Exchange. The | queacion connected with his own office, namely, the | honorable gentleman expressed a lingering regret that | proceed from the head of the party in ppeosition. Now, : a files, containing @ report of the final debate on the | 1088s sustained by speculators a a hauste are caid to be | annexation of the territory of Mysore—(hear,. hear)— | tho plan proposing a £6 tranchise had not come on for | sir, I do not for a moment question his titte to de- Royal Canadian Yacht Club. Derby Reft Dill in the enormous, securities of all kinds being still furtnerde- | and I say that I bave never heard a speeoh fn this | fair discussion. But that was a question affecting a | cline to entertain any suggestion proceeding from ‘This club, which lays claim to a fleet of more thas erby Reform in the House of Commons, with the | pressed by orders pouring in from the Prussinns to sell at | house which contained nobier sentiments, dehvered in | single figure, and there was no doubt about it. All that | me, but he must know, it he chooses tq dignity me | twenty yachts varying in tonage from four to one hun- speeches which John Bright, Mr. D'Israeli and Mr. | any price that could be obtained. Yesterday there was at | bettor language, or in @ manner more calculated to | the right honurabie gentleman could have done, had a | witha title of which I am very unworthy, of leader of and of which the Prince of Wales Gladstone delivered just previous to the division: first a slight reduction; M. de Moustier’s declaration | impress the house. (Hear, hear) I regrotted when |,£6 franchise beea proposed, would have been tw | the opposition in this house, that I do not hold that po- dred and seventy tons, which the Or 2 was interpreted in a pacific sense, or atleast in opening | the noble lord felt it his duty to toave the | have proposed a £5 or #4, and we might have | sition by my own choice; that if there ae = in | is chief patron, has organized for the coming season ur special correspondent in Berlin furnishes two | a prospect of protracted agitations, during which some- | Treasury Beuch. But if I may be gratified that the | agreed to have settled the borough franchise on | this country which ts more than another only to beheld | with the following list of officers and members :— letters of the most serious moment, detailing the corre- | thing might turn up to avert the dreaded catastrophe; but | noble lord has approached me even by avery little, | some such basis, and the right honorable gvntle- | by the ire voice of those who are concerned, that is the Hich the Prince of Wales; spondence which has taken place between Frurc@ and | 0” the receipt of telegrams announcing that the French | surely 1 may be as much gratified by the not small | man the member for Oxford and other honotable | post. Therefore I confess that after the candid statement of | , Patrons —His Royal Hishnoss the Prince of Wales; x " government has been inaking immonse purchases of | steps, but the large progress, which the rivht honorable | mombers have told you that such a measure would | the right hmorable gatleman Iam at a ls to perceive in ua rp u lency, tt pe Bareraa ene Vent Eee russia on the Luxemburg question, the resolution of | grain in the north of Germany, and that Drouyn de | gontleman who has just spoken hasmade since last year. | have added four hundred thousand or five hundred | what sense it is that those who sit upon these benches, and Gee Oe Hecke ee oak aad aL ae Bismarck to go to war, and the determination of the | L'Huys, the declared enemy of Prussia, would probably f detieve that if it were worth—it is not worth th thousand men to the electoral roll, which would nave | who are supposed by the ic to represent the majrre em, F wke, E. G..Leugh, and ¥.. H. German people to “be in Paris in three months” after | ™8¥me the portfolio of Foreign Affairs, the Bout refer to the pages of “Hansard,’’ it would be posail been a fair and generous exte.sion, (Hear, hear.) | ity in this house, a capable of directing its relapsed into its former gloom. | Prussia funds have | show that there was scarcely a member of this House on | There de nathing im the world om affmsive fo the‘cimmom | proceedings, T confers I cxnnal well, understand | én Goat Richacison, taitbar ‘master, 40d @ right honorable gentleman pro- 5 , Members.—Doctor Rae, ten Stuart, R. N., hostilities commence. falien five per vent since Wednesday, railroad shai that occasion who felt or pretended to feol a greater ter- | sense of the people as an attempt to oer what appears | what sene it is 'm. Cooper Esq, The Journal de St. Petersbourg contains the following | from eight to ton and tweive per cont. ' Amorican bonds | ror of the perearpl ot the £7 bopaebelders, t» be @ concession, but which really turns out to be no con- | poses to fulfil his pledgrs to that portion of the members eres for the Ye Commodore, E. Mf, Hodder;Vice- on the eahjucbae ahs'gnesti6i or "icerautbi: are also weak, which 1s partiy attributable to tho last | than was felt bs the right honorable gentleman. | cession a! all, and t' is agreat migfor'une, in my opinim, | of the Honse by declaring he is ready to entertain MART re Teme, pupae ey Ee ae Haenaey q mburg:— despatches per cable reporting a rise in the premtum on | himself But £ will not reproach him, I do | that in dealing with this ques'im the Chancel! r of the | their aurgestions provided none of those suggestions are | Commo ore, C. ryatt; Captain, E. C. Joues; Secre- Tho impression produced in Europe by the commu- | gold. not reproach his colleague and chiof in this Hou:e, the | Kz kequer has tried to avvid following every step of his | offered by the person whow they may honor with their | ‘ry, Wm. Armstrong; Treasurer, H. L. Hime. nications of Count de Bismarck will soon. become —— Chancolior of the Exchequer, Lam only too happy to | predereesor in ojice merely for tie purpos: of ding some- | choice. (“No, no,” and “Hear, hear.”") The “father of |, ommiltves—Suiling, H. L. Hime, Joun Cuyley, S. F. known. Apprehensions will certainly arise in many find that they are willing to proceed even to the length | thing original, and in doing so he his done something | the lodger trauchise”’ is like the fabled hoad of the Ro- Holcomb, T. Murray and Captain Courneon; Mecearing minds. It will be difficuit to understand how the PRUSSIA FOR WAR. wr the meagure which they havs introdu-rd, and I shail | by zo means wise. (Hear, hear.) I have stated | man mythology, who devoured and made away with his | 4. L Hime, W. Bellairs and W, Murray; Finance, 8. FF. French government, knowing the susceptibility of Ger. pristriorentitintoel wes fot break my heart if the measure, as it comes out of | that I am for ouschold s:ffrago, and if | own ciilldren. "(Caughter.) the satd that T mado light | Holcomb, George Oliver aud William Hope; Ship, many and the situation of the grand duchy before SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. thle house should not take precisely the shape that I | the rignt honorable geutlsman would accept that propo- | of this franchise. Where does he find auy words of | Oicers of the year; Katertainmont, A. Boswell, George Europe, could have pursued negotiations with Hol- ag should dike to see it take, but I shall console myseif | sition. or the amendment of the honoratlc member for | mine to that effect? But weare not in the sams posi- | Harman and William Murray; Auditor, C. Heatn. land to the point of arriving at an understanding with- | Prusyian Note in Reply to Napoleon—Ite Con- | with the belief hat the part barriers against a jus: re. | Oldnam, Y should not divide tho house azainat I. 1} ton a8 We were Inst year, Those who, by thelr | aang aguanaiy out, having the, Intention of not pausing before any | "Totty iiamarck Determined Upon War | presenaion are broken dwn, and that the Chancelbr of | vhink that on this particular point the government | unwise resistance reform, have ‘been the ey chequer and his elleagues have utterly repudiated | ought to yield. (Hear, bear.) The Chanceilor of the | true fathers of the recent agitation—(‘ob,” aad warlike thental reservation. We, howover, consider that | “In Three Months We Will Be 1a Paris” — ihe oon the past with which ficy have Ten comected. | Exebeqaer asks tho advice of the house, and when he | cheors)—have at least ‘done Sta Wh service, aes pd cep: ould be studiously avoided, in order to Peace Still Possible—The King nnd the | (Caoers.) Now, sit, I shall endeavor, in a fow min- | gots it he repidiates it. If we suggest a mode of setile- | they have made us much better acquainted with wait .-? the progress followed hy the negotiations be. Crown Prince—National Antipathy to France, | utes, to ask ‘the attention of the House to the | ment different to that which he proposes he says we do | the viowsand wishes of the working classes than we wero tween Pars and the Haguo shall be known. Indeed it | ge, precise point before us, because t uot about | so in the spirit of party. (Hear.) I can assure the | twelve months ago. It is true I was not, and am not, 0 would be better for the material and moral tranquillity of Brrus, April 12, 1867. to discuss the question as a matter of party. | housethatif the right hovorable gentleman the mem- | sanguine as to the effect of a lodger franchise in adding nations that the question of Luxemburg bad never been | rast evening intelligence was cominupicated to mo | (Cries of “Oh,” and cheers) the Chancellor of | ber for South Lancashire now occupied the Treasury | numbers to the electoral lists as many of the working | W! Seti raised; but if the most perfect compsure is not main- the Exchequer made a bargain with us at the beginning | bench, and had proposed this bill, every syllable I have | classes are; but still in principle it ik-one of. those Eymphad ie: boaeds alo farmed’ everywhere, it would be anticipating justitied | which, if correct, 1s of the highest importance, and | O¢tie gossion that tt was uot to bea party question, and | said against it T should then also tave uttered. 1 | vital points without which no settlement dé the question | Zymphad (c. Nae? arms to believe thas the festival of peace organized in | would show that war is even more imminent than was | it was not to be uscd for the overthrow of mipisters, I | have got far beyond party in this matter, (Oh! ot) I | canbe hoped for; and it is one upon which the right | Glance, sloop... --... Paris, in consequence of an appeal addressed by France | gy ected, It is to the elfect that an energetic note was | shail treat it inthat sense, Last night, sir, I was sur- | shall congratulato the Chancellor of the Excuequer with | honorable gentloman must prodace bis own plan. I wish Fielon aon erg to tho industry and arts of the whole. universe, is to one # prised at the speech of the right honorable gentleman the ny heart if it should be his good fortnno to settle this | the house, and especially the Treasury benches had been | 1 ty var aye be mark the date of a war for which the unexpected preten- | despatched yesterday to Paris by Bismarck, inquiring | Prised Mt rhe spoten it she Tig te im with, ilom fur the nox! fly years on a ‘broad foundation; | fuller when. tho to the: Troasnry taunted | Tntrighe, schooner sions of that sa .¢ pacific France should give the signal, the reasons for the armaments undertaken by the French | great pleasure, but last night I listened to him with great | and I bellove that that is the wish also of the great ma- | the henorable member for Bradford for opposing a ad Losbayiedan government, “for which no motive can be found in their | S*xprise, because it Is only three oF four weeks go when | foriyy of tho members on this side of the house, (Cusere oat whieh ae Leni are ane < Mons, pepe nee ; te the right honorabie gentleman threw out @ hint that it | But eve it is absolutely impossible that there | than ever, In particular I regret noble frice adienue, s THE FRANCO-GERMAN WAR QUESTION, | relations with any other Power," and which, be hints | outd'bs desirable possibly. to alter the Iaw of rating, | can bo a majority of xeutiomen opposite who: behove {Lord Biche) did not hear one of the most animaied and | 1 Belle Canadienne, sehr. - eae 1m the present state of affuirs can only be dirocted against | and draw a low tn Be Cee some, and — bee pare a x the ic peer ua panllaman. can eer outd supe oe Nese from the Lend Mi a ion? | ting great numbers, 9 right honorable gentleman e a wixe ons whi “h gives 28,1 ditional votes toShef- | ury bench during iscussion. For my own part SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. Fee ea reer. ate ae nameant cewsation” | the Chancellor of the Rxchequer, soizod ‘upon that | tield and shuts out 36 000 in Birmingharn, I Know nothing | am In favor of drawing a line, Oat of drawing it aa low Sinepipmaaie = Paris in Borlin-French | % “2 "tary preparations, holds France respmaible | hint, and gave a certain cordial approval of it, and Iam | at all as to what 18 to be the result of the division to- | as possible. Iconsider that a su extonded accord- Falcon, Wideawake (c. board) sloop “for the disastrous that ensue | pot certain that the right honorable gentieman, tho } night. I have notan idea on the subject. I wish we | ing to the capacity of the is not an evil buta Nete Luxemburg Question Position of | ‘ot (< distros on arin se el Riraburtor'Soath Lavonshite, has not been i some ie, | could havo no diviston—{cbeces)-—and Yaak, tho caverae J. (Chgers Ait chat i rogaine the. process St ox Lents gred induced to tako tho step ho bas taken ta conse- | ment would consent so to their bill as to meet should not procved so fastas to outraathecapacity cherinnd—The Germans Claim Alsace and | derived is one which I have always found well Informed, | Gnonce of the powerful support of tho Tight homerable-| wixn-of the majority; ‘but-wharever the division may | Of the péoplo Ir the pestis of our people were such ip Lerrain ariamentary Preceedings—The | and to which in thié instance I cannot help attaching mat {Crios of “Oh, ob,” and cheers). | lead to, I emate with the utmost: frankness ant comscien- | point of éducation an imeneere alt- were able Mite: Badget—Diseatisfact Me eard right hi gentleman fz tro modest to assume | tiousness that Ihave not suid a word nor taken a step | to erercise the suffrage with intelligence, I cas ieaeae <1 Aaa Aletta tech nga Met rclauisey! shed saaaapnn mrs i he bas that iafluenco over the right honorable rentie- | with roxard to the bitt bat what wae by an | would not draw a linc at all. Theline bart etc t= age) 7 other quarters. Of course t would be proof demonstra: | Pan'ths momber for South Lavcaa'es ow Lreally be. | wonms aod meet usrbest wish--("Oh On bad shecrs) = | pin tha Ghrevmuances Of tar timee; but the shor port oF Benin, April 10, 1867. | tivo uhat Prassia, or rather Bisenarck, is determined | lveve Lem not overslating the cas. (iieat), "Now, aft, | that uow at this suprome hour of the question R shoals | sy alan tends wpe « ‘That principle is one We are evidently im the midst of # orisis, and one of | yom war, and that his only foar is that Louts Napoleon | What is tho amendment before the House? Itiseimply | be grappled with with wisdom and nauehip, and a permancnt applicalion—one that eam 'n ver be wrone. the most, if not the most, severe crises the Old World take ‘this—it affects the ey franchixe only, and it pro- | settioment offered to the people with the gon-rosity Sas nter and cheers.) It is that Dire poreons wher a wi back out of the quarrel, to prevent tho possibility | poses what I think in ‘oar o»mmun senso wo | which belongs, I lope, at Ieastto all the great statesmen Hiament recogals:s s0,the oles condition in upiitiea, Ciunhal Ladibiée' a. cecanimin, haa passed through for the last Gfty years. 1 tele- } of which he addresses him in terms which leave the | should all say was a reasonable proprsition, that |-of this‘country. (Loud cheers.) life fits them to be invested with a title to the, ‘tne, Mt L poppe graphed to you on Sanday chat alarming news bad ar- | French Emperor no alternative but to resent them | every person to whom you offer the birough | The Cnancettox ov Te Excimacrn, who was rocoived | should, so far asdepends upon Parliament, equal ies Frances L. Butler, residing 0. 52 Spring rived from Paris, and that Bismarck, who, on account of | or to submit to the humiliation a great ieee, who is Fee ve foye ig Bondy entitlod.to | with loud and — Vee gg chooring Lh) minis h most abject it, and who may justly ty laced On | terial benches, Dodson, sir, although wo at is delicate state of raged generally retires early, had | power has ever received. The idea that Napoleon, | exactly tho mae eae with the aus facilities for ob- | tn be ge pe on od bill psy the fe] : ntation of the boon roused at two in the moruing by a special message, | who, after all, oven bis worst enemies allow to be not j. taining it, and with the same powora of enjoying 11, that | people, there really aro two policies before the House, 0% A every other person shali have, (Cheers.) That isthe | On the most imporiant portion of that measure— and, ordering his carriage, drove immediately to the | dogtitute of resolution and point d’honcur, will disarm at | Object of the amondment as far asl comprohend it. It | aithoagh we are formally called upon to amend the bill o oe In in bape hws day began | tho diction of Prussia, and at the very momont when | means that the eat householder of ten pounds and 1 bad the honor to introduce —we are Teally considering to at something ox inary bad occurred; | Prussia horself bas about doubled her military establish. | UPFAards, and the householder from ton pou; ja respect of tI rough franchise a contrary policy y hall be te it Hi j toad oat tat a death tad teen raved frm | man, crn one tat bweverprveied ul te | te fa aad tat acount heater she | Bont Fendsoan” te mombet for" Routt. Ean" access to it ani an equal enjoymentof it. But the complained that, on the evening of the 29th right honorable gentloman draws his line among the oe tr last February, officer Thomas Murray, same class, and gives to one the suffrage, while he | the Fourteenth precinct, arrested and e excludes another, in every respect his equal, from it, merely because hé may happen to live on | her the atation house, where the other side of the street. (Oh, oh.) Is it not | ferred a charge of disorderly conduct the ‘fact that in ninety-eighi boroughs the | n the following — alleges that while he was question is simply one of what parish a person | Conducting her to cou asked her what she could may chance to live in? (Cheers) It may be that the | Sfford to give him asa bribe should he refuse to make esent government will be the immediate authors of | any charge against her, and she replied that she had no & Fy the Prussian Ambassadr in Paris, and a6 no one knew | the m:nd of Bismarck, and such a proposal can have no | ton pounds shall havo no advantage over the compound | castire proposes to draw what has becn ba jousshold suffrage. Tam firmly convinced that its evils | money, but that, if he so clecied, he could have a gre its contents the wildes: rumors were difused and found householder below ten pounds. It means in pont of | pily and traly described as a hard fast line, | will be neutralized by the sense of the jo of | ticket which she had obtained some timo previous for @ othor object than to provoke an indignant refusal and | Rousehelder, Bolom, en, petite none our coneutee | Reiow which igo ‘one, can enjoy" the privtioge “ct | the counvry; but I wil not travel tot by aroad ereicite | watch and chain. He possessed himself ot the oo and bitterness that will take away from the nation all | mado achargo against his prisoner and then sense of gratitude for the benofits veoutved. and which | the “‘prontise to deliver.” After being committed by will lead to long serics of heartburninzs and agitation, | she magistrate he called on her at the and again rare nd Net cates “acid | Stadia Gort as ‘sta'6¢ Soe fe Seaass reach it by a a liberal por Ald ng, (Lond | vie but a few hours, The same day of this transaction ‘THE DIVISION, she was conveyed to the island, whence she was Te The question was then put that the words of Mr. Glad. | leased eight days afterwards by order of Justice Mans- stone's amendment bo inserted in the third claast. field. ready belief. precipitate a rupture between the two Powers, which, as | oncies special classes for 6; : : , ci pecial privileges, but having | the franchise, On the other band, wo have proposed a It was allrmed that Louis Napoleon had sent an witi- | jt ig cloatly inevitable at some future poriod, could derived who ‘aro the persons on whotm You will ena | measure under which every inhabitant of 8 howe, sub, matum to Prussia, summoving ber to withdraw her fer the franchise vou confer it honestly, ject to certain conditions, which are in harmony will coun fr0dn LacceusBcig; that the eroope’eaeasiped Te ee ere cen Sine mone Seveestlt foe Presets TL ani on seit cn Vesta i, (Choate) Abe the havits and mauners’ of the country, and whleb I peg eld = than the present, An acquaintance of mine, who is on | this is the state of the law wish scarcely any exception | think are approved of by the rational discrimination of at Chalons were to be increased to one hundred thousand | gy intimate footing with Bismarck, and is perfectly well | Birmingham, as the house knows, is considerably larger | the people, may possess the franchise. Instead of men, avd placed under the command of the Duke of | acquainted with his character, sald to mo yesterday :— | than Shofeld, and like Sheffield, it is concerned chiefly | drawing » hard line wo have said to all pavers of rates Magenta, and that the Corps Légisiatif would be appliod “Tt is all nonsense for people to talk of there being | inthe manufacture of metas. What Twill say of it | who ar’ not now enfrancuised, ‘We will take care that s bd p no war. Do they think Bismarck is a fool, and will wait | now is no more than I said of it before I was.a member | you shall have an opportunity of acquiring and onjoying to fog a loan of three hundred miilion francs; that, om | ti}! the French have supplied their whole army with | —and it is, that there is not tn this kin¢dom a more in- | the right of voting.’ These are tue two schemes before The committee divided :— Abraham Goodman, eoniry arg Nt carries on busi- tho other hand, orders were given to utilize the whole | breech loaders, have completed the organization of their | dustrious, or connected with its industry @ more intelil- | the committes, for we must take the bundle of amend- | For the amendment. peg “me corner ee wane oy ee phe ney my 7 4 5 resources und are thoroughly prepared for the contest? | gent, population than that of Birmingham, (Hear, | men's suddenly put uron the table the otber night Prusso-Federal army; that the South German States | rae ee ree ae dio met wean! guither preparatim, we | feat.) Well, but what does this bili do for Birmingham? | to get at. the schome they propose, and. tho scheme is would be required to fulfil the engagements on- | jare an army superior to the French in respects, andin | Why it gives a chanco of admission to fa 4 that winch was indicated in the instruction relinquished tered into by the treaties of August, 1866, and that | three months we shall ge! ‘e Paris.”’ 2.884 persons, and it exctudes under the i | by the honorabto and iearned member for Exeter. To Ge 1 Moltke was about to leave forthe Rhine. Th Whether this is not being rather too sanguine (the | Tenements Act—(No, no)—wait till I havo fin- | our proposition the rignt honorable gentleman has epomyenleo ” sc bh © | speaker, as may bq inferred from his connection with | ished my sentence—I fay it exclades under the | offered two main objections, the first of which is that excitement was intense, exceeding anything I have | the Promier, if an enthusiastic patriot) can | Small Tenement act, and under the various local rating | the principio of rating is n witnessed, even after the portentous speech of the | only be proved by the ovent; bat it is | acts, no fewer than 36,177. (No. no.) Iv well un- hougut the! the prmneip! Against it... pawned at bis office by @ man named Savage, who acta, Mt 0 “py | 88 it ip alleged, asa “ranner"’ at the Tombs, the womam IMJOTHY sos ee sce eeveerseeeeseeseneeeeesseeeesee sol | hoing with him at the time the ticket was handed te The handing of the paper containing the numbers to | him; the watch was afterwards-taken out by some Mr. Whitmore was hailed with vehement cheering from | w i the ministerial benches, which was sustained for several | it was pawned he (Goodman) was called upon seconds, and was renewed on the reading of the num- | who represented himself as being a police officer, bers at the table. asked to sce the watch pawned by Savage; it was ibat * wi the opinion of military men in eral, and of | derstand what honorable gentlemen mean. The: was contemplated by the inanners and customs of the own Fronch Emporor, on the 1st ot January, 1850, particular. | the Fenn thems ives, that’ at the present juncture | this:—that toaccomimodate this capricious m couniry from ancient times, and to a very great degroe | The House adjourned at five minutes past two o'clock. im, but ne, evidently considering it of no great ly as it soon became known that there was a tremendous | the Prussians have the ‘advantage in point of organiza. | the government—(cheers)—and the caj of in counection with tue enjoyment of civil and po- tection, panic on the Paris Bourse, which served to confirm the | tion ana probably of arms; for even if Napoleon should | ure s in no degree essential to tical rghts. It ts recognized by the common law and ANOTHER PESTILENTIAL NUISANCE. was the worst approbensions, Next day a rather more tranguit | Succeed im furnishing his entire army with noedie. | reform—the people of Birmingham the statute iaw of past erations, and {n =— bay sey here ad- ow . aut | vane before hostilities begin, the troops will be un- | Tencment act, if they make up their minds to it, abol- | the age in which we live it ‘has boon | q plonster Receptacle on Tenth Avenue for | 1°°2¢4 for 8 furtner hearing. fooling began to prevail; some of the most alarming re- | accustomed to their new weapon and awkward in using | ished, and they are also tocome hero aad ask Pariia- | part and portion of one of the most famous Dend Ani Slush and Debris. Patrick Cassidy Ot No "336 Woat Sixteonth street, se rts were officially contradict but enough remained | It; in thisas in everything else it requires practice to | ment to repeal their local rating acts, (Hear.) [am not | laws connected with our political history—the Reform pees that the situatio nasties omiieas Trig | become perfect. In generalship it would have been | surprised that the member for Sheffieid or that the | act of 1832. (Hear, hear.) In many subsequent acts ore » 7 = said a year ago that the French are superior, but now, | member for Oldham should think that ag regardetho | and ia many public documents of great authenvicity, Rot denicd that a telegram was received from Count | without depreciating the merits of McMahon, Niel and | particular places with which they are comngeted | this principle, now described as atien and newfangicd, Goltz to tho night of Saturday to Sunday, although , i must be conceded that they have found | there is something useful fn this bill; bat I have | has been adopted and sanctioned as the basis of impor- th ent as to ite conten! | rivals in Freckenstein and Steinmitz, and tnat | a higher opinion of the peoplo of Shoflield and of the | tant arrancementa, I was somewhat su were tho government cagems are GHens o8 +f | none of them have surpassed or equalled tho strategetic | people of Oidtiam than to belivve that they would fore to hear it spoken of as newfnngi allen. my information is correct, it announced that in the | genius displayed by Moltke in the Bohemian campaign, | to havea bill passed which would do such grievous Injas- | (Hear, bear.) But the second objection ts that it is too council of state beld by Napoleon on Saturday, it had It should be mentioned, howe that in spite of | tice to Birmingham and to the great wajority.of the | exclusive. Sir, that objection is scarcely consistent been ved to address, not an ultimatum, but a note | tse threatening auspices thero are political circles, | boroughs of the kiegdom. (Cheers.) Last night I bad | with many observations subseqaentiy made by the bp dona ay - M including some ot the highest, who still obstinately re- | the honor of speaking to three gent men from Birming | right honorable gentioman, with mavy inforetces ho The approach of the sultry days of summer, and the | jovial, hearty old man, who likes everybody Sa Possiblity of a return with them of the visitation of that | think, and geuorally prefers to look patente hi hn frightful scourge, the cholera, makes it necessary that | through acertain strect, and loury everything that bas any tendency to make localities | Cassi Ad cops ep) unhealthy should be removed from the vicinity of | !Dm ou the sid to the Pruasian Cabinet, stating the reasous of France for nd are confidant that means will | ham, Who were not up here on any matter conyected.| drew avd many conclusions which were cheered by its pestilential vapors for nearly three years, | Patrick, considerably elovated the acquisition of Luxemburg which was imperatively arrive ah n polation aallsfactory to beit'| wah nie BIL Ove of theas was ss emiacat of | bis friends— all pointing tn thix, that the measure was of | notwithstandin, com from the residents < eer tt cae ae . for the of ber front 4 remindi jes. Both the King and Crown Prince aro anxious | the Chamber of Commerce, and another was Z @ very revolutionary and dangetous character, (Ministe- | and owners fn the neighborhood. This muteanco eon- b Joy at peer one 6s ch Spe yep ug | fora compromise and reluctant to push tatters to ex. | nont in the administration of the. poor law fiat cheers) Now t humbly thiak chat i setding the | slate of an ive. of water, of nearly | ‘in he had Bismarck that by his own avowal the annexation of that | tremities; the former bas a vivid recollection of | borough, I did not want to. suggest to basis of our borough franchise the House has not to | half ao acre in extent, and of a depth of ten to | Should do, province with Germany expired with the dissolution of | the ovents of 1806, the rout of Jena and tho | the dbificulty that I felt; and I asked consider what the operation of the principle we estab- | fifteen feet. This immensé for filth and slush Cay poe the Foderal Union of 1815, but : ing the willing. | “bt of bis family to the uttermost ends of the | “would it not be possible for you in Birmingtam so | ian may iminediately be—whother it be too exclu- | seems to have been forined to receive the yh ° Ray iy 6" | monarchy, and the Intter 18 afraid, Dot like Alexander | to alter your position with regard to the question of | sive or too expansive—but whether it is a jast | contents of the drains running down Fifty-third and | street and ness of the French Government to consult the other | of his fattier's leaving him no more worlds to conquer, | compounding that you might put yourselves in agadvan- | prineiple—(hear)—and whether it will in practice | Fitty-fourth strests from Ninth avenue, as they are | {orm Dis, Great Powers who were interested in the question as co- | but of his risking what he has got by ing in acon: | tageous a situation as Shemietd?” They said that it | uitimately bring about a sattsfactory state of things. | convoyed through wooden culvorts into formed | Caused him exceeding great astonishment. Pat of former treaties, and adding that the flict the issue of which, though the chances may be | would be absolutely imposible: for in Birmi a | (Hear ) are the tons made to our scheme | by the low open lots located on the west of Tenth | indignant, beers el meg ng 40- | momentarily favorable for Prussia, no human being can | great majority of the 36,000 compound househ: bad | of establishing the franchigo upon personal pay- | avenue In addition to the water thus conveyed into | had Ro rosso, pexetion of Luxemburg would only take place with the | foresee, But the King was equally averse to the war | never patd poor rates at all—I moan, directly—it bad | ment of rates; but oblections have also been this disgusting reservoir. it receives the whole of the Ne Ls a romper og full adherence of the population. with Austria, a Power to which he was attached by old | never been the custom of the town; aud to ask them | tothe scheme of the right honorable genticman, which | drainings from the stables of the depots of the Ninth | No pau: im cul This coincides with the explanations given by the Mar. | habits, by family ties, and by their common Legitimist | for the sake of putting some of them upon the register, | is founded upon a hard limitation; the greai obiec- | and Tenth avenue railroads. But yet to make matters | ‘ansacti quis de Moustier in the Corps Legisiatif; and by this it | traditions; he was ciosoly allied with the King of Han- | in accordance with the requirements of This caprictous tion to that bard line which the right honorable gentie- | worse, it is the receiving place forthe dead carcases of | “treet; and, man pear something like conferences of the | over, who was nis own cousin and who regned by the | bill, to destroy the whole fabric of their economic ays- has proposed is that it offers us no settle. | the goats, d &c., which meet with untime. | that fashion, creat Powors will be proposed, as was done in 1859 and | same divine right whieh Jaye Sun fo tonont sod tem in connection with the poor rate, was what mont of the question. (Hear, hear.) Although I lis- | Jy ends in the neighborhood. "At the present time no | Dut then be 7m 1866, We all remember what such a proposal led to oa | yet Bismarck persuaded him to despoil the one and to | House bad no right to ask. (‘ Ob,” and cheers) It | toned with great attention to the speeches made in | less than eight putrifying specimens of these various , a of it, ir, Acton Ly introduced: dethrone the other. ‘was a thing the House had no right to ask, and if it did | support of it, I did not hear one argument to show that are undergoing the varions stages of putro- ry Cassidy to Patrick Cassidy, and vice versa, and Louis Napoleon, on the contrary, {8 odious to him as | ask, it would have no right to expect that they would | the principle of adopting a figure—which I may now | faction, either upon the surface or at the edges of this | *4vised them to take each other by the hand, which i comply with its request. I havea right to complain— | assume to be £6—would cive any promise whatever of a ‘The stench arising fromso notsome a col. | didn’t. At the close of the trial Patrick went out, the nephew of the man who sut the house has a mghtto compla: he members of those | settlement, or that it would not be immediately sought | lection as this, can more easily be imagined ‘than de. | bumored as usual, but Henry looked as if liquid aggra- most terrible disasters and humiii A boroughs which are adversely aftected by the bill have a | to be disturbed, and an agitation tmmodiately fomenied | scribed, and the effects must be most imental to the | Vation were circulating through his veins and not regular h tho King is aware that tho ultimate security ) right to compialn—of a provision which mast cause con- | against it, (Hear.) That is the point which has been | health of the neighborhood. It is worthy of remark | /ood. io may discover, that he, the very type of craft | of Germany depends upon the discomfiture of France, | fusion in almost every borough, and which is not in the | evaded this discussion (hear), and | thet during last aummer’s visitation of the cholera, and caution, hag been over-confiding, or at least | and as a good German he fully shares in the natural an- | smallest degree necessary to a satisfactory settlement = ee point we have lor, | this was the most unhealthy locality in the ‘THE JAPANESE EMBASSY. over-hasty—that he has attached too much weight | tipathy against their restless neighbors. Under these | of the question. (Hear. hear.) The House in such | I cannot but the amendments that he has placed | Twenty-second ward. There were fifty or sixty — to the half promises of Bismarck, and that they | circamstanees, and considering the ascendancy Bismarck | cases very often proceeds upon precedent. J likes | upon the paper @ party attack, because they are not | cases of the fell disease in ite immediate neigh- Their Movements Yestorday. have been mere sures laid by hts wily an- | has gained over him, it seems hardly ble Bae Ot ape eee, ad een o Thing has laces Rataaners amendments our they are a counter proposi- | borhood, and im ome house, not a stone's throw Mr. Chilton, of the United States State Department, tagonist to lure hin to destruction; but now | that his pacific qualms will be strong enough to with- | i becomes very Now, 1 have « groat regard | tion. (Hear, ) when some from the fastid pool, two women died of this dread com- led the Ji te @e this affair has assumed its present dimensions, he | stand the arguments of his Premier, Ld 4 for the Reform act, and from the way in which the | were made upon a letter that I wrote, I conovive that | ptaint. The lation of this district, between Fifty. | *°compsa! japanese Commissioners cannot give in without raising a domestic tempest, which | will be, by public opinion and by the influence of hi Chancellor of the Exchequer sometimes speaks of it he | those who made those observations entirely misinter- Frid and Pitty fourth streeta, has increased | Park yesterday. They expressed themselves as being might be more dangerous than a foreign conflict. Unless | military entwrage, who are eager for war against the | would appear to have also a great regard for it. Ii preted its character. First of all, that leti was | since that time, and it is bat reasonable to expect, | highly delighted with the prospect which the Park pre- the accounts we have of the state of public opinion in | “hereditary enemy.” As — ‘a8 hostilities have not | I am not satisfied whether he is not actuated by a sort of | not the House Commons bat | should the nuissace be allowed to remain, that the mor. to PY France are greatly exaggerated, he has only the alierva- | actually broken oat it would be wrong to despair of | envy of Lord Russell—whother, as Lord Russell is the | to those me in the summer will be som fearfal, | *nted, and avowed their determination to make a more tive between a war and a revolution, all chances | peace; even the Krewz Zeitung admits that “all chances a eee Reform bill of 1 nein og fe, gent are the Commissioners? ‘they do | extended survey of it after their return from Washing- considered he can hardly fait of maintaining tt have mot yet disappeared;” but the jorable gentleman does not wish (0 become both their duty they will see that this place is either drained | ton, Ono Tomagoro, the principal Commissioner, re But it the amour propre ambition of the French | truth cannot be disguised that both France and Prussiaare | toric name in connection with the Reform bill of 1867. | Iti or filled up ere the heat of summer causes the two tle ing ‘are touched to tue quick by this question, its effect up- } “drifting into war," and it reaily appears as if nothing | (‘‘Hear, hear,” anda laugh.) The principle of the Re- | mention ‘omit its death-carrying vapors, No time should be lost; | ™#ined at the hotel wa! jeg) a wore cneey, eg on the pride and patriotism of the German nation is | short of a miracle could prevent it. form aie is extremely eimpte-—is io housenond sudivege ta Nemea for if sickness breaks out in the neighborhood at their | *T¥e, and recei pee disposed and equally deep the Prusian note alladed to above to be aa- | towns limited toten pounds I honestly believe that door will lie the blame of allowing 80 (atal a nuisance Pag him. Mr, Chilton, State Department, which ise meat tn wan a Be tho ‘vistlog party to, the Park, and’ were is varied beauties that it presente. pe notified SUPPOSED FATAL ASSAULT. saying wo hee Se y ‘vithin the tase few days, aod is | orders—M. i bas not yet presented. From this | and far more likely to settle the question, than the dremes — The soureay westens HS betel at half-past five fapidiy becoming an accomplished fact—if not in form, | it would be evident that Count Bismarck has determined | which is now the house, (Cheors.) I believe | might Ante-mortem Statement of the Victi o'clock P. M., eg | ony Bae ging at Jeast io spirit. Bavarinns, Swabians, Hessians, Ger- | to bring on a crisis before receiving the explanations of that because it would be honest and equal; whereas this | (Renewed On the evening of the 5th instant John Bendo., a Ger. | 0 with the we Ausirians, all join in firm wishes to defend the | the French Cabinet, which at any rate would have ren- | bill is not equal, and therefore calied honest. | orable twenty-one of age, living at No, 200 them, edtock A one Fatherland inst ‘he Aggression of an unprinctpled | dered eet ged pe ey IO (Hear.) I believe the proposal of the rignt honorable mas, years Mott At chewk Goved ; on pause weighbor, and as to bis own | Prussia instead | terchange of ideas taken ‘with the other Powers a Gladstone) would include within the the street, called at the house 147 Chrystio street to see colleen’ tn Wee eet intent nom g t + mis~ of forcing them into war as he did last | interested in the treaties of 1816 and 1859, and whom | electoral more completely and fully those | the motive of the condact of the right honorable gentle- | some acquaintances who lived there, and while ascend: sioners, but Jap ya or he TA year, Bismarck will have some di France bad expressed herself ready to consult. whom the house to take in, the best paid | man. Nothing can be more legitimate, 1s i 9 party ot. fight of be had servants, accompanied by the paymaster cay their impetuosity and eagerness for ihe fray, and most of the working classes of | tack. I endeavor to meet it asa party attack; but it is | @6 © sure © man whom never met were in Che gros mosey mers sees oe = eonitdence in tnomeelves, in the Kingdom. (Chere) The right honorable of part of the tactics which It was u would be | before assaulted and kicked him in tho breast, thus | farmed into United Biates onrtency. toners. ‘ther excellence eit mi man Chancellor juer when hewas | adopted House upon this subject. as him back © Sooner of later,” thoy a mus’ come to a reokon- THE REFORM QUESTION. making his ‘in favor ot hie bon in'1869 mage | Bouse of Commons, only speaking: I Soe knocking ee nig Yoo the stairs, causing in- Png my Afr transacting itr nancial Basaves ing with France, ‘aud there ‘cannot be a better time tre ‘use of some shih, he seeme to bave Just | uhet whatever may be the division of tonight, whatevee seen oem & fe feared, fumalty, Maes a Ce, PCRS Seon aes lesen ea seacitiog ab. setts of it than now, whem we are admitted by the enemy him. | Exciting Debate om the Derby-Disracl! Bit! 6 | time Bendel has been under the ‘care at his reais are, FS enclosenere ‘will start this morning self to be RUpETION 10 ie Mon an the meanuzation, aod | Hefore Its Passage in the Commons—Speeches from | dence, and yesterday, fearing tbat he might die, sent for for Washington, socompanied by ‘Mr. Chilion and Mr even ia number.” Little, too, as the personal charac- the Chancellor of the Kx. nana Wildey to take P ter of the Premier is admired by the majority of Bright and min expressed in | Coroner Wildey to come and his testimony im the | Derby. nation, they all lenplelt: SS i, BSS energy, im r—The Division and Defeat ot desirous | case. Previously, however, it being learned that Leon- WAL INTELLIGENCE, the political abi that bas euabied him to foil the erale— Scene im the House, d&e. ard committed the assault on Bendel, he was mal arch. diplomat st Europe at hs own weapons, and ; In tne House of Com: tre motion for the 04 — above ail it bis ournme: House 29th of April, we could 00 the. debate on Mr. sition of & witness to the assault:— Engines te be Tested, &c. held here at On Sunday « popular meeting was by | Bfreed 0.00 the CR Commander J. B. Croighton, at present on duty at the arrested Ly emery cecceeet int odes Commander J. B. Creighton to Command the Below vee sini Onctda— the the Alham! was tended almost exciusiveiy by ‘8 amendment be brought to a conclu. STATEMENT OF BENDEI. tnembers 0 the advanced liberal part, and ‘in this sion that night ‘and rest. |. Between cizht and niee o'clock Friday Ordnance Department of the New York Navy Yard, hae was resolved to support government O resisting the Preparatory to resuming im committee of the whole point thes See Rcem rm Bonn, tree Dany re wee ‘ordered to command the United States sloop-of. protensions of France to the utmos, The province | House the adjourned debate on the question before the in our discassions we were anxious | rear house, first floor; I went to see some friends; | beer pote of Luxemburg,’ it wasfleclared, ‘‘must never be severed | chair, namely, whether Clause three words iberation and after the inter. | I wae golag up stairs when the prisoner kicked me {t. SCAR bor Siting for the astatie suentron. from the mother country; and it is the duty of the Ger- | should be added giving compound householder eubject, 10 | the breast: I fell, trom the effects of the Kick, $0 the soon be ready for her trial trip, man nation to use every Means in their power to pre- | the franchise ‘whether he in or his land- ite wis | bottom of the flight; he only kicked me ones; I do not | when the comparative merits of the geared and direct serve tts connection with Germany.” Nothing can ex- | lord be rated to the relief the poor.” Mr. desirable, | know why he kicked me; I had never seen bim before; | acting engines in the huge vessels of her class will be ved the Foience of the language employed against | Osborne brought under notice a memorandum which he fair discussion and deliberation, It is @ twas cube dark; | am cortala Ghat the pwenee So mows, . France, amd more than one speaker stated plainly | said had been made by Mr. Dillwye of @ conversation ing to distinguish between the house is the man that kicked me; when he kicked me Madawaska's engines, which were constructed that ie uen ene Scan seaee phy io tee gentleman had had with | honorable gentieman, to whom ESS Cre Geren Cnr ur averee J gg MT - iy —— one rt Germany, war to oe ee wo Sti OF PRILIP MAYER. 10 results pars Setar, St Se Oe See Paes tor iat the substance toh wae the honorable sad ‘larbever: Philip Meyer, residing at No, 147 Chrystic street, LR

Other pages from this issue: