The New York Herald Newspaper, January 6, 1868, Page 6

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NEW YORK HERALD, NONDAY, JANUARY. 6, 1868. church doors through all | be enhanced by the loss of the temporal pee, be remembered in what ‘net Le ‘ pare) Jock im the morning till h to ameliorate our internal condit ell peror Napoleon found himself at noon, braving the rigor of ‘i day, which was , in- | make the Romans desire union with the reg of Italy. | end of the German war. Prussia’s aggrandizement,. sc: clement, £54 Temaining to the very last hour, the indicn But these are indirest means.’ There 0 also direct | rapidly and unexpectedly accompli displ, ‘fhe same devotion in the cause of charity | means; but who cam define them? Eqents cannot bo | the Frouch, who iusisted upon view! rs erage eam shown In Ronen | eee oe raandad Ra recon Yo sstioat | aieunee woul wap a ts 1B to obtain o Map wa OF the.dead. object, Those means do not amit Of discussion uutti the occasion presents fiself. We come to Genera! Gari- FRANCE. bald!’s enterprise, with respect to which I always Teply, as sare elet, thas the movem: = tune ani 1080 Wer's DOt the means to employ. rman unity, As to Austria, she had been Teommeuenl eeelikahens by reason both of ourdomestic | knocked down, and was iif ae kd The only Power to be solicited, web ‘An un- derstanding with Raseia would have at once so ‘i , Robi GQiannel, «crvers.) They did mot frighten B, Ashworth, and seconded W7 Mr. Robinson, | therky lik ihe igotings of iast year, They wore not “Mayor, was presented. | ing to address the | near home, aud tue goverament in London always Kis Me. 00s Poses with d Po He said:— } rat they could count upoa tue power of reat Brita Movting, wad coer this meoting 7 0abtless to congratue { to provent avy great mischiel Yous sons foe The Ost object of this mestOEe ‘unrortunato brotuar~ | Cuaunol. The grievances wore no Temed.eny jate my—aball lor into the perils, and che | mands of the peoplo were not conceded. Nolang ghter)—o0 ys = ‘ments of Parlarmntary | deen dove ii d except ey Ava 1p At ang oF 1g. iiteulties, apd tba 87 not be considered Capable | ror. If you go to tue frst ime when the horr:t fe. But oat ell Pe fion smpartially—saughter)— al laws wero ameliorated, YOu wilt find it was dur of dealing L My gurther, an merican wat Of Independence, whi 1 shali advance e litt ja London felt that it would not do purpose Offs o: the constituency of the ci my ‘a great war with the colonies om band with a dj- who sre MViney have by their rece! EUROPE. French Conspiracy Against Napoleon’s Throne and Dynasty. mixed up with Continental poli- was inop- | tics, England, be quickly Derosived, was favorabl w Commercial Depresston—Consptracy Against Bonaparte’s Throne. condition and ef our tnteypational relatio: ‘The Paris corresponcsat of the London 7imes, writing | ping to reorganize, the ie affection in Irciand, and the penal Inws were mitigat — Manchester, t | to some extent. In 1820 the;Catholic Emancipation me restored. Fenvored that 7% cia Tightfal position In the Eros | Wr Someaaed; Dub the Duke of Wellingion sdmiued t v)s | on the commercial condition of the empire, on the 24th | Faoe it wins ae Pisa Rss 3 France, So Sean make 377 . Proclamations Gf the “Reds” | ier) pete "a ‘moments no” far as too. year | Panes because bo would n0 take tho ceuponsilllty | Sr peggmer, mays:—"Commereial stagnation has not, | desc for'ome timate eome, and that Frum, Cad either given Napoleon. Verhorial ine Against the Bona tes. 1832, Ykoeh maorisi ais La ‘ the thought fpisce, “a poor law Danses fof ireland, and the | since tho establishment of the empire, been so groat as | ditlonni tmportange from he pepaniss tended to pro- | even i war, procured itn ie ndthaage of our s partes. sharmei{quing of the Reform bill of that year, Ge | Umoncutmbered Estates Court was extabiished {a ordér | at iuis moment, nor the want of confidence moro gen~ 448 4 social revbutlon, by o ne ae eens of 5st arises’ naar pape De Saes of th fourteen yoars to the year 1848, aud call to forw/? you can the things fat ‘spoken by mon Russia, Our readers remem! that time, that Fri - pe humbie m Of and mnight'be mace magj2 {ree Bus et | 64) pagoie may wot positively believe, or would fala } Sorin to Reais i proprietors, To carry j$ Out, internal fo a by me the pressure Ly some grey Sustsene pafnuade tbaipelves tuto diebeliov'g, that Fratice ie on uillity yas abovetall things 2 d 1 aak remlnenk, that eere writie 8 of writers pointe po. gt Wing beeu dom y hy, | Waother iheAte agitation has mot rendered the applica- V the pr lieved Im, it may be, by thousands upoo jo pperie! Yarliament for the Irien nation, And if | the eve of any great commotion internally or externally. | oi) oe i ayiaw far more difficult, A deputy has sup- ousaade of the ‘people, as to the tremendous and up, | thBde great meetings were feregerded, whos was more | Tney do not give aby precise reason for the existonce OF | +osed in Ms speech that 1 got up the Roman insurres- ce bad di Tyessaly and Epirus to Greooe * the Porte. In put- ‘Ang forward such a proposiion France, of cours, was perfectly aware that there was not the slightest cuance. Prince Gortschakef on the French Policy im: the East and Russian An- p lina ounervanaee sane. shan id spri 4 invent ag natural or inevitable than i on sane he fd ajfecling which 1s bost exprossed by the word malaise ; Son py sree ae: escape from financial diiticulties, | of seeing it realized, But in tore pohey ian Darsued ticiyvation of a General War. / | 120d tupp!es of food grown in otuer @iniries, Re- ig of the wrongs done to 1 iy, but it is nevertheloup et that, however tempting the tomo operation took pinoe anda nee vaing sueaere, | taprostion fer demeanor would produce upon Hussey” LS / member the state of feeling Into which those unfor- +d purpose, capitalists " Gagage in any operation | ruily ed out, But for that agitation, the fesuits | allshe bad in view, tue improvement of. uer reiati tunate tories were plu at prospect. Now | ranks—-of @ dark conspiracy? If last year Par- | P f 4 come down to the pend year tear” tet possible | lament had refused to asteod the Tranchise, if ail our | of ‘importance, and ti they hasten to the Alot | ttt oem be all untrue, that which Fa said up them ree ee oar oe ie ular | Dank [bee the utganer,, there, inditforeit 2x as (o the disasters that would arise i! ever a moderate on, 60 to pro nly satis at un TFobn Biteut va Moform, the measure for the suifrage, were forced hrosgh oF Dus “the. deat’ members of the Imperiah Ligialiure, novela i it grant ‘ariiamont, That fortunate: ty] you woul ave a Eng! mn gorge: ond examplo. aad Fenianism. Sea Peaking ot the Tonderscthey, mate i | dark and’ a crlminal ‘conspiracy—dut you would ployed, except in Bourse operation profitable enough—they know very well what they are | bave bad’ men who would gradually have worked | to a certain Cg a arrests the depreciation ‘doing—they, many of them, understand theao questions | their way among tho people, an al joither 1s it easy to say how or waa Tv a Dock: just as well and as much as wo understand them; but J | 11 ted them im principles and in practices which are ation will end, Few pass a t agit ry b.e British War Ships 44 Dock | pea: of the tory nary in the country who are the pawns | near akin to tho worst form of criminal eouspiracy. | much talked-of conference, or b hat tho demles Guard. and thechessmen with which these leaders play their game, | (Hear, hear.) Zhere is moths 10 safe as great mecings. | in the Italian Parliament are likely to elther mayflally yards Under Arme ard. Only imagine, aad if youcaa ft will only be toexeite | (Cheers) Cometogetuer; look each o:ber in the face; wate or bring it Bearor tos solution. yout comimisoration, how these men bave been misied | let the mon who comprehend the things diacuas thom | Ttsiram questions, of which most persons to be bes is o to time; how they bave been alarmed. fay before you ewig ae — for arent pre ‘tired, a is drawn to the NonB of pope y have wi vote by am open free voto ip Polio: 0 | People percelve with @ cortain misgivingthe wren Tho German mail steamsh); gains? a Br t re mosb calculated to do them good: req Jers take that voice as siy- | feeling towards the Frenon a erenenta? yayed im the Eblers, which left Hamburg on/' end Southampton | have spent time and money; how they have spent mil- try, and let them bead to | press of Prussia, ‘They remark, ton thé maover in Sanéy Hook on Satur- | lions of money and oceans of beer—(iaughter)—in fight- id give tbe country that which 1tdemands, (Cheers, ) ich the absence of all di atic 4 in. the *Yol- n the 26th of December, wi y Waughter)--in Agi aoe beer ade for" Teele, annoy ow tous Tee acca ee ae Teatauee 190K with ourselves. n came the Laxembu:g allair,, ™ ‘whieh could only add to ner desir to gain our sym- Unde ese circumstances is was not the journey, of %he Czar to Pai it did, at the period of her worst e rassmentés, should have been, regarded by France as @ most important event, SI yt only saw certain ad- vantage in supporting Uy in the East. but could the more easily second our retion, as our claims were moss. moderate, Russia dec.fued all aggrandizement, requir~ img only that the cyndition of the Christians, livin, under an ipwleralse yoke, should be ameliori Surely this isa pogramme which confers ‘no: politicat’ advantage Whatgter upon ourseives, Wedo not know whether auy Yeuding engagements were catered ini Parts, That @ diplomatic secret, a that ihe Cabmet of the ‘Tuileries united with our owm to represent to the expedieucy of inquiring into the condition woud bave shown how great is the coniidence in the our Nene wonit @ the wrong to sup- that io conciuding the conye: mm be peo to ive up Rome; but T will tell bits yuat in conciuding @ treaty with a more powerful tation the weaker party ought to do itin such terma bs to preclude all ambiguity 4 apreeaatae onus is oll knee reas han. iS nativa Ww! always be {fn the right. We had pledged Aes to do alla our power to 1nsyrb respect % the national T must explai. Ons tan only satve a cons}tutional government by legal theans, and bad I made ‘use of preveative and illegal Tieans to maintala we convention Parliament would have hada nga to atcuse me. France know this, aud that we had ng power to proceed against Garibald!; and 80 trad to tig tet bis tirst tinge the begivuing of the movement, took while the Ricasolj Cabinet was in power. Ifd mention thie it is by way of reply to the ‘ sy | tng contested elections vo lose which would be the great- roiative to the nex @ay night and made her a # this port at any early | oe ne adv: leon aus nd for that reason that you have at this mo- . wid taly om the. | @e¢patches ta which are related several conversations | the Chriftians in Crete and the rest. of the hour yesterday morning. MEabghior) Bek aff tal Tea, inage ootrotes la, sient: @ terrible and ‘calamitous state of things that bon Netmpan Srna Rae 09) i with the French Chargé d’Aftaires, where be complain | Evapiro. We may also point to tho part France played? The Bammonia lando/tWO hundred and six passen- | ing, this political warfare, this vast expenditure is ia | existe. Jn America you hav: another Ircland—an Ireland een . i Hotaru terres spate een oat i 5 athe: ity rate ps deri ee Remar LA overnment in Ireland; an Ireland z 7 , gers, She also brings of Europemn fles tn detail of our | Vain. For, one ef two thin, happens either | wre doe of ramon win wepart fo what they deteve | Trial of Red Republican’: had done all that was possible, Tbe proclamations were | policy abalogous to our own, In the meauime Ed. cable-despatches, date¢ ber day of sailing trem Eng- | uprising of public opini tobe the sufferings of the country they have (eft, (Hear, for the Dethronomeyt ef Bonuparte, public; we bad no need to be told by France that there | ropean events steadily progressed. The conflict between tend. of the fires Reform hear.) Many of these menarecapable, and many of them | {Paris (Des. 23) correspondere of the London Times) | was ion in the oountry. ‘What would you bave | France and Prussia, from being seemingly Inevitable, Lieb: im 1867 thelr own lors desperate. They have been accustomed to deeds—what "A trial is golng on before te Correctional Police Court | me do?’ I suid to the Chargé a’Affaires, ‘0 long as | became more aud more improbable, Tae unfortunaie ‘Tre subscriptions / Lisbon and Oporto for the reserve T pay?—deods of cruelty and of blood, in the course | of Paris of twelve persous'#i0 are charged with excit- ‘he lews oxist you cannot reproach the government with | tue of the Mraican expediium tiem Emperow , Tespecting them. If therewere preventive laws, empow- ering the government to‘terment citizens, it then would ‘be easy enough.” All-the measures that could legally be taken to prevent the agitation, I declare and affiria it ‘pon ty honor, all shove ‘menstres were taken by us of “No, no!” on the right, and of “Yes, yes!” on the left. Greavexcitement and disturbance; calls to order by the President.) Permit me, Signor Presidente— I heard shouts of ‘‘No, mo,'? on the right, and I chal- lenge all the gentlémen who sit on those benches to dis- Prove my words. 1s there not one xmoug you who bus the courage to rise and utter @ solitary “Not” (Great ge le ole T ask cunt (vielently)—! to speak. Ratazzi—1 hase the honorable Peruzzi for having lifted the glove I threw down to ail the party opposite to me, I hope that in bringing bis charges and narrating his facta he wili seek his information in Florence, and that he has not brought it with him from Paris, where he was when the events occu! This sarcastic allusion to Peruzzi’s well known obse- quiousuess to French influence was a most telling hit, and brought thuaders of applause (rom the left and from the galleries, cheers and counter cheers, calls to order from the President, who violently rang bis beli, and at last, with great difficulty, ebtained silence. Ratazzi resumed—I deciare it on my honor that I disapproved the — movement, and 80 aids many men off the advanced arty, (Murmurs and jaughter right) Your ita Cheers.) I at if of one million toAbe Portuguese loan amounted to | ‘member ot the tory patty here I hope B £7,000, 000, ‘my feelings.to his frieuds—I mast say I feel for thet i great commigeration; for it seems to me that Baron Magaus/nd Prince Salm-Salm have arrived @t | Doiitical tife must be one unvarying cup of sorrow an the Napoleon in a painful position to the Hapsburg dynasty, He therefore was 0 Salzburg 10 exchange foviings, as. big papers were made toannounce, But Baron Beust had: other ends ia view. He could not allow the opporti to pass without iudulging (be feverish acivity whic has so long distingwiaped Dim, here ts most relial authority for the fact thas Prince Metieruich, the Augirian Ambassador at Paris, bad long beeu busy advo- cating the advantages of an Austrian alliance, and thet M. Drouyn de Lhuys was not averse to the idea No insignificant hopes were based upon this design, The ‘objects to be atiained were no less than the formation of a Soush German Confederacy, and the beginning of a Polish agit ., to be further developed in the event of @ Prusso- Russian alliance becoming perceptibieg-a mag- nificent scheme, it is true, ihe more the that it fell to pieces the moment that it emerged imo the world of realities, The South German States aid not evince the slightes: disposition to secoud the intentions of Baron Beust, while pubic opinion in Austria loudly declared against a policy which must result im open hos tility to Prussia, ‘he Austrians, moreover, plainly that the country not baving as yet recovered from last defeat, aud the army and ‘inances continueg ins state of utter disorganization, it would be contrary to common sense to engag? in & perilous enterprise. oleon himself eculd not be blind to the weakness of Bis frienda, and so it happened that the Salzburg inter. view bad no immediate result. Still, the way tos ohange was paved then and there—a fact which was tq become moro manifest during the sojourn of the Em- peror Francis Joveph ai Paris, But what occurred in most .eavonomed end sanguinary civil war; aud, | tog hatred and contempt gainst the goverament, with fi now from that war, what i more likely than that | plotting against tke publ} peace ead with forining part they showld turn th instruction they hi Teceived to | Of asacres society—all, @ Course, contrary to the law. a nH oses which they believe in some degree patriatic? | T mes of these pesons are:—Accoles, professor of Brussels, disappointment—(laughier)-—aod {t seomsas if the laat | If the government of England and the government of law, aged 41; Naquet, apc ois opemiatsy 88: Fan ote English advicerfrom Japan state thata general dis- Aron oF it were reed 0 be Fein Malwa the ape eagle is called, a been Mf Hie mereaeerar pyc is i Las, | osTnaD, a ‘godteher om etl more whi afterwi @} ave to | ment of statesmen does any man in the wor! eve ; uy ol Dandment of th: Japanese troops has been ordered. The | fvatum © |"Vrow Mr Mill, the eiminent motber for | ihey would bave allowed things to come to such ® Dasa fessor of Latin, 3} ‘Adel; Meili; oabinotinaker, 25°; Yapaneso have established a line of steamers between | Westminster, says the tory party are naturi the | as this? If your leading and eminent men, Insiead of Birang, QGénouille md Hermana, no profession men- ‘Yokonama ar! @saka, bi stupid Co Gann ) Weil, Layton believe, is not | clamor : ingly for office—if they had undertaken to | tioned. The last tireo havo absconded. It was Accolas, y intelligent w denied man among the tories, Unless | teach thi at was tru it things mi, tt appears, who sugested er ergauized the “Peace Con- The Rugean Consul st Hakodadi ‘sanounces that ta | Raat ee than ehanot act feel timretro’ | been doney Tremind alight have’ eeu tanuall, gress” bold at Gereva, which s0 scandaliged the Geno- are accordance 71th the treaties conclttded with Japan by | spect cust be to them exceedingly humiliating, and the | kingdom might long ago have been united, (Cheers) | Vese and at which Garibaldi was present. The I= England, jrence, the United States end the Netherlands, | future, in their endeavors to look into oe ‘must be | Ag it {s, fee what a position we are in, The whole | ings of these meg had roused tho suspicions of the Paris 2 5 » | equally gloomy, But ‘this last humiliation appears to | civilized world points to our condition, The newypapers | @utborities eve) since the middie of september last, Jeddo an/Oseka will bo opened for trade with the con- | rieto be almost the deopest of thom all, Lord Derby | of France, of Germany, ‘even of Iialy—fuil of | and their meofngs were carefully watched and noted. tracting “owers upon the 20th of January, 1908. dered, more than amy other man, to be | trouble as she is just now—1 the newspapers of the | On the 12th of last month the Commissioners of Police ‘Among the faithless, faithful only he. United States, discuss with great freedom, put with | of various quarters of the capital were informed by {Laughter and cheers.) Everybody has not been of that | moro or less fuirness, the condition of this couatry with | several respectavle persons of thoir having re od by GREAT BRITAIN. opinion, even among the tories; for a respectto the state of things in Irend. They do not | tho post prinied circulars or proclamauions of a most ‘once by an accident spending an evening at a | now write about Poland, or Hungary, or Venice, but seditious cbaracter. 2 dite Re fr Indi a] Weisn watering place in company with the pro- | tuey write about Ii id 14 they point to the people The first was couched m these term: Capea "and ite Returas from ia and] prietor of an out and out tory journal pub. | of Great Britain y that we have not done our duty | Pasxouwsn—The Of the | Bonapartes was Mexico—The Iron Trade—Feninntem and Its} jished in thie ‘country, and he told me that| towards our sister country, And whatever be the | crime; wis now closing im cryne, after having dragged France E£flerts—John Bright on the Position of the | be didnot think much of Lord Derby, (Laughter.) Ho | criminality which we all now deplore and condemn, a | Srom one ae to another, The usurper of our rights, Tories, Voto by Ballot and Ireland. used a term whicn will be understood bya good many | responsibility that can neither be weighed nor measured | Bonaparie, i mey.ortag, as to mete ts ae Fern here, did not think Lord Derby was thorough | reats upon us, the people of England, Now, it would mr Senet Renee by ; ty On the Sist of May next, ia conformity with the re- : day the opprobrinm of Mexico, to-day that of ome, . bred asa tory. He was only a “broken bair'd ‘un.’ | be easy to show that as a nation and poopie we have lust | imbeciio allows himscif to be duped by Bismarck, aud quisito twele months’ notice given in May last, the te- | (laughter and cheers.) * * Without doubt tho great | greaily in cnaracter from the state of things existing | transforms our glorious soldiers toto shirr) of the Pope. terest on India bonds will be reduced frem five to four | meetings which took place in different parts of the | betw England and Ireland, and if it were not not the cup of shame fullf Shall we deirer up to thi per vent, and notice bas been given in London that on | Country this year, which showed them that if they met | cate subject to treat upon, which Ff now thin! al PSE hearer band our conscience, ous poner. ughter dovs not affect me. Geodamen, you who smile even at the declaration that on@ ‘of your colleagues ry jamen' jr i) te) id, it would show how | ¥ the Ist of January, 1869, » further reduction will be | Reriament without, the promise or na mectiog bi eatery we farce Wott ie nate nal oes and” morat | $2008 sbi up, miser boar doors. We ‘have io choose | makes upoa bis hovor, while you contlaualiy complain | the inuervalt What oovurred | to complete, the made to three per cent. go back to that side of the houge which the; influence with other nations, and —_ especially | sumption of our destinies in our own hands, that your own intentjoas are misrepresented, permit me | change and drive the Tuileries into the arwns of Baron ‘Tho veport of the directors of the Mexican Raitroad | UPON 80 long and never seemed to feel the rmalert with regard to our moans ‘of defence, —_ ‘Pieesdond is worded thus! 2 al Les ee 12 Cag rite ves pecs ts laity: waa Weaning nd bes ae im © hel cabaiben comfort. (Cheers.) During that session of 1866, itis | ome point only—the question of tax any Ls -poreus lease oh WP Europe to render an Austro-French all France does not belong tw herself for the last fifteen years; she has lost all her hberties, Her wealth is squandered, f a century lost, She was once the h he is now their nightmare. Her gevernment ook for the nations of the earth, lier honor ‘ms quite tarnished. ‘The T invite the difniater of the Interior, who has all tbe cir- culars and telegrams, to lay them on the President's table. (Sensation. ) La France says that negotiations are being carried on between the French and {tallan governinents with a View to an arrangement destined to replace the conven- on of Sepsember 15, Tne other Powers will be kept informed of the progress of the negotiations, that they may subsequently give in their aduesion, GERMANY. 03, Company had been read at a meeting of the share- | impossible in language which would not be exagg people can understand the quostion of taxes who can- holders in London. The paper states:—The receipts on oa and even teroens a tenors elgg and | not omnes ean sty ee leek pes Tam 44d able » jowhng rage which theysexhibi inat the unfortu- you the exact figures, vut I suppose at this momen’ the Vera Cruz and Paso del Macho ling, forty-seven | Hoe ng TOES Or tho seven pound franchise, Their bit.\| we are supporting, out of the imporial taxation, a force miles in length, for Jenuary, February, eight days in | terness and malice t the bill wouid have been | of twenty-five thousand men in Ireland to the perce March, and the month of July, amounted to £82,240; on | tcarcely somite it he bill bee been as bad as thes. pert Ce we have ee Capp rely ae os peace ane one eeniatan carpeires ta said tt was, and it is clear now that it was not uearly so | for so many hundred years, which hag been under the ‘ ‘ the Mexico and Apixaco, eighty-six miles sm length, | $2'7'J¢ thoy deciared it to be. ‘Their conduct in the pur. | sovercign and Parliament of Great Britain for so many | Reasons too bd which tne impure bends tn which our £32,361, for four months; and on the Tacubaya Tramway of office reminds of some lines which were pub- | geuerations. In addition to this we have in Ireland | crush those who want to restore suourity, dignity and fof nine months to £5,045, Notwithstanding the state | lished a great many years ago, which never bad » more | from twelve thousand to fifteen thousand poiice, equal | hberty to France. Let us have coniidence in each other; iet ©f Lue countny there wore received, between the lat of | exact application than when they describe the course of | to the very finest soldiers m the quality of the men, in | us go k to the great national path of honor and of January andthe 30th of June, on account of the fifteen | the tory party last year. The poet in the ‘Rejected nd in discip!ine, (Cheers) This 1g notall, We | bverty, lt is on our doing ao that the salvation of France it customs’ duties, £13,648, Addresses” savs:— this moment in Canada, threo or four thousand | ¢¢Pe"s. | artbpentam tray 4 aad ou scootat of the y, about fifteen thousand soldiers, pald out of | The third proclamation is not less etrong:— indispensable, On the contrary, things assumed a more paciiic aspect, and the Tuileries needed but to declare that they would not take up arms, unioss the Prague treaty was openly set aside, to allay tue last lingering remuant of suspicion; for it had become quite mm | that Count Bismarck bad no wish to go beyond hi original plan, confined to the north, and pluck the southern fruit before 1 was ripe, What, then, were the’ motives of France in thug suddenly binding herself to Austria? Im our opinion there is bus one way of acd counting for this e'range anomaly, As we have seen in’ the above, France at a certain moment thought i& advisabie to enter into @ more or less completa, ry of her a: d debt obligations, £13,970, ‘The board wouid lo Bo when ‘dogs’ meat’ re-echoes throuzh the stree! n 3 h=Par- no Ume Ip again communicating with the sharehoiders Saat aympathetio dogs from nelr retremt: ss this country. Aud why are wey in | _ People of Paris, sixteen years ago the republic was murdered PTs pep Means denen Rep aw yasermenciag Sit ong FE! Nha So woe after receipt of expected detailed advices from Mexico. Beam with bright blaze their auvplicating eyes, In order that they may confront, | duriay the night, One man usurped the fiberty 0: all of us. g vinced herself that the Russian alliance wor The London Times of the 25th of December, speaking eir bind legs, ascend their joyful cries; d, if necessary, drive back the Imshmeu in | He seized upon France and divided her among The Paris Consticutionnel, in repiy to a statement in | mereiy assis: her in the pursuit of pacific talen~ tims, and Lhat designs against the peace of Lurope would not be counienanced by us, Tne servility of Baron Beust had more w otter, Having, by his agree- h Hungary, been forced into a policy hostile to onians as a race, it was but natural he shoul hin ‘wild with hope and panting to prevail, ‘United States. -'And if it were not for the moral sence | Hi# caprice is the law; his hesitations, bis reticoncos. b Sreaumbebnd Cilnnes eenak iohes temhan aeeniaa ean the quick ear and wags the expectant tail, Of the pple of the United” State, an: the quod faith and | baie cowardloe, bi rT Are pence or mac Wall exo aa it Je now, yetirisumen did not eee in it cause for | (Loud laughter.) Just so the gentlomen of the front | Aon o/ their gov-rnment, there ts mo dubs but Uiat great | We were promised weait thange for liberty. Working ‘Dastility to the Crown, But we know that since 1! cppesition benches, and such of them behind who | trouble—far greater than any we have yet seen—wow'd have | mor who ask jor bread, e empire euriched yout im conciustou of the Arerican has set loose a numb: Vhought that there was something to be bad, especiaily | arisen on that frontier betioven the Irishmen in the United | the grest drsusters of patronized ent 4, What has be- the Weser Zevlung, recallg the speech of the Emperor Napoleon at the opening of the legisiative session, in which he said that France frankly accepted the changea which had taken place at the other side of the Rhine, of the Irish question and Fenianism, saye:—‘“The Couclusiou of the Acaerican war has. set jose e numer | snd avove all the lawyers, who bas siuco been gorged | Staice and the ruljec's of tie Britch crown in Canada, | ote of the forsunas of ciizs promised glory u manifest aympathy with the Poles, He wat a us d, for the sake of that patronage and rt in exchal for dignity. Soldiers to massacre the io Wurtemberg Chammber of Deputies the Government | aily, then, noi oni} ainst Germany, but also against eequired. itaportance, conclusion is obvious that patronag Wel, then, wo have from ifyy to Gfty-tve tuousmad | Criiege and the Oochin-Chineve, 1 is to enniava tne Tepud- | Reform bill was prosented to the members, According | Rusia and the Bart hve was all that was required f India is called “loot,” formed a com- ie lerpriee i Ata. . =e we roy iat restless element | Ditation to overturow the bill of 1866 and piace them- which has Hover been wanting in the Irish population, | ®!ves in office. And to keep there thoy consented 10 Tt need not stop she course of remedial legisiation; bus | Passa bill infinitely worse in ail the points on which | because the irish people are a dis it should not, on the otber hand, force us to acts which pndemned the Bil of A608. And I-ventare to say .1 people, ing grievances which they constantly ex- | giayoir joors at us anda Bismarck makes game of us. our better judgment co: Nothing will be gained ir conduct om this occasion leads to the conclusion | piain, but wich wa have hitherto refused to look at or | Tut. in what the empire has brought usto. 1s itnot ume to by prociaiming that Fe: that there is scarcely any institution of the fountry, | refused to remedy; and there fe not @ singie one | get out of thie mire? effect of British tnstitutions or 4 however honorable and ancient, that they would not of them which any seusible man among uw On occasion of a-visit by the police to the residence of sirument in the wands of Providence to induce deter | SF the permanent posression of office, (Cheers.) But if | wit oot say that we o.ght to have given {the accused, named Chonteau, there wae found Jegisiation. Is is no consequence of our acts, and our ‘there be occasion for us to criticise the conduct of Parlia- | tuem without asking. (Cheera Ty woul uot ‘a zinc tube, ‘concesied der grount in a cellar, the Measures ought .not to be, or appear to be, under ita | ™Dt or of {bo tory party, we may not the jess rejoice at | diminish our power of action in the least degree; nay, H proamole to which runs cow puiei the triamph which eur opponents have achieved. There | i$ would strengthen it for every purpose, aud remo an Raglsh tate report shows that the exporis ie more to be added. They were not willing to let the | from us the very greatest disgrace tuut has ever in our we: io Of Meson; it 1s to becom iw to kill Garibaldi that you roto promised pre-emuitones among the hatous, and we 2 for them & subject for mockery. We are drivea out or mionted and insulted | {0° oh by « simple threat from the-Uaited State. “A Goris. Af the Pope, and it made ty wear uniform, We the time being, Alliance with him would probabi! maintain peace for a whilo, keep Prussia within tue bounds of the Northern Confederacy, and prevent Rus sia from alleviating the sufferings of the ial Chriss. tians, Such a result was agreeable enoug! bad the additional recommendaion of pleasing which, im these modern days, knows mo other than the praervatin of the status quo, The Italian troubles confirmed the French Cabii this policy, The astonishing devotion io French interests manly fested by the Vieuns Cabinet in the negotiations oomel ‘ cerning a conference could not but prove to to the bill the Lower Chamber ts to consist of ninety. four members, sixty-four of whom are to be eiec! by direct election, twenty-four to be selected irom the nighest rate payers, and the remaining six members to suo church, The Upper Chamber the nobility, the u Catholic Churcaes, and the great towns. representatives will bo nominated by decree, RUSSIA. of railway iron from the United Kingdom were consider- | thing be done quietiy, but they bave since the risiog of | time or rece 1s settled on the character andl repu- | STATUTES OF THE REVOLUTIONARY COMMUNE OF TRENCE WORK. Emperor Napoleon that he might count upom these Sbiy jacteesed in 1807, notwithstanding the competition | Parliament taken steps to add greatly to that triumph. | tation of Eugiand, (Cheers) We suall see by td by Whereas, an imperial wad moourgu‘cal reyuire 16 the reign erties Pts ag ggg Pneotgerogy saan of Belgian makers aud other circumatanees, the total | For we have seen leaders of the tory party at great | whether the present goverament is capadie of deaing | of despotism, of ignorance ‘misery, Sitcke | What England Wants In the Enst—0; % ouly an inference, but an inference derived from shipments in the ten months ending October 31 having | >ADquets in different parte of the country dancing with a | with this question. Sir Robert Peel, wien he resigned | efforts shoud Ye direcied to overthrow, in wrde: io found in | Her Policy om the Turkish Questio eae Ge ical ae annttaes Ri reached 512,071 tons, as compared with 430,141 tons to | Sortof tat on at the sucosss of the princip! the corresponding date of 1865, and 361,652 in the first | Of which they have all slong peen the stor deo montue of 1866, she exports to Russia In the tee pro oa ge Mays Rigg ro oes ° ab moniha ending Oatober 31, 1867, amounted to no less consti jon wuich then prevaile ‘gihe: if Than 125,212 tens agasust 65,308 tons im the correapond, | Dest interests of the country. To crown the whole thing, | widely ia the country, he “are wot propose to Parlin- | muni cotsider any Aiversetice as na laapedianot: 13 the Work ng poriod of 1866, and 37,755 tons in 1865. The United | ® stranger spectacie w: t before seen in the politi- | ment the measures which be knew were essential to ave undertaken in common. States took the latge totai of 145,108 tons, ax compared | CA! anuale of this country, We have scen Lord Derby, the | the pacitioation of Ireiaad. (Cheera) He knew that 1 nen are brothers. They are bound ‘with 79,023 tons ia 1866, and 44,055 tons ia the first tea lax a fender o protectin, the last and frmest bulwark | i{ he had proposed tue: he would bi Deen | One to the other. The closest ailiance suould exist between months of 1865, To British India the exports reached | 20dinst democracy—we have secn him exhibiting himself | driven from the leadership of his party. There- Chay ought, for the Sake 6f the French peopl 140,606 tons.in tho ten monthe, against 117,737 tons in | 1 defence of free trade and household suffrage om the | fore he caried on 1 Seontienchall aak predecponaltee.etih's mavens leon’s ‘‘Shiftings.”” The Moscow Gazeie publishes the following remarkable article om the policy of Russia and Eng'and in the East:— “All antagonism between Russia and England would cease to exist if & were possible to disco’ &@ means of insuring to England her domination im the far East. ‘There the interests of the two Powers do not come in conflict; there Russia may wish complete success to office upon one occasion, admitted candidiy that Ireland | its place a democratic and sedaliet qovernmens, under the was his difficulty, mot because he had no: done his best | Bame of repudiic, Lased ov te sublime pringiples of 1789, ‘of the pariy sunt rat ved by athelam and materialism Whereas, our device, “liberty, equality, fraternity,* must oie France at @ certain period was on a very footing with Russia, The fruit of this hers a proximation was the weil known deciaration the four Powers handed over to the Porte. It would be absurd to assume that France joined in such @ step unless she had an opinion to expres an bad previously ascertained this opinion to coimcide with that of ¢ Powers. On this poimt a good deai of diplomatic cor deed, and 69,000 tons in 1860. The ebic market laiform of the Freo Trade Hail in Manchester, (Cheers.) | he could, doing bis best ¥ Tospondence exists, not s vestige of which appears in ‘which Groat Briain bas had to mect with Belzian com. | Notwithstanding tov, 1 suppose that our friends the | at the last coufessing thi ind ‘was bis greas'difi- | ment hue that of 1 England. The continually increasing influence of Eng- | the Yellow Book. ’ Th Yellow Book having toon cota. piled under the influence of the Austro-Frenea rap~ . have leith, for their credulity ia | culty, What, thea, cat party do with Ireland? | amovitious. no part ube sngdow ia which ine The rules and regulations which foliow are twenty- es of the tory party bave bad euch full and per | five in number, e had in Lreland, They have | of cloven iembers, mo to ther beart’s contea& | the ib of September last, eommittee could ecclesiastical revenues of the | be changed ut the will of the members of jon and given them to asnall section whose | the socivty, but the change could ouly be mad mer does not much exceed the population of in case of serious charges of misconduct. If the charg yy and Salford, (beers) They have bad seariy | was proved tbe accused was to be (ried in geueral con- © Lauds of great proprietors; meariy aii | yooation, Am accused person would be permitted ie re been chosen from these ji dofend nimsei!, but If found guilty would undergo the estat arty. They awe bad penalty prouounced against bim by his judges Kver ery and polis, ‘Tuere is mot a member of the society was calied upon (o execute ti L1H consequence of jvfor- | TePoriers take notes of the proceedings, and the jud aso and bigoted tory can foutence, whatever it ‘might be, pronounced by 0 mation that be had bees communicatiag with persons | @8¢ Jury are before the pudiic, but ihe’ jury rtseif dis- ¥ been had in the most ¥ against tho accused, ' kvery iember was knowa to be connected with the 2 movement in this | Cusses aud doliberates and comes to its evnciusion in | and complete shape im Ireland. ers.) 0 make A MAU proselylex as possible, and city, and also that he bad been z to promote | 8¢cret; and it t anderstood to be very disnonoral unfortunately for iue tories, tw only spectic wien to comply with the orders issued by Fevlazism in the ranks. It was reported that soldiers | ‘2 ay jurymaa, after the jury have given thi dang: arses 18 (error. They have no security, and mmities im the interest of the common * verdict, to inform Any person Bot upon the jurv— | don't comprehend any, for allegiance, but that cause. fle members of tue commitioe wei any @utsider—as to what wos the particular | eonsysts in powertessness to rebel, and the consequence | meet once on Wednesti, and o 4 it was hoped that the report was | View of aay member of the jury; but it i | is now, that I fear :hey will do as in time past—repres- | if necessary. fand was estabiiehed to Balounded. ‘Subsequent facta, however, transpired | {+ to be eawential for the right performance of | give measures, and often of a most stringeut character; | the expenses of tho civil interments—ihat 's, im'erme: ‘nich abow too plainly thateven in the midst of the | ‘At imporiaut duty that the jury snould retire, and adininistration of the law, calling om the poo- | without any religious ceremonial—and other contingsn~ Joyal and gallant Beveaty-eecond Highlanders, and with | #BAt ils deliberations and conclusion shoutd be in secret. | pi ngiand to support them in ail that is severe, coniributions were to be voluniary. Miautes many of the mem in good positions, the dire disease of | Thea take Parliament Partimament 1 opento the public, | (Cheers.) I could make -ome excose for ® severe wl. roceedings at meetings ot the commites or of the Feusaniem bas oven diacoverod. People come in The reporters are there; and every | ministration of th if T caw that they would | general society were to be drawn up and read at ti A large seizare of gunpowder mado at Sundor. | Morning, tf you read the papers, you may know more | rap diy and earn nce measures likely to give | meeting mnmediately following. commities boui ngiand. Tee eflesrs re information that | Of What baa beon done in Parliament tham anybody ia | catisfaction 10 a disloyal people, (Cheera) Ab preseat | itself to take all the stepa it might deem neful tow rishmaa named Joseph Spear had a quantity of | tte House itself. That is ail public, but the Cabina des | 1 vee nothing of the kind. Peruaps when Paria | establishing @ continuous and direc: correspondence wih peition haz been Russia, but even with that country a | tries will still, bowey Prach larger business than tual bay beea done this year | Without iimit, ‘and sail still beveve in him, (Cheers.) | Tue: dy British firms, They must believe in somebody, and that Lord Derby | pri Toe annual rate of mortality during the week ended ‘Will still stand as a sort of sain: m the poii ‘cal calendar December 21 was 26 per 1,000 in London, 29 in Eain. | Of the conservative party, Ido not doubt. (Cheers.) * * ¢ burg and 29 in Dubiia; 23 in Bristol. 20 in Birmingham, | That te only a slight elaboration of the old corponed 83 in Liverpool, 85 in’ Manchester, 31 in Salford, 23 in | ‘hat the bailot would be un-Kogheb, It ie curious BheiFeid, 23 in Leeds, 21 in Hull, 22 in Newcastie-upou- enough that neary all the Englisn who formed colonics, Ty ae and 23 in G especial y ia the sou bern bemiaphere, fiad the valiot a most admirable inachiaery for stections; aud \c is there universally accepted. Aa to public duties being per. formed in public, take a court of justice—that is heid in public. People may come in as they like, Jand in Egypt is spoken of well, Let that influence still further increase, Russia has no reason to oppose it, It ‘Appears from the discussions concerning the Abyssinian expedition that it was prepared with the utmost secrecy, sal of these discussions will | berger must not tell tales about the vaciliations of to prove to the took first to the one, ceal this incousistency Napo. in his speech from the throne, expressed himself in a manner which he pre- sumed would alike sty Austria Pruwsia, He dweit upon the necessity of succoring the Christians, Dui thought i equaily necessary to preserve Ottoman, iniegrity. To revert to the declaration delivered at Constantinople, Baron Beust, it is true, could mot quite sup) ress his chagrin. But he comforted himself by the Fellection that the Freuch government would not hav ‘acc:ded to it bad not negotlutions gone too far to admit of retreat with any sbow of propriety. The Frenolt semi-official papers, mo! , were not behindhand in informing the world that the Austrian Chancollor had bis mind set at rest respecting the worth of sa Geclaration. He bad been at once assured, whey sai that the deciaration was not worth the paper and in! consumed im writing, and that it would never be acted upon, There was a rumor of a protoco! having been signed by the Cabinets of Vienoa and Paris, securing the Integrity of the Turkish empire. If we do not bee lieve in the existence of sucn a protocol, it is only be, cause there ts no necessity“o! putting down in biack and white what bas long been agreed upon in a moat moving rier of the force to be employed would led o qual certainly have been ample, We are, tho pedilion, tuere ts « fart! nt to disguise, not to Par the King of Abrssinin follow ‘ the English power tn the Red Sea. it mot nap may then be dispored 10 Christians ia To; statesmen of Eny les: apprehension, and to adopt towards the: kindly poliey? im such acase Engiaud might proceed in perfect agreement with Russia in gions of the itl to France it would remain for bes sarpriee, and ian a tioa in the prosperous condition of the rchovls for young ire rganised (o prepare Turkish maidens for life in tie om. An imperial ukase has been published in St, Peters. the tmporial manifeste of the 28th of y ad’ anpowder stored about his promises, and the oificera | Nts in public, The Miuisters of the Queen hold their mt Opens we may see somotiing of it; | the priacipa: seat of tue Revolutionary Commitiee in spirit of harmony. The affair simply is that i in with lm a® io was going to hit Work. He st | deliberations and come to their conclusions in secret; | but I venture to say tuat (nere ia no {a Ire: | London. “Fie Wore various steer asticion regulaiin te poral uae of tate of | haute Caus Se eene sae anener Zit denied that he had any gunpowder in bis px and it is only when a great result has to be explained laud who ts @ greater trator to tn the manner im which the atudenis were to correspou pag Rowen litical te ally threw Russia overboard, and adaered to Austr: 4100. Butwyon the officers telling bim that th ae public ip Parliament that the matter becomes in any | tho laws of his country than a Minister woo ¢o ‘talutes were signed by the pr Wks tock eet ihe Nee roneiaae orelga, co : At present she ia quite aa zealously od as is Baron wish the workingmen. ‘of the commities who bound themeelves by oath to Beust in keeping the Christians under the Mussulman yoke, and preventi any amelioration of miserable mate, As it would to avow such an intention in mmy be concealed underneath a m ology, concerning the necessity of prese | States, spreading civilization, and je hike, ‘we are to credit French promises, irkey ie be Europeanized fourthwith, Wo need not ‘ that the attempt now to be made, in right © warrant to search bis hous. he took them toa lexreo open to tho public. And so with regard to | tinues to hold office, and ts at the same treo not djoining &is own, where they found four hundred | ¢lections; they would be im public. The returoing offl- | euiightened enough, who have sot moral courage enough ipounde contained in thres large begs In. coal house, | Crs, the agencies of the candidates, they wourd ali be | to recommend to the Crown aad to propose te Parliae ar said Chakbe had the guupowder for blasting pur. | Public. Everything would be fully known except at taeasares Of justice for tuo pacification of Ireland. poces, tho individual vote of the individual elector; that ot let me be Understood aa saying (nat if there were 4 derpata Mom Plymontn (England) Dockyard, dated | Would be deposited in the ballot box or urn; and to | » change o! government this question would’be grappicd the Zu of December says:—The precautio: the great advantage of the ‘own and the Constitd | with tue force which 1 necessary. There are among in this port quingt the machinations of ency until four im the afternoon aobedy would know | the leading men of the whix party men who have (ait have invotver a lar; amount of what was the resuit of due poll, Every mas voting | sentiments with regard to Ireiana; but who, whenever labor, especially on the part of the nai would thas be enabled to give his vo in eccordance | they treat of \uis question, are afraid of dealing wita it Prince Gortechakoi™s Manifesto Agninet @ aMliated was a professor of chemistry, Naquet, accordiag to the Avocat-Impo- gave to Chont of the committer, a receipt making gun-cotton, “aad," observed the avocat, an of science, the professor paid by the gov- ve that arm to Chonteau and Godichet, the the society, and be thinks ail that very Naquet, tt appewrs, wrote a letter to M. Vie~ Italy. {Berlin (Deo, 21) correspondence of the London Times.) AS hae been noticed iu this correspondence, as the tary forces. Today the Maser At with bis own conscieatious convictions, entirely uafet- | as it must be dealt witb, and therefore it might be neces | tor Hugo, asking his advice aa to whether he should | cvouts gradually developed, Russia, ab various times | earnest, wil tall ae sigually as all Lana Shen ag the paddiewheot Avon to tored of unindwenced by any other cousideratiens, aad | sary, even if taere wore @ cha! f goverament—eu bi bis chiid a Jew, on the gr t , | im the taat year, aitempied to induce France to look A few more Turks learn to converse in c! * ne 5 oven oon oa ie bo’ seeias "4 Le upon Eastern atfirs in the same light as herself, | A few Odalisqucs in er teen: and impressed o1 commandin; the result, | will venture toeay beyond ail contradiction, | pose that chauge of government were such af people | also Jewish, would give him money if the sun for exira vigilance gt this season. arms. That portioy of the wa not on act down tu their clothes, The gunboat Redwing, ditional marines, bas been moored near store of live ebeil ix BL Germans river, The wast ages 4 northera portion of Keybain steamyard ie | Cverywlere (Hieses and laughier.) I do mot go In return, she bad no objection to loosen somewhat her ancient intimacy with Prussia, and remain a peutral npeciator of a correction of the Rhine frontier, France, thoagh apparently unviliing to qntertain these pro- posais, at one time belaved in a manner which not un ‘was pot of their ‘enh? OF whether he gslould allow bim to grow ap like bimseif—that ts, neither Jow nor Christian. In the same letter he binds himeeif by oath never to accept emolu it of any kind from tho imperial government, which oath, by the way, he generally expect—io stimula with strong languare, d by & strong expression publie opunon, et of the constituency to which the appeal sbeaid be j the timid counsels ‘o thoee who might oneness whe made, (Cheers) J Aope at the next eection thal this | present government when it resigned office, But the consider thi# question the tore [ am impressed Perhapr they will even begin fo strum on the piano; what advan’ a eee even trlane ooh Site oll ed oultire? They wilt wither away in tniera minable siavery should Frauce and Austria have it forming & escribabie seriousness, | think of many | did not keep. nataraily led Russia to anticipate @ speedy conciusion d by the wlitary. Bags of esad have been | everywhere. (Hear, bear.) Ido notgo into it any fur. ys which I am sure are not without foundation In the lotier he gaya:—As a socialist repablican, as an | Of the bargain. Eagerly seizing the hand held out to all their own way. bd po relations betwee al) those parts of the dockyard most exposed | ther now, because at some perhaps not distant time f | which I cannot and which | dare not publicly discuss | enemy 10 ail political despotiams, aud ‘o al) constituted him, the Czar immediately repaired. te Paris to talk all and Frenc! inets are not confin ack by Greek dre, shall take an opportanity of dewoting ap hour at least to | deiore this audience. J tuink tt has within it peril | reiigioas, which, im iny‘judgment, are the despotism of | over with bis royal friend, and, as am earnest of future ra, In Germany, too, those Powers pr: ry servicos, also assisted him torough the watoward diff. | samo (o stand sentinol on ti to perform while I live no re- main. In Italy ther ¢ consummation of unity; la all countries of and develo) Liverpool, Decombor 24, @ party of the detective | ® thorough exainination of thie quesiien so as te show | such as for a long time thi* country bae nov known, force were employed in watching Branch Bank of | (6 vast advantages, not to the Liveral party alone, but | that it requires great resuiution and wsdom such aa wo Lngland, the possibility of come Fonian attempt being | +9 the public, and to show the utterly fimsy and uaten- | don't often flud in our yoveraiments ty most it as It re- Spprenended, Nothing draospired. abie character of the objections which are made to | quires 0 be met, If Ireiaud is to be made conent, if Our correspondent in\ Southampton it even by tho few eminent men who have dis- to be healed, If there is to be henceturth padilo steam vessels Helicon and Vivid cussed tho matter in an adverse senes, Lelore I wer has yet been, x uuited kingdom of ound oo i ceaclude, there is one other question te which ref- | Great Britain and Ireland; if theeosptre of the Quewn, re- Supposed that there ships, lik Bl erence hag been made, and which I think it | presenting the majesty of the law, shail ever Le of equal and Crower, are gone to look for a strange would not bo right for me to pass by. I mean the ques | authority vast and woat of the nuel, } must be done HOt pomessod of | papers. tion of the condition of lreinnd, (Chaers.) Et is uot my | and it can ‘be done by measures of great statestinan- The Warrio tigate, Kas dropped down under | intenton to say anything io tno way of explanation of | ship and of justion, (Cheers.) [be morais of the tut, ateam to an @ oY Ostorne. The capwaine and | Whe I conceive to be the erivai under which the | tried on tha floor of Parluimoat of in the secrecy of Commanders of ail ebips in cokutnise: Iri#h nation have labored, nor of the remedies which | the Cabinet, will fail hy Biructed to adopt overy neces: Ought long ago to hare been applied 3 is one of @ different characte: by night, to protect thetr shi ious attacks; | frequenily both et public mec:ings , unless it be (hat the rewe: from dusk unt!) day! git a guard \pomt is Lo row round | Of the House of Commons. Ove thing, at any rata, I may enniry fail 60 bw that ican produce wm sates each ship in Hamoaze, two ai launches will eruise | 2 Sllowed to say with regard to them, man ejwal fo these things Cheers.) Teay (he gan wn, about, each guerd will Lave tweiveXouded rifea Itap. | *eegree with those who, when any crisis oF trouble | leading im the councila of the Queen's gaverniwment, shail pears that what the government mod! apprebend ia che | 87.80% fay that you murt, Arvt of ail, preserve order, you | grasp this great quetuoe and end It—wao shall compro~ dropping ot torpedoes down the seam. Ali ebips in | MUS Put dows all disivyaity and disobedicuse tthe saw Rous the remedies and shai admivister tikem, and make stupidity, I have resoly Higioua act whatever, After # loag eddress from ihe Avooat-Impérial, M. Jules Favre addressed the Court on bebaif of Accoias; and M, Crimieux for Naquet. The trial was not brought to a clove on Saturday, and it will probably last # day or two more. —o unexpectedly arising in the Luxemburg aflair, Vienna Cabinet, indicating @ resolve to constitute herself the opponent of the Czar in the East Nothing davated by this dsappommtment, the Czar's Cabinet reiterated is advances om more oocasions than one, The last time those overtures were conveyed to the coveted aily was a few weeks ago, wh ba foe Incumbered horvelf with the scheme of sible conference, mebs be supposed to be peo accessible to ofere of heip, However, no greater ensued in this than jn any of the preceding instal The anger engendered by such a series of rebuff? cal crisis of this year, Enropoan Cabinets have sought a combination, cal lated to restore the public confidence and satisfy the, sousible and logitimate aspirations of the nation, result of their ondeavore ts the Ausiro-Krench combiy pation, than which non — could be imagined! ITALY. The Logistative Debate—Party Recrimination The disease which we are a Ranieoment, r f a Apreenay ng Avolegram was sont frow Paris to the french Minie- | now caused Prince Gortéchako to publish a lengthy corre. ‘er at Florence to protest, in the name of the French government, against the declaration made by M. Mei brea about suspending the parinent of the Pontifical debt on nccownt of the former provinces of the States spondence with bis reprosentatives at London, Parie, Borlid and Coostaotinoyie, intended to show that what- ever opiaiens may be momeutarily held by France abo not many months ago curried favor with Russia by Italy. iy the Christian East, but convines it of the {naif os of Europe and compoi it to rorort to mean timost despair aloue can suggest, lt will and | them law, ue would do ti coramission are also to keep watoh (a\harbor tame | YOU Must easert tho supremacy of (be goverumen' which tn future ime We c! obliging her in tbe Levant, sari the Belleroplcnn Prince Comme | tue consider the grievances (lat are complained of | pea of history will delight wtracs, ‘Cheas) me may | % the Church, That protest is considered as @ aotics | © This curious correapondence, which apy Turkey to persist in her barbarous porscous ‘constanuy | Generally, aftor baving seserted the aupremacy of dhe | tothe very full gracfy the goblest ambition of 4, | Of the Cossatiom Of the September Convention om the | Journal de Si Pete borg, ie accompanied by ticn, aud plunge the Poles once again in a reckiowe ¥f law, and having made what they call peace under part of France, tory article in the o: Invalide, supplying inveresting | Course, such as they are now payin Mat 0 ripe and he may build up for himee: np to aban. | tho happiness and the ur of Cem. | W nO considering of thom, This bas been the case ta | (Loud cucors.) Cuber meme | Ltéland for two huvdred years, is grest presrner there has een the gallows amd the gibbet, Of late youre (he Enough of (his, We wish only to dep! P iy not to draw any conclusions as to the future, or w Our policy therein may be. Current avenis are 80 xs ovedingly important as to deserve the undivided attem« ‘Sta Russia remains faithfal la details of what bay boon akeiched above, and betraying the feelings of the writer aa much tn the fact that such 4 disclosure \s made as in the violent language ia which i couched, A translation of the aricle in question re of the } ie grievances are forgotten aud La France, epeaking 00 the subject, says:—‘'We ean. not expiain to ourssives how @ governinent could thus en by the Laverpooi ( ree to himself, Lord Stanley and sor (4 merely because tt fai) (n ite most serious engage rs, The London ,. a We heat barvartly of de law has but rarcly exhibued itvelf, bu 4 will got be saperfuoun, Ib as follows:—“Atien~ oe ak ne eas ae Sees Ss former wears Ub Water tae persone whe relied IRELAND Uhioks it bag to deal with » state chat i@ pot able to eD- | tion has been ofien drawn in the Rutsiea press to the f traditions. She oaly aske whal voted ty the wdc: of Ireland, death by the iaw tn Ireland was somahing wonderful kde cha Siang force itarighta, Such an attitude towards the Pontifical | coniradictory eharsctar of French polley in the Bastern | and acquite herself of all complicity in the approaching, and appalling (o think of. Now, twenty years ago, Sympathy with Feotaotem. government is not only paltry strategy woworisy Of agreas | question. [tis weil kaows tl the declaration pre crisis. = Onices evian difference: in Wetern bunipe are Joho Bright on Retor ad Henne , | maoy of you will reco! that Troiamd, ‘under the Phe government in Dudiin was obliged to wave prod | Biaro, but it is ace ally disboues!, 1¢ ia, moreover, @ | sen‘ed at Constantinople by Russa, Prussia tnd Italy was | adjwted te cbviows that the present armed peacs must m and the Situation fe | guidince of on of Ir st Bons, the lace Mr, r ‘i hice | Pulitical fault, the more unpardonable that t doos not | tod orsod by France, to be immediately auccesdet by the | give way (0 an obstinate struggia, Irelands O'Copuell, theo were reeetne ae Mr | lanantions to prevent Fenian funeral processions whied | fie ine Hicly See, but racer the wimnoroaa holders of | prom lgation of a’ number of diplo Notwiiberanding the ominous propheey with which tf win gtock, #bo placed their coniidecee io tue probity of the aelociéd wito a tiew to prove that the optuions ot A nomorovely attended public meo haid fn} the perp’? © val probably in numoor to the meetings | bad been arranged to come off In Bantry and Tr up, this interesting edusion ie made livat of here d the new theatre of Ruehdule, December ve pure | teat we 4's year ago in Birmingham, Maucbes.er, | notwithstanding she suppression of ali that bed been | Itaind government, Wit is most imprrilled in this de. | Franes diftered votally from those of the three Powsrs | both by politicians and the public genocaily. | t eople pose of presenting an address to Me, Jacob Pright | Levd®, Giasgow and in London — Ihoso tcetibgs were saovneed plorabk: aair is the honor of the Florence Caoinet aad | just menyoned. How are we to account for tis tmeon- | aro quite ready to that danger may ve lurking im ner of Jolin Bright) congratuiating bim upon his | held to condemn certain things that were evil in Ira. rreaia on a chance of Fenian'sm wero made ab | the cret of lialy sistency? To attribute it to mere chance is impossible | the indefinite fuvure ailaded to by Pringe Gortschakot eiection for Manche: The Mayor (Mr. Whitaker) oc- | Innd; to demand remedies; to complain even that thero neletown, County Cork, and others were expected In the Leg slative Charnbers, Senor Raraxer reemmed | in matiers of cucu tmportance, We are, on the contra. | in his cuncluding passage; but as the Prince himssif, ta, © P ‘ A Oo 8 le s union between the two c tries, Penuy coliecwons for th r Von the necessity of ob. } 6 ged to bese our investigations om the hypothes@ | @ preceding and more \empe: sentence of his exsay, n- | f ¢ wht thar ¢ r ‘ ; n who were executed a t t We, too, admit the eo | Caat Prance vs oct.ny in acerdane with a plan de de-a’ety | cannot belp deciaring the b tha miseries of Ireiand, ¥ are te Hoy vag” 5 Unt } ce tive Of the | wrectured and lacl down beforehand, A careful inquiry | East as provisonally secared by tho agreem you that ntto eorgr fjus onto when about £ i 00, dor re convince tho | i » past w ad us to the same c on and | Ausiria aod France, np great consern fa experienced r er which ap ad- | wuleh weeg ty ireiand } useq Gane t at | pa erting to the wy @ real aisy | Ca s (bat ge ean aba yon thy Foi ve Je ynexplicable at Urst sight Lo renier our- | at what may ullimately,tura up ia bhe historical evelu- Grom, tue adoption of Wick Was Moved at uromt lengiu | meetings, (Cuore) They were om the ober wide of | eispla ny we ce and gentlemen, } Worsiip, and that 0 auipority of tng Pout would | seived inieliigibie, we must go back to Jast year's cam- | tion of things a

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