The New York Herald Newspaper, May 11, 1868, Page 10

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10 EU ROPE. e-ctétions Voted down, n™ Atm ———. ip bat tee preposition was comed the pw 4 22. jai landowners. He wi went When a mightier power would forte win Mecklenburg, and would. bless it 2 re lengtiy #e Of civilization humanity, After a os | SO den eae aa Mr. Disracli on “ Dark Confederacies,” | { door Junkers, the chivalry of Meeklenbarg ! how will mourn Ancient and Modern. French Sane Oo” the News from 4b v@inia. a ae Rights at ‘sea and Ameri- ean Deeistons. Our European Hle* of the 28th of Aprit furnish the following Aldine 4 getaiis of our cable despatches to thai day. Neut: GERMANY. Promcs of Peace—Congress of Nations—Re- a the Census of the Nerth German Con- aon Reichstag—Marriage and Peeperisa—Leyalists in Hanover—Anhbalt Ready fer an Accesstun Treaty=The Darm- stadt wad Wurtemberg Dificulty—Emigra- Yon to the United states—Imprisoument for Debt. Brewin, April 19, 1868. The while ramers which have for the last ten e business of the day was completed by callin, Up the contested election returns in the case ol Deputy Von Helidorf, who out of 12,712 votes | scant majority of 66, which, it was canned, be om to the undue Influence of the authorities fn bis dis- trict. Several conservatives having denied the alleged logrollag, Count Bismarey Gane W ticir aia b ry By that the government claimed it as a right Beciarsar by all ee it saw fi¢ the candidat whom it wished to be elected, ‘The voters, he con- tended, had a right to know which candidate would be agreeable to the government, and if sume officials had pronounced in favor of that indivédual it was no ground for complaint, Deputy Sehvitze-Delitasch cailed attention to the fact that the Oficial influence in the case in question had gone bo far as to seize the election tickets of the opposite party, and Depu! Von Hennig regretted tha, the vernimen' now undertook te meddie with lection re- turas, the validity of electons being decided by the Reichstag and the Bar@ Chancellor having no right to interfere with it. %% government candidates are to be proclaimed, sai, Herr Von Hennig, as is done in imperial France, “we are going to have a par- | lament like that in Paris, making laws in direct opposition te the wit of the peo; Should the Bund government ‘think itself entitled to influence the eleciions we wifi have to use the utmost vigilance in testing the rewrus, In spite of this strong appeal and the committee's report against accepting Deputy Von Heildorf’s eedentials the final vote wed a smat inajority‘for admitting the member, A few sittings more and the Reich will again adjourn to make room for the Zoll Parliament con- vened by ‘@ decree dated the 13th instant, aud commencing, ‘We, William, by the grace of ing of Prussia, and ‘entrusted — with presidential functions according to the treaty of July 8, 1867, between the rth Ger- man Confederation and Bavaria, ‘temberg, Baden and Hesse, call together the German Zoli Par- Gays agitated the press and public have subsided, Whe official journals prociaim aloud that the peace of Europe is better secured than ever; and the specu- Aators,'4 la baisse at the Exchange, hasten to wind up their disastrous engagements. The readers of the Hexsip are 60 well supplied with information on every moye-of European diplomacy that they have a better and more instructive coup d’wil than any one bere though he should spend eighteen hours of the @uy at reading rooms and subscribe to a dozen @isferentjournals. They undoubtedly know, too, that vali canards of trouble and discord in the European “orchestra originate in Paris, that France stil plays ‘the frst fiddle and changes the movement from Adagio to Prestissimo and Furioso quite ad Ubditum; ~and it may have occurred to them that all this pe- ‘riodicaily returning bluster and commotion only alms ‘at nipping the thought that nothing less than a Euro- pean congress, with France in the most prominent ‘Beat, can secure reel peace and happiness to the rest ‘of the world. If the move turn out successful it must be admitted that the game of the empire, and ‘particularly that-of its dynasty, has been well played. A very siight rattling of swords, 20,000, more or less, Chassepots completed in the 121 factories at St. Etienne, a talk on business between the Emperor ‘and Marshal ¥lel sufficed to make continental gov- ernments feo! the ground sliding from under them, thongh they might have considered that France had No allies and could never think of going to war with- ®utsuch. Ylere issome hope of being spared dur- ing this svtamer the eterna! ring of the aiarm bell, ‘which for 'variety’s sake may be for once suppited by the nightingale chaut of general harmony, disarming ‘anda congress of nations—not a European congress, as that would exclude America, but a congress of all ®ations, What a relief it would be to speak of some- ‘thing e'se than inventions of new guns, erection*of Stronger fortifications, increase of armies and addi- tional State lo: and taxes to pay expenses! At Present a faithtul correspondent is compelled to wel! upon such topics as the following:—The works on the Navy Yard at Ellerbeck, near Kiel, are be Pushed with great energy; 1,500 te 2,000 labor from the Eastern provinces wil! be employed, and Quarters for their reception are almost read: Monitor has veer co fed for by the Bund ’Navy Department: al Mottke is engaged in the survey ‘Of the country amund Trives to determine the seat ofa new fortress in iteu of Luxemburg; a new re- Polver gun, similar in construction to the Catling. 48,502 Reuss, young dynasty. v4 88,012 600,731 -Scliwarab Sondershausen 68076 99,490 <Schwarzburg- 49,183 — Rudoistadt.. 75,149 ‘Saxe-Altenburg. 141,399 111,40 Saxe-Meiningen 181,483 315,936 Saxe-Coburg- Gotha... 164,527 31,814 xe-Weimar. 282,165 Uzie02 ae 2,426,193 57,508 (north of 901,906 the Main). 257,899 Garrison of May- 45,598 ence. 8,697 Sicadccies sens ‘ + 20,894,857 Of the Southern States (within the Zollverein):— Luxemburg... 199,958 Baden ++ 1,434,699 jesse (south of Warten s+. 1,778,479 the Main)..... $05,745 Bavarta 4,823,606 Total........ - 8,802,487 ~The grand total of the Nerth &nd Southern States is 20, 4. ‘The cameus of 1804 in the States at present forming ‘the Nort German Confederation gave 29,800,000 Souls, and the Bund government, confidently expect- ing in tiny period of three years an increase of at least ome per cent, or a population ef about 1,000, demanded and obtained from the first ¢ funds for au army of 300,000 men—that een! of the entére population, as preseribed by the ccp@ititution, When at that time Deputy Twesten | weqwinng of Minister of War why the try rc wlments numbered up to 109%, though enly be found in the etat, he was answered negiments (Nos. 98 and 99) had been erder not to exceed one per cent of the \ut that they would be filled up after the Whh % ‘was almost certain to show a good erman Confederation #8, one yx eensur Seal hurder f Pare Gan 90,000,000. It now turns out 905,145 less «Yon 86,000,000, compelling the depart Ment, in sts wt obedience to the constitution fo at once feduce the military establish, it by the. exvess of one per cent of 06,143 eo ul, ST 1,001 men. The democrat 18 ai ® in their arithmetic demanding the War Departinent restitution of 105, 141-100 895 thalere, equal t6 226,475 thalers, If, they leaily , the omief of Lhesstatisitoa’ Burean, Dr. one the ma Xim of puagne es! veritas et mw wveledit, for the row ‘ons of whis unex pecied shortcoming of census iti a quien ave case, Let statiat 18 ‘clear up the ng ‘ter aikd Show the relative pyeenortion fo be asuribed to war, fagnine, pes! ancl Last, @hough not leam , to emigration. The Rei has reopened its sittings, wits ony 210 to yr * ts to answer to the call of b+ roti. An intcrpeilation ity Wiggers asking why @ general electian law for the North German Con fed- eration had not yet. been published was replied uo by Commissary Von b'elbrick, who pleade? other and More pressing legish tive labors. second inter (ation with reference to the unconstitutional treet ment of Israetites in b oth Meckienburgs elicited fron. ©Oount Von Ewenburg.a $ Bund Commussary, an answee to the effect that they ad no anthority to interfere ‘With the 5] laws of thone Sta The next Object of discumelon was the bill entitied “Abolition ©! police restriction on 1: 17 which vides tuat citizens of she Bund may enter into jony to communal unions, Wd that a meri er. te shall Hot Pe refused (WD account of insufficlént rty or earnings, or bad repute, or other re ees, and np kind of fees or taxes shall be ex from the bride. ‘The police restrainte respect- the marrying of Jews anv of some particular of citizens are abrogated, while the statute fag having @ household of their own or béeleng- oncerning of iniliiaty persoxe, civil oMm- bt men anf teachin rentains in toro, ‘or t the bill, Covnt von Bassewitz, it too much license for matrimony, ea m. Is everybody to be per- to home anywhere, household con- corns esit were, in the gir? Is that true mm Which the laborers on ry mahwey ‘or railroad contract on the strength oa wi may earn during ‘ite Is not the famine in the Eastern fini age) the hye to ad. 4 ite pri J aa ae: ing con. went ip many cases erlin, & resident of Meckienburg, admitted that Festrictious diminish connubial proletarianism, Dut he show ometal Sgures how it tncreased ‘the illegitimate. FF 1808 to 1817 the proportion OF fllegitimate bo imate was as one to tweive, 1818 to aa” mine, 1828 to 1837 as One to se ‘ead to 1847 48 ONE to five, 1848 to 1857 ne to 1&6 as one to three, If con- to four, aud 1 jo, the fo, “Mer will ere long out- ming at that ri Dumber the iatier, Sifskc Ske ‘at’ oe vvernipent of Mecklen. W's, awa: aula of publiy morality, proposed & abolish tye ro | lament to meet on the 27th inst., and charge the Bund Council to make the requisite preparations thereto,” &c. The ministerial organ claims a Prussian victory in the South German elections to the Zoll Par- Mament, reckoning as more or less friendly to the na- tional cause forty-four out of the eighty-six deputie: but tn order to arrive at this result it has grouped the figures to suit itself. It is something novel, at all events, to see the representatives of all Germany wiliing to meet in conciave even If none but commer- cial questions are to be discussed, Of the discord which will stalk rampant in such an assembly you shall be duly informed. Day before yesterday the Crown Prince started on his trip to the wedding of Prince Humbert in Flor- ence. He dined at Leipsic and has accepted an in- vitation from the Bavarian monarch to remain one day in Munich. His suite consists of Lieutenarit Colonel Von Loucadon, adjutant of his may, two of his own adjutants,"his physician, &c. It is not known whether the latter, Dr, Wegener, has pro- vided himself with the new habit de cour—velvet dress coat, color ad libitum excepting blue, silver embroidered collar, white or colored cashmere pants, chapeau clague and sword with silver belt—just now decided upon by Victor Emanuel’s master of cere- mony, whose former nonchalance in matters of etiquette has often been the theme of amusement. e birthday of Queen Mary, the consort of ex- King George, was celebrated at Hanover on the 14th inst, by the loyalists, who had a jolly time in clubs and private mansions, and displayed the former national colors, yellow and white, in an ingenious manner by strewing the road leading to the royal castle with slips of paper of that hue. Some of ihe ex-purveyors to his Majesty closed their shops. In the afternoon crowds of people pilgrimed to the Herrenbaus —— tadies and children being dressed in white and yellow garments, the men wearing the decoration of Langensalza. Several cards of con- ratulation were gotten up and sent to Hiebzing. the peice winked at these demonstrations, harmless as they were, and the day passed without any dis- turbance of the peace. The advantages of throwing off the cares of sover- eignty by an accession treaty, such as entered into between the Duke of Waldeck and Prussia, must have become so apparent to the Duke of Anhalt that, through the mediation of the Prince of Hohenzol- lern, he has proposed a similar arrangement, with a view of retiring with a handsome indemnification and al! his domains and private property. He even offers a complete resignation of his threne; but that will not_be accepted, as the vote of Anhalt would . then be lost to the Bund Council. The Darmstadt difficulty concerning the military convention with Prussia has been disposed of by the ‘ion of Licutenaut General Von Greimon, and y to be foliowed by the dismissal of Herr Von igk. Prince Louis has resumed the command, he mission of General Von Bonin, selected for urpose by King William himself, has thus been clirely successful, The contagiousness of such @iiicuities is shown by events now reported from Wurtemberg, where the Minister of War, Merr Von Wagner, a friend of Prussia, has a hard Post agatost all his celleagues, “The radical party in Lugratios i golug o4 ib dus style Detweou Good Friday and Easter Monday 647 Pomeranians in a@ body passed thvengh Berlin. The feudal Kreuz Zeitung, aways opposed to anytuing American, to emigration, to republicanism, &c., must have slept luke @ top when it permitted such a news item in its columns as:—'The number of inhabitants of the county of Schomburg, in Hesse, is frightfully de- creasing by emigration to America, which is ascribed to excessive taxation.” Schoiburg county belongs to Prussia. It is, indeed, a scandal that imprisonment for debt has not yet been abolished in Prussia, nor will be before a new code of laws regulating the subject in all the States of the Confederation is agreed = and put into force. The commissions of jurists engaged in drafting the new statute report in favor of its abolition, and the majority of chambers of com- merce to whom Herr von Der Heydt applied support this view. The opponents of the abrogation, pre- dicting the ruin of all small trafic, set forth that with many the only motive of paying their debts is fear of tmprisonment. If such, however, is really the case it would do no great harm to refuse in future all credit to these parties; wholesale dealers, knowing that the State will not ald them by depriving a debtor of his personal liberty, would then exercise more judgment in trusting. At present creditors, in order to get hokl of their victims, resort to the meanest tricks and Kidnapping. In an instant of this kind, which happened a few days ago, a rich distiller, a’ are that tue wife of his debtor was await- ing her e nement in a neighboring town, wrote him @ letter—not signed with his own name, of 8e, as that would have spoiled the gaine—en- Closing five thalers, traveling expenses, and biddin the husband to hasten to his wife's bedside, Vict was caught in a hack on his way to the ra road depot by the sherif’s officers, waiting con- cealed under the direction of the distiller, and the driver was forced to convey his passenger to the where, it 18 needices to add, the taken away and returned to the interest was lately excited in Cologne by a divorce suit and the dnal decision upon peal. An industrious and opulent citizen, Herr F., was surprised one evening at his own house by the sudden entrance of pollcemen, aecompanied by an attendant of a lunatic asylam and friends of Frau F. and her danghter, who demanded his person, in- sisting that he should go with them. ., in the full possession of his senses, strenuously objected ; he was then threatened for his resistance with a strait jacket. At this junctare some neighbors, attracted by the noise inthe usually quiet street, and weil kowing Herr F., came to bis rescue and expostu- lated with the officers, who admitted, as did the 4 ni of the asylum, that they had not disc od { the supposed aberration of Herr F y \ their ation, however, by producing @ regti- ifle \ectaring Herr F. an insane and dan- serous tian. ‘the evidence inthe trial showed that this doctinont had been grven upon the requestof Frau ¥. by aplysician more in thoughtlessness than with evil invent; for he had seen Herr F. but once, when bighiy ex: an altercation. Herr F., feeling all his wife for having duped ‘ed a suit of divorce, which nse _celebre, and in which ol were employed on both sides. Frau e that she had been passive in the whole am nd'that having been once menaced by her husband she had really believed him non com- wos. She faiied, however, both in the lower court ‘snd in the tribunal for appeals to convince the judges: ence, and consequently the prayer of Herr F. was granted. The Grst contributions for the sufferers in East Pras- sia gathered in New York have arrived here to thecare of Mr. Bancroft; they consist of some fifty odd barrels of flour wnd six handred thalers, and were sent, free of charge, by the firm of Richard & Boas, of New Sock, semis of the Hamburg American Line of steam Of the ybysicians who braved the danger from ty- phold in (he stricken province itineteen have ange cumbed In their nobie task, leaving behind bereaved families wiNhout claims for pen: government. 80 much for" the. difference! betwoen ing One'mVife on the battle feild and ot Spingombattine Ky spldemic and relieving hugen 4 ba honor Sc ed Sbuivion. and emoluments, here a ENGLAND. ernie, Mr, Dierncti on the Attempt on Prince Alfred’s Lifem 4 “Dark Oonfederacy” Extending—Mr. Giadet one’s Sympathy with the Queen—What fe Thoweht of the Budget—Manufacture of Church Metivons. In the frous'e of Commtons on the 27th of Aprit, Mr, Disracii, who, On teing, Was grected with acciama- tions, announced the mews pf the attempt on Prince Alfred's life, Me saldz—Ln rising to maké ~ motion before the reading’ of the order of the day, J douvt hot that the Hougeys anticipating its purpose, It ts ‘Oo Move an address s@ her Majesty, expressing ortthe Dart of We House its eympatby With her Majeaty ox the distressing intelligence which asrived here on Saturday last, which had occasioned her Majest so mveh grief and which still causes her muoh anx- iety. (Hear, hear.) Mine will beacommon voice when 1 express the sorrow end the indignation with whic’, the House and the country heard the intel! the Vattempt. to. assassiaate Is “Moya ies 2 of Augthing’could aggravate the: aieoctee yy Ali an; 1 i would be the circumstances under ete act a“ committed, His Royal Highness r Ohad Py wre =n of her e Was, in a certain degree, repre”, Bi Enettndsne elciion sD mont of usiasin. W! m rouched. country in which ha was the b zart of the and Seen oy is waeeees which wi manners, (Hear, Near) 78 his cordial hen the ws he was fulfilling ery pi maee ie graceful appanages o f . was establishing & new charity, a7 fin mee i favor of the novie profession to W’xich he ts devo’ in which, I may say, he has dir, and of i I sees be wt ornament. (Hear, hear.) It is Roticing this subject, to evade the whos! vor the act in quesiion, We lfve%n an ‘of progr ess, or Sometimes we flatter oettielves that such is our happy fate; Lut there appear 30 be cycles in our proy jress in ‘which ihe worst passions and habits of dist int ages are revived. Somedistant centuries ago § ne world was tortured with the conviction that 7 vere was some mysterious mower in existence who ¢ guid coni- mand in every camp, and coast, and capi tat, in che worti a poinard at its disposat and de yotton — 1 ‘seems that at this time, too, some dark: confederacy ‘of that kind is spreading over the we ria. (lear, hear), All can say 1s, that lregret ® Jat for'a ino: ment such acts should have been assoc! ated with the name of Ireland. (Hear, hear), Ia m myself con- vinced, as I have expressed beforein § jais house, that the imputation is unjust. (Hear) ‘T pelieve that these acts and the characters Who pf .rpetrated them are the distempered consequence a leit wars and disorganized society; that their da ck ipvasion first touched Ireland, but that the w ation as a whole entirely repudiated them, and the manner in which another son of the Queen has rece) ntty been received is mores a oe OF she I en unchanged and undimmed, and just feelings which have beer, fy ge depen cae of the people flow with the same. vigor we have ever recognized. I trust that under " these circumstances I may move, “That an humble * address be presented to her Majesty, containing an + expression of sorrew and indignation at the atrociov is attempt to assassi- nate his Royal Highness the D- ake of Edinburg while on a visit to her Majesty’s A’ istraltan colonies, ‘and to offer their heartfelt congray, :ulations to her Majesty on his preservation from mor’ talinjury, and to assure her Majesty of the sympathy; of tae House under her Majesty's present anxiety a ad of their earnest hope for the speedy recovery © .f-his Royal Highness.” (Loud cheering.) Mr. GLapsToNE—I rise f0 ¢ the ing ss address which ha 3 just right honorable gentiemar heartily concur—every man must concur—in the sentiment of sorrow ani in the sentiment of indig’ ation which are expressed in the terms of the addre: is; and we must all, I think, feel a sincere thankfulne: +3 to the Almighty, ‘who has been pleased, on this crit ical occasion, if not entirely to hres the arm of t/ 1 assassin, yet to prevent— and I trust definitely ‘| prevent, at any rate thus far irpose of second- m moved by the to prevent—that morta! | consequence at which the assassin atmed. I do D/.ot know whether, judging, a3 I judge, merely from | expressions contained in tele- graphic intelligence, y t would be safe or wise to as sume it as rigidly / demonstrated that this foul and loathsome deel was connected with the Fenian conspiracy. / If it be so, am_ sorry to say it ouly / adds another’ dark shadow to the distress wiltet 1 previous acts of horror have brought upon the /name of that conspiracy. But whether it be 80 or‘/notit cannot in the main affect the sentiment with’ which I am sure that address will be voted by tye honse. Every man who has the smallest share of ¥ tuman feeling must feél profouna neni, ‘on the on, hand at this new cause of anxiety to her Majesty 9 don the other hand at the fact that her Majesty has & 2en spared another deep and severe afiliction In the midst of that crushing aMiction which has darke ned her day. And as regards the Prince himself, ¥..ndoubtedly if anything could have disarmed the 42 .nd of the criminal one would have thought it wou) d have been his youth, his great inte!- ligence, the go-aial manners which have endeared hun to all wit) whom he has been brought into con- tact, This is #. subject on which I think few words are best, the @ bject being to convey to the fout ot the throne the éy.tiful and loyal sentiments we feel for her Majesty,/ and I will thevefore only say that | most cordially 8:¢,ond the motion. The Logsion Review remarks that the Disracli budget pre)sents no feature of novelty; it shows no fertility ¢ dnancial resources on the part of its framer; tt does not in any way warrant the belief that ‘we have a new Peel or Gladstone in Mr. Hant;” but, on the other hand, it is safe and honest, and dees not in any way sin against sound economi- cal ene ee. . The London Spectator points out that the great blot of the budget is that which Mr. Gladstone hit so hard—the Jarge addition to the ordinary expendl- tae FMS hope of governing ntinent divided all dai would be past. The London Eraminer says that ample time has been given to get bw agitation, were that possible, in defence of the Irish Church. ‘The writer adds “We know that no pains were spared for the accomplish- ment of the pious purpose, and that no time was lost, after the sammons to surrender, in endeavoring to organize the means of resistance. Often before has bigotry been set ablaze with less available means of blowing the coal; and never, perhaps, was the active mechanism of churchmanship in better working order, The signal for collective and concerted action was given by the highest political authority, on the very night that the first heavy blow and great dis- couragement were inflicted on the ‘alien establish- ment;’ and we can a with what impatience those who in high places drew the bellows and pre- pared to fan the fame, waited for its outburst on the Inorrow, But somehow this time the fire won’t ‘ie 304th anniversary of Shakspeare's birthday, s, on April 23, duly celebrated by the Urban (Lite- Club, at St. John’s Gate, the famous old haunt of Cave, Johnson, Goldsmith, Garrick, Guthrie and their contemporaries during the early days of the Gentleman's Magazine, Mr. Darby Griffith, M. P., will shortly call attention to the manner in which the exercise of the preroga- live of the crown in the granting of Utles and digni- Ues has come to be considered to be part of the ordl- ni patronage of the Prime Minister, and to the ex- tent to whieh the exercise of that power for political purposes muy affect the independence of the House of Commons. A Welsh newspaper gives an account of an experi- ment in the manufacture of petitions on the Trish Civarch, made by some of the chief officials of the establisiment residing in a chrtain periats in Any = .. The ollicials prepared a petition against Mie Gladstone's resolutions, but 2 of the parishioners Would sign it; tt was therefore resolved to subscribe the names of about eighteen respectable men without their assent. This was done, and the petition was sent in to Sir Richard Bulkeley, the member for the connty, who, struck with the remarkable similarity in the handwritlug of the gentlemen signing, wrote to oue of them, and by this means discovered the forgery. Whereupon Str Richard threatened to prosecute the clerical imposto At the mecting of the Royal Geographical Society of Loudon Frederick Wh: per r a paper on his nthe Youkon river, in Northern Aloeka, or America. FRANCE, Neutral Rights nt Sea—The American Condeme nation of the British Bark Springbok Opinion of the Attempt on Prince Alfred=+ Peace by Preparing for War. Vader the heading of “irrize Courts of the United States—Violation of Neutral Rights,” the Mémoriat Diplomatique, of Paris, publishes at full length @ Joint opinion, by Mr. George Meilish, Q. C., and Mr. W. Vernon Harcourt, Q. C., of the English bar, pro- nouncing the condemnation of the cargo of the British bark Springbok by the Supreme Court of the United States to be a miscarriage of justice, the French journal adding:—“While we entirely concur in this (Messrs, Mellish and Harcourt's) masterly and unanswerabie demonstration of the utter absurdity of the sentence of the American tribunal, we cannot refrain from once more recording our protest against the inadmissible doctrine of continucus voyage and suspected ulterior destination as laid ‘“aown by the Supreme Court of the United States. The eminent English jurists before named have ‘assumed for the purrs se of their opinion that the law is correctl; laid down in the Supreme Court's judgment,’ an have confined ‘themselves to proving thateven that assumption the decree of condemnation i Ile~ gal and unjustifiable.’ We, on the contrary, cannot make any such concession, or concur in ‘such an assumption. We regard the doctrine in question as @ flagrant violation of neutral rights, and accordingly we eerey udiate and denounce it. In our } yh ‘th March, 1864, we discussed the ques- ion at great length, and we proved that our views were supported by the highest authorities on interna: tional law. It is unnecessary for us to go again over the same ind, but it cannot be too often or too emp! lly repeated that the maritime powers of Europe, France, and even En; aud herself, pen | interested in preventing the admission into the law of nations of the ly dangerous doctrines the American courts. We trust Lord ley, wae hae ‘now the Sprin; will have the judgment to perceive that more than mere private interests are at stake, and that the il- legal of the Springbok and the condemna- tion of her false a question gravely affecting en mown Dy Loran cr wor, Dery ‘ind. Bus: r i ‘anwort fell in’ the muting of the House of Peers ofthe 18¢h le Paris correspondent of the London i Willing op the 74h pf April, says:~The oul atiswp k case in hand, NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, MAY fi, 3968—7RIPLE ‘SHEET. Set to mals pofccls ccagot | OUR TENEMENT HOUSE SYSTEM. in ‘observe, the papers = ais evening “tb Deticts and Their Remedy—Improvements fall to give uate exp! While the public oA ‘ith the Ameican community in manttesting the TOF thy aoe and their gratideation atthe Prince’s ; marek. 4fe escape, the papers barel mention the without giving utterance to the feeling8 «nch a das- tardly outrage must create in every wen mind. Here ls what the Patrie sayaQn the — Despatches from Loudon recgged in Paris durin the night announce that an pt nas been made in Australia against the iif of tre Duke of Edinburg, the second 800 Of the Qree of E: d, now on & visit to the colony, The Yrince was wounded by & shot tired, according tq a Colonial Office telegram, bya Fenian, While eploring so criminal an at- pa no one Will Rold the frizh nation responsible jor i The Pays:—A Fanatic haa just attempted to murder one of the s6Ns of the Qeeen of England, At the very time when the Prince and Princess of Wales were visiting Ireland and the cordial welcome of tie Irish aforded 4 szemptecn of reconciliation between England and Ireland @ Fenian bullet was aimed at the Duke of Edinbarg in Australia, If it were not blasphemy to that crime may sometimes serve a useful parpose, it‘might be remarked that it is useful in showing the ‘distance between demagogy and liberty, The G@aeette de Frawpe;—This nows has caused & ‘iiful gensation throughout England, where the uke of Edinburg re the affection and the esteem of\public opinion, The Presse:—Fenian- ism has just dishonored itself by an attempt against the life of on of the Queen’s sons. None of the other pavers express any opinion at all on this dastardly crime, The Paris Putrie remarks that the defence and prosperity of French maritime towns, in place of possexsing a mere local value, extend much furiher and elways involve a question of national interest, and-that circumstance gives to a bill now befere the Legisiative Body, for the improvement of Bankirk and Gravelines, a great importance. da France argued that under existing circum. stances, when the whole of Europe was bristling with soldiers, when at the gates of France a trans- formation had just been effected which destroyed the equilibrium of the great Powers, when so many am- bitions were still, if not menacing, at least persis ent, the best means of maintaining peace was to raise the Freach armaments to the level of those of her neighbors, and to show herself strong enough to be sure of belng respected. The Liberté, the advocate of systematic ridicules that view thus:—If you wish to be consistent with yourself you ought to demand, in order better to assure do- mestic tranquillity and harmony among citizens, that every one should be obliged tomever go out un- less armed from head to foot, and that nobody should be allowed to present himself in a drawing room or show himself ata theatre without a revolver in his belt, a rapier at his side and a carbine on his shoul- der, Si vis pacem, para bellum. ‘The News from Abyselnin tn Paris. [Paris (April 27) correspondence of London Herald. The tidings of the discomfiture of Theodorus, ant the end of the Abyssinian war, elicit from our excellent friends on this side of the Chan- nel a tribute of sympathy with the Abyssinian chief. The Opinion Nationale, which fever since the expedition began has been broadly hinting that the Engiish army would, like that of Gambyses, be swal- lowed up by the sands of the Desert, connot conceal its chagrin. It ascribes the defeat of Theodorus to hig imprudence in shutting himself up in Magdala, and to the fact that by who'esale desertion his army of 150,000 men dwindled to 6,000, 1t derives, how- ever, some consolation from the fact that, “at all events he fell fighting to the last, and the 6,000 sol- diers who remained stanch upheld, till ail were shot down, the national flag of Abyssinia.” The Liberté is inspired by precisely the same feeling; but it expresses it rather better:—‘Theodorus has fallen sword in hand, Mike Tippoo Saib. On the 10th of April the “English arrived before the Amba of the Negus at Magdala. On the same day Theodorus at- tacked them and his bands were dispersed by the Angio-Indian army. On the 11th and 12th ne tried to negotiate; he dish up the captives, Sir Robert Napier only accorded to the poor African Kinglet twenty-four hours to surrender, A portion of his warriors disbanded and gave themselves up. The re- mainder stood by tie Negus at Magdala, which was taken by storm on the 13th. Theodorus was killed, with most of his faithful adherents. The losses of the English were insignificant, naturally, thanks to the primitive armament of the Se. Poor Theodorus |’ In short, there is no disguising the fact that the French papers, and, indeed, the French pub- lic, would have been delighted at our being defeated by a mob of savages, It ts all very well to talk of entente cordiale, and “passions of another epoch,” but these laments over the downfall of Theodorus, this talk of the Irish nation, this undisguised sympa- thy with the Fenians, are significant symptoms that the old anti-Enygiish leaven is far from having died out. SPAIN. How Narynez Canght His Death Hlness— Meare de Duin, Wi6 Yune we ia suiie aud LoUnL ue UMeste, The total effective of the Spanish Ceo is 79,145 men, not inciading officers. The new civic guard is composed of 9,523 rank and file. RUSSIA. Royal Tour—A Grand Naval Review—Foreign Assertion and Imperial Reply. The Empress of Russia is to proceed towards the end of May to Kissengen. The Russian journals announce that Genera! Totle- ben has been ordered by the government to inspect all the Russian fortresses and ports in the Baltic. On tle 18th of May Admiral Butakoff will review at Cronstadt thirty-two frigates and iron-clads, The Journal de St. Petersbourg says:—A foreign journal, a few days back, spoke of “a ukase suppress- ing the consulates at Warsaw,” as well as of “a cir- cular addressed by Prince Gortschakoff to the repre- sentatives of Russia abroad, giving them notice of that important step.” False news, like spots of oll, spreads with a singular persistence, and of all infor- mation it is that which 1s propagated with the great- est facility. The majority of the foreign journals now Teproduce the statement, at the same time embel- lishing it with gratuitous commentaries, We believe we have good authority for announcing that the cir- cular attributed to Prince Gortschakoi does not ex- ist, for the excellent reason that no such measure as that referred to had been adopted, and that not is changed in the position of the foreign at Warsaw. As'tuey were before so they a BELGIUM. The Labor Strikes Extending=-Censtitutional Enjoyment=A Peace Congress. The Journat de Charleroi of April 27 states that the strike of the Belgian miners continues, and Is ex- tending from Forchies toward the centre of the dis- trict, The operations at four pits were stopped. The men show no mischievous disposition. Some say they do not work because the wages are insuficient, while others aitirm that they abstain on account of the presence of the military, which they look on as a sign of distrust and as @ constraint. The number ont on strike at the varions coal mines is from one thousand eight huntred to two thousand, ‘The Tribunal of Courtral, judging on an appeal, has decided that a local wation of the town of Row Jers, a public balls to the authorization of the municipality, is unconstitutional, Brussels journals announce that the Rev. Henry, Richard, Secretary of the Peace society of London, and Mr, Cooper, one of its members, have arrived in the Belgian capital to organize a Peace Congress there in September next. The communal administration of Brussels has pub- lished an announcement that the promenates at Pe poy are to begin this year and for the feture on the first Monday in May. A Terniric Hatt StorM.—The Princess Anne (Md.) Heratd records as follows the ravages of a terrible hail storm witch recently occurred in that section:— On Saturday last the lower gh of this county was visited with the severest hall storm ever known in this section. It was particularly violent at Crisfield and vicinity and in Potato Neck. At the former place it lasted but a few minutes, but those were minutes of terror and dismay. The windows of the cars (ten out of fifteen) were broken, as also the windows of dwellings in the vicinity. One hundred and fifty es were broken in one house and ninety in of another. One of the hailstones, about the size of @ turkey egg, struck Dr. Hiram Gunby on the hand and paralyzed it for a while, raising an awful bruise thereon; @ small heifer grazing in a field was stricken by @ storm of the icy missiles and killed; @ colored woman from our town was on her way to Crisfleld tn a wagon and was so severely bruised by the hail that she is confined to and cannot get home. The oldest inhabi- tanta say that they never witnessed such a sudden itful hailstorm mor such large di of hail, the size of turkey e The worm also the lower ond of Potato Neck, near Jericho, The hail stones breaking sixty panes of glass in the ‘house of fe ir. injuring the dows of several other welling houses, but not so badly, from ry that from’i We learn, ali came V's Is th: the storm visited that place and shattered windows romiscuously, The storm also passed |. fana's Toland, shattering wind>ws, tearing off shingles and killing chickens. ee A New RAitnoaD TRACK.—Under the cover of darkness and with the aid of lamps, a numerous gang of workmen were vigorously engaged in tear- up the pavement and crosswalks in Hound oa and laying down a new allroad track the Third avenue aa last night. The men ere, and silently, apd numbers of ol ith their lab of wonder et ts wir labors wit! ,famae degree im Fire Escapes and Means of Egress Since 1860—Present Aspect of the Question—Paris Medels and Suggestions. Solidity, beauty of structure and adaptat* , o¢ these to purposes of convenience in buildir |, consti- tute the great desideratum of every © jmercial city. Every great city in Europe hag “’ recteq particular attention to this subject Ol ing the past twenty years, and espectally 1D. * aris, under the rule of Na- poleon IL!., avery S8tfong effort has becn made to realize Bome of the qualities of an ideal city, not only a8 regards pv’plic improvements, but as regards buildings for tenant purposes, New York, on the other hand, Wile possessing far superior advantages, is still 4 century behind the great cities of Europe tn the attainment of a perfect build- ing system, undergoing, as New York has in te past, an infliction of injurtes under defective bufiding laws, which cannot be eradicated for many years. Legislation upon this subject began as early ‘as 1813, but earlier legislation was so vague and in- definitive in tts provisions as to fail utterly of pretect- ing the city against flimsiness and insufficiency of structure, as is demonstrated by the number of puild- ings which have been taken down orrepatred as unsafe since the beginning of the operation of the present law. The flre warden system was the first toward the organization of a building department for the administration of a more operative system of bullding laws more operatively administered, ‘This gave way to the “Unsafe Building Law’ of 1660—an act passed April 17 of that year—which embodied the results of the experience of some cf the most competent draughtsmen and builders in the city. Alterations with a view of conciliating private interests, which case of fire, have were made by the Legislature, had the effect, how- ever, substantially to cripple the efforts made under the law to prevent the erection of unsafe buildings, and to cffect the removal of dangerous ones. On date of April 19, 1862, owing to these defects of oper- ation in the old law, the present law was passed, and, } though important modifications have been made in the statute since then, the practical features of the law have remained unaltered and unamended, The comparative inoperativeness of the previously enact- ed law has been thoroughly demonstrated by the number of buildings removed or repaired as unsafe since the present law came into operation, The sub- joined table exhibits the figures:— Removed or made safe in 1862... Removed or made safe in 1863. Removed or made sate in 1864, Removed or made safe in 1865. Removed or made safe in 1861 Removed or made safe in 1867. Total seeeee The number of attempted violations, notwithstand- ing the stringency of the law of 1862, has amounted since then to nearly three thousand, and demonstrates the necessity of exceeding prompiness and diligence even under the best of laws to prevent the erection of structures unsafe in some particuars. The schedule of violations stands as follows:— Removed in 186. Removed in 1863 Removed in 1864. Removed in 186: Removed in 1866. Removed in 1867 65, 149 465 438 , tel i ken place in the erection of tenement houses, and have related to insuflcient means of escape in case of fire. The tragedy of December, 1867, ai 596 Second avenue, in which nine persons were suit ed, had the effect to attract legislative attention to this sub- Ject and the necessity for exceedingly stringent regu- lation in the provision of fire escapes, and was fol- lowed by the act of 1867, which required in buildings of that’ class that both fire escapes and scuttles leading to the roof should be provided, It has been proved, however, by scientific inquiry that of those who perished at No, 596 Second avenue probably not one was really burned to death; in other words, that mnrocadion Was the agent of their death—demonstrating that, althongh a building may be provided with all suitable fire cscapes and means of egress to the roof, unless the tenants be speedily awakene i they are liable to perish by sutfocation; and, in view of this fact, fire alarms for every story, so placed that oy on be sounded by policemen in n saggested. Had an alarm of Coutain ensue ut MiULe LuiMUes suULIG De provided with fire escapes. This applied ayy to buildings to be built after the passage of the act, and was not made, as it should have been, retroactive, In 1861, however, an effort was made to cae the provisions of the law back to all buiidings—in other ery to render them retro- active; but thesact iramed for the purpose falled to become a law, and the matter went over for after- consideration. In 1862 another Pe. Was taken in the matter, and it was provided that fire escapes should be engrafted on all isolated tenement houses of over forty feet in height and which were built to accommodate more than six families above the first floor, Where, however, two or more buildings of ual height adijoined the same were exempted. ‘Thus stood the law until 1366, when it was amended to read as follows:— “All dwelling houses in. bes f part of the city of New York already erected, or tat may hereafter’ be built, that now are or may be more than forty feet high, that shall be built to contain or be occupled by six or more families above the first floor, and all dwelling houses that shall be buiit to contain or be occupied by eight or more families above the first story, shall have a stairway, connected with a proper scuttle or other —— leading to the roof, and all the rooms on each floor shal: connect by doors from front to rear; and every such dwelling house shall have placed thereon a tical fireproof fire escape, that shall be approved by the Department for the Survey and Inspection of buildings in the ch of New York, and all front and rear te! nt houses the same lot shall be conne any such buildings out, or where the adjoining and © same may be e: re, thereon fireproof fire esc: hese provisi: found to be inad- equate, and in i867 the ia i$ again amende: it was required tall dwelling houses erec: that time an after to be erected to contain four or more families above the first story should be pro- vided with practical fireproof escapes to be approved by the Superintendent of Buildings, and as now siands it requires fire escapes to be plac all buildings d to contain four or mo} lies above the first One would naturally think that it would need jess than seven years, With a doz- en practical illustrations of the unsafeness of tene- ge; provided that where all be built fireproof through. » two or more dwelling houses nd with flat roofs, the requirements of plac- ment butiding: ) have brought about the enaction of a by which suitable pro- visions for egress in case of fire should have been compassed; but the fact stands, nevertheless, as a sistent agitation to compass even the most reason- able reform in this respect, and the further Important fact stands that the wholesome provisions of the act 1 1 and its workings embarrassed by le evasion and pro- crastination on the jords. In fact, no device of jaw could be invented which could pos- sidly Work so eitective a reform in this matter, per- haps, as to make the owner liable for all losses accruing to tenants through accidental fires and especially liable for all damages to i son. An act of this kind would leave the advan' in the hands of the tenant, where perhaps, in order to secure ordinary safety to person and property, it ought to be left, > it was not until 1866 that any marked reform in the building of tenement houses in. During that year $14 tenement houses were begun and 249 were completed. These erections were generaily far supe- rior in every respect to the structures of former fh being constructed with decent regard to the ealth, comfort and safety of their occupants. Sub- stantial freproof escapes were put on every bulldii where the Jaw required {t, and those by law exempt from these appliances were provided With substan. tal stairways leading to the roof. The practice of butlding front and rear tenement houses on the same Jot has, however, not as yet been abandoned—thouga, as might be supposed, the probabilities of escape from the rear structures in case of fire are very slender indeed. To obviate this diMculty it has been sug- gested that these rear structures should be built wholly fireproof, thangh a better means of obviating een HAG have the law 80 a ae no nt structures for tenement put sho erect atall. There are now ‘nde ieee than mx hundred of- these rear structures in the two or three leading tenement house wards, and most of them —— with no more than the ordinary ear lances in case of fire, which happenin htful casualties could hot but result It ited in this connection that all rei should be provided with non-combustible ‘wood-houses, if in the cellars, and that all storage of combustible buildings of this class should be strictiy pro! Throughout the length of whole streeta on the east side and in the tenement house districts the prac- tice prevails of letting basements for Brocery stores, bakeries and the like—a ve which in thi has been demons' history of fre investigation onstrated tobea fruithat et nflagrations in these dis- tricts, ‘Two coni cea way of fire escapes deserve particular noflce and degeration fnvented to answer the lemands of \."¢ /8 a nd have come into something like genera; "Se. One yatem, which many excellent feat. CS 18 - Y ®smail tron tube or hollow bead, faster. ee Under the cornice and extending across the entire an this tackle, to "ad the hose or can be fixed in & moment and raised or low at will. The baii moves in- side of the tube, and py this means ¢an be carried ‘The entire apparatus is by one or two men upon ease, Another contrivance for the same purpose consists of a strong iron ladder, coiled upon an iron windiass,. under cover, upon the roof of a@ building, and so arranged by an Iron rod, running from the wind'ass to.the sidewalk, as to enable the ladder to be iustaut- ly lowered and fastened to the curb, affording & certain and secure means of access to any pari of the highest buildings in the city, ‘These appliances were proves however, by thy hard test of experience to insumMicient, even wr. the addition of ladders and scuttles a3 means Of wry ogg. to the roof; and by the act of 1866 ladders ane, gout tes were dispensed with, and substantial styirs aug bulkheads were substituted in their stead. thus fur- nishing # direct passage way to the roof at all times, and always ready for use. ‘The law ‘was net, how- ever, made retroactive, a8 it shov'd have been; aud. thus the greater proportion of tenants were left ag insecure as before, as has bees: demonstrated by the experiences of the pe yeur, in the nature of things, the law as. it stands at present, is, however, only temporary, in that tene- ment houses constructed with sirict regard to the letter of the law are notoriously insecure. Seue plan ongut to be adopted by which the in mates of tenement houses may be rendered as secure in life, limb and property as the inmates of first class dweiling houses, aud there is prohably mo- feasibie way of compassing Uns end except by righ insisting that all hail partitions sal! be construc! of brick from foundation to roof, with walis not less than one foot thick and witht flues for the carrying off of aii in cases of fire, ‘Suifocation will tus be preventes and it has been demonstrated by rigid inquiry thi suffocation is the main danger in tuese cases. TI floor beams of these halls siould be of iron and suifl- ciently massive, the interstices being ited in with brick, after the usual manuer in tlreproof buildings. All stair structures should then be of iron frame: work, and all flooring and stuir steps of iron. or stone, In ail cases where the first or basement story is used or business parposes the» floor of the second story should be of irou aad brick, thus isolating the upper stories of the building from. the lower by a practicaily fireproof partition. ‘These improvements would yield a practically ireproof and always ventilated atair tower irom which, even in the last stages of th migit be made safely available as a ineau Wo the street, That the law will take tus practical turn at an early day is certain, though a few more additions to the already long list of tue suifocated im tenement houses may be necessary; and in theo meantime shifts and expedients ure better than noting. Inmates of tenement houses have certainty a right to the ordinary security of life, and souner or later this security must be extended, The number of tenement houses in the city ie. enumerated at 18,582, of which tue Kleventh ward coniains 2,149, with an aggregate of 4,1u4 amilies, ar 67,466 persons, the whole tenement house population. of the city being about 610,000, or more than Lait of the whole. Three ciasses of lairs are occupied bd this vast aggregate—iirst, old sheds, stab.e lofts, di lapidated uiidings too ricketiy for repair,.and lofts: over warehouses and shops; secondly, cellars, im which at high tide the wacer is suimetimes a foots. deep; and thirdly, buildings erected for tenement. purposes and buildings meiamorpuosed into teue- imeut houses from those formerly used as manufac~ tories, shops and the like, Of the saustary condiion. of these rookeries nothing need be said, the facts Speaki g for thenmseives with suilicieut empharts, In such rookeries there can be no p.ivacy or isviu ton of families, and, in fact, tuis is the case with the better class of tenement houses, Sone few modei houses have been erected, in whic, to a limited degree, it is otherwise; but geuerally the old method is pursued without substantial modilication, ‘rhings are move cleverly managed in Paris, with. even greater economy of space thab prevails in New York, where, if description weut begying for words: of suiliciently graphic coioring Lo paiut lis every-day observations, description would still fail to put on literary Canvas tue details of ith, squalor, incon. venience and want of privacy which pertain to the system. In Paris, however, with equal econamy of space, different results are compassed simply by the application of a little science to the system ef baild- ing for tenanis, and Uhis is one of Ue great poits in which New York 1s fiity years behind the Depart ment of the Seine. In Paris a suite of apart- ments compreheuds the convenience of or privacy; and, for ail matters of isolation, one may live a8 privately as if one occupied a house of one’s: n and were not in the least degree amenable to: landlords. An application of a few grains of geo- metrical sciel and a few graius of ordinary inven- tion to the tenement house system, as at preseat ad- ministered, could not but result in manifest improve-- ments with equal economy of squaré yards; and:bo. tuis phase of the subject the Superintendent of Building should take early occasion to cal! ‘dy of the Pari 100d points here: to render the. viltable specula- te ‘ IFE BALSAM. 5 the gvorst stages; pa kies tp sy sent, and the worst cases of discases of the blood, great debi.ity, liver compiaint, Kidneys, salt rheum, ée., &¢., are most cértainiy cured by this sovereign purifier. Hyatt's Life Balsam cured Mr. Joseph McLaughlin of mer- curial scrofula after it had destroyed @ part of tue nose and) eaten hoies entirely throngh the roof of the mouth. He was then (1867) residing in Philipsburg, N. J. physician had abandoned the case, and his friends thought him in a dying: state, when his brother advised him to try the Life Basams. one bottle of which enabled him to leave his bed and come to this city. In one month he was entirely cured. Inquire at 18 Fifth street, 7 Hyatt’s Life Balsam perfectly cured Mr. Wiliam Springer, 18 Broome xtreet, of inflammatory rheumatism of 80 severe a charactee that he became deranged. He ot inft bis’ 0 hand to his bead, and was contined to bis Sed tiene three months, - The Life Balsam has been tested by the public during 1 years, and these are two cases out of » hundred thousand as cured, It is a certain curative for fistula In all curable cases, Principal depot 246 Grand street. Sold by druggists. $1 per botte, or six bottles for #5. ]Mrortant Notice. DR. LIGHT Bi CoD LIVER OLL, oft consequence of the immense demand for this celebrated i rts of the world, the cupidity of unprincipied deal exelted, In Al ta ‘9 pul # inal such dishonest pro the inedienb profession and the public in Aimer to, plac | comsidence nthe gevulneness of Dro Dis JONGIDS LIGUT BROWN COD LIVER OLL, and to realize its unequalled ellicacy, every botue of DR. DE JONGI'S GENUINE OIL, sMnped to the ‘United States by bis wole consizuees, Ansa Jarvord & C of London, is now sealed with a re capsule (Betls, maker, London), colored blue white top, stamped with a blue fish on a rod shield, abel bears the additional signature of the sole accred= United Stateg and Canada, y & CO,, 34 Vesey street, N.Y. sts. iN support, drunkenness or desertion suflicient cause. publicity; no charge until divorce obtained, Advis 3 M. HOWES, Attorney, &ec., 78 Nassau street, DIVORCES BSOLUTE LEGALLY OBTAINE! or exposure, Good everve Success guaranteed. THOMAS KEMAN, lawyer, 72 Broadway, room No, 6, second floor. DIVORCES LEGALLY OBTAINED IN ; also from States where non-support, drunks enness or nis sullicient cause, No publicity: ‘no feew in advance; advice free, YT. KING, Counselior at law, 261 Broadway, A —PRIZES CASHED AND INFORMATION FUR- + ished in all legalized lotteries, J. CLUTE, Banker and Broker, #6 Broadway. A —OFFICIAL DRAWINGS OF THE KENTUCKY » State Lottery :— KUNTUCKY STATE EXTRA—OLAGS S21, MAY 9, 1863, 6, 23, 12, 8, 67, 61, 7/, 4%, 26, i, dt, 65. Pee a ar a eR Oy URRAY, EDDY & cee tas Oficial Drawings of the Paducah’State Lottery of Kentucky :-+ EXTRA—OLABS 373, MAY 9, 1868. 2m ORR ERs eo ie 1-H Sip bontON ado. anagers. 2D, For circulars, &c., in the above Lotteries address MURRAY, EDDY & CO, Covington, Ry. A —OFFICIAL DRAWINGS OF THE SIIRLBY COL + , lege Lottery of Kentucky Fea tnt ier a i 4 ang “ar " eliRLby COnLRGR—CLAKS 938, Mae 9 Bh Oh Se tANCK, Sha KENTUOKY—RXTRA CLASS 8 67, 73, 64, 77, 5B) 18). 7 i Se aaety eres his ‘or circulars and informat! a} cE, Ky. —NATHAN & TROUP, EXCHANGE BROKERS, WIL A. open, on of about thé 12th of May, thelr new office, 1 roadway: | Prizes cashed and information given tn all gab zed lotteries, a COn 160 Brondway and Tt Nassat street Aeon bleemtongine ee aeD LOR " ongivene mee an WILLA Howan, t Hassan etreet, ) NATHAN 4 0o. A =PRIZES CASHED IN THE NEW KENTUCKY LOT~ stories of France, 3 > RT WILEY, 174 Broadway. B' RANDRETH PILLS.—Wil EN YOU HAVE ANXIETY ‘and fulness about the heat or egitfeg or fying pains, from four to six Brandreth’s Pilis ti afew hourd grtninly rellero YoU, and two oF three doves cure you, ee The ‘ovum ' _Ditice, Brandreth House, New Tark. Sold by alt druggtat ir, 4 a gihtes'k Bowery, over Clizera’ Eaviogs Bank: Indien’ Foon 4; gentiomed's Foom No.5, sin liaiieai ER WHEELER & WILS 8 RUTTONHOLE ATTACH ideratiier for foot hundred buttonholes ao hour. roeaway, ies, dressmakers and : asnoeios

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