The New York Herald Newspaper, December 17, 1868, Page 7

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eeEeEeEeEeEeEEaEPEPE eee Eee NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1868—TRIPLE SHEET. 7 GRAPHIC NEWS ENGLAND. NEW YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY. T ask when and where was I ask where and when were depths of humanity. the “good old ‘ame the good old times? This old world Mma been ge powers of the provincia! Diets for consultative aod nancial purposes aud in coming to aa arcangemens religion must be yours. It was not freedom of retigion, but freedom of princes to prescribe freedom of reli: this hundreds of thou- with Hungary by means of moderate concessions. gion for their slaves, and Beverdy Johnsen and the Engilsh Working- ning round tn space three or four or five hundred | sands have on the battle fleld or been burned | ‘The Diet of liu was summoned once wore, As men—His Regard for the Criticlam of the | “#470 by John Lothrop Motley on the Pol | millions of years, it more oF less. We | at the atake or buried alive. It was seriousiy hoped | soon as assembled cae Magyara Were found 2s faith FROM His © tical Progress ef Europe and Awerica. are not very familiar with our predeces- | and believed that humanity conid be thus reinanded | fu! as ever to the crown of St. Steplen, as indit- American Press en Omcial Conduct. The Academy of Music was last evening crowded | 2078 on this continent. The oldest must be | toitsdun , buffeted, cheaied out of its rights anda | ferent to all others onthe brow of their monarch. ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD. QUIET THROUGHOUT SPAIN, Lonpon, Dec. 16, 1868. A letter from Reverdy Johnson, the American almost to overflowing on the occasion of the mntro- mted to us in the man of Natches, wi bones were disinterred a few years since in lock pi forever on the immortal member, And Nota thought was admitted of swerving from the these who would read history by the years and nt ancient constitution. Vhe light and soul of the us duction of Mr, J. Lothrop Motiey, ex-Minister to | Strata considered one hundred thousand years old. | by political chronology, would concinde that there | Dist Francis Deak, man born in the Minister, to the London Workingmen’s Society, 18 | austria, ag ad Yet he is a mere modern, a parvenue ‘upon the | was ddeadly fate operating against man, uniess, in. | middie classes a practising tawyer, of mov. printed this morning. Mr. Johnson justifies his Slecturer before a Now York audience, | pianet, compared to the man whose warlike imple. | deed, we hod fast ¢o the fact chat in huiuan as well | crate“ forunc’ with ao Werscnal ‘aims, and friendly intercourse with John Laird and other gen- tlemen friendly to the South during the late civil war in America by the example of Generais Grant and under the auspices of the New York Historical Society. Last night was the sixty-fourth anniver- sary Of the society, and they could not perhaps have ments have been discovered in Euro; We have no filtal interest in the man of Natchez, Prior thas he or any of his descendents left any trace along the track of their existence to encourage us to claim any re- as in ical affairs nature is always producing its a, the lay of time, through causes in operation from the beginning. (Applause.) But history is never hysterical aud never produces by | of surpassing forensic ability, wielding, by the power O: genius and integrity, an almost despotic sway over tie proudest amstocracy in the world, The Prussian war brought the debaves to a sudden close, Sherman in their treatment of ex-rebel officers. be morated the occasion better than by the | lationship to thom; but sink a shaft deep enough in | catastrophes, and it is only by remembering | So soon as it was over the Hungarian Diet was once selection the society made in the person of Mr. Mot- | London and you will find marbie shrines, mosaics, | this that we have any reason to hope aud | more convened. B: Beust, a statesman of quick CADIZ AFTER THE SURRENDER. Ifhe is guilty of treason, so also are Grant and Sher- ley 'to deliver a pasts ‘on the occasion. Pictures, relics of that Roman people who gov. | believe in the general. of mankind. intellect, : large political vexperience, ready” elo- Bailing of the Spanish Fleet for Cuba. ‘he Greek Government Rumored to Have Ac- ceded to the Sultan's Demands, Bloody Battle Between Native Chiefs in India. man, General Grant has entertained at his own house a distinguished Confederate leader, He ascribes the attacks upon him in the American newspapers and elsewhere to a secret dislike for the Preservation of peaceful relations between the two countries, The English Prose on President Johnsen’s Mess.ge—Johu Stuart Mill on the Recent ElectionsReverdy Johnson Again, Lonpon, Dec. 16, 1868, The Daily Telegraph, ina leader on the financial Portion of President Johnson's Message and its treatment by Congress, complains that the resolu- tions condemning repudiation which have been called forth by the Message still leave open the ques- tion of the payment of the national debt in green- backs, An excellent band discoursed eloquent music from the platform from the opening of the doors to the opening of the proceedings. A very few minutes after eight o’clock the mem- bers of the society marched down the centre aisle of the Academy two and two, the president, ex-Governor Hamilton Fish, and Mr. Motley im the advance, arm in arm. As the procession moved down the aisle it was hailed with the warm greetings of the audience. When Admiral Farragut, who was about one of the last, took his seat on the platform, the audience broke out into a burst of ap- plause, and the gallant Admiral responded with his usual genial bow and smile, Among the audience were Mr. Hamilton Fish, chairman; Admiral Farragut, Gulian C, Verplanck, W. ©. Bryant, Augustus Schell, J. T. Beekman, Peter erned what they thought the world when the British were painted savages. They never dreamed of this ‘continent of ours, where the man ot Natchez had roamed hundreds of thousands of years before, but had produced neither altars nor Statues. We talk of hi because we can trace our way back dimly and much perplexed for thirty centuries. Those rude forefat of us all have faded forever from memory and from chronicle. (The speaker here commenced reading from his notes.) Placed on this isthmus of a middie state between two cternities, man looks backward with & hope that is almost akin to despair. To be created at once in Itkeness to the divine and to a fantastic brute; to be compounded at onge of the bestial and the angelic, dragged upwards and downwards by Sneaonieno forces, is enough to make us believe that World 1s a place of pi 3 to some higher sphere, Let the ee stand erect in hideous cari- cature of humanity; weigh his skull and a Hotten- tot’s if you like, and find less difference than be- tween Hannibal's and the more Southern Africans; until you can find the dumb animal endowed with progress Great discoveries are apt to leap from the brain of men at identical epochs. Christopher Columbus, trusting to his own stout heart and a mariner’s com- pass, seta forth upon the unknown seas and dis- covers America. ‘his was the great event thus far, as time in its patience was to prove. It is one of the great milestones of human progress. Civiliza- tion seemed to find a new field for her endeavors as the discovery of America revealed a virgin world. It is difficult to imagine a more favorable position than that enjoyed by this republic, Nature has done her best and it is not for ph ical advantages cule that we ought to be grateful. To have got rid of all the great Pachas, of the superstitions of Asia and Europe, is a boon for which America ought to be pexpesasily upon her knees, Around the cradle of he American nation were many good angels, but also on almost her natal day came a cursed bark with its unhappy victims from unhappy Africa, and the seeds were ted upon this Continent of her fature woe. 0! hy grew side by side with democracy until the time was to come when it Should be decided which of the two was in conform- quence with tongue and pen, imperturable tem- ber, and immense power of work, who had long been Adininisirator of the little kingdom of Saxony, be- came Prime Minister of the Austrian empire, Con- sidering the experiments both of centraliam and of federavion to have failed he decided on complete concession to Hungary. The constitution was re- stored at last and @ Hungarian Ministry formed. At Pesth, in the midst of the most stately and pictuieaque pageans that had been seen in Europe tor cen- es. scene so full of historical and mediaval splendor that it seemed like a living chapter of ‘Troissant or Philippe de Commines—the King, attired in a long brocaded inantie, with the sacred, jew- elled crown of St. Stephen on his head, and mounted on @ splendidly caparisoned white horse, which he managed with periect skill, amid wild siiouts of “Eljen” from his lieges almost mad with enthusiasm, rode up the sacred mound on the Danube and waved the ancient sword of a long line of ancestors to the four quarters of the world in symbol of rotection to the realm. Hungary was restored. rogress may be under military dominion the religious faculty who worships the Creator on | ity with the eternal law. Chemistry resolves the | that now exists on the Continent of Kurope. Re- bp bs Stuart Mill has written a letter on the re- popes, edn aa Me inne Rev. | his knees, who has treasured in his heart the hope | universe into a very few ten: ‘Take | flect upon thsee figures. Frauce has oue iniilion two The Reunion of We te! Armi sult of the recent elections. He ascribes the defeat 4 tt, ‘arner, iam Chauncey, | of an tmmortality, you ‘ong be sure that the | a@ little potash, lume, salt, &c., and there | hundred thousand troops, Prussia a million, Russia estern Armies | of the workingmen’s candidates to the heavy ex- | George H. Moore and many other members of the | pace betwera man’ and the angels will be | is your hero, your prize ‘fighter. Polltical | a million, Italy six hundred thousand, Austria nearly pense of an election canvass as now conducted; and | society. crossed at a single leap sooner than the | chemistry has also its analysis. Oligarchy is found | @ million. five Powers—saying nothing in Chicago. R THE OPENING PROCEEDINGS. infinite space between the brute and the | to be composed of the same gaseous vapors on one | of Great Britain and other smailer Pow- as @ remedy for this evil he urges that the govern- man will be diminished by a hair's breadth, | pars of the earth asthe other. So soon as the fight | ers, each of which has a@ larger army than ment pay the necessary expenditures and make all Mr. Hamilton Fish took tne chatr and in a few fapplause.) But more than the space since p:imeval | with oligare! fan in this country the tears com- | thia great republic—these five Powers keep SPAIN other outlays ill atid penal. remarks stated that the proceedings would be | time began must the brute traverse before he can | menced runnl own the eyes of Privilege the world | fivefor six millions of soldiers perpetually, We know age AGA) aie te opened with prayer. crawl even to the threshold of humanity, There is | over. ‘Patriotism,’ safd Dr. Johnson at the epoch | how much tt costs to maintain a army, and we Mr. Johnson, the American Minister, in a short someth! in man alone which has weighed the | of our war of independenco, “is the last refuge of a | know, too, that when i principles are at stuke— Whe Cadiz Iusursocclaactlow It Wan | #Pevch at the anniversary of the French Hospital, | ev. Mr. De Witt, the trst vice president of the | heavenly bodies, measured thelr distances; marked | scoundrel,” And there haveybeen a series of Dr..| when the "national existence 1s at stake—every clil- Stopyed—The Damage Done in the City— ‘The Government Troops Reported to Have declared that Lord Clarendon was of the same mind as Lord Stanley in regard to the settlement of the Historical Society, then delivered a short and appro- priate prayer. out the spot where worlds were thousands of years ago and where they shall reappear, described the curves in which the planeta move, laid down the Johnsons who have been ready to denounce patriots and republicans, especiaily if their efforts were cal- culated to interfere with trade. 1 had no idea, zen is ready to be a soldier, and great commanders start out of obscurity to take the lead; and when the emergency has passed this great army resolves THE ADDRESS BEFORE THE SOCIETY. laws which the universe obeys; something which | said aneminent statesman in Europe on two occa- | itself into the masses of the community, and Been Beaten—Action of the American | 1¥¢stions pending jbetween England and America, 8; > The Chairman th he | has guidea the aimost divine flngers of the sculptor, | sions, how much intiuence the American republic | being enobled by military experence, they Consul—The Insurgents Declare For a Ree | 924 peace between the two countries was certain. cvaittig: en introduced the orator of ti the pencil of the painter, to oath up beauties ae ‘was having upon public opinion in England until I | become better citizens than before. (Applause.) public. Lonpow, Dec, 16, 1868. ¥ The New York HERALD special despatches, which ‘were forwarded from Cadiz under date of December INDIA. Defeat of Abdool Rahman Khan in the Pass Mr. MOTLEY on coming forward was again greeted with the applause of the audience. He said:— LaDIES AND GENTLEMEN—I have the honor of ad- than nature has revealed; something which shaped the Grecian and the Gothic temple and the Pacific Railroad; something which has nerved heroes tu despise danger and death in the sacred cause of country; something which hag tied the marked the universal congratulation when they asserted that the republic was likely to be broken up. The result was closely watched in Europe, but it would be dimicult to overstate the ignorance that prevailed in regard to the meaning and Who doubts that tne new English Suffrage bill, which so nearly anproximates to the universal suif- rage of these States, haa its fruit from the Appomat- tox snpie tree? (Applause.) Mr. Motley then eloquently reviewed the question dressing the Historical Society of the great metrop- 7 f 10, 4 great sailor to the maintop above the din and smoke | the progress of the contest. But there was one man | Of Southern immigration, portraying the great ad- ‘ » bike Sabor ed in Sa The ema of Damian—Earthquake Shocks—Failure of petal the great republic, These simple words sug- ccbetge (applause followed this allusion to Admiral | who believed im the great organic law of human pro- | vant the Southern climate am soil offered pecial bd ‘were stopped on the road and hel the Grain Crops. aero ne 82 Wide & range of thought that you will | Farragut, which Was so marked that the old hero | gress; that man was John Bright, And the great | to the poor laborers of Hurope, who are the length of time specified. The despatches de- Lonpon, Dec. 16, 1868. Ristory by ay ny bed Cie vee oer Se ie our = aa nage to Seknbwisaus it by Hsing and bow- cone ou on we the eancot A oo longing 0 make mA Mess A GF eee affairs . 4 6) ie may guide and control the fleet until ever jumaD ry has there been such & col 01 r. jotley sai ‘ar oor Saas Apapeead of (see at that hist Telegrams from India received via Brindisi, el result, and I would fain grope my way with | victory be won—(applause)—something ‘which lias | battie with such & stake. It was not for ter- | lave meapaaned upon your patience far more. than and sta ie government troops were badly | state that reports have reached Bombay, which have | such lantern as 1 can provide myself for the | chained the great soldier, despite all opposition, to | ritory, empire, power. [t was not merely for the ia- | 1 intended to, and have endeavored to trace, from ‘beaten In their encounter with the insurgents. While | been subséquently confirmed, that a sanguinary foros hatien far or near. As I have walked at | one line, even if take’ all summer- —(applause)— | tegrity of the vast republican heritage. ‘These t what we know of history, the law of progress. My tho fight was progressing, Captain Farrell, the Ame- | pattie was fought in the Pass of Damian, in ; Afghan- ie ap cutee Gotan ek eth ed ae faye, and all winter, too, when duty gives the | though precious, are of little worth compar belief tn fone law ts absolute. That all mankind are vican Gonsul, is said to have mounted one of the | istan, between Shere Ali and his rebellious nephew, command; something which has inspired and sus- | to the sacred principle concerned in the struggle, | capable of progress | as devoutly believe. In the barricades in uniform and holding the American flag in his hand. He called upon both ‘parties to Stop the struggle and put an end to bloodshed. The ighi was shortly after brought to a close and hos- tilities ceased. Abdool Rahman Khan. ‘The latter was totally de- feated with great loss. Shocks of earthquake are reported at Peshawur, Lahore and Jabbalpoor. Famine is again threatened in Central India, The to multiply as I looked upon them, as in tropical re- gions the vines and overshadowing foliage seem to expand in growth before the gazer’s eye; a8 1 saw the innumerable steamers and ships whica crowd your wharves like moving woods; your mart, whose slightest throb sends a pulsation throughout the world; a population assimilating a vast amd discor- dant material ito its own flesh and blood with tained hundreds of thousands of obscure, nameless, half-forgotten men and feeble women as they were consuming by slow fires atthe stake, when & word against their conscientious convictions would have saved their lives. As long as history gurners such facts as these of men’s progress out of the lower depths man need not tremble lest the angelic part of him should be imperilled by his likenesss to the For it was to be decided whether the great law of history which we have been tracing was a truth or a lie; whether the human race lias been steadily altaough slowly progressing or whether we have been fatally drifting back to chaos, For surely if freedom is an evil from which society, new or old, is to be saved, and slavery the great remedy and the great hope for the world, the only solution of politi- ‘western portion of our country, where there is a de- ciency of ure Water, artesian wells have been sunk. Like the bursting of the waters from them is that great upward spiritual movement which comes in the Stamp of the right in the great four years? conflict in which all have been the victors. ‘The lecturer closed a few minutes after ten o’clock, having occupied one hour and fifty-five minutes in Numerous buildings throughout the city bear evi- | food crops are deficient and the prospects are worse | such swiftness as sometimes to suggest an occasional | prutes, (Applause.) Aad their language. ‘he | Cal problems, then, is the sctence of history, the | the discourse, ences Of the struggle, and the bullet marks on the | than before. Ree es Tne Lene kit deat brute oan ohatear Ain sees but man can mots giamal ‘and Sontemptible of all thaginanle * ol] q — “s 3 y speak. the chi 8 in men and the | studies. was not a question for anerica, houses tell plainly of the flerce character of the con: Ng, | PArsxtan which nothing ‘more “veautiui ex: | eariter langunges ure inowoayllabic. -A‘chinese Dr, | UY for the world." The tolling” multiturtes THE NEW DOMINION. test. The City Hall was badly shatterea by cannon OUR WESTERN VETERANS. isis In ancient and mperial cities—and the tre- | Johnson would be an impossibility. He would | of the whole earth are iuterested in the fate peeeaenaememeemee shots. - . Near pecans Nae batt Cols Ml etbet Hats Geipedt Bie Diet a perish for want of polysyllables. (Laughter) If it | Of this great republic of refuge, which re-| Rumored Offer of Mr. Vanderbilt to Lease The vessels in the bay are filled with people depart- Reunion. in Chicago— | {2° jibraries, the colleges, the halls for the admints- | had not been for the tower of Babel we should have | celves»and protects the oppressed of every race. ing for other and more quiet iocalities. The government troops are reported to have been guilty of excesses and plundered some of the many deserted houses, The Grand Army Proceedings of the Second Day and Ads journment=The Grand Banquet in the Hall of the Chamber of Commerce. CHicago, Dec. 16, 1868, tration of justice—as 1 looked upon and listened to this vast, vehement youth I was oppressed by @ single thought, that this is’ ail of to-day. There is something marvellous, there 1s something startling, depressing in the rapidity with which this has been reached, We talk of Linge Noman or: been spared a great deal of inconvenience. It is also a painful thought that languages will not live uniess they are stone-dead. (Laughter.) Cicero or Demosthenes might stand on any platferm and if reported in the morning papers of this day their auditors might not think so much of their and Purchase the Great Western Rallrond of Canada—Whalen Expected te Get a New Trial. “My countrymen who work for your living,” said John Brigut at Birmingham in 1863, “remember this—there will be one wild shriek of freedom to startie all mankind if that republic should be over- thrown.’ But the game was fought out, and boii wiuners and losers are the gainers. The South, Toronto, Dec. 16, 1868. Itis rumored here that Mr. Vanderbilt has made A number of English and American tourists wer “ societies of the Grand Western Army | C8! More thoroughly appreciate the labors of tiis | eloquence. Alfred the Great, if he came from | While deeming itself to have lost all save honoi an offer to the Great Western Railroad Company ot axretal Wks aiitae nilaoriting bar ae vere sais ns d accomplished much | Boworable society and of otuers in this country for | his grave, Would not tind a soul in tis | be more prosperous than it ever dreamed of ere @ | Canada to lease that road for ten years, with the ¥ y y , but were sub- | have been in session to-day an I the preservation of the memorials belonging to our | dominions’ who would understand a word | generation of mankind shall have passed away. | right to purchase at the end of the lease. Should his sequently released through the interposition of | business. The proceedings were harmonious and | great and most interesting and important past. We | of his utterances. It is also painful to remember | Letits “bruised arms be hung up for mouuments” | ofrer be accepted the Great Western Railroad Com- the American Consul, who, on their release, were forwarded to Gibraltar. The Consul’s private resi- dence was the resort of peopie of all nationalities, who fled there for protection. Tye insurgents loudly proclaimed im favor of a republic and cheered loudly for America. They also declared if the clty was bombarded they would ask that the country be annexed to the United States. Effect of the Suppression of the Cadiz Insur- rection—Subscriptions to the New Loan Closed—Election of the Cuban Deputies, Y Maprip, Dec. 16, 1868, ‘The leaders of all the political parties have united in making a solemn pledge to use all their influence to preserve peace and order throughout the coantry ‘until the Constituent Cortes has met and settled the Questions at issue. ‘The prompt and effectual suppression of the revolt ‘at Cadiz has greatly strengthenea the hands of the tended to make still stronger the tles which bind in good fellowship those who have experienced the hardships and triumphs of four years’ hard service. THE ARMY OF THZ CUMBERLAND. The representatives of the Army of the Cumber- land met at McVicker’s at half-past ten o'clock this morning, General Thomas in the chatr. Colonel WaiTMAn, of Ohio, read an epitome of a work prepared by him on the dead soldiers of the Army of the Cumberland and the collection and burial of their remains. Major General Butterfield, of the Twentleth Army corps, was named as the orator for the next annual meeting, and General J. 8. Negley, of the Fourteenth, as alternate. The SECRETARY read ® communication from tne Army of the Onto, proposing to join the committce to arrange a consolidation of the Society of the Army of the Cumberland with that of the Ohio. Colonel NICHOLAS ANDERSON moved the appoint- ment of a committee consisting of the President and can never collect too many of them nor ponder them too deeply, for they mark the era of the new civiil- zation. But that most intimate past presses so closely upon our vision that it seems a portion of the present, the glimmering twilight dawn preceding the noon of to-day. Ishali not be misunderstood it | gay that there is no such thing as human history. ‘The annals of our race never have, never can be written, We have, as it were, a leaf or two torn from the great volume of human fate, which we at- tempt to decipher with purbiind eyes, but it is all confusion, The isiand upon which this city stands is perhaps as perfect a site fora great commercial and imperial city as the heart of man could desire, It was built up tor the capital.of the world’s empire, and not any of the world’s capiials that hitherto lave been can surpass the inevitable future certain- ties of this thirteen miles long Manhattan, (Applause.) And yet it was but yesterday—ior what are two centuries and a half in the past —when the whole surface oi this island, now groaning under that which it oppresses the imagination to attempt to conceive of, scarcely furnished a respeciabie hunt- jug ground for the indian tn his hunting moccasons, who called himself the proprietor. But yesierd: Cimmerian darkness prevailed; to-day grandeur, that we celebrated the three hundredth birthday of ‘Shakspeare four years ago, and let another six cen- tarles go by and perhaps there will be none to phi- losophize with Hamlet or weep with Lear. Shaks- peare himself may have become almost as much a myth as either of the two princes he has endowed with present immortality. {t is painful to think that the creations of the language, the great works of the poet and the dramatist may become as obsolete as the odes of Comrie or the lays Liewellyn. ‘The school- master Cadmus came out of the Hast, as it is the fashion at the present time for schoolmasters to do, and brought with him sixteen counters in his pocket. Among the Pelasgi, the schoolmaster being abroad, education among the people became rapid. There 1s nothing iy human affairs that can compare with the introduction of the alphabet. It was no wonder that Cadmus was considered a king’s son and allied to the great lawgivers. The lawgivers, as Lord Bacon says, were ranked among the demi-gods; but invengors were consecrated as among the yous them- selves, And if the heathen mythology now pre- vailed what @ Pantheon we should have at the Patent OMice in Washington! (Applause and laugh- ter.) Contemporaneous with the epochs of Assyrian and Hebrew spiendor there wasa certain sage in a along with the trophies of the triumphant Nort; for the valor, the endurance and seli-sacrifice were equal on both sides, and the defeated party was vanquished because neither pride of color nor im- mortal hate can successiully struggle against the inexorable law of freedom and progress. J have spoken much of America. The political attairs of its aver Europe are at this moment in amore iluid state than usual. The effect of the triumph of ireedom in this country on the cause of progress Europe Is plain; bué it would be impossible in the Itmits of this ad- dress to take a survey of the whole field, It seems natural, however, to glance at the political anu so- cial heart of Europe—Germany. Ever since the great rising for freedom against the Koman empire, Irom near the dawn of the Christian era down to. tuis hoar, Germany has been the main source of European and American culture. The common mother of nations and empires—alma nutter selie proles—she still rules the thought of her vast brood of children—Franks, Saxons, Netherlanders, Ameri- cans—Germans all, Her Gothic branches in the iifth and sixth centuries, sweeping to and fro over the extinct Roman empire from the ultima Tivde of Britain to the confines of Asia; ler energetic Norman branch of pirates, seating tuemseives with such pany will, to all intents and purposes, become a part of the New York Central Railroad, and all the mechanical departments of the latter company will be removed to Hamilton, It is expected that Whalen will get a new trial. In that event the venue will be changed and the triat will take place at Toronto or in one of the county towns near it. Miragone Captured and Burning—Jacmel to be Next Attacked by Salnave. Private advices received in this city from Port aa Prince by way of Havana atford us important intel- ligence from that place. Authentic news had been received on the morning of the 1st Instant at Port au Prince, by the arrival of the war steamer Salnave from Miragone, stating that -the town of Miragone, recently under blockade, had been taken by the forces of President Sainave on the goth ult, The buildings near the fort, consisting of the Custom House and others adjacent thereto, to- Vice Pi for the purpose designated, which | wealth, luxury appear. The world’s great hope is | city im Armenia—a blind man, as it hap- | Lappy audacity on every throne in Europe, from the | gether with the logwood in that quarter, provistonal government and has dissipated the alarm | Vice President for the purp) ee In this “wppabhe. ‘The “future of humuuity, | peted-eang of the. greatneas of ‘past’ tinge | Wiliams and Henrys of the North to the Rogers, | femer, Wil the, logwood tn that quarter, were, ait ‘which previously prevailed. : General Brooks, from the Committee on Perma | at least ‘during the cycle in which we] of the Grecian and the ‘Trojan, with the | Tancreds, 8 of the South and East; from the | nave left Miragone, the fire appeared to be lessening, ‘The Minister of Finance has already commenced the payment of the January interest on the public debt in London and Paris, The popular subscriptions to the new loan have Deen closed. They amount to 500,000,000 reals 4$25,000,000), the amount asked for by the Minister. It is Officially announced that the election of the Cuban deputies to the Cortes will be held immedi- ately after the arrival of Captain General Duice at Havang. Appointment of Foreign Ministers. MapRID, Dec. 16, 1868. Sefior Manrico Roberts has been appointed Min- ister to the United States, and Sefior Novara has re- ceived a like appointment to Turkey. nent OfMicers, reported Major General George H. ‘Thomas for President, and seventeen vice presidents; Corresponding Secretary, Major General William E. Whipple; Recording Secretary, Lieutenant Coionel George G. Waterman; Treasurer, Brigadier General John S. Fullerton. The report Was adopied. General ANDERSON, speaking by authority of Gen- eral Thomas, moved that the resolutions of yester- day, demanding that a statue of General Thomas be placed upon the national monument at Washington, be expunged from the records. General BaRNUM declared the resolutions were a superfiuity; the managers of the Monument Associa- tion have already expressed their determinaiion to piace General Thomas’ statue on this monument. After remarks from General DucaT and others, General BaRNUM moved that the whole matter be expunged from the records, which was carried amid great confusion. THE ARMY OF THE TENNESSES. The Army of the Tennessee met this morning at are at present revolving, depends on the manner in which we Americans execute our great trust. (Ap- plause.) The good old times! When and where were these good old times? ‘All times, when old, are good,” says Byron, and “All our esterday is have lighted fools the way to dusty death,” says the great master of morals and humanity. But neither fools nor sages, neither individuais nor nations, have any other light to guide them along the path which all must tread, save that long, glimmering vista of terday which Pipe) so rapidly fainter and fainte: the present fades off into the past. And I believe it possible to discover a law out of all this apparently chaotic world, thus confused and tangled skein of human events as It spins itself through the centu- ries, ‘That law is progress—siow, confused, contra- dictory, but priceless development, inteilectuai and moral, of che human race. it 18 of progress—human rogress—I have to speak to-night. ‘This Hob Ded Tas given the startling result. [ must say this when I survey the spectacle which the American present wonderful power of poetic genius, giving a minute detail of their customs, the color of their hair and eyes, the names of their soldiers, a catalogue of their ships, all the dally, even trivial instances of their domestic and military life—all these are as fa- millar, at least, alinost as familiar, after three thou- sand years have passed away, as is the siege of Vicksburg itself with all its patriotic associations, its passionate circumstances, its thrilling ucidents and the momentous My patna resulting therefrom for all time. (Applause.) Out of these records of the past we get a glunmer of chronology. There was at one time acook in Athens; whether @ skilful cook or not we are not tnformed; but he was swift of foot, and he ran @ race before his countrymen, and this is the first record we have of the irae ames, Which formed such a beautiful picture Grecian life. Strange that that epoch has a record of a date which reminds us of an epoch in our history. ‘The Olym- pian race was run in the year 1776 before Christ, and s just 1776 years after Christ we have the Kurics of Russia to the Roderics of Spain; ever, where, in high places and low, all-conquering Ge: many has stamped our civilization with her tin- ress and bequeathed to modern languages the reasures of her ample and varied diaiecws; but everywhere separation into smali national group- ings was the initial characteristic of Kuropean his- tory. Seven German kingdoms in what we now call England; as many independent dukes and sove eigns in present France; a dozen kings in Spau in italy; hundreds of them in Germany proper; a piu- rality of sovereigns, in short, in all tne districts of Cbristendom—thus was Europe broken into hostile and discordant fragments. And the tendency to write these jarring sovereignties into a few solid masses has marked her later history. A thou- sand years there was # hepiarchy in haif the litue island of Britain. Now, Europe itself is aay more than a heptarchy. Five hundred years ago the seven electors of the Emperor acquired com- plete sovel ty within their own dominions. Three while it was said the town was being pillaged. The troops on both sides, for the first time since the re- bellion, fought desperately. ‘The kilied and wounded had not been ascertained when the Salnave lett. ‘The President was on board his other steamer, the Alexandre Pétion, near Miragone, and intended ta leave there for Jacmel, the next place of his opera- oe which, it was said, was at its extremity to hold ou THEATRICAL AND MUSICAL NOTES. No performance at the Freuch theatre to-night. A mutinée on Saturday next. The New York onic Society will have an extra rehearsal of the essiah” this evening. “Fieur de The” is among the pieces shortly to ye produced at Pike’s. Matinee on Saturdi Grau’s company will perform at the Music to-night in ald of the Société de Bienfaisance. On the 22d a performance will be given at the French thirty year war, the disunion of Germany was | ¥ % ) Se ~sid- | reveals. This nation stands on a polnt towards | another epoch froin which this great republic dates | Centuries later, when the shameful peace The Country Tranquil Once More. Crosby's Muste Hall, General Giles A. smith presid: | Tn nation and people are struggling. They | its records, when the great principle of equal rights | o¢ Westphalia had at last endea "thar | {heatre for the beneilt of the Hebrew Fuel Associar Paris, Dec. 16, 1868. "Fhe committee sppolnten to nominate officers pre- | are at the starting point—not thegoal. ithas placed | among all men was proclaiined to the nations of the | Conflict’ of demons, which we call the The following oMcial news from Spain is pub- lished here this morning:— heads. of the various departments in the provinces, sented the name of Major General John A. Rawlins for President, and five vice presidents; Recordi) Secretary, Lteutenant Colonel M. Dayton, of Gencral itself, or rather destiny has piaced it, more imme- diately subordinate to that great law which governs all bodies politic, as indispensabie as the great laws earth—a nobler era than any that had ever dawned before. At another epoch there was a certain she wolf in au Italian swamp with two twin Died. Hoarr.—On Wednesday, December 16, JAMEa. Hoare, Jr., 31 years, 6 months and 6 days. completed. More than three hundred sovereignties were established over the unhappy land. Over the Such The country is entirely tranquil. The addresses | Sherman's staff; Correspondit retary, Brigadier | Which govery the planets. The clear philosophy of | foster chiidren, and these _ children, after | 307 independent _ sovere! reigned an Em-| ‘The relatives and friends of the family, and mem- prepared by the government, to be forwarded to the General A. Hickenlooper, of rit if reasnier, Brevet | De Tocqueville was s0 tipressed with the spectacle | having been nurtured by the wolf and grown | beror enjoying the priviege of issuing orders | pers of Engine Company No. 2 of Jersey City, are re- Major General M. F. Force, of Ohio. ‘The report was | of this then almost infant repudiic, the phenomenon | up to manhood, founded a city which has had | aod of BE eee ag gee f ee a. aa spectfully mvited to attend the funeral, from his late adopted by acclamation. which he had studied with microscopic minuteness some influence for good and for evil on the cause | aon my residence, 85 Essex street, Jersey City, on Friday ining necessity for the restoration and pre- . as well as with statesmanlike breadth of vision, that | of human progress and human civilization. Tne “Holy Roman empire’—an appeilation f elo: curves cahen . consequently withheld. we ‘Camberiand, requesting the a planoent! Har’ he exhorted his countrymen and Europeans gene- | orbit of civilization and pi so far as we | Which, as Voltaire remarked, was open to crill- er tion coer — See Ninth Page.} —— ’ committee to confer with one from that assoctation | Tally to accept the fact that democracy was the pre- | can trace it, seems, for some mysterious reason, to | cism on three points. It was not holy, was not pest ne rte aM Sete ; Salling of the Fleet for Cuba. on the subject of the consolidation of the societies, | ordained condition of the human race—the condition | have been preordained w travel from east to west. and was not an empi With Mrs. A. St. John, of Rochester, oe that 1 A committee was appointed, but was instructed to | to which the world was tending to seek happiness in | In China, India, Assyria, Greece, Rome, we behold | those exceptions the description ts rfect. during tbe peat ten years she has made more than vests, : * Oapiz, Dec. 16, 1868, take no action tending towards the extiuction of the | conforming to that divine law rather than weary | successively springing up asthe orb of civilization | After nearly two centuries more had away, | with heeler & Wilson machine, besides doing her ‘The fleet, with General Dulce on board, sailed yes- | army of the Tennessee as a distinct orgauization. themselves out in struggles that were inevitable. | rolls over, and as it moves we behold the shadows | the © of Viei as part, of little good familly eowing, and ‘she bas made over 1,200 vests with terday for Caba, and may be expected there about Lewers were read from Admiral Farragut, Com- | Circumstances tn the obvious phenomena of the poll- | of evening falling on the land wich he leaves be- | that it ‘accom| for humanity, at least, Seodie now in use, silat o modore Foote and others. ties of the country, to which the philosopher did not | hind him. , poetry—the wathetic arts of life | much diminisned ti ie of petiy Bi gr A Ladies’ Fair is Now Open at St. Stephen's the mpie et zapnary. Be ONUMENT TO GENERAL M'pHERSON, | Pay suficlent heed, have retarded the result which is | all follow on {ts orb. What would the world have | in . ‘Three hu: and odd of them | onuch entrance on Tweny-egith and ‘Twemy-ninth General SHERMAN and others ein rd to | now showing signaily its approach with rapid and | been without Palestine? Where would the culture | went up to that poli and only | strects, near Third avenue. THE EASTERN QUESTION. the proposed McPherson monument, and other in- | accumulating speed. Whether it be a bane or a| of the present day be without poetry, without | thirty-flve escaped with fe. The German Q = teresting business was transacted. 4 biessing tt is almost time we should accept this great | the drama, scul| architecture, the lofty, almost | Demos, somewhat later, after union A.—Save Fael—Reduce Coal Bills.—Fix Your THE ARMY OF GEORGIA. a! and make oe bens — a can oon divine, Poe a ny Ko Grosee-—wiknowt 0 the prone im- _ ae beg partially Ca oy eeee house with Roebuek's Weather Strips. Office 68 Fulton at. The Dema: Tark! bers: . | thorough! ice in an eve in great perialisin, ‘materia! urpass. lead of Prussia, eee <diagst peaggttnd) WR anne oy BE Ba AOE ocr Ml eer ai? our instivucions are founded | Ing military art, the colosaal seltesteem, the subtie | league, filled with larger ideas of union, resolved as Bg oe rm Opinion. —Extracts from GreeceReported Compliance of the Latter | Fit Ming, General Slocum presiding. thanI do, But it {8 not to flatter or exalt that [| and sharp chiselled juriaprudence which made | an exemplification of a principle to free the German | Bnglish testimonials, giving evidence, ‘eificacy Country. General BeaNeM, the chairman of the Committee | allude to this favorable condition and to this fore- | Rome the mistress of the world? (Applause.) Dead | inhabitants of Schleswig-Holstein from the Danish | “Wr have derived benefit fromthe Troches t Lonpon, Dec. 16, 1868. on the Constitution and iiy-laws, reported for adop- | Most position which we occupy among the nations | Athens shone there forever—(applause)—not a con- | crown. The two Powers took the war into | gnyining I ever tried.” ‘Tho ultimatum addressed by the Sublime Porte to | tion the constitution adopted on Tuesday by the So- } Of the earth— not entirely, py bowen eeentn ee | alee en cae cniverss ot teste, Wika ite milky way apg ag had Fang pe hg the bit | “Frime Tenore of the British Operatic Asso. Lon tnodifi meri i a a Schl | war oarsene the government at Athens demanded the disband- | clety of the Army of the Ohio, with o few car | was Sydney smnign who once ‘alluded to.an individual | ing truths radiating the Tong vistas of obscurity. And | Soon over. The provinces were taken from Den- st have tried your Troveoe Mate Oxtord Mute Hall ment of the volunteer forces in Greece within five | “MS, POSED CONSOLIDATION OF THE SOCTETIFS. who had permitted himself to speak doubtfully of | Rome, too, in the supremacy of ber military life, | mark. Then followed the dispute for the booty. CHARLES SLOMAN, the English iaprovienton” days, the prohibition of further volunteering, the A bom :munication from the Soctety of the Army of | the equator. 1 should be sorry to be supposed | in the supremacy of her legai life and at the epoch | ‘The rest of the story is familiar. The sewen weeks’ “phe Troches give t satisfaction.” , read stating that that body had adopted | capable of flattering the equator, but were it | of her shameful decay and decrepitude—Rome stands | War; the disastrous day to Austria of ae 'T. W. K. LEE, Edttor Lo ugh Monitor. immediate dismantling of the vessels used for con- | fhe Ot Te ee tions: — pied | or for this little angle of 23 ‘deg. 26 min. | a perpetual mirror to point to us a new path of pro- of which Bil undersiand. | very benetcial in clearing the thryal, when compelled to veying supplies to the Cretans, the restoration of ss 7 and 27 sec., which it 13 good enough to make | gress and to warn us the dangers of luxury ana | ing—for, behold, when the smoke was cleared | sing, tough suffering from cold.” | | AINSLEY O DOKE, to the island, the punishment of the | ¢yRoolveds, That a commiuse ve appointed to confer with | Wim the plane of the ecliptic the history of the earth | ambition and from that disdain ot human rights | Away, fot only was Austria excluded from Get | is. touien Pyne, of the Roget ata Cee ee oe Cretan refugees to the , the p the several sociation of tee ie cniea , and all Which it inherit would have been essentially | through which she herself perished. (Applause.) | many, but even her allies in the defunct Bund—the | Mise Louten Tyne, of the Royal talten Opere, speate ee persons who ssssuited and wounded a Turkish | we and place for holding the union. reer modified if not altogether a blank. Ont of that ob | Rome fell—she became subi i, but as thedeluge | Soutnern States—had accepted by treaty the | Uitrand strengthen ihe voice.” iy officer at Syra, and strict conformity with the terms | ,,Revolved, Thal s committen, conetens, of in Ohicaro ne | Hane of the vcliptic have come forth progress and | which destroyed her subsided, behold the German Mlkary and commercial supremacy of Prussia. | ° fa Coughs fo ‘Throat Diseases the Troches are tn treaties. ‘ “th % > it rve: ‘one of the | appears, He conquered Rome und a new civi jor ress ea Srreinttad, Tanneases an Georgie native to the union or Seer peorouna “ana toagurna writers that ever peran. But that was & low civilization at best, The in Conttpental Europe, glancing at the war between PRA; Umivel it is rumored in Paris that the Greek government, | consolidation of the whole into one society. dealt with humaa history that it was to this gradua | great mutiny against Rome had generated into new | F _— and Austria, the lecturer continued:—iiow og itatare’y Suatve! led Mole Bra nGold, and Pressed by the great Powers, has yielded to the de- ‘This proposition was agreed to by the Army of | tion of the zoue and the alternation of the seasons | and misceliancous forms of despotusins, Europe | much has liberty gained by all this pi ? Time | Sppiied at No. 6A louse, Manufactory 68 Maiden lane. f the Fi Georgia. ‘ that the vigor and variety ot the human race were | became a camp—a conquered territory. The tron- | wiil show that liberty and are identical. It) yy, vou want a Timekeepert=If So, Ask mands of the Sultan, but none of the French papers | Georg! ‘ . | attributable. Nothing good oF great had ever | clad man on norseback carved owt the land among | {8 Impousible that the successes of Prussia are to x SOUR Stonnh jeneral SLOCUM appointed @ committee on con- | attribu' 9 ie i d th ‘tablishment of tt militar: watchmaker fora BOREL & COURVOISIER NICKE today allude to such concession. The Monitewr | siidation and on time and place of meeting. come of could come out of perpetual spring | his retainers and followers. The people were trot. end a in the Go shment 6 aay great military WATCH Pine Mocal nwaraed nt Lonion, Parie and Sina cs 1" T e servi te Me cl says ail tho European Powers recommend King | “On'motion of General Wurrriesny congratula- | or the midsummer” of the tropics, oF out | ed and male to wear the collar, of servitude | empire. The very, Feaction golhg on here i | Bepoauiona, tor beat performance.” George to respect the rights of nations; but they insist apon moderation in Constantinople as well as in Athens, The Moniteur thinks that this harmony of counsels among the Powers is a pledge of peace in the Bast, Prussian Mediation in the Affairs of Torkey ' and Greece. committee, together with the president, be left the . 3 lex’ ia pid hei. X e Beas: fact to which wll bodies politic must turne The | from the prison house vo which they were doomed. on the right road and out of at perplex ities, BeERtan, Dec. 16, 1868. — Cee —s — fos pas the ry oo voices ne Americans nave been pont of atendency to boast- | And aul there was progress, for besides the | The brief history of Constitutionallsm Sol = 4 rapes PE yan Posing my) my qe ouport Prussian interests being strongly in favor of main- | fo, Cause a history of the Army of Georgia to be | fuinese, but | have never seen that those people who | sword two other new powers had suddenly | 18 full of instruction. | The expe Gloot out vt retal our splendid ‘wholdsale stoc taining European peace the government has en- deavored to induce Greece to comply with the de- tions and thanks of the society were tenderea Gen- eral Cogsweil for his address at the Opera liouse on ‘Tuesday evening. be On motion of General Warrriesey it was resolved thai in case,consolidation be not effected the presi- dent and Executive Committee cause to be printed 500 copies of the constitution and by-laws, together with the proceedi of the meetings preliminary to the organization of the soctety, and that to the said prepared. Adopted. ARMY OF THE OfI0. of the thick ribbed winter of the poies. It is to the temperate zoue with its vigorous healthful alverna- tion of the seasons (nat progress and civilization are due. It is no merit of ours that the earth does make this blessed an, and ag earth, the men, im. habitants of (i earth, have the right Lo recognize our spirit, and a8 Americans we have the riglit lo re- jotce, but in Lrerabling that the more fortunace condi. tion in which weare politically orbed, and which has been placed around us, is due to the great central us most on this head are overcome with onal Seif-assertion is natural, bashiviness themseives, althoug: not the best attribute of ali vigorous and stamped with the owner's name. feudal system established. busters became Kings by the will of God, which meant the will of the steel-clad fist, Romance has written the chronicles of those days and has shed a lustre over the crimes then commit. ted that has survived even to our own days, But men stragzied against this destiny; tiey were over. thrown; but they rose again and struggled on, with hue and cry at thetr heels as they strove to break Adventurers and flii- appeared and were idly augmenting in strengtn, Thee power of the. be ‘and the power of the purse, (Appianse,) soon giuned a tremen- street, up stairs, only wholesale of Prussia ts distinguished for courage, insight and | agents for the manufacturers. breadth of ee ee tence kB pat 4 genius consists in an im ive power of governing fyvvonomming tthe apie of tie nae, an ok | ky abt sane iba tn oa better readthe i ol mes na rek. . iP. Phil i Small is the chance of despotisin these days to stem | “#® Address Fhilenthros, box nace Be. the rapids. She may utter dismal shrieks, but shoot Fine Sik Umbrellas and Canes for Holiday Magara she must. (Applause. The present govern- | presenta at MILLER'S, 966 Sixth avenue, corner Twenty~ ment of Austria has placed itself conscientiously | second street. Erring But Noble.—self Help for Young Men triple one—centralism, federalism and dualism. The reaim is an agglomerate of many distinct nationall- B. & H. TF. U Bl Broadway, St. tes, scattered vnrough ten kingdoms and more than ’ . and Frames, Stereonc and Views, Albums, carv’ Sin, ace Be ‘KXruONY & C0, Bl” Nicholas block. Cail early. The Army of the Ohio met at twelve o'clock at 7 be rincipaiities. The ws \ds of Turkey #0 far as the demands are founded . De ‘ogressive people. If ever a nation survived perils | dous inonopuly of power—a power which was sadly | thirty duchies or other |p : Correspondence, not a quivering muscie, not a thri t y. A} e J f ee ey, Be Sk, Ne ee Le eae meieie, Ga place of srenest meeting, wit iwnstever else may even th ite * snortal * agony but hus been | King took to himself the tiie of Beaticlero—the dine | and the triune realin, of the holy Stophen— | “t/ lan at GL, and J.B. KELTY & 00.'3, Nox expected with confidence that the Turkish and come up, to an executive committee consisting of laid bare before the world, severely lectured on by clerk—and soon the son of @ Washerwoman be. consisting of Hangary, Transylvania and Croatia— stors, and statesm id aristocrats Who | came a high priest by education and jearaing, and | bat commonly calied the kingdom of ftungary. Holiday Presents. Greek governments will Ysten to the warnings of the Llane a Beare de Mit eras ore eon sig ot relief at tie denonstravod death | through the power thas obtained put Nis foot on the | After the war of 1850 the (right of the Austrian | | Wingo Big ms Peels. Carved Wood Art great Powers and = ere rEET The powers of the committee of conference were | of democracy; but behold the monster is on his feet | heads of emperors and kings. These political priests | people to representation 8 iy Souer De jomm wor J Faney Chairs, at KELTY & 00.'8 furniture store, The Roumanian Soldiers Approached by For- | continued, they to report to the Executive Com- Pony Crt og alive than pl ery i — ae soe oun ee me nad eed , Benen! ree en Tonge ip ; at roalway. ‘ : time to time. an any Ml ody thyme ey people shoud dis i A central Knox's Knock Down Argument that Knocks Emissaries. mnittee from, t tirely favorable to our | and place tf the people should discover the magic | in the following February. A cen tainent, or ren ag Puare, Dec. 16, 1808 | yay ata Shctanet comeentttonae es 7: te BOaNd OF | eon,” ea ee eae at hopes. Men | spell. There was ancuer power besides this of edu: | Kelchsrath, was,established {oF the wile empire, | ionag mupetioriy ot the liais which be manufactures amd An invitation was recetve to visit the rooma of the | of jus have uttered bodings from time | cation. augmenting and growing into power, This | c wing of Rp de Ra. oo Ly 9 Gaieed sent States ble gree Hat Emporium, No. 912 Broadway, corneas Intelligence from Transylvania has been received did us infinite service, Fulton street, over all other —original in conception, istorical Societ, tt to thne against us; but tr was the purse wita the clink of the pure gold tngit. | uve Chamber, ‘clean be } Sar ee aa rg, mats nar | fet otn ate Bemaeecmuts "| th. anus ot Maman | Smear peed aes | ia sft gant tone | tears me oe eve Se Ono centiy been detected tampering w! aman THE CLOSING BANQUET. wi votaries us—Mal , the 1 ‘ me: | Ceoeteee eis. = prog wy = lace event erect spirit that fell from heaven; and if! speak hope- | The pugnacious burghers rescued or purchas great 5 Ae chine . soldiers, The news says that they were well sup: The grand banguet took p! this ing in the v 1 know that } their Ube fr theit lords and owners. | element thi tthe west half. it bey: the Maagie Co were working in the interests | immense halt of ine Gamer. of Commerce with | fly even Prot Ther i this country—maddening | Stil man struggied on. An “experiment: | Leytna, Hu i gl i ery piled with money and Lieutenant General Siierman acting as president. | the pursuit of 'y Tugs: tinnity of he pany 63, hiro: wire ail orders Bhouid be agiurcende mY, ane Sr aa cot a an a ae elias gat areas | gehen ood eunbuwtet a nangerd, | fi terlgatndWhsret eps | See wines 0 wea. e e energies 0 his land, and p ua . --—— menepanetionpestpeien ‘The Designs of Russia in the East. snk ore fine tinmenge yeables bearing the de- | has been pourcd vt like water at ail tintes and seu. | Anoiner doctor carved out letters on movable plates | in the central imperial system Rewly promulgated. | wren Deiter Casen of Assorted Lie gore for the Dec. 16, 1868, vices of the generals of the armies of Virginia, the | 8on8 Whenever needed to save the country, to relieve | of wood, and lo! the earth was made to trem ne, We Can wait, Minister Schmer! ng. ©. | holidays.” MURPHY & DUNN, 60 Beaver sareut. “see al Of. PETERSBURG, ee eee ee eraind arnt Tonuessee and she one | distress, to. chcourage enterprise and. to foster | anc| the tron-ciad man reeled in his saddle. But thé | too, can walt,” replied the Hungarians, And they | verusement. It t# oMcially stated that the destyna of Russian | ranier of the Guif aqundrou, and momoriais of | science’ and art, (applets) Mas has | poiltical priesthood had reigned too long to surren- | won the warting game. Sebidei id r ~ a amen Ona Aut ar not with he view of | Herat. Aer anon ware Meaauexay te | tat, Maga Haein ou, Tie eu: | ayia Mich gd wae thes nse | she Peary comin an mmpunca tr pe’ | Bex cemetary. gnc na “ ’ o po he ot of conquest, but for the ree Lvevan tee Pretens, ‘commene ad with feservolt ‘of the people's weaith aiid enerosity has lished by the new order of things, but yet religious | rial edict, thoexperlment of centralisn, was acknow- rede e . ncaa aleo, yy purpose of strengthening tho ate treaty with the | , Fra nsropriats remarks, then followed the toasts | beon puttowing, a constant a ae ; pee fr becom ts ae was tot thought of. ay 4 — 4y have res = founded on what bee ba poe tale at Ero sere Bokh: seouri a more ses, th atest food that has fertiltz e land—sprea over | tie . ace; creeds soentatpes fer ibe, Sue preeny ay he abe a | and corulallty he company ‘broke up fate Bowe, tae broadest prarics and Teacuing to the loweus | thay suasiers, Whoever your ruler or master ls lis Federalism was to congist mainly in enigszing the | wade. i,

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