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4 NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 2, 1869.-TRIPLE SHEET, BUROPE. “ENGLAND. five, and of the nineteenth, 233. The surviving pecr- | thonght proper to remove him, notwithstanding the | tention." and will probably die. The public, tt ap- however, bear iivtle comparison tothe MInber services he performed in breaking up swindling pox dig uot suiler thetr daring amusement to be of creations. W! Eari Grey came} into power | “wine rings’ of Cadiz and New York, and during terrapted for so slight ap occurrence, as the dis- in November, 1830, he was called upon to contend | the becember insurrection, which have becn highly | abling or killing of an arena favorite, Shouts for with a which, scarcely without interruption, | complimented by the tate Secretary of state, Mints- | anotiier matador soou calied another miub.e pder- ministration of Lord Bute to thatof the | ister Hale and the people of Cadiz, dmrespective former Lo take his place. = jotiam does not show itself in the ardent love for tue gereounllty of have that pride in | might serve as a barrier the one hand, and, on bat adly educated and governed, and raise as high nour | frat aut pathos " whoare in power. They do 1 them w! otuers have for the Oilicers oi their owa from ta whose ranks £3 Sas some of our very best a See chates. fr goolnans ot oe myer aud so- ‘ancthivinamnentennaeag Duke of Wellington, bad been recruited through | Class or party. bs pblest men, shou assert ow soolat ower claesot, ie lindians,” who compose . , 5 7 i ‘han they have done till now; aud uboveall more | the great mags of the population and really te most The fritish Army Again—Efect of Emlgra- | nearly seventy years of tory rule. Sir Erskine M: General pumie ts a Frenchman, late @ resident of v oy x lar pur. | hopeful fare nation, has b 4 ton on Reerulting—Cost of the Abyssinian | 288 stated that during that gloomy period of English | Staten Island, but he is credited to Rnode Island. GERMANY. im society and tax an etivo part im seoular pur. hopeful part o ene future nation, has been psed as history, from 1790 to 1330, more than 400 peerages | He tect the French army in 1361 to takearms in tho had been ted. The actual number made within | service of the United States. When he arrived he the reign of Geo Ill, was 388, and during the | Could not speak Rogiish, and at present speaxs it Foreign Relations—Ambitious Diplomatists=— seventeen years of Mr, Pitt's Premiership upwards frepeninesiy and writes it indifferently, He knows Constant Fear ef Aggression—Milltary Pre- of 140 new patents were issued. Within two yeara | little or nothing of Spanish, and ty unacquainted parations—Postponement of the King’s the same Minister bad either created or promoted”) with the simplest duties of a consul. His eaucation J Ri red of i thirty-five new peers, A large number of these names | has been entirely miiitary, and his inelinations are journey~Rumo' Resignation Baro: have, however, dropped from the rbli of the House of | totally foreign to commercial and legal transactions. Von Der Heydt—Commercial ExporteArctic eeping them in subjection, Bat they custom, Nv by jaw. ‘Thus in Galicia the principal | show an intel! it Appreciation of the position and bearors of the national idea, the Slavonic movemeut, | @ desire to have the beuellt of tne righis of maa, the national science, are priests, while with us you | which have been pablisued, but not yet enforced. ever see @ priest occupying even & Greek or Lan It is worth whiie (o notice an exampie of ihe char 12 @ secular Now all these | tyranny which extenas into various social matiers. ood = and wholesome results can be ob- ‘or example, the day laborer 13 pald nominally three on) nn infusion on & ares reals, of twelve and a half cents each, daily. ‘Tne Scame of the fresh and healthy lay element into t boss or overseer has double, By Virtus of tis advan- ‘xpedition, abe we Loxpow, Sune 12, 1869. voe American Minister, Mr, Motley, in company wits Mr, Charles Dickens, went, the day before yea- terlay to visit our military establishments at Chat- I donot know whether he tsany judge of “ 7 1 £ an average more than twent; radie | He isa cavalry oiicer; has made an excellent 1 ertaln t every year. ol ons r a 3 count of all he saw it would verify exactly all I It'1s not eurprising that when the whigs found | the first port in Spain and m the moss important | It 18 generally admitted that the result of the | mon with moles by a secularization of the Chureh to | black mall 1s not paid the laborer loses his work; @ certain degree. “Such 18 the aim which the present | and, work being always scarce, this las to be sul Minister o! Public Instruction, Count Diuitry fol- | mitted to, ‘The proprietor allows lus overseer to do stay, is steadily and pertinactously pursuing ever | this, and it is regulurly pracused. Them poor men since his nomination. His double position as Minis- | have believed taat any foreigners would be petier ter aud as Secretary of the Holy Synod gives him | than their countrymen as employers, and 30 Maxt- additional opportunities for exertion, and at the | milian and the intervention got ia and got the lite same time, course, additional tribulations, His | popularity it did get until worse eviis followed in its ministerial ig may be stated in the words, sya- | train. One who talks with these humble people and tematie an cling opposition to monkish en- | is in their contidence wall hear that they have a high themselves in office in 1830, they at once began to | Consulate in Cadiz. Mr. Farrel! nas deiayed nis | French elections is not such as would necessarily o numbers of the rival parties in the House o! Lords. fae sudjoiued. tabular statement hows the | in order to instruct the new Cousul. ’ | teou’s government and that of Prussia, Ail remains umber of creations and promotions in the peerage Cuba 1s about to receive in place of Dulce General | in statu quo ante—that is, an “armed peace” and made by fry minister from Bari Grey's accession to sgeecet oer oaen as —— hes Bue Prk unremitting watchfulness on both sides, However Wer to the ei eee eine ee ene atvega Far Place Bayou. Tox), | Haman being, bat I think hewill And terather hot | strong may be Count Bismarck’a ambition to estab- Be oe te 3 hayo been endeaypring to impress upon your read- 1 this series of letters, The garrison at Chat- is an excellent sample of the whole English y. The various military establishments are very ', Nothing can be better than the manage- of the hospitals, the cleanliness of the bar- tn the “Evel i Island.’? hed | | e under a Hohenzollern dynasty, S, tue feeding of the troops, the teaching of the mid ee cg it $9 | in the Posten ct fecha Sete ienaty. has chet aap sn raeae, ae rain ¢ eroachment, Jnde ire, opinion of the Unived States people and their iste jueer corps and the perfect discipline of - - 2 8 Gj Il | is denounced as untrue, but it so happens that the The black clergy, comprising the whole corps of | tutions; they got this in a S Gres degree from know- 1 T m 0 - t 6 2 18 24! Spanish government believes it now when it istoo | Some day humbling Prussia and its Premier, their | bishops, archbishops metropolitans, can hardly | ing or hearing about the Americans who were nere whoje’ place,” Fure, Seruar | Seay. 0 7 er oe 1 19-33 | Jate, Immense forces, when they are ready, will be-| hands are tied more or less by aged monarchs, just | be expected tamely to surrender what has taken | In 1847, who treated them and governed them much various military administrations is al- ~ ie ? i be ie sent to Cuba, but the éscudo of Castile and Arragon | ag unwilling as old Nap mimself to run the risk of centuries to secure, but the Minister is as deter- | to their satisfaction. most unlimited, and from the commandant | Mr. Gladstone. Ber. Ae tree, is 8 8 | Will be a thing of the past on the first day of January, mined to wrest supreme wer from their Still tue grand question remains how MeXtco is to he ta b body knows panel 1 = —— -| 1870, n Cuba, if the patriots hold out a few months | losing their thrones. Allowing @ certain prejudice | hands as they are determmed to keep it. | emerge from her ancient barbarism. Time wiit 1 to the youngest dram boy everybody Total... 8 € 8 1 188 | longer and the New York Junta do alittle more work | in France agatnst Germany, we believe the maority | Much is done already, however. On the one | doubtiess see tals done, and means are at work, his duty and does tt thoroughly. But, as Isaid be- fore, Uie Chatham garrison {s but an example of the wh yush army, and notwithstandiag the im- mense outlay of money Chatham could not place more than 8,000 fighting men in the fleld to-mor- row, and 3,000 men would hardly suMice to defend its own walls, Ip uesied some weeks ago that the effect of the enormous Irish emigration would soon show itself in a diiculty of getting soldiers, What I then sald hand, married priests are encouraged to | howeverslowly. But it 1s @ pity that the present apply for the places of rectors, teachers and ceueraon: nas not yet seen the reilef their sufferings profeasors in the ecclesiastical seminaries, as well as ave deserved, and sad to think of If over genera. for the places of teachers in secular schools; on the | tions must die without realizing a reasonable degree other hand anybuuy who wishes 11, and is qualified, | of security aud prosperity. unless married to a second wife, which 1s contrary ‘The universally esteemed and long continued Con- to canonic law,.may take orders without any hin- | sul, John Black, Who has resigned from reasons of drance. If the minister stand it iong enough against | ill health and to return home, Is stiil detained here his powerful opponents, who of course emplo} by attacks which prevent his depariure. ‘he con- every means of opea an still more undergroun suisinp isin charge of Mr, John Cripps, appointed warfare against him, we may hope to sve a married | by the Minister pending the arrival of the creden- archbishop, which is uot (ar from @ married metro- | tals of Dr. Skilton, the new appointee. Mr. Cripps, politan, although of the Confederate faith, is now loyal to The lberal party have been in power auring two- / aud less talking. | A desperate effort will be made, | of che intelligent and industrial classes to be in favor thirds of this period, and have created 123 peers, as | BOW Chat American muscle has taken a band in the enanan He iain’ nal Foy im this country. If a against forty on the part of thetr opponents, yet | affair. Until the said isiand has driven the Span- peace, 7 they are attll in a minority in the House of Lords, | ‘ards out of the same or its independence ts acknow- | cordial understanding could be arrived at between It should, however, be explained that aitnougn in | ledged there will be no king proclaimed, because | hotn it would be an enormous profit to the people less than forty years 163 new patents lave been | Serrano and Prim are not able to fight the Cuban who roan under the burden of military estab- Issued, the whole of them were hot absolute addl- | patriots and the republicans of the peninsula. OFF GLORR: BATON v tions to the strength of the peerage. In the majority ‘The Kenosha, Captain Malcom), ta at Barcelona. | lishments. A genius is wanted to allay the of instances the dukes have been recruited trom the | Her officers (maid @ grand entertainment toaselect | fooiisn fear of aggression and put a stop ranks of the marquises, the marquises from the | party of Catalans a snort time ago, which has beca tans ci t deri ft tional: re earis, the earis from the viscounts, and the viscounts praised by the participants aud tue Barceiona | tO pace AAW pg yt HR OME from the barons. Rare instances occur in which a | Press. sources, We noticed in some journal here a con i was verified three days ago. The minimum height | the case of Lara inka Gnesells ee Tho Regoncy Question—The Efforts of Ser. | Complaint respecting tho ineMictent action of the late the restored Union and bas always had the best repu- army has been reduced by an inch, and yet we can- | COuBtcy, but as a rule the rank of baron of the | 4 Spanish Bull Fight. diers. It was there state t not leas than es hehanhaekenncan all for lig energetic and honorable mauagement of the ease Se by which an outsider enters Mapxrp, June 12, 1869, | 4,900 mattresses and beds should be provided ‘The list above given is irrespective of the peers’ The proposal to make General Serrano Regent of for each army corps of the North German Confeae- eldest sons, who haye been called to the upper | the kingdom, though preliminarily accepted by a | Tatton, 80 as to accommodate, in case of war, 48,000 hone Ss Sears a nctnet casein ad majority of the Cortes, will not pass without a vio- | Wounded. The marks of identification to be worn Earl Grey; the is of gilesbury, as Lord Bruce, | lent struggle on the part of the republicans and by every soldier, consisting of a small tin plate, upon in 1339, by Lord Melbourne; the Earl of ome ae their temporary allies, the few Carlists whom the | Which the number of his regiment and company of Deen poo Peeaniees asus, by sir t Robert priest-led inhabitants of the Basque provinces nave | '38tamped, have been ordered; they will be worn Peel; Lord Stanley, of Alderley, as Lord Eddisbury, | sent to represent their fanaticism and bigotry in the | 04 8 String around the neck and under the uniform, in 1848, by Earl Russell: Earl Strafford, as Lo: Parliament. Yesterday no less than three amend. | #24 Will serve forspeedy recogultion of the wounded Strafford, in 1853, by the Earl of Aberdeen: the Earl and killed. The miiitary gazettes teem with such of Tankerville, a3 Lord Ossulston, in 1359, by the | Menta were presented to the resolution by which : rhe Earl of Derby; Earl Fortescue, as Lord Fortescue, in | Serrano was proposed as Regent of the kingdom, | Precious information and descriptions of new 1859, by Viscount Palmerston, and Earl St. Maur, i2 | The frst amendment was moved by the republican, | Beedle guns, submarine torpedoes, &c.; aiready wie calling cor Hem eee aad ot | Soler, and was that instead of a regency there should their columns are filled with the details of extensive Aberdeen was the only patent of peerage conferred | be an executive council of flve persons responsible | Meld mancouvres to take place in the fall of the year. by that nobleman during his tenure of- office, @ | to ghe Cortes. The second amendment, moved by a King William’s journey to his new provinces, eee eer canned, Laon’ young Deputy named Abarzuza, proposed a regency | Which had at first been fixed upon for the 24th ult. i. |. | and deferred until to-day, has again been postponed member of the upper house two years before his | of three persons; and the third, moved by a repubil. to the 13th, ‘This 13 somewhat strange, a3 his Diplomatic Items—Fears of Grants Policy | ‘2 consulate. Even by the most radicai republicans ‘The Disturbnsees on she Wese Const-Weai | ‘ie th nas been oxprestod tuat be might Ue con way to Guaymas—Whoere is Negrete Corie ee eee be given to the, inst; nigcant Od Mexroo, Jane 12, 1969, ary allowed this important consulate th the cap! 3 ofthe leading American republic afier tue United The new Minister, Mr. Nelson, is expected to ar- | Staresand in which we have 30 great au interest, rive in this city to-morrow (Sunday), and will pro- | present and future. Ouly $1,000 15 id, without bably be introduced to President Juarez on Wednes- | Be gees ety hl Be pete als : sitio day, the 16th, by the retiring Minister, Goneral Rose- | formed, should be paid at noarer five uimes that sum. crans, The latter will leave immediately thereafter | It does not appear reasonable that the Consul, Who for Acapulco, ana thence to San Francisco, with nig | 40@3 most of the work, should only have a twelfth * act of What the Minister receives. entire family. ‘The General has been making prepa- | P%* cheering item 18 that some material works are rations for his departure for some days. promscening: ica Sede. Hiden Vera Cruz has ‘The greatest possible excitement prevails, espe- | been openc anta Ana Chauiempuin, thus giv- ing railroad commuutcation from this city to within cially among the foreign population, as to the policy | thirteen miles. of Puebla. This. last section 13 pro- of General Grant toward Mexico, full instructions eee loys ears oar pe or eaten cp for the carrying out of which it ta believed Mr. Nel- en & day aud a balf of diligence will unite 3. ratiroad with that proceeding from Vera Uruz and son hag received from the State Department, The | terminating at Paso del Macho, ‘The railroad aud not find men to fill up the vacancies. Our soldiers are paid better, fed better, lodged better and treated bett t have ever been before. The term of service for @ soldier has been reduced from twenty- one to ten years, The period of service in India has been lessened from fifteen to seven or eight years. We have no war in any part of the world to cause any extraordinary thin- ning of our ranks. We have not increased but have actually decreased the strength of our regi- And yet the vacancies are as Many in pro- and more dificult to Ol up, than they were during the Crimean war. One reason for this ts the ever locreasing unpopularity of thearmy. The mili- tary aristocracy will not move from the beaten track, and so tmprove the service that aman entering tt as a private soldier would have fair hopes of obtain- img rank after a certain number of years. Whether appointment to the woolsack. can named Malsonnave, that there should be one | Majesty has completely Tecoverod from ais Indispo- foreign population look and hope for annexation, oe, Sal ery pom Sip olty ie napa are toe tilted or unfitted for the service, no matter what his regent, removable at the pleasure of the Cortes and | sition, is datly conferring with inisters aud re- | absorption, an American protectorate, or any other | Pleted and the telegrap is to be extended to Uuer- isitors at Babelsberg. It 1s said that navaca. But we do not hear yet oi the promised education or acquirements may be, It 1s rarely indeed SPAIN. responsible for his acts, Solver: Tinie: ‘a change which will insure security to life and capl- | Gompletion of the telegraph to tue luo Grande and otwithstanding the heat of the weather, the ther- | the arrangements for a° festive reception mometer marking thirty-tive dezress (Centigrade) in | have met with opposition in some ano- The New ConstitutionmHow It Was Received | the anaae ne enuerien ree, gromcne, pa ee a Cee ee ue Notte een: cane 4 cere tadize, —" were doom! tsappointment, for none but thir ukunft has heard o! a Fol oa ES Be copie Tee, Regency rate orators occupied the whole session. The re- | Common Council of Hanover to vote any funds for Question—The New Consul—Cuban Affairs. | pypiican orator, Soler, said noting to the point, | the purpose, as thelr exchequer could not afford it, Capiz, June 9, 1869. and conned himself Ae wencrelitles upon the excel- ay pean sonalaerany ire Depron mut lencies of the republican form of government, a | of iis Majesty. The time chosen for p is not a ‘The tast Tight of tie'many prepared t impress the theme which has been very nearly exhausted by | very good one, for great dissatisfaction 1s prevailing people of Cadiz with the virtues of the new constitu- | previous speakers on former occasions, AS he was | jusi now throughout the country in consequence of tion expired last night in the midst of the most { evidently ‘speaking to Buncombe.” neither the | tue proposed increase of taxes. The unpopularity of profound silence anda dead caim. The most ener- | Marked impatience of the Chamber hor the admoni- | this measure was evident from the action of the zs tions of the President prevented him from bestow- | Reichstag on Saturday last, when an additional duty getic preparations had been made to give this | ing upon the audience the whole of his long pre- | on alcohol was discussed and voted against by 202 solemn act—the promulgation of the new constitu- | pared rabies Rodriguez, vay re economy nae iss only bts Moe xf Ea spe ens is omer bike 8 writer and profesor, answered him in the name of 0 jat nature will meet hn the sa y = tion, or, as it has been atyied, the code of Serrano, the Commission, and asser.ed that General Serrano | matns to be seen how Prussia will manage her de- Prim & Co.—a fitting receptton; but a more lament- | hag never for a moment since the revolution given | ficit. Count Bismarck and Baron Von der Heydt able failure has never been witnessed within the | cause to doubt of his intention to identify himself | have again hinted at the necessity of putting the white walls of Cadiz. with the ideas and aspirations of the liberai party, | screw on the Prusstan Diet, which they tireaten to 9 aed and that liberty would run no danger froim his | convene much earlier thaa usual. Rumor spoke of All the ofice-holders were out In full force, ditto | hands. ‘The aincudment was then rejected. It was | the resignation of Baron Von der Heydt, who is con- the army and navy. To give the funcion a re- | tien the tura of young Abarzuza to move his | sidered the scapegoat of his colleagues, A r amendment in favor of a triumvirate, which he sald An anecdote 1s toid of Baron Von Rothschild, also spectable appearance the alcaldes of the villages i : he considered as i¢s3 dangerou3 than deliv- | a meaber of the Reichstag, who maintained that an and towas in this province were invited, the Com- | ering the country iato the hands of a mil- | eficient and comm i saul Minister of Finaace was mon Council and the foreign consuls. The latter owes deol or cargo Sontectone. He bees ne irk = res eee 3, ea enter juto = @ prolix history of — tie eing asked what effect the withdrawal of Baron body have a horror of civic powwows In Spain, be- | election of General Espartero as Regent 1 1841, pre- | Von der Heydt would have upon the government he cause they are generally treated as intruders and | vious to which there had been three months of agi- | revlied:—“Pooh! It will be no more to Bismarck have no particular place assigned them. However, esa eer ot en pedi to Oy an aOe, oe ITE) than the discharge of my first teller would be to amendment rejecied by a large majority. The Dep- | me ! they resolved to have a meeting before they decided | yey fasonnave then moved his amendment, aud | ‘The exports of merchandise to the Unitea States to take partin the ceremony. All were in favor of | declared that the aim of hiaself and companions tn | for the year 1868, a3 given by the consular report of turning out except the Austrian Consul, who, re- pethenis foeware ee amendments was S delay | Uhis city, fall elated OC Pes Cs in ue Votation of the Regency of Serrano as long us | previous years. Tis applies especially to woollen membering a bungling affair tn 1962, declined to | po:sinie, whiie the affairs of France were developing | goods, and is owing, no doubt, to tne high tarif and haveanything to do with the demonstration. The | themseives. He upbraided the governmeat for cheir | increased home manufacture. The amount of ex- English and Russian Consuls did not appear, but the | not bein, A] a nd Bains, and aoe soning Bk ae goods ae ~ the erat ome oice in crown of Spain to go a begging. He was replied to Was 5,251,000 thalers, in 1867 only 3,660,000 French andAmerican attended and agreed todon thelr | }y yorrera, who said that once an energetic Kegeat | thalers, and last yeur it had’diminished to 2,830,000 uniforms, in compliance with the request of the | established, aud the principle of autuority «uly | thalers. Woollen cloth, which in 1867 was exported Governor and as atoken of their kind feeling towards | Seated, there would he no want of candidates TOR Ens | $0 the igure of 1,483,001 has come down to. 74,000, , 4 " crown. 8 essen vernmeut o! and weolien shawls from },000 to 114,000 thaiers— the government for the time being. ‘Considerable | ty. pation should be carried on, which tt would be | a failing off of neatjy ity per cent. This benetit to the speculation was indulged in as tothe probable ap- | under the auspices of a man of taleut and iniczrity | United States resutts in a corresponding Joss to Ger- pearance of the American Consu!. He, of course, es ba: nl A no nmthocy, ot is ie ee man Pia .. come ~ ayy channeis, " ‘ had withdrawn, jority, Who had kept tieir | one of which tt has found in the Asiatic coastin responded to the Governor's invitation, and appeared | 471,” thought that they migit carry the ameud- | trade. ‘It 1s stated from Singapore by the Notte ip his uniform, that of an American military oMcer. | ment by surprise, and proposed that the votation | German Consul that next to England the heaviest The procession assembled in the Governor's house | shétia ve goninal, There resulted, however, ama- | commerce is transacted by Germans, and that the at two o'clock P.M. and perambulated about two- | Jotity azainst 3 AMeidnseat of Tek ts 46, bY Rreat | tonnage deionging to them in the Singapore, Siam, ~ ie 7 exertions of the whippers-in. To-day it wili be the | China, Cochin-Cliina, Japan, Batavia, Manila and thinds of the city. The spectators were very numer- | turn of liberal union people to present their amend- | Sumatra trafic finks equal with that of British ous. Each roof—azotea—and balcony had a fair men bdo aeentcd as Habe Reid edb of stipping. pinto Vero! brad ere? a oon “the c ‘adiz jolving the Assembly, leaving it to dissolve by its | business in those seas, in spite of dangerous naviga- share of “the charming girls of Cadiz,” and the side- | Own autuority after voulng tie estimates, tion, monsooas and pirates, which Leve driven off walks were blocked up in many places by the silent The public has seea with disgust that the govern- | the Spanish, Swedish aud Austrian fags. Singapore hundreds who looked and gaped and held their | ment, tar from diminishing the expenses of.the War | scems to be the great emportum where splendid peace. Arriving In the plaza San Antonio, the con- rtment, 1s daly maxing new batches of colo- | freight charters can alwi be had, and American sular body, alcaldes, &c., ascendéd the*platform, brigadiers and generals, The Gazette of yester- | shipping interest ought noo neglect this port which had been hastily erected the previous evening. | Gay contained the appointment of tiree lieutenant A meeting was held the night before last by the The secretary of the Governor read the constitution, | generals (Cerrino, Pulido and Milans del Bosch), a | committee of the North Polar Expedition, under In the midst of his labor a battalion of infantry en- | Imajor general (Moriones), six brigadiers (Enrique | Captain Koldeway, who reports that everything wiil tered the square and the few hundred persons as- | Serrano, Laguncro, Vailaion, Cuervo, Palacios aud | we ready for starting on the 7ta or 10th of vune. The sembied near the platform skedaddied to a safe dis- | Merelo). Ail tuese officers had suffered exile or im- | fitting out of the tender Hansats so complete that, tauce. This Movement was the most unfortunate, | Drisonment during the reign of Isabel de Bourbon, if required, this vessel can winter at the Greenland because it gave the promulgation a very warlike ‘Tue otiicial rojoicings tor the promulgation of the | coast and operate mdependently of the Germania, appearance. The housetops and balconies were | constitution have attracted crowds of people from | The captain of the Hausa, Mr. Hegemann, is well crowded, vut the attendance in the plaza was poor | the provinces to the great pleasure of the Madrid | experienced in Arctic navigation, and has @ fine tndeed, and the vivas were confined to the uniformed | trades people, who see consumption of their goods | reputation among the Amermwan whalers at Hono- entiemen in the vicinity of the platform aud the | terribly diminished by the exodus of the aristocracy | lulu, ‘Two astronomers, Messrs, Borson and Cope- fe endents of the Governor. to France, there being now scarcely a family of ave- | land, join the expedition, and will be provided with Rte the secretary had read the new constitution | rage weaith but has left Madrid im searca of cool | a Bessel apparatus, for degree measuring, and the the Governor inade a speech. He was greeted by | air. The multitudes who have arrived from the | pendulum instruments. The crew consists of a the aforesaid vivas and one “Death tothe Republic; | neighborhood tu witness the inauguration of the | select body of men, each of whom is well qualified but a dozen “Viva la Republica’ was the response, | Nationa! Pantheon and the processional carrying of | and anxious to go ou the expedition. I, was not The people in general remained very decorous and | the illustrious dead to their resting piaces of honor | dificult to pick out good men, on account of che eloquently silent, because the battalions of Spain | in the colossal church of St, Fraucisco will be disap- | numerous applicaate from all parts of the seacoast. were at hand, and the history of the country con- Ponsa adecree m this day's Gazette adjourns | In fine, everything ia well, with the exception of the tains too many tragic episodes which were inaugu- ne ceremony wutil the 20th inst., for, with the usual | necessary funds, which are as yet insufficient to rated at the conclusion of funciones, Prudence, | procrastiuation of Spaniards, the Executive has not | cover expenses, though this is not to be a detriment therefore, told them to stay away, or if present to | oven able to got everything peady for vo-morrow. to the expedition. Baron Von Gerolt, Prussian abstain from any kind of dissattsfaction. The ma- | While the monarciists remain supine and reliant | Miniater at Washington, but now on a visit here, jority of the citizens bt Cadiz are repudlicans. Trey | upon the action of the government the repubitcans | has been cordially welcomed by Hon. G. Bancroft. do not beileve in the new constitution, because they | are displaying the gpeavest activity in propagating | In retura the Baron gave a splendid dinner to the know that such instramen‘s have no binding force | their dociriues. Scarcely a village but hus its re- | American Minister, which was attended by macy in Spain: because they remember the perjury of | pubiican oub; and what is remarkable, in many in- | members of the Corps Diplomatic; also by Count Ferdinand VII,, the villany of Maria Cristina | stances within my own personal knowledge, they are | Alcantara and Baron Vou Magnus, ltormerly at and the carelessness of Isabella. Constitutions | presiaed over by the lower orders of the clergy, some | Mexico. in Spain are like dicera’ oaths—taken only to | of whom have not hesitated to inculcate the wildest be broken, It is not @ rigmarole of fine | socialist doctrines. The republican chiels—such as RUSSIA. chapters and well arranged sections they need, but | Garrido, Tiguwas and Castelas—repudiate these doc- “i a thorough, radical clesaing out of the whole con- trines, thought they s180 int protty broadly at some nnn cera of crown and bauble. When the system that {| moditications of jand-ownersi\p, stating that the rr 7 hag impoverished the land is dead and buried be. | land, more espectally in Andalusia, was given to the Diflerences te the, Chane aad Ete Onneee® neath the mountain of the people's hatred @ const- | grandees on condition that they should detend the Wincks and Whites. ‘ tution may be acceptable, he — then pens of a from = pe ~Nepnte it was een as ST. PETERSBURG, June 2, 1869, last Sunday may be repeated ad li)ifum, and no one and that now their tenure no longer avaiable. as I have hinted more than once that there isa will be gullible enough to believe in the new bora | there are no Moors in Spain to defend it irom. The Constitution. = sale of the immense, til-cultivatea lands belonging | Struggle gotng on at present among the higher church The people of — ee es wo oa See ee Patan oe smack | authorities which may possibly end in soine very un- the republicans, the neos, or old monarchists, an very strongly of socialism, ts one of e tuemes . the progressive democratic Serrano-Prim loyalists, | fended by the republicans of the more advanced capperes and seein See, Ton tees eee The former abstalsed from taking part inthede- | kind, and has so alarmed the absentee land- | that there has always existed a certain antagonism monewration be ‘ause they do * believe In any om fe ot ty Ms aoe aoe had iene between our white clergy (married, priests) and stitution that recognizes a king or queen; the | with tue Carlist pretender @ crown and offered | pack clergy (unmarried, monks). The: iatter, un- 8 horror of insurrectior their services on condition of his f 4 ‘4 scoent, from, 8 De ‘a ey ri rena 4 | shackled by family cares, and having nothing to at- sense of profound loyalty to the immaculate lady tend to but their ambitious views, have managed to tal and progress to the country. The Mexican peo- e teas there with the American lines aud Liose of ple are anxious, and will most jealously watch the fe world. ‘Tue discussion of the rumored loan to Mexico and behavior of Mr. Nelsop and any outcroppings of | gale or mortgage of Sonora, &c,, silil causes much Grant’s Mexican policy. Several parties recently | excitement, and tt is said chat the late Consul Brink, arrested charged with conspiring against the Mexi- | now in Vera Cruz, brings some documents bearing can Treasury, making up bogus Claims, &c., togo | thereon, although nothing is really known, ‘the before the Commission in Washington, are in prison, | newspapers talk against aay such transaction with held for trial and allowed to communiate with nd | the United States; but the people in private would one. Some prominent Americans charged with | not object, especially af the American mouoy is to complicity are being looked after. be spread over this very necessitous ground. We ‘she Monitor tee pele “Mr. Brink, who shall see what Mr. Nelson brings aud what rellet went to the United States as rer of despatches { General Grant may give; for itis generally thought for General Rosecrans to his government, in regard | his valent will lelp here also, to the ae oss patho se Oe Leper a at seems, has returned in the steamer which has just ona arrived at Vera Cruz from New York. Although ths NAVAL N:ELLIG. NCE, eet fea bee poet Fee uper i false, itis very probable that between the said gentleman and our kovernmient somo explanations "must be maue in | Advices from Yokohama, Japan, dated May %, order to ceed up ae matter upon which the Ameri- | report that the flag slip Piscataqu, the Ashuelot, can press has spoken. re Last nigut’s telegram from Guadalajarainforms us ee ees raps kaye wer ee: that Lozada has ordered that the Indiaus may take | Vousing at Nagasaki. The Uuadiita wa3 crutsing possession of their lands (‘arms, &c.).. So landed | along the southern coast of China, and the Monocacy property disappears in Tepic. Also that alarming ama, rumors were being circulated on the coast in regard wae p Darina es pee on: ee to the movements of Piacido Vega. The Aroostook was at Hakodadi. ol nun Aer mgs Pera oe bree pegs Bevel The following changes had been made:—Lieuten- af ilroad route to Guayms, and congratulates the country upon the | Sruerga to tdaho. iicuseuadt. 4 My Gacduge dee PiNugrete, the geuius of disorder and rebellion, 1s | (@cved, from Idaho to Mouocacy, | Ensign BW. fying round at every point where there 1s a chance ety Matoey Soin Guida: 300 ene eee. to hutch a conspiracy. ‘The periodicals and ietiers | Bably and Alfred Force detacued from Iroquols, all at tho same time announce hit to be in the neigh. | odered to Idaho. Kusign F. H. Paine detached from 5 " M Monocacy. Busigns T. F, borhood of Querétaro, at Toluca, in the Sierra, and Iroquois and ordered to | in this city. Un last Stouday it was intimated tha, | Metgs and H. G. 0. Colby detached from Fiscataqas he was hatching a conspiracy in calle San Hipdlito, ge begeca Re a ied iar oper rast Whereupon the police valiantly searched the houses steamer. Acting Second Assisiant Engineer Joho of that vicinity, giving sudicient warning to each Miller detached from Unadilla and ordered to Pisca- house, to the redoubtable rebel, to euabie him to taqua. Acting Third Assistant Engineer W. & escape, | Ina fonda they founda “hat,” which is | Kynminaua detached and ordered home. i believed to have been the property of tue great pro- nunciado, This was triumphantly marched oif be- tween # doubie tie, as though the guard were ap- OOKL prehensive of its being galvanized into a live head. ae mp geie as Negrete 18 @ man of extremes—that is, he goes to tne : extreme of despotism and to the other end of liberty; The Algonquin. be is extremely popular, and unpopular to an ex- treme. One half of the community says he is ‘the Ss. tning of beanky see joy forever.” So gees: the only real military man in Mexico; the other ex- | Old saying, and judging from past and present expe- treme is, that he is’ tue “grandest rascal in the re- | rience the Algonquin is a “thing” which the mie.” sah ih § United States Government will enjoy forever as per- Foreign and Native Public Opinion—Testi- | 80nal property. The Navy Department, on the 12th mony of the Press—Official Responsibility— | inst., promulgated the announcement that the side- Condition of the Laborer=The Olid and New | Wheel steamer Algonquin, of 974 tons, old measure- United States Consuls—Railroads. ment, would be o@red for sale at public auction at Ciry of Mexico, June 13, 1869. the Brooklyn Navy Yard, at 12 M. on the 26th day of He who looks upon the present state of Mextco, | June. This notice had the effect of attracting to the it he has any philanthropic feelings and any know- | Place of sale on Saturday qbout six shipping mer- ledge of better things elsewhere, can not avoid an | chants, which small assemblage formed the group intense sorrow at what he sees and hears, and an | gathered about the auctioneer, who mounted ardent desire that orser and peace should be given | @ pile of lumber near the Receiving Storehouse ,at after so long @ period of tyranny and violence, | the Navy Yard, at the hour appointed. This func Foreigners have been apt to lay the blame on tne | tionary began by stating that the hull, spara, anchors, two boats and other appurtenances belo! Mexican people, and they still declare that they are | eto the United states pes net algonquin yer A incapable of forming good institutions, The Mexi- | onered for sale; that sne was & new Vessel, and in can people themse!ves now generally charge the | excellent condiuon, to which fact Captain Strong— government with the fault, in not protecting them, phe So Ae Ege ar atte Teme erernarng a in baving its favorites ouly in office, with large sala- | tioneer by stating, for the infurmation of the party, ries or with several salaries each man, with tmped- | that he knew nothing about the vessel, but he of sumed that the gentlemen inte! in the sale ing the free election of the oficers and representa- | gxamined her before nealiegs Wares ‘This was tives who are to be elected by the people; and they slight drawback to the auctioneer, who then say that the constitution and guarantees are only so | Coutunued—tnat the terms of the sale were $10,000 muéh was te paper from not being enforced, h soldier obtains a commission. And « v jon as the working classes get better and bev educated they avoid enlisting in the service. This accounts in a great measure for the paucity of recruits that we can obtain in England. DBULWw1s Hot the sole reason, nor will tt account for why Irishmen, who used to form two-thirds of our line regiments, do not enlist, But I will tell you what does account for it. Within the last twenty days 10,000 strong, able bodied mechanics and agricultural laborers, a large portion of the very pith and marrow of England and Ireland, have emigrated from Liverpool and from Queenstown for your country; and although they cannot be prevailed upon to shoulder a musket on this side of the Atian- here ts lite Goubs that they woulda make ex- petlent soldiers if called upon by your country. ‘The worst feature, that 1s to say the worst feature for us, wilh reapect to this emigration, is the bitter . hatred to everything Engish that these emigrants carry with them to America, It was not so in for- . Im those days an emigrant often left his 4 i with a sort of undefined intention of re- turning thereto, or at any rate of benefiting more or less the relations he was leaving behind him when he should have acquired @ position in the land of his adoption. But now even Eng- Mshmen leave the country with the conviction that prosperity and advancement are to them ail but forbidden, and that tt 13 onty those who have 1c birth that can hope to get on nd. I need hardly teil you how far more this feeling 1s in Irishmen, and that they heir country with pot only an avowed and a hatred of Engiand, but with a frm in- to return some day as the armed enemy of the English government. One of the most extraor- dipary ected with our army at present ts the uncerta! of its future. On Thursday last there Was a detvate in the House of Commons on the subject of an army reserve. There was a great deal of sense, but a vast deal more nonsense, talked on the occasion, Bud any foreigner letening to the dts: cussion might have imagined without much didi- culty that he was in the legislative assembly of a kingdom that had only just sprung into existence, instead of in the time-honored House of Commons of the British empire, The debate was inau: gurate? by Lord Elcho, who since the volun- teer movecent began has always been a prominent member of that force. But the most hotabie opinion started, which ts one that begins, strange to say. to find advocates here in England, ts that we should revert to the old system of the baliot, or, in other Words, that we should adopt tn tnis country the conscription for recruits which we have 80 much and so long condemned as a French institu- tion. The outline of this new idea, icy is only now leg to be agitated tn England, 18 “that in every parish there should be held every year @ ballot of ail men ofall ranks of life, ween the ages of efghtcen aul thirty, and that those who draw certain numbers should be liable, if calted upon, to serve seven years lu the army and seven years in the re- serve. This scheme, ti it could be carried out, would no doubt be a fair aud equitable mode of filling our ranks; and if the nation could be imbued with the idea that the baiiot woud be honorably and honestly carried out, we have no doubt that it wowld .become very popular. But What could be carried out honestiy—or rater what gould be carried out without unfair ness in England? What between the aristocracy of ealth and the aristocracy of family the conscrip- tion in Mis county would simply become a gigantic job, of which the fich would get all the profits and the poor ail theknocks. And this itis that makes every one look upon the scheme as impossible to be carried out. "You no doubt remember the result of the Abys- sintan war, of which we were so proud a year or two ago, And there is no douvt tuat, so far as the troops are concerned, the expedition was @ most to our arms in every way. Not so, financial arrangements connected with We paid our first httle bill, amounting to some $50,006,000, without much grumbling; but now we find there is a supplementary bill te be paid Amounting to from $10,000,000 to $15,000,000; amd, AS Usual, LOW that the Lorse is stolen we are begin- Bing to lock the stable door. An inquiry is now ordered into how this enormous expenditure was Incurred; but 1 doubt very much wheiner any good Weise fy trou the inquiry. t eh the expedition was first set on foot a num- ber of young olticers were selected from the English army to rua ali over Asia Minor, parts of Arabia, Palestine and Egypt to purchase mities, oxen, coro, firewood and every Kind of supply that the hoa could possibly want. These officers were selected, not on account of any particular fitness for their but simply because they were officers and did to the British army. They knew nothing of untries they were sent imto, nothing of the languages spoken in those countries, and still less, if possible, of business or the rudiments of Mnancial arrangements. As @ matter of cow they had to deal with the most knowing people on the face of the earth, Auimals worth four pounds were bought tor forty pounds; grain worth a dollar a measure was sold them for five dollars; the horses they and £150 were not worth as many ywhere they were met by well or- gauized associations of natives determined to make the British government pay through the nose for everything they wanted. This payment, by no means & pleasant process at any time, haa pow money or arfstocra’ i deposit on the day of sale and the remainder with three days, and then begun with “How much am What ts certain is that this country, 80 favored by | offered, gentlemen? $40,000 shall I say Be peo nature, 13 stilt sdffering sorely from some cause, | Sail 80. | “$35,000 ? $30,000? who says Which must be attributed to the ignorance, errors or | BODOAY sald anyiiing. | the sip, injustice of somebody. The people are probably | emphatically added the crier. $20, originally no better or worse than others. When | 888 $15,000?" Some one noddei educated and moralized it is abundantly clear tiat alte etn 4 bp pa ge none better are needed for citizens or friends. When | hill nrtarye but the ahi grt was ‘ eo K 4 ignorant, vicious and bratailzed they are dangerous, | eventually to $20,009, and then in sums ot a 4 20,800, at which latter figure, being nearly @x- terrible and the toois of the positively petnicious rete) in breath, the auctioneer Kaocked down and wicke‘ indivi duais who belong to the privileged | “Mr. Dickinson's failure to the United States gov- and so-called superior classes, which the ancient | ernment,” no sale being effected. This vessel, tt despotic laws allowed and which the so-cailed repub- | Wil! be remembered, the one which experiment- lic Bull tolerates, either from not being ready yet to | ed with the Dickinson engines against the ‘orbes en- change them for the mstitutions of free nations, or, | €es, with which the Winooski Was run during the aa tue opposition to government say, because tne | Celebrated trial in Long Island Sound in January, rulers do not want to i the people as yet too | 1500. Siuce then she has been lying in ordiuary at much power. Any pettifogging lawyer has great | the navy yard. power Cppteee any one who 1s not in that ring, and horrible injustice is the consequence. The citt- French Men wen has no defence except in the costiy way ofem- | The French imperial navy brig-of-war Obligado, og og Ne “King te “ which arrived at the Brookiyn Navy Yard in com- very heart, only being pronounced, aud their mean- pany with the school snip Jean Bart on Monday yr po AAR poe jin last, 18 now lying off the buoy there. Sho met the 0 y I—in for threatening danger (o tnnocent persons, The bold latter vessel at Martinique, W. I., and escorted her and wicked offenders, nevertheiess, still ‘ravage the | to New York, taking on board squad of the mid- country, geeraring confidence, and, of coursa pa- | Shipmen for instruction and perfection in drill aud ey Noy é, indi ‘and commerce, seamanship, Her officers are as follows:— follor War. Who is now in Paris, and a desire to keep the balance | because they fondiy ppeieve iat ‘the firm estab the blessed oll of coronation for the legitimate | ment of the monarchy wil etr beat protectio Bats, and not “for such profaue fellows as Montpen- | there are mavy who have openly deci din favor draw to themselves pretty well the supremacy in sier, the Kiug of Portugal or the Duke of Wechingera- | of the permanent regency or even ae ip of Gene- | every line. Thus it isa thing understood once for tenhaz—the latter did take t in the syncion it as any members the English | all that none but monks shall reach the highest dig- parely to preserve poe mie = lew get ae the Cromweil to assume the crown of | nities of the church, and be bishops, ‘archbisbops and remind us 0 — NT aes eage metropolitans, although there is no ocanonic law 4 rate, tickled with a straw. repens 4 aaa Whatever to that effect, Inteod, the ase 1s so gone- to be met—or rather it has be met and To give greater éclat to the affair the national fi ‘Captain—Landolte. is now being discussed. It i» the old story | was Sispl ed from the respective fagstams eac raland so ancient that most of the Russians them- | of yesterday, ‘The first is extracted from a paper of | Lieulenants—Hardy, Dorlodot, Peyronton. of the Crimean war over again, and tne | day, the troops wore furnished @ ratign of cheer, selves, if not specially instructed in church matters, | Guadalajara, snd gives an ides of the public security | Surgeon—Zan forerunner of Ww. we might expect if ever we go | wine and ordered to put on thelr “: ay clothes, believe it to bea law, just as moss Catholics not in the interior, ‘The second may serve aa a waruing Her crew numbers avout 100 men, Hor pavers cna. to war ou a iarger scale, Let it be remembered that | and she windows of the barracks and Governor's resi- erag- | ge a tnagine the 008 ot to Americane who have Mexican bonds:— gists of four beams Pieces. She i i 8 Old= the actual fopye that marched up to Magdala was | dence were “illuminated.” The latter part has been | gig which Spanish republicans believe about to take | “Tous in ecology, imagt ibacy bring nows of robberies, of kidnap. | {ashioned twenty-fourgun, brige .. Rod eet not only numefically very amali, but that, a8 aFrench | the laugh of the city, Imagme @ dozen of 60 of blue place in France, they should immediately take mea- | clergy to bea dogma of the Catholic Charch, and and of assassinations. What will th ign nations | Navy, A rot won staff officer who accompanied the force described it, | aud green tumblers Milled with @ kind of thick OM | fures to overthrow monarchy in Spain. In the would have some trouble in believing that Monsieur | *! And orem yee will wepe-we who are the ones | Present (aw doo an veasol of instruct lines the men were undergoing very great privations | upon which is placed @ nor. wick. Ignite i] Meantime the Duke of Moutpensier cannot resign | 16 Curé or 11 Signor Abbate have as good @ right to we ail say boat shore ste tany who are robbed, that there ieconnaet ey "the Obiigado will remain bere the ¢ Clmpaiga there wae not ing in the way of ee: find. extinguls en. tt “iurengers’ would ‘take toe | Ramses te renounce Se = eres i se family joys and tribulations as themselves. One of rie pro kiencupes teat there ore mauy who areas- aout her more @ consort us ready for sea. ie _ rl ury and bafoly anything in the way of comfort to be | aifait to be a wake on a gp tT ig J oe ML A iy joys gagetnated, and that we stall make @ novena (prayers for nine BARS, I BO here was no | found in the camp, and yet we have to pay this | sgn of Joy—nothing but a dickering row of lights of iy, a eeaitlen Ssonfoeth fab wer ctratioton the clovergst things tho black clergy have done for mali " ure enormous sum (or punisuing King Tueodore of Abys | that constantly demanded the atvent soldier, ‘The themselves is thelr having appropriated tq them- ‘that we Mexicans cannot find une. ‘Tuesday sige 0 : ing King of aby: Who, very oiten, 1ost his patience and cigarette in bis the Of the Conremondencia—is paid” organ’. | solves the exclusive right to educate the white ni tesierday, an we hare been sagured, the Spaniard and | during yeiich time ane will undergo & protiy wor. ing acircumsteuce whlch came to my knowiedge | niles x deride, thie, pretended ,guaiiy,, amerting that | clergy, which, as You perhaps know, forms some. | firlg purnapety varia Cnregsins neat Mento; | Grupa truck to W preparatory to, her tue other day. “There is a book, written by Major e regency ts tho question of the hour, but st | Be,has never Caren, Ott teere ctaoeniP Frocen | thing of a caste, owing to the priests’ way of inter- | Ofte ainnen ny nena en Breen by the Ju on her cruise, Her officers olaim to have General Upton, of the United States Army, catlod “System of yo Tactics.” This work has been most favorabiy criticised by military men in this country, and I have reason to know is likely to form the foundation of a new system of drill for the me lish infantry. Whe' the source from which it je taken will be acknowledged is another matter, pr I bardly think it will be etther ignored or ented. omcers ‘most favorably lmpressed with thei The same journal of the 6th inst. publishea the je of New York and vici omMecial order of ~~ — Bernal, Qrugnted with the scenery with waicl ‘Totuca, ee era eta mrcerereen Frven Smip at Savannan.—<Acting ret after. nue Bureau might ta ‘This opposition organ entities the piece: joatth 0 “The 1s travelling rapidly towards ite Felicity.” the N of ~~ ass dices Ga ees stcecet | sae et ‘The desiring to as much aa possible eetstees tt Gigatinge wes avin: bers te ment. If ‘oy Ubirty per cent ta collected, \eipriecuseent Of afteon dayn; for more than tnirty and lous than sixty. ousting faye: dt is (wo months eantavalt not be celieeisa | ond Tate aad ou wilt arrest {ust to be puniehed for the fault of nou com. | destitute cond ‘ecessar} ‘Th bas alwi finds few supporters outside of the friends of Ser- ry nt and as much to tsa Sn" ie tau afar gpovee | Peau aan ag te Btn age | MATING NG oo San ee aa Proof of ne uncertainty, of 8, king remetning Poona et Bpuid is delfuing to a republicn | having tt all thetr own way, no layman could take — govt ,. ders, unieas he had been educated in one ol that one were inaugurated arte There are wos conte stieution i, sathoritieg vine permis ae. special ecclesiastical schools called semi 04 or a rsons here who sw that regency ts to be seminarie: ~ Loads tate voatane | eco, ecvoweny sie, tied | eaten aver genni ae crate like Serrano, who is @ duke; Prim, who 1s 9 | Save qigo deaared ihomecives in favor of ths eee teachers 3, Tuvore; ait are mouke. ‘ vis, and Topete, who has proclaimed his aver- | ji." wiias, the Captain if everybody could not take priestly or- jon republic. because he wished ‘and had quaii- So long as the regency lasts there will be no fignt PS Op Spy Soot’ tnc mes ‘by the ubonssaty st ir treatment nity, and to be h it abounds The House of Lords, {From the London Daily News.) The House of Lords, as at present constituted, consists of about 460 members, of whom fifteen are minors. Deducting the Lrish and the Scotch repre-* ye td Peers and the prelates the number of hot a Wn typrd is 259, and of these the lai Ing, because the republicans have resolved not to cae araw the sword until the King of Queen be instal. | Share oo led, When that happy time comes look out fora aaeiteeted war to the knife and the same to the hilt, The fac- | t9: Nouvilas tion then Wii! have to take sides, it ry e ly might become a monk’any at these prociivities, and | he pleased, from the Ay of Cer ey superseded, very death, Nor is wedlock an e to in rid do not tn general troudie them- | vocation, A married man may the creations of the present century. BA i Tarone mo rere to the wets sun: rs teh op wt gn . o i selves ww err ban it on ge ety fans am Pg: my gran | ay’ with the by Going put into the service of the yn ion de Moattort ari 0! jces- e new Consul, General ir 5 ol v- | occasions. I TY) ater leave the decendants of turee only now | airy famé, has arrived. I was present wi attractions for and that of Tast Sunday’ which clear that s could not be allo’ Ao ..4 order must be oy Woo: | We.cnce dol. fea, having one They are Lords Hastings, | cailed wo seb the present Consul, Mr. Farrell. , The | was presided over by Kivero, the Alcalde of the city, | this ra eee pain of showing too dec: ‘a lean. we ho eee tas the & ay Rot be | shi sD AMaae a is lac roo | HeeutaQinion"sathaneg a’ tamara | BANA hah’ a teobashy ota stat | taer'waea crate drt tna wherever | fhe cle, cinagpeedane and Livery hin jatier from 1 e quietly, wel e@ bear ieir chatacter, of on ul ol ol a rviving peerages, Which are creations of | to resi Stating that he did not apply for the place; bull killing. At the bull fight alluded to a terrible | celibate c! takes the A moment | 18 appended to all oficial documents to iudicate that W they etykoate from the nal constitutional aud in presqat liberal government, What tmust bo tue ant olixracter of the collectors Who enter under such | teen to preven! He Téualties? feports the disease as of the maliguaas typ9.—Se ‘The truth probably ts that this tga good people im | vannah Republican, wd per hi that he asked General Grant for Frenen con feet ted Vy The Tato, @ ‘clean limbed | when oxy is growing dally in importance, and was handed a commission for Cadiz; that he | matador” or first Swordman, now the first of the | when # umion with the hi it Churches ts as not compttent, Ac.; but Mr. Farrel told him | bull fighter guild since the death of Cuch: who | contemplated, when even from midst of the that be intended to leave on the ist July, because he | for his skill was named the “maestro” or ster, | Catholic some hopeful looks are turned towards th rteenth century, are four, viz., the baronies gt Camoys, Cilnton, Dacre and Witlo he peerages of the fifteenth century now repre. sented ace seven; of the sixteenth, twelve; of we seventemth, tlurty-lve; of the eighteenth, ninety. cvuld not live om the salary, and aa the government by what called @ ‘nil of in- | tt is particularly desirame to everthing thal