The New York Herald Newspaper, August 3, 1869, Page 4

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4 NEW YORK IERALD, TUBSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1869—TRIPLE SHEET. EUROPE. aystem iles*to-aay, as in the times of Cromwell, a Jeaiousy, suspicion and hatred between the widel separated classes of society tht is Iraught wi danger to the peace of the country. It true the declaration of an excited peer tha’ in certain events, weary, and, true to his natare, he has juat as much pity for them as the cock for the earthworm. Dy be Domariea 2 iaule, @ lame cow sd In a subsequent issue of the same journal the ver. | MAY who together batim report comes in for the following comment:— pn MA country to discharge, and im resisting the de- mands ‘gf tue goverument tuey were not esis! the verdict of the country or the deci- Blous Of the Couiu0ns, but the will of a single individual. Their jordships had exuausted all does’ we Mc) Grant Dum on Friday al aaa, ‘tae coutrury, it Bays, ve Mr. Graut Duis uotion toat Russian conquest has reached its limit to be eu- tirely erroneous. We will say at once we believe should pared fers c . ‘The full report from the Naw Yor HERALD, as just | their thickets and their groves; for peasants the at generation will see not only Samarcan4, ny ble beast A ag eaten forte aerisive gave war’) me a Craps cog by hag traui |, shows still che nesdteoa ii down the trees for frewvod, "ihe ‘ay waste toeir | but the whole of tne Knanagigof Kookaa, Bokhara The Debate on the Irish Church Bill | indgnter ‘ana “eueersy but woo remark nevertheless | pects of ths iris Church, Dut tase own dignity humor of' the Bund Chancellor in his sarcastic, property that they may live, for ‘he means to livo.| and Kaiva added to the empire of the Gar, aad rr) Before the Lords. Hoblitty that ‘a. conmict. may “arwe in’ which | “he Wickes eh Condon ha i ovscure regions of Chinese Turkisten which lie north obility that @ conflict. may arse im which wil be look wing protested it | tives, Having been expressly notuled by the corre- | tne picture of want and muery, solitary and d! A ation of Church property, Lord Gaay- a @, roads 16 they called upon to Noose secu! spondens that he would “speak in ? pe well | and nothing ts leit for the tenants of he of our dependeucy of Cashmere, it 13 01 n0 use to between: ane “~~ enumonee power — ihre st ae Sibik lorie in reply, and chaspo- Koow Sp cxpostoiauens: were to tne | seek shelter ee they nuns any ig cucety abut C3 eyes to the future; is me netiar fe Sagadaue leploradi sudden debate | teriz language ‘applied erica hosannahs thas in other more industrious count take ‘ by'vera Granville with a declarati font that he could peda as odensive, and the charges ‘against Be this as Re mag, the Count knew well why he | lighten the labors of the bast inevitable. When civilization comes iu contact spoke to us as he sponge a ig of what pod fg or | merce at other raai may say upon the matter, We are now ina position’ 10 give you the full | Weeks that has caused me to write this letter. contents of that important document, the circular | have waited tw: despatch of Prince Hohenlohe on the sudject of the | Upon finance, besides ' listeniog Ecumenical Council, it is daved Munich, Aprily, | speakers, to see whether there Was one among tle addressed to Bavaria’s foreign diplomatists, and hag | Choseo men of Spain who possessed acumen enouzh been held back untu now. to discuss the real cause of the distress of their ie aaa eee enna ee | CateTagl aa eee te Saw vened at the instigation 0) e many, ca will take place in December next, should noun. | doubdtiess, who know full well better than ay them as unfounded, concluded witu au earnest ap- Peal to the House to support the goyernment in What he descrived a8 @ grave and critical moment. ‘The question was thea put that tae original words in the preamble wich set forth that the proceeds of the property of the Irish Church “snk be held nd applied tor the advantage of the Irish le, but not ior the maintenance of any Church,” &c.; “nor for the teaching of religion,” which had been Struck out by the Lords but restored i Com- mons, should be retained in the bull. This form of Putting Wwe question ied to -ome discussion, which Another Disastrous Colliery not allow tt to proceed further until after he had th his Explosion. enjoyed an opportunity of consuiting wil ool. leagues in the Ministry only added to the excitement of the scene, for It was feit that the criais had then actually arrived, and that the direct issue between the Lords and Commons must now be made and submitted to the judgment of the country, i was Some time after the House of Lords adjot late as was the hour, before the excited groups of noble statesmen finally dispersed, and during this interval the real feelings Of parties made themselves Apparent io loud and uot with barbarism, barbarism must give way. stil the Times has mo fear of the 1 sult. I¢ will be @ benefit to the world that Russia shouid absorb the petty Uzheg States, where Musauiman fanaticism (akes its most odious form, It must be @ gain to the world that ia afew ears the traveiier will be avie vo vinit at his ease khara and Sawarcand aod find there a reasonauie and civilized government. The presence of the Kus- slang ip these places must be made consistent wit the mutntenance of British authority in india, not by bootiess expeuitions, but by following the ex- COUN] BISMARCK AND THE PRESS, ‘The Inman steamship City of Washington, Captain 2 always prudent remarks. ‘W) wi ted by the Duke of MaRLuoxvu 8 | foreseen circumstances prevent It. it wili no doubt | stranger the real cause of it; but tt 18 possible they | apie of Russia herself aud developing tue re- soe iron Wed pore Inst evening, She tenga ae, | £eHeral inquiry, aad. this’ was ‘answered in wo very | moving an an smeniiaent, tuat the Houssas inst | be stonded by a large anmver oF buhops roms ait | may be deterred. frees actor cates They have | sources of the couptries which we govern. With the 23d, arrived here last evening. She brings de- | gractous mood. The tory majority, however, seemed } upon the whole of their amendments in the pre- | parts of the world, and more numerousty, perhaps, | debates upon religion, Eingi0od, Ly India prosperous and coniented we are Baie, tuils of our telegrams up to date of sailing. to have the talk pretty much to Rosettes the bulk | ambile, Whereupon their lordships divided and | than any previous one. - fo will, also cena in tne | relative merits of and it but it caunot be too mach borue iu miad ine rai eenvnarinn OF 113 to 90, re eve jority against Ministera of i nse yen uc Tordstups losisted upon adhering to their amend- ‘meni to the preambie. Lord GkaNVILLB thereupen announced that he Must deciine the responsibility of proceeding with the bill until he had communicated with his col. leagues. He should, therefore, at once move that the debate be adjourned, of the ministerial supporvers having followed Mr. Giadstone back to the House of Commons, where te Was received with deafening ana defiant cheers. One noble earl was beard to deciare in a violent manner that he was prepared for the worst, and that for himself “neither Commons ' nor Crown should ever induce nim to sield his convictions of right at the bidding of radi- cal demagognes. ‘The Duke of Cambriage 13 rumored to Dave been emphatic in his denunciation Au international congress of societies for the pro- tection of animals 1s announced to take place at Zurich on the 2d of August. ‘The generai impression of the London mewapapers on the morning of the 22d ult., after the stormy debate in the House of Lords over the Irish Church bill, was, that the Church, bill would be udlic Opinion of community | speeches of such men as Castelar and Garride have Riat high’ importance which ‘attaches ‘a profound the peoples of to an Ecumenical Council and its resolutions, | Burope, bnt nothing has been said of the great evil It is not to be supposed that the Council will } done to Spain by monkhood, by these multiiudinous occupy itself with pure questions of faith, with theo- | Jeast days. logical matters only, for no such subjecte wiil be In the debates which have lasted two weeks in the brought before it, ‘The only dogmaitcal question | Spanish Parliament one man only hag been bold which, a8 hear from @ good souree, Is to be dis- | enough to draw Saletan between the revenues Of 18 that Of the iniailibility of the Pope, This, | Of France and r] even however, stretches far beyond the religivus boundary | plain w! Fraace had, with Lio bos very tnat india cua only be realiy defended by itweif, A country of 200,000,000 peopie, penetrated by rail- Ways, connected by the most rapid communicaioa wito Europe, and itsell the centre of tae whuie traie of Southern Asia, need nut dread the armies ol uuy Power. The fear of Kussia will be dissipated in & few years by the moral and terial progress of India, by tts closer connection with Europe aad by the increase of socisi regard between the Kngiisn- and the mative racea. When that seci uw The motion being acquiesced in the adjournment man arity withdrawn, Farliament prorogued and an au- | of what he was eased to regard oh u- | of the Liouse followed at twenty minutes it | and is of a highly positical nature; fur in it 13 in- | small wence in su; area dow! the | feit the jealousy with which Russia is regarded wil tumnal segsivn =convokea, when the Lords ds re eee eleven o'clock. a ce cluded the authority of the Pope over all princes and | revenue ot Spain. Spain, with a soil which Isso {sm of Mr. es aed and to have ex: hope that the Quétn might rather dismiss the ninis- ters, with all their rity at their bucks, than con- sent to the creation of a new batch of peers to over- come the obstinate opposition of the Lords, ‘The Cabinet council, which followed the scenes of Dight, remained in session for many hours on We lay, and itis said tat the ministers were widely apart in their views as to the most desirable policy to be pursued. Enough is known of their dehberations to render it cerfain that the extreme measure of the immediate withdrawal of the bill was advocatea by some of the most prominent memoers of the Cab- inet, to be followed by the speedy closing of the pres- Mt session, the calling of an autumn session, the rapid passage of the bill through the Commo! its return to the Lords tn its original shape, aad the final creation of a batch of new peers sufficient 10 turn the majority to the ministerial side should the upper nouse persist in ite obstinate resistance to the will of the country. This decisive policy was op; by Lord Clarendon, Earl Granville and others, who Gepiored the political excitement it would ental upon the country. They advocated the contin- ue rs Been peal Ao Mah ae bir mai ot, ie hope at ie fears’ of te Lords would dictate prudence and induce them to recede irom the amendments rejected by the Commons. This policy 1s understood to have prevailed, and to-night the result will be Made known. But nothing is more certain than an eventual rupture between the two houses, and no vemporary patching up of a :ingle measure can avertit. Even in so unlikely an event as the pas- sage of the Irish Church bill. this session by some sort of compromise, the conflict must come upon the next measure of reform to be brought forward by the present Ministry, which will touch the teader point of tae Irish land question. ey the probability ig that it will not be so long delayed. As a London journal says to-day, the motive power of the Loras has ever been a “hatred of reform, tempered by fear of revolution,” and in all measures of progress hitherto, ifcompelled to give way, they have only done so after so crippling the limba of reform as to Tender its steps uncertain and slow. Messrs. Glad- stone and Bright Know that they have all to gain and nothing to lose in the contest the Lords have themseives invited, and they Will not now seek to avert that contest by yielding to any disngurement of their present work. They are willing to give the peers “‘rope enough,” but it 1s only in curiosity to ascertuin the answer to the pertinent inquiry of Mr. Bright's organ—What will they do with it? The devate to-night will snow whether they are prepared to turn it to the use which many persons believe Would be the most beneficial to the country. Yanisi, and the two nations muy auite to develop the vast regions wach Providence bas commited peoples in secular matters, frultful, which has seasons so mild, with salubrious thelr charge. ‘Such an important and weighty question demands | aif, Which has @ population naturally todustrious, the ‘atieation of all governments who have Oatnolic | yet ranks in agricultural productions least in Subjects, 80 much the more as committees are oraturs who have u the esti: now at work in Kome pee aoe the | for the coming years 1869 and 1870 and the re- questions for the decision of the uct One | venues have scraped together neariy everything of these committees is charged exciusiveiy with | that bas been known since the prehistoric State Church matters, ahowing the itention of the | They have retatled with the Rint grt Hay ae pro- Roman court to have the Council's decwion in | lixity ail they knew, and have constructed moun- religious-poitical adairs. The organ of the Roman } tains out oi moienilis; but the reader may wade Jesuits, Civita Catulica, acknowlaijed an oficial | through their emission until he sinks into a pro- organ by @ Brere of Pius 1X., has uy poke of | found slumber, and yet will find nothing therein the Papal Syllabus of December, 1804, laring | bordering upon agriculture or upon the duty of gov- that the Council should adopt it as a decree of its | ernment to encourage the art in The Gem of own. The articles of the said by ded ngs apnea the Antilies, they , Will supply .ail deficiency. to the principies of present State organizati itbe- | Totally forgetiul are of the that civil war is hooves governments to consider the serious question | Now waged there, which will absorb more than the how to instruct the bishops of the country ag tO their } revenues of Cuba will cover, and yet they count Rarptipanone ip proceedings which aim at the | Upon $25,000,000 as revenue from that island. Be- lestruction of the existing relations of State and | sides this unwise abstinence upon the subject of Church. The practicability should be likwise cou- | agiicuiture in Spain the Ministers have determined sidered of a joint protest on the part of governments, | (0 maintain g standing army of 80,000 regular through their representataves at Rome, againat any ped ad thos Srawing kyo from the country the resolutions affecting Stave questions without a hear- Tequired to tili the soi ing and assent on the part of these governments, It has been said by some that the Spanish character Such a step of the governments interested in this | 18 unsuitable to agricuiture. In forier times it was serious seems Wo me of the highest importance. | Unsuitable to agriculture only because of the very un- 1 have Waited until now expecting that something | Settled state of the country, because of tne trequent would be done on one side or the other, but, such | Wars and the taste which increased for daring adven- not being the case, and time pressing, I now in- | tu) for our irregnlar, predatory and guerilla- struct your Exceilency to moot the question with | like life, In modern times there {8 no distaste of the government to which you are accredited and | 4griculture, but there exist checks and inimicai fe in ite views and par roree tn big tend na Pig gy we Demeainn) of: which are dotng a0 your Excellency ropose the Tous jess e Spanish calendar. qnastiia. as to whether united action ~ the part of | front and main cause latterly has been that Spaniards the European States shouid be taken, how far they | Lave been unfortunate in their governments. Ferdt- should proceed collectively, and 1n what shape, in | Nand VII. and Isabella LI. kept the estas more order to apprise Rome betore of the course they | Tigidly than their subjects. They bestowed millions mean to Gen and a8 0 wether a preiminasy con- be ya ana a Sraw ae eee epoberete ference Would be desirable to agree upon ous action. : eer unheard of saints with diamonds and encircling their Your, &c., &c., will, if necessary, leave a copy of | necks with carcanets of valuable pearis, and wasting this despatch in the hands of und make an | Wealth in senseless processions. 19 this not devoting early reply ag to its reception. Capital to unproductive usef Is it not as senseless To show that there isa strong ultramontane party | Of tingas butlaneg “tee Qqumlas (as Chares, in Bavaria, we may mention that only the day before hate eat bi} tme Golo of conital a Lear! yesterday a bookseller at Foorchhagg exhibited in | Uaproduction. € piety and religious fervor 0: his window a caricature of the’Pope and Ecumenical | {bella JL. were worked upon successfully by monk- ish empirics in the same manner that the Catholicism ouncil. The same picture was afterwards handed | of §) to-day, even under the regency of Ser- about In a tavern, being brought there by a Jewish | Tauo and his fellow revolutionists, ta subject to th teacher. A jr ‘cemediapele collected, vacuicosed buffoonery of the Pharisees in monkish garb, Said the house of the teacher, and then proceeded to the | ® Spaniard to me the other day, “Don Seiior, do not buokselier’s, demolisued his show Window and con- | blame Catholicism, but blame its agents,” Precisely; tents, though they were well aware that ne was an | thisis just what men should remember wno are o} orthodox Catholic. The émeute could only be quelied } diferent denominations, not to blame Cathokcism, by the ald of the mliltary. | Many acrests were made | Dut the agents Gatholio region whoa byte at Wad'the prisoners nent to Bamberg. never was—the nts Only are at fault, justas much as bad actors who murdera tragedy by a Shak- PAIN. speare. 8 N ; Now feat T have hie pe the reader erie \- rue reasons Which have prouuced in Spain Financial Bungling=The Extravagance of the lamentable state of the Treasury, of which | the Religious Festivals=The Public Estimates | Officials compiain, I might as weil give them an idea would be compeiled to pass the bil. The London Daily News says the country is in the midst of a constitutional crisis, ‘The last accounts from the Rhine ag to the state of the vineyards are op the whole favorable. The biossom, though fal!, was late on account of the colduess of June, but the subsequent warm weather bas produced a good effect. The grapea are be- ginning to form, wna a fair yield may be expected. The annexauon of the Grand Dachy of Baden to Prussia is So oonoxtous to the population, that since January last 1,400 people bave emigrated to America and elsewhere, A mass mecting was recently held at Munchen- gratz, in Bohemia, at which 10,000 persons attended, and resolutions were passed in favor of preserving the autonomy of that kingdom, The Madnd papers mention that the eight ser- geants of the regiment Cantabria, who were found 1D possess.on of Cariist comuussions, have been sent paruy to Ceuta ana Cuba. ‘Tue National Council of Switzerland, after along devate, has sanctioned the commerctal treaty with Germany and the convenuon for the protection of literary property with the North German Contedera- tion, ana also the treaty with Wurtemburg respect- ing the law of naturalization. ‘The Emperor Aiexander has returned to St. Petera- burg from Moscow. It 1s stated that his Majesty's stay will not be of long duration. After a grand re- view of troops at Tsarkoe-Selo the Czar will go back to Moscow, and then proceed through the southern Drevinces of the empire to the Crimea. Iv is believed that the Bishop of Bresiau has called upon lus colleagues in the episcopate throughout the territory of the North German Confederation ur- gently to memorialize the King of Prussia, with a view of obtaining his mediation in behalf of tne persecuted Catholic clergy in Russia. We know not to what extent the statement is accurate, we only wish that we could hope that the increasing prestige and influence of the Prussian monarchy coula be employed in so noble a cause. ‘The Irish Times states that ‘her Majesty has con- veyed to the Lord Lieutenant her intention of paying @ visit to Ireiand next year and remaining there some time, The London Society formed to secure the suffrage for women held its first general meeting on Satur- Another Terrible Explosion at the Haydock Cotliery=-Ferty Lives Lost. Onthe morning of the 2ist ult., about eleven o'clock, another terrible explosion Occurred in the “Queen” pit, Haydock, neur St, Helens, the scene of the explosion in December last, when some twenty- 81x lives were sacriticed. Messra. Richard Kvans & Co, are the proprietors. The pit has veen worked avout ten years. It is 260 yards deep, and ts worked 1n two seams, known as the Wigan nine feet and the Ravenbead main deif. ‘he explosion of last year togk piace in she former; as yet it has been, im- possible to ascert:in with any degree of certainty the site of tne still more ap; ca lamity which took place yesverday, linarily some 300 persons are employed at tus pit, but lat- Verly the nuimber of colilera bas varied [rom 150 to 2u0, owing to the depression in trade. The Liver- pool Courier of the 22d ull, Bays that though two ex- plosions have now taken piace in this pit it has never been considered a dangerous one. Shortly before the first occurred the underiooker visited the exact spot where the ignition took piace, everything being then apparently sale, and no’ indications | whatever are said to have been perceived of the second disaster previous to its ovcurrence. It ig alieced that the usual inspections have been regularly made up to yesierday morving, when the pit was reported all right betore the men descended. Work was commenced at six o’clock in the moruing. The exact number of work- men who were lowered into the pit 1s not yet known, being variously estimated at from 160 0170, Though apparentiy of a terribiy violent,character, the explo- S10 seems to have spent itself in the internal work- ings. Nothing whatever had been disturbed at tne mouth of the pit,and bappily the means oftom- munication were left entirery unimpaired. Every- tning proceeded 1n tne ordinary manner till about five minuies past eleven o'clock, At that time a banksinan named Thomas Taylor, who was working Dear the mouth of the pit, had his attention at- tracted by a volume of smoke and dust which was suddenly ejected from it, and at once conjectured that something serious haa occurred. A girl standing near him was thrown backwards by the gust, but was not injured. An immediate con- ference of the workmen employed outside took Diace, and while @ messenger was despatched for Mr, Isaac Billings, the underlooker, repeated signals were sent to the bo tom of the shaft, but were un- answered for at least five aninutes, when a young man came up and brought the sad itelligence that a irightful explosion had occurred, In a very snort tme the neighborhood of the pit was thronged by srowea of men aes none in the wildest ir es excl ent, implo! lormation res} e fate of relatives oF iends employed inefe., Mr. Isaac Biilings, underlooker, at once organized 9 stair of searchers, among the earitest volunteers be- ing John Baines-and James Leatherbarrow. The ex- loring parties commenced their perilous operations bout one o'clock, from which hour till early this LITERATURE. Review ef Now Books, Essay ON DivorcR AND DIVORcR LRGISLATION. With special reiecence to the United States, uy Theodore D. Wovisey, D. D., Li. D. New York: * Charles Scribner & ‘leov, The learned President of Yale College has divided nis subject into six chapters. The first treuts of “Divorce Among the Hebrews, Greeks and Re- mans;” the second, of the ‘Doctrine of Divorce ta the New Testament;” the third, of the “Law of Divorce in the Roman Empire, and in the Christian Church,” the fourth, of “Divorce and Divorce Law im Europe Since the Reformation;” the fifth, of “Divorce and Divorce Law in the United States,” and the sixth and last treats of the “Attitude of the Oburch Toward Divorce aw, Principles of Divorce Legislation.” The first three chapters we will simply notice by stating that they are very inverest- ing compilations of facts; but they contain nothing that we have not read many times over. The fourth chapter, however, ts valuable for the clearness with which it shows how the Reformation was immediately followed by a gea- eral looseness of ideas regarding the marriage state, Luther himself going so far as to affirm thai “when one of the parties withdraws from the otner, so tuat he or she will not perform marital duty or lead a common life with the other,”’ there was cause justify- the dissolution of marriage. Chewuitz, Zuingil, Calvin, Beza and others agreed, wita but differing shades of opinions, in ignoring the Catholic doctriue of tndissolubility and im making certain designated offences, the commission of which by the wile or husband tended to alienate or injure either, suili- cient cause for divorce. Ever since the time of Luther to the present day the legisiation of all Pro- teatant countries has tended toward simplitying tne process by which an unwilling wife or busband can get rid of her or of his marital obligations. fn att Catholic nations save France, were tne ple aay be justly said ignore, religion in the Eta, all faitns being recognized by government, tue sanctity of the Pert ue continues unim- aired by legislation, and although in most divorce tarded b eg gar fossrainte oe, to muse ie ieapraces, by legal restraints as a racti- fable ‘anigss the married couple find it utterly im- possible to live with each other longer. It 1s » sin- gular fact, too, that in France there are but few di- ‘Vorce suits; and between 1038 and 1840, in tne Khine provinces of Prussia, containing 600 000 Protestauta, there were but four divorces to every 100,000 Innaol- tants, and here legislation 1s based on the code Na- The Debate in the House of Lords Over the Irish Church Bill. In the House of Lords on the 20th wit. Lord Gran- Ville, in rooving to agree to the Commons’ amend- ments to tuelr jordsuips’ amendments so the Insh Chureh bill, took occasion to deny that, at the mnsti- gation of siinisters, tne other house had assumed 7 E morning fifty or sixty men have been continuously “ day, the 17th ult, under the presidency of Mrs. P. A, aeearin ihe jontanine: - aon fie « eras at work, in relays, displaying the most commenam. and the Tarif: jor this oace how the finances of Spain stand. poleon instead of on the generat code ot jue king- Taylor. Mrs, Fawcett, (the wife of the Honorabie | ihe case he should nave considered that he, } ble axiety to do everything in ther power to save Mapnip, July 20, 1809. ROTIMATES OF bien FOR THR YEARS 1869 AND | dom (p. 224). During the Gres Lig pode iid member for Brighton), Mr. J. 8. Mill, Lord Houghton, | personally, had been unwortuily treated py { lle. Evidence of the frightful nature of the expio- | ‘There are several things requisite before a man | pe Debt—State Debt mount. Interest, | OF Prussia the number of divorces Li inhabitants ranged from filty-seven in the judictal district of Berlin to sixteen in the judicial disirict of Greiswald. But it ls in the United States that divorce flour- ishes; and, in spite of the bign standard of education in that section of the Union, New England shows a greater laxity of respect for the marriage stave than any other part of the republic. Until within a few weeks past, and since the book before us was writ- ten, there had not been a divorce c.ge before the courts of South Carolina since her settiement. Dur- ing the eight years between 1860 and 1307 there were 2,910 couples divorced in Connecticut to Jé,227 mar- Tiages, while in Prussia in 1855 there were but 2,037 divorces to 84,014 marriages of non-Cathulics. But bad as this exhioit is, it does not fuily show the con- dition of aifalis in Connecticut, for the marriages re- ported In that State mciude Catholics, who, as roles sor Woousey remarks, “rarely petition for divorce.” Deducting these, the Professor comes to the conclu. sion that one couple is divorced in Vonnecticut ‘to less than eight and a half of so-called Protestant or reg. sion was soon met with, The airways and stop. pings were found to be extensively dam aged, the wagons were in many cases blown to pieces, ana the first and second party of search- ers soon reported that they had’ met with more than twenty bodies im the main delf. Twenty- three carts were obtained, and im these over sixty sufferers, sent up from the pit-eye, were carefully taken to therr own homes. Only two of this large number of injured were suffering from burns, one of whom, @ boy, being since dead, the rest having been more or less affected by the choke-damp. The pro- prietors were in Manchester when the explosion took Place. A telegram was forwarded to whem, and in the course of a few hours Messrs. Joseph and Josiah Evans hurried to the spot. Telegrams were also despatched to Mr. Drifiield, the county coroner, and to Mr. Peier HigsOn, the government inspector for the district, informing them of the catastrophe. Mr. Mercer, of the Park lane colliery, and Mr. Onad- wick, the surveyor, remained for some time at the pit-eye superintending the labors of the exploring his colleagues, Bus the fact was that the amendments inserted by this House would have had the eect of re-endowing the Church which it was the aim of the bill to disestablisn and disendow, Of these amendments, tie most 1m- portant was the one relating to concurrent endow- ment, the acceptance of which by the government would, 1n their judgment, be a breach of faith with the constituencies; and as it was opposed by an overwhelming majority of the other House, and public opinion was utterly against it, he appealed to their lordships to deal with it as practical men, and Whatever might ve the abstract merits of the plan to regard it a3 perfectly impossible at the present moment, The proposal to hold over the appropriation of the surplus, too, was extremely objectionable, as calculated to encourage incessant agilation and raise expectations which werescertatn to be disappointed, especially as no alternative pian that was likely Lo receive the assent of the Commons had been propounded. Lord Cairns complained that Ministers had not seri State Debt. 4 can be called an enlightened statesman, A states. | Consolidated reaten, Wf A mmaboege man should have a knowledge of statecraft, which | Perpetual rentes at 8 per does not consist merely of an accurate acquaintance | paviidalet forehin.;------, With the standing poiitics of the country, but of dated home... ws whatever may conduce to good government, inter. | Perpetual rentes at 8 per cent of un- nally and externally, to the safety of the country and | |! the prosperity and happiness of the people, Though <i toner ig vasencee Spain can boast of great men in vartous things— erpetual rentes at 3 per historians, orators, poets, novelists, one or two aSprishdon of residee sleet ponkinted pS cnapracney pretty fair genevais—she has not one political econo- | 1% °; mist, she has not one financier, she has not one man foreign, corresponding to the nomi- fit to take charge of her revenues, Allofthem who | }iaycaPlta! th In tintes mainte have tried their hands at financiering have ‘Total. miserably failed; they have but increased’ the Esti burden after an unskiiful manipulation of | For Senate. For Cortes. the funas; they lacked the courage to check the | For charges of juatice,. Mr. Stansfield, M. P., Professor Fawcett, the Rev. Charles Kingsley, M. Aries Dufour, M. Louis Blanc and Karl Blind were among those present. A great number of sadies attended the meeting. Among the resolutions passed was one in favor of the early m- troduction into Parliament of a bill for the extension of the franchise to women, Much consternation was created in St. James’ theatre on the night of the 2iet ult. by an occurrence of @ very alarming nature, but which happily was unattended by any very serious consequences, Towards the close of Offenbach’s “Orphée aux Enfers,” to heighten the effect of the scene, a quan- Uly of colored fire 18 burned on the stage. Mile. Schneider having approached too near one of the trays of the burning composition, her dress igdited, For passive classes, pensions, i and in an instant she was enveloped in ames. The | adhered to the pleage given by the noble Earl ‘onthe | Parties. it is said that the anderlooker le a | audacious claims made upon the Treasury, and were | For Presi nt Aye rather non-Catholic audience rose in a state of sudden alarm, and several | second readine of the bill, and by which many of | 'horough inspection of the various workings on | too reckless in distributing what had been coliected Eon Lack of space prevents our reviewing this really interesting yk as fully as we desire, Dr. Woolsey has carefully given an abstract of all tne divorce Jaws and divorce statistics of tue different States of Tuesday, reporting them to be in good working order. When our writen left the pit last night he was informed that thirty-three bodies were lying at their jordships had been induced t -vote for it at that si out of respect for what they conceived to be the verdict of the country. Instead of occupants of the sta/is ana boxes leaped on to the at so much trouble and cost. The chief of these For appertaining stage and threw their coats over the actress, who For i bunglers I call Figuerola, the present Minister of nistry of State. . the pit eye; but it was greatly feared the list of dead | Finance. For Minlatry of Grace, Justice and the Union, and has shown how sertously disreyard- piecrehdrcera cera getined atte de sgt AE al Sel Gaamnaprottoean the Prime. pons: | would ai Idast reach fori. Most of the deates neve te sy = Barus Tawar “ ee dione peat) mi vs regen ar. = BRB | turorthe sanctity of the marriage tie the. people of scene. The curtain fell, but was raised shortly after- | EAU condescented te use language with reference to | resulted from the choke-damp, these bodies | the amonns he in hig hands would ap- | yor Ministry of Mari — 5,988,862 | this republic have become, He has written in sup- presenting ® remarkable contrast to those of the poor fellows who feil victims to tne fery blast. In the former death wears the precise aspect of caim and i. ful sleep, while in the latter there are horrible instances of mutilation and dis- figarement, It would be impossible to convey even a faint picture of the ueartrending scenes witnessed pal the stoutest financier in America, He has played | For Ministry of Home une with fate. But not only through the bungling of | *Yenera service of hublie works..... 908,350 Figuerola and the rapacity of the ministers, for in- Agriculture, industry and commerce 612,345 stance Prim absorbing $2,000,000, &c., andthe avarice | pure Mattuction. ... ons of the political under-graduates, has the financial wards, in compliance with the demand of the anxious spectators, and it was then discovered that, though the slight dress worn on the occasion had been completely destroyed, Mile. Schneider had for- tunately escaped withdht injury. port of such additional legislation as will check the practice of married couples rushing into the courts and applying for divorces, trequeutly for causes which should not be recognized as'suiicient to le- gally separate them. He favors such restraints as will prevent the guilty parties, where the cause is tneir lordships which was quite unworthy of his position; all the amendments, with the exception of two, had been rejected without the sitghest con- sideration, aud these two had been modified in such @ manner as to be perfectly illusory. He himself had always objected to concurrent endowment, and Exercised privatel; had not proposed to reserve the application of the state of Spain been perplexed, but by the normal state 1,108,006 | Sele Tar eT ine, the partuer Of is’ oF. her rf ew to . . | on the pit bank. There are few of the cott; tn the 5 11,109,804 | crime; the making of adultery penal; thé prohiot- « ENGLAND. meat ae ‘Objection to. ‘ihe Ministerial comes ag TE 5 Dut contain some eu rer, and | of Spain, of this truly Catholic country. The blame Focuiney treme inines i, ean tion of divorced persons remarrying within a certain was that it left six or eight millions sterling at the disposal of the executive and beyond parliamentary control. Originally the whole of the Irish members were anxious to have the consideration of the surplus postponed, and in ad- hering to this amendment he believed their lord- snips would carry with them the optnion, if not the votes, of the majority in the Commons, and certainly the opinion of the conntry. As to the amendments respecting the power of commuting life interests and with regard to curates, which he considered yital tothe interests of the Church, he trusted their Joraships would take a firm stand upon them also; but as to the others, which were of minor import- ance, he was quite willing, in his desire not need- lessly to provoke @ collision between the two houses, Vo ask their lordships to give them up. Lord KIMBERLEY argued that it was impossible for the government to accept the amendments which Lord Cairns was inclined to insist upoa, Lora ¥, alluding to the language of the pre- ambie, that no portion of the funds of the Irish Church should be applied to the maintenance of any Church or the teaching of any religion, which he regarded as equally condemnatory of the Estab- lished Charch i this counjry, and ‘offensive to the religion 01 the majority in Ireland, entreated Minis. ters to make some concession on this point,*un- less they were inditfereut to the passing of the bill, or desirous of putting some degra- dation upon the House of Lords. For it seemed to him that the speech of Mr. Gladstone and the tone adopted by the government indicated that they i e rather {nclined to disregard than to conclave if Jordships. “Rt 1t does not rest upon Catholicism, but upon theprin- | Amortization of Treasury bonds, with cipal agents of it; upon the charlatan monks who | j.verem,o8 Same, ouether, with in- Ampose upon the credulous minds of the peopie. Spain and other com) a — «7,176,206 An acquaintance with political arithmetic, which is @ little given to calculation of national circum- stances respecting the number of the people, their consumption, &c., the general products of @ king- dom, its wealth, coin, income, &c., reducing all cir- cumstances to numbers instead of treating them by way of verbal disquisitions, would be of vast benefit The aove is tha sosemens they have elon cy A Tived a to the leading men of Spain. It 18 moat useful | aver a two weeks! debut, and. to tie ackavwiedg, sclence, and would tend to throw more truth into ment that there will be a deficit of over $42,000,000. that of politics in general than any other sts ley have not taken into considoration the possi- could. By reducing Srerything concerntug: overs. bility that the war in Cuba might last much longer, mental or municipal affairs to numbers; by adding, | 89 that the expected revenue from Cuba might be subtracting, multiplying and dividing what is poli- | COUSiderably crippled, that they have abolisned for tically heard, much more solid truths might be dig- | the current year the monopoly of tobacco and of covered by Spanish financial oficers in one day | Salt as an experiment, that they have abolisned the than by listening to declamatory harangues in the | CoUsumos, and though they have passed the capita- Cortes in a whole year. tion tax they may tind it very dificult to collect, I siated above that the blame of the perplexed and, after all, that they may have a civil war on state of Spanish finance does not rest upou Catho- | eir hands long before the year is out. ‘Truly one icism, but upon the monks, upon its Spanish | C@UNot see that Spain has been benefited a whit by agents. Why? Because they have filled their cai. | the September revolutton. ‘Ihe Spaniards have es- endars with dias de jlesia—teast days. This last | ‘4vlished a government which think it right to play month of June was replete with them. We have | #!! Sorts of tricks witn the resources of the country, had sal days of San Isidore, patron of Madrid; ‘The church property, mines and other miscellaneous Corpus Christe, San Padron de Aviela, San Fran: | Properties belonging to the State are of immense cisco Caracciola, Philip de Cwsarea, Primo y. Feu. | Yalue, but they cannor contribute one dollar towards clano, San Barnabas the Apostie, San Bacilto the | the defictt. They have been taxed to the utmost Great, San Marco, the Cuckoid's day, St. John, st, | ®!teady. Of the future of this country, under such a Joun the Baptist, 'St, Plutarch the Martyr and’ St, | Press of circumstances as descrived above, what can Peter and St. Paul, Aposties, which make thirteen | ‘€ most sanguine of her sons hope for? feast Oays, and for the month of July there are qe an bots ciepoeiees Spon phe Sevier . = eleven. exe feast days cal nv q marke at nearly all the ‘dea of the Count’s eventually withdrawing entirely | Madrid to shut up thelr shops, the laborers te cance | Tepublican iolnority “ate. provectionstn wepeaie from his Prussian Premlership, which, as they hope, | Work, 80 that evs, ire falta and industry } those clectod by the great manufacturing centres. A mi bry zs ittie incident took place the other day which shows WALput ay epd jo the detested Hulenburg-Muhler | 8°2 Suspended. Political le in this ci Meng 2 ae hitch sagt a te Bt dteat earvice, "tt fac that eanital m3 b tated coma hs Bret Baye Deen moaised by thg about @ indre liberal policy, which productive for thirteen days in one month, that the GLa OVO. css ie q Would have the eifect of lessening Prussias’s present ons to the city Of Madrid may be estimated at | Colleges have sent to the Cortes & 500,000 whic Workinan who can scarcely Fead Or white—e man Serco aeey of aise generally obeerved thas the | See ete TOM Meee Hercete eavarecala, Be | Who in nowever, of prose nevurercaeae ike Hise evelopment of the North German Confederation | which’ is’no insignificant losa to one city. |W. He made @ speech the other day in his coarse Cata- requires the undivided attention and activity of the | would the Jos be to the eutire kingdom at this | IAN accent, aud was answered by the Marquis of Band Chancellor, and that for this reason the Count | Fale! for every city town and petiy village | Optsval, Ziving rise to an obsorvation that e grandee Would do well to limit his aphere of action. te would amount to 8 fabuious. sum, which, spinner have given each other the same title—“Your The curious coincidence of the report of your cor- | by a little trouble aa computation, could | S¢forship,” and that the tone of respect with which to term; separation from bed and as a temporary Measure; Protecting the injured party from pecuniary Joss or deficiency in the means of support, and de- priving the culpable party rom ali benefits which tne marriage settlement placed within tus or ler reach; regulating the custody of children; makjng the law. ‘specific and for determinate causes, which will leave but little at the discretion of judges; untformity in the laws of the different states relating to the pro- ns to Cerner Ae yong for Lehre qe the reconciliation of { les aula trates unless adultery be ie Eafd o complained 4 On the whole this essay 1s aamirably written. The great dificuity m the way of having its doctrines ac- cepted 1s the tendency of tie age in’ which We live, Under the colors of universal liberty the most per- nicious influences are at work. Women claim the right to participate im government, 8o tiat, among other reasons, they might be able to relieve themselves of their marriage bonds with greater facility than they pussess at present. One strong-minded woman deciared ina pubiic speech that Woman must “have clidren when she pleases and by whom.” Half the burden of the strong- minded Women’s cry Is the legal vassalage her sex bears to man. On the other hand the mea are not backward in ridding themselves of their marriaye ties. Marrying hastily and without due considera- Uon of the atep they take, a few years tind maay wearying of their ponds, whicn a facile court, ove- dient to loosely worded laws, severa for them, The evils of which Professor Woolsey most eloquentt and abiy complains are very grout, but we doubt 1 legislation will correct them. ‘They properly belong to that great social question, the solution of which will go far toward either further elevating the hu- man race or impelling it to a retrograde movement, Tae LITRRATURE AND LiTeRary MEN OF GReat BRITAIN AND IRELAND. By Abraham Mills, A. M. in two Volumes. New York: Harper & Brotuers. Several years have passed since these vowmes of lecturés weré first published, and the opinion we foritied of them at the time has never been changed, In & most agreeable, comprehensive manner tie lit- eratuye and literary men of Great Britain and Ire- land are treated of. Interesting sketches, com- mencing with Ossian and ending with the celebrated Junins, together with extracts from the works of each author form the subjects of the forty-s1x lec- tures in the two books. We doubt if any work now The inhabitants appear almost stupetied by their double affliction, and it will be very long ere the ay pervading feeling of crushing sorrow abates. The Irish Church Bill—The Coming Conflict Between the Lords and the Commons, ° Lonbox, July 22, 1369, It is seldom that the hereditary House of the British Parliament is the theatre of such a scene a8 that enacted within its wallson last Tuesday even- ing, when the debate on the Irish Church bill as re- turned from the Commons reached a climax, and the passions of the ‘‘not very wise” peers overcame their customary prudence and drew them into the whirlpool of an angry and personai debate. For some time past it has been evident that hidden behind the parliamentary courtesy so Much affected by uygiish legislators lurked @ bitter and venomous eumity between the Lorde and Commons which could searcely fail, sooner or later, to break forth into open expression; and hemce those who look beneath the surface were scarcely taken py surprise when the tory leaders threw off their flimsy disguise aud opened the flood- gates of thetr wrath upon the insolent rabble who dare to press upon them measures of legislation to which their personal prejudices and class interests are equally opposed. Tue cavie has already ap- prised the readers of the H#RALD of the o¢currences of that eventful night; but neither the meagre tele- gtaphic sketches, nor, indeea, the extended reports in the English newspapers convey any adequate idea of the actual scene immediately pre- ceding the vote by which the peers signified their determination to defy the reiterated verdict of the lower house aud to inatst upon such an emascula- tion of the preamble of the Irish Church bill ag would leave the road open for the virtual nuliifica- The Marfuis of CLANRICARDR, though believing i 2 . ° in tion of the policy of disendowment and religious the wisdom of cohcurrent endowment, was ion equality. pared to a a the government; but he hoped the ‘The English journals and English statesmen are four would usist upon the reservation of the sur- a8, prone to reflect Wh severity upon the extravagant Lord SHAFTSsBURY denounced the whole bill as the and violent debates which sometimes cast # scan- | most violent snd revorstuees maare that tad GERMANY. Count Bismarck’s Retirement—Opinions of the Presa=The Translations from the New York Herald—Copious Criticisms Thereon— Radicals Rampant—Bavaria versus Ecu- menical Council—Prince Hohenlohe’s Circus lar—The Ultramontane Rabble. BERL, July 16, 1860. ‘The King’s order, dated the 30th ultimo, granting permission to Count Bismarck to retire for an indef- nite period from his oficial position, and expressing the hope of his speedy restoration to heaith, has doubtless reached you by wire. Opinion varies very much respecting this step, some portion of the press insisting that it is equivalent to a retirement alto- gether; other journals, and among them the official ones, inaintaining that is only temporary and that the Count’s return may be looked for in the fall of the year. In the meantime President Deiprick will attend to the oMicial duties of the Bund Chancellor, and General Von Roon, in conjunction with Baron Von Der Heydt, will stand at the head of the Prussian government. The Southern press rejoices at the elictantiy he admittea tn: was now infpossible to Cif & measure of concur- rent endowment; but he held Ministers responsibie jor the fallure of a policy which commended itself to nine-tenths of the edacated Classes of the country, and which they could easily have carried had they chosen to adopt it. Lord HALIFAX, seeing with regret shat concurrent endowment was impossible. did not regard ¥ words4n the preamble as material, while their Dmis- sion would be deemed by the public a covert attempt to promote that object, aud so give rise to useless religious agitation, the haughty grandee replied was, , more} ‘& (print turnishes so thorough an account dal upon the American Congress, and time and | come before Parliament since the Reformation, and | Te*Pondent’s interview with the Count becoming | 22,,made, out copie is cvused by the suspension | HArKed than fe had ever used in ht fife before, fen, from. ine earliest ego as nol they again the Senate and House of Representatives at | 1°Twld that ere long it would have @ serious effect | known here just at the same time of that personage’s a dissolvent Y — t Capital and labor. If the productive powers of | his tari question bids fair to be Washington have been eld up aa scarecrows | Hota 00, the revations of Church and State, but | retirement caused an unusual sensation, go that the | capital, which is Iaetaphorical term for the pro- a] RE ae A to iriguten off ine birds of reform. Repub- | “Lord Russel, prosiaitmed himself favorable to ais. | WeMsre extracts frst turniahed ny the Norddeuteche Gate neers ted ae ee for 186 | Satiaty the exigencies of portfolio-seeKers than from and. “American statesuen ape” pofyaicense; | establistment, aud, aubject to existing rights, to dis {| Allgemeine Zettung (Bismarck’s organ) were tol. | 1/424 cil, then, i the financlat heads ot Spain | 27 gompacibiiity of the Cabinet members. rim anything but flattering colors by the brushes | ton inthe preamble wae uinotomart ane” lowed up by a verbatim translation from your jour- | Were ‘but to direct their minds to this one fact, to Tauoh “bioster, Prim’ heeee whe Minister of ol rtisa artis, Bi Rl politic, To hae given glebes vo the clergy of ail de- | BA) the consequence of which being tnat in any one | ‘28 Pray MCUarally (raaetae Peer ee Ec TentTy, | Finance with seeking t0 qlonty his ‘sell-love: Terher u a Cohdict | pian remine would have been the best and wisest | reading room fifty journals might be taken up at | remedied bara eine tt one man bold enongh | tian the prosperity of the country. Madog, an old with the President of me United baton aca wast | Pisa, Lor Dat have done more tha anveaizeccoce | TaNdom and the leading topic treated on therein | to direct hts rind to tn re ede eae ies | Prim, wis surrounding Mince with fee eae Grey and Lord Savsbary would have ‘put Ben | pease religious discord. ‘He should thee Would iavariably be Blemarok and the Naw Youx | Produced by tus political Tigeation: ard the cone, | shat his co of beings prosectionist a Batler to shame in tne hottest days of impeachment | against Ministers on the preamble. Srelore vowe | eaRaLD. The opposition journals did not, of course, | quetice ia that the countes is fern tar’ ‘mere unhealthy mask to hide wickea dewent—ne as the repreventa- by their vindictiveness, violence and auscrupwious- | “The Duke of ARGYLL replying 10. the observations + that yy Yor thie. lat ng tive of Catalonia expected the Ministry and the ness. Their assault upon the first Minister of the | of Lora Gre lenied that th Jet go fine an opporbanity slip of falling foul of the | Aiate, than Pind i for, rie datier empire, ander | Cortes to listen ti Crown was at once unpariamentary and yuigar, | were desirous” of precipitating @ ouiliseo cece | Count and deriaively saying that it wae on very well | Sing wel Tory fests ee een ana SES © Of that provinon, Pew OF WHS wRTIER Peon aud in the case of Lord Salisbury especially, the in- | the two EH 7 cra ‘pression Was irresistible. that ‘his “trade was as such a ‘esign they would: eee erve 4 ‘arsed out pacwspaper correspondent aoc hs griets to | any more._the term, ix, rather, convalescent. Jonn lectures. They are admirabiy adapted to the schools and colleges of the country on acoount of their clearness, oie of diction, reliability and compactness. To the student they will convey am immense amount of information in eek small space, and, from the pleasant style in whici they are written,’ will leave upon the mind a more lasting impression than moatother books of the kind do, In bringing these lectures again before the public the publishers have done weil. Like wine, they improve with ; and reading them, as we have, ir the lapse of some ten years, has afforded us an amount of pleasure which few books of later date have done. ‘The mechanical execution of both volumes {8 all that couid be desired. Tne type in which they are printed is large and clear, the paper excellent, and the binding neat and serviceable, fuuch attributable to the effect of a too liberal | of office at once, S newspaper correspondent so openly and unre- | Stuart Mill, the British political economist, says RUSBIA, LOVE AND LAND. Poems by Michael Scanlon. Bos- dinner jas, to the excitement of debate. ‘kari | principle of concurrent endowment and derecaiee | SeFvedly, whero he dared not prefer hiv complaint | 8% Pg ey hd mivinenanhinnd ton: Patrick Donatoe. 1860. _ ies ge By: ail ot Ld . — bl Dota pool a eaten RE sane a ia before the Legislature. industry.” ‘The smallest American schoolboy Russia and England in the Enst. ‘ This volume ia full of devotion to the land of the they never desired to pass the Irish Church bill, | with liberality and generosity. co— | The Berlin Zuiunyt, of democratic tendency, Known, nor yee anderstesa. by epariaeds: hese rintusmal length disetages a ngttds Att article of | quthor's nativity. tt ts brimful of patriotte animos. between the thane means Of creating @couision | | The Marquis of SaLisnury, who taunted the gov. | WFites as followg:— scription of the city of London during’ the Great | gression npon the Indian empire, Remarking how | tty to England, Itsings the glories of Ireland, iauds the heroism of her sons and 1s fairly effervescent ‘With passionate appeals to the Fenians, All this ts very good in a measure. The love vorses, too, abound in rapturous sentiments. But the amount of real poetry in the book 18 Jamentably smail,. A ly | ernment with a change of opinion on the subject of | The news of “the groat Counv’s reti ‘ ¢ t rement had | Plague might be applicable to the city of Madrid | entirely the English view di from that of Anglo. goacing, he Peon al relent iM. Lord Salisbury ee ae and disendowment, which prior to | bai bg transpired when the national liberala true daring a feast foo) if you wait except Taellans, the Tunes thames cine tO Men ace entitled Of members wie io] pie ing the yd majority | reaching ti geyanad bench they treated as differ- eted loudly the advent of anew ana great era. ‘The | the iideous sights seen in the streew of | to be heard with the greatest attention, for vhey are alaves and dupes of jupported the pill as the mere | ent matters, but subsequently h to be indiasoiably | Band Chancellor ride himecit cleverly of his former } the former clty—the suspension of all business | men nerally much above the average intelligence; demagogue. And Wile diese’ eoportuea ie hone pt oP eaten’ fe al pot ‘ his cone 168, any said; leaves the Minister of Finance | 18 the same. This i in reality the reason that the | wey have an accurate knowledge of the country delivered the heated peers, drunk with excitement, | Deen & Wise and ‘satesmanikey yn ave | With the deficits leaves the Ministers o¢ the Interior | ‘Treasury Is unfilled; this ts the reason that the State | they alininister: war ont we cegagds Its. nilitary 3 = and Public Instruction to encounter, with ail their | has suc a beggarly’ appearance. Hence ts tt that | topography, it ‘resoure and its means of de- | few gems, displaying the true poetic sj irit, are Such wild expression 00 eae ae eng and. raving appropriating oe supine, “ue conduct | of | unpopularity, the rough handiing tat surely awaits | the city of Madrid possesses such an abundance of feuce, pats regards its” iitical Condition, aud | in the collection, Ike pearls thrown carcienaiy in ye Gvident that tue right chord his igh LA 0 Ly 3 it oe Calgoo rtd ¥ A ing to bind ratare { them im the fext meeting of the Diet, It isthe Hon’s | small shops with no business. Hence is it that no | the soclal or religious Influences Which affect its Unfortunately, one is compelied to piod Struck at last | Parliaments reminded hin of those who thought | aen, ,Where very short Work will be made of them | new railroads can he Wulit, no new roads or canals inhabitants, ‘They also Know—not clearly, but much igh page after page of less than mediocre verses ana that their Heurts responded with entnusiasm to they could keep from drunkenness by ai rei Me : gg uinply taking | In his absence. But suddenly and very malapropos | constructed. Hence 1s it’ that the fields are not en- better than the public at wome—the real character of | before he cun find one of them. some the Eg (eee Hie A iinee ally a pledge of sty oi 7 ‘hey wished to guard | arrives an American journal, containing Nisearoke closed, that they are badiy cultivated. Hence ts it | the revolution Pnich 18 1n progress in Central Asta. ) are absolnie, unmitigated trash, winour & partiols people Who stand at their bavis. » and wie har: concurrent eudow tent or the appropriation | tun gossip, the correctness of which 1s vouched for | that the peasants look 80 miserabie, that thelr habl- | Now these peuple have, rightly or wrongly, come ol reason, and With out very litte rhyme, from be- Darphin ad Teonabherenity to wind ‘ts of the surplus to any religious purposes hereafter by | by ins own Organ. From this it would appear that | tauions are so small, that their furniture Is wretched, | bellove tar the Conquest o: wnat Is kiuw as inde. / ginning toend, On the wile this isn very arUpie enn Saas tee Garin ond honeae, ~ por my insertion of re pean Must feel would | the Count’s spite, far from being directed against | that both themselves aad their cattle are the picture pendent Tartary and the possible auvance of tue | how cd Gs PETUSAL HAs given Ha such A headache 0 that at Sie foundation of the wivrious Brit be | inoperative. heir jordsnips had a clear | his high-born colleagues, is strongly vented againet | of famine, Hence is it tat there ae nob many | Kussians to the fronuers of Aighamatan do ingome | tat » incapacitated from reviewtog ib ab provea tha jor giorio ritish | and well defined duty to themselves and the | the cepresentativer” is Of these he 18 entirely | meadows and fallows. that thay haye not a suilicient | wav threaten Rrinwh Hower in india. ADE Lhe T rey \ wreater ion

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