The New York Herald Newspaper, April 26, 1870, Page 6

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6 NEW YORK HERALD, TOESDAY, APRIL 26, 1870.- QUADRUPLE SHERT. dress defel 1 had not con- | passengers, and tn teu thereof to tmpose a untyorm | 450 persons been proseout ruary; | have been socurring in Barcelona, beve ee: S80. Cerwiess THe =m Charge ar et per cent on the gross tragto, ‘By ins | It duly seventy-ous reone were reenter ‘and | give us Mo sevout of them, eit ie nisier of the La- CUBA. e cluded at the rising of the cow oaersgiou tuo revenue would suffer logs to the extent | whether fresh arrests had been made, rior Lo Rive Us some ReWws respecting them aud of £107,000. Keeping in view the duty of paatanolng M, Ollivier replied that the arrests had been effected os ht ww i IRELAND. our resources, ana reducing burdens to the greatest | In consequence of tho riots and the erecuon of bur- | sak itoonvenient to give explunstions ot vheus ovtoth, exe . extent cooaistent wun the good faish and security of | ricades, and the preliminary. taqu ty would be com: | cept to say thal hey have originated fa the carrying out tas | Condition of Affairs Throughout ’ C f E eae the country, he proposed to apply & of there- | pleted in afew days. The government was desirous | law of thequiutas, When this ts complotaly’ the Tho Brigands’ Capture of English | mye ongtord Election Petitton—Matlow | maining surpiusto tho reduction ofthe imoome tax by | of, with aumunity. erameut will give more explanations, the Zsland. a ten fey fe pa the subjecvot the insurrection, ‘and the rest o ernoon session t the discussion of the Electoral law, The House met much astonished by one of ecreta mounting the iribune and reading the folowing 4 Prim;—- ‘THY PRESIDENT OF THR CORTES, pati Bxcriurnor—The + Councl of Ministers to Seookeney, accord of the C “Mapes, “April, we © TSUAN PRIM, The question was formally put and, of coarse, eee everybody went e saying, “What fy peony imposed to meet the The ltting inn closed. ‘The Plebiscitum and Ite History. Bought—Werking of the Coorcion Bill—Bar- | Cot crthy ag mere’ Catechism—Public Education—Secta= came Se ts oa ‘would amount bay aca Dusuim, April 12, 1870, | latgest amount of reduotion he bad’ to. propose ive ie Livepost Jenteal AMAL Tho result of the Longford election petition, which pow hy ‘One-half. ‘this would entail a sacrifice of to universal guffrage. In 1848, in 1861 and in covets rele Mogens ant Ovings +0 many | SS frewnas and ao maa ne propa | tna Yh nigerat ue ag wrt Lun ane Roman Catholic pricsts into the unpleasant position | Without holding out any nope of further reduction | tnirty.two A esaention of the lath ot tantary, of alders and promoters of bribery and corruption, | ?F ultimate and solely with the view of | 1952, which, with the modificati lous Senatus jie imparting stimulus to trade. The reduced duty | Consuta, is the t constitution of France, ra has given imunense satisfaction to the section of | ouvraw agar” would come into operation imme. | <5"olony ‘vai? woniacatons isthe, tandarnenia nationalists who have been at War with the priests | diately on 1 a for opposing Mr. Martin, also to the Fenian body, who Teflned sugars, for the double purpose of enabi down in the prociam: of the 4d of Decem! have been so unsparingly denounced by them, and | refiners to work o their present atooka and abd a 3 ‘unl witha in galt onlateeal we a also to the most rabid among the Orange faction, | Dort, If. they thought proper, to obtein the drawback | Vorsn) « poten esc ei gel ‘The i who hall it asa blow at priestly influence. In the | amount 198.600, ‘Dedocting this aum.from the | {rom the compound word or County Longford the friends of Marin celo- | #4301,000, tuo esumated excess of revenge, there Lrg manera ll ga Bl Amaya ob brated the victory with bonfires and such like would remain @ net sum of £331,000 as tae surplus [wart lative power. napter four en- | the The article referred to occurs illuminations; but ‘in ‘Dublin’ we have the renee seat ree ent ttines inet constitution, asitiog: ‘and ce Tourists in Greece. Fight on the Cauto River—The Insurgents Mov- ing into Bayamo—Exoitement Among the Spaniards—Valmesada’s Proclamation~ The Captain General's Reports from the Camaguey—Operations Insignificant — The Cinoe Villas—Other Nowa American Securities on the Bourse in Germany. The Freuch Plebiscitum—Its History, Intent and Operation, The steamship Bienville, from Havana the 20th, rrived at vhis port yesterday with latest matt ad- vices of the progreas of events in Cuba. The purser will receive thanks for favor received. GERMANY. Amorican Securities on the Frankfort Bourso— The English Coercion Law in Ireland. a fining the powers of the Senate, b; ich the English Accounts. : headquarters of those who pull the wires in all such | the duty on sugar. especial ip o' tA Havana, April 20, 1870. 4 f the constitution ts commit- m the London Times (City Article), April 14.) i " matters, and scarcely Was the announcement re- xine debate ensued, after which the resolution vothat body. ae twenty-seven, for instance, te Frunktore aivices state that the recent caer. ‘Asap of spnaidecatie impoitance has taken place The Inman steamship City of Brooklyn, Oaptain | ceived tll a new committee was formed to prepare passed. says that the Senate pene y a Senatus Con- | ness for American ratiway bonds 1s Ree J on the ban! the’ Cauto river separating tho juris Brooks, from Liverpool the 14th and Queenstown | for another contest, It is not quite deolded whether | Wht the People Bay of the Binances. | siution, and wicks necessary vor iermnset wut | Call Fe ee ea nate These. are now | dictions of Las Tunas and Bayamo, The socounts thus far received are entirely through Spanisd sources, According tothese the insurgents under Modesto Diaz (and almost every other chief in the Central Department), fleelag before the active per- secution of the columns inthe former and other jurisdictions, “determined to seek reltef tn the cradle of the insurrection, believing they could there find the requisites for prolonging the contest."’ Lhey were encountered near the potut of passage of the river by the battalion San Quintin and an engagement took place, in which they lost on the fleld and by drown- ing some 200 men, forty horses and many arms and munitions, They succeeded in crossing into Bayamo, however, and on reaching the capitanea of Horno, de- fended by a detachment of volunteers and soldiers, attacked them, killing all but four, two of whom were wounded. The number thus killed is reported at thirty-five. £vidently much excitement followed on the movement. Vailmesada immediately proceeded to Bayamo to take personal charge of operations, and i as usual preceded them by a proclamation or two, i which appear in the Bayamere Espaflot under date * Mr. Martin will be put forward; he is rather averse oa fo ne (pe Leaps of a i fora | ‘the sense of the Brtioles ‘of the constitution which to it hi " ipece! ~ ve rise to different interpretations.” mself, and should no positively decline to | nudges apecol, unusually wodious. He’ had, more- | "1s toudueas of the Hmperor for the plebiscite may stand one of the Mberated Fenian prisoners will be | over, the fortune to rise in & house already | pe very easily accounteh for. By this process he and requested to take his place. Two or three names haye atgees ged bad Supaaiens: he 80 Mpexpootsa his uncle got ali ey ever ‘supreme power been mentioned, but as some time must elapse be- | toe lanonty iy [aig Aceleps ercularie sade Ane g orem (ERR sncoekoniecs: In. epresens fore the new writ issues the selection is deferred. | series of — “questions.” — Followin without | mentioned that the name of M, Rouher, regarded A younger brother of the unseated candidate is | Mr. Gladstone's skill, the example set by] asthe Mephisto of the present situation, '° ut the hamed on the other side, but the general impression | Mi, ,iAteOMe,, Re ECP Ot amount.» | 2206 Of the constitution of 1852, and Drape Ls toa, titutional scruples, Whai if the vote among politictans to-day is that the government will anand the manner in which he proposed to | MMs cons take every means to postpone the election, for, there | dispose.of it, But he occupied the first hour, not as shone pees Mt t bape ores Ob: BAAR Oe sInet, sane fs little doubt that if It was to go on just now while | his chief used todo, with philosophical disqulsition | Considerations do not enter into tho theory of ple party spirit rans #0 high in the county most disas- | or with those wonderful effurts of rhetoric which, | piscites, Stace tne execution of Louls XVI. there trons and fatal results would be unavoidable, from 1860 1866, so often contrived to ren- | pave been several appeals. to the plebiscite in France ‘The trial of the petition to unseat the member for | der arithmetic itself amusing, and made Mr. | on constitutional points. The first was on the con- Mallow has commenced, — Mr. Butt conducts the | Gladstone's budgets the very fairy tales Of | stitution of 1793, when the Mountain party, havin) petitioner's case. It has little to command ne at- | finance, but with a minute and tedious explanation | finally conquered the Gtrondiais in tho ersten teution save the illustration it affords of Irish gulla- | of the details of expenditure and revenue forthe | on, set about the completion of the constitution bility. Mr. Munster is an Englishman, rich—as so | past year, as compared first with theexpenditnre and | which the Girondisia had begun, said to be the many John Bulls al 1 ambitious; he wanted to | revenue of 1868-69, then with the estimates of April | pandiwork of Condorcet. This constitution, which reach Parllament Howse, so he drew checks for chari- | last, fe went into every single item, and explained | was diiled up with @ rapidity that contrasted table institutions in abundance, promised undying | its increase or diminution, its excess overor reduc- | wih the siowness of the Giroudis's in e'abo ating attention to the interests of his constituents, and’was | tion from the estimate. Into these we shall not | constitutions, reguiaied ihe Bumier of repre exta- elected. But there is little doubt he will be sent back | attempt to follow him. The general result of nearly | tives im the Nattonal Convent orde ed anuual without the M, P. title or the-checks, an hour's oratory may be given in @ few | @ e:iions and establi-hed trial by jury. Thiscoa:t.- ‘THE COERCION ACT. lines, The expenditure was — estimated at | tuiion was submitied to a ‘and approved ‘The English Coercion law has glided into actual ex- | 268,400,000, the revenue 16 £76 200,000, leav- | by 1 801,018, agaist 11,010 vo.es. The ardor of ihe istence ina much quieter manner than was expected. | ing a surplus of £7,800,000, The changes | convention iu cons'tiudon building was, however, " Rioting was anticipated, police and military were on by the last budge! reduced the estimate of | greater thin its desire to. put the constitution into the qui vive, but as yet their services have not been | revenue to about £73,600,000; the actual revenue was | esfect, The constitution, 50 approved, was in fact required, ‘This is 0 @ great extent due to the fact | about 275,000,000, an excess of nearly £1,400,000. The | never acied upon. Two years afterwards, sub-equent that only two or three yery small steps have been | expenditure fell short of the estimate b Semi to the death of Rovespierre and the downfall of taken by the castle officials under its provisions as | Tue surplus thus brought back Ww nearly its original | the Jacobins, tbe National Convention again app!ied yet. I fully anticlpate outbreaks and disturbance | amount was expoude:l partly in defraying the costs | itself to constitution making. It employed wy the whenever it becomes 1 to make active | of the Abyssinian war, of which only @ small fraction | work that experienced hand, Abbé Sieyes, Oam- rae of the great powers confided to them, | now remains unpaid, and after this extraordinary bur- | pacérés and others; and on the 23d of June, 1796, ome oficions rural magistrates have ordered | den had-been met there remained a sum of £3,500,000, | there was ‘submitted by Bussy D’Angias a bran new arresis of “suspects,” — but ee have been | which Bas enabled the government to reduce the | constitution. This constitution created two cham- notified, under sealed. missive from the castle, that | unfunded debt to the lowest point it has perhaps | hers—the Gouncil of the Ancients (250) and the Coun- they are only to avail themselves of the new law | ever reached within the memory of man, and to man- | cil of the Five Hundred, who in their turn elected when they see urgent necessity, and if possible to | age the purchase of the telegraphs without resorting | five persons, called the ‘Executive Directory, known communicate with the Lord Lieutenant first. The | to «formal demand on the money market fora loan. | as the French Directory. This constitution also bal] was opened In Dundalk by the arrest of a pub- | Altogether the financial retrospect is cheerful and | was submitted to a plebiscite, and approved by lisiier who sold. some rather silly productions con- | satisfactory, indicating that the revenue has re- | 1,9§7,380 votes against 49,067, More. fortunate sidered to be of national tendency, among others a | covered somewhat of its elasticity and that | than’ the constitution of 1798, it did work. It pamphlet called “fhe Irish Farmers’ Catechism,” | the country, 80 far as its taxation af- | endured for four years—till the famous 18th Bru- which has circulated very widely during the t few | fords evidence of its condition, has shaken | maire which Pan es on the scene Napoleon Bona. weeks, and which every one is now looking for and | off the lingering ill effects of the crisié | parte, who made very short work of the Ancients, reading, owing to the notoriety the publisher's arrest | of 2866, following 80 close wpon the terrible | the Five Hundred aid the constitution. Napoleon, has brought it into, It commences in this style:— sufferings entailed on our chiefest branch of manu- | in his turn, went to constitution building, and on Q. What is your name? Jacturing industry by the American war. 1% must | tho 10th Novemb2r, 1799, produced his constitution, A. Oppression, ‘be remembered, however, that four millions and which provided, among other things, for the election b. ‘ho gave you that name? haif of ast, yeasts revenue was odtained by of Chief Consul and two assistant Con- . My landlord and nt, in the days of my youth, | operation which not well be repes | OP suls. This likewise was submitted to a plediscite, wherein 1 was made a child of toll, a man of sorrows, ion the oharacter of which Mr. Lowe still obstinately | and approved by 3,911,000 against 1,669 votes, The and inheritor of a bundle of rags. miastates, but which really involved the payment of | Gonsuis appointed were Napoleon Bonaparte, Oam- did your landlord and agent fhen do for | more than # yca:’s taxes within the year—five bacérds and Lebrun. Three years afverwards, in you? quarter?’ income tax and o larger proportion of | 1893, Napoleon was appointed Consul for the term A. They did pene and vow three things in my | assessed taxes. This extraordimary resource rather | of ten rs; and a few months subsequently a neme—tirst, that I should renounce all the comforis | more than provided for the extraurdinary demavds made him Oonsul for life, by 3,563,185 of this life and all the pleasures found therein; sec- | of the Abyssinian war. Votes against 9,074, Quickly upon the heels of’ the ond, that I shouid be a hewer of wood and a drawer AIS, BAT life Consulate came, a8 we know, the hereditary selting at two per cent discount, The issue of Port Royal bonds has mignally failed, and others re Jected are without the shadow of @ chance, The Inarket is glutted, and the holders are weak. ‘“Ac- oordimg to the printed opinion,” it 1s said, ‘of an eminent lawyer at New York, wherever there 13 a c@uita! 1n siuares, only such mortgage bonds are valid whio-e issue hag been sancttone | by an assembly of slareholders—au assembly almost impos~ he'd under the peculiar circumsten Talway building, and this @lds a new danger those already incuried by improvident investors.” RUSSIA. rs Frevdem of Conscience as Interpreted at Court. the 16th of April, arrived at this port yesterday after- noon, bringing our special correspondence aud newspaper mail report in deiail of our cable telegrams dated to her day of sailingfirom Ireland. ‘The King of Greece, in order to celebrate the anni. versary of Hellenic independence, ordered the eree- tion of a national monument destined to perpetuate the remembrance of Capo a'Istria and King Otho, » The note which M, de Banneville, French Ambassa- @or at Rome, is about to and to the Pope from his government is, according to the Mémortal Diploma. tique, drawn up in the form of a memorandum, which, after being translated into Latin, will be communicated to the Council through the Cardinals Legates. The fori of memorandum has been adopted by the French government as a convenient mode of causing its views to be Known at Rome, and at the some time relieving it of responsibliity towards other Catholic Powers without the necessity of accrediting ‘an Ambassador to the Council, Prince Pierre Bonaparte appears again as @ corre- spondent in L’Aventr, of Corsica. The Prince desires to thank those who have come forward to condole with him in his heavy affliction, He has, ho says, received expressions of sympathy from numerous correspondents, French and foreign. The ladies have Deen especially gracious in “deigning to shed the balm of their sweet words upon him,” Prince Pierre, ‘The Prince expresses a hope that “before his powers leave him he may have a chance of proving other- ‘wise than by words that he has never been wanting im the will to render himself useful to his country and every good cause,” A London journal of April 12 makes the following announcement:— Misa Louisa Pyne, who has for so many years occu- pied such a prominent position as one of the most accomplished singers of the age, has announced her intention to retire from public life, and arrangements: have been made for four farewell oratorio perform- ances, under the direction of the National Choral Society. The first performance of the series will be the “Messiah,” this evening, at St. James’ Hall, In London Prince Christian, of Denmark, presided over the anniversary festival of the Royal Society of Musicians, at which a list of subscriptions amount- ing to about £300 was read. Aman named Campbell, a butcher carrying on 9 large business in Derry, Ireland, was shot in the s The Government Messenger of St. Petersburg pub- Ish 6 an address to the Emperor Alexander from the Livontan nobility, saupiis: ing his Majesty to allow the rein! ma of the German languaze and the fundamen autonomy of the Lutheran Church in that country. A de aon of three members pro- ceeded to the capital to present the petition to the Minister of the Interior; but the next day received the document back, with an intimation written on the margin by the hand of his Majesty that he was ia resolution to app to Livonia the av and institutions prevailing in the rest of the ‘he deputation also received an order to quit St. Petersburg at once. AUSTRIA, ‘The Grand Constitutional Want. {From the Spenersche Zeitung of Vienna, April 10.) ‘There was atime when Vienna was filled with re- joicing, and Austria lly boasted of being in ad- ‘vance of all German States in sincere and genuine constitutionalism. The Reichstag of the North Ger- man Confederation was regarded with a somewhat contemptuous pity, because it had not obtained @ law with respect to ministerial Feepaneibitty, a Parliamentary Ministry and a number of other rights and powers which the Vienna government granted without hesitation. But the joy in Austria over the liberal legislation in which the Parliamentary Ministry aud the Reichsrath have unquestion- ably been very fruitful, has long since passed away. Once more a sad experience has shown that liberal laws and paper constitutions may be framed without diMoulty, but that they are of no avail unless the soil has been prepared for them, and they are the ripe fruit of a healti tonal and poittical te. The new constitution has done nothing to reconcile the various nationall- ties which compose the empire; on the contrary they are now more violently opposed to each other of the 16th. These are addressed to the inhabitants and soldiers respectively. He informs the former that Modesto Diaz, with his band, had entered Baya- mo, fleeing before the columns which were pursuing him in Las Tunas, and announcing that the six bat- talions which he had sent in pursuit, together with the loyal volunteers of the jurisdictions, would soon put an end to this cohort of bandits, He calls on the latter, who “‘have a better kKaowledge of the coun- try than the enemy” to drive them out with the usual | eertewens appeals, The battallons mentioned as sent in pursuit, in addition to the San Quintin, are the Matanzas, Espaiia, Bailen and Valmesada. Span- ish loss is not mentioned. At the last moment the Journal mentioned, of date the 17tn, states that on the 16th the San Quintin met the eas 4 on the banks of the river Bury, near a potas called Rosario, beating him and causing him six deaths. Spanish loss ix wounded. Dates from Santiago de Cuba to the 16th state that the fight near the Cauto took place on the 10th, and laces the insurgent loss at thirty instead of 200. In he jurisdiction of Santiago, long since reported paci- the usual active prosecution of the insurgents continues, On the 9th the coffee estate, “Santa Ele- na,” guarded by a small number of mobilized yolun- teers, was attacked by them, but reinforcements com- ing up they were driven off with a loss of two killed— one, & negro. e have no variety of report from the Oamaguey. The Captain General still remains at Puerto Principe, and ina telegram dated the 14th, mentions a recon- street by his nephew, just returned from America. .* a - than ever, and therefore it is nodding to its fall, as a aE ae 4 din Tiopérasy for the rue (ee ees nd, tliat should be'® slave for them Rnd og ates nang ition vrrig A empire in 1804, wien again there was an appeal to | each of the long line of its predecessors did when its | noissance by the column under Lieutenant Colonel > y pperary ur- | all the days of my life. PAO bury, Ap < @ plediscie, not on the point whether Napoleon | time was come. Vergal inthe Sierra de Cubitas, in Yaguajay, San der of Kirwan were some of those whe had been PREPARING. eed sparing OC Uy Sor cern Temunon yesterday | should be Emperor, as a often asserted, but Antonio, Qlavellina and San José. A ‘of 200 evieted'and recetved £800 compensation for gurren- | 4 barrel was seized inone of the steamship com- | morning in the Court of Arches, London. with regard to the hereditary succession. The men found in the hill near the Savaunah Tal A pany’s stores yesterday—contents, a antity of colin The Rev. John Jackson, the deiendant, examined | iyeig9 : Drnaments anit revolvers. Those W a yeas” to this question were 3,821,676 0 2599 are smuggling | by Sir J. Karsiake--I am the rector of Ledbury, apd | «jogs. the arms into the country are preparing also for the | Went there in 1860; I took orders in 1842; before going Pry + eon tnole ras ete, ott ane decent intermentof thei? victims by laying in stores of | to Ledbury I was in Worcestershire and Lincolnshire; | giar of the Emperor had set; only 1,300,000 votes coffin decorations, Some of those seized have arrived | in 1860 1 exchanged the living of Dodderhiil, of which | were oast in the aMfrmative and but 4,206 against. im Dublin to-day and been conveyed to the castle for | 1 was pairon, for Le Ibury, of which Bishop Hampton ‘There is here long gap in the history of plebts- the inspection of his Excellency the Lord Lieutenant. | Was patron: I have been curate and incumbent at dit- | qe in France. Untit the cousin of the Great Binpe BDUCATION. ferent places since 1 was ordained; I was married in | yor came upon the scene the plediscife was allowed Now that the fervor of the Parliamentary debate on | 1845; in 1866 Parry came into my service as cook; in | to rust. In 1848. plebiscite gave the Presidency of the Land and Coercion measures has subsided, the | 1867 Lane came into my service, Duving been en- | tne republic to Louis Napoleon by 6,043,872, against settlement of education 1s cropping up again. ‘The | gaged by Mrs, Jackson; 1 had known her belore as a | the million and odd votes cast for Cavagnac. In De- Roman Catholic clergy repudiate the concessions of | parishioner; she was in the national school, but not | comber, 1851, a plebiscite declared Louis Napoleon the governors of ‘Trinity College to throw open its | #8 a teacher; I objected to the girl, as she had a very | president for ten years, by 7,481,231 against 640,737 prizes and honors to ali, irrespective of religious per- | bold appearance, ‘and I did not like the arrangement negative votes, ‘In 1852 the present ‘constitution suasion; they will have the denominational system | at all; in jhe autumn of 1867 my son was at home, | was ratified by 7,478,431 votes to 641,351. In De- oruone. They demand stilla charter fora univer- | With Redhead as a tuior; Mr. Buckler came | comper of the ‘same year a pledtscite sity where the youth of their flocks may graduate | in January, 1868; in the autumn of 1867 | ratifed the Senatus Consultum establishing under their own eyes and regulations, In this find | he was in negotiation for another pupil | the empire by 7,828,189 votes — against that they are not supported completely by public | from Liverpool; it was arranged when I} 953145. We can hardly wonder that the Emperor is opinion; on the contrary, there is very general ap- | Was at Liverpool thit the youth should come, | enamored of the plan which has dope so much for probation of that system’ which beings young men of | but afterwards Thad @ letter from the father stating him, and that he will make a struggle to retain the all ere into friendly contact and classroom rivalry. | that his mother did not like him to leave home; when ower to resort to it when necessary, A very con- Protestants, as @ rule, are in favor of this mixed sys- | 1 was in Liverpool an order was giveu for an iron | giqeraple party in the Chambers is bent on destroying tem, and 80 is a section of the Roman | bedstead and mattress, and they were sent to Led- | tnig power of the Emperor to keep himself neato of Catholic laity. A form of declaration was | bury; they were taken up into the apple room; the | the constitution. If the Emperor is equally deter- drawn up by the Catholic bishops _ two | iron was not unpacked; in the summer Of | mined to retain it Prance has just enter ‘upon a months ago and sent around all the Irish | 1869 it was unpacked, but never before; there Was NO | constitutional struggle which in d. we shall re- dioceses for signature; it has been forwarded to Mi truth whatever in the statenent of Parry that 1 be- gard with interest, but with that equanimity and Giadstone. I find, on analysis of the signatures, | haved improperly with her in the apple room or on | Dnnosophy with which le are apt to regard the eighteen peers, ten baronets and knights, thirty-four | any other occuston. Peeablen cf others Ia the meantime tis remembered members of Parliament and only 900 laity. The fol- ne Dean of Arches—Then no part of her statement | that Pion-Pion only last September deolared that ple- were dispersed with two deaths. One or two other small bodies were encountered, but without any determined result. The other columns report nothing new. Persons presenting themselves state that the In- surgents have adopted extreme measures to prelong their resistance, All have been obliged to up arms, irrespective of or condition. They atso say that the disagreement between the chiefs increases. Cespedes is completely at loss, and has endeavored to relieve himself of pret offering the Presidency to Fortun (?) who declined the honor. Don José de Lamar y Valera, a native of Matanzas, and Pedro Bon, of Colon, in this island, who came out with the expedition of Goicuria, and Francisco Sicre y Justiz and Frollau Pola, who came out with the expedition which disembarked in the Ramou, have presented themselves at Holguin,.and have written to the Captain-General, claiming to have been deceived and asking his indulgence and pardon. Private accounts from Puerto Principe, under date } of the 14th, state that 600 troops arrived from | Havana. No additional military operations were re- corded, A meeting of the citizens of note had taken place to devise means to renew agricultural operations about the city, and otherwise to restore the normal condition of the locality, A number of presentations are reported but none of insurgents in arms. There would seem to be little change inthe Olnco Villas and mountains of Trinidad, as we receive the 4ering their holdings. In England the lecturer Murphy delivered his ninth and last lecture at Woolwich. In the afternoon bis address was on the confessional—‘to women only.” ‘The crowd was larger than on previous occasions. The Devon (Bag.) Central Chamber of Agriculture met to consider the E.iucation bill, Mr. Hookes moved aresolution in favor of compulsory education, but against denominational. Other speakers were in favor of “Biblical unsectarian teaching.” The sub ject was adjourned. ‘ ‘The Vieu correspondent of the Bohemia states that in consequence of the decision of the Pope that # Catholic officer in Austria can only swear thlelity to the fundamental laws of the State by appending to his oath, as a saving clause, the words “excepung the obelience due to the laws of God and the Church,” the Austrian government has resolved to admit neither this nor any other reservation, but will regard such a qualified oath as null and void, and therefore virtually excluding the oandidate from omive. Trentham Hall, Staftordshire, the seat of the Duke THE FENIAN SCARE IN CANADA. THE EXCITEMENT SLIGHTLY ABATED. Some of the Troops Withdrwn from the Fren- tier, but Preparatio.s for Defence Not Abandoned—The Situation of the Past, Present and Future. MONTREAL, April 24, 1870. ‘Tho exaty's telegrams have already announced the fact that the Fenian alarm has somewhat abated in the different sections of the Dominion. Although the excitement is not so great as a week or ten days since, the feeling of security from invasion 1s far from general, and the government will notbe likely to re- lapse into a state of indifference or cease prepara- tions just yet for a possible war along the frontier. About two-thirds of the volunteers who have been doing patrol duty along the Canada tl 13e3 rae is true? Disost of Sutherland, was threatened with destruction by Gl tree, Pda Cad Mise Aisa tt bor Witness—No; I was never on any occasion Wen ier and Vermont line during the past ten days oe ie a eared BER ae @fire. The Duke is an amateur fireman, and has gute exprene our optasons on unlvensity etneation in free gtany eee oF proper pondnck towards Party Napoleon to the Senate. were withdrawn yesterday, and this. fact has | several encounters with small loss to insurgents in y js the constitutional of tish sujects wary, provided at Trentham ample facilities for extinguish " of or un Toone f west may on Tuesday, the McK of January | The Senate held s sitting April 13, M. Ronner mn | ¥en currency tow rumor that all the foroes are to | the mountains of Alunado and Qalapasie. | be called in and the organizations disbanded. This is not true. The government has no notion, with the information which it professes to possess, of ceasing preparations for defence against General O'Neill if he should carry out his cherished desire of making an attack on the British domain, It may also be properly added here that if tng conflagrations. These facilities enabled the servants to suppress the fre before much harm had been done, At the London Bankruptcy Court an examination and discharge sitting was held under the bankruptcy, upon his own petition, of Henriques Borges de Cas- tro, described as formerly carrying on business as a energy, and the each day contains the names of those embraced in the deci The children of Castafion (late editor of Voz de = killed in Key West) have sailed for Spain. A sufficient sum of money has been raised for them te Tender them comfortable for life. The Irish-American sailor, Thomas Kerry, re- pan killed here recently, is not dead at all, much the disgust and dismay of an officer who had om- ‘er. religious wality | and returned.on the following Saturday; it was the | the chair. M. Devienne ascended the tribune, and Sat scnreticns) straasan etree by He tiales That 8 ractice to have mothers’ meetings at my house on | read the report of the committee on the Senatus eter ae are st present precluded from the | Mondays; they were held in my study, and I went | Consultum. It it 9 re-echo of the Emperor's mes:aze ‘on account of conscien’ Feligious opinions regarding the | in occasionally when I want anything; during | on the same subject, as it was pubitsnet in the ‘@ therefore demand such w | these meetings, whioh Mrs. Jackson attended, Mr..| HeRaLD some time since. The Emperor gave @ very system aa will place those who entertain these | Buckler, myself and my son sat in the dining room; I | friendly reception to the Marquis d’Andearre, who Conselentious objections on ® Fenking ef pocaliy, jo We babs gave Barry Boy menwaicn Lens =H rated of sonpletied. 60 Dis rete “ iy ne senna why pe ie mothers’ meetings or at any other time; before ncere masty ane vert} Benoee and cesahurnents, movernment and repressmtayon. Muy I remember having heard of statements made | serious guarantees against piohtookare. faculty by Lane; 1 was in the habit of calling upon Mrs. | contained in she Senatus Consultum. The Emperor ‘ wine merchant at Villa Nore de Gaya, in Oporto, and ENGLAND. 4 the Fenian forces should ever be placed at the mercy | cially reported his death. It seems he was struck | London, The “statement of accounts” fled by the BP ayer on Fo eo eee aera vieabie they | Toncgsuonee 10 COMA ROS Possibly make any fresh’ | o¢ the Canadian volunteers they will find that the de- | down and left for, dead, “but subsequently came, to | bankrupt ts of a very voluminous character and ex- Tue Budget as Presented b: Lane should not remain in our house any longer, and fonsive war will be one of extermination. The feel- | ™ ‘ y the Chancellor ti A ‘The coast survey steamer Bibb, which was sent as hibits a total debtor account of £70,916 124. 1d. ad tio tana ie dia, Baril pares Frege Sl fee iaie eatt Pere Hyaciathe on the Crisis. ing of the people against O'Neill and those who sym- } bearer of despatches to Admiral Poor, at Santo Do- mingo, recently returned here. He. reports ail quiet there. The Dictator is expecie1 to come to Havana before going North. Tne Severn had gone to San- tiago de Cuba to examine into the enforced depar- } ae of Mr, Phillips, the late American Vice Oonsul there. Arrival of the Flagship Severn at Santingo do } ‘ Creditor, by debtors, good, £24 13s. 10d.; ditto, doubtful and bad, £894 14s.; property given up to assignees, £132; property in hands of creditors, £27,974; ditto, Oporto creditors, £4,136 19s, 24.; by deficiency, £33,648 19s. 11d. The bankrupt states his expenditure for two years had been £850. A telegram from Galle of April 13 says:— This afternoon the Duke of Edinburg has met with a most cordial reception from all classes in Ceylon. pathize with him ts very bitter, and as it is becoming intensified dafly during this periodical alarm it ts reasonable to suppose that very little mercy would be shown if they should happen to fall into the power of the British forces. The Daily News of this city, which probably re-*| tlects the sentiment of the. government as correctly as any other paper in the Dominion, does not seem to share in the belief entertained in some quarters that there is no cause for alurm, and it rejoices eloquently In the House of Commons on the 1ith of Apri Mr, | I did not know that Parry had been at Airs, Bayils’ etd Li higinctd addressed to the Paris journals Kennaway, introduced by Mr. Kekewich and Mr. | until months afterward: I told Mrs, Baylts that | the following letwer:— Panta, April 8, 1870. Scourfleld, took nis seat for East Devon, in the room | in consequence of the reports concerning Amy and | yam supposed just now in denttete ohare ‘a share ot Lord Courteuay, resigned. myself, which were most Ke by mage Lane had bet- | as considerable as secret in the publication of the Concorde. I ‘The House having been occupied for upwards of | ter leave; und then it was she sald, “My daughter is | teel certain that such a proceeding wili not be attributed to me an hour with the consideration of the Metropolitan | such a liar that no one will belleve her;” she soid it | by those who know me well, but I owe to the public a con- District Ratiway bill, and there being also a cop- | was kind on the part of Mrs. Jackson to have taken | tadiction ‘dire sup) mp my sympathies are auierable nutber of questions on the paper, 1 was @ | such on interest In her, and that If we did not keep | on{he side of « work in whlch my owe brosbes ts eineersed, quarter to six when it resolved itself into Committee | her she should not come home, but that she would | ang tert one which is canal ‘than ever of Ways and Means, and the Chancellor of the Ex- | turn her out of doors; that was all that passed at that. | are different methods of serving it; and fam enxious Te chequer rose to open ois budget for the current | time; that was before I had given her notice to | mum in the silence which my conscience imposed upon me wersing, Cuba—Communications Concerning the De- parture of Mr. Consul Phillips—They are 1 micable—Courte ‘A bail has been given in honor of his Royal Highness, | finaeral year. quit; about ‘a week afterwards I told Mrs, Baylis | the outset of the crisis which we are now tra at the patriotism which was manifested by | Beported A jous Treatment of at which 1,500 guests were present. Two elephant Without a word of preface, Mr. Lowe at once | that Ihad been to Worcester to look after a servant, the pecuie when the call for yolunieers was made. Her Officers. }raals have taken place, and fifty animals were cap- | dasbed into ‘comparaiive statement of the esti: | and that when I was there the register omcokee, BY GREECE Lt gine Hb Bip apiae ene tesrenuee dota SANTIAGO DE CuBA, April 15, 1870. ty i te ated an revi once, “4 is ‘ “1 tured. Her Ma ¢@-ty’s ship Galatea will proceed after- | mu actual enue and expenditure for the | said to a lady in my presence, “Provably this Heceealty whieh forces pe ns nasert the sapremscy of ‘The United States flagship Severn, Rear Admiral year oe np sist of ae dae Rood pak ap- | gentleman’s servant might meet ba = lady — pearea that the revenue originally estima tor | asked the particulars, and I told her that she was a pture Tourist: Brigands. that period amounted to £72,855,000, ruisea to | good servant as far as work was concerned, but that be print! perecetl Sehstaty if 1) 14. £78,205,000 by the alteration effected in the collec- | she would require a very light hand and judicious 4 darin Bot Ob Greek Bi oad es 1, rch tion of the mcome, asseased, land and house taxes; | treatment; I said she was one of a very large family | 4 figns. band of thirty o athe ey cuttate aeized and that the estimated expenditure was £63,223,000; | and I thought it very desirable to get her away from | 1 9iy afarathon, an Enj neh ‘and Italian secretary of thus leaving a surplus of £7,982,000. This was dis- | home; I told Mrs. Baylis all this, and she said she legation, three’ En isi travellers and two sepia posed Oe ae iD eatin depen pene pe ee much obliged tome for getting her daughter a They were attacker by a body of gendarmes, ‘Whom c place, y ve 0 of £4,600,000, and next, in effecting re- | — ‘The witness dented, in answer toa series of ques- Shey detested, Sag. Wen uece oe ae eae Guctions ‘of’ taxation to the amount’ of | tions, the statements made by Mrs, Baylis in refe- | Prewner: Having i bs Ps £2,940,000; after which there remained a net | rence to various alleged conversations. He also, in | ™ {From the London ‘Times (telegram), April 14.) rotrines for the year bad Speier ere ARTI Or dae tn rec ap nat manner, repeats deniat of Mramsa, a brita2, 1870 the charges of immorality preferred againsl im by Ait a fargest revenue ever raised in this county, with ine | ane aud Parry grime nave seized; near Marathon, two secretaries exception of the three last years of tho Frenen war. of ri Primes one English and the other Italian, three Passing to the current financial years 1870-71 FRANCE. English travellers and two women. The brigands right honorable gentieman said he estimated the ne Poveegth Se putea. 4d have kept the men, for whom they demand @ heavy ransom. wards to Australia, The Emperor Napoleon reviewed, April 14, at Long- champs, the light cavairy and horse artillery of the army of Paris. Mrs. O'Donovan Rossa gave a reading in the Town Hall of Waterford, Ireland, which was 80 crowded that numbers had to remain on the stairs, having been unable to get into the hall. His Eminence Cardinal Cullen arrived in Dublin from Rome, and was received by a large number of private friends, A correspondent in Rome confirms the tntelli- gence published by the Paris Univers that the two English ladies recently expellea from the city re- authority at the Northwest by force of arms, and the fearful expense which attends inilitary operations, Ro one can dispute the fact that the youth of Lower Canada have turned out with a devotion and zeal that every one must admire.” Commenting further upon the threatened invasion, the same writer pro- ceeds to answer such questions as these, which have been propoundeil by the American press:—Why these spasmodic efforts to repel an imaginary foe? Why should the Dominion thus excite itself and drain the labor. market to fill its volunteer cerns Where is the foe to be sought, for whom such mighty preparations are made? The answer is “that the Fenian demonstration covers an enormous frontier. We be assailable at a hundred points along @ line of tier extending for 2,000 miles, Every one is aware that the Fenians have long been intriguing at Fort Garry. They seek some weak Poor, arrived here on Frihay evening, the 8th inst Considerable curiosity was manifested when she was signalled, and some excitement when it became gen- erally known that Mr. A. E. Phillips, late American Vice Consul in this port, was on board. Tue Severn saluted the Spanish flag at noon next day, and writ- ten communications have passed between the govern- ment officials and the Admiral on the subject of the precipitate departure of Mr. Phillips, who, I be- lieve, holds the Spanish government responsible, and claims heavy damages. What the result is by the ex- change of despatches I do not know. The Spaniards | claim they were amicable on both sides. The officers of the Severn are constantly coming on shore and have been treated with the greatest ex- celved notice that their return would not be pre- | revenue at £71,450,000, and the expenditure at os point where they can most annoy us, It matters not ted. ‘The case of the lady who refused te eave | 201,113,000, jeaving’.a ‘surplus of £4,331,000, To (ope otro ath Sodktget cle ro gt-arere| ‘The following was also received in Fleet street, | to them whether tho locality be St. Armand’s, the | cept, indeed, by the Bandera Espaflola, who chose Nor been taken in hand by eth Odo Russell; but his this sum he proposed ane £160,000 by imposing a Mail telegrams from Paris, dated on the 13th of Honhodt shores of Lake £rie or the Red river; at each of those pe a ah fo} A Ra po aaa Neotn wane bol 9 7 license’ duty of twenty shillings per annum for car- lows:— oat ints they are to assail us if we be found i 2 rh pit Aritens, April 12, 1870, Feumbering, They calculate all the chances in. their | the officers of the American squadron were tepresentations to the Papal authorities produced no result. A communication on the subject has now been made to Lord Clarendon. ‘The North German Correspondent, of Bertin, an- nounces:— A great Polar expedition is being prepared in rying any sort of firearms, and at the same time In to-day’: ys silting of tte Legislative Body M. Emile Lord Manchester, Messrs, Vonner, Lord Herbert, oa eee oe rite tend “somiy, | gilivier, stated that” the Miaistry were thoroughly | Secretary Italian Legation, and Bayl, were taken by eluded. Of course volunteers and others determined not to follow their adversaries into dis- | brigands, near Marathon, yesterday. having otherwise a right to carry arms would cussions which had already been terminated by a Ladies liberated. be exempted from the operation of this | Vote of the Legisiative Body. oS ysl the question:} Ransom demanded this morning, £2,000, of the nomination of Mayors was held in reserve by Cook's party all safe, i isi and tiee Basra tate yay Me | the ay ae etd of the right and left centres. insulted and accused of drunkenness and licentious- ness while in the above named city. However, yes- verday the Bandera published & Tefatation of ‘the , and everything has jeasantly. Mr. Phillips has not pee e small panic 18 among the Cubans, who dare not near the Severn for fear of being identified with Mr. Dp favor, and if they’ come the conclusion that an alliance with offers most. rospect of success our eroces will meet mm there. We believe, and have always remained firm in the belief, that the Indian tribes at the Northwest are devotedly attached to the British Crown; but the danger is that old tribal animositiea might be revived. \° ‘The Minister of Justice subsequent): posed the agshi _ fwedon for the Years S71 ana i872 anagr une difec | deal with, In aupropriaing she proposed. fest, (0 | acjonrument of the Ohamber until the Phursday 10. Ae Hele 8 point of Ronor with the red man to remember | FOES eh aed Sires Consul here, Went On oar; tiftc leader of the Swedish expedition of 1868. Parry’s | stocks tnto terminable aunutties expiring in 1885, ium, whieh would be uNpenewi ories cerned, which might be turned to account | snd was received with the usual courtesies, Yester- ‘tempt to reach the Polo by pushing on to the north | which, at £7 168. cent, Would in the course of . The reason for this | The Barcetona Insurrectior by revolutionists who wanted to make use of the in| (ay @ large party, including Mr. Parsons and the Of Spitzbergen 1s to be repeated, and it 18 proposed | tne current financial year throw an increased charge | %Journment was, he said, twofold. In the first sy 1 Prt By Ser Ota eoniinte no Wyanied £) Hake, C0 of She Th) lish Cousuk wont on board to viait the Admiral, to winter on one of the Seven’ Islands. Protessor on the Consolidated Fund of £190,000. ‘The annual | Place it Was necersaty that ithe Ministers shionld at- [Prom the phereng ‘Geette, Aven s end ina parade or {t one Ne ‘aigtatizod yr ay and were recelved with the utmost attention. On Nordenskjola intends to proceed to Greenland this | o} thereatter would be £547,000, jand.in the year | tend the debates in tie Senate, and secondly, itwas | he y and telegraphic communications with | Aghting. ‘The probabilities are that not a shot will leaving, the representative of her Majesty was salu with the usual complement of guns, Tho Severn will remain until Monday, the 18th. y From the insurrection we have little new. A party of insurgents recently attacked the coffee estate “Bstretia,” and killed and wounded most of the small garrison there and seven or eight tegro slaves. THE SUEZ C/ANAL. | harge . | believed that the majority of the Deputies desired sa eee Ea naatesson ot a remission of in, | to be among thelr constituents during the plebist- | Barcelona continue interrupted in the line of Zaragoza Y Noticing tary riod. The government might have pro- | from San Andres de Palomar, in the line of Tarragona Come oan intencere, to paruoipase, in ke sayin posed Mprorogation: but did not do so from ag‘er. | from San Feltce and tn the line of Gerona in Masnon, aull remaining of £4,297,000, the-right honorabie | ence to the Chamber. M. Jules Favre contended In despatch of 7th, yesterday morning, ine gentleman stated that he ‘had given his best | that the first’ motive was insuMcient, | and mitted via Tarragona, the Oaptain General consideration to-the application of the brewers to be | that the second, if confirmed by a majority, would | of Catalonia makes known that the forces con- coe ier from thelr ilosuse duty, but liad boon obliged | be tantamount {oan abdication on the part’ of the | tinue occupying positions upon Gracla, but that he to leave the matter where it stands. In like manner | Chamber at such a decisive moment, censured | had refrained from ordering them to open fire by hehad fully considered the suggestions made with | the Ministry for preferring to divide itself rather than | reason of the heavy wind and rain which were pre- summer to purchase dogs for the sledges and pro- eure some necessary information. The Patt Mal Gazette of the 11th of April re- marks;—~ There 1s some risk that the resolution to send an armed steamer mto Canadian watere to protect American fishermen, which a telegram on Friday [let | informed us President Grant had an- oui by special message to Congress, may lead be fred in he eat no commanding officer would trust to chance. He must anticipate every contin- gency, provide ‘ainst = every. danger. He must’ take with him a force certain to command success. Thus the uncertainties as the charges to which we are exposed. If England could induce the United States to pu’ down the Fenian movements at ihe ‘West the cost of the Red river) expeditionary force would be perceptibly reduced. Hence many tmak $0 serious Complications between th: ; dissolve the House, adding that such a Ministry was | Vailing; also, that yesterday they veritied the sorteo the United States. Paar ve TosDect 10 RS ALE A OP rostititig tae, Sereda one of agitation’ and sterility. M. Ollivier re-’}) tu Barcelona without novelty, in sptte of barricades eet one gee hati ties: ie Condition and Earnings of she Transit. ‘There was @ large congregation at the Unitarian | derived from this source, he might remedy a promt. | plied that the Cabinet submitted all its acts to — ae oe a wma tipo dt ko honor of c preted omy Uh tngagy ge Are From Galignani’s Messenger of Paris—April 12, nent grievance by allowing farmers to steep their | discussion by the Chamber. The Ministry endea- | troops ly. destroyed; " joluming he | wilt be felt. in augmented taxation, But glory ts ‘ne report lately presented by M. de Lesseps to the Chapel, Little Portland street, London, when a ser- mon was preached by Keshub Chunder Sen, the well known leader at Calcutta of a society of Hindoo theists, whose chief object is the destruction of idolatry and caste throughout the Indian empire, The discourse, which was delivered with ease and @uency, was of an earnest and impressive character. A fire broke out in the Glamorgan Inn, Cardiff, and before adequate assistance could be rendered the proprietor, two of his grandchildren and a commer. cial traveller lodging in the house were burned to death, Ata meeting at Liverpool it was decided to form a local organization in connection with the National Emigration League. The prosecution of the Rector of Ledbury, on a charge of improper familiarity with two of his do- mestic servants, was continued in the Arches Court, London, when Bir John Karslake delivered an ad- ttle with it, sab; vyored to insure respect for suthority and ee | had ized would go out Immediately to attack oo ee ay Penity exces, pecnators aot curity to the country, and the plediscitum was @ | the pueblos in rebellion. At noon on Thursday the providing that no kiln was kept on the premises | work of stability and pactfication. The present First battalion of Africa arrived, after having beaten Trexisued within a quarter ofa mile. Commg next | Ministers had alwavs maintained a frank and loyal | the rebels of Moncada and San Andres, The to the taxes which he proposed Terit, | aititude, and they defied anybody to are that they | First battalion of Ingenteros left the train he included in this category the foot hawk: | had fated to keep their promises. M. Oilivier then in San Felice, fought and conquered the ers license, and the small license duties’ col- | acveried to the complete liberal transformation ac- rebels of that town, and arrived at Barcelona yeater- fected from the still makers, seliers of playti complished during the last. three months, and con- | day morning. ‘The Second battalion arrived a little cards, svap Manufacturers, paper-makers and tinued thus:—“The Ministers have been faithfulser- | later, having come by sea. The Cazadores de Tala- watch-case makers; in ail ncing about £6,000 a | vants of liberty, but have not separated the cause of | vera embarked in nd at nine last night for year. He further proj to revise the stamps and | liberty from the cause of the empire. We accept the | Barcelona. The 8 battalion of Africa had equalize the duties between foreign and inland bills | high responsibility of our acts, The country and reached San Andres and continued on to Barcelona of exchange, which would entail aloss upon the | history will bear witness for us,” on foot without being molested. General Baldrich, revenue of £200,000, A further loss of £120,000 a M. "Jules Favre sald tnat the Ministers had dis- | with the battalion Mendigorra, arrived at Saba- year, of which, however, only £60,000 would fall on | payed great eloquence and had offered no argu- | dell without novelty at eleven o'clock last night, and the present year, would accrue from the abolition of | ments. He pointed out the contradiction which | would resume his march this morning. The imsur- the impressed stamp on newspapers, a measure | existed between the words and the acts of the gov- | gents fied trom the town on bis approach. By pas- which would come into effect in October next. 2 | ernment, and he concluded by demanding to know | Sengers who arrived at San Andres last night we was also proposed to carry all newspapers of legs | the cause of Coumt Daru’s resignation. learn that tranquillity was completely re-established than six ounces weight fora halfpenvy and other ‘The Chamber ultimately voted the motion foran | im Barcelona. 3 pristea matter at the rate of 8 halfpenny for every | adjournment by 193 against 63, (Madrid (April 8) ‘correspondence of London wo ounces Or part of two ounces. This would in- ‘ne Committee on tire Budget have resolved not to Standard.} ‘voive @ loss of £250,000, His next proposai was to | suspend their sittings, M. Jules Ferry questioned tne | _ In the Cortes yesterday there was the following in- remit the five per cent duty on railway rre- | government relative to the judicial Inquiry into the | cldente— celts, and fo aholish tne exemption of olase } alleged plot against the Kmpergr's fe, and asked | u Sepor FoumR—For threo or (our daye important events ways a costly commodtty.’” meeting of Suez Canal shareholders at Paris states oTne four meh Who Were arrested here the other | tHat about 8,000,000 francs will be ‘required this year day on suspicion of being Fenian spies have all been | t,complete or bo tap the veer - a | dinch ‘The men proved that they worked in | THe total number of vessels that passed through the the Sia es im the winter and came nome to Canada | (val from the day of its opening to the 16th of in the summer, and were on their way home when March was 209, representing 146,631 tons, Of these | arrested, All of them were Irishmen, put were old |. $0,052 tons werk ngliah: veosels, 24,900 tency 18664 j resident of the Doininion, one of them having been Bayplan, 1 A Austrian, 7,386 Italian, 4,17g Rus: 628 pants j } | j a stevedore in Quebec upwards of twenty-five years. Bs taky IR ee eaten earns Turkish. Of the 209 vessels 200 were steamers; thé A Neoro Jugy IN Cricaco.—In a civil suit that | others were sailing vessels, ‘The tulls collected were was tried on yesterday, before Justice Drandortf, | from 79 vesseif of 64,644 tons (120 vessels being ex three ‘were subpcenaed to serve on the jury. | empt, having passed through on the occasion of thi Mr. Sparling, the plaintif’s attorney, challei the | opening of the canal), realising 593,411, and th panel, basing his objection on the istatute of Illt- | amount from small vessels as transit dues was 20,1861 nois, ‘The court recognized the fifteenth amendment | With respect to England the report says, “Eugian ‘as Isw, and overruled the objection, The jary was | has from the first day been able to utilize the lava com} of two Irisnmen and a German, in addi- | largely. You have seen what au imposing com i tion to the colored gentlemen above mentioned, A | mercial fleet she has sent to it, and that fleet aug verdict of seventy-five dollars was rendered for the | ments every day. Building yards work itteraily nis planted. This is the first jury Seed’ Gran in whole | and day in the United dom in transforming ¢ or in part of negroes that ever empanelied in | building vessels, We could cite to ag @ single com this Stace. Refreshments at Transit House.—Chicago | pany which, in its calculations, has put down a Times. Avr 2, annual payment of 2,500,000/, for the canal.” =~ §

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