The New York Herald Newspaper, July 4, 1870, Page 11

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< Sra NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 4, 1870.—-TRIPLE SHEET. ; ul mason gi FE Ts c two or three hundred most! and | the Of my associates indeed wrote to me, o voeative of mirth, THA BAST. | Menteur temgised erm | Raakeutaseutcn nie cmae | L088 OF THE TENNESSEE. DICKENS AND THE DRAMA, | Seteusir {sk so Sarat tame winder Thed cohen laa sks ane | “FRSR MASA sateen by Somer ee, | PArieunes ef the Morning of tho Charleston percomecentre pa hen aneitastu peroly, vivia and ingentous a rendering, is fanciful, spirited and mejodious, and the play itself 14 @ bit of brillant nonsense, woulez vous ?”? Bien tore and ancicat spinster who are most scandalized ant Who affect greatest horror at the “Grande Duchease.” ‘They remiad one, in the plenitude of 16 thie statement by demanding Néeor ~ ‘ couple of ‘other munitions of war, had | cution of the convention I have referred to, That isto eay, I and New York Steamer Tennessce Ne . A. Curious Chapter of Recent | seetsmusyiec tsegn the, cus'om house Without | demand theimmediaie iperation of myret, of toy employee | Cape Kear—Passongore aud Crow all Safe~ | “aries Dickens as a Writer for the Stage— Turkish History OF Pchahe Aner atew days! ela? ar imipoll the demand (uther that thelr horace and all tuett por: | ‘Thetr Arrival im Witmiugtoa—The Vessel | Festive Plays by the Future Novelist— ’ ; tored to them. 1 bi Hi y expedition-moved up, the country, and only nated | Baré @ sald aud slaved te tue triah aii uothiny but ia | Med to the Waters EdgemCerge 8 | His Histrionio Genlas—The “Strange when the borde: jesert had been reached, Total Loss, * their Censoriousness, of the exclamation of a lady, ibustering Finso Bedouta shelane, who nud proDubiy Deon ‘prev, Tt 1s needicas to ay tha the Pacha aid not release | oft's mlUnioy wad at ir a Jostords oa arin Gentleman” and Other Worke—What *plevddmens Sarseres coh tae furkl Platee as Ciak The "68 Syrian Fill ing e-Byria as a | ously sounded by paeenaeron ® Syne vats Ne bed by Cafe rr 4 ‘accondhag {0 promise, Probably oven | yy ihe information that the new ‘atoamahip ‘Lennes is Now Being “Dono” tn England— Fesoth ae connene Mee: & oe ale Jo niet Hie juestion lomacy—Stor: jesert about & ir be! a expect tha’ e would, ut the re- why y 4 L850: rity,’ been ribeaageaeing vt poweetal gheleh in this corner of the desert, Suloy+ | mainder of the story can be soon told, ‘The whole | tout Of {he Clsde steamers, ply Me eer hs te Peep Behind the Seenes—-The Your true tory Britisher {s an eecentric creatnre the O'Reilly Revolt in Syria and Its Los. man ibm Merscheed, readily agreed to the revo! party, greatly to the relief of Reschid ‘Pacha, were | the beaci, some thirty mies below Cape Fear. W.th : {nthe marter Of Visiue, which he puts on and off sons—A Speculative Revolution—Mus- onary apoganne ‘and promised ald in men to the | ordered on to Stamboul for trial, At Stamboul, | the rumor was coupled the statement that the “Aminadab Slecks” of bety ee fee Eaptures bg sil extent power, With anothor sheikh, named Bowever, amen scan founa what a trial would involve United States revenue cutter W. H. Seward had can apormiee tat tae Myre tapha Fail Pacha as Its Pro. Miguel, O'Reilly is also believed to have forined an | “certain foreign diplomats’ and would ovuse @ | gone to the assistance of the steamer, and London Society. UDfathomable ips niceeene a ones iniquity . aulance; but uel has always deniod it, Miguel ‘eas scandal, It was decided, therefore, to hush | Wouid probably return during the afternoon, The fat ai litte extravaganza posed Figurehcad—The Schome be known to a few Amertwans as the matter up, and the Levant Journals were “in- Which he laughed at lastseason tli he was blue i the face. ‘There is no such iriend 0 Vile as Une TmAn who makes virtue ridiculous,” w 7 shech who escorts travellers to Palnsra, His wite | duced” in the usual way to wreservecionce,” Ths | SeWaFd reached here about halfpast four o'clock, Ruined by a Fiirtationy an English has sely observes Miss bringing with her a cargo of human freight, who ui lady, who @ rather cu- | entire party were released on the simple condition f atel Lonpoy, June 17, 1870, iy Lord Ritessborou had fortunately escaped with their ves, but with us history. Marr: for. | that they should leave the country, and one of them of al “ th 1 be felt Austin, i snus regret rage General of India, oe pe. alvorced ees a atraaies robably, er his cape to gn rd ave ert d aye “OUNt or THE Loss, ans nega anise tor fi reve pind sai br pairs org eth, gave ed bevel most for infidelity. She was marr! an English DECUNY post as physician ip tie Uito- Tennesse Sharlest ‘ew York, D sen Londoners ive Buyxoor, June 1, 1870, | fir nee tained Digby, Gus 10d a very cooenters Oa ae The Tennessee left Charleston for New York, at had experience for many years past was brougus out & few nights ago atthe Vaudeville, under ihe poetle tit'e of “Two Roses.” It ts from the pen of Ar, Albery, who wrote, a few seasons ago, for thu Lyceum @ piece called “Dr. David,” in woleh Mr. Herman Vezin made a hit by lis nished acting in the character of David Garrick, The two Roses are no political adherents of the rival houses of York an! Lancaster, bat simply # couple of country girs man service, aout six o'clock Tuesday evening last, witi' 773 | Ne fond of the drama and an active promoter of ali Tam going to teil a story which {8 not partioutarly | roer. Finally she married Miguel, ahd as ehe has Such is the story of this abortive Syrian revolt. | pales eotton, 490 jose Tost, 550 boxes vegetables, | movements deaigued for the benefit of its votaries, how—that is to say, nearly all the facts which give | $7,500 year sho hae made him a sheik@ of someim- | The lessons it teaches are obvious. In what other | 377 barrels potatoes, und soe other Iniuor articles od of Ni he displ: t ‘ da | Pottance. Lady Dighy ia reported to be master both | country, pretending to the rank of u great Power, | and suine Aity-thtes prasedgers, eighteen of waom | Dut aban early perk jad bpdecinhe amp as idog point and inrorest transpired nearly a yoar and | Brier nuspandandms tribe and when O'Rey arat | could 8 flibuster Hope to torce the government into | wero ladies, About oue o'clock, on Wednesday | Uitle skill tn the constraction of bright, festive littie halfago, But any story is new until tt is narrated, Sogeszes 4 Samcod Miguel ae pe, seas ncn - cor ae cone i) ite eri see = morning smoke was discovered Issuing from the | piays, which attained considerable popularity at the aad (iis one, although 11 may have been fully dis- project, while, stated, she further sted “ “‘speculatty +, | forward hold, where a quantity of pressed cotton 2 f 0 13 su. poate: ye ae i se diplomatic pot 0d Ovkenty by ac ‘a9 dragoman or interpreter in his | guilty in fuct of asanguinary attack upon pescelul | Way growed Tire ceo ea Ee ety Cotton | time of their production, though their author's su conierences with other Arab sheikhs, But this | eubjects, and guilty tu iutent of a design to subvert ri les east north ? Ri se . | perlor fame a3 a novelist eventually threw his pre- has mover hitherto appeared in anything like ® | picasant state of affairs did not iast long. Between | the lawful government, be alowed to go acot free? | [OT miles east northeast of Cape Romain, and be ~ . daughters of & pompous, heartiess old “sweil, tween twenty-ilve and thirty miles from the shore, | ensions as a dramatist into the shade. Lord Pal 5 wikh Miguel and lbn Merscheed there was a long- | Turkey may, indeed, be slowly regaiuing her ancient | As soon as ihe discovery Was made the steam who, Coming unexpectedty into the possession of # sat pet it neanseses considerable: lotereet inngy | standing feud, and party irom iis dislike to ne as. | strength, bit sue ia Sull iu te iecbie-t wtuge uf come | Aaeoatsimediscovery was made tho steam PamDs | merston used to aay that he had hardty ever met | Ipiehdid lortuue, terns tes ack upon ail his old aud yet it possesses considerable interest, if not | sociated in a scheme in which the latter nist play so | valeacence. Was put in motion aise, aud six streams of water | Withaman with any claim to education who had | {fiends and notably upon his daughiers’ lovers, two from the tnérinsto tmportanoo of ts incidents, at | consplouous.a part, and party from unwilingess to | Fe ee ee etc py tats | Ud Benin Jots “from ‘the holler were turned info | not at some me or other of lus iife attempted to | Geshlug Young Fellows—true gentlemen Dott ree ee ane inataghre MAnREr | Foy pus toeward’ Wr Coloual” Omiakin ter | demoe eatcchean un eemieet ter tae Meena ee ee Pyenty! antuatey “avo “nap | tearm shorthand, “He had himseit made the effort, | was bimsel! in needy circumstances,” Unt f which it throws light upon the real condition of | an’ immodinio coutrivution of @ certain | government In O'Reilly's pluas. “Most. people had gaized so much headway that the | aud we have his ewa word for it that he would | Whom — he now Se oe = % See Turkish cimpire, ‘The world 1s frequently assured | number of camels towards the purposes of | Sytinand Stamboul alike speak of this asa tact, | cames oust through (ho iower hater und the vessel | probably have shoue as a stenographer but for two | Roses Worthy of more Mn ee hae the “sick man” iy recovering his healt, and | He expedition, Miguel determined to, withdraw. | whi Rot Buscepublo of lexal proof, | was in luminent danger of destruction, . Ineffectual seis ald cunnadgeen 16 foiled. | Hs 10006 2 O'Reilly was, of course, very angry, and to punish | admits of no moral doubt, That the | extorts were made to put down the hatches, and in | UAfortunate iiitie clreumstances—the extreme dim- that the various domiulons of the Sultan, however | him and at the same sme to give ton Merachsed n | Emperor has long. entertained some special | ¢roke, "Te made 1 pat down the hatches an tn | ese ease en elaine wad aie wire Widely differing in the origin, the religion and the Ricdge af luis being thoroughly in earnest, he aitacked | Project about Syria is a matter of notoriety, thogi, | and, afier being wet, Were put over the open hatch greater diMculty he experienced m reading it when Sspirations of their inhabitants, are being welded iguel’s tribe, firing into thei with his mortars, | Owing to accidental circumstances, this questa Las | below and the upper, hatenway was put down, written.” ‘The rage for dramatic writing was at one > wounding two or three men and Killing several cam- | hever since the settlement of the Syrian massacres | With the hold shut oi from the alr and sixstreams ee x Was Mt one together into a compact mass. But this story shows | jg, Miguel and Lady Digby, together with thelr | been brought conspicuously forward. In consulaies | of water anda cousiant volume of steam thrown | time quite as prevalent among literary nen as the Chat the tie of union ts stil: so weak that a mere ad- Wane, 509% FeCl eae Dia straight go Damas- pth at aon ying bowl Se artind etek keen into the hold, the proapeot Li i ood for obtain: desire to master the humbler accomplishment of cus, we they te ir siory to the Governor y5 " ‘© ) tug a mastery of the flames. @ few passengers in of i a voutarer, 40 Tall posecestin ef) taaeenses and-with @ | fOr Te Resohid Packs could nor undermand the | Tarkey, (rom tagged to Aleppo, I can speck conf- | the forward state rooms were awakenel “oy the | Shography, 1y the cloisters of Westminster Abbey eloar perception of the chances of succossand failure, | fui) meaning of te nows, but telegraphed orders to | dently as to the Poiltical operations of French agemts | poise created. ‘These prudently kept quiet until the | May be seen to this day the grave of an erudite can dream of wresting a provinoe like Syria from | the Pacha oi Homs to go out and capture the pugoa- | among the Eastern Christians im Mesopotamia, In | gaimes vurst through the lower hatch eu the re- | though now forgotten gentleman who combined in tue immediate grasp of the Sultan, and of forcing | ¢0us Frauks, this case of O'Reilly where could the money come | matuder were quicily awakened, and, after furuish- & ~ ‘Sayer ee sg dm . A LADY IN THE CASE, from, unless from France? he story about the | ing themselves With Ilfe-préservers, patiently, | Mi Own person the talents of a pious parson, a dra- she latter to recognize It as a somt-tndependent The enterprise nad now reached {ts cri: The | “English capitatists,"’ 1s evidently a fabrication; mere | though with some alarm, awaited the reswt, lu | matic author and a shorthand writer, “Shorthand State. This story suggests, too, if it does not | Rubicon had been crossed, the first blow struck, and | Capitaiists or any country are too selfish to risk their | the meantime the six boats of the sieamer he wrote, and death of hua short hand did make,’’ Gomonstrate, that France stlilcherishes the project, | {t only remained to vigorously carry forward the pro- | money in @ Wild scheme for the benoit of Mustapha | were cleared and everything was put in alien ta t ete 7 ne ‘ a + | gramme of revolution. If the merceuaries under the } Fogil Pacha. And, again, what power except France | yewliness for the passengers and crew to leave | the quaint tnseription on his monumental tablet. whtoh, If she had dared, she would have enforced in | Golonel, who were by this time reduced to a toicrable | 18 strong enough’ at the Porte to have a matter like | the yessel, M it should become necessary. For some | Everyoody knows tial Dickens began hfe as a re- 2561, Immediately after the Syrian massacres, and | state of discipline, would only hold orm against the | this hushed np? ‘he “certain dipioma's” com- | thue the Hot steam passed trom the lower old | porter, but the fact that ke wrote for the stage has while her “army of occupation” still held the north. | {€W troops that the Pacha of Hom3 could ogre must have been apparent irtenis of Tur- | tirougi the water-aght bulkltead tuto the boiler and ty P pel: mation Ke muster, all would go well, the revolution | Key; if they had been the agents of a notortouly | engine rooms, aud though the engitiesrs were nearly | #Mmost vanished from the memory of the public. His tn portion of the Holy Land—the project of erect- | would every day gain tustrengi, Mustapha Fuzil | hostile anny Russia for instance, tt 18 ciear tho | snuocated thoy remained at their posts and kept the | gemlus, Was essentially histriontc, and if he had tng Syria tnio a special government—which, even if | Pacha, again sedaced by the prospect of success, | Porte would have made the matter a8 public as engines in notion. An tiour subsequently, when the | taken elther to stage writing or to “stage playing” {&shouTd nominally remain under the Port shoud | Would Join the enterprise, and the foriune of ‘Colonel ee, Ag it would Increase the sympathy of its | flames had been somewhat checked, they could at- . ‘ e # ” 7 O'Reilly and his followers woula be made. Who, tends. But wiat is the ultunate am oi France in | tend to thelr duttes with ess discounort, When th (to use an Old-fashioned phrase) there can be no be directly answerable to the Christian Powers for | indecd, can say to What this petty flibustertng revolt | Tegard to Syria? Who can telly Perhaps the same | fire was discovered the course of tie steame doubt that he would have achieved distinction in éhe seourity and good government of Syrian Chris- | might not have led? But aiairs of vais nature hang | brain that conceived the project of a great Lauia Aged Lo DOLth NorLAWwest, and At AOU BLX Oo money, comes Co grief again and 13 only too glad to let Lis cuildren marry the men of their chotce, Ths isa very simple plot; but the charm of the play dwells not so much in the cunning complication of curtous incidents 4s In the skiiful portraiture of cha- racter, the Lappy treatment of & few well-combined adventures and the detigutfut ease and brilttancy of the dialogue, which, ashing with wit, fancy and sentiment, runs its course rejoicingly, like a* river inthe sum. The success of the play is, as regar both author and actors, the pure trinsoph of inte lect, the piece being wholly devoid of Uiose spectas cular displays, hairbreadth escapes, gymnasite exe plots and breakneck adventures which are the iife and soul of the sensational drama. The comedy ought to do great tings for Mr. Henry Irving, wao, in the character of the starchy, stuck-up aristocrat, tremulously sensitive to his own interests, but cal Jous as iron about the weilare of ryoody else, has & part well suited to his talents, and he plays It to perfection. , Mr. Craven's not very satisfactory comedy of “Barwise’s Look" has been ndvawn at the Haye market to inake way for Mr, Tl. W. Robertson's plag , called *“ilome,’’ a pleasant, interesting at founded upon the “LiAventurier.? In biuns, on a thread, and Colonel O Reilly’s project came to | empire in Mextco may dream also of establishing a | in the morning sie neared the shore and thence | °et Capacity; for he had tn hun the ‘makings’? Sothern resumes hts eld z HISTORY. ignomtnious shipwreck through tne arrival of a C. Christian Power th Syria and Mesopotamla. | steamed up Ue coast at a distance of a third of a | NOt only Of a vigorous playwright, but of a brilliant | playing tt with hts custr x pretty woman at Aleppo. it would be hard to decide which project is the | mue. But he: thement, Mr, Buckstone’s play (speed was materiaily slackened by | comedian, as was abundantly proved by his admir- Some four or five years ago one of those restless, How was tits? Nothing could have occurred more | Wildest; it would be harder still to decide which | reason of the te @ amount of sicam wilch was Ne r ‘. . IR ot ‘ 4 able acting at various amateur performances at Bascrupulous, daring spirits that, auracted by the | Baturally. O'Reilly's escort, whether or not they | ave sunk lowest—the Latins, asa race, In Mexic used to keep the fire im check, A jarge volume of | 7 Sileriies aceite a : vanity Were cognizant ol his ultimite alms, were men of | OF tho Bastern Ohristians, as a religious community, | Water had ven poured tuto the holdecausl Tayistock House and elsewhere. and confusion of Turkish government, flock | few gerupies, who needed ouly moxey to indace | in Palestine and Mesopotamia, bow to iower some two feet in tue sea. His Argt piece, a farce calied “The Strange Gentle from every country in Europe to Constantinople, } them to bliniiy obey any orders that might be given _—_ dawned many of the gentiemen passengers volw aa far" % : & i + man,” was produced at the St. James theatre on th found himself ina very unpleasant position, an | them. Foreseoing the crisis uf his plot, O'Rei seat | PAE SEAUGHTER HOUSE CASE IV NEw | fered their assistance in working the baud pumps | M2) ° Was produced at the St, James theatre on the Irishman by birth, theson, or, according tosome, the Ware, his Heuienant, Phot siepno to Se on ” a rendered valuable service, Opening night of the season, September 20, 1 . deg 3 large creaits and bring the money to the camp with . fron LW pearances, a sofctock A. | 1 f r. le: a 2 he brother ofa Dublin attorney, this man, named Colonel all” possibte speode Untucktls ny ORLEANS, rind tedele abd sont nS te boner Mabe We Ana as FEES reece gee SF Whe aR just as Ward M., the fire was again getting'the nscoudaney. tho Rese egg ; “a O'Reilly, had been, in early life, a private soldier in | Teached Aleppo, a very old Enguish consul, with a Leonean hot steam was onee more coming trout tito tho | Witch was received with great favor, Tins was By i very young Wiie, reached there wiso. Ward was fas- | The Argument in the United States Coart on | boiler and engine rooms, making it dhe for the | followed by an opera called “The Village Coquettes," Sho English army, and had served through the Cri- cinated by the charms of this iagy, and, forgetful of the Lilteonth Amenducut. .| engineers to breathe and nearly banding them with | for which Bt. Mutlva composed. the | muste, Mean campaigns, At the close of that war, having | bis duty, delayed day after day at Ateppo, basking From the New Ort Bea, a the intense heat, Later, fears were entertained that | tnd which was brought out at the same estab- risen to the grade of sergeant—the highest promotion pF on a Sh Nonsense. | yy ml iow pra ODES Tee chomeice me fangs bal Kot, betwen decks, and with these Wenvent Bway Dover bey 6, 1896, pine quaint . " s ‘or the camp he was alreauy - y A ao ess ine ons It Was doeaied important to put the pas- | humor, une ed pathos and graceful lyries of this Possible for a non-comml:rioncd—oMcer, and being | too late, tnd hearing on the way that the expedition srt lp a of My. C. A. Woe 1, Who had been sengers ashore, Where their livess at least, were an. prodvction found prompt recognition, and the piece heartily disgusted at the tamencss of the career | had surrendered he Ned back to Aleppo, and thence Spe nent ee Of James Stailurd, a member At eleven o'clock, when (he steamer had arrived a | enjoyed a prosperous run. The “Village Coquettes" open before him, he obtained lls discharge and ac- | 10 Alexandrotta, and lett by the ilrst ‘steamer tor Ing Violet Caeectation, under an accusation of | short distance above Little river and thirty miles | took its tle from two village girls, Lucy aud Rose, Europe before thu hue aud cry were out for uum, haying Violated the fourteenth and Liftecath amend. south of Cape Fear, she was run bead on vo the | led away by vanity, flirting Wii men above therm m cepted a commission from the Sultan. In the Turk- Cone EQUESCES, meats to the constitution of tie United States and | peach and avonce scuttled as the on-y li § station, and discarding thelr humble, though isi army he steadily worked up to the rank of colo- pate Pacha of Homs had executed the orders from ~ ar red cite Pheer eee ing her, She groanded ta ten feet of wc worthy lovers; bat, fore It 13 too lave, they Rel, winning by the way a creditable reputa‘ton as Liner fodgobnt apeigaetit wpm bee gd ES eutitled *‘An act to enforce ‘the rghit ofthe Ohi fit pont inte rete thee renee the passengers | Ralnorth and Mise falta Genie were the ne oines, Goldier, as well as several decorations for distin- | OReilly knew that the game was up. He is sat, pod ran oe ae Tae at yy ne, Several | were taken to the beach, where subsequently atent | and Mr. ti and Mr, Gardner were their be: guished services, The disgust of such a man as this | indeed, to have attempted to rouse his mervenaries monly yo ed my DLL be Caltces tus dene was improvised from a sat to amord shester froin the | trot um Was the Lord of the Manor ‘ay be tmngincd: when He discovered that hostile | “Su; Mueutaboks’in, a alice eaieee. Poe se, | amaeudment, PaLeneye Wolk M. ‘ke, Tsdaraitl and.the. pace | genie’ gems Cheers woe canta ee eae machinations agatust him not only barred the | some immediate pecuniary compensation for tt Tie charge agaist Mr. Weed was that ho banded | of tne steamer, Mr. Davenport, ieit Ina. sminil bot | fatter, played by Sttickiand, urging an clopement. way to future promotion, but even imperilied | The Colonel, there‘ore, sadly yicided up limse peanpe aie Sette ene aaa to look Lor assistance. They came up the shore, a Baile, hed g trifling part, rendered highly auusing “ x °C . y O Lunrty- 0: oO sSmitt °, iued ») Nis actors > acting. bat little money, for the pay of the conditious, which the Pacha, without tite slightest in- per iaenjd his property to unlawful and unreasona- | the royenue cuttr W. H. Sev ard, and Captain | theatre a farce called Is She His Wife; or, Tarkish m#itutre is not excessive, and it was ab- | tution of obso: ving, teadtly assented to, ‘The whole Myaoeasont for the charge was the fact of Weed's | Usher hearing of the parttentars, prompily got np | thing Singaiar.’’ tn whieh t Solutely mecessary that he should do something for | PSTL were pkon om to Damascus and handed over | pong “a Btookholder and dealer in the slaughter Wace cece Shh ee eee mafiatetes, M hus future nvelihood. Looking around for some con- Resciutd Pacha examined the prisoners during an | HO!8¢ monopoly; that he has been a vigiiant aud | terday morning. ‘hey found noting left of her but genial feta in which fo exercise bis talents, he saw | enure mouth without any very tinportant results, | Merested pariy in all sults against the bateners, | the ull, irom ihe suv ering Wood Work of which epartmoent of in the condition of Byria-a cha hich in the | Colonel O'Reilly's behavior during tits period was | Sending couris, conferring with wttorneys, brow: | proceeded an lime tae of smoke, The pas- diverted is attention from te ke condition of Syria a chance which in the somewhat amusing, a3 he conducted himeelf wut, Le sipes ie Pp iooge Publishing dacistve and hos | yengers were ali on the shore and as confortable ne | Stage, but many. of his greatest novels have been hands of aresolute man might be converted inw a | formly as though lie were a prisoner of war, ald w articles In is newspaper, the Times, and sign- | gircumstancea would permit after having passed the by the clumsy journeymen cath bY ng the bond by whicl in} 5 i i splendid fortune. Me conceived, indeed, what he | daily demanded the release Of himself ant'con- | 2S, Hct Cour MYOKIE te een the | night on a barren sand Leach. From tiem Mr. Un- * in theft attempt to iit them to the stage. ‘ Eighth District Court, invoking the interposition of 1 “ne ! " ate : v , tvel aie . pa panions according to the terms of hls capitulation, “ 5 dertull earned that after the pilot and himsell had nt state of publi feeling, wiih Dickens Balvely terms tn his confession the idea of a “specu: | Te pore himse:f, Indeed, with suck sang froia tuat | Me Police to prevent the introduction of meat into | qef: for as lta has also he revived with succe: Mr, Buckstone and Mis. Frank Matthews appearing with very comic eifect in wo of the ponoipet parts, They have not been dolig mach business ab the Lyceum, “Little Faust,’ by Hervé, having proved but tudtirer- ently successful. The house ts to close im another fortiight. Meanwhile one of the tormer lessees, Mr, F. Marshall, the “ind nt Sheridan,” 18 comb out as a Shaksperian reader at (he Hanover squay rooms, At the St. James theatre the management mean to revive Poole’s famous old gomedy of “Paul Pry," mn whic Liston achieved.sueh glories in bygone times, It is to be produced on Monday next, With Mr. Lio- hel Brough in the character of the inqusitéave Pant, After a galianc struggle, Which deserved more sauce cess than it obtained, Miss Fanny Joseplis nas at length revred Irom the mavagement of the Globe The doors are closed. A well known and lively lady novelist of ning ) With the amnsi gity, Naughty, bal Miss Elise Molt, who hos just returned from a sue cesoful tour through the United States, 18 engaged at the Strand theatre, and will reappear there next W. siay as Lord Darniey, in the burlesque of id of the Cloth of Gold,” ry @ud My, Dilley are the joint authors of the secona T. P. Cec prize drama, he Mate the Mountey,” Which has not yet beea placed of the sta SEVERE RAI STORM IN CLEVELAND, Attack on the Fonndation of tho New England Biock—Honse Strack by Lightaing—Street Improvements Destroyed. [From the Cleveland Leader, It never rains put I pours, is Ww July 2.) st ta Wet be sad fn é “ t en la the evening the smoke ry lipand the thongit of hin in every | of tne disposition tiat has characterized the weatuer Sative revolution” in that province, the Pacha atlast believed that tie revolt hat really pois ppc bined is bee phigh th bead began to issu through the upper deck and the h be little reason to doubt that the | in tus nemlborhood for the past few weeks, Every. F. At the present time the enlightened and energetic | been hatched by tke Porte — itself, Tor | P&ay’ enter house; that he kuew of wil thatthe | vessel was abanitoned, Captain Chichester and of his pays at any London theatre wanted a good shower, but Tio one desired ih vse Police nad done, aud persivted in his support of —tHiainisteation of Reschld Pacha has brought Syria | BUtPoses | OF its own. |= Such things had | them, ‘The tuunction proceeding. of ine ipben oiten happened, and at not & very re- Mf ‘ e tuto @ reasonably orderly condition; the Bedouins | mote period. He therefore ceased to” bully District Court was treated as without euthority of aw ding and provisions, 1 ible tosave | the “Don carios’ of rd Rasselk or that are kept on the cist side of the Jordan, and neatiy | te prisoaers, lodged thein well, and fed them } OF Precedent, except tu the periods of wranuy, and | the basgiuge of bie pase Whh sone | Wretched play of Mr, Disraeti’s, whitch set the aut Se aaates” The Bosouiny . intaaell< but. aos | cotontes leaeen teeta ay Agreed tothe eked | comparison was nado betwyven that myunetion and | Te fases barst § HGNSELOF Ihe Voemel Pare tie | in wertting for the arate MY, Dickens pleasa veed gowed by the | efforts made | to restrain | ment, and O'Reilly the next day handed In the fol. | HEWES of asslatanco that Janos O68, during the | ofjurid flames, piuseutihg 4 spectacie of AWAd gran. | BIsfAMous nom de pune Of “Boz,” & sobeinee or ro ripe for mischief, and ta | lowing document, written In comewiat sitnehod | Are Atnerican revulutton, denoinced as arviteacy | Ohl! chia i erate | eich, in punning allusion to the quotation trum everF nook aad corner of te country there were ele- | Freeh, It Wil bs hotloed that the sory of Ulleere | M4 dosituctive of uberty, and to the generat | Vt! eight o'clock yesterday morning the passengers | Vilyl! “Procuaibit hum Bos" provokea the fodowing micuts of layiossness and disconteat, which mignt | diners from the one I Dave told in afew partionlaras. | Warrants issued in the reign of Georgo Tl, cone | and ercw, with tie ococrioly OF Cay ees | Nene eplahtine whieh deccreee Neat the f¢ Feasonably be expectid. to guiner round and | the sutrender, for exainpie. On these: potnes ft is sae tenant aia aie ee Uikenod ‘O | the citef engmocr and te stewald, had all been | though st appears to be forgotten at tits sits: strengthen an jnsurrectionary outvreak. It was | possible O'Relily may de truthful, buf, at any vate, : barb 3 safely transterted ty the Seward, thronzh a vy Oh, Dickens, dear, cisar, therelore, that if O'ielily could contrive to | very ‘ew people bet mn, ‘The story Luave given | Wager laws, which were pronounced to be uncons:l- f 1 ae hus Worked nobly until ten i the en- | Would prove highly attractive, “They would surely m Lo sceure canvass and spars ioe tentsand | prove better cn in the hands of a manager than such us .ell Upon the city Thursday night at The storm made its appearance at about eleven o'eluok Chursday nightan the form of asirong wind, filing the air with clouds of dust that seemed to args to tue clouds in quest of Water to quench its thitat, Soon the rata came on from the South, being heard several minutes before its arrival, and literally mans dating the streets, The thunder roared out th long, p and thighty pels, and the lightning frequently Bled the atria vivid naanes, mM wat given. Tite #31 Cedar avenne, ina large dwelling, ‘ ~ % rt ‘ suri, when the cutter steamed off and brought thed 1 y Nghiniog and almost immediate! muster somewhere Ln Syria the nucleus of a revoit | is tie one generally recel\ el. tational by its Supreme Court. | ‘Thts injunction sim- | git saiely tu tis cliy yesierday afternoun. “the oth, a rool to cellar. Apart from ttt freal hhe might soon araw round his standard, by promises , i 4 Ply eajolned the police to prevent all moat belng | cors spoken of above remained on tie beach ged Wh of the Lightning the large streams of water caused of pander, a laree army, Abundaut revolutionary ee RELLY'S CONFRESION. latroduced tuto the city of New Orieans not prepared | will be pronght nere to-day on a stc.un tug, which zis, tee ae, by the fain operated disastronsiy in many localities maverval oXis-ed 1n the counteys Te Itcould only be | artam here x prisonee oatinns tS ee eetating | at the siaughter house Of to Crescent City Uompany. | Ierr yesterday monaios for tae uree per! “Procum it bunt the gland bioek received tote than its shard aggregated togeticr ina compact mass much, very | having warrenderal tho arms and munitions ef wee ont Every Policeman was mado a judge and could pre- | “nie origi of ihe five 1s as Yet duknown, the first | THE “VILTAGR Cogcerres—proKeNs’ 70 | ofthe ravages in this respect, ‘The outlet of ths Burch, conid be accomplish. d by is wid. certain conditions, made between meand | Yentand hinder the buie ~~ from pursuing thelt | ind cations of fi Waving been discovered about mid- q caten basin Was not large enough to give free paa- Of Course, any such oudreak could be easily sup- neral of Brigade, in the presence of hi thout any trial or judicial mauity. | night of Tucsi: 28 become 80 when about seventy-iive miles out rn ti the whole milit ver Port it Pacha. These conditions were as follows: | Tuey were to judge of the modes of hindrance, ard ya Chartest o: rane! 4a fine ne la au C Roo nestile iiuenve ov entice Gurope, were cirected | qtiertete ante comiya aad auletent eoct mould vo | Ball selzed aud held a inrgo portion or meat pre- | Huying been bulit avout ony Feat deen Sie eae | following extrac 6” ia Suppression, But Colonel O'lteilly did not ex- | Bey: eo that he suould be able to eoutinue the gurvey of the | A may dee ouec bers for the markets of the elty Lil | sidewnee! sceamer und was intented for tie Un.ted DEDICATION TO “VILL ect OF Wish to ict. Watters run On BO far as that, | proposed road to the Euphtates. Haris Gestroyed. it wasa perpetual order. They | sintes Navy, but was aflert/acds sold to ths proprie- | Tot. P. Hauuer Md not hope to erect Hyia Into an idependent | | S2n/—That and my companions de permitted to retain: | Made ho return to any court, aul Were sadject to nO | tory of the Clyde ling, they iieading fo place hor on | MY DIA Siote, He mevely destied wo Kindle 60 extensive | pilsuch arms aud munitions of war as personally beonged | Fesponsibuity for thelr dotgs under the order. | the route bstiveen New York und Wiltmugtone She | thanyoufatier tt , revolt tc tho Porte wouid willugly pay | ucitd defies to go howd aad thal po en edt viel 3 prey Lea Agee was afterwards, however, pliced oti the Now York taeal roeheans a you. milk aes gti saat lly Jor sts voluntary extinguishment, And be F ts ected a South Carol steamship lihe between New | a a ff ‘4 are . goon found-a prospective price for auch SuoMIssioN, sy been on | were “unruly | and ill-advised persons,” |} arienol pain Uiebamer, her Gone: | iio cenmk Ronee Seman white, Beato is having been broken, despiced and un- oni 8 York and Charleston. Captain Chichester, her com- | the same stock. I dedicated to you the frat pla; mich Would bring him honors as well ws money, | geengnizod ‘by the authoritue, ante number of persons | WHO Were not named or described, ‘Thus tte 0 Phe ue it would gatn f¢ s ere Kel * t mander, was formerly on the Rebecca Clyde, be- | I ever published, | and ou made for me the $ scheme the sympathy of | totally ignorant of my inientions being in prison, Thave con- | Pollce were set at large to discover and todelermine | tween this port andl Raw York, aid hay alvrays | feat play Perer proaices, the balance tem your favor, a! least one Kuropean Power. ‘This was the erection | Sented to write the {ollowiny in order to tacilitate their dis- | WhO were “unruly and ill-advised persons” whose | yanked as one ol the Inost wire Ul’ and efticiont mas. | 8841 4m afraid itwill remain so, That you may long con: ‘ 2: Syria into a vice-royalts. on the Egyptian model, | Shaskiauive see tented ide tatneetaereaTan ® | Properly was to ve destroged on thelt Judgment, | vers in tue inerehune tariies Whe pascongels ave | sqiateyatte amtvetmene oC the pat : anfon be gpa to fs “royalty y tel, Be) aly wl ra he hg ill y a d es Ss r , by the honor and ites) ‘otir private life, Bributary to [he Sultau, but seif-governing and per- rid ‘whon Twas in ‘Stambouty Constantinople, ‘sulferhy Porn tober whiahe repulted: tant Hentias Bae ail unanimous in thew expressions toward hit, | onthe professfon which for many years oa, bave doue Bape available in posssd:e con Helos against Him, | the results of intrigues successtully set on foot agate me. | and property described wher nate and seizures | Verve that moral Man evusd Mot have done mre | much to uphold is the sincere aud Cureat Wish of mn Let it be once asmounced that tins was the alm of | Later that isto sny, inst year-—{ had interviews with several | ANd Drape PAG. Meat nate cate and selzures | under the circumstances than did he, And he was | Me yours, moat faithtally, CHARLES DICKENS, tio enterprise, and the sympathy of France, secret or | Persons with the view of securing the pecuniary means | Were to bo made, Messrs. Pratt and Weed had pro- | gily seconted by ail of us oilteers and crew, D pt, ae “ avowed, Would ve thrown Luto the seate tn favor of | Of commencing this speculative movement in syria. | Cured (his paper to be issued, and were responsible | "ihe erew aro. pow An Lilla ily and wilt 7 “Winer tne. bonsesele geotintin® tae Gaon the revoluit oeremine,. Lamn Our nite | aim | Was, to force the Ottoman | for all the consequences civilly wud criminally, The | eared for. Yer neariy all of the passen Hither the honorable gentleman 18 in the right or he 1s 10 revolouary programme, Jam now.sUPpOsiNg | government to consent to certain condition waiclr we fourtecntit amendment to the constitution and the 7 tf , bis pol a 2 pirase. in. very common, tse within the walls of that Coonei ( y and the man who was to be-| fended to demand. These condilions waste hie tule W peetenk cara riotin en Mee rete | Mstht, all of these, with going two oF thier , | Parliament. ‘nis drama may have a plot or it may wot, anid Put forward ss Viccroy were hatching this scheme | creation of ‘a vicoroyalty in Byiiny with hin Bxcollency | Case gu jay bt oa Son de caule to this | concneing overland to New York, The offters will re: | the songe may be poetry oF they may not; and the vole sruegyey castes ater aha suow that | Bet Sontee che on taarnh caret aroaatog | soca pons tel ten eet 1 | avn fo hareuon. We” Ano of no ctance a | Mla etn feealgts i mg gn enue qi a x | CY ol right to the succession tothe Vicoroyalty of ‘800 c ‘i es ft $0 ’ ows as the ho nan oF lidy who reads -~wplthongh there 1s nothing but suspicton tosupport el leeroyalty of Egy; | the eubstance of the arguinent of Judge Catipbeul actual destitucion among either passengers or crew; we to the iarge stream of water, and workin around the cd.eh basin the basin Was soon wor away, © ng at tle point where the pipe wall fell into a distance of from uventy-tve feet, giving pussige ton Jarge Stream of wat he water rusted down, bearing away every ob , entering the lower part of No. 29, where the femiy of Mr. L, Rosenblatt re- side, The stream rusted in here with a territic Noise, awakening the family, composet of twelve persons, and frightening them out of thelr wits, Mr, Rosenblatt, tis wife and eluldren immediately made for the uppei Sof the buliding, and desvensed into the 13 OF a Ladle ed ap to the window by some policemen, A servant girl, wih & chitd in fer arms, attempted to pass cut’ ou tie and fell through the sidewalk, which waa d away byt rrent of water, A board was put down, assisted out of the cellar. Aq Ue water rusued into te house It carricd off every particle of furniture. A large cooking stove was borne of a litndred feet from the house, where it lay au yesterday, Almost every vestige of furniture c y was carried away. © WAU interest the - nf eutort : Once tn arms wa shoud laye madea certain deunie ‘5 save, 3 rt n to think, To retaining bis own private str ti aris : She charge, the. bellef cutoriained by ewo-thitds of | rangement with Mustapha Pycha, sich, for. insta yosterday. Mr. Roselius, o: counsel for Mr. Weed, | Puthorwel us to Bie Lint ee anor suartan. las ee Agi phigh XSAVRRON BE SOUREO WO te abST wae the pesple of Syria that france, even Ab Us Cariy 1 ceaslan of land for purvoses of colonization. andthe payment | closed the Argent th a bite! address, ia wiloa ne | i plication for rely which he formed upwards of a year eg v Dae - hage Of Lie Affair, actually encouraged it, and even | of a sum of mon: The latter part of thé pr thud tho aa not aitempt to answer tho points’ made by his wit be promptly responded to by him on behalf of | he wrote the plece—tie author leaves squad Of labovers to meme the road. By noon it wae fustigntod some cf its deiails, 18—Wwell,’ posstbly, | money part) only to vs insisted ou in case that hismight to | Gayersary, Tite ‘Judge then took'the case under ad. | Wecity. ‘ epee ies oe corre, Nims aia, AB die or she ws nearly all arranged, but another rain set in aed bn & founded on fret, the succession to the Viccroynity of Egypt should be recog- + * He will Probably render his decision to. On board of the Seward yesterday, on the way to aintd tide.’ AU he wished We ey ee ere ot few minutes destroyed all the work a But wid was to be the Viceroy? Not Colonel ae This scheme was tn short one of those affairs in day or to-morrow, whea the United States courts this city, @ meeting of the passengers was heid, at Brabham and ali the percormers Gat. kamuied te tne repro: Several other localities in the city were affected by ¥ O7Reiliy himseif, of course; he could only aspire to | Wich money was intended to be empioyed for the overturn- + af wich Mr. D, F. Piomming, of Charieston, was calied the rain. The tmprovements ou Literary, Mapie, ba the King-maker, the Deus ec machtat the | 128% A sorefement, such ae a has successfully been done will be adjourned for tue summer months. | to the chair, and Major H. F. Lord was eiected sec | the interest they evinced Init (rom its \ * power behind the throne” of the proposed ‘king- | also, by the waye that at “thie thao’ Facil Mustaples soe me Teg retary. poet hat gehen oncaeid pn dom, At tus period, however, Mustapha Facil | Pacha was an exile, Shortly altor bis Majesty ‘the WOVEL AND IMPRESSIVE FUNERAL RITES, Mr. E. F. Underhill offered the following preamble | grownpd K with suocess far exceeding hie most sanguine an. Pacha, the most cunning and tie least scrupulous | Bullun, during his viet in" Burope, having shown ore and resolutions: Acknowledgments, “It isnoodiens to ndd thet the 0 Turkish politicans, and the brother of ismail | Bis food | will. ee Mossphe | Pacha, the | Lady Pall Bearers at the Obseaquics of a Whereas the OAsiongers on the steamer Tonnesege, of the | an opers must bo, to n cer Pacha, was in exile, and, utter a Little tempting, ue | Posted wy tne pealne poled, Getuue Hoblocan Gh tutes. Young Lady. New York and Charleston steatsh'!p line, have been rescued | music, and that it Is scarcely rair oF agreed to 1uriish tie money Lor the expedition, While, | {ho ale: Theck bomeren. Sanka eeiman to enter 10 in {From the Troy Times, June 27, wan appete s tFo Sree edn cearcus calaution watch | by thoso atrlot rules of aritictarn wht Subsequently i de sttgid Dave i reasonable cluince | my employmentthamen whom I had engaged through the | ‘Tho funcral of Misa Mary Gleason, who died at the | “Wherkhs'icis just tint yee should bem pudiic expression | *aUie t0 # fve-act tragedy ow fh OF success, he would openly weceps its leadership, | Wioter’ and. further, lading other porsons in Linglaad Fealy | wail Works on Friday evening, (00x place yesterday | of ‘gratitude vo thos hone exertions this destruction of Ed Af the revolution were strong chouzh to warrant the | te ald Of June. Tought to say here upon a polutor hones | aliernuon from the reside f her iatner, Wiliam | Duman life hag been averted; therofora, o¢ it Tho cast was as follow: @ormand Mustapha proposed to require, as the price | that resigned my cominiasionas.an offcer ik the Olives | Gleason, au old aud well Knowa resident of the | _ lesolved by ihe passengers of the steamer Tennessee, io 7 beaoe, MOK uly is Huuediate Lustitution as Vice- | service as acon as { had resolved to enter foto thisaifair. t | Sixth ward. ‘The deceased was a young lady, whose | Meeting by gen ag lig ten Bo eng ela tnd oy Of Syria, Lut also @ recogition Of lis clalin to | ought now torspeak of the persons who accompanied ine in | ainiable disposition and kind heart nad won hosts | Under the guidan of Divine Proyideu she tha. 8 fhe throue of Eg. pt upon the deatn of the Khedive, | this expedition, ‘The Gret’ who 1 engaged wun, Colonel c fibjection mand. tho. steamer rove ok) pt upon th a Romer Told film Dothing of th ‘inn vee arith yey el | of friends and endeared ner to all who knew ner. | kept in sudjection for over ten hours, und. the steamer THE PLAN AND 1HE MEN, sens tata fedommusendiad nite to prepare fentig Hatin The Young Ladies’ Sodwity of St. Joseph's purish, | brought near the shore for the safe landing ot the passengers ular by Having thus assumed a complete and finished Tr aicné add tantiions ot wae for = soceat ‘oxped)tion. He | Of which she had been un esteemed member, at- | by the steamor's boats, George Edmunds (betrothed form in the mins of its projectors, the sciteine | consented to serve under me on condition that the mu. | tended the funeral in & body, eight of their members | _ Resolved, het whilo tt may seer invidious to make special | Your; Bensoa. sentation of this opera will accept his warmest thanks for iL Jrove, Forest, Mul, Praukin aud Hilt streets wad Wiell aVenUe Were sO greatly damaged that wa — Work will not suiice tosiraiguten matters again, vi day yesterday It rained with more or less vlo- lence, sumetines simply misting and now aud them counug down 43 LM augur holes, that augured na good, had bea bored in th Unal three ky, and the streets of the culy pre- euraace. VILLAGE Coquerri friend) ‘The following are among the prominent provisiong of the new Constitution of Llinols, voted upon ow r. J. Parry seems to Nave dragged slowly along for some Utne | nitions having been once landed where I wmled | in white dresses and veils acting as pall bearers, | M:ttonof indwiduas where all seemod aulmated vy @ com | Johu Maddox (a «Gardner | Saturday last, July 23— Without 1nuci progress Doing made toward its exe- | ho sliould have the right to demand the object of | Upon reaching St. Joseph's chen the society en- ee et ea ae ae weeae. ue Dassengers | Lucy Benwon 49 Rainforth bribery, perjury or other No person convic cution, After a wile the Sultan went to Europe, | the enterprise, and that if he did not approve of r the pleasure he youre | Rone (her coum J. Sento s _ ° " tered, and ag the collin was bemg slowly borne | of commendi especially the conduct 7 oy A id * u infamous crime 110.8 Lo any Oilice Of profit Gad (probably in view of the coming struggie Wath |, g?t ate yet to adhe OR che rentitg Meet | down tho aisio Miss alltcHoll, who kindly lent her | Colchester, “Cllet Male. “Becket, “Bocond °Mate™’tak | Hime eocupled in Fepiessitd aad ehalte | or trust in the Stat tubers of egtstacure the Khedive) graciously pardoned Mustapha Pacha, fealon In court there was great Netahter at this phrase, the | Services tor the occasion, reudered @ choice and | Has, Steward Booth, Purser Jack: Chief Engiweer Beene, an Lngilsy vi are required to sweartbat they have not paid any br.ve to secure their ei¢ction, and that they wilt not receive any gift or brine for auy vote or influenoe they may give or withhold fur any oficial act which they may perform, Legisiative and Senatorial districts are to be ap. portioned according to the nutaber of inhabitants, and all countics having three-fiftis of a ratio will Le entitied (o at least one representative, No appropriations shail be made in any private law, and appropriation bills shall contain “no other provision, No money shail ve drawn trom the State ‘Treasury except ti pursdance of law, and when propriated for any specifle object shall not be di- ‘anc, oilers Speece se Fano ae ero aerceiiy tat he | general tmpremion erlienty being that Colonti Romer'was | appropriate aeieedon apon the orgam, ‘The funeral | Hasd,Assleiant Englhoere Hairis and Hane, oilers Speece What is Now Done” in Londo: , onion. showd have nothing more to do with the proposed | scarcely troubied with an {noonveniently gtri services were periormed by the Rev. Father Michel, ‘ bra a Cre athe cit} a prudence the: - Sxpedition. O'Reilly, however, seems stilt to have | ples.) While walting T niso engaged a A liyinn Was sung by tue young Indies 0: the society | plied in tue-orgauleabum. att distcibulioa of their farce cy | Mr, Charles Reade Is at his old lunes agatit. To cherished hopes of uducing Hitt to efttet into it, or, oar (ME. Canlleld, no passed by this alias), tolling them | and a short seriiun preactiod by the reverend father | secare the sntely of the lives of those who had been eutrustaa in detault of Musiapua, 0: finding some other igure: Ger Laing fhe feds ng lg make the survey of @ Fatlroad | Herore mentioned, full of consolation to the tnem- | to thelr charge. Tio Captain Ghlcttster, more copeciniy, tor | Nas Produced a new play, or, to speak more correctly, head for the enterprise, and in the begining of 1868, survey, {n view of # ‘sobbeteten, trom te governmant fof the | bersof the bereaved faintly and of connsel to those be abi sencneneet Dace, seh people pen gt bape od Leh he has made a flerce onsiaught on Mollore, of whose furnished wih funds from some mysterious source, | tra sportation of minetala from the mine of Arhana tothe | Who hid been the friends and companions of her | Were salely landed wo eaunot ‘pone in terms df too high | Aelightful comedy of “Le Mulade Imaginaire” he Degan to nvke the necessary preparations for putting | Mediterranean coast, At thts time I engaged also Mi ard, | who had been called from their midst to receive a has produced at the Adelphi @ new version called hig plang luto execntion. ‘The next stage of the case | who had given up his pagtics. “ eriatendent of bridges in | at her Father's hand the crown whicn He hath pro- Resolved, That our that ” p on telph ‘ fa his advent 10 Syria, in the summer of the same bist To Tacahantng aves’ nd je Hi mised to His faithful children, Ag the reverend | D. Usuer ahd the otllce “The Robust Invalid.” But that he appears to be Tea; at the head of a large expedition) the avowed | Abvatinia. 1 uiso eogaged Dr, Dilon ae physie'an to accom: | {atller Concluded the beawitful hymn “Angels, wake | ave cutter W. H. gow altke beyond the range of piety and of reason one Bjecs OF WHINE Waa The. COnStCNCHOR OF & Fantom an cutvarens Poy (cr me arene @ Coe Mupaentes, | Dee SO yous carey” Wee sang Uy Bie Misucll ta 8) Toor might fee} taclined to appeal to hiin in the langua agers and crow of the Tenvessee the mom Ee eee the teke preg bts Broly on Fg fo bim a man of honor and of | very touching and effective manner. The society Of their perilous situation on the addressed to a profane translator of Lomer— Are also due to Coptam James recoguas » TL kuew we'l that he wonld not retire when | then passed fo the entrance of the church, where iver. ‘ veried. ‘ fi es. The Colonel took care to let every one ould find himself in the face of danger, and | thoy opened tanks and sivod In stence willle the | —‘Kesolved, That eoptes of these resolutions be engrossed Ont stay thy ruthless hund; procesd no further! ® The Legistature shall not release or ext(nguish the foe Haat ue was in posseaston ‘of ample funds, aud A Ae eo TS Goes uacethoven to the Hearse, and tence. DOLHS | set acisentat er mcehnr tee semaioees wiooe canes mea Tait not written ‘thou shait do no murder? Indevtedness, lieb.it'y oY obligation of ty corpora. the mercaants of Boyrout readily enough believed | {2% enrotied as escort that none oF then ie covionarat to 1s final resting place in St. Mary’s Cemetery. | beca mentioned 1m these resolutions, It is so written, but your remorseless “adaptor | tion or individual in the Stare. that bie loug-hoped-for mili aA of # ateaig Froud | my ulterior alms. Whep they fouyht and when ther wounded | Aside from the socicty tue attendance at the fuueral EE ES pays no heed to the thjunction. Not that Reade ts Legis uthorize addt- to tho futerlor hha at ieng harrived, 16 was hoticed perone as ‘dated Ty the charge) they did so stwply because | Was Very large. SINGULAR SUICIDE NEAR BOSTON, by any Means devoid of talent; on the contrary, he lowanee to ony pu x singular thav O'Kelly seemed to Keep aloot as ordered them to do so, and without knowing why or for oO “pT clase € isa man of ability and has done some passable | officer, agent or contractor alter service Las been “3 nue as possidie irom tite consttis, Dut this was put | gal ey were Hehting. cane esos wetter Hack sont A BLOODTHIRSTY LITTLE SAVAGE IN SARATOGA, [From the Boston Post. Jane 27.) things in his peculiar departuent of literature—that \ered or @ contract inada, down to pers nal disasreements or to the abundant 2 nyaelf, privconlite A lady. tile passing through the groves of Wood- | of novel writing; but he is no p. b had agaln and wr ‘ " " A44 ‘ , ror fant to the expedition, free gp hee eet he he é The Saratogian has an account of the brutal mal- | lawn Cemetery, Friday afternoon, Bear the North | ehlet of It is that he will not 4 of REE OE NOES ea Hea ee eer the ANgloct unto won seat noes | crentment of @ iittic boy about «x years old nauied | Chelsen line, exe suddenly upon the d ad body of | — At the Princess’ theatre Mile. Schuelder ts appear- | corporations or individuals, ‘ The personnel of the Colonel's staf he dese: very rich, indeed retived from the affatr, ecanse I post- | Allen, by another boy nav tHuntoon, Wio is only | « well dressed man, from whose head flowinga | ing nightly in La Grande Duchesse’’ to No law shall be passed extending the term of any: the confession, which I give below. There w tively refused hia aid, ns Tdid not wish to engage too posi- | fifteen years of age. The details show a most de- | stream of blood mixed with brains. The deceased disgust aid indignation of the “unco-: Public oMcer ater Lis election or appulatuieut, persons among them wio claimed Ameri ively in the affair until 1 was {fn poseession of the prayed nature on the part of Muntoon, which, if nol | appeared about seventy years of eee, and was well | who denounce her and her performances us every- ‘wo-thuirds Of ali the members elected are required. Ahip—olonel Romer and Mr. Canfeld, otherwise | Money of ywhic | the, parictpation of Mustapha | Checked, Will evenita ly lead him to tie galiows. It | dressed. A letter was on his kneo dircoted to An- | thing tuat can be tinagined of iniquitous and v1 to pass a law over the veto of the Governor. Under y writer. Tho mis- ceive the fact, State giiail not loan {1g credtt, nor in any man. ne reaponsibie for the debts or Uabrli * % al ef S oaitio: t Oo “A appears that Huntoun endeavored to decoy young | drew John Mation, Rutland, Vt. ‘The letter showed | They hold up their heads tn horror and invoke the the p it Constitution @ majority only is Mirod, pee Pale rag ona Ce aaa Slt cic aA Rag 2 ih Liar acelin is pen Rd ee Soar et BOAR ate er crete eG rh AMET COS he ea Woil,ttts a | The Supreme Court shail consist of seven judges Watton, ‘accepted service under the Suitan, and tind | ecived Goal notice that nothing was to be expected from et him some squirrels, ‘The voy refused to go, a8 | been living with his son at Hyde Park, and that he | matter of taste—Quot homines, tot sententia. ‘Every- | inscead of tree, as at present, Fou the rank of Bey or coloucl, Mr. Canfivid } Mustapha Pacha, and tminediacely I separated myself from | fiw mother sent him to schoul, when the rascal | had ieft tere oa Thursday, aud had stopped during | body ts entitied’to his Opinion, as the man said ‘The Legisiatuve shall have no power to discharge had formerly beon American Conaui at Athens, | Sweyman Ibn Mericheod, I then awaited the arrivat of Mr. | geod him and @tagged him to the cemetery and the mght at the United States Hotel, in Boston. In | when he throw his wife out of the window for saying | porsors or property from a propor te share et the letter he refers toa garden he had laic out, and to | that she preferred bine to brown. [am ree to confess axes, nor comraute such taxes tp any form, . the chickens of his son, wiich had devastated it by | that Mile. Scineider’s proceedings are not exactly County authorities sh never assess taxes, the their scratehing. ‘This was one o1 his great troubles, | those of a Lucretia, I have seen women both on anid | aggregate of which shall excced seventy-Uve cenie 8 in order to sat Out wpon the line of the - i : - Ward, the Colones cliet of stat and most trusted | Sind (om Aleph. ie ere ng eoumplote tlie survey, oT ime | Uhrough AK fearing his ‘vet and logs tn the biaekbercy Associate, Nei been an Emygiteh tarm- i atso to give wave of aveence to the greater part of bushes, He then took the litte fellow to a pond ina Ing set..er tn Horkapy ear ievettor or & pecuitae Ktud fost eho wereen me. Thad given an order to um of my | Secluded neighborhood, into which he threw him of wheeled conv. yan apecialiy adapted to the | men tego to Mahomow! Aya, at Salamieh, tn ordor to invite | two or three iimes, tie boy crawiing out each Une fue antes ord vita, } ee ' witle — bb Sania ek vay ney had ae ey more demure Orage more bois pd $100 Valnation, untess authorized to do so by a rrow aud une # him to most me, go that Tmicht say to Vouseil, Pacha, that | begging piteously of the rutilan not to drown him, | “talked agatnst him behind his back, alt hough she | of havior, more refined and jady-like in ther car- | Vote of the people of the county, feabie keepeet oun Super t ripen nea cumunedte 1 B Ae aia ty heard Menews | Goiting ured of this sport Huntoon took & ciud and | was ail smiles to his face.” He was, therefore, tired | riage aud deportinent; but what ol that? ‘there ta | \’Ragroud Companies are required to keep an omice If, the Turkish services, and lastly @ horse dealer. themseiver upon the hill, at the: imtance beat young Allen over the head and arm, cutuing the | of lite, and was “going to meet his beloved wife, | notuing to onend good mora’sin her escapades after | for tho iransier of sock and make such re} ng doctor to the expevtion had formerly been by yi yards from our eucampmeant, upon ie ito aot peaping. the ealn re ghee Sy eget man of the Kngtish iscopal ON. 5 tion of the two Pachas, [went to see thom, and we m until he Was insensidle, lefthim, ‘The poor boy, Ronn heen chaplati at pec artes t wn, fureseed ma) " ‘convention, the conuiitions of which Ihave given at | after ne recovered his senses, crawled back to the vile by Anglo Saxon (owlsts, Gut nat abaudmed .ne- | ‘He commencoment of this statemncnt. Jage in @ terrible condition, 113 hair matied in blood th eC] he hi dt 1" 1o4y for medic.ne. 16 whit be FOPOT EC | eee ies eielation to thosavetation in’ cote, | Af ftogspawn. He ts silll'in a precarious eonditiony who died twenty-five years ago."’ ‘Ihe sons of the | all, however much there may be to make the judt- | Legislature aa it may require, decejsed—one of whom ltves at Hyde Park, and | clous grieve on the score of good taste and gravity of | soldate with ae lines, A majorit! auother at Medtord—state that thoir father hada | demeanor. One would be sorry to see auch manners | directors must reside in State. The Teglaatire to fit some time ago, and, since then, his | In a drawing room, the more particularly tf one teis | will Mx maximum rates of ch: for ail the rail. has been affected. It is @ curious fact that the | @ personal interest In the lady 80 conducting herself; | roads withia the Sta A eyes brie sonnel of the cuberpttse Was oO} r having since vomited Jarge quantities of clott chose for tho fulftiment of the deed his own | but a certain license may be conceded to the stage. | nicipal subscriptions to ratlroads be subi ee eee athe clarnoter, WDIOh sOeera: Beenie te prey erie py Syra aeiyf or thedyrin canst | blood, whieh ttis aupposed ho Awallower, ‘The boy | pprial lovin the oetnetery. Mallon leaves his cloth. | A burlesque docs Not Ckrct so Figereas weve Glee, separately. ‘dha dhere ty Uubis.c.ing specuiativns, ve now to hts Excel.eney the most V8 gasiirance that Huntoon has been a verror to parents in the oe to his children, and telis them that lety as that which governe the proceedings at & ‘The Bul of Rights ‘ides that. son shall \ * MAKOH, ave had reiations nelther with the Greeks nor with the in- | for a long time in consequence of bis maltreat ‘Will say he was insane, bat they must not Tr moet “Be not ri i) fovermuck; why | be Dott of y The party stayed bat a =lurt time aoa | furpenis in Crate, and that | never oxo fe meee erm | of viele Chikirel, Nd ws he is under arrest, tt is to ig he te only tired of" aCe; aud concludes | suouldst thou desteuy, sugseit observes Soiomon, | his rol may ve. abol. “fren want to Trip tims es mat. tauamtons of canhoawe hee hed In tbe be hoped he will be putin @ plice where he can do that they will be bappter than he has | whom we are tuuzht to regard as the wisest of men. | txued Ls law. OF Special privi: qhesod for tie purposes Of OU. were only a fow Gage at Syra, where they were oust, Que no orueliy. ‘fo (ae pure all things are pure, Mile Schneider is | legce stall ever be mate ware.

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