The New York Herald Newspaper, February 8, 1871, Page 7

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working classes, who most noeded it, of that pecessary article altogetlier, Thoro will be no such excuso fu the sumincr of 1871; and yet we ae not be surprised to find the ice com- panles attowpting to keep up tho price on some protext or qnother, Great monopolies do not ‘Tike to rolinguish thelr aN ry mes NS, TEN. BE I a pwhen once tuey succeed in running wo Up. Meantime we rejoice to see the fue promise of { ? plenty in this greatest of all summer luxuries, non. He aye om MigU peiyed | é fhe Danger and the Safety of Tam- if many. We have stood by Tammany Hall in several ¢ritioal local emergencies. Our defence of ‘the “Old Wigwam,” whon there were fear’ that the power of the municipal government would fall into the hands of dangerous people, was especially conspicuous and successful. We bustained the new City Charter with all the influence at our command, for we believed it contained many pro- wistons calculated to benefit the city | and guard the people from ouverous exactions and corrupt domination. Woe are ‘Btill ready to sustain tho Tammany democracy fo their administration of the affairs of the elty provided they exercise wisdom, economy and probity in the discharge of their duties, We do not intend to impugn their motives or actions unnecessarily, nor, on the other hand, do we intend to whitewash their shortcomings or conceal their official derelictions. Now how does the case stand? We fear there are grounds for grave apprehensions that everything is not open and above board in regard to the legislation at Albany about our city, Atanyrate the republican or anti- Tammany press have seized the present ocea- gion to sir up agitation which will, sooaer or later, compel the Tammany leaders to come before the public in some unmistakable man- ner and show that their’ hands are unpol- luted by official corruption. It is boldly @eclared that the Broadway widening move- ment was # job that wonld not bear the eruci- ble of rigid scrutiny fa th. Anditor’s office, and although only nine iiilions were alleged to be involved the bill authorizing said widening | ‘was hustily presented and its passage hurried | through its principal stages under the Tam- | many spur, The proposition to invest in the ; hands of parties alrendy in the possession of | vast civic powers the responsibility of levying | our city taxes and in fixing the standard of values upon the property of our cltizens is open to serious criticism from a variety of reasons, not the least of which is | that it is undemocratic if not clearly uncon- } Btitutional, and is caisulated to provoke dis- sension if not lead ultimately to division in the democratic party iisel’, The latter con- | sideration is, of course, of net so much mo- ment to the people at large eas it is to the democratic politicians themselves, Hence it is the part of prudence and discretion, for their own sakes, that au unpopular measure be not unduly pressed upon the people of this city. Agaju, the bill giving a single person the right to purchase the fountainheads of the Croton Aqueduct—from which the water sup- ply for our immense population is reccived— to erect dams, to build highways and bridges and perform other things {n the same con- nection, is conferring « lease of authority which may be stretched to any length, and is linble to great abuse, no matter what safeguards the Legislature may throw around the sat amount of exnendifures asked for. The sule of the public markers, wowé7er Ae- | sirable, should be conducted upon a plan that will lift the whole operation fur above any taint of bribery or corruption that can by any possibility be attached to ft, We are pleased to notice that the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund have taken some measures to give the people a chance of being heard on this in- teresting matter. Thera are other measures that demand the earnes! and candid attention of the Tammany leaders, most of which are, no doubt, familiar to our readers. We do not believe that Mr. Sweeny would, knowingly, sanction any scheme not strictly upright and honorable. But he may not be, sagacious as he is, aware of all the secret jobbing movements that are going on around him. To be ‘‘forewarned is to be fore-. { i armed,” and in that spirit of good will which has prompted us ia former times to warn Tommany of dangers that menaced her and pointed ont the way to safety, so we now caution her to be wary how she conducts herself in the present emergeney. She must remember that not since the dark days of 1860-61 have the democracy had so brilliant a chance to regain their hold upon the national government. This is the first time they have showed their heads nbove water since the tremendous political Deluge of that period. Tammany Hall bas always been truo to the Union and the country, and with the power- ful organization she has now at com. mand she may lead the democratic hosts to a splend‘d triumph ia 1872. Why, then, endanger so bright a prospect for @ grand national future merely for the sake of a few crumbs of patronage, and, through a species of legislation affecting popular rights, furnish the enemies of the democracy the ammunition wherewith to go through the next Presidential campaign? The republicans are divided among themselves, Their main hope for reunion is by creating dis. sensions in the democratic ranks or among democratic leaders. Honee they grasp every occasion, where these leaders commit errors, to make capital for their own party. And hence are Albany and the actions of the Tammany Regency there just at this juncture watched with so much eagerness by the repub- Yican managers. | Again we warn the Tammany leaders to beware of the dangerous rocks that surroucd them, and upon which they may split their party (o pieces at any moment and prevent it, for perhaps.a quarter of a century, from reach- ing © haven of national safety and security, A PayMactER IN COMMAND—ANOTHER Suea@rstion.—The Hrrawp's proposition that surgeons should have command of the first ship carrying provisions to France has been approved by several of the staff officers’ organs, bué they have a word also to say for paymastors, and recommend that Paymaster Barry have another ship because he under- stands the sclance of navigation, The Hrratp readers will Goubtiess recollect the circum- | mitters of their foolish faces. oe NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 187!,—TRIPLE SHEKT. ship safe into port during his severe illness, It is very evident from this that the lady was anavigator, Now for seamanship: we doubt very much Paymaster Borry’s ability if on board a sailing ship to put her ‘in stays,” and we are sure the lady could because she has ash tice in that line, Feo~ "" woe Se Beton IP TS gre sons i We have proved beyond doubt that some ship- masters’ wives are better fitted for command of a ship than paymasters, Punch on the British Aristocracy. There is, perhaps, no politician in England that ontches more quickly and follows more closely the current of public opinion and public prejudice in that country than Mfr, Punch, of Fleet street. This gentleman has been re- cently indulging every week in a series of comic articles turaing into most amusing ridl- cule the great country families of England. These articles are not without significance, and it is pretty evident that this humorous ex- ponent of English public opinion has come to the logical conclusion that the age which wit- nesses the downfall of so many medimval tra- ditions is not in a mood to tolerate secial and political prerogatives which rost chiefly on hereditary distinction, sy The fact of itis that the mother country of England has “lords,” as her sullen daughter of the States has “dollars,” on the brain. The country families of England are pre- cisely what our railway corporation and land-grabbing families aspire to bo a century hence here, Mr. Punch may smile and the country gentry of England may object to being compared, however vaguely and remotely, with the prospective country and city gentry of the United States, such ag our railway corporations and tand grabbers are endeavoring to build up; but, reasoning from cause to effect, with bis own logical acumen, what may he deemed the absurdities of English social life threaten to repeat them- selves here ina much more objectionable and offensive form, Let us take, for instance, Punch’s last gem from his peerage—Sir Brooke Jenisoa, Bart., of Tyddesley Court, descended from Bernard Jenison, on whom a baronetcy was conferred by Charles the Second for distingnished ser- vices on horseback in the commissariat depart- ment at the Baiile of the Boyne, on condition of his and his successors annually presenting at Martinmas six new laid eggs to the Dean of the Chapel Royal. This baronet, the tenth of his line, is represented by this rival of Burke's ‘‘Peerage” to have destroyed wild ani- mals fu every quarter of the globe, to be a vice president of the Mutual Glorification Society, Fellow of the Piseatorial Society, &c., but unmarried, poor and a great smoker. As yet we have no actual baronets here, but we have in eur railway monopolists and jand grabbers many who doubtless indulge the | hope that in some future generations their de- scendants will glory in being also tenth trans- There is one point where the analogy ceases. We fancy that six new laid eggs, however well laid, would hardly tempt our Washington or Albany lobbyists to grant a charter. The iruth is, the tendency of the age is to assign to moneyed power the place once held by gentle blood and ancestral descent. Even here, what were termed our old families are completely thrown into the shade by the Fisks and Drews and Van- derbilis ; and so we see in England, while the old country families are belng held up to ridicule hy Funch, & peerage is conferred on Baron Hofiischit4; wader the yery appropriate title of Lord Lentmore. Ifit is no. coz” {hat the | plutocracy of Eugland will ever deal so humanely with the people as the old blood of the realm, itis certain that the shoddy, the jobbers, the peculators, the contractors and monopolists, the railway and land and tele- graph grabbers, who now in the United States hold the social and political prominence which {n the early days of the republic was accorded only to pure and noble-minded states- men and to disinterested public benefactors, forbode greater social and political revolutions on this side of the water than can possibly overcome Great Britain, where a most intelli- gent middle class hold that balance of power, while with us it is controlled by railway cor- porations and rich monopolists, Let Punch, then, deal leniently with the poor, stupid old country families of England. ‘Tuey are harmless, and if Sir Brooke Jenison will smoke too much he may impair his credit at the tobacconists, but will hardly endanger the State. It is a different“ case, however, with the large landed monopolist swells. They hold out to our monopolists here dangerous visions of vast estates and of future Fisks, Drews and Vanderbilts revelling in millions, while the vast masses of the people sink into pauperism. It is te prevent such a consum- mation most dangerous to the future that we oppose a!] mouopolist rings here and. regard them as much more dangerous to the pros- perity and liberiies of the Americans than Punch’s played-out baronets can ever become to the British people. New York Ca#arrry—Tok Desparrine Moturr anp rau VETERAN OF 1812.—-In the Heratp of yesterday morning we published a brief account of two unfortunate cases, each appealing loudly to the sympathy of the com- fortable classes in this city, It is a source of pleasure to us to ba able to say that the mere statement of the two cases has been warmly responded to. Very respectable sums have been sent to this office. These have been sent to the proper quarters without delay. If the publication of these two tales of sorrow has relieved distress we shall be glad for the sake of the sufferers, for our own sake and for the sake of the citizens of New York, VIEWS OF THE PAS/. FE 1866—An appaliing calami ele phia. Two thousand barrels of petroleum haying become fired the oi! ran tnto the strects as rivers of liquid fire, ta which many of the occupants of the houses it ignited perished...... Roanoke Isiand, N. C., capiured by the troops under General Burastde, assist- ea by the fleet of Commodore Goldsborough. 1850--William and Mary College, im Williamsburg, : Va., destroyed by fire. 1843—Pornt-a-Pitre, Guadaloupe, entirely destroyed by an earthquake, 1612—Samuei Buiier, tho author of “Hudibras," borat. 1687—Mary Queen of Scots beheaded at Fotherin- gay Castle. 1616—Mary Queen of England born. ty Occurred in Philad ES ~~ DOMNION GF CANADA. Ww MONTREAL, Fob, 7, 1871, Sir John Rose has been here for some days. He leaves for Ottawa to-night, and sails from New York for England on Saturday, slance that occurred some yoars ago of a ship- masior’s wife who vavigated her husband’s Well mformed Canadian papers say that the American reports trom Washington r cung the Ashery question aro aot World contradic INSIDE PARIS. Herald Special Poport Trom ‘the City. POSTPOREMENT OF THE ELECTIONS. An Eva of Anarchy Ap- proaching. ! | Revolutionary Meetings and In- cendiary Harangues, A Robespierre and the Guillotine Demanded: Candidates for the Assembly Taken from the Slums, ane Animosity Between German and French Women. No Peace Negotiations En- tered Into. The Horrors of Starvation Threatened. The Feoling Against Gambotta Increasing. TELEGRAMS TO THE NEW YORK HERALD, “Loxvow, Feb, 7, 1871. Lhave received the following despatch from the New York Hexranp correspondent at Paris, dated February 4, The despatch says:— THE ELECTIONS POSTPONED. A government decree issued to-day post- pones the elections which were to take place on Sunday, although they will be held on Wednesday next, GENERAL, CONFUSION. Up to the progent moment all is confusion, There is a tendency to reject en masse the mombers of the Government of National De- fence who are candidates for election. Meet- ings are held daily and are more demonstra- tive in character. The name of Garibaldi is received with cries of ‘‘No stranger.” RABID PATRIOTS. Some of the political clubs insist that those who surrendered Paris should be arrested and tried, and that any candidates desiring the support of the clubs shall sign an agreement undertaking that the Government of National Defence be called to the bar of the National Assembly to render an account of their con- duct in signing the armistice; that they shall agree that a treaty of peace shall never be signed on the condiifon o1 ‘the cés- Sewers Gee eT Laer Ce sion df Alsace and Lorraine, and “that Paris shall continue the defence and refuse to ca- pitulate, BLOODTHIRSTY SENTIMENTS. At a meeting held in the Salle de la Reine one of the orators, Blanche, by name, declared that to save France in the present crisis a Robespierre is required and that the guillo- tine can alone secure salvation, This blood- thirsty sentiment was received with enthusi- asm, the assemblage yelling with delight, The persons present were mostly belonging to the Central Republican Defenders of the Republic—an association of workingmen which comprises among its members the names of the best known desperadoes in the French capital. CANDIDATES FROM THE SLUMS. Nearly all the Paris candidates for the Na- tional Assembly have been taken from the slums of Belleville and St. Antoine. Napoleon Gail- lard, a well known red republican, declared at a mecting held last night that the present gov- ernment was composed of twelve bandiis who had sold Paris for gold. He denied the Prus- sian victories and demanded that Paris vote in favor of a continuance of the war, THe was loudly applauded. SOME SPECIMEN BRICKS. Some of the candidates aro well known men, violent socialists and Among the names of those nominated for the National Assembly by the Republicau Alli- ance, International Workingmen’s Association and Central Republican Union, all ultra-radi- eal societies, are the following :—Lonis Blanc, Victor Hugo, Ledru Rollin, Felix Pyat, Henry Rochefort and M. Brissac, the editor of that once violent but now defunct newspaper, Le Combat, reyolutionists. A MISSION. M. Etienne Arago, a member of the pro- visional government, left Paris yesterday for Italy and Spain, on a special mission to the governments of those countries, WAR BETWEEN GERMAN AND FRENCH WOMEN, More than ten thousand persons proceeded yesterday to the top of Autin to gaze on the Prussians encamped below. A considerable por- tion of the inhabitants of La Villette are Gor- mans, and some of the women called upon their countrymen to fire on the Freach. They were immediately arrested by the National Guard and conducted to prison, Another German woman was arrested for shouting ‘Down with the French!” and was carried along the atrects shrieking, followed by a crowd bran- ishing revolvers, Tho danger of difficulties pbolween the German and French women is | *bandonting to the possibility of boing driven, much greater (han between the men. NO PEAOR NEGOTIATIONS, The Journal Offeiel denieg the reporls wihleh ara om ° yucrent concerning n@ voter very tial peacy, 2 that anything was signed except we . ° yention for an armistice, The present govern- ment has no power to treat for peace, AN EXPLANATION, The goverament denies that the Prussians proposed to assimilate the Gardes Mobile with the National Guard and allow every man to retain his arms andretura home. Jules Favre has not ceased in his endeavors to obtain per- miasion for the Gardes Mobile to remain at their homes, MINISTERIAL OH ANGES. M. Dorian has been nominated Minister of Commerce, in the absence of the present minister, who proceeds to Dieppe to act as superintendent of the revictualling of the city. THE THEATRES, Tho theatres will not be reopened till after the expiration of the armistice; but a piece enlled “The Siege of Paris” has already been advertised for the Gaieties, and another on the same sul ject for the Palais Royal, RADICAL PAPERS, The first number of Henri Rochefort’s new journal, the Afot d’Ordre, appeared yester- day. It contains much revolutionary rant about vongeance, Felix Pyat’s new paper also made its appearance to-day. It is the successor of the Combat, recently suppressed by General Vinoy, and has tho samo crew and colors aboard. It declares the empire was invasion and the republic deliverance; the empire was capitulation, the republic is resist- ance, The republic will survive the armistice, save France ind avenge Paris, ‘TROCHU'S POSITION, General Trochu, in declining to become a candidate for the National Assembly, says :— “I only consented to retain tho presidency of the Government of National Defence from a sense of duty to my colleagues and (o my country. Lam about to be discharged from it; my part must finish with the events with which it took rise.” The letter from which [ have quoted the foregoing extract was read at one of the pub- lic meetings, whereupon the assemblage ex- claimed, as with one voice, ‘The members of the government aro all cowards,” THE REVICTUALMENT, The government kas purchased large sup- plies of food, but private activity can alone insure the revictualling of Paris, Provisions are now permi(ted to be brought in from any source, THE PARIS GARRISON, The work of disarming the enceinte is effected slowly, and will not be completed till the expiration of the armistice. The 12,000 French troops permitted to retain their arms arene ot MELEE 4 pak Bidens hw. jhe purpose of preserving order in Paris are comprised of threo regiments of the line and one of Gardes Mobile, the latter being the regiment which behaved so well in front of the Hotel de Ville on the 31st of October last, NOT COMPETENT, Colonel Piezza, accused of inciting the soldiers and people to revolt on the night of the 27th of January by calling the National Guard to arms, was brought before a court The court declared itself incompetent to try him, and he was conse- for martial yeaterday. quently discharged, FEARS OF FAMINE. The stock of flour in Parig will be exhausted to-day (Saturday) and to-morrow the city will be without bread, Grave fears are expressed that Paris may, after to-morrow, experience This and fears of the ultras and of mob violence makes the more respectable people even long for the presence of the Prussians as a protection to the city. FEELING AGAINST GAMBETTA, The feeling against Gambetta is much in- creased, course his arrest will certainly be ordered, THE PARIS CONTRIBUTION, The Bank of France has agreed to advance the sum of 200,000,000 of francs levied upon Paris as a war contribution, Bonds for an equal amount will be issued by the city to the horrors of actual starvation. If he continues on his revolutionary repay the bank, DUCROT DECLINES. General Ducrot has not been wounded. He refuses, however, to stand ag a candidate for the National Assembly, “Down with the Democrats?—A Goverument Explanation=Revictualling Paris—A Propo- sition Affectiog England, Lonvon, Feb, 7, 1871, Advices from Paris enable me to report, for the information of the New York Heranp, that the walls of that city are piacarded with such inscriptions as ‘*A basles démocrats /” NOT RADIOAL ENOUGH. The ultra radicals repudiate Victor Hugo, Louis Blane and Rollin, and favor Pyat, Delescluze and Timaldi for the National As- sembly. A GOVERNMENT EXPLANATION. The following has been officially published in Pari “Ia a few days the government can explain its conduct. It was only after the most laborious efforts that the conditions re- lative to the National Guards stipulated by the convention could be obtained. M. Favre has not ceased for a single day his demands in favor of thoga by whom he Is accuged of from their homes,” REVIOTUALLING PARIA ‘ah The govern ~eeucat has purchased several atiwvus ror | Marzo stores and will aid private exertion in ’ 7 wn Ye nswerla that tho statement fa false loam eneetually su; | Ren he people, Tr Ff “aiving the wants of t! Py * Samm ig clang all claim to requisitions, i y, the introgidtfoil and distriimtion of food by any and all means, A PROPOSITION AFFECTING ENGLAND. Admiral Tenand has arrived at Lille. The Paris Liberté announces that M. Dorian, the Superintendent of Public Works in the Paris government, proposes the wi'hdrawal of France provisionally from the commercial treaty with England, DISBANDED. The National and Movué Guards in have disbanded, Paris THE FRENCH ELECTIONS. Energetic Action of the Paris Government, GAMBETTA’S DECREE ANNULLED Etienne Arago Maintains the Vattdity of the Deerce. The Bonapartists, Orloanists and Im- perialists Disqualitied. The Bordeaux Clique Determined Wot to Wield. Pelleian, Garnier-Pages and Emenainel Arago at Bordeaux. TELEGRAMS TO THE NEW VOIX HERALD. Bonpgacx, Feb. 7, 1871. I am enabled to inform the readers of the New York MWxravp that M.M. Pelletan, Gar- i nier-Pages and Emmanuel Arago, members of the Government of National Defence, arrived | here this morning from Paris, GAMBETTA'S DECREE ANNULLED. The members of the government who have arrived here from Paris telegraphed to the Prefects of all the depariments last night a decree annulling the Bordeaux decree of the Sist of January, relative to electoral disquali- fications as incompatible with the principles | The Paris decree of the 29th of January is maintained. of universal suffrage. A CONFLIOT—THE = DISQUALIFYING — DEC REAFVIRMED, Minister Etienne Arago has issued a circu- lar, in which he maintains the validity of the decrees making members of families, once regnant and imperial office holders, ineligible | to the Assembly. The circular adds that the decree of exclusion extends to all members of ; the Bonaparte family. Se i __ SRE AEXUBNED. ‘mieux, who left last night for Paris, met his colleagues of the Paris government on the route, and returned with them to the city. Manicipal Amendment Gambetta’s Decree German Censorship of the Press—An Equi- table Deduction. Lonpon, Feb, 7, 1871. Iam enable to inform the Herarp that the municipality of Roubaix has nullified the Bor- deaux election decrees. GERWAN OENSORSHP OF TR PRESS RE- STRIOTED. German officials in France have been in- structed to abstain from the exercise of vigor- ous censorship over the French press while the elections are pending, and many journals, which had been suppressed or had refused to appear, have resumed publication. AN EQUITABLE DEDUOTION, The Echo du Nord has a special despatch from Berlin to-day, saying that contributions already exacted by German commanders will be deducted from the amount of the war in- demnity ; also the value of tho railways in Alsace and Lorraine. GENERAL REPORTS. Troops from Alsace and Lorraine Reviewed in Lyons. GERMAN OPERATIONS IN THE JURA, Continued Bombardment of Belfort. TELEGRAM TO THE NEW YORK HERAL®. Lonnoy, Feb. 7, 1871. 1 have received a despatch from Bordeaux dated to-day, and containing the following items of news, which I forward for the New York Heratp:— REVIEW OF TROOPS IN LYONS. The Préfect of Lyons yesterday reviewed a corps of ten thousand troops, all of whom are m Alsace and Lorraine. GERMAN OPERATIONS IN THE JURA, The Prussians have occupied the town of Lons-le-Saulnier, the chief town in the De- partment of the Jura, BELFORT BOMBARDED, Advices from the scene of hostilities in Eastern France report that the bombardment of the fortress of Belfort by the Germans is still going on, A NEW PREFECT. A despatch from Bordeaux, dated to-day, states that M. Barckhausen hag been ap- vointed Prefect of the Department of Gironde. 1 \ Atencio BEVICTUALLING THE CAPITAL A CHARGE AGAINST THE PRUSTIANS, pupply Trai as Deta at Ami Activity of the British Government in the Work of Revictualment. ; TELESRAM TO THE NEW YORK HERALD. Lonpon, Feb. 7, 1871, I forward the following intelligence for the readers of the New York Heratp:—~ PRUSSIANS RETARDING REVICTUALMENT. The London Morning Post publishes a spe- efal despatch from Calais, 6th, which saya :— “The Prussians show determination to retard the revictualling of Paris. Nine trains loaded with provisions for that city have been detained by them at Amiens, though the line is entirely clear.” ACTIVE AID FROM GREAT BRITAIN, Tho Post says that tho British War Office and Aduiiraliy sre actively assisting the efforts to revictual Paris, and that a large number of Brilish transports will gail ta a few days with provisions, ANNEXATION. An Official Letter About the Condition of Affairs in St, Domingo—Annoxation Desired, So a United States Consul Says. WASINNGTON Feb, 7—11:20 7. Mb ‘ecetpt of a commupt- ates Cousul at St. Thomas, Loasalate, Januacy 25, 1871, in which mr © Opponents of the aNLEXade Domiigo begin lo assume shape and to Hemselves, ‘Tue last senooner from St. Do- { mniage broughe ‘Mall batch of refugees, who re- | Port that Lup Was at Cidao raising the people } Against unneration and Baez, and tai Cabral in cation | sot the Boutt Was doing the sa: The singuiar fact about Gus matter is Chat th inen should fee from St. Domingo jost at the pertod of upriae | ing. They also report that Gomez, ab pres ent Vico Vresitout of St Domingo, or, at leust, was bOt recently, has joined with Luperon people. Probably ati the {| colected into various shop nd published through- | out the United States, In direct contradiction of all | this, 1 have to report that, by imformation from St Domingo to the 14th west, Uieara that ihe unanimity | of seuliment among the people miavor of annexa. tion continues, that Luperoa was seen at Turks? Istanct not many days since by General Prophete, an Aled Haytien in a penniless condition, and that ‘al Irapert, one of Luperon’s Meutenants, hag sth work of fring the rts and more will be declared that all attempts to up @ revo. | luton in St. Domingo at present will be | futile. In fact as long as there are reasonable i | hopes of annexation there will be qni¢t in St. Doe | mingo, for the better ciasses of the islan t are aimost unanimousiy m favor of 1, anticipating renewed life and prosperity as the result, but I very mach Tear for Baez and his friends in the taland should | annexation fali-a bloody revolution and conse. ‘ quent anarcby will prevail, ‘fhe coming of the | commissioners Will be haiied with pleasure by all classes in St. Domingo—at least that is the tenor of all i 's [ nave seen from there, by whomsoever written- friends or foes of annexation. I have the honor, &e. THOMAS MAILS FOR ZuROPs. The steamship fdaho will leave this port of Wednesday for Queenstown and Liverpool. ‘The mails for Europe will close at the Post Office at twelve o'clock, hoon. THe New York Heratp—Edition for Europe— will de ready at eigitt o'clock in the morning, Singie copies, in wrappers for mailing, six ceaote, » Vonsat BRADY i coed .—Phalon’s New Perfume, A—Phalon’s Now BCE YOU, I LOVE YOU. Sold by druggists and at 517 Broadway. A.—Balls and Parties.—Boots and Shoes fer Ladies, Misses and Gentlemen, at BROOKS’, 575 Broadway, A.—Perfect Fitting Boots and Sho and warm Overshoes, cheap, at E. A. BROOKS’, 575 Sroadwaye A Nenlected Cough, Col’, or Sore Throats which mizht be aby a simple remedy, like BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TRI . ff allowed to progress may termi pate gerlously. Hronchilis, Asthma, Catarrh and Con- sumptive Coughs, THE TROCHES are used with advantage, giving oftentines immediate r Singers and pubitg speakers will tind them also exc to clear the voles and render articulation wonderfully ¢ A Positive Cure tor Your Cough, Cold or Hoareeness, SMITH & CO.'3 PATENT YROCHES, sold by druggists, Take no other, A. An-Royal Havana supplementary. Detormined by the drawings of the Royal Uavana Lottery, For information, &c., address MoINTIRE, GREGORY & CO,, at 215 Canal, 134 Chatham, A.—~Sieering’s Patent CHAMPION SAFES, 261 Broadway, coraar Murray #102 9%. Because a Person Has a Bad Couch I should not be inferred that Consumption has set fn, althou a case of Consumption is rarely met with unaccompanied by a distressing Cou; Where, however, @ disposition to Pulmonary disease exists, a Couyh, if left to itself, Cie and racks the lungs and wastes the general strength, an soon establishes an fncurable complaint. In all cases,.then, ti fa the sa ian to get rid of a Cough, Cold or Hoarse- nesa without delay, and for this purpose no remedy acts more promptly or surely, or with more benefit to the organs of the chest than DR. JAYNE'S EXP ECTORANT, an ar- ticle aclentifically compounded from caretuily relected drug and which, on trial, will always be found worthy of its wo wide reputation, Sold by all druggists, Chapped Hands, Sore Li Chilblains Are cured by GILES' SUNFLOWER CREAM Price 85 centa, Sold by all druggists. Depot 189 Sixth avenue, cornor Thi twenth street, Diamonds Bought and id. EORGE C. ALLEN. , under St, Nicholas Hotet. Gile? San Flower Creom Cures all Skin Dine eases, Old Sores, Burns, Sealda, Pimples, Piles, &e, Price 38 cents: Sold by all drug Depot, WILLIAM MM. corner 18th st, Golden Huir.—Robare’s Aureoline Produces by two or three applications the beautiful golden color so much admired. Warranted not to destroy the hair. E. HOVENDEN & SONS) No. 5 Great Marlborough street, Loa- don; CASWELL, BAYARD & CO., Futh avenue, coraer Tweuty-fourih street, New Yor! Galvanized Tron Cornice Ma: faciured by CALVIN OARR & CO., Clevelat operated by the patentess at Marshall Leffert's, street, Architects and all interested are invited fo jes Mante Ohio, will be ‘4, Beekman see them, Matled Free for 25 Cents.—Dr. Kabn’s Lece tures on Nervous Debility; Marriage, its obligations and im~ pediments, and diseases arising from imorudeace, wita cases from wetual practice. Address Secretary Dr. Kahn's Ma- seum, 745 Broadway, New York. ‘The Green Flag wi!l Wave Te-morrow where men love freedom. A Phrenologica: Examination will mark tne plucky pairiot or cowardly traitor. ——$_$_$$_$_— West Side Association, i “ ms, 5 % Or Forty-second street, on Wednesday evesing, 8 FeDCURIYs o'clock. #Aeocues vetll be made by Hon, A. Oakey Ball, Won. Be orton, Win. R Martin and others. Oxdon, Hon, Win. Fuilorton, Wm. & MARTIN, a, Secretary. JAMES FROG Ee Th, COMMITTEE. Jarvigan, Marshall 0, Roverts, are Scnford,” Daniel ¥. ‘emanny has Fr, Livermorey ¥ ry : i ihan Edgar, John A, O, Gray Rowe Aeenwtngh, deuaihan pleas SRN ere Jame T. King, Cyrus Clark, fits) B. James Monteth, — Jobn T, Daly, lip, G. Weaver, Roswell D. Hateb, Joha W. Pirvon, Benj, 8. Beokmam Zoelnion Cures Cousamption and Skin Dine wea after other remodies have failed; pupifios the bleeds. fuakes thy akin vouthced and Delgby

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