The New York Herald Newspaper, May 7, 1873, Page 14

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4 cdoradter tt may aksame im crosemg tse rronuer uftder the hamdyof the contradandistas Feannot say. | Our Dhsthess if to get it into a certain piece of | (érest near the frontier, where men are Waitiig: for us.” So I wad already fiiirly started in life ae & Cariist! arid’ a sintuggler, and? it Was exhildrating td think thitif the Fretich’ aucitorities canght rite’ T might gO'to the gilicys, and if the Spanish cadght me Fr affptit be shot at sient, . PUMPING, During our ride of thirty mile# from Bayonne to the frontier I had time to draw out my companion a®to the Way Hi which, with so little mioney, the Oarlists have already secured so much inthe way of supplies. It appears that in adklition to the committees in London and Pars they have also agents in al! the principal cities of France, Oné of Mese agents at Bordeaux induced the municipal government to sell Lint 3,000 aniforms worh during the late war by the Garde Nationale Mobiisde, at 2. a piece, and at this moment, therefore, there aré several battalions of Carlists that oné cowl searcely tell from the recent Frenen Mobites, Some accoutrements wére obtamed in the same way vom Bayonne. It was propesed in @ Board of Pubdli¢ Functionaries to sell out at auction allthe pit inititary lumber, but the republican menthers: ppposed it asa thing likely to help the Carlista, and that this was not to be justified by the money tie sale would bring in. Thereupon, the friends 6f the Carlists in Bayonne found a leather merchant who bought the whole at private sale for 10,600r., and there is now scarcely @ sword belt ér acart- ridge box in the Carlist army but came from this “We reached the frontier safely, and between Es- pelette and Ainhoue, scarcely three miles from the Custom House of Daucharinea, we were relieved of the cofflned cannon, and I saw the whole walked off like a bundle of bamboos on the shoulders of ix fellows, any one of whom would be uncomforta- ole company for the biggest prize fighter Lever taw. Next day I saw the cannon divested of tts funereal garb and in the jovial escort of 500 “Vol- ontarios de Carlos VII.” The six contrabandistas rot 200 francs, plenty of wine, plenty of cheers, and went away with fresh instructions to be carried put at another point on the nextday. STATE OF TRADE AND TRAVEL. And things like this are in progress along the whole line of the French and Spanish frontier. Strict endeavors are made by the French to stop it. They fail. But they stop something, and that-satis- fies them as Frenchmen that they bave done their uty. The thing they stop is the regular ordinary Intercourse between the countries, All or- finary travel and all legitimate traMflc be- tween France and Spain are equally inter- rupted on the whole line, from the Atlantic across to the Mediterranean, Not only, however, bas legitimate traMc come to an end through the vexatigus regulations, but trafic of another sort is in the full bloom of an enormously stimulated vitality. Contrabandistas (smugglers) are thegreat | men of the hour in these parts. One of the operations 1s oddly complicated and adroit. Goods sold in France pay, through the tax bn sales or some contrivance of that nature, a heavy duty to the French government; but the same goods exported to Spain pay of course no duty in France. Even the import duty into Spain was lower than the duty on their sale in France; but now the Carlisis have established their custom houses, and, anxious to get money, they make the Uuties still much lower than they were under the regular Spanisi government. So exporters send their goods to the Carlist custom houses and pay the trivial duties; but no sooner have the goods thus reached the first Spanish post and escaped the tye ofthe French authorities than they are again smuggled into France, where their low prices find them a reatiy market. Nothing short of a line of oMicers close enough to touch one another through the whole length ef the Pyrenees could stop this trade. Going to Spain by the high roads, the goods return to France by the | lunumerable mountain paths that the French ofl- ters are not disposed to trace, and where they would have a bloody encounter for their pains if they bvercame all other dificulties, All these paths are known to the Spaniards and are practicable to their mules. In the recent cndeavor to prevent Carlists poming imto Spain trom France all the roads were decupied by gendarmes and troops of the line, but there was no interference whatever, for the friends df Bourbon took to the hills and crossed at leisure. Perhaps an account of my own crossing will give you the best idea of the country and the operatiens, PASSING THE FRONTIER AND FINDING ELIO. Having safely placed our cannon in good hands, my companion and myself drove to Ainhone, where our horses spend a day at the place. We took a bedroom, and all the lights were put out at an early hour, that | ihere might be nothing to attract the attention of | vhe patrols, At midnight there was a knock at our Yoor, and the ofd lan’ady—one of the sharpest of she contrabandistas—whispered that everything was ready. The “everything” thus referred to was another mysterious tudividual, ready to guide or carry us across. Nearly ali the remainder of the aight was spent in an indeseribable scramble on the mountain patiy, in thick woods and along focky streams, where it was impessible 10 say whether the palm for depth was to be given to the darkness or the mad. And in this scramble we passed the lines, Near three in the morning we passed seme Carhst outposts with much parleying, and at | ength entered the old deserted monastery of Urdax, the headquarters of General Ele for the time. Here we found the General occupying a | couple of rooms made nabitable temporarily. He received us tn bed, and wien I saw bis handsome, venerable looking face, with his full gray beard | aod 8 bright colored silk handkerchief wrapped round his head, 1 confess I was very agreeably sur- prised, and as be spoke to us my surprise was Rreater still, Instead of a semi-savage leader of | lerecious bands I fonad him one of che quietest, kindest, genticst old gentlemen I ever met, Mav- mg read the letters | brought, he said:— “I shali be most happy te give you any imforma- tion I possibly can, und if { were a quarter of a century younger I should at once get up and have & talk with you, and send you on before dayiignt; | owt Tam too old for that, and we will arrange things differently. Your travelling companion will return to Bayonne, but you had better have @ cup of chocolate er a giass of wine and go to bed and | We wilt talk to-morrow.” An atd-de-camp almost as old as the General aimself was thereupon ordered to take care of me, and.I took leave fer the night @ this courteous tost whom I had pictured so shortly before as ai- most any sert of an ogre. GRITING ACQUAINTRD WITH THE COMMANDER-IN- CHIRE. Awakened by the old aid-de-camp next morning {found the Gencral already on foot, or rather I ound him quietly seated at a writing table answer- mg the letters L ha brought, and the casual visitor, seeing his quiet dress and his peaceful spectacles, would have more likely taken hum for the medical man of the neighborheod writing pre- teriptions than for the hed of (he Cavlist move- ment that threatens Spain aud its new govern- Ment. Twe little cups of choceiate, two glasses of | Water and some bits of toast were brought and the | General tuvited me to take breakiast. | At breakfast it Was understood that L should ge | with him for che review of some newly organized bands, It was to be a round of several days, and Wve were sure to have hard fare and harder lodging, and rain, perliaps—hardest of ail; but he thought | we might see somothing Worth our troubie, Behold | Us, therefore, s00n after safely deposited inside an , old four-wheeler inscribed “Servicio partiouar, and which had perhaps once appertained to the | Postal esigblishment, It was drawn by five inules, with three armed volunteers mounted as a guurd— one outside and two on the front seat in-uie. Away we rattied with a certain serious gayety, for there is always an cxhilaration in getting of, no matter iu what circamstances, General Elio is the oldest leading member of the Carlist party, and is, at the same time, regarded | ge their ablest man. Judging froin a constant per sonal intercourse of four days he seems to me one | Under arms or banded cogeiney ofihe most accomplished and amiable of royalists, | and, strange a8 it may sound, one of the mont { liheral. Me has lived many. years an, exile in | France, Italy and England, and hae thue seenired were placed in the stable, and | we were known a8 excursionists, who expected to | | period—alarmingly frequent. 1 Uh Aw Nuw & thorough knowledge of the ) iieiness and insti- tutions Of thosé countries, It tmnpowsible that any one should look rhoré like an old English nobleman than the General travelling with his | Euglisti passport, his Scotch plaid’ and fis um- brélla, hts gaiters, fett nat and similar articles all marked with the names of London makers, ‘This ol dotdier began life under Ferdinand VIT. as an Officer of the Royal Guards, aid was among tiie first who formed @ Carlist party upon the abrogation of the Salic law, in virtue of which law Cartos' V. would have been King of During the war that followed for the rights of tite asplrant thus put aside—known iW Carlist his- tory as the seven years war, and of which war the famous Zumala Carregui wae the head and front— through that war Ello commandéi a brigade, and, driving with him now up and down tle hills of Navarre, he constantly showed me the places—the villages and other points—wnere there were com- bats in the old tinfe, regretting apparently only that he fo longer hdd for the cause the physical vigor of thirty-five years ago. In 1837, through the treason of Rafwel Maroto, the Carlist struggle came to an end. Elto then went abroad with Charles'V, and lived apart trom politics until 1860, when hé jomed Ortega's attempt to restore Charles VIL, made at San Carlode Ia Raptia, near Torlosa. Hé was captured with Ortega anti condemned te be shot, but tire sentence was changed’ to banish- ment by Fsabélla, Ortega was the only man whom o’Donnell would not permit to be pardonet. General Elio still remembers warmly the clemency of Igabella, amd spoké of her a#a much better woman and a much better Queen than Spantards generally admit her to be. “She was ruined politically,” he said, ‘by people like Louis Philippe, Montpensier and Narvaez, and morally by Serrano. It fs possible she would always have had a favorite; that is a question of tempera- ment, and with her it was always a question of conjugal unhappiness; but in the hands of Serrano she became demoralized to the heart’s core. And this despfcable person had the effrontery not only to overtlirow his mistress and hts benefactress, but to sign a declaration m whitch it was written that Spaniards were obliged to conceal irom their wives and daughters what waé going on mM the reyal palace.” On such subjects we chatted as we were driven along. ‘WHAT t SAW OF THE CARLIST FORCES. Our journey was strictly confinea to the province of Navarre. fFhad the option of going to the head- quarters of Donegarry or Lizarraga, but as I knew there was already a HERALD correspondent with the former I determined to visit the latter, especially as I hoped in that direction I might see the celebrated curé cf Santa Cruz, who is a com- mander. under Lizarraga. From Urdax to within sixteen miles’ of Pampcluna, the limit of our ad- vance in that direction, we saw Carlist battalions ‘Mm course of formation in every village. AN were tolerably armed, though sometimes one company had Berdan rifies, another Chassepots, and still another Minies. Many had no uniforms, and these looked really like bands ot brigands—that is in a picturesque and extravagant aspect. At Maya, St. Estevan, Elizondo, Sumbilla, we found in each between seven and eight hundred men and plenty ef om- cers, some of whom had been soldiers of the regu- lar army, who, being sergeants on the other side, were made lieutenants here, and others were young no@sof the oldest Spanish famittes. Alf Were busy at drill, I all cases the battalions were commanded by old Carlists of the Seven Years’ War, many of whom seemed to me rather old for a service so specially calling for energy and enter- yprise. As there are neither tents nor camp uten- sils, the men generally occupy the villages, into which the population seem to welcome them. At all events, there is no misery apparent om the faces of the peasants. Young girls sing the Carlist songs in chorus with the soldiers, and the village boys play ball with the younger volunteers. All the stories as to forcible enlistment were, as I was void, and as it sseméd to me, entirely false. “Why,” they said, “should we take men by force when we even have not arms enough for all who would come willingly?” In all the villages 1 passed I saw young fellows at ordinary labor, cutting wood, tending sheep, &c., who would have made good soldiers, and who would scarcely have been left if the country were swept for recruits. As for exactions, I can only say that I saw none; but saw cattle, sheep and poultry plentiful everywhere, ex¢ept in two villages recently occupied by a republican colamn, where chickens were especially scarce, Carlist rations consist of three-quarters of a pound of meat or bacon, one pound and a half of bread, half a bottle of wine and five cents a day in” money. The officer's ration is double, but he gets | po money. As the tréasury cannet give him what he ought to have, honor is supposed to supply the want. Rationsare supplied by the Alcalde on the demand of the commanding officer, and against re- | celpts which will be cashed when the King reigns | in Madrid, One of the Alcaldes to whom I spoke ‘On thts subject was not a Carilst, but a “progres- sista.” It is quite immaterial to the people,” he said, “whether they feed Republicans or Carlists, as neither pays for what is taken. There is, indeed, a little preference for Cartists, as they are people of our own country, and often even from our own village—our neighbors and friends."”” Taxes are collected by the Carlists, but only | those that are well recognized as. enstemary. General Ollo accepts in payment of taxes the re- eeipts given by his own officers for rations when- ever he knows the taxpayer to be poor and well disposed. DISCIPLINE is not strict ; soldiers and officers seem very much on the feoting of equals and famthars, Soldiers in | the inns did not always rise even as the General | himself entered; such a fact as a respectful salute | is unknown, Our three guards, in and out of the | carriage, smoked their cigarettes and dozed as if it was their pleasure trip, and questioned the General with easy noncfalance. In the ranks they look well and seem disposed to do whatever is required, with a tendency, however, to hold on to the cigarette even there, and a rather extravagant love of shouting “Viva el Rey y el General Olio!” Rather tired of this little tribute, | the General once asked me to ride down the line instead of himself; but they did not know him per- sonally, thought I was the right man and shouted ali the same. At St. Esteban a mounted messenger came with 4 nete for the General, and our mules were at once harnessed up, and instead of continuing our ad- | vance we turned porthward toward Sumbilla, ON A NRW TRACK, “You will be astonished at the change of route," ‘but 1 have information from Lizarraga that he is moving to meet the Republi- | cam General Fernandez, who has marched with a may see @ little ighting.”” | It turned out otherwise, however; for Fernan- dez, advancing as far south as the neighborhood of Lesaca, en the west side of the Bidassoa, and see- ing Lizarraga’s forces occupying the surrounding heights, was not delighted with the sight, and made the best of his way again to Vera and Irun; 80 that when we arrived, next day—wbich was Friday, of Palm week—we found Lizarraga and his men devoutly at church, partaking of the holy communion, As the Carlist motto is “Dios, Patria y Rey,” oue would naturally anticipate that the religious clement was not of a retiring nature, and one finds the facts in aecordanee with such anticipa- tions, There is @ daijy amass and chaplaina are very numerons, Fast days are—especially at this Lizerraga’s table Was not sumptuous, notwithstanding the presence ofthe Commander-in-Chief, AT found on it that woullat all pass muster with my palate was a dish of bolled beans and some bread and wine. LINTERVIEW THE GENERAL “What is the fereo aod what are the plang of the Carlisis !’" are questions (hat may occur to every reader, [will let Geueral Ollo answer. He said tome: | “Some eager partisans say we have 40,490 ‘men brigade from Vara, By to-morrow morning you | | + bub this is an exe | Aggeration. We have, of weil armed and well equipped men, abi cen thousand, net many more 4 We shill certagily law have gone to give the As to the number of mew we may have at our disposal when the King crosses the border it i# aw yet somrcély caicalabie; but I know that the sountry people through all Spat are Cariists. Hfthe large towns there are republicans, avd the rien landed proprietors are Aiphonsists. As for artifiery, we are as yet poorly sipphed. We have’ four cannon here and a latger number in Catutonia. Ina few weeks I be- liéve we shal have moré cannon and some thou- sande more small arte; and on the day when we take @ couple of big towns the whole'country, as far as the Ebro, will fall mto our hands. We need not endeavor to take fortified places like Pampe- luna, the citadel of which is impregnable, and on the walls of which my nephew, the Marquis Hor- mazas, received thirty Dayonét wounds in an at- tempt to take it by storm. Showld we oceupy the neighboring country we need only blockade such places.” ge wuaTARY ORGANIZATION, as received from the seme authority, is as fol- lows— “Dorregarry is commander of the three Basque provinces and of Navarre. General Ollo commanmis under him in Navarre; General Velasco in Biscay ; General Lizarraga im Guipuzcoa; and General Liovrente in Alava, Lizarragais now only organ- izing his forces im Navarre, and Dorregarry is doing more active service there, In Catalonia the general command is im the hands of Alfonso, brother of the King, who has under him General Sabaies, in the districts of Gerona and Barcelona; General Tristany in Lerida; and General Vailes in Tarragona. Santa Crus, the notorious curé, isa subordinate under Lizarraga, and has been con- demned by his commander to be shot; and his only reply hae been to inform the said commander that he also should be shot whenever Santa Cruz should meet him.” “But I hope,” said the General, “that Santa Cruz willcome to his senses, although I have my- self confirmed Lizarraga’s sentence giving the curé two hours for unconditional submission if he wished to save his life. He is an ambitious man, and craves notoriety and power; but he has no military knowledge, and the influence he exercises on his band of 700 men is simply due to energy and | personal courage. It ig wonderful how, by the force of personal example, he keeps his men to- gether against every difficulty. I do not doubt that the greater number of atrocities attributed to him are altogether fictitious. He has, I know, shot summarily @ man and a woman, but he charged that they had repeatedly given informa- tion to the enemy. Spies, of course, are not spared in any wars; but when the Carlists kill a spy itis called murder, while if the republicans. kill a Carlist of any sort it is called a ‘just measure of severity.’ ” Tasked the General how it was that the King did not put himself at the head of his troops, and mentioned the severe censures I had heard on this subject. He said :—“We have great trouble in ( KEEPING THE KING QUIET and preventing his rushing precspitately across the frentier, as he did last year when we were de- jeated, and he had to retrace his steps, Should I be defeated or captured, or should the same events happen to General Dorregarry, you can perceive that the disaster would be measurable and not be- | youd remedy, But suppose either to happen to the King, what then? And both defeat and cap- ture are clearly possible toany of us, no better armed nor stronger than we now are. ‘True, neither is very likely with the disorganized enemy | we have to oppose, but we must not trust our cause to unnecessary possibilities. It is true that His Majesty’s coming would excite a great movement in his favor; but an untimely en- thusiasm may waste the grandest epportunity. We should have the peasants by tens of thousands thronging to us and demanding arms. Well, we have no arms® to give them. Discouragement would follow delay in such a matter, and our young | fellows would go off to their homes disheartened and never rally to our colors again. All that we must avoid, No, no; in a few weeks more we shall have arms—arms, our great necessity !—and | munitions and supplies of all kinds, There will be plenty of men whenever we make the signal, and | then we will occupy what points we geed; and I will ask you to come again and describe for the Americans the entry of Don Carlos into his do- minions.” Expressing some curiosity as to WHAT SORT OF PERSON THE KING WAS, General Ollo spoke as follows, as nearly as I can re- | member :— “He is very intelligent, very kind-hearted and of great personal courage; but I am unable to say whether he will be distinguished as a statesman; for this 1s a subject upon whicn a fair opinion can only be formed a posteriori, an’ not other wise--that is to say, we must judge of it from the facta only. Many intelligent men have failed as statesmen, while men of inferior intelligence have proved quite equal to the little statesmanehip requited in a sovoreign. Italy and Engiand could supply iius- trations of this.” These closing allusions led me to observe that the General made a scarcely justifiable comparison in referring to constitutional governments when Don Carlos was commonly recognized as the repre- sentative of absolutist theories. He said:—“You are greatly mistaken if you besa | that the King ever dreamed of absoiute power. | He knows, and his counsellors know, that abso- lutism 18 impossible in our day, He understands | also the ntter impossibility of that otuer bugbear of Peopie who shout for progress, government by priests and monks. The iegitimate monarchy in Spain will not only rule with the advice of the Cortes, but will restore all the ancient franchises of the various departments—the /veros, as we call them—which have been violated in turn by all the Progressive parties, It will support religion, of course, but will not go a step beyond what the reli- gious feeling of the people requires in that respect. People say we will overran the country with monks, which is simply nonsense. It any person is disposed to a monastic Hfe, government, it seems to me, has little to do with it. There 1s among our peasantry, and even our people at large @ religious fervor that may be deemed fanatical; and if our monks were fanatics it was not because they were monks, but because they were Spaniards. If 1 should calla good Cariist in the next village aud tell him myself that a detach- ment of our friends had been beaten somewhere he would not believe me. He would answer that God would net permit Carlistos to be beaten. You cannot make a people thus tenacious less fanati- cally religious by closing the monasteries, as the progressist did. Such a foolish and unjust Measure could never have other consequence than what we see—that is, the increase of the very lanaticism it streve to stamp out. And, say what | you may, against the monks, if you siudied the | the be: Basque Provinces, where priests and monks have | otrect, always been powerful, you would see much in their favor, There is not a single peasant in these provinces—man or woman—who does | not write grammatically and in a clear hand the | Basque language, and many write equally well the Spanish language also, Their good health is the ; result of their virtuous lives, and their moraiity of | right instruction. Not only are there no beggars, but distressing poverty is unknown, Much of this is due to their priesthood, and the remainder to what the priests help them to maintain, the an- | cient privileges of the Basque Provinces and Na- val We enjoyed here per.ect self-government, } and did not know what conscription meant. Over | and over again have [voted here as a landlord of | s Navarre on a looting of perfect equality with the i poorest of my tuwmers, You are surprised at the | Strength, courage and piety of our young volun. | teers, some of Whom, as you have Sscen, are scarcely | sixteen years old, It is the result only of their | | pure lives and the absence of that source of ruin } to the young men of many countries—tue conscripe tion, In their ‘Dios, Patria y Rey'—the Patria | C means to them the rocky soil of these mountains | and this pure air’? » Secing that the General was leading me in an awkward direction, I said that of course people abroad were legs intorested in these domestic ques- tions than in the Spanish foreign poli and that Americans would above all like to know, what Would be the views of Charles Vif, WIT REGARD 10 CUDA. “Weil,” replied tie J, ‘at is diMeult to say anything positive On that subject at tas time, | Slate Work of alt mraee Slavery of course will be abolished, and @ special constitution will be granted to the colony. You are probably anxious te know whether His Majesty would be indueed to part with any portion of the Spanish dominion in the New World; and I mast. fay that no government could sately venture such @ poticy. Its declaration to that eect would he ite own death warrant. It would give effective ground to every element of opposition, for it woulkt appear to balance meaner consitterations against national fealing. My own epinion is—and FE believe that to 4 certain extent this is the King’s opinion also—that colonial poticy is simply a consideration of debtor and creditor accounts. Ifa colony pays, keep tt; if tt is a loss anda burden, cut tt-adrife. In my option the English colonial disintegration party is rational, But the subject is entangled with sentiments of nationality and pride; and you see that even the English government, so strong and rich, dare not declare plainly the policy im which they seem to believe—dure not openly put to the public the question of cession, How, then, can any Spanish-government be asked to do so? If we conid sell Cuba we shoul, by a stroke of the pen, restore our national tmancer: Bet to make such a sale a strong hand is needed, and no hand can be strong in Spain un- less it holds plenty of money. Thus there is & vicious cirele; we could not sell save ina condition that would make selling superfuous til che one good reason for the unpopular bargain had passed away. i 5 This isa vital topic with us. It will come up often, and we must only imitate the wise English policy—to endeavor to prevent irritation, and by all proper good will and courtesy toward the American government to prevent the arising of any pretext for their O€CUPYING THE ISLAND. Many other questions were asked. and answered, and in all the General seemed to me to exhibtta moderation and a good judgment that [ never ex- pected to find in a Carlist !eader, and that I knew tohaveno existence among Jegitinists in France. At night, ow the fourth day, we lad to cross the frontier. Rain was fairly pouring down, and there were five miles of font path through the slippery and muddy forest befere us, all of which did net de- ter this old soldier of seventy years. At daybreak, ex- hausted and wet through, we reached Ainhone, the first Freneh village, and got iato « carriage belong- ing (as the driver told the gendarmes on the road), to “two English gentlemen who had come on the previous night;” and at noon the Carlist leader alighted in the main street of Bayonne as safely and quietly as if little Theirs had never fulmimated against him a. decree of arrest and expu:sion. #0! NIU RE, A PARLOR AND SOFA REDS; THE + riety ofany house In the city; Depot 40 Bleceker street. A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF CARPETS, ture and Bedding at lowest cas! 8, by weekly instalments, ab OP FARRELL'S warehouse, #0 Lighth ave- nne, between rtieth and Thirtw-tirst street 4 RARE CHANGER FOR How SEKEEP! hificent Household Furnititre tor si.e a property family leaving ci overed silk brocade ot the richest « So m0 ts, Cost $80; for $240 ¢ ton gia rosewood, walnut Cuanher sParhieare, ARGEST VA. e"s patents, | Stylo Loais XEV.; hain, spring Mattresse | Suir grand Pianoforts, mariuatcrie bois dor se Cab: 1 phy Tables, Etageres, Bronzes, Extension Tante, “puitet, Chinaware, Glaseware, Silverware, &e., at init original cost, 3d West 15th st, near 5th bi A RARE CHANCE, FOR CAs! dence East, aoe stree Top Suits, $40% Suits, $38 than halt original cost. RIVATE RESI- ‘arlor Sits, $75; lots for les AT PRIVATE SALR—AT. fi THE FURM ATURE wa private house 210 West cath near 70 avi—viz., Parlor Suits, Redroom Sutty 2 spring and hair | Mattresses, Ornaments, Kitshon and pining Room urate ture, Bedstead, Burgaus, Washstands Brouzes, Clucks, &c,;:’ one sour round Piamotorte, Broadway naker, cheap for cash; contents of honse, in use eleven mont | | PRIVATE FAMILY WY! ra | private site, Furnitnre 0 seer To | West Twenty-third street, two Via for $250, one for $2: ‘arior fs, Cost B50 : Rep Suits 0, Mirrors, Carpets, Be $25, $5, $125, $150 complete Wing, Peantings, Br tains,” Ktageres, Bookeare. Siverninted Wares China, G Uaeeares &c,' Cail before purchtsing elsewhere and exalt nf Atal NIT! ealdenge ‘te ‘act Twenty Fourth and Lexington aventtes, for fice for cash.—Magnificent Maric | brocatet Fatlor Shits, Neurty new ony Antolpette, styles satin | tresses, Beddiag, Bu a nificent patent Aras ai nt | tarte, cost $960, for $300; Stool and o shipp A PARTY WL NG TO BXOH ANG and take a Tandsonet iurnished cando:oby applying at 207 West PF pleasant house, with every © C4 RPETS, ‘ian wer; has box fF FURNITURE and Board ath street; Furniture, Beds, Beddit Payinents by the week or ferins cxsy KELLY & 00., corner of Twenty-ilith sre C 4, THORN, CORNER POURIERNTIL / and Fitth avenae, are prepared to pay the Sfah prige tor good kecond Land Furniture, Cary Mirrors, &. ; also a large stoek o/ 1 rniture for tale! Ooh SECOND HAND AND MISSIT CARPETS A FT sy ae Brussels ant [ngrain, handsome alt for pattern ale cheyp, at, Ta Fulton street, corner of Duteh, Entrance on Datth stroet_ ONTHLY OR WEEKL Farniture, ome 381 and $36 Third aver Prices | AND ANTIQUE tH hird tte Tergent assert: WRAHAM'S, 197 Third aye teseription of Furniture TEERLY “AND MONTH Y PAYM ANTS “¥OR FUR. yaa ire, bid ad ant ht iy fig M. COWPER- fies vtesl tn ore prices rte one KUROPE. QWis8 AND UNITED COURINRS sOoCTnTY.—cov. SS riers inay be secured on atityacby lamilies visiting Enrope on writmy the Secretary, 54 Mount street, Grosve- nor square, London, England. EXES AND FE RIMFICIAL, WUMAN BYEs.~ DAVIS, veator and only maker of the tinprovet Hinnan Eye, acknowledged by the treutty ty tro. the coe correct jinitation. of nattre ins the world. tet fast Fifteenth strect, between Thted aad Fotteth avenues, BILLIARDS. Al —bATEST DESIGNS OF BILLIARD + aml all appurtenances coon» special atiention to private GEORGE E. PHELA TABLES ted with the trade; No.7 Barolay street. 7 Broad: New York. ‘Beteneee. Vollender, .Y ILLIARD TABL SMALL ri HEE “OT SALE CHEAP ‘our-p be Gommintes good iw new. Call at Piano store rest Twentsetiied Steet eve Third aye F°s BALE FIRST CLAs¢ WOCKET AND CAROM Biliard Table, in good order lee-box: reg- son for selling giving ‘up busines Apply at 90 York street, Brooklyn. EW 5X10 BIT. $300, COMP “Nonpareil” tn steat second band 1 Ww, $18 avd upwards KAVANAGH off, corner Canal amt Contre sts, Ww iH. opieernis «+ with Delaney’ 1 Wits Crstio st andl che: nd for years Wacecoons MARBLE MANTES.s. LABER, SPEAMM VRBLB AND) ¥ dt SAING +. Works, Band 1 at Bightoonth street. urd Marilelzed Mantels, Marble memts, at prices that dely competiCion for the trade, N ASSORTMENT OF M\NTE: for beauty of design art ality” o¢ y. warble Faruiag NSURPASS EN Ns Fourth avenue and Sevente ntl: <tr ation square. | GTEW ARTs SLATE MANTE Wen AND gantidesigns; State Works of iption nad} Mantels. f. Sti Niet ELD. saul | BEV vented street nove aes sient nite, Ne ¥ REMO OTIOE OF RENOVAT.—P since the Ist ot May, & former offfes, where he’ TARD,-PRIVAT fart its ALTO-WITIL A POWELL ly re (Tay ait ionin service, Address & ork Wesean, POSIRION. As ORGANIST Te lg TY =P copal oe, atholic service plam. P Mivexs A. Bi, York ANTED—A_ TRNOR church in New York. ing salary, box 2,023 Vost o DANCING ACADIIIES. Su SWS DANCING ACADEMIFS, b)) PRIVATE 1 CIRCULARS at Priy IN SOME, t LEADER + With LeIerb a BOX BOOK OP! leat a great saeri- | etand Sixth a¥en ue} ait | a TRALBO, | YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 7, 1873— QUADRUPLE SHEET. i AMUSEMIONTS, Boome THEATHE, CLO AULT, i Edwin Booth te site PN iat onager DION Bove Tox ULT, vr ny these oe St iy Ni NGuTS nee great ooo me eee Drama of swo. in his new DAD! LAST neworcpere 2 Sathaiad and Last rn Ber ONE Ur" DADDY o'DOWD. maining nights of Mr, wove? seated. sige, tee at Ditson & Co.'s masi¢ oor’ tar.vene. ~ NETLEON, EXTRA ANNOUNCEMENT. Lar Of The mi it Veen neces the reappear ance of the cel ouradaa tg fancances On MONDAY EVGNING NEXT, MAY 12, when she will appear tor the raves al ti a ata ih aa this country, AM In the grand Mistoricat nitfe Dram, nathe, writtes-fy An a rpeee td owed wnat on Sir W. Watear bees tn mous: ee ical Romance of Ken- | ibwortl fone “io such great atecess ‘ot ait cond dred cohustuting nigh seca ricKsran App wie Say SER Mone (bis fir ton atheeeaaiet * cami Te ‘a Hifects ant an hog ‘and Corps de Ballet ot | . The Box Sheet for the NEI! | Rowopen at the usual places. L pe gt THEATRE. Sons Eaneve s 00 Bay EVEN ott Mr. JAMES E. HAYES iG AT 8, WEDNESDAY AND saturpay MATINEES AT 2, the Fi palilon. of HUMPTY UMPTY, yi anata reconstructed by the author. NEW CAbsTs, NEW BURLESQUE OPENING, NEW 8OENERY, NEW MUSIC, W TRICKS AND EFFECTS, AND AN ENTIRE! LY NE naa PANTOMIME, K. MOREA MLL of all Premiere lee Damsousee Mae HGS Be HARRY JEE, Champton Hat 5; TER of the World. he wondertal thant Soyeae MME. CisaTaT RBURN, vent on RL Bt Anew Historical as et” WASHINGTON CROSSING TRS DELAWARE, Wana Propricter and Manager..Mr. LESTER WALLACK GREAT SUCCESS, ANOTHER TRIUMPH, EVERY EVENING fs Lroodiennirgs “et © ean. 1g P.M. will appear in his ortginal part of SQUIRE CHUCKLES, UIRE’S LAST SHILLING _ Gs eg and serious heres, in four be Se H. J. Byron. res HMI POLK, Mr. J. st M. HOLRAND, ‘att GW. BROWNE, oe KATHE! ie EFFIE jag Mme. PONIST ric} pate Act. —-THE MISER’ Act seen HUCK. couNtRy HOUSE rd — ANOpatNG: iS IN LOND Fourth cINteRton OP Sf winks” Bivoxnes COUNTRY HOUSE. EATS URED ID IN N ADVANCE, LULU. An original Seni The piece will aa ai, ARTIETS CLRROLIy Act \TIBLO'S GARDE: RAI eb ‘0 BERKORMAXG ae ae Ae ae Lv! TO-DAY, See ni i RYN awe THOROU OMPLETE THtUMEA. uty Ee Sir 4 BRA: Ve Fr 1Te in BARTHOLO Clown aN Ty gt BN ibis td Pantaloon: Bur MATE LULU. LULU, LULU, ULV, THE SENSATION GYMN. a bh wove, os Lrlinnaake GYMNASTIC _ PER- FORMANCES EVER SHEN IN’ THE WORLD. THE ENTIRE AUDIENCE RISES IN EXCITEMENT WONDROUS FLIGHT THROUGH SPACE, BOUNDS FROM THe STAGE TO A PLATFORM SUSPENDED THIR' ay es ABOVE IT, pane THE MOST, piveiount OF ALL ATULETIC OAULE TW ID-ATR: A TRIPLE SOME! SCENERY, MUSIC, COSTUMES po ol LANNIEP, Mt! PITTERL, CORPS DE BALLET IN TUREE aah BALLETS, NSFORMATI Ee OND HARMONIOUS 18 apes soir LF UL te D coxdavnios Rpt eri XECUTTO! UT AER, BREELL TLY @ SIN BX ON. 4 SATURDAY AT TWO. Nas GARDEN MATINEE, LADIES ak AVOID THE CROWDS at the eventing bec 04, by attending { inve of ALKA: ULU, on i TO-DAY" WHORES OON, AT. TWO, { LULb=THe SENSATION _GYMNASTOLUL | este maseleontn oo Usps SQUARE THEATRE. Propric Meat cg Satitday Watiner i Carriages may be ordered for H o'clock. LA, Sigs POF PROU. FROU. ‘The management, in fonder to adhere. to plans pre- viously made tor the production of novelties during the cuiFrent seazon, are compelled to announes the praeap ih ear SOF FROU FROU, ast nighis 0 ve charming youn actress, so EL, IN THE Mr, —— SHOOK Mr, A. M. PALMER in her mo: ¢ brit ra sf er most brilita oneal nA? LAST MATINER (biit one) of FROU-FROU, SHORTLY, a new drama ofgroat Interest, WITHOUT A HEART, Which will be superbly n npn Produced with a yeah AY EVENING. FIT of Mr, 1 D. Hy Mes Bis, 7 M THEATRE, opposite Metropolitan Hotel, ATHENE 585 iiroutray, FAMILY MATINERY ee mc AT 2% O'0LOOK. ie chee 4, Le TORS. MATINEE. ity Piet BOF TRE ctotu oF aoud, Mie Minne. Jackson, Miss eat Arnott, Miss Tillie Hall, GEORGE WILLIAM WEST. WILLIAM W! Di LRU SCHOOLCRAPE oe “$x and regilar Olio and Butlesque Contpa aierngon aoorn 9 i ey renin at fe fox office open daily, § ANG foe Nees Monday tive ee cat aA Ari thors the REMMELSBE ACADEMY. OF aruate oF THE ARATE TAD wrao, | Pak Thdisputable ste fu “Poetleds: Queen ol Bue. MIS LY! oi ixtilosivsoy, j HER INCOAPARABLE COI The most complete burlergee a atattion m_in'the gu. | Pe Stave Manager. Hatty Boke e Wusleal Director’ Win rHtts a EVENING, GSK: 8 of ib a he ae ae a oe kd i aa aes al ke asia cent strert, Heat Third avenue. AD. a if * ed seseressesDitector CHEER VRE Sidi, Box office open me ‘rom 9 till 40’ Belo. on | BRANrsoren. poten tes ¢WENTY THIRD SEREDT, | EVERY HVRNING AER 8) ATINED Aad Crowded iiNs Hanae elope eet (Hits a BRYANT'S M | BEYANES Mt MUSstite ot AngusEt SEE i | BRYANTS MISSPREELS, Nell e iteed, | fot Stanwood, Wwity, Darter, Rice, Morrissey Emertse Hed ke. Famine’: ‘Natinees Saturday at2 Seats T's OPERA HOUSE, “3 | ‘Wxtra Matinee THURSDAY Astorn, BY Bonettot Mosrs, MORRISSEY and EME ae LB lds Brothe: ARERR HAS a or a QTEINGAY It | Ot Rea REN Programme.—? Madion Morto Glove and the 1 thon.” Pieken: ApINGS Titay evening, May 15. oS Not AsiaThe8 ot His Trade,” Nhazzar's Feust,” Arnold: elute Hunt; “The wake ne Fntorval of ton minutes, ing Part 1—“Ring Lear—The € 7 | pum ive hia! inher eae oF Panera | Daytac “Maior Sainte Puke Cotting Seats, $1, at SCHIRY nd the Hall, Sptetethanes place. New York particulars address J Buren once RVERY EVENING, AMU SE584 Wes. ee en ARRON Ben ava as e se suis a6) Sole Temec-and Ma faim, . at ‘GUSTEN DaLy. | Byery cvening this weck (beginning lat S o'clock, over at TD the very Opt far Lra.a of Society in acts, ent | DIVORCE! AST W tet] _—_ Uo ONY qQhstacters by tha famous originat east, ine!udi ‘Chas. Fisher, oF DIVORCE, George giarke spuenen day 1 Mrs, ‘Gill ass fim: | Miss Sara "Jeet, La gcaadd *SATURDAY, Ay ig, LAST MATINEE eS T “ONE of pitoncg, * MONDAY, May 12. Benefit of Mr. GEORGE A *,*WEDNESDAY, May M.—Benefit of Mise LINDA © pieTzZ, TUESDAY NTatr, May 20, FIRST PRODUC ning otter, a Jong rans slaborate eh arsal, of a new and or hia pay, of powerful emotional eivet us Air atsusahi A Nouuded’ the last brill ihe work of Dr. MOSEMIH ALS ot a and called “MADELEIN MOREL{” The new piece parties offered with rich and appropriate urroundiny ith an extraordinary distribution. The Hox Bit for the first night will be opened Tues lay 33, TH saitaat? ee BENEFIT ‘OF PMS e fy fi ERT, ion she will t, ior the 224th time, her on which occasion shew ae a . IPHEATRE COMIQUE, 514 BROADWAY. ¢ and Pro| pietar * TROUP: Mr. JOSH HART... sear be: * LAST MATINEE OR Ete Pes F THE sage rath sin TROUPE. 0 Mr. FRANK KERNS, “a «Mr. FRANK KERNS, AT MATINEE. ome BU! eo, BUG se THE tee oe Peale ‘The great AT MATINER, THE FEAT OF DECAPITATION AT MATINEE, ALL THE MAMMOTH TROUPE AT MATINEE, AN ENTIRE NEW OLIO AT MATINEE, Miss KITTY O’NEIL, AT MATINEE, Miss ADA WRAY Q a pain fignspay Mean vm ia FRIDAY NIGHT, 7 Last Ni Troupe. Xx" ae pees AN Pit NEW OLIO, and first aS ny Of the follow! eo Pt REN BAMILY ‘The wonder of “aires "tie 100K, rrveatnn. Hoge Th Jest hog ‘ai urn ve fs ee WVARMENS pores: in bare ofhanite rack cine a the 38, The great ant of mtg of Bsn for SATURDAY Maun mary To. Bowes: ya DAY, MAY 5, firvt time here of a nev aid onurely original. drama, ia for whorl tt 5" Lhe US, a entitled m by the talons aut Ores aus: MARY Fa Tat parse 1 sout-sttrring, never-fiagging interest the beginni ng to is di ul De ja eed 0 the stage with the usual cence hng distivgntnne thi entab ianmen labo St ENE! SPLENDID SCENEM GNIYCENT APPOINTMENTS ai an BRORLL ENT C437. ie eded each evenin: a te ecomeaita, FRIDAY NG, pen of Mist MADBLINE we hie Y SRY- : ; . ud grsiea ea aa eG SG ne lees, will shortly be prs, --Manager USEUM, DOM. MURRAY, Woor’s ant WEEK OF AMS AY. Mine. celebrated’ eyertal | pally Comedian NATINED PERFOR. DOMINICK KMURRAY, The mat and in_the ne ie Mr. Drama of HERNANDEZ FOSTER, WILLY REILLY HEUNANDEZ, FOSTER, ma oi DEAN COLBEN. JACK HARRAWAY. RAND OPERA HOUSE.—COWMENCES AT % TOR Gat AUGUSTIN DALY....Sole Lessee and Manager. Mr. CHARLES FECHTER as MONTE CRISTO EVERY Nic Stade i the magnificent ro Drama of MONTH CRISTO, Produced with the most elaborate and ingentous Scenic hes Mechanical Llinsions ever presented upon the Amer- n stage. Magnificent Scenery! § Superb Costumes! Lina ecw er § SRE As ce le ae BT. RI Nixgs” e ~ C.J. ROCKWELL, Mr. LDEN, Mr. Roney Y r DGDEN, Mr. CHAP) revi "Bie tha je, Peakes, a pm Bemen, dearie und others. GRAND FECHTER MATINEE NEXT <omes. Seats may be seenred for 20 dave 1 fgg ge 3 ster ra wi g “ to atten Box ey ‘open are cit mit cena aoe IN A po. 14 WEEE. ded houses. 8 sleek Buus CON; HORS MER th ira Comedy and. CI nee Wie, fom OP APT or. Wire fata nee b tami BE WEDNERDAY, TWO O'CLOCK. ME FB ee fig enery and GHP, ___ Miss MINNIE. ee Wile secant FRIDAY. ®. ANNA BISHOP HAS THE HONOR 10 OMAR ABFedtaNct in SW YORK REE See nee caren tid ae rand For thisoceaston itme? hod has ‘actceay N plensare it an and G. iN Srinctpal ‘music stores, min boas oS ee oul anes Rone ited he free on yon Priday ¢ evenings, OPAL, fe GARDEN. Ci) FENINa OF CBN ARK EDNESDA BY ie May TH EODOR ‘E THOMAS? uaeee NIG! rales _Fall partie lars ih Re gente” SUM a sor ane should visit the mig it iptul oe timag. Teratye om Peay ete 7B hy PO) Rested ae iia Wee MATEUR GYMNASTS. Je entertainment at a Bg, 37 Unto aga r next. FO aanneeen MM, at 8, 1 foat fleet res ean " ie Ta Senta” 3 ieee NE yoRK NUsBus OF A fiway, New York. New i ‘orl HORE an Es iT 1S asin othe ited for 10 a eyes iT CLASS AMA ive & ny, of Mae Aca oP Tite EVENING TELEGRAM, SOUTNWEST CORNER BROADWAY AND TRIRTY-PIRST STREET, UPTOWN DEALERS AND_ NuWspoys SUPPLIED Wes Fr SREwDr, L REA NWA BRABIN RvrNtxo, HAY 15. | ia Hat ap iy arene this season in Amerie’ of the | Shakspeave-ot readers, Wifhsas eniiteis newt paneren | ow prog ran _Tiekets $1, at Se Wyreests Hi PIN weondway._ or tn DURWS GALLERY 0} “PAINTING3—OPEN 4 y and evening, io iie cane ling of the German Say- neral Motthe’ fag ca Bo: Itty sor Sehrader, is Now ‘omeambition. NOING@ AND, BOXING ACADEMY) Meg paar | paer, near Broad path A ane sortment hand an Colonel ie Bae MINSTREL AND ROPOLITAN ‘peat SHOW “PRINTING ESTAHLISHMENT, HERALD BUILDING, BROADWAY AND ANN stteen 4 LARUE ASSORTMENT OF THEATRICAL, VARIETY CUTS UONSTANTLT ON TIAND &

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