The New-York Tribune Newspaper, May 2, 1866, Page 8

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8 Hate on the question of the union of Croatia with Fon- . General bar gony prevaled, and s favorable result gup«fl«l frow, fhe negotiations. M. Deak bus guite | recovercd. ) e i The Principalities. A 10 4n) of the disturbances at Jaecy was apprebeuded. | The trepps were confined to their barmacks. —— Endia 2, Bowbay private telegram of April 11 reports the | | : " wasket yaralysed, sud prices of ootton and hirtings lower | that he would swcond, tho addrves 10 T *4d nominal. | beginning of the seckion, and he wasn't @ i more go y believed to aet from p Such being the ease with *“the Ir ! Eymeest, delighted to call them (who exhibit v | LAVERPOOL, April 21, 1€66—p. m. Mr. Peabady is swong the jassengers by the Scotia. ie wax warmly ehecred on embarking &t Livirpool. There 1%, as yot, no direct contirmation wernts in The Tomes te Pans, Ap na conft an Dot ms the A tedogram received here from Vi Abat Ansiria in replying to the Pro Bas submitied propositions for mute Proposals wie us follows: Destoge their wilitar which ex.sted jrior (o the U5th of April be the Ausirio cor nsive WEAsUICs; te for the mutual ¢ rm on that day, and is that 1 tisnrm only on the 20 e Au proposition is said to Lav ) eated to Paris ad Loudon, where it bas been cordial woved. v April Diet, the communi- ancing that the ques- Attbe vext sitting of the Fede eaticn will, it is suid, be made, ann Tow ¢! went is in a fair woy fi 1 IVERPOCL There is yet no news of the steau Ap ship City of W d to state that the Govern on warranting belief in the sta the rupture d Prussia. " fort Diet rade declars Paris Bourse closed firm, Kentes, 671, 65¢. " MELPOUR: March 2h—Tarfl again rejected, Minie- try reigred. Lexvon Moxey MArEeT.—Under the more pacific aceounte from Germany, there bad been o decided improve- o the funde. Consols on the 20th advanced to 87, a8l m cuut demaud at the bank was moderate, and the # casy. ‘The bank rate rewains at € per o kly veturos of the Bank of England exhi erense in the bullion of £345,006 sterling. The v ou of Barned's Banking Company ou the ereated considerable excitement | eles. There 1 no precise informetion as to th estimates 1 as Ligh as £3,250,000 aterii shares cn which are abl ereuiions be paid in full. The bank had made large advances on o Pears were entertained of one or two large failr ol on aeconut of the bauk suspension; but it # the temporery embarrasswent of the firm in question had Been satisfactonly surmounted. Hopes were enteriaived thut axsaugenents wouid be made for a favorable Liguidation of the bau! vot, for & resuroption of businese. AMERICAN SECURITIES — Messre. Baring Broe. & C eulay pays: There has been a fair busincss this week in Donde, und the parchases are supposed to have been priveip for Ameriean account. ‘The clogiug price is 691@70. sl are t: Erie's quiet, 534 54; Kllinois, 794 @80. Buyers of Mary Fives at v9); VirginiaSixes offered at 50; Sterling Fives nomivally 5 & 5. LIvearoot, April 21—Morning. COrTos—The Brokers’ Circalar says: ** The Cotton was beavy on Friday, and on Saturday a further and de @eeline was snbmitted to, quotations becoming almost non sual. This extreme depression attracted the attention of b ere, particalarly for consumption, and & large busivess @one on Monday and Tuesday, aceompanied by a rally in ices. On Wedn upon lato advices of full receipts at Awerican ports (though aficrward qualified), the dewaud sgrin “ell off, and prices gave way. a TLursday mowing the existing want of confidence was tnereased by the aunouncement of the difficulties of a local tank, end Puciness wae checked; as the day advanced there wasa more clendiness, but the quotations still show a deeline of 24@2d. from last week's rates. The quotations of American are reduced 13@2d., after considerable Suctuations from day t. bit a de- toy iron, &e. ivor- is npderstood ot o uay. The decline in otber descriptions ravges from 1 to %44, ¥ ® on tho week. The sales of the week add 67,840 bal ine eludiog 8,710 on epeculation, and 19,280 declared for export. “The quotations are: Midd) ing. 143d. 14id. 1440, 144d ) thore was a good demand for American, uced under & less free supply. The apont 12,000 beles, including 3,000 for port. Middling Uplands 14i @140, The stock on huud is estimated at 19,890 bales, inclaling 300,060 Ameriean. The woek's receipts reached 191,927 bales. At sea, from Tudia, 545,000 bales. TRADE AT MAXCHESTER.—There was rather more inquiry yesterdsy, aud a steadier iecling wiled, but business was Yeste: and prices slightly ady, wales were computed speculation snd ex) b & limited scale at below of ny. BREAUST! Frs—Messra. Richardson, Spence & Co., Wake- . Nash & Co. and others report Flour very dull but steady. Small sales port: Bekd ‘Wheat i limited demar d at about the rates of Tuesday. Corn in p;:v.-qum at 28/9@29/ for Mixed, aud 30/ @31/ for White PROVISIONS. —Measrs. Bigland, Atbya & Co., and Bruce & McAuliffe report: Beef very dull, lower prices must be wecepted to effect sales. Pork dull under large arrivals. Bacon very flat, 1/ lower and still tending downward. Lard meglected, and bolders would accept a declive of 2/ @3/, hbere duil and easier.” Batier quiet and Bomina, Tallow Bt and 1/ lower. PRODUCE.—T).e Brokers' Circular reporte—Asbes-—Pots dull ::lovn Old New 33/G. Pearls, small sales at 37/, ars dull and 6d. lower. Coffee unchanged. Rice quiet at Bate rates. Molasses, no sales. Bark—sales of Philadelphin at7/6. Clover Seed—American Red 36/ @40/. Jute dull and 15/ Jower. Fish Oils inactive. Linseed Oil quiet at / @42/6. Rosin in fair demand; Awerican 6/6@10/. Spirits of Turpentine—sales of French at 45/, PETROLE| ¥—Doult, English & Brandon report of Refined at 2/ @2/ 1 per gallon, with Spirit at 1/2. LONDOS MAKKETS,—Messrs. Baring Brothers & Co, ‘Wlite American, %, @52 ; Red, Tron—Welsh quiet; Rails and advanced to 80/, but closed st 7€/, offee very firm. Rice 3@6d. lower. dull; Common Congon, 1/13. Tallow declined to 46/6 for P. V. €. Spirits Tarpentine lower; sales of French as Petiolenm—Refined, 2/3. Spirite, 15, Linsced Cake in / 5 demand; Now-York, in bbls, £11 5/, Linseed, 6d.% er. Linseed Oil dull st 39/ @33, Sperm Oil finm; £12: demanded. Cod, £48. LATEST. Liverroor, April 21—Evening. Cozaos—Sales to-day, 10.000 bales at yesterday ement. and including 2,000 to speculators and €xporter jug Uplands is qumes "ON!J. BREAUSTUFPS are inactive. Provisioss dull 1LoXDOX, Saturday, April 21—Evening. Consols, €7, @874 for money. They opened lower, but rallied 0 the sbove figures. U. 8 Five twenties, 70}@70}; Illinois Central Shares, €02 904; Erie Shares, 54 OUR EUROPEAN CORRESPONDENCE. Must Happen in the Event of o 8 fsterinl Majority—An Fmpe g Dissel sien—Debato on the Repeal of the M Tax —John Simart Mill om Posterity—The Na. slonal Debt and England’s Future—Talk of Amecrican Affairs, the Civil Vete, and President Johnson—*‘ The Times” om the Fesmo—Ntems. S Loxpox, April 21, 1866, vhtil yesterday evening there was o very general belief Shat the fate of the Reform bill would be decided last ‘might, or rather early this morning, instcad of being ad- Journed till next woek, as the event has proved. Ordi- marily, on oecasions like the present, when both parties | Besire to bring their whole force to bear upon the result, s wmutual understanding is commonly afrived at as to the might on which the division is to be taken; but the *“ wind snd talk " into which, according .to Mr. Carlyle, we are ol drifting, bas bardly got itself expended on the subject. ‘#0, notwitbstanding Mr. Gladstone's desire to make an ‘#ud of the business, one way or the other, we must wait #ill Monday or Tuesdsy. Under these circumstances, ali political London (s much smaller aggregate than that of WWow-York, for I really believe the mysterious murder of the poor old woman in Cannon-st. excites more interest than the Reform bill among the cockneys proper), is occu- m;poonhling a8 to &u decision of Parhament. It me, therefore, to speak of it. A Government majority is pretty confidently hoped for, but not ko 1arge a one as was expected o few days ago. The ons vary from 8 to 20; earlier, the sanguine talked ®f 35. Of course this is little better than guess work, as ot the two great party meetings there were ouly, in all, 460 memhers present, aud therefore thereare s couple of hund- ed who hisve not pledged themselves in any definite way; and the expertest whipper-in would be puzaled to tell how 638 pew members will vote on 8 question like the presont. “The diminution of ministerial prospects is owing, first, to the inberest disike of Pariament to reform of wiy kind; wecondly, to the energetic opposition of the Tories. The -n.{timl &8 it professes to be, has hardly Mdlt:-z of the shadow of Lord Palmerston—that wost fatally- popular of Machiavellian obstructives, whose very traditign DODSETVES SITOT, iniuh'iol sud class legislation, whose name bis dlsci) faign conjure with were the spell effica- r& the way, what & thing is it that men do in world, aud with them so much of evil ! else it were immortal). Men elected under an old system, how- @ver faulty, are slow to be convinced of its dolecu.:zt to alteration, and stop their ears to the truth enuncisted ‘ennyson’s verse, “The vl N AT fit st “Then the enemy is , BOWing tares among the whoat, orop is ly 4 t. There is not much doubt the Parliam ut Mn’vn due to a desire to -::n.:’ Ilgfl votes aguinat Raforin, aud that it has poen. to d | Burke, NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 2. 1866. suceessful. Thue, Sir Grorge Bowyer, & , aud eidinarily a friend of progress and popu- | L educed into the rauks of the Opposition, | things before the war. Al ok for . lerk in & nrovincial ba Sastocnot thisis s very dangerous ery for the S i, ok of p | and the uncompromising tone of bis mestage and speeches row chaiman of o 1 s | Lolps to warran sw.York is_cooling toward bim dealing prio wers, of * | One of ading judges belonging to that State told mo this fluc l.lwds.u) 1 1 the O Donog! ¥ | Sroming thut the President could not zet a vote there to save t calo ted to do | “Copperhead’ has been shouted at him, and the effect e g 88 his OWD country remains misgoverned. The defection of Pim, the émber for Dubiin, mey be attributed to similar reason. -culy &8 all the London comespoudeuts of rish vewsjapers pre ool to English ost all ocensic There & le ou @ for getiing on t | things are hardl Elck nd D 1M o8 @ altons at'he had writte y last ietier, and | bl | | yeported in the . Iy knows that the Opposition its prose T resie t is impossible ceed Wiihe | she vy of calling clected on the distinct issue of though the Queen is understood W be ave and the state of licland ren ment in that country able. (Beside, the | talk about the sedistribution of s bas alaried many ¢ constituencies, many of whom are de of the ema agzainst the bill, kuowing thut its sequiur must disft If such a resolutio e C ed ou nd must be u stirring. ' t at the hustings on the question of Re- 8 own merits | form, I ton or demc 4 popnlar e nt measure bhave admitted that they ntend to maintain the nopoly of voting poss certain classes of the ty, and Mr. G od that he dis- olies in repre J pon this | erals have joined Assue, and whats | iis particular stion about the ultimate r will s before it is too late, and ¢ of a bill which is infinitely ub can possibly h ground, ever may be the fato of 1o is beno g more hope that tho Tores they are exposed themsc ve therefore nssist more mode there was of o and, in_econsequene for Lalf a centur, to help truth by butiing at ity W and runs over ti d then proceeds at o te And this is Low we fiercer pace for the iu | stand at prescnt Awong the of the week, r it was intro- | the measure, a8 st with a of what a Tory 8 pre n the delightful hypothe -was the produe vor of th t on account of its intri e of it. This baronet is « in the House of Co ' amed b * in which, accordin K‘” d | g of *‘incurablc Sl e S e e o L SR [ comes louder and Jouder e Five everything to the | by nve ident wanta to of ‘The Presi ve i his 1L of the taunt 8 soarcely Jess fatal to a than was the u{a’ *Suspect’ in the watehwords which urged the nation on T Jost their electric iuflaence. The President is a‘Saspect’ 4 of the most ariful, and promises to be the details of the Radieal strategy to render him s comments The Star, **is the testimony of a ¥ to the President ;" further opin: g that Mr. arcely venture to assume the responsib; ¢ the bill'as was at the risk of im- By Congress. 1 5 continue that lll‘lmr‘a;‘\h cut of the negio during the war, which nd the subtraction blic man in America rench Revelation, The to war bave not yet the addi ( ofgrammar) would quite qualify & zton y Hall on the subject. They d . apparently, f 25 10 spell correetly, They wear o Look at bow they have been ular rewark, it be Eyre's bangings, son’s bunting down with going on for & 1d clothe Ja notwithstan ) with * cats of plaited wire,” N that the negro * must huve been at the tom of it, tho t, there's a.good deal to b on both sides. ets & deal car turr ward it, This unl y 5 yOu Seo, is the prover- . pity jhat God's law sbo L 15 pu th ith 1 onds—it 18 qui bial individual w him.” W rican, fami e before the war, might be astc t lighte at th dly out ll,}' that the devoted, of that enterprise, «d over to our side to went nez Cana . intelligent, pe nspiring Monpsieur Lesseps, “hoss "’ that railroa Bowles so eloquently lays o Your_renders may collect, i < Victor Hugo's 1'ravar’jeurs de la Mer, priuted from my MS. in Tne TRIS/xg a month sgo, the mention made there of the €ncour ter between the hero of the novel and adevil of a dovid.fish, It has been to French readers tho most effeotivg assage in the book, and of the two parties to the comb#’ the devil-fish has become, not the most ad- mired cerrainly, but quite the most notorions. The French wime of this monstrous cephalopod i8 Pieuvre. Yet maze mogstrous drawings of him, largoly drawn from ation rather than from sea-water originals, appeer lns ! and fanny ut ,in @ symb bere the essential Lusiness is 1o ‘catch and bleed the pensive public. Pieurre is fast istinctive class vame of that portion of the rerto known ns Liounes, Lorettes, y wily—or it might which Sawnel Way, if Buches, Cocottes, have been a fortunate ale—the fashionuble and hetter clagses of monde and ave 0 \wrlwl‘.y sue- cecded in mutual rivalry that no one can tell by the eye to | )f either belongs—was She was riding lease—the which sphere of Society a specimen ¢ Defallen by a droll aceident the other day. [not driving, my litle neologist critie, if you tocher was driving] in an open carriage, with a very small ame of bonuet and & quantity of orname ated e growth on her head; the street 8 ecrowded 1 horso of the following yehicle, with appetite by the false appearances, stretched forward o neck | high shrieks from the s fortunate formaie—quick-tu 1 ks of lun< er” from the h ious pedestrians, Seantiwe the reviled horse, hop nd red, hit deeper iuto the deceptive provender, and y bit off all the back of the head—of ir and things of the lady. 1 would, if T could and dared, gome picture—some image of th strive form_ai the last fashionable hats for women, But this is quite | ompass of mere male wits—th they are littlest “loves of things™ in their kind that the sun ne upon womar's fuir face in despite of. I'll try 1 ) Primarily, in its essen this last best giftto 1 | knocked away, into the river, th & her round into wid- channel off Dej tow lies moored, one of ¢ wost powerful vessc itish navy, Mr. Peabody sails on the Seotia, the vessel which con- m 1 00l to the United States. this letter, f Iy bibition of National Portruits, com- ud, is now open in the arcades and we the Horticultural Gard ut guth Kensington. 1 bave not yet been lo see it, 5o must resorve wuy gossip there . N il Lo ¥RoMm PARIS, ——— The Strnsburg Election— Defent of Lubonluye — A Few Fign Inferences — President Johusen nnd his Vetoes—The German Ques- tion — Elegnut Extracts — Fersoual and Literary Ltems—The Lady and the Horse— The Latest Siyle of Bonuncts—Rusanity in Fiance, From Our Own Correspondent. Paws, April 20, 1866, Well, we are beaten; Laboulaye is be and that rather worse than we expected. Aud yebina ¥ hope- ful way after all. There is as muck of the Binkes il quality in the defeat of the Lib Water | d authosity, his kind * have their best bower as 4 clever lawyer, who defended the who killed his n y, Lord Wil- | drove A poor Serv, N erazy by | ter his client had confessed | E ed | im in | cid | 11 Apple-pip Kelly,” tho asg had died trom in the fruit in_questic him as Mr. Montacate Crawle and St James.” Now he is and, of course, an Tax for a habby. ticuls wearison statistical: he told us, in brief, that of the £60,000,090 cx- ended in this island in one year for beer, that no | ess than £20,000,000 was sttributed to the tex on | malt, and that if the tax were repealed, the article sold’ at two shillings a gallon might b ved at seven pence—to my thinking an rable state of things, for average Britons generally ec cet a8 much as 1s_good for them, a t h(m ever, a Mr. Neate projosing ai of the application of the surplus rev of the national debts John Stuart Mill secon notable speech which produced a great effect in the House and drew from the Chancellorof the Exchequer an ad mission that the subject was one of great jmportanee and | even urgency, a:d that he would speak to it when he made | his fivancial statement, Mr. Mill contends that as tle population of Great Britain is already too great for main- tainance by the land, and the native supply of coul & ques- tion of a few generations, the national debt ought not to be entailed on posterity, but grappled with by Enelishmen of the present day, their children and grendchildren, inso- much as they are and will be_better able to pay it than osterity, for its own sake, as curiously sud nobly distinct from the ordinar: utterunces of Parlicment: e would press the attention of the House to the duty and necessity of taking that eonsideration for posterity which had been strong in every nation that ever did anyihing ereat and had never left them till the nation, ax in the case of Rome under the Empire, was { censing to be o great nation. sny, in the words of the old jest selv posterity 1 Posterity has done nothing for us Was it trae th 0 nothing for us i He may tained that whatever has been doae for mankind by the idea [here might be somo wh “Why should we troutle our- of posterity, by & philauthropie rozard for posterity, by a sense | of duty to posterity, and even by the less nobls but still l-uu by | feeling of ambition to be remembered and thought weil o | posterity, by the founders of nations, and by thoss second founders of nations, the Reformers; by laws and institutions which caused fres eountrica to be free, and well-governed countries to be well-governed: by all the rolo lives that had been lived and deaths that had been died in deferse of freedom and in defiance of tyranny, from Marathon and Salamis to Leipsic and Waterloo; by all those traditions of bero- ism and of virtue of which #he tressuries of wations were full; by all the schools and universities which had handed down to us the culture of past times and by that | cultare itseif; all this is awessed for us only because our aucestors have cared and taken thought for pos- terity. [Cheers.) We owe to it our great masters of thonght —our Bacon, and Newton, and Locke—our Shakespeure, Mil ton, and Wordsworth. [Cheers) It is said that some om- | inent man when he desired to assist any person by pecaniary help used to have & way of doing it thus: He ‘would eny, “Mind, I do not give it you. I ouly leud it you; and I ex- pect that if you are ever able to repay it you wiil do 80, not to e, bat to some one else Who may be in e like position, and with the same stiptlation, so that the stream of benefit may 0 0n a8 far as human honesty can keep it flowing.” |l:‘h.~. o was not sure but it was Fraoklin, And wh Aid from benevolence, in order that the beuefit of gift might go a far as possible, we should do from the gratitude owe 10 our_predecessors, which we can never repay d rectly to those from whom we, like the objects of Fraukli beuevolence, received it, but 'to others for whom they have csred and for whom, and tot for our own service only, their labors and sacrifices have been incurred. Wihat were we that we sbould usurp to oursclves aud employ for our ows pur) and use exclusively what was meant for mankindt It was | lont, and not given to us, and we were bound to haud ou theso | gifte, not only in full, but with interest, to those who stand in | the same relation to us us we to those from whom we heve re- ceived them. So shall we deserve aud so may we bope to re- ceive & share of the samo gratitude. [Much cheering.] ‘This is none the less fine and just because it ignores the inventive faculty in man—which, I think, may be trusted to supply the exigencics of tho future—or ihe coal of America, which magnificently-endowed continent posses- ses twice the qeantity of this little island in proportion to its size—sufficient to keep the world going for a fow cen- turies, in default of eleetricity or some other medium stepping inand superseding it. To be sure, civili | which, said Liebig, * is the cconomy of power, ard En- glish power is coal” —wiil then center in the United States, and, in the words of Emerson, “ England, an old and ex- hausted island must be contented, like other nts, to be strong ouly in her children—a proposition which no En- dishman, of whatever condition, can easily entertain.’ r. Mill's argument is so far just as it insists that the responsibility of the great debt ought ot to be entirely shifted to posterity, especially in a ]n of comp tively unexamplc .vrolpefll(. An individual with & sub- | stantial income who not onfy neglects to pay his past debts, but goes on adding to them, making no effort to | satisfy his creditors, is regarded in the commercial world | as an immoral trader, and as a man to be shunned; if he ultimately find himself in the bankruptey court he ‘meets with little compassion or sympathy from his brother tradesmen. As Mr. Mill pojnted out, Great Britain ex- | pended in thi. worthleas Crimean war pope then it by | ssved in the preceding Lslf century; u.f at the presen! moment it is dulninexl to nothing for the reduction of the | debt which Englishmen, in common with their stupidor ancestors, assisted in creating. 1f the people were really !vl‘!pared to provide a sinking fund for the liguidation of | this debt, the means, one would think, might be found in | reducing its monstrous military and naval armaments and | the thousand and one extravagancics which inflate the na- tional expenditure. One will look with much interest in | Mr. Gladstone's Budget for 8 response to John Stuart | glll-pugn{nihlnflunom. He is clever” for the ouse in A far honester sense than that inw | the objectionble. o Apropos of him and T%he T'imes, wo talk of th _sage of & &“fll Rights bill over the veto of President » ol nu:%. | Dot too wisely. As a matter of course, Mr. Lowe's organ indulges in a little characteristic lying and misrepresenta- tion on the subject, instructing its readers that the bill in question was a species of franchise measure for negroes, and invoking the same sort of hostilit, -Qninn it a8 that sedulously cultivated among ¢ respectable ” Britons against the working classes. Dodging the describing of it in de- tail, it talks windil nbonts L ting "’ to itself H 2 | | { a2 wers which the United States Coustitution doos not con- of “ authority overriding State authority,” * law nulli- ing the State 1a: » vernment by milif » :' &! n‘:‘a' 'T'dn'"' aud lelt" tutional thooflu of ident 0" (whom, once, it expected would resign on ac- count of inebriety’ and general unfitness fur his flu}, and | pe ment sgents were permitted, say it by what would ‘scem a 8 #-ul\; upad their remoter descendants. Hear his appeal in ‘behalf of | ! victory of the Govern to loast of it. » The whole number of insc s is 37,478, of whom 30,000 (an unusuall went to the pol's last § h good thing—proof of awaker Of these, 19,600 voted for M. Bussidre o supported by Government, by an ual character, gxe at wealth and propr N ries in those parts; & Liberal supported by « s s the L sition, g ietorsh 9,900 § W1 10 €O in Am int With 1 haracteristic his raral vot as q country | ) larger majority of all the votes far d of his Liberal opy K toa winority 1 can nt for the ¢ central authority at Paris. y indus to voters that the question at hand was uot 10 eleg oue of two mes to represent their intereats i the National Parli- awent of the Empire, but to et between th al Empire aud revolution! Some inspiring be ave discovered the mischievous conseqy this Ay se 0 argnment since the contest is over, and poor Lime | miliarly known as * Bilker's Hail," and on reaching her reom Rriaay XaRe pritle aom (L8 0are i) L 10 | Nevin threw bimaeif upon the bed aad was soon asleep. On regarded ns the it flows from bis e, bs |k p ftor, b d eady wer been ordered tocopy and sign an ¢ " B bt b v Mg stitutionnel, all **going to show,” that al ugly | vest, wh large vote thrown for Laboulaye is not to be iaterpreted | 61,600 e of th as all revolutionary after-all. ets. Viacing to the door, cnsed the women Do your readers care to k this connect . | of the theft und de the return of the mouey. Fir cinl newspaperism, that the resident Paris edi | lvlll they were enught, Bridget hauded to bim & O daes s New-York corres declaring that was sl she bad in ker posscssion s asigromind 5 . Ho stil refosed to allow them ~ to depart, the correspondent Government wan_ who o ) e g W P o B o i S - ] on American aflairs in the Constututionnel mouey shovld be reetored to him While 8o engaged Edward of President Johuson's speeches and v likewise the English 2'vmes and Post and Herald, 1don't know that President Johinson's tends to The Herald—Y wcan The London, 10t it “York worthy namesake, . But hero is a pretty passage fic e of its Inst year's numbers, issued presonutly after the assassination organ of the Euglish Tories feared that summary justice might befall their American congeners: * Still, we would fain hope, for the sake of our coraron bumanity [observo that the first estegory of enlightened Kuglish aristocratic humanity has nothitg in common with tho coarser, col- ored varieties]—for our comiion kindred, that the Ameri- can people may show itself, in this eritical hour, more just, more generous and more sagacions than the drunkcn blackguard whom, after the fus) of an ignorsnt Afri- cnn tribe, it has chiosen for its ruler.” It is “this sort of rhetoricians who are now busy putting brilliant patches of imperial purple and praise on the democratic coat of our tailor President. The war question is still the question, agitated and ag- itating, this week a8 last, and always unsolved. 1 must still incline to answer it in the negative. But no one mln'nafnluiun, your correspondent’s less thau enother's, should have much weight, Ounly, 1 should say, that I fol- low in this some few calm, mtelligent judgments of abler men, whose calmness is not flurried nor intelligence dark- ened by engaged interests of their pockets or of thel ity, in being *well informed.” f).pnnnmw bodies and speculators st the Bourse are in high *canaries,” as Mrs, unickly would phrase it. A glance, indeed, at the daily tables of quotations on the Paris Exchange, published in all the evening papers, will indicate the anxiety and the utterly unsettled bobbery of public feeling aud opivion better than anything I can write deseriptively, Constitus tionnel had wn'inspired article on its first page a few days ago, the object of which seemed to be to quict the general apprebension. But it was so indefinite aud dimly oracular as 10 leave the pensive readerin much the same state of doubt in which it found him. Stll I rather guess, despite Herr Bismark's able statesmanship, that we shall not have war this Summer. It would be & long story, aud pe hardly worth the telling, to lay out all thereasous ou which this guess is based. ‘That one wan by his recklessness and obstinacy and force of will over a stupid king eap so set all the world in_turmoil—and cven gain with educated intelligent men the quality of * --is & wofully condemnatory comment on the coustitu- tion of Earope aud its bnlnnz&ng powers. Quite superior, meantime, to any labored editorial that I Liave yet had the misfortune to read, treating of Bismark and the question of the day, is the brief chapter of * ele- fim extracts " which I translate from yesterday's num- er of La Laberté : ** What we are to think of Prussia—the Mask.—'The day will come when the world will kuow that Prussin is everywhere the protector of the right. ! [Fred. Williamw IV, of Prussia. * The Face. the only Ie[lé o Dcli ##possh i Al Ll AreCein e - . IX. [of Denmark]. e 1 =] “Christian 1X. never had any right over the Duabies."—(Bis- mark's dispateh of 15th May, 1864; Prussiag Plenipoteutiaries on London Conference 12th May, saife ,hfl “Tho hereditary Prince of Augustenburg is the prince who unites 1o his lnmn the best claims to the succession in the Duchies."~ [ Prassian Plenipotentiary, 2tth May, 1eod, “The Grand Duke of Oldenburg has, perhaps, the best '—[Circalar of July, 1864, e King Christian bad, if not sovereizn right rights of possession.”—| Dispatchies to Austria, Nove Decomber, 1564, ~ “Prusssia itself has, imate sov- amber of * Christian of verything obscarity till t have gi opivion. The Government will not decide until it has bheard @ expression of their views."—[Throne Speech to the Prus. sian Chambers, January, 1865, “Prossia has rights of sovereignty over the Duchies.”— Prissiau Plenipoteatiary ot the Federal Diot Bession of April “Christian 1X. was, up to the peace of Vienna, the sole le- gitimate sovereigu of the Duchies. Prussia and Austria have now scquired all s rights.’—{Statement of War Expeases pressated to Prussian Chambers, May 15, 1665, To change the subject, The Count of Montelambert is ;":'.:'f?.f..'&f 2n'::‘gr-pmnu‘m- for his voyage to and through Barnum'’s “ Universal History of Humbugs”' is trans- Inted, and has quite a pitifal little success here, The manager of the {talian opers haa discovered afemalo the like, no doubt successfully bemuddling that large class of men who think it u’m-lu 'nl‘flhlfflm The ZT'mes confidently expected that the President would ob- tain the support of the American people—a few maliguant Radicals " excopted—and published this from its New- York correspondent, in its yesterday's issu **An observer bore csunot belp wotioing that the cry be- tenor in the person and v organs of one Miss Meclla, an Ttalian young lady, who is presently to ap) on th boards of Les llahilu in the prlh of y.olue . ly in oon: thing—a male body at any rate. ‘ITie Sultan of Turkey has at last been coaxed, bullied, or intelligently persuaded into ziviog & regular chaster to i of Lincoln, when the managers of that high, shrill-toned | 's0 much as approech or dis or sweot face—is not unlike a over. 1 mean one of those covers to one of those backets such as we wero ver 80 many pleasant years ago, Lo Carry OUF noc s to school in, of some six inche 4lrr'Pl ametri- and somewhat cooped in the middie, Thi a finds & place for iteclf on the top of the modern 1, in the u ted between else’s luxuriant and the apper- y simple ) rosettlements, nibbons, and the thises o taining, I sm assured t t-covers does @ and figure-stuflod r ree and compress the following: At the begi were resident in institutions under G ment supervi pjects, of whom 20, wero properly and 43 cretins. docs not incl homes, sud w more. In 1861 000, 84,214 were than of women—as th u) frout s What w d th This d in their st a8 It is worth ne is fearfully larger in the class p than in the institutions exposed to surveillane the provoki usee, the report sh that in Frau with us, *rum avd relig t hiet. e CLIrY NEWs. — The National Steam Navigation Company's fine Saturday, May 5, for Liverpool, caliiog gors. - CTOR This annual is now in £ the supervision of Mr. H. Wi epends greatly upon the facilities to the convassers, it becomes the duty of citizens, to furnish the necessary information The Directory is & work in which we steamship Erin ealls 0a ¢ at Queesstown to land p Trow's Cr1y Dip led upon, » interested, stworthy as possible. — Brir's Hean.—The hiv ck markets Lave all 1 upward tarn this week, with a fulling off in the re of each kiud. The preseat cool weather sharpens the ers say so many people are for cooking. that for a day expect to s foot up rted off 1o, bigher, not sold. Abont ., and these ar dofug lexs than last weey, o b n celp sppetite for meat, thovgh butel | " or two b ving, v do not Be Hogs nie trichina or frig nearty all for the re! welling quickly at dad t rads AR LT Ropnen 1% A Low Hovse—PART 0P THE STOLEN Mosey RrcoveReD.—At an early hoar on Tuesday moraing, Jobu Nevin, residing at No. 200 Tenth-ave., accompanied Dridget Wilson to the low den No. 1034 Cherry st,, moro fa- Finnegan burst open the door of the room and ordered Nevin | toallow the women to depart. The wowen then ran fro room. Nevin at once hastened into the strect, and procaring tho serviees of Offfcer Oates of the F the arrest of the women and Finoe A thorongh search of the o arth Precinet, cansed 00 the charge of lar 3 ro | remainder of the stolen money. Subsequently Justice Hogan committed all the aceused to the s for Wial. Alice is o native of Ireland. aged 30 years Bridget is a aative of Eng- laod, aged 20 years. Both are inmates of tho o where the robbery ocourred. Fi od 23 years, & native of this city, and -sl. P4 ARRESTED FOR PASSING COUNTERFEIT MONEY.—On Monday night Richard Abbott was arrested by Ofticer Hollo- way of the Eighth Precinct for having passed at the storo of Mr. Nicholas Bennett of No. 338 Broome-st., & counterfeit twenty on the First National Bavk of Portland, Coun, Mr. William Holwes of No. 297 Canal-st t the also passed one of the counter! 81,500 bail in each case Justice Dodge ¢ for trial.He 1s agod about 32 years and Richard Hargrave was arrested by Officer Procinct on the complaint of Dennls Hoga st., who charges the prisoner with passing upon him one of the atove counterfeits, In defanlt of 81,500 bail the prisoner committed for trinl by Justice Dodge. Hels s native of city, aged 22 years und a mechinist. SR Roupep oN THR STRERT.—While Francis Laurent, dotng busiaess st No. 17 John-st., was on his way home, early on Tuesday morning, at the corner of Graud and Wooster-ste. v this 1 we should aid in rendering | | Presid | dnthe b | of som: constri, To 'Whe Ausccisted Prese. It is unde ts Tespec Ax intc ensued, in which, if the rumor be true, Secretary Seward red himsclf in very decided and emphatic terms stthe planof the Committee, and in favor of the decla immediat lately Rebellic e a8 Ll 5 sclf as strongly in favor the Pr: anton w ttee sued by the Administra the Cabinet. mitt de into Congress of loyal representatives of the States lately in rebellion, expressed uo opinion. Pre hich loyal re States sh pecd was not mittes, and declared precedent to the admis T States m ition, o¢ by the under the € to be al rigid adk ked that havin, o terrible r be restored witl ral terms, t hould be at a participate i in ge atoa a writ of on board t i o is Presi aud is alzo e and Pike's P issu nd seerat eonm The Osweps Canal i the boats are | Offcer for yesterday: for April 20, picsions ro were 0 ospital is 101, on the coruer of th by Dr. Gray Twenty-siat ing M -squire on th the vacant p Lirge aud_periodicals, with t reation in a wellordered restaurants, the Ei to ba regarded s premises thero will versation and excreise, able accessories of 8 5 fort and exclasiveness of . Wi % attacked by William Worral, a colored man, knooked 50, with which down, and robbed of a silver watch valued at i attomptei 0 eapape. - Wiile senling u evce, bo wis caught by Officer Crittenden, of the Eighth Precinct, and the stolen watch was found in 8 yard ear by. ‘The prisoner was rday committed for trial, by Justice Dodge. watch resiored 1o the owe g 1Anuouncements. | TreovoRe TiLToN, FrEperick Dovarass, 8. F. Cary, Horace Mann, . C. Neal, Sam Slick, Plato, ete., in nty illustrations, with Ethnology, Phrenclogy, Pysislogy, Physiognomy, Paychiology, sud other interesting watters, in May No. Pietorial PREENOLOGICAL JOURNAL, 20 cents, or & year for $2. Fowwen & WxLis, No. 369 Broedway, N. Y. —— CAN'T A¥FORD TO BE WiTHOUT ONE.—** The Machino you sold s & year ago gives entite satiafaction, Having a family to Jrepare for & long ses voyage, we have hnd an opportunity to test it thoroughly. and the more we test it the bettor we like it. My wifo she must take one with us to India, snd if I tell her we cennot ford it, she replies, We canuot afford to be without one. “*Rey, Lraves Sussess, Missionsry of the Mabratta Mission, A. B.CF LT Mirax. Obio, March 5, 1666, Ropners! RopBrRs !—The OFFICE of the BURGLAR ALpRM T RLEGRAPN, which protects Invvllbl‘v and without dauisge each window and door of the hiouse, s rewoved 1o No, 354 Broadway, oppoaite City Uall, E. Uotuse. sl C. R. BroappesT, M. D._ bas arrived at his office, No. 670 firosdway, N. Y., where he be consulted free on all dis eases of the Luugs, Throst, Catarrh aud Comsumption, the first 10 days of cach and 'y mouth, from 10 to 8 o'clock. le can detect | your disease at once. —— Boaarous's GALLERY. Waxonnors, Tavion & Bnowy ot Philadelpbia. ¥ixn MINIATORES. Bee specimens st Bo@aRDUS 8 UaLLriy, No, 363 Brosdway. i~ People that move on the Ist of May, also pengls that do not move, should nse KExT's EAST ISDIA COFTEE, which i wold by all Grocers at 25 centa per 1. Wholesale degot, No. 154 Reado-st. RS T A HarvARD GRADUATE will fit Students at New- York for College. Address R M. Ors, Cambridge, Mass. Refesen- cos: Dr. Bellows, New-York; Dr. Hill, Dr. Peabody, Cambridge. ——~—— GarrpaLpr Burrs, por Bovs—The most elegant ever before scen I tin conntry. Ladien calland tnepect ther, Kaw k0! ROTHERS, No. 62 Lafayette place and No. 34 Fourth-ave. A Wenld-be Pelsoncr Tried, Convicted and Memtenced. Torowto, C. W., Tuesday, May 1, 1866, Dr. Gustaff, late of New-York City, -hz utzm ted to poison & man naned McKinnon here, several months ago, was tried yesterday, found guilty and sentence * to Bfteen yeurs iwprisonmient in the penifentiary, ider, MeCall, 3. G MeCall, 1 K. Heiama ¥, Wells, ag. A, J. Lyn, J n w, 8. Noges, L Wi W, 8. Oor WSteamship South Ameriea. r and pass. to Chomas Avconeto & € bo_ (of Nawsaa, N, P.), Robinscu, Cerdevar, 8 daye, w W o0d & Son. {lghter), Kiabal, trom abip Tmperatice each. th, Pervas b aso 1th, P Marac ar (o it Hoster nnd Sarsh hore at Leng ., Telegraph, Weaver, D. R DeWolf & € §shy. Dresdes, Cas ad , as preseribed by law nee to the Coustitution as it is, and sustained oursclves under it during lion, he thought that the Government could ta resort to amendments, at ifthe organic luw is to be changed ralenti On Wednesday last Depu: bLout to e amount of § free, The Cholern—No Den The following is the report of the Deputy Health While the prasent extort actunl cost or members. n Steauship San § nd lady, Mr. Giibe lady, Mr, Giibe heeler, T. H. Farl . C. 0. Haliet, Lieut. TAE REPORT ON RECONSTRUCTION. Syecial Dispsteh to The N. ¥. Tribuse. WasnxGioN. Tueeday, May 1, 1606, The Cabinet spent four bours to-day iu a session, the groater part. of which was epent in discussion of the Ree ' iorr Committee's report, Secretd Stanton elone favoring it. WasuxGToN, Tuesday, Moy tood that in the Cabinet meeting ited an expression of opinion fiow the Heads | ropositions rej Munday last by the Congressional Comuwittee ou Recon- ting the Seerctary Mo of an hern tion The President Opposed to the Scheme. B —— A Majority of the Cabinet Sustain Him, es Harlan aud 1806, -day the resting and animated discussion is said to bave admission of loyal representatives from the States. Culloch was as orted on | 1 otary of State in his opposition to the plan recommended by tho Committee, and expressed bim- mediate cousumy ident’s restoration policy by the sdmission into of loyal men from the § ras equally decided in his opposition to the proposition; he was for adhering to the y which had been agreed upon and consistently pur- 1 die was gratiied that the iad brought the subject to the contideration of ation of Ftates, Secre- Sccretary Welles was unequivocally against the Com- s scheme, and was earnest in his support of the comprehending the instant admission scretary Harlan was rather reticent, and Postmaster-General Dennison was opresent i be admitted to seats in Congress, present at the me to Lis home jn Kentucky, The F carnest in bis opposition to the report of the C biwself inst yal repre the shape of aum passage of la agal itution no State could be de, z¢ in the Senate, und that Sepators aud Repre- t once admitted in the Ce time when all th n th uesd De Henr mer d with the 3 ed, aud wl ed bonds to th ibark for a T was take itted to j, Iuie saae. pbaand LR Cswego Canal Open. Osweco, Tue 4 in good navig: Ve he south, L Cla jon: atefrates u_unimportant feature. olegant thi parlors, rooms o table d'hdte urant combined f & privato resid 1t is ntended, wi terand two childees iy at ond ses wrence an Gugion. & T _Guyles, wife, J. Knox, Mr. Whiter, N.' Hamilton, M. F. Foster, J. Wescott,'F,” 8. wiac Patten. Theolors Brown, E ohn. King. A ohneor kinahy, Jaues Mull ve, Wai. Aweiford, H L A. Friedenberz, E. C. Adder'y, O , Michael Daly, R. J. Addison” Corm ly, Tinkl 16th, wud 8t Tuou Irond Company, sual appliauces of phys esail atfthe publio Toctie brenfast and dlning saloohs are moF Adfss Daboll 3ise Ber Gewenden and lady, N. t, d two childen, in favor of carrying out the restoration policy of the 1, Lut expressed some doubts as o the preciso s fiom the Southem Attorney- being on a resident was all conditions senta from idments to the I o the respective opstitution, He He remarked, States and all the . — Avrest of Eienry €. Wheeler—A Supposed De- of §2060,000. oy, May 1, 1666, arb of ) is port, under the ‘ollowing circumstances: ut of the Brunswick and Florida 0 pro prol o the Supreme Court at an early day on a and his bail will be reduced, to en- condition, and terday. Hosprrat, Smip Favcoy, April 20, 1666, “QyaUs CLRTISs, President Quarantine Commiss th piea.» tind report of admissione o the hospital are three, as follows: Joseph Winken. o, William Morris, five years, and Mar- re. wathe, The number of patients remaining ). H. Bisseit, Deputy Health Officer.” ———e Tug Feneeric AssociaTion, finding its quarters, Fifib-uve. aud Seventeenth-st., inadequate to tho demands of its increasing numbers, this association re- moved yesterday to tue spacious mansion recently occapied on the porth-enst corver of Fifth-ave. and renjarkably fino proj on the great highway of fashion. andoverlook- Ground will be on of the property at once for the erection of o iiding. alfordggg, wiih thejorescat bouse, ample room b, rty with a frontage roken on for ti g #s its pame implies, is ot devoted to the inter- !tieal party, or to persons of any special pro- calling, but is composed of the best representatives s of political opinjon aud of nearly all tho profes- Vions, the prerequisite to an election to membersbip being in- variably a g aral and socinl standivg. 1t will have s library of standard works, files of and weekly papers Tec- In the new for reading, con- nd all the destr. o are iinformed, to yeceivo one bundred additional members, the new premises Deing decised etirely edequate to the increased number. e e—— ador—C. H. Cham- n, Miss Chiessman, . C. Warre o urst, €. L. aker, W. Chiarles Speicht, Fred. Van Kemp, A. . W. H. Shaw, John MecKenua, T. P. Robinson, Caretti. Joseph Edreichei. James F. m, E. Birchard, Wm, m, J. P. Davideon, W. Pease, H, F. Jawes A. Luicombe, aod 39 in ! lepaugh, Rio Janeiro April 3, Pahia s 25th, with mdse. “Fortane Bay, 12 days, with herrings to Virgluia, ™ w W) i Virpvia right. Vinini. i, and, teboro, N. 8., with spere te Snow & Rich- 0 TO THOMAS R. AGNEW®, No 202 Greenwicly Tasp. Coten, Fish, Floir New-York. Cne yrice Iy u ches| 4T 200 and yet W Rad ab euy store in s, CEDA R CAMPHOR stifles all insects that breathe through their skine. Excellent defense sgaiust CLOTHES-MOTHS. Sold by Druggiste everywhere. HARRIS & CH APMAN, Boston. LADIES & GENTLEMEN out of the city, take your own measur A. BOO oinkEifods First. Place the foo o catiine of seme with s b Second, inches and fracts figore B, viz. 1. 2 THIS HOUSE IS THE L. TA BROOKS, A a pires , as ahoy e the following messurements, in ith tape wieasuro, ...u.i". in) ~The Ball of the feot. ROEST IN 11 FLISHED IN | ind send 1o Tmporter and Manufacturer of S, SHOES, &C. BROADWAY, NEW YORI FOR MEASURING THE FOOT. _llfl CITY, AND WAS | J I.E.WALRAVEN, IMPORTER, JOBBER, RETAILER or gl Upholstery and House-farnishing Goods, No. 686 BROADWAY, N. Y. wiil on TUESDAY, 1, st the NEW wid BLEGANT MY R A d_eire. A ock of UPHOLSTERY MAT ted MAKSEILLES ORTAT| LATE ADVA ST FAVORABLE CONDITION of the O1 RRET, wii:i will enable bim o offer thein st prises, he fuels ed, will prove scceptable to bis friends eud the public, UPHOLSTERY DEPARTMENT in QUALITY, RICHNESS and MAGNITU i3 roidion of Mr. FISHLEY, late with Mew a B WIND LAMBREQUIN S, FRENCH, ENGLISH ond TASSELS, CORD and LOOP FRIN GILT AND WALNUT CORNICES . WITH PIER AND MANTEL GLASSE made to order in the latest styles. WINDOW SHADES i WHITE BUFP AND GREEN HOLLANDS, GOLD BORDE' aud PAINTED in great variety and Elegant Designs, ca HAND and TO ORDER. THE HOUSE FURNISHING STOCK A will comyrien an extensive sesor , SHEETIN, NS, TABLE DA NAPKINS, DOYLIES, PLAIDS, ke, d TOTLE MA g (all wizes), HUCK, NETTRS, MARSEILLES HAMBRAS, TOI. the best manufe Particuler atten L HOTELS, PUBLIC INSTITUT for CAR BUILDE 1 as MOQUETTES, 10N3, i UPHOLSTERERS AND FURNITURE DE are invited to examiue the above steck, which will be cficied oo vorable texus us auy othes house o the ciiy. A CARD, st 12 years co the well known hoo Haviug been for the holstery Departm 1 would respec GOLDEN BITTERS, A PURI ELY VEGETABLE TONIC, 3 AND STRE iE t the evil eflvets of unwh Will cure iicartburm. Wil care Headache. pie ti liealiby 8 gans of digest Will invizorste the temperature of the body and the force of the circs a4 genesal corioboru of the yystem, coatuining no poisoncis di wnd fs the . BEST TONIC BITTERS IN THE WORLD, HUBBEL'S SUPERIOR OLD CABINET BRANDY (Medicated,) FOR DIARRHEA, CHOLERA MORBUS, COLIC, GRIIING PAINS IN THE BOWELS, CHANGE OF WATER, &e. THE CABINET BRANDY Has been used with almost unparalleled suceess for the prst Twenty: Years, in cases of DIARRHEA, CHOLERA MORBUS, CUL e FOR SALE IN ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD . Contral Depot, American (:;;.‘.‘m. No. 55 Hudson.st., New-York. GE! U s Co.. Propriter. CATARRH CURED BY INHALING A HARMLESS FLUID. DR, R, GOODALE'S CATARRH REMEDY GO eure, i° you K whichare wery simple snd plan, SOME OF THE FIKST PHYSICIANS ARE RECOMMEND- NG T, Da not allow the druggist to palm off any other ou. 1f they do not keep it, send money to the a warded at once. Price, #1 per bottle each. Send stamp for Pampllet, Sold by Druggists. C. R. PARKER, S No. 508 i DR. It wil! certal preparation ot w ge: ol FISHING TACKLE ALL ITS VARIETIES, FOR SALE BY A. DRAPER, Paper Collars anp CUFFS ror LADIES AND CENTLEMEN, Wholesale & Retail, 387 BROADWAY, N. Y. — Ladies’ Victoria Tume Ladies’ EmpressTurne- over Paper Collar. over Paper u. Cents. Reversible Cent: Paper Cuffs. » gmnm NOTICE TO THE TRADE. A wholeuale price bt seut by mail,

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