The New-York Tribune Newspaper, December 11, 1866, Page 4

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b te ) d 4 NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1866. ' ‘ o ni#g of the Rebellion, whic resulted in the rocogni- atubers of Baden, ono of thros Boutheferman coun- o b THE DRAMA. - R P —— A Amnsements. HoumAy Grers! Faminy SILVER'! is no doubt that wo have caught ons o! the principal P '« e U st T SR PROR Y Loucivs Haxt & Co., assassing. tion of the Robels as belligerets, and the wide-spread | tries wtisl have for tho prosent been exoluded from —— CAN MUSEUM. ' BARNU The Oldest Plated Ware House in the City — destruction of American commerc®, Wa8 adopted, aa | the North-Ggrman Confederation, have by an elmost " OLYMPIO THEATER. “ v, THE WOODEN SHOE- DAY AND K ,THE WOODEN ) 3 x ‘ — ] MAREL Me o nd o 0 sompua, TWO HUM- Nos. ‘fl::‘";"l;f:‘::*' sue, OUR FOREIGN POLICY. Mr. Beward afterward acknowledged, With the hope | unanimous vots fesofwed to apply for an uncenditional | * The first ropresentation of s new play and ¢h LEGHON OF WILD A <8 S1LvEe-PLATED WAKE A furthor glanco at the recently-yublishes cor- | and view of conciliating tho slaveholders. Tho samo | admission. All the diffionltios with Baxony have beou | appearance of an old, favorite player formed mm::" et BT R e At Moderste Prices. respondenco relating to Mexion will slow bow lit!lo | Seorotary now stands bound by tho most solome, | adjusted. In Havaria sad Wurtemberg the party tion,that waa offered, last night, at the Olympie Thoate .'l‘;' : 5 BYENING - Ldwin Booth e . e | reas0n e havo to bo prond of our laat move in the | or, rathor, he most blasphomous docaration, | which favors tho reunion with Northorn Giormany s | Merktr of Rovouswoc was o play, sl Mir. Geargt Jortan ® pIS EVENING-THE BUACK CROQK—Grest Pursiense N“W’mfifli Daflu@mnu ; Mesican gaaue, althongh, porhaps, azy. propotition | yado durin the Presidential tour, thst hoavom and | rapidly growing, aad even from Austris wo hear of | o 45 iy Mgyt iy ol Bollol Trenje would seem respectable alter somo that blot the recent | cgrth might pass away, but the plodges given to ¢be | publio manifestations the significance of whiok 08D« | soveral times called out duriug the play, ‘M';“W“m 4 Mo way R . o YO THE AT e o SR e pages of our national diplomacy. The first orders | Sonthern States by tho Prosident must be fulfilled. pot bo misunderstood. An address of Austrian stu- | was summoned befors the curtain by hearty “pplause, "~ NEW YOIRK CIRCU TUBSDAY, SECEN 11,1068, looking toward the removal of the Frensh toops from | Tho American people bave como to a difforent rosolu- donts has beon published eaying that soon German | whert hmu:mmmm@.& wiit5 EYENINO-NEW )ORK CIRCUS TROUPE. ElNino et : ____ § Mexica wers issusd on the 18th Ootobor, 1965, in con= | tion, and thay will look to Congross to 0o that no | Austria will knook for admission af the door of united | not AT e, So. QY. i o : Mexican complications, howerer urged by political | Germany, and this address is known to repregent the - o_——y indeal a Bore o Advertisements for this week's issuo of Trs WakxLy | 8oquenco of a suggostion voluntarily made by our will. Eddeand Mile. De Ber; % = e : ished s NG A ACK S TURATER | otk TRipvx® must be handed in To Day. Minister, Mr. Bigolow, that the United 8tatos | jatrigners and reckloss spsculators, shall bo allowed | sentimoats of the German Universities of Lebtrta. m;&‘,“m“&w i Bt Beederie Robivgon. Ms. John Gilbert, M. Charles Fisber, Miss e o would reognizo the Empire of Maximilian, | to interfors with the accomplishment of the national | Tho same views are openly expressed by the leading g v in_bore peodied 19 some extent, ) ra. Vernon. T0 ADVERTISERS. which was even then in a tottering condition, 8o soon men in the Diets of the German Proviness which are = Dickens. The .-...'fi'..‘a’. % oy, of now in session. Even in Holland the unoonstitu- SUFFRAGE AT THE CAPITAL—MR. MOR- | tional course of the Government ia said te have given RILL. rise to & party of snnoxation. Belgium is charged OLYMVIC THEATER, Wo will thank our advertising customers to hand i y rtod. i ffirms YIS EVENINO-MASIEK OF RAVENSWOOD. Mr. Geo. | theie “.m,,,,,,m..,.,_,,,_.,w_:x_ Die. 1€ roostvilon x :homlmnih ‘:":? :Op: :;r‘ D"?l‘"l'i: or‘m- o e 9 o'clock they cannot be elassified under thair proper hoads. B e = e P respongibility—although how ho ocould vepturo & FIFTH AVENUE OPERA HOUSE. e 3 S e w e e S ™" 10 CORRESFONDENTS. uggston of such profuod momont without Mr. | Tho Sufiage bill o tho Distrit of Columbi g0t | by French papes with Prossan eympathios, andon- | 6P S, ALEHNCn /T St e e — No notice can betaken of Anonymons Communioations; What Seward's approval Jis incxplicable. He insisted that | hoaring yestorday in tho Sonate—bettor lato than | odly an entirely groundless invention, but which t:‘:.h portraiture of a pieturcaqoe Ml Ope duily from 82, . (0 10 . . T# g n“g“': - 'll"_\;u';im N':'"fi'l"""fiwll."orlvflbh«-»\ ferring to his proposition in a lottor to M. Drouyn do report & bill _wiux 9literw qualifioation, they aban-| by crushed to picoes between the two mill- ?&em:n -r«n&:w f 4 srveam ALONAL ACADERT OF DESION . pu ANl businoss Iottors for this office should bo addressed to * Tus | Lbuys, Feb. 7, 1866, Mr. Bigelow said: doned that intontion, and prosented & measure more | stones which incloso it. Switzerland foars | know! of "‘“..,..."““‘-. fi:";eq ': SIS bANRAL XIS (KION OF THE ASTISTS FUkD | | Twouxs,” Nowsas. 4 b « I askod whether,in your Excellency’s opinion,Max- | truly demooratio than the one hithorto understood to | gim " formances, those of Mas, [ lfi' oy ’ Wo cannot undertake to return rejected Communioations Tl Sot1d B bilotbatnstaiaismpelt withott the hinave Dbogn sdohted: # /2% 2 similar fate, and the Fedoral authoritios recommend, | Miss Carson g Lady Ashom M. Stoddert s - g 1 e - avo Dboen adopted. 0y propose onact | thorefore, an immediate arming. Sweden and Den- | Balderstone, Mr. ‘Vandeubo ny Haywtaw of Buelaw, Mr. Stuat aid of France if his authority were recognised by the Unitod States. That inquiry led to a conversation in that all males of 21, except paupers and porsons under | mark are both courting the favor of Prussia. The BROADWAY THEATER THIS EVENING—ST. MARC. Mr. E. L. D T i E# On the second page of to-day's issue will be found | M n b dianshi f b olth : ’ x THEATRE FRANCAIS, 3 : v " | which I'hed ocension at least twice to state to your | GuArdiansiip, not falons mor Rebols, being citizans, | whole Germanic race on the Continent is gravitatin P e ::;:::‘{;rr:::;j;”:::fif;‘fi:,';,’,f' ;‘;",:J:’fw:"n;":" r:hl' F.x(\;lilv noy thatl our recognition of a_nyd(h;;'urfnmg‘n! and having residod six months in the Distriot, shall | toward a closer union with Prussia, & und::y whlo: mn%?‘dh‘g ] by XN L mh AT BACE. o i st py i in Moxico, 80 long as it was enstained by foreign | " tatinati 4 dan wi o a last ¢ FHIS EVENING—ORATONI, SAMSOR. Ceeiian Chos. sizth page 8 column of scientific ams. arms, was impossiblo; that tho logic of the situation ,};"‘ 8 vote, without auy distinotion of color or race. { can'have no othér iseus (han the figl absorption of all mmm-fl o few officers T = ey roquired tho independence of Mexico to be estab. | 218 is & good bill. Mr. Willoy tried to rostrict it | the minor and impotént commonwealths by thd m“:n?#hfli:&-ml any wdus LE } grant of suffrago by requiring that voters otherwiso | rising Germsa Empire. Groat Britain stands aloof i i, & oedless Cortesy.” “:‘"‘ Sordan demwrved .t'n-m..“ lished by the withdrawal of all forcign soldiors be- Iy recognize a Gov- Controllor Hillhouse of this State, in a memorial to eral Government shall qualified shall also be ablo to road and write, but, | from all European questions, The Reform movement with & unanimity that surprises and delights us, the | in Englaud and the Feniaas in Ireland may well en- fore our Government_could formally 1 v ernment accused of owing its existonce to their Congress, proposes that the G FREY rxuffl-}%‘;‘ '3;:’"‘.'.{ (;’fit;:spifi,p;)usu prc. | allow some particular source of national revenue fo | presence.” Se 1 URES e the several States in liquidation of their war debts. This proposition was mado in the face of tho rosolu- anusrdm"vnl?:y,r"' .M‘":M tSnflmge.“ “'m vrw grosa the attention of a Government whioh has lost | i Tt will be played » e e ot T'he toxt of his argument is the large war debt of New- | ¢ o izing the Repwblic of Moxic R e 01— | all claim to influence in Continental affairs. t every evening thie woek, HALL OF ST. STEFHEN'S CHURCH, 26th-at., between Lex- ) 8 tion of the Senate recognizing the Republic of xico, | 14 ome bolng ‘prosamably Mr, Willeys Ligusel, Aoty oy iy a1 M--mv . York, and its inadequato treasury. of the unanimous resolution of tho Houss of Repre- - e o sontatives repudiating Maximilian, and of the almost Tho bill to appoint the 4th of Maroh as the day of unanimons sontiment of the American people. meeting for the XLth Congress and each Congress The President most properly disapproved of Mr. succceding, passed the House yesterday by a vote Bigelow's tender of rocognition, but Franco was in- of 127 to 30, It provides, also, that the act making [ formed that she might rely upon our friendship and ",f,',"'\““’? appropriations for civil expenses shall be so amended neutrality, and on the 5th of April, 1366, M. Drouyn that no member of the Congress next proceding | do Lhuys, roforring to Mr. Seward's pledge of non- shall have mileagp paid him for fabulous travel. To | intervention after the departure of tho French troops, the credit of the House, there was little objection to | advises the Marquis de Montholoy, that the Emperor STARR & Marcus, this part of the bill, which,as it stands, promises to | had docided that the troops should evacuate Mexico JEWELERS AXD SILYSRSMITAS, secure to the country a more continuous govern- | in threo detachments, the first being intended to go No.22) s . p * ” fully Lform the public in hu.\'cn.lhcr, 1866, the second in March, 1867, and wich Jwwatax sud SiLvs 1 the third in Novembor of the same year. The President yesterday sent a message to Congress The Emperor was perfoctly frank, not to say blunt, fgton aud 3d ave. GREAT MASONIC FAIR AT TUE PRESBYTERIAN CHUKCH. corner of Grand end Crosby-ste. . s who emulates tho attitudo in whick tho orator | Prince of Roumania, whom she has rocegnized, and drow the first Napoleon, and stands alone, | now patronizes a3 a successful representative of the grand, gloomy, and pecubiar. If wo havo done | (‘Mristian interests in Turkey. In Central Asin Rus- any injustics to the Sonate by suspecting it of | sian troops have conquered the last fortress of Bok- unsoundness on this question of olerical tests for | hara, and are making rapid progress in consolidating suffrago, wo beg to express our rogrot, and | and civilizing the newly annexed territory. our great rejoicing over its esudden acoess P = i of virtuo, Wo aro, bowervor, quite ot REBEL PROPERTY IN ENGLAND. 1033 to know what Mr. Morrill has to complain of | Fho settlement effected by the Hon. Freeman H. in tho criticism of the press upon the hesitation of | Morse, the United States Counsul in London, has the Benate last session to act on the Suffrage Bill | poon suspendod and referred to Washington. 1t ap- Mr. Morrill says the position of the Senate has been | pears that Mr. Morso was empowered by the Treasury studiously misroprosentod. Wo sgreo to that, if it | Department, under date of June 9, to settle all claims shall bo shown that any journal Lias ventured tv acquit | of the United States upon all Confedorate property, by BY TEARGRAPH 10 THE TRIDUNE. o glkl:olm m.—‘n. bfl.{ mfl r the Vir. o) y o Houso to—dqy,r.thutumm The bill grants e 'l,l’l Exocutivo privileges wpon all the Vi CLIN THIS EVENING TAINEENT, “THE U LADIES FAIR. G-IN AID OF THE THIS EVEN! DUTCH CHURC Fifth-w BY TELAGRAPH TO THB TRIDENA. - BAVANNAL, Ga., Doe. 10,—Aaron D. Nunnally, Thos ment and legislation. e added to thelr stock of L of the GommaM Manvracroning Company Siiv arnp W, il B e Th et .49 | giving the desired fuformation on tho reported mose- | in advising Mr. Bigelow of tho wotives of ks deci- th Sanaeol prsaint nd procsoted sagon during | compromiso or othorwise. But Mr. Dudloy, our Con- | Grifin, Ga, by the United Blates Deputy Marsha, be of Bhefield, or Chaistofle of Peris. In quality of metsl snd plating, | Ments of Gen. Sedgwick. No official account of the | sion, and the freedom which he proposed to exercise. | hat § to push this measuroto avoto. But wosus- | gul at Livorpool, had commenced suits under his m"o“ntole-velnvlhfl g A ¢ ”'owl‘mh acioty of elegant designs sod finish, we commend it 1o s fsvorstle | crossing of tho Rio Grande and theoccupationof Mata- [ On the dth of June, Mr. Bigelow thus recites his p‘lljh‘ apt Ilt . I'uhr telling too muck !rw!h that Mr. Mor- [ gonoral power as Consul, and with the sanctionof the | Al ex 3:"'“- 'm:mfl“' ary-brod, are highly "““""":MMM A A Bt et moros has yot been receivod; but in case Gon. Scdg- | conversation with the Minister of Foreign Aflair ::\L' “ (.':] f"‘: nv];;mm Yo fask., g “_'” °brh“" us by | State l"jP‘“f"”"‘r and ho has doclined to withdraw h“.l :,b;';,wdh‘fx"' :gq ' -u .‘ . @ X wick should have carried out his intended expoedition, “ Hg said that the Imperial Government prochimed fi)llmw“i:;lz lh":’l of (: ""m“;." (:r :'r‘:‘;‘: ;’ U:: :':: those suits without express orders from Mr. Adaws or - and o m: t oti Gen. Sheri ith is | its intention to retire from Mexico, because it suited ” propositions: Frrst: That.the Sena! the Government. their trinl bofore & town Mo fihfi s, ofl .en" . <w(n,dcu - 'f,“'}'d ‘1“' h".n l? its convenience and interest to retire, and for no other | amplo timo to pass one of the several suffrage billson | Afr. Adams having declined to take the nsibil. | Grima has been gacrisoned by a company of United States GORIAMAPG nlly approved. @ is to be removed from his com- | Lo T 1 s eans to withdraw its army within | it calendar last soss oS i L . 9 - . troops. Tho arrvst was without 2 endar last session. Second: That it did not | ity of withdrawing pending legal procsedings, taken TENNESSEE. We cherish & laodable prido in beiug the introducers of thess goods, | mand and be put under arrest. Gen. Sheridau in one | the time prescribed, and it does pot intend to take one "‘“'":‘"‘ """: Voug folt "” :";‘:‘L" rolined taste, towhose | o big dispatohes asserts that Gen. Ortega has no other | or two hundied in tho first detachment and one or two on » ronnge we sre indebted 4 5 . R od i o800 il sate ; ‘ which we have iaod 4 eunbody fu il oue productions fjewslsy | chants. Gen. Sherman, it is roported, bad arrived at | gary to gpeciy with minutenoss details of this kiud, ol e liverwrass, 5 i St Brazos from Vera Cruz, and will now seok Juarez | which depend upon hygienic and olimatio influencs Twrant & Co., overland. of which it was the best, the only, competent judge.” pass auy ono of thom. If he denies either of | with the anthorisation of the State Department, the these propositions, we shall confute him by the | matter must await the decision of the authoritios at journals of that body of which he is an honored mom- | Washington, However, the influonce of the sottle. ber. If ho admits thow, he conviots bimself of an un- | ment made with Fraser, Trenholm & Co., has led just attack upon the pross for calling attontion to an | other parties holding Confoderate property to come admitted faot—which, in discharging its duty to the | forward and offer to sottle, aud settloments aro being UNAUTHORIZED LOAN BY THE STATE TREASURRS— AID FOR RAILROADS. Auu-..-un""-: froferd 3’«‘.::‘:."’.11 of thels ewn la m— The explicit declaration on the part of the Emperor 4onp paci it ¢ el i v i ordes—mvesctng i the novet |y oot of tho bill ofered by Senator Edmunds, | of his intention to use his own discretion, and bia curt | Public, it was bound to do. But Mr. Morrill, in either | mado on equitable terms. Tonnesseo ‘Bank st Memphis, ovor §100,000 in Juwmas. Osecks Buoguss. axp Faxcr Coone regulating the tenure of office, is to givo the Senate a | intimstion to Mr. Bigelow, with but swall excoss of caso, shall not provoke us to utter auy, barsh | Whatovor is obtained in this way will be clear gain u".:'l.‘mm‘,fi h:‘:'“ mmww. . word in rospeot to hinmelf, for wo mever | for the English dootrine that the Confoderates had 5% hadte o Manighis e adoutor o withdtaw -.1 loan his sosson in Paris, London, Vienns. Gonevs, Naples, .. Fechibiod on this veatinot: of ek wud | powor in dismissals as well as appointments. The | diplomatic courtesy, that whatever ho did in the mat- A bill_has its last reading, extending & State. doubted, but have often applauded, bis bonest | bolligerent rights, and that we inherit them, as the over 2,000,000 to the railronds of X dovotion to the cause of Equal Rights for All Mo, | winning belligerent, is repudiated by our Government, Egl—:on}iuq evere Tr HOLIDAYS. Prosident may, iu the recess of the Sonate, suspend | tor was for bis own convenience, and uot to pleaso the Tin LARGEST ASSORTXENT ix THE CODNTRY OF any ofticer guilty of official misconduct, or logally | United States, left no room for surpriso at any change A d ; $ RIOH DIXNER AND TEA SETS, disqualified and incapable; but he is bound to report | he might find it advisable to make in his arrauge- which we, in our way, also strive to dofend. We still | gnd our Consuls aro instructed not to stand upon that | N, snvrcue, Doc. 10.~The House of PAMIS CLOCKS AND STATUARY, tho fact to the Seuate for its advios within | ments. . Accordingly, Mr. Bigolow writestoMr. Sow- | think, aod Mr. Morrill must pormit us to reassert, | ground; and tho Courts hors are not friendly to the | day passed tho Be 'mfll% and Fiws FANCY G003 —of acr own {mportation. twenty days after its firg day of mosting | ard Nov. & 1866, that the Minister of Forsign Affairs that ‘thcrn was & dolay last session [fenlom to great | United States Govornment. Beside, law is an ox- | ncmw. u;f'm, Y public intorests, and woll desoiving more than | pensive luxury in England, snd extromely tedious. 000; Cincinnati, Cumberland = Nex, 938, 335 ons 240 ¥ shonet, Beookiyn. theroafter. If the Somato dissents, the sus- | had informed him that the Emperor thought any re- P S i pended officor ball resume his dutics. In much the | duction of the Froneh force in Mexico might be peril- same mannor the President may fill vacancies by | ous to thoso who remained behind, and ho therefore b death or resiguation. Tho bill, as Mr. Edmunds took | proposed,instesd of bringing bis army home by detach- Wik CroTsing,—Tho best place to buy superior | the trouble to explain, was not concelved in hostility | ments extonding to November 1567, to bring thom all e ey et o el B e Eat sy | 10 the pebhent Administration, but a8 & proper safo- | home together iu the Spring of 1367, e b eimwra s Noe 30 o T Bowery: ihe | guard of republican liberty at this or any other time. | This change. which on tho face of it, wasa breach ‘ssortiment bu the city and pricos less. " » of faith on the part of the Emperor was deemod to be justified, as is now alloged, by acts on the part of this Governmont botraying its purpose of active interven- all tho robuko hitherto cast upon it. How | Ships wonld woar vut, vihior property would bospirited far the Semator from Maino was responsl- | away, aud the litigation would probably end in foe- blo for that dolay wo will mot undertake | bills to bo footed at Washington, and an ondless to inquire. Wo shall only remind bim and his col- | amount of needless porsonal aud National irritation, loagues that we know, as it is well known by them, | The fow persons who know by what means Mr. what personal and party reasons, urged for postpone- | Morse brought matters to an equitable adjustment mout, availed to influsucs tho consent of men always | regard tho feat with unmixed admiration. The radical and seldom othorwiso than oarnost in pursuing | Confederacy was really bankrupt abroad. Much of their couvictions. its property is unsalable (a3 uniforms), and all will Tho-bill was not passod yesterday, but wo trust | gell at a low price; but & million or two may be got the North that the Tengessce or will do 50 in sevy the 17th inst., to convene The Union League of Philadelphia, et its annual moeting yesterday, received an official report of public G - i rts of which will due influ- | tion. At any rate the now policy was affirmod i e Prix's 0. K. Soae, :::r::!, ::l:;' t:m;" :hw“"'e‘.:;:::o (‘;:n “. o Do ‘nesoery on Milley igeanit. TH there is mo roason to doubt that it will bo pressed | out of the yreok, though nothing very definite asto | = s % o o The League now numbers nearly thirteen hundrod | expodition ind provod an uiter failure. Tho Mexi- to & voto to-day, aud that @ two-thirds msjority | amount oan be kuown uow. Mr. Morse's offors will, | **XICTET e - - s yo may upon record in favor of a measure which | j i New-OrLeANs, Dec. 8.~0On account of the Creax TARTAR. members, and of local patriotic associations itisdoubt- | cans without even our moral aid had rendered tho | - R P noasuro which [ if succossful, rosult in great. profit to somebody, | of tho cotton crop and other Reonoumical and relisble ariciss for fauily use. Soid by Orocers | Joas surpassed by none in point of wealth, intelligance, | Empire an impossibility. ALl that romained for Na. | %% Just, that it may bo in danger of a Prosidontial | though uot the govornment ho is supposod to repre- i"““fi"&fl“m'fin"m 1 y _______breor Ko 35 Wamotorsr | und decided and active power. Moro thoroughy than | poleon was to save what was left of his army, and tho | O sont. fmal dry o merchaats oy haiag rusponded making 0 Tun Combination of Ingredients used in making { .14 gny institution in Philadelphia, it represents | collapse of the Empire made it essential that they v = SR T el Brows's Buonouias Twocuss " 1s suoh as bo give the beet pousile | 41.g ;3004 and public epieit not alone of the city itself, | sbould go togother. O et - - CAN4DA Tho approaching close of the year finds nearly tho fuake . i ONARLES MINOT. The telograph announces the sudden death of MoxTREAL, C. B., Dec. 10.-The Cabinot had & ] sitting on Saturday, and much business was done, othing definite has tmflnd. " . xl:f Monck lumm Now-York, and as soon as he is across the lines Sir John Michol will bo sworn in &8 Administrator. with safoty. The Troouss sre used always with good soccoms | ot of Ponngylyania. The effrts of the League to ‘Bic State Dopartment, however, thought other- ..-:.‘cimn -’::‘mn-m for Coughs, c:xds;‘nm. wustajp the 1oty yay ere part of the bost history of o | Wise, and with that extraordinary facility for saying X Wyin Fous, Fo "_—(;:M—'m city that boasts its Hall of Independence of 1776 and and doing the wrong thing at the wrong time which St of * s in fhe olty, | its Union Leaguo of 1864, Its fine houso on Broad. | Mr. S8eward so constoutly exhibits, it resolved to offer a parting insult to the Emperor, to whioh, engaged oy wholo of Europo apparently at poace, the littl islaud of Candia being at present the only spot whers fight- ing is still going on, Even thers the Insurrection has 2::.;“::"7" {’p’:::’l';:z ‘::".::l-b:i:" ""“:':‘:;-‘"‘ boen homwed in on all sides, and unless a gonoral | o000 e during the last 25 yoars, the d i wou ot s b the sensaten prices of 156 L on pI A o . i n i e NoT$13 Brosdway, | 8t almost destroyed by a late fire, is now quite re- ising in the Christi B f Turkey should - b ke O ho was in his Industrial Exposition, he might possibly | Fieing fn the Christian provinoes of Turkey sho widely known—probably better than in any othor eapacity. R Parie TG THE YOUNG My 07 NEW-YORK. built. - Rttt a0, e e :m:' 74 m,"h" tako place, tho last of tho Condian patriots will | Ho was bora in 1312 at Havorhill, Mass. His father was a law- m’fi;{&:{gfifim‘mfl_‘“‘"‘?u”m A g e soon have to Iay down thdir arms. But the | yerby profossion aud a Judge by position. After graduat MoxTrEAL, Dec, 10.—At 3 o’clock p. in., Lord Moack drove to the station whore & mbuofhlun(hlul at Harvard Colloge in the class of 1528, at the early ago of 16 N S -2 Buppemar. Abill is before Congress to grant certain righits to | afford, perhaps, an apology for a foreign quarrel. wealthy citizens were in attendance to bid him good by. oxplosive material in Turkoy doos mot, 0B | il s g sudiod law and practiced at the Suffolk T o Eapecially sdepted for young men. the American Atlantic Telegraph Company, a corpora- | Accordingly, Mr. Seward replies by the (Cable on 'y o8 CUSTALNS ’ =S | tion organized under the laws of this Sate. If our |‘the 23d of November that the Emperor's modifiostion that account, become less. Tho oonsummation of | L, ™'(y a1 ho was appointed Superintendent of the Boston | ‘Thers “.‘m:m&z?xm ool @ wholostle, Tl (ol g - o report may be trusted, this modest Company asks, | of the previous arrangement ** 80 as to loave the whole m,’ i“d""“dl""’: ‘;ru]fl"“:""l;" !und; r"::“ :’ o of m,‘,‘.‘,‘"fiwfi‘lfi:liu-lrl::n;::ahil:n'x T&wxfi B 'x]:?zli:.; ro&n lhhlol.:i Jnnie'JAyI't;, on';:l witpessed z 3 S R e O e i i h rince nearly rela 0 most of uropean ot hed to the Michig A Southern | Judges Mondelet oy. Judge ot remarked and the bill proposes to confer, the exclusive use of | French army in Mexico for the present, instead of P! subsequen [nmf?; r:":;f“d m"m y 15.??':?-5: fl"‘ hogs.tbfl s ‘of service would be s blissfal i - one; and that wo had heard the last of the ‘enians. . A number of French Canadian families from the West. They wore sufferers b{:h.a:m and wont to Cbi under great difficulties, nona of them. being able to ndB:g . Failing to - work were com roturn. forty other mmunto . ‘The weather is clear and cold. TOEONTV, .. monarohs, does not only signify the loss by Tarkey of :::lém’-'h"h o L ek 8 g oed four millions of people; but of all the many impulses | sucoeedod by u,"i«"uq q. Wico that ime “Mr. Minot ha which have of lato been givon to the aspirations of S0 the pasltion of Camtaltiag Bng e O b ooty - tho Christian provinces, this is the most dangerous, | nearly every railway throughout 3:: v‘.;m has ofticers LA for it practically illustrates the collapse of Turkish s '2;“_;’:.';:‘{;",',‘3,,‘5:,,’;, ,._,,;f“m’m‘ml i power. Servia insists on having the same independ- DEATH OF GQAVARNIL enoe which has been sccorded to Roumanis, sud it The most philosophic oaricaturist of the age, Sulpice will not be long ero the same domands will be mado | Paul Chevalior, better, if not almost exclusively, known to the :m‘nm:&myu%rw&lzl:vgm ) Poriowre. . the onlixlo Atlantic coast within the jurisdiction of | withdrawing one detachment in November current as o axD Tasus Covanms : | the United Btates, for the purpose of landing o | promised, is now found in every way inconvenient y telograph cable. What mystery is thers in | and exceptionable. 'We cannot acquiesce, &e." And this business of telegraphing that it should | the reasons given why we oannot acquiesce are that kindle the avarice of men into such a flame that thay | wo have sent Mr. Campbell and Gen. Sherman to will be fled, neither on land or ses, with nothing | confor with President Juares on subjects which are less than au immeasurable monopoly? And what | deeply interesting to the United States, and of vital 1 the New Etgn, -t 1 L) 0. L. & J. B. Kuurr's, No. 47 Broadway, Usz Huw's Bay Rux Soar, 32 Parkrow. Seld Everywhere. TIRRN(A, VARIOOOELE, and GENERAL DEPORMITIES reaied by be wndersiguod st No, 156 Futonst, Trimen i p . Supporters, Spinal aud Shoulec Braces. Silk Elastic sort of arguments are relied upon to convince s | importance to Mexico. The dispatch does not add, as " 2 Susponsory Bundages, k., carefully sdjusted to suit each : " . by the othor provinces. public under his psoudonym of Gavarni, died ia Paris on the ualed by any other of the eddosit soch | majority of the represontatives of the people | might have boen expected, that we had also emplayod’ 'The happiost poople {a Eutope st this moment are S wtimo at tho age of 6. TIo came of poor pareats, was pn:iu s y - u;’mb\: lairs of sont at an oarly ago to get bis liviog in an engiuedr's factory, | 4o give s fitt rocoption to the Chicago de the Qntario and Huron ship canal. Among other things that they should surrender the wholo sea const | Gen. Sheridan to intervene in the domestio of the Republic into the possession of in- | Mexico by arresting Ortegs, tho rival claimant of dividuals confederated under the title of a | Juarez to the Presidency, on the pretenso that ho was telegraph company? We shall rejoico to seo more | violating our neutrality laws. cables laid down—the more the better, for we do not | To this dispatch, when read to him, the Emperor sbandon the hope of & beneficial competition between | listened in silence, and on Tuesday came the reply by rival Atlantic telegraph corporations—but this bill | the Cable that ““France bas not changed ber rosolu- luliu?l‘ The national unity is nearly con’mlm. Anc only came before the world s an artst when ho had at- Venotia has boen annexed, and the avaoue*ion of |y i uis 34th year. His first occupation was the deslgning of Rome by the French, whioch is to be completed, ac- r books of fashion, which he abandoned to cording to the Connntl?l?, 10-mOrTow, removes {he ;n;;;:f, ;&zm :‘;‘Il‘og. :"; 30.:“4':' ‘-‘w”n‘fl 1ast obstacle to tho acquisition of the Papal domin- ) outh which be afterward continued in ‘l"hhl: fons, _As the last circular of Ricasoli to the Prefeots z"r"';"";-‘cfl‘e ::";‘p"hm“{:“l:“ s lasing (uns, indicates, the Italisn Government will obsorve the | renowned " Enfants Terriblos ™ hls * Parouts Torribles," his DAY PRESENTS.—The cheapest and only genu- Meocschaom is bought st Rurn's MBXRSCRAUN MANUPACTORY, 415 Broome-st. A R R R O1p Eves Mapg Nxw without yoomleg dootor, *‘ Seut post on veceipt ten cents. Addrens . E. B. Foors. No. 1,130 Broadwsy, New-York. CouroRT AND CURE FOR THE RUPTURED.—Sent on ecept often custa Addzows Dr. 2. B. Yoors, Ne it is proposed o give s grand dinner on the occasion. —————— IDAHO. A cis. 0, Doc, DerThe Idaho Tosrif t lature assembled at Boise City, December 3. The of the Cosmos Bilver Mivi Silver City, §oRo, Tas attachod Docembor 4 o o000, _ldaho E i i ol W«lb’hh ZLonRS would forbid all competition, and lesve the publio | tion.” i 3 Kot ..:‘ hvu::: . p;bnbly worse served f;.n l:.h at present, ndp:;,m? ;:;'mmA.:T ;,h ‘:,', l‘?o’::l:a;o .:hu":f;fl: :::,b:;: striotest noutrality. Thus tho struggle of the Roman ;lyt‘;:'r;u’:f“ _md‘;og-mfihrm';‘;“.;?:f‘:m‘ifi pors are fillod with mml:. of murders and mrm- family mae! h»;-i: out that hope of redress which we venture still to | journal hastens to call upon THz TarzuNe and othor peop:e vlvu,h t::i:pm-{oa:;un!::l:rh:; :l‘l“t::.lm.:;‘ :'}’«:?..’:o'cfi:i :{:1‘:1‘;:;"‘:: nhru::lw‘l‘:?-:-: r;«m;::l:‘ - the Indians, who seem to havo their own way —— e i i . conclusively the irresistible po - | Rovolution of 1848, and G ‘went for a time to England, 2. & T Lavies’ FURs.—A very choice selection of my owa p— - papers to- do Justioe to “(he foromost of Amieciost |, w’. bave no trustworthy information about Yo ho produced a volumo of skeiohes oallal " Gavaral in THE PACIFIC COAST. Raxra, coroei of Cansl snd Wooster sie. L5 diplomatists and statesmen.” Tondon,"" and contributed a number of designs to one or two Of | a¥ TELEGNAPE Tp TEN TAISTNS. and made over. The State correspoudence referring to the capture | To do justi M ) inco the | the Intentiops of the Pope in case of o successful | the bumorous publications of the time. Gavarni's friends used to | = g, Dee, 10.—The Pacific mail stosst- NEw REQULATION NAVY CAP of Burratt is 1o aad oi tial in its detail 0 do jutios to Mr. Seward's diplomacy sinco the | | v oo o torants o tho organs of tho Ul | 4k vistt Bugiic spelct i NWhea ho returaed hohad | o0 \coptana salled to-day wiih 476804 tressare, of whieh tt is 80 ample sud oircumstan ite details | gommencement of the Robelllon, when bho began | ™® 4 loa all his galoty, and Lis thoughts ook an ex . 3418 o1 I dor New-York. ‘She -I“"‘ tramontans party, which ought to be bast informed, o This s :,r‘:fln.:: O Aepaas, for L' lliustration. dis a3 widely a8 the less orthodox papers. Lavterls Gavarni ooctipied himsolf & good deal with a subjoct i?:or:l‘nnu wo hear but little exoept comments | that l& '%;:"}." dream of bis lify, viz.: thesteering of balloons on foreign questions. French vessels are now plying —— . DE BARANTE. between the ports of France, Italy and Moexico, 80 | 40 Barante, the historian of the Dukes of Bar- bring back French troops from two expoditions which | 0.4\ “ied racently at bis country seat, tho Chatesn ds Be- even the Government doos not deny to have been | raate (Auvergne), in the Sith year of his sge. Ho was edudat- signally disastrous. The Government with iron hand | od et the Polyteclinio School, and filled various civil and diplo- suppressea the free expression of popular sentiment on | matie offices under the mcn-m :‘R:J -zht he 'u the suffered disgrace; but it is casy to divine what oamed :,l':;:“ XVIIL “'"““-m ~ iy m""“" tho sedret influence of the failuro of the Imperial “a":" hwmm""‘ o Labw ] ':k ”M."'" schemes on the public mind must be. The Emperor's | the Chamber of moy_fi':fi'& m.,.;l life is drawing to & close, and it appears oxtremely | e was raised to the of 8 1 doubtful whether & government carried on in the | fal ““miz%fl'm‘gm m nsme of & ohild will be able to save the shaken | the Doctrinaires, muwfl.mhfio dypesty. e, ok e i a i vl From Spain we are almost daily receiving dispatobes w a8 ot only to confirm the belief that the roal Burrstt | pjs ygle by assuring Europe that wo had no power to has been caught, but to create a definite suspicion | ¢ogres insurroctionary members of 1 State—that Slav- that the testimony necessary to a conviction is easily | ory had nothing to do with the Rebellion, and would st band. The chase of the fugitive, extending in a | gontinue just the same whether the revolution should slow way for the period o{ a year, over two or three | yucceed or fail—would be an irksome task. Some day continents, has not been without its diplomatic excite- | wo may possibly attompt it. In the mean time, let ment. Our Consul at Liverpool wrote to Secretary | uy gay that, in oue view of the matter exprossed by Seward, of date Sept. 27, that Surratt was then in | nfy Soward, we aré inclined, under existing ciroum- Liverpool; but up to Oct. 11, though Surratt was | stances, to concur. We quote from a dispatoh of the supposed to be still within the provigce of our Con- | 6tp mber, 1865, The extract is a retranslation sulate, Minister Adams had not vum.d on & worrant | from ncb, a6 We have not the original at hand; fox his arrest—tbe evidence, in his opinion, not justi- | py¢ the ides is 90 simple thet its full mesning has fying the step. But a fow woeeks after that date, | goubtless boen preserved: - Axp CHarRav. Oy, No. 513 Broavway. ONSUMPTION, le.n v(io‘lr';.urr, lz:lrlnu AXD 2 E&.dunmmflm.fimu o y. X CHEMICAL POMADE Restores Gray Hair, ozl o 2SR zflfi.w.m.m.wm,.‘_:g Aglmhfl.byn.“!:nn?u:n,l.l. o g .u::d-.-‘u‘-«‘b‘s:u. S ¥ MG-MaORIE COMPANY, No.506 Broad- - B e o o o e e e Lo s 4 Co's R S o S 2 ! BSENTS OF AFPECTION AND CHARITY— | Consul-General Potter of Cansda furnished corxobor- | «Tpe Exgcutive Department of omment ; » Tock Buteh SowingMactiner. Ne. €38 | o0 4o pimony that Surratt had gone to Liverpool Fraidoc Bom s e e e in ; #0 that it if of knowing w! r the state of aff e time in September, appears if Minis- 4 i o 0 08C0 VIEws, oo - Lasveciras, be Rk BT AnTRoy e Bio. | ter Adams bod seized the sssassin when his wherea- r & Witios fewing Macbises i BRO0E- | Douts wero brought to bisstbention for the second ime, O tion o S vy JaF tn aton. | Sbout the immminanco of s evolution whioh averybedy, | i Chumter 13 forgs xd a: Pt bamaiie 438 Feur 20 would ‘50 Ba7e been fr In e wrong, Surat's | f the Uniied Bietsson thiskmportaat queston. | ieluding it seoms, evo tho Queen's mother and bor | 5t 00 L T et i h 7 st 3 Tirrio Co% Look 9Tiion SXWiNG-Ma | mubsequent oareer is o bo traced in ltaly, where n | Howaver advantageous it may b in ordinary oases | only siater, the Duchess of Look upon & | Tr from sare 254 Vst Ouk 3 91 b 1 FAn 4L s Fale 10 sapenter of (e Sering e g, Pr ! s - 3 ¢ Rome of his enlistment in the Pepal Guard. By | Executive, acting generally without the advice of the exder of Seoretary Seward, Cardinal Aptonelli was Senate, the right of Congress to determine the policy mwmummmwm e do n do :_ g g of scboelmaster from Maryland informed our Minister | to leave the management of our foreign affairs to the m.mm;mmu.mn'uummn. “Wm% .z:...g Turning from the Latin to the Germanio world, we E&fl'fi m o in 183, the murdor-plot, throwiag the obiof responsibility for | American Congress. ; W daod 0p Juforaen D, B (pin 0 1 ey, Whesp L Qus bpd o0d tblong xs'e®d ety Ay Log'y

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