The Sun (New York) Newspaper, October 22, 1872, Page 1

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o ————— nn ) SDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1872 PRICE TWO GENTS. t m 0 ob yrol < ey vo how to e polls vor ve rT " 5 b THE sco REGATTA. » Ne ENGLAND AND IRELAND. | eperstaoneicer im, to, hare, bean the Pent [he cmairiotie” Enndidate, ie would: not have | down an Meee rat wre hasaiee Hart Raniend pin Ny THE PRESIDENTS PALACE. deg rate in Troland | been better that Sarsfeld or Tyrone had won, | act was therefore pass was primaril the Irish middlemen | Exciting Race Betweon the New York re of the blame. The fault = | dissenters Anothor Dye nat he ‘he restoration came. ‘The Stuart Kings were | and the peasant had no reason to regrot the | forced. ‘This act was entitled “To prevent the | must bear th ing Clab and the Ariel Club ef Dattimere— iY Fr DE pro “ e rt e t a vhen he a « der foot by the | further growth of Popery, An act had just | of England was neulect. The prastical pressure ro THE PROGRESSIVE EXPENDITURES THONY FROCDE'N THIRD | wulughe barks and with the site came tho | dye when fe wos rodden,wnder faut Dy, ta | futher gmt aha" pcan Cates | was MANS Wo nen of Heth atid ang | ‘he New Workers Victortous, PROGR RASIVE EXP ENDIT! LECTURE, -_--+ Great Renefac! ane aa eiettin, | and the terrorist inspired by raiding bands of | from purchasing land and from acting on Eng. | race, ‘Tho English agent would have left the % OL HEE re ae ee ao eed muther lonty nor | Heh ell, ie must. have boch made after the ex: | peasant in rags: the Tre mitdie-man took hie | ,BALTINorE, Oot. 21.—The regatta this nfiscatod | peace ainple of Louis of France, when he recalled the | akin and his flesh and left him in his bonos, | afternoon on the Patapsco River was witnessed Fatal | w, The Cor- | States would be 1 Oran ‘owners, What was it that gave the peasant the right to | edict of Nantes. Tt was provided further that | (Laughter and applause.) The curso of the | by fully 4,00 persons, the majority of whom ginning of the Centary — $383,594 of te abileked Charch-Fate | Never constan _ Bogland | enjoy the fruits of his own Industry? ‘The set- | no Cathoile should be able to purchaso an estate | country was too much liberty not liberty to | were Indies. ‘The first race was between the Credited to Grant's Four Years, } . was ont tled law and from a Protestant, or should take lease upon | the poor but Hberty to the rich, and the strong + A : ‘Boom the Chaeanatd Cone Lal bchd hall th denatenbt hd conciliating the Catholics, Something over one RULE OF THE STRANGER. any farin or land for moro than thirty-one years | todo what they, would with thelr own. Now | New York Rowing Club and a crew of the Ariol vom the Cinctanal mercial, Mr, Froude delivered his third leoture in | third of the land was restored. d that no should sit in Parliamont, | and then inthe letters of a Viceroy one does | Club of this city, Tho starting point was a flag | | When it was first proposed to build & ‘The peasant hid had experience of the Association Hall Inst evening to a crowded THE CONNAUGHT PLAN Yantages to be enjoyed under audience, His subject was: “The Penal Laws | was abandoned and the extl Never had life gone so well wit! take oMce under tho Crown, or be admitted to | ffnda cry of Indignation, Lord Donegal once, any of the learned profession’, Wanting money to pay his debts, demanted | stake a short dist Now what was the effect of this act? ‘Tne | enormous fines of his tenants, and evicted half | the course down the river one mile and ah so below Fork ie house as an official residence for the. Preatdent be below Fort McHenry and | ce'the United. States, Fepublican simplicity was some quarters deeply shooked. It was de- 4 ay lowed to return to their hi all the years of his tragic history, had effect wi yot out all moral principle nh ounty in enforcing them, making take boat and retu! aking the dista clared to be only an ing of the aristocratic of Ireland and thelr Consequences.” The loos | TN Yh th tenured te (hele Nam fo comfortably situated the mid re orthless. chile | and families homeless, ‘The Viceroy, ft teres miler. "The crew of the New York boat, | fashions. of the Old World, with: thelr palaces turor said: end the old rivals were once more left face | when at work for the Ulster settlers, dren pretended to be converted in order to | by what he said about it privately, would ew of the New York boats | forthe royal family, built, and decorated, and LADIES AND GENTLEMEN: My Inst lecture | face, with all the old animosity embittered a | on his own patch under the protection of Eng= | make themselves Independent of their parents ; | been extremely M@d had he been able to have | the Keroseno, wero: FL. Leland, bow; W. H. Maintained atthe expense of the laboring massoe ended with an account of the rise, the couse- the usand fold. lish law, Speaking from e standpoint of aman | gentlemen affected conversion, that they might Hacopal Church was redstabtiahed. Tt | of the revolution—the Catholic owners having | fe sheritts and magist 2 buy lb Calhoun, No. , No. . F. | of the people. The corne: le Ky tea, or be able to buy @ HANGED LORD DONEGAL hor ‘0.2; Frank Ellison, No, 3; and 0. F; peop corner-stone of the Prost Pillar of WAL, Tueommenced in massacre, and | suited the Lrish Protestants as ill as it suited the | been driven out, and their lands baving been | piece of land, of hold Johnston, siroke oar, The average weight of | den't house was laid at Washington on the lath jease. Lawyer qualifed | 0n gallows sixty fect high. a spectacle toall his | the New York orew. was Int Ihe, “The crew of | af October, Ii, while George Washington waa fended In ruin, For ning years the Irish leaders | Scotch Presbyterians. ‘The Scots would have | taken by large owners who now resided on | themselves in tho same way to be admitted to | brother noblemen: but the law. unfortunately. | the faltimore boat, the Debutante, were: Wil- | President of the United States. It was long in held. the. dost nies of their country. in theie | none of it. ‘They cleared it out and eet up thelr | thelr estates, and cared: nothing for the welfare | the bar or the bench. no longer provided means for promoting noble | ja Giimore. bones LON Graemwe fuliding, and when Oongeses femored from du. They years of continual anarchy | own churches. ‘The Irish Protestanta were leas | of their tenantry—I think the men of the rovos THEY CALLED THEMSELVES ProresTANTs. lords In such emphatic style. [Laughter] Lord | Walter Negley, No. 3: and J. HO, Watte Philadelphia to Washingtam, in 1800, the Whito ‘itual slaughter, One-third of the popue | fortunate. ‘The archbishops and bishops were | lution should have acted on the principle of fs . Donegal got bls money, and the six thousand | ani Weaver, ve weight 116 prtmds Be Hovee was in a highly unfinished state, as the n perished inthe most piteous misery. Its | placed in their sees. unterbalance them | Henry VIIL, and made the absontees sell out to | They were tn fact of no creed at all, Being in | families, all Protestants, came to New Kngland, Pate Tor this rave by | letters of Mrs, John. Adama, i quences, and the collapse of the great Trish re~ % 7 % " oe Were now, being recently pant ivienr sutering fell upon the ont the Catholics were allowed to revatabliah a rlval who Were willing to live in Ireland. Cirant- | truth Catholics, they were condemned by thelr | (Applause,) vere re John. 4 per eeir wince end. their Wttle ones. Hed th hele and. convents were rebuilt muki'seem hardc but No-adtninistras | own consciences, and became. reckless deaperae | 1 will mention a few more specimens of the | Eiilott of Greenpoint 1. 1 Peer atal cei hous Geen it cre ats started att o'clock, the New York | Republicans" of those days about any atterupt nk and station of the ident of the public is well shown in rich | dows, Ireland was filed from end to end by men | condition of verjured to the lips to thelr po- | Ordinary asses: identin the country, and interested in the In society, ‘The law, however, was even | serve notice, Every Protestant farive qgvery ntry’s prosperity, would have been of inf Hin Its iniquity. It was ruled in addition, | lying Protestant gentlo:an, kept his ho nite value to such & country as Ireland then me act, that no one was a Protestant armed. He had only himaeif and his parvants f Government favor, ¥ eat the present day, the ived in state at Dublin rebellion been sustained bya determination to | and as an Indication be free; had an irish nition been forming | lke what wi ftself in that furnace of calamity; when | Catholle prir van i the clouds cleared of had there been seen a | Castle hy the English Vice liberated people standing erect amidst the ruins | | For the Protestant ish soclety in the list century, per that has ong law for th erfor the poor, A real aristocracy, | who were BV strokes, For | to support th at the expen crew pulling 40 and the Arie the Bret half mile tho boats pulled nearly Bre, Wiggs vont of the stroke oar of th Ariel boat slipped, by which accident the cre’ Onformist a 708: lost three strokes, and the Kerorene shot ahead, | 1798: ( Nhe fleet of the Ine | While, there was no mercy. ‘They 6 was, An arist of absetitees was nothing law, who was not amemberof the | to depend upon to protect bis life, Half the | 4 oKes, an K Bh Ot Anema: Of their houses, watching the fleet of the Ins | while. there was no ert ca iaet thea | better than @ mockery and a curse Fatahlishod church. Nonconformists had hithe | County Kerry, the county that L know. best, | Phe Ariel crew soon revained thelr stroke, | As for the palace of the President, the plan must disappearing below the horizon; had and Kepublicans § spuried ahead, and passed slightly in advance | have originated with somebody who wanted to wet Sa eeane Mt another Hotiand: had | were looked Upon ae venomous reptiles, re ls another measure which statesmen | erte no legally recognized existence, yhad | was ruled for many years by Mr. Daniel | OP the New Yorkers, From. thie point to the | political idol. A'Presitent te the very inst pian in Che fared with the Saxon ae it fared with the | Nocthera Proshytorians and the Cromwellinns | would call impos but which L almost re: | no toleration they were Hable to punishment ; | Mahoney and ix * farie fe wash Cee ae eer ecor eee et Beate he | Zommunity for whom the pablic sagt to belle a howee nin Price, tremendous ag Hewas, would | Were the bone abd einew of t tetant Ine | eret could hot have been carried out. Louis of | but they were subject ax dissentereto no spectal | tenant of Lord Shelburne who lived in England, | $UrnIng stake the race was most exciting, the | ivtiivche hans ealary Ave times furget than thet of hor he r AS iniaalon of | terest. “They were the best soldiers, the best | France, fust at this time, disabilities, A einthe art reainat Popory | He was a sort of smuggler prince, and. is olde ly RUM Cy cl ie pubite officer In the Union, and hence oan t Bee more free ror avethenations | farmers, the best citizens, the best men of bual- MEVORED THR EDICT OF NANTRS, Arknowledged thelr presence, but acknowledged | © faites” were four thousand peasants in white ¥ contested, the Now. York boat reaching | fatotimehoures Ab ner public oalcer to pay the ij bt bd hag) r at differen “9, al ereseenlar and spiritual the: 7 f a) touly to place them inalmost the same position | sheets and with blackened faces, Whose business dA Rh Ab ent of his house, of the world. | Th mn roe on afar diferent | pea. Tn all matters secular and spirtual Wey | and declared that Protestants would no longer | gs the Catholics, No one waa to be admitted to | was to #eo that. no policeman, revenue officer, starting point four lengths in advance ofthe | nut the argument In favor of providing the spect Ireland with its chiefs and its arm ad the ate ution be tolerated tn the French dominions. The mt Hd Ariel crew, ‘Time, 17 minutes It seconds. The | oyiee Mavi i He patrivsic heroesy and ite passi nate devotces, | Vins, Yet it was thought wise to allow the Hrashune: Wie, trench dominions, The | serve his country in any capacity, military: oF | tax collector, or undesirable visitor should wet | Aticts tine way id minutes, The race waa for | (lef Maxistrate with an oficial, residence, ae i A Dabeot ignenots tooked to Treland fo vl civil, al the rank of a petty ables unt his foot within the. precincts of the arn : e ebatnn A ne public expense prevailed, and to this day LAY PROSTRATE AT THE FERT MOPS TO PENSECUTE THESE MEN. Trinh Cathe their eyes turned longingly | he had received the Sacrament from an ordained | Country. (Laughter.) Daniel Mahoney's daugh- | §PU0f colors. a tag with the coatof-arius of | the sate officer of our Government who enjo 4 ' of afew thousand English Puritans, What was pels and thelr schools were closed, | to France. Leannot but suggest to you thatit | clergy The Pre ant community was | ter married the O' Donogh His will is at the the wir th ne at with coe ‘ute ot ‘hv tase in | the advantage of a house free of rent bs t t $5 be done withit? 1 tlemen, with ere Were required ty conform to the | Would have been better for all parties con- | formally cut in two, and the most energetic | old place yet. He bequeathed his “best blue | the pettin, att ‘New York crew was tue favorite, | President. The heads of departments, with h qBe euperiencs of two o T'progress and | establishment, aud when thay refused de- ved Had there horn an exchange of popula | gectian of it was ostracived. velvet breeches to my daughter O'Donoboe, as | Mhebetting the New York crow was tie favorite. | their comparatively small salaries of $800) @ f enlightenment to guide you, what would you | prived ¢ Tt was a turni tint With care and syaiem it might have by One more touch had still tot the | the man in Kerry best fitted to wear them.” | cits, the Undine, L Hirondelle, and crew No. 2 | Soaf are compelled to pay the entire expenses Rave had Cromwoit do? Will you say that he | In the ¢ The prondest | done. with the consent of all parties concerned. | picture of the condition to whi English | (Laughter.) Oe ee ee ee eee eg rem Nou? | of maintaining thelr households in Washington, should have proclaimed Suniversal emnesty, or and bravest OL Puritan, coly a ithe Impossible, a rate d fy iH Beer and eto Legislatures, between thew, pad re WARS WERE NOW ENDED, Rtwo-mile course, one mile to stkke and Return Pile the Pres id " wt h $55,000 8 year, has also thrust ballot-balla in the hands of the clans | lotments, and bade Ireland a » farew si id 2 8 ito] e duced the miserabie country. he English | yy, ete al J el 5 “* :, ry dine Se eT | his mansion, periodically refurnis! with ele- SUM Hiaaword had. scattored, and bidden the | They had given their blood in vain. Kings ond | those that come up of themselves, without cloth manufacturers possossed at thistime the | putgecrion fights had taken thelr place. The | Therace was won by the Undine Club. Time, | vance, and his Ave secrevarics, his stoward, and f Trish to decide thelr owndestiny 7. They would | priest# had come back again, and with kings | from them, (Applause.) Grant, that §8 | monopoly of the European markets, The Irish | je had thia advantage, that, the combacants | Feitivinideite. which ce the tecrite tetore tia | Messenger, and doorkeepers, and watchinen, have voted by an Immense majority for the And priests it seemed that they were to have no | Lmpoesible, then considering the change which | rivairy was no longer to be dreaded, for the | might be. murdere Irelysn nnd. Hike the | race third. Onerof thelr outerisers was broken, | hd policemen, all paid for out of the public H fects which by arms they fad failed to wi abiding place. | hey turned their faves to the ee come aver the condition of Ireland. I think Irish weaving industry was at an end, but the Nalin oo ts battle Wook dpain peat + id + | Puree } Hoy would have hidden the Bnlish and Scotch | setting sun, and the descendanteof the conauer: | the time had come that there should have bec | cupidity of the Kngliah was atill insiMclently Combats between the gentry were 4 WEST SIDE TRAGEDY. THE ARCTITECTURE OF THE WHITE MovaR. | en rr a hace shnsig caken: thambelves | States of Amepice plause) je United | re last desperate attempr of the old Irish to re- | Protected. The advantage of England over the | equally common, but these retained their de: i ‘The White House, Indeed, ts, not @ success in Sah TeLigion, to Dave slmnly sake shembsives | Sie Or cetst wan ates orosant, & fi Cover thelr lands, and’ expel the Protestant | Pett of the world lay in the cter. Duelling became so frequent that ‘he Bolles. an architectural point of view, It is. badl { ereT unas aglish, you may nay. bu ager at Avery extraordinary scene.’ tt happened | owners, there Was ho further occasion for penal QUALITY OF 178 WOOT, {i was proposed at last to make the survivor pay UPAR: Vellanra th Wighin’ avenuocca | panied aud Badly executed, espectally in the hare, It is too late to ae! that there was some uncertainty where Jatn enartments against liberty of conscience. ‘The | and Trish wool was as good or better, So excel. | for the sunport of the family of the man erant Yeuders tn Eighth Avenue-A | [nierior, and It isa pity that the. Hrithh whe ‘ kind, Ireland had formed partof the d: as buried in Wostminster Abbey, ‘The Deanof | genius of Protestantism fs opposed to such re- | lent was it that if k of Insh wool was mixed Soule Algae pe) secteule ot Hime Policeman Beaten, Perhaps Fatally, they burned the first White House in 1414 ba 4 of the English sovereign, f will not say how it | Westminster, wuo is my friend, h Strictions. Hutin Catholic countries there was | with three packs Trench wool, the French fon Ky nat o in inna he yy Pe “ On Saturday nights Eighth avenue, near | not also destroyed the plans of the architect, Hy had come about, but #0 tt was, England, 120 | sion from the Secretary of State te ho toloration for the Protestant; and. taking | weavers could then ¢ safully with ngland to Ireland heh be}. : : who rebulit it after the same old designs, The yours before, had shaken off the papal author.ty, | the tombs and discover where man's nature as it ts, It lsno wonder thatthe | the knglish. The Irish we tbe secured | Proved in the same way that we prove rides, | Forty-second street, becomes ® market filed | houss is constructed of Virginia. fresstone ‘ Adena ree VY. It was not thought prad: conduct | ordinary Protestant should be inclined to follow | therefore at all hazarda to the English manufac. | 4nd guns—by standing Ore. i youd pequiers with scores of itinerant venders, who wish to | which is not white, but a dirty brown, and ex- 4 THE POPES HAD LEVIED WAR such an investigation by daylight. Tt was done | the exatmple, Hut the penal laws were against | turers, and n easy terms too. [Laugh- | Was sent over shortly after the middle of the | gicoge of their overripe fruit and vegetables | tremely porous, so that it has to be kept con- it upon their de Jects, as they were ple atnizht, and he asked we, and perhaps one or | the genius of free Institutions, and could not be | ter.) ‘The English Parliament, at the instigation | last century to be Secretary of State under Lord | & 00 stantly covered with a thick coat of white paint, to call all P States, They had used | two more gentlemen, to be present, We went; | enforced Ina Protestant country. Exper the manufacturs, passed an act that not Harcourt, An opposition member, a Mr. Bag- bad smolling ham, fresh meat, clams, flah, | whence, indeed, it derives its name. Even with the swords of Spain and Austria to force them | and there, by flaring torches, among those old | had shown that they could not be carried out In ‘ece of Irish Wool should be exported to an pic quarrel with him atthe end of ® | and oysters, which it would be impossible to | this the house is excessively damp at certain rt back {nto submission, and the shricksof slaugh- | dark arches, we were probing among the ashes | Ireland. ‘The revolution bad left the Cath other country except England. All the Trinh | Week for some unknown reason, Sir Joon | Veo, over sunday. They sell nothing ft for | seasons, with a chronic tendency to mouldiness. | tered men had gone vp from hundreds of battle: | of the great dead. We looked upon all that re- | without the power to hurt. and proscrintive laws | wool was to go to England, aud Kngland herself Biaquiere belleved that if he did not ficht he : It is located,as most readers are aware, in the a Gelds. Ithad pleased Irelal in that universal | mained of kings, princes, warriors, statesmen, | could only be.a mockery and an insult. But | was to fix the price which she thought it reaso! wight as well leave the country. So he accepted | food, and their prices are much lower than those | west end of Washington, a mile and a quarter 71 wwar,to take the Itallar side. ‘she had madehor | and prelates, “We felt almost culty for the | the Catholics were not the only suferers from | able to pay for it, flaughter|—alxpence a pound, Mr. Bagnal's challenge, and they mot at the | at which respectable dealers can sell good | from the Capitol, atl occupies the front of & d rovinces the theatre for a century of desperate | liberty which we were taking in disturbin THE PENAL LAWS. or thereabouts, The French at the same tim usual Banting ground in the Phontx Park. A attiotea plat of ground forty acres in extent, whicl asurrections, Had she sicceeded In establish | their muguat repore, “At last we came toatomb | apy, Wve sictcltcoaried'y vA were willing to give three shillings a pound, and | &eftleman who was just then riding In the park, “ Piretchee'down, to, the Poromac 1p the rear of Ing her independence, she would have by wher evidently some son had once lain: | iavaity ter Rngiand ete he ant proved t+ -F | the Government was wise enough to imi saw that something was going on, and rode over | They all live in the neighborhood known asthe | the mansion. The building has a front of one thorn in and the ally of at least, we knew not what Itwas or who it w oyalty to England tn the rebellion. but the | that, with this enormous temptation, It ¢ RAST Eee re ee ee stamping ground of the * Forty Thieves,” and | hundred and seventy feet, and is elehty-alx fe mies beth left her t Tt was the tomb of Oliver Cromwell, th furore CuLece Of sthteemenshin, appeared. £0 went smugellng.. [Laughter.) Bhyge of its A ‘ thelr lawlessness is a great annoyance to the | 12 depth. The lofty portico in front displays self it would have be Protector of England Mm hii Up | see meee the Catholics down sad to maintals here is no country In the world so favor Blaquiere Orst fired tn the a'r, and Mr. Bagnal L dbase neta four fonte columns. The East Room (or grand ee mcs Eicsed WOUGA IER: Fecie hin Comore J hitbedy onagat. | the supremacy of the Episcopal Church by pur- foramuggling as treland. “Tie rie then took deliberate aim at him. residents of the nelghborhood. The next morn- | drawing-room of the White House) (sm fine j hostile armies, he neither side of | lows; t ad cut his head from lits shoulders | secuting the Nenconformists. With @ szatem | is inden y THE PISTOL MISSED FIRE. ing the atreets where they have been are filled | apartment, eighty b: forty feet, with a ceiling of i her, Bngland, and th rwhich England | and posted it ona spike on Westininster Hall oot teaching, such aa the Kirk eetaullahed | oniy by native t ‘oast guard were | He cocked it again, and again it missed fire. It | With decaying ¢ waves. unsalable vexe- | twenty-two feet, and richly furnished, as are also was Mghting, would have come to an ing! They had Qung out the Cromwellians; they had Mis A lesiag hice % | laughed at and commanders were bribed. In | was the days when they had fints in their piss | tables scraps of meat and bones, fish entrails | the smaller apartments on the first f nown i end. It could not be, and the resolution o flung out Cromwell, and there was thie sad and manufactures: the irish (would have | revenge for the destruction of its trede all Ir Miaquiere then bowed atid said, = There d oyster shells, which load the air with pestl- | as the Red, Mlue, and Green Rooms, familiar to } formed that Ireland, whether she would or not, | silent and Indutey, There ‘were’ two branches of | end Combined against the law. Catholl apneara tobe nomething the matter with your Hential odors throughout the day. sin og | tg people of the republic as the reception rooms } % ne NOLAN Awrrn MEMORIAL . re “ cont | Protestant, all classes of the peop! rymen. | pti Fat haar bi Al + ‘omplaints were made ‘apt. McEqwatn, of | at Presidential levees, The President's office is 4 Tie ces Mad talleeed al of Masaealty. We [et wini bed It gave us thoughts which Tie SARIN. iby hace oa the Judges on the bench. and oven the officials Shear antic’ He dil an ook tock naieere the Fhirty-geventh street Police Station. and be | Very Inapproptlately and incon ventently Located follo’ of cesnity. : A » ublin Cs self, all wer and tn hi oO a 0 break up the busin i Saturd on the secon joor. ‘The entire mansion con- gpust look at the position as men, not as drean had better not be uttered “i the linen trade w: rried on in | Gefeat English avarice and ain again, and again tol missed fire. Sir | Tight he detailed teveral men from the reserve Ley r. or ‘ { ‘and enthusiasts, What was Cromwell to do? | | Well, gentlemen, f¢ Cromwelliana in rts of the country, and in this the noe eee re then said, "1 think, sir, you had May Ramanan eran rye. | tains barely twenty rooms. An extensive cons a Terai youtwhat he did, and you shall judge | Ireland they were gone, Other Bngiieh came | Catholics shared. Every cabin had ite spinning PUNISH ENGLISH INJUSTICE. your dint.’ Another dint was | Crasher, under command of Koun i aimculte pr at Ms Mg Bip agies Aa Bf * for yourselves whether he did ill, The Irish de- | in their places, me makers, land jobbers. | wheel, every village ite weavers. Industry had | Tngenulty could uot have devised a system | Put In the pistol. and then Mr. Bagnal bad bet- | Yespiie the threals of the venders, After res | 2unck to the White House, replacing ap old ane iY tnanded liberty of conscience.“ Lmeddie with | speculators. The persecution of the Protestants | taken root, and needed nothing but fair play to | better suited to the lawless temperainent of the F fortune. The pistol went off, and the ball | porting at the police station, the roundsman | war + one y y ing a no man's conscience, Lord-General an- | Was checked after its frat excesses, and the | develop Ueland into a rival of England. 1t | Irish people, or better ilated to encourage d through Sir John Blaquiere’s hat. The | Rrared out on his rounds. At Fortieth stre bo} COSTLY LUXURY. swered. “but if you inean by liberty of cons | Ulster settlement continued to prosper, but the | naeced only justice and @ continuance of politi | such ‘a temperament. This state of. things nds loaded again, and this time Mr. Bagnal d Eleventh avenue he saw a Aaht between t 2 4 i 2 at Science Mberty to have the mass, that will pot | Protestant colonies in the south had received | cal quiet to make an end of Ireland's misery. | continued for three-quarters of a century, | fred first. He again missed. Sir John Blaquiere | Men, the Ae rhea What the Executive Mansion itself has coat 44 be sudered while the Parliament of England | their death blow, ‘The Catholics overspread | The ‘Cetholica would. have. forgotten foreah | and it. forma. the key. to Irish his Was golng to fire in the airagain when Mr. Dag- | We Ver rough troatment, fie took the Larest | architecturally ts not accurately known, since ht power.” at i pera Oe apacehes there Pee Se eer: afiliations and the tw factions wc uid have lost | and Trish character as ne as the o aL Cook of bla bat bowe and insisted that Sir | man off from the other and separated them, | the appropriations, both for the original edifice “4 Monstrous!” you may say, Well, gentlemen, | swept ba ec areturning & James th the remembrance of sectional differences iutheir | mere ohn must shoot at him. al restrictions were maintained, he latter said he | Tn. ot n why he should shoot at hin, that Ane a Warne and would pot | verely thtat his life was despaired of, F the world. | Mr. replied that | “Gmcor Mulligan, on postin Fortieth street, | other pul could not be; that he must fire at lim. treat | arove the men away from the roundsman, and | Of the edifice, however, was not far from $500,- tad | and for rebuilding the manson after Its Interior was burned in 1814, are “lumped " with the gen= eral expenses of construction of the Capitol and ¢ buildings of Washington, "The coat lowed Charles, and Hic, lent th In both combatants add the officer and with his ow by: alter tander ay ub beat him so uid be easy for me Algo, Himself a Catho- | daity int intl ence of the Crown to the cause, 3 untries he s« himself to undo the THE REVOLUTION BAD OF! urse of common cupation was ED A PREACH en the two creeds, and the manner in hit was dealt with made the wound in- ounted no sin to smuggle. A. pri paulted his Bishop as to what he shy tit. ‘The Bishop sald that as Ki orge had no right to the crown be had cer tainly had ‘no Fight to the. customs duties, | him like a gentleman, otherwise it would be a th speaking bere in this place, before the freest people in the world, and | Reformation and reestablish orthodox Koman- speaking upon A subject on which the American ism. He placed Catholics inthe hig ames t rae ry silien: Btatto, ek 000, Including the first and second erection, H ple are more justly sensitive, which is the | Inthe State He made Catholic Th arlinment tisisted that | fPaughter) Un rather different xrounds, hut | Second affront, and they would have to fight | {ook him to the Folice Station. After having | “ng rey bi fiderty of thought and speech, than perhaps cn | Catholic Chancellors, Catholi Hand cor ter the revolution sbould | still as to the main facts, 1 entirery acree wich | again. Mut Onaily they shook hands over the | hit wounds dressed he was taken home. A few | House, up to th any other subject, in this connection and at magistrates. He made the army Catholte, Ay ie ds appl pay the ex Bishop that he had no right to the customs | Matter, and Sir John Blaquiere was after that | Fleventh avenue and Fortleth street, a ven istration in 1817, had cost the very considerable ‘, time Leaunot utter those words. Retore I des | be -exrelied the Protestant oMicers. Me’ dis: | penses of the war, If thin had been dove. there | Guttes. || auahter.| the moat popular Secretary of State that ever | Wagon comalning tree men war dtiven t sum of € ne grants of money by Cone i ounce a great man Like Cromwell, | must be | armed the Pr teentiy. aud Ohally he cre guid have been none of the excuses afterward |" Just plance at ireland then, as she stood at | held office In Ireland. (Laughter and applause.) | {inuch Fortiette ctreate Une of the te gress for refurnishing th idential Mansion Ey sure that either you or Tor any of us, would | ated the brother of the Catholic Archbishop al eg for Interfering with Irish trade. Indur- | tiie accession of George 1. and as she remained Where, It may be asked, was the Irish Parlia- | jeard to cay, Lwish that Captain was tt have been regularly made every four years since ; ve acted more wisely of iuore Foucie in | Dubin. the netortous Dick Torbet, a duke. and | tral prosperity would have gone on unchecked. | tnt her chains were broken be the ceveltat the | ment allthis tine? It was discussing the cons A 145, corresponding with the Presidential terms, } have acted 1 rT } he t i and another rejoine I'd like to kill that —-— u . the same circumstances. ‘Tie mass, aswe know | appointed him Viceroy, The next step was to Hut the prospect was blighted, and an opper- | american colonies. A Viceroy resided tn Dub- | dition of the country. But the Irish Parliament |" ‘of & roundsmat with the exception of the commencement a | ft, is the sacred rite of the religion, which ts one | have been the reversal of the land me tunity destroyed that could never return. By t English Earl or Duke: be came | Was managed, too. How it was managed a few Capt. McElwain says that these men probably | Of Mr. Monroe's second term in 1 | Mies and one of the oldest, and in | and the restoration of the Catholic proprietors, | the Articles of Limerick and Galway, the Ca dhe remained there | Words will tell, Half the revenues of Ireland | yeishe to the athe and that hes theore of tie | 20 Appropriation was made. The’ sume nonea, ts 1 OT enuti{ale modes of | Mt was to have been managed quicty by form How were promised the toleration which they was in session. | Were settled permanently on the Crown, and | qc-auft is that these men staumed a fight, soas | granted have been variable, running all the way HT worsnipping our in Siawer, dt'has hors | lan. but the: English revolution came in tie | doped under Charies, More than halt of the rer a keane Crown claimed thedl-position of them with. | 25"er the foundamen near enough “and give | rom &B:KN to £4100, son's tine. the ef rowed one precious jewel y the coron way anies abdicated aud fled to France, and stocracy connected the rebellion were fore. the country | Out being re my use of Commons. em a chance to hit him. . were two grants, ¢ 4.000 and one of Re adversary, for it ba to rest WILLIAM OF ONANGE allowed to retain thelr eatutes was: {by Lords and Justices, usually the | Out of this ary far OF OM Cette | Hiaave inmate Mal ttc an (Gad heen an aae of Fefurnishing the White House.” In i} Flants of conscience in others, and in lear: f England. How was given to King as Instead A i Irish Chancellor, the Speaker of the House of | ture when political matters were mioreanietwere | eomrartabies the Captain, Sergent Coombs, aud Huren's first year pu tray t that it bas parted with but a sir helen a a J gr itoe, Commons, he Archbishop of Armagh, the seesof the fret | six good men in civili. ns’ dress sallied out to | 8% (for those days) of $2,000 was vote a4 which wade fran object of dread to others purse the Bnet were dt barred Irom, Primate, In the Legislature the Church interest find the assailants. In Eleventh avenue, near | Was this all, Appropriations were made those ei dete hareeny Canes Pesta Ing the the war. ‘The English Parliament | was suvercign, ‘The Peers being alinost entirely AS THE IRISH PARLIAMENT Forty-second street, they caught several of the | times for repairs and other expenses in the four i ? “ x f Fae rritated at this conduct on the part ot the | absentees, the Upper House was virtually the | grew more troublesome the money was applied | gang, and gave them in charge of uniformed | Years of Van Buren’s tern, swelling the te f e not Hand, whi was, was held | King, and h wr " DP wang, we of rined o , has been and is the belie of some of the noblest | The ine ot Tinelend als Dinesh lotercreted Late © Was spent in recriminas | house of the Bishops of the Ketablished Church, | less seandalously but more misehievously to the | officers to be taken to the police statien. As | expense of the W House to bfes that ? ene Hee prer Ocne hone $0 Humanity tt the constitution divers ay lantern that Hint theveussilon whieh nenunled Uh The members of the Establishment, though re- | purposes of political corruption. When apeer | they were walking off more of the gang arrived, | Siministration—an unprecedented sum, And ’ but this is not the creed which Cromwell refused | th Fee re ety Tee poate sory | copie tbe aueRMOn WiIEE oneu nied aby the pretended converts from Povery, | ora commoner brought up the question of the | and thinklng thit the oficers not in uniforni When to this war added the discovery by one i porate, Sie, mass ae Cromwell Rew i | hawasathlKingotlroand. They insted nild die—and Anne. Engiana } 4 unted to no more than one-tenth of the | injury done to Irish trade, and obtained a hear- | were with them, and that they were the stron zie of the terrible gold spoons in the Fresiden- ; req bao eyrabol Of w, ayetem which, WHerBTerIy | Be Tae aN tenis: tiiey tastied Louis should die and Ane, England had haben weh | whole population, yet the clergy had in their | ing in either Mouse, the Viceroy would send a | crowd, attempted. to rescue them; but they | Hal ehina closet (though the spoons ware afters ' see lal aeot aweee™ Nariatinn inaia ica pet help them. Louls sent them money and arme, | Hanover. ‘The Irish Catholics declared ver Js the ecclesiastical property of the et message to him, and intimate to him that if be | foung’ more policemen around them than th ward found to be merely plated or gold-washed), i Sword 8 vd Yicles wherein it had ‘net | some of his beat officers, and 4.400 men Bearirale tate isthe L y If, with these advantages it mad: would hold his tongue he might name his con had Gupposed, and more of them were taken in | the popular odium against Van Buren and his { eit was stirring up civil war and the vers | _ The factions that Cromwell had overthrown THY PRETENDEN n is not far to seek, The | tons. ‘The most distinguished champions In ‘all there were nine arrested. Of theso | ¢Xtravagant administration was aroused to a a3 t pasaions which d humanity, only | Were ones tore in possession of the Trish Gov The Cathotl ida tov Hf properly distributed, would have sup- | Iriah rights were rarely inaccessible to Influences | Hugh McVey, William Young, and James Corri- high piteh. = eer ie reigtit ; tpetuating | erament. [t remained for them ty accomplish he Catholle priests and bishops taught their | ported a resident clergyman in every parish in | of this kind, and the country was made to | gan were held in detault of bail, and the others The Whigs came In with a rush on the “Gold t Shas te mola te Meee avart | at once what thelr grandfathers had faiiea ty | peowle that the Stuarts were thelr lawful sove. | the country; but clergymen who were related to | provide out’ of its own resources the | discharged, Young and Corrigin, were yester- Spoon” and Log-Cabin furor, and were at- at usurpations: Tt any a char serene Beare Pen aed “nN ve Irish Protestants insisted (het | some great magnate, or who were fortunate | means of corrupting {ts natural defenders, | day tdentified by Roundsman Clark asthe ones | teked with a severe Mt of economy. Under the e} ey nlanees ik rahtn woe, cer LYOLORTAAY anhilerh thie Valled a bare sguagngmins puch alloral, doctting suontt | gnevat tave interest at the Caatie of Dubin | Many pretended patrlote discuvered that thers | who were Mbting. McVey was held-on charge | bilencs of thls, quly, $000, was voted to re- ; aE Ni ‘tt nt rant Parliament yre- Ee eo + | held sometimes as many was no road to wealth and promotion so sure as | of attempting to rescue # prisoner, furnish the nite House und air not say that what Cromwell did was right or a free p pal Parliament, a fair repre- | nent waa not confined to the Catholics, but pre- Ld. - which was increased to $14,400 wader Polk, The 4 : < on of the rity of the Trish popula. { » the ns AS SIXTVEN DIFFERENT DENEFICES, wn affectation of patriotism. I do not mean to Last night Roundsman Clark was slightly im- hich was increased tc mw . t wrong, but this I know, that If we and our nott vailed among the prelates and clergy of the E ve en _ i" 4 9 site Giferenve In pulntot expenditure between the b fathers had been struggling in adeath wrestle and in the arts of It you will see the thevie | tablished Church, The disloyal feeling among | They pocketed the money, the churches wore | ty that there were no good and honest men at | proved, although still In great danger. fdministrations of Harrison aud tyler.and those foracentury with such a spirit, this T know, | table tendency of the 1 which is call many of the Irish peers and prelates was brought | allowed to fall to ruin, and the congregation Pe lahone Bas clakey were actively enekied |S EEE ry yee of Van Buren and Polk is well thustrated inthe { that we should not hesitate, if th was: | Baer Y Deny ol prominently into botice by a circumstau An | course, became Catholics, The bishops were | Huliding churches ant school howecs while the LOCAL NOMINATIONS. $19,000 of total expenditure on the White House $) in our power, to stop the fountals from Ly rare es hele pean litte thir felt would | attempt had been made upon the Life of the appointed by thet rown. Some of them were | people were making roads and canals, draining -—> Tn the four years of the former, against those waters ek Bittoraees were Home lane Real hale ooun Th ihe Genetehauea. Witee King, ‘and the, English meartigment passed ® TA SxerneaL men, Tbe Rabe Pi Bishop Her tee fF es and working farms: but among the most | Bringing to Light the Names of the Men who | and $5,000 under each of the latter, ' lause.] Had Cromwell's policy towards ireland | aretup Cromwell s fbnantationa tothe rootey | Me nan punlsbment of offences agalnat | ley would, alone, redeem bia, order from, dle; loud-mouthed patriots the Viceroy found thy : are Really to Run. THE ITEMS UNDER EACH ADMINISTRATION. } should not be here addressing you on any ques- Y dispossessed the colonists who had setued | tg Tretund to be repassed by the Irish Parliae | can but quote the account which is given by M te Leeland | hatenved ty har own Oh: Last evening, in the Sixth District, Thirteenth The following table shows the progressive exe } Of difference between ourselves and. tre- | on their soil a completely as they had them- | ment, bul the Irish peers were rash enough to | Dean swift pinta Cheat a Leidat tte reathone had rafeed te coam= | Ward, the National Democracy nominated tor the | penditure in keeping up the establishment of a | He had formed a design for the pacitica- | selves been dispossessed by the Puritans, and | thr ut. ‘This action of theirs came at a| No diame (Swift wrote on the oer Pe S Ren RE RAuen inc yaiped We Dover Assembly John © Rap the President from the beginning of the century tion of that country which would Ee aaa CHRO Tare Ag RUNS AEE MIICE | npculler 7, time, “there was a faction ln Rng: | geondel) Fest and fll their purses out of her credulity! But | The Apollo Hall Assistant Aldermanic Convention | 10 {he present year Wwema Included undet future troubles there iinposstble would let no sinyle alien escape, they and rendy to take advantage ofthe indignation | kaise) iis sald that things of this sort goon in most | nominated Daniel F, Crowley for Asristant Alderman, | Cao admiuletration are what fas by THE ULSTER SETTLERS, ATTAINTFD BY NAMP ocenal y what was called Ireland's Ingratl- | iheger: countries where there are popular governments, a have iy. DI sat: ae PNAATLL EEC URAN Tee oneaaen ' + had been driven out, and all other English | almost ¢ Reeth ache tude. The woollen weaving Industry was so | {akepmeasion of thelr Mahuprics: they are reguiariy | that corruption,more or less of it, fsa necessary | ,2ht Seventh Assembly District Grant Republi Presidential whe he almost every Protestant landowner in ¢ prosperous in Ireland that the English manu- | peoped and. murdered by the bighwayiien, who seize | condition forthe working of free constitutt ntion nominated ( stable, and } and Irish owners who had stood by th try. You may say (hat this was right, and that Se eee ae Tap ittels Giprimane. F 7 the bighwayinen, who seize | con orking of free constitutions. Thomas E include, under any administration, the i Par t th hout the war, wi f b h act mbled for their supremacy, They Ar rob J patents abd go to lrelabd, and are con | If that be ao, then have the destinies pro- ages y i Arla etttan an phe cineetiakcland art England ought to have acquiesced, T say that | then thoughtof Ireland asacolony. You knowhow | secrated Bishops ia tueiretead. (Laughter) nounced sentence aainat free constitutions. | naid latec 1 priations for the President's s i bal been out th ihe war against England. and | war prepared to bac hee words with deeds, | £2#and handled her colonies in the last centu: | mvgeit found in Dublin Caatle an application | Hither liberty must east out corruption or cor- | Bhencer far URETICA OE SOY RIBS » declared ct t : er ared 10. BBS HOE ROnds els Applause, panufacturers Bes f uption will destroy liberty for Mayor. : H their lands were declared ccntiscated. A» be- | When there Ie a queation of thedismemberment | erin hon elt tae tive pareage ot eta ea "* | tothe Viceroy from one of the bishops of the | TPption will destroy liberty, Hy . ne Administrations fore, oh the original settlement of Uister, the | of an empire, the province which aspires to a | Pea tcpen con eparrage oh 2 2am Dane uch | Inet century, who was going to London, fora | Here there was a perfect storm of applause, | janes A Pairs Dufrict Convention nominated | yohn Adame “ et a ee ead td rnc t mating | Sobarate existence must have strength to do tt. | that trade forever. Tho English Parliament, in | separate ship to take his horses and servants | amid which Mr. Froude retired from the plat. | | The Apollo Hall of the Democracy of the Seventh Con Madison ; } possessed any real right in their farms, baving | Kugiand would have been craven had she assent- ae ot teat Bi donlv chance | and carriages from Dublin to Holyhead, and for gressional District noniiiated Thomas J, Creainer Senet t performod honest labor upon them. were pro- | ed-toa xeparacion from her of her own free will, | fegiee trelved tn mubiectinn wa te oe tee, | leave to transport for his own personal: private, | form. The James O'lirien Young Men's, Acsoeration, nomt: | UTR LL tected, subject only to the condition of being | It would have been a death blow to her own lib: | fand poor and helple eee eee Urey | and immediate use 4.000 ounces of silver plate, eI ne ted Jamies O'itrien for May, er for the | tacksoue 13a obedient to the new Government. The noble | erty, [Applause] Nor was Ireland itself without | overwhelmed her woollen trade, aud Y | (Laughter.) East River Pirntes Under Vire-One of them | AM*iih'y Pee Aerie gerald | Vent 1x Js and geutlemen, the men whose trade was | men who would strike @ blow for the English ntaponlvanpiintd ek neg: IN THE WRECK OF THE MISH TRADE Supposed to be Wounded. iy District Tancuauy and Libera | Harriton sid ty ist 4 snd us lords of the soil had maintained | por lavana las ve ; ninuied «lh c A a OW tho linen manufacture escaped. Ulater was al- The canal boat R. F. Silliman, lying at the foot jon nominated “MH. Dorgaa | Taylor and Fillmore, 1949—185¢ PATA 57.206 theinsclves by poor men's industry, these, by | down In lrelut Win honor co | Balt the businessof her unhappy people, Twenty | lowed to retain ite staple indusiny, aud with iba | of North Fighth street, Williamsburah, was boarded by Hon Apaitan pac Gbiariae 1880 } win it one huge aweep, were dispossessed. ‘They were | he despulled, The Ulster Protestants bad sume. | Mousand Protestant workinen left ireland aud | Proabyterian population, Mut walle they work- | thieves about 1 o'clock yesterday morning, who forced ably fi e, Fifteenth f Fieyat ; came to this country or returned to the places | edu: chingly they did not rf rant Republican Amatetat eriianie ¢ . . 08,738 Yen outof Ireland altogether, nor were | thing In them of the old Calvitiatic heroism. | hence They hud comer Many more followed, | edn undinchingly they did not fail to resent. | open ihe forward hold aud atole # quantity of new rope | que aarant key ubieay Avmletant Aiderianie * 184590 the b f b hel Without means of support. if they had | Londonderry was an old town. unwalied and une to the bott their hearts, the Injustice witll “ d i Bas,534 t themselves. Of the four dis: | provisioned: but the Protestant shopkee an7 | but the destruction of the woollen trade was Wie treated, and the dis, | Valued at upward of $40, The noise awoke the captain, | trict, W.S. Karite from the Pleventn, be ‘ land one was stili to be theirs. The | gppreutices held Londonderry azainat the Ca- | HOt, the only cause of thelr departure, | The h they continued to 1 McComb, who hastily dressed hineett, When | from thet itleenth. Stephen pitugnaon fro) $1,149, grvat province of Connaught was assigned to the | tholic ariny with French officers uiitil a roast: | EAmet providing that no. person should reach ; they were disafte deck he saw two men in @ amati boat | Ht Maan from the Lightecuts, and ben) It will be seon that of this million of dollars, Trish gentry as exclusively their own, ‘The ed rat had become @ dainty apd starvation 4 Le i ¥ their nearest. syy rowing away in the direction of New York, The captain | the Twenty frat I bers, more than one-half, or $61%,- Were cut off from the rest of the country. They held at bay with boot sol a garth nivss he ha en, by a bishop, Ln in New England. 1 The G Republican Aasembly ¢ been expended durt he last ele night live in auch way as pleased them best. As | from the guiter. POOL SOLOR Ane: Garaaee md there was no toleration aa in pst of the Country was left to the operation, | tok the ferry to Houston street aud told OMtcer Ginley | nated f Kesembly eA. Whi m been expended during the lest eleven 1, They were not on for en approached and lauded. th for the Eleventh, Fred Tenth, Alonzo B.' ¢ 1 : nn’ adiuinis ric Wellain tue the Twertth, | Quring Mr. Lincoln's adiinist He sort Rite | ceasity of appropriating a considerable sum bes have the act enforced. The Nonconformists | familiar. Amidst anarchy and the paralysis of had been faithful to King Willlam all through | industry, — Irish society had no longer | of the caual boat Joho Clark Curtin, which was lyiog | Charirs Blackel fort i the early and dreary days of the revolutic actions for men of wealth or intel- | Alongside. The officers sorang from their place of cou | the Fourteenth, Capt, C. 1. Farley for the Fufceeath, | yond the estimates to make good a deficiency in They had defended Derry, and had aided in the The hobles and “wentlemen — fived | eealinyat and ran down the wharf, but the rascals sce. | Charles A. Fiarimer for the seveuteeath, Rermard Digs | the furnishing and repairs of the White House, H ultimate triumph of. the royal arms, and this h the Continent. ‘Their lands | Me them coming rowed off, Altvough the omicers Ored | lin for the Eightocuth, William D. Opdyke tor the | And when Mr. Johnson came in there was ane ab hale Fearn Atl tae anIn AEA bene ddfemen gn ekay terme. ice | furore at chen they Kent on thir way. scrote th Jeu mua Wiliaus Haw, Jr, for the Twenty fest | other scandal, hushed up at the times bug he planted down the army whieh had | as the 1 it. Each soldier had his land as- | be do: ohim. If he preferred to retui he was at liberty to sell it to another man, who should take his place, Mat sands of Protestant fa ly reault the work of conquest had over again. Times had char home | England, and not for the better, William lish | troops were not like the Ironsides'.. They were thou- | @ motley compouna of Dutch, English, Germans, nities were thus distribus | and French Huguenots, and they were ill dis- ° ¢ bishops a de 0) 7 men iu the bout wan strongly animadyerted upon by Mr, Thaddeu ted over the land to introduce English industry | elplined and dissolu @ Irish, ¢ ih | the bishops a definite farewell, and took to the lish lord was far away; he asked no qu Bit, a d out after ihe Ariug that he wae shot. trongly anim pon by Mr rddeus and Beata artes e' | olplined and dissolut in eee gerien. on th feR- | plantations to assist in disiueiubering the Brite 3 as long ae the rent Was paid; his Irish wide | The Rout after the ding that he wae shot, Stovghis, wlio was Chalrian of the Committes i THE KEFORMED RELIGION had been drilled by French officers; they wore | Shemplte | C . dleman, holding on a long lease perhaps twenty | from the WrOpn. EDO then srressel| the beDINe OEE Leer ae ineint tee bone PFOUM 1 Well armed and equippeds they were on thele | gglt as geld that the Catholic priests were | or thirty thousand acres, must be an idle gente. | vf, the Jolin Clark Curtis a an accomplice of the Fander pe Con er Apotin tail « bite House after Mr. Lincoln's decease by an as made a reality. ‘The Huzuenots and all | Well armed and eduipped: they wore pn they | teaching disloyalty, and an act was passed for | man too, Catholic born, he was obliged to call | eves = Tention of she Syrecnin Disiries nomiasted Andrews. Tuntaithtil steward, or the pillaging Of Ups whom Catholic despotisin had driven froin thelr rn acid, Gxhiting for everyibing which they held | the expulsion of tie Irish bishops and clergy, | himself Protestant. He was as tuch Protestant airey for the Assembly. The Graat Republican As | watched servants, of something of the kind. 16 homes, were wel omed, and all were encouraged to bring with them their trades and th The priests were all ny Houses | semviy convention nowinated Mr. W as long as th ey and Mr. Simpson for Ans Lid feth District Liberal Fi ed toromain and say maas | gs hewas anything, His esschtial creed war the | Pfairle Fires in Nobraska—M leg for Assctubly | was this that led to the ¥ should live, provided they took | creed of his forefathers, that work was dis- and Barns Destro: ant Alderman. The tM | for refurnishing of 830,000 in. 18 from what it had always been under similar umstances, At ppropriations supplemented roceu 3 publicaus Bominated John D). pations. Preceding settlers had introduced the oath of allegiance, No priests were to be | honorable; sohe sublet his great hoiding to si OMAHA, Oct, The weather has been ox- | Coughlin for the Auembh by $84.00 for furniture and repairs in 1866. Manufactures into freland, They had built TUE WATILE OF THE BOYNE ordained in place of those dying, and none were | or rey men wader hinand they cust |ltrcenete a Hn rue ye Pe The Committee of Seveity last evening approvedthe | Of course the reader will make bis own allows tare ai wand they had began to trade omy he ish rt se uc 9 e | tocome from forelgn parts into the country, 8 ' Liage fecal Mac Bhi BEY OF IAG, G08 prairie e¢ | nominatic of the Hon. Witham F, Havemeyer for | anee for th Atravagant rise in values and t y the Irish did not so much as make a creditable | ty also be ge tals hold work to 1 t ¥ See lal nenicuae hs thw’ alari in En | stands AC Athion® they were aurpried. and | Abe prelates of the Eatabilahment Aattered 9 be gen iitav they must subs Mave Deen unusually frequent and destructive, “The | Major, Noah Dasis for judee erties predict otf atd | cost of labor and commodities site the War fand, and Irish coi had been nipped by | driven from a position which the most moderate | themselyes that in spite of the Articles of Lim- ‘aga . country within an ar from thi ape n Vourst for J y uperior Court | the expense of the past four years we do not ins restriction. ‘These rd and iniquitous laws | care would hayemadeimpresnawie, AtAughrin | eck Bid onside deen -nostly burn Other codorsemnente were deferredto Friduy alght wats | clude the cost of th idential stable, state Cromwell Gut away from the ro. ts. fle saw they fought bravely and well, but they stood THE CATHOLIC RELIGION WOULD DIE THERE WERE HALF A DOZPN OWNE grain dh ampere hy the architect at # for which no justice in starving Ir dustry to fil the | only until the French General b killed | a natural death in Ireland. In a community of | or gua wners, before you came to the pe Yon , Kings County Liberal Nominations, propriation was made by Congres pockets of English manufacturers, He saw too | bya cannon. ball, when the Wnto | trade and prosperity such measures might have | drudge who was to work for all—the peasant, | eg ehnandtued ee heerwce tikck und tate ene ued Last night the Democrats and Liberals of =a that if Ir land was to become ashe desired to | an irretrievable rout, and never rallied | succeeded. In Ireland the act was fulminated | who had to furnish this long scale of privileged | The soldiers at the barracks ucre Were Cut all Inet bight | Kigge county nominated for the Assenibly: Fourtt The Maryland Jockey Club Races, foe her, a full pi and's prosperity, | again, William was ‘unwilling — to press only to be ridiculed, The Catholic. bishops | masters with materials for a life of idleness be- | and to-day Oyhting the flames to preveutthe @ struc: | Diatrict, Jarvis Whitman ; Fifth District, Henry W " Oct. 21.—The races of the Marys thy otlon of aseparate interest and aseparate | them, He was himself tolerant beyond all | could not be discovered, and the Irlah, Judges | fore he binself could touch farthing for the | Hower the barracks, aut have succeeded checking | Slocum; Klynih District, Archibald M, iilea, Sith Baurinons, O¢ i Datlonality ought to come toan end, He abol- | contemporary princes. He knew little of | and mavistrates received. private” instruc: | food of hituself and his children, All these woe } the flames tn that quarter Diatrict, Joh. Jacube land Jockey Club over the Pimlico Course begin to re i p fate 1 t ‘ hod She Tria Partie ents frslend wa Irish history Ho understood ithe nothing | ions that the laws passed were not to be | called gentlemen were living beyond thelr ——— COLMAETAY Aftercoga the Democrats of (he Fourth | morrow, and promise to be of more than ordigary ta porated Into England and made pal of the Irish people. He saw only in them a | enfore ‘The Irish Protestant Parliament folt | means, eating and drinking—eapectally drink~ The G » st0 ‘a e: OE ee ThE MIBtRe Sol UTEGee ier acuuke. | kereat en sually well attended, The entrice forthe od her towns and counties sent thelr r high-spirited but an unfortunate race who had | that no such theasure could be enforced, and at | Ing Laughter] dueling. hunting, © torses | yh’ Granite sem pee OY Ceeeler. [wns anitall the wards to Willunsburghsescept tne | hurdie rave are Lochiet, Mind Tomu, aud Tammany, with tatives to Westminster. ‘Thus, with the been long misgoverned and oppressed, His | its wit's ends and in despair it petitioned for its | racing, borro, ver y and mortgagini Sr ANCH NOT Ey Ue He CAMPAIGN WAS | Thirtecuth aud Nineteenth, aud has heretofore elven 4 | Pocntel as the favorite by three to one over the others, nenta of mischief handoutfed or awept « mind was mainly on his duel with France. He | own dissolution, A commission had been ap- | If the peasant was industrious and tnproved | feirly opened in this city Contght by a large and brlty [large Democratic majurity, “the Ion. Stepica Y. cola: | he Aaah Nist qhe way. with anew and whulesoipe stock of | wax anxious only to quiet Ireland on easy corms, | pointed to consider the terms of an act of union, | his litte bit. # farm, the sharks were down upon | lant toreilight procession, From noon until nightsalt | bet af the Nineteenth Ward was unaniuously noininat: | For the Dixie Stakes a dash of two miles Joe Daniela, energetic Protestants planted into her soll. with | and the aasier terms he allowed the soor 1 Irish Parliament lald itself and its fors | him, raised lus rent, or turned him adrift and | yeniclos of every description came into the eity trom | 84) Air Colnal in Clerk of the City Courtsand wae a | woodhiue, Hxperience, Oaks Mate, Silvnt Friend, Trag ) and free participation in every material | thought the work would be accomplished, | lunes at the feet of England, let is holding at an {inproved rent to some ¢ Ta uinettiene telaging the hardy none of uke Giracitg | selegate to the Balumore Convention, Hike, Wheatiys aud & brother to Pilgriin will atart, Jow HOLL whic England porsessed, Cromwell gave the Trish to respite until they | Lsuppose that inthe history of any country no | else. Under thi eecursed system the Irish peo. | & Res aN ae ne ae Peg aR Ura chy CORAL tae AY as at CROMWELL HAD TUMNED A FRESH LEAF had submitted without condition, William | such act can be found as the refusal of Ireland's | ple rather starve than lived during the whole | State, with their white hate and capes, to take part in Fifty Horses Burued to Death, third rece-mile heate—Tubman, ‘tein, sad Hanes tober braioal Histarecand’ane ned ‘dat | WOuld not allow them to be pressed. and insists | request in Hos, But England had fallen under | of the last century; and then we quarrel with | the dlaplay tn honor of the Farmer of Chappaqua, At? 1 Enicago, Oct A tire broke out at 7:00 this | vor will wart, with Tuliuan-as the favorite, Mon length ona earect a? lndaotny an ered 8) ed upon peace while they were still In acondi- | an Infuence which has had too much weight In | them for being reckless, improvident, and dis- | o'cloek the procession begin to moye from the depot sim u large barn belonging to the West Side | erchiet, Detouiler, and Flork Metves etarc ia the fourth whlebwe aailiee Wty and brosveri(); | tion to stipulate, ‘The war was ended, but it | swaying her policy—the Influence of money—of | contented! [Applause] pquare In command of Col. C, W. Piper, amid the boom st, and | PAce8 tree mile dush~Mousrcbist being the favorite, teak Pipa BD Our A y polit of | ended only in the famous Capitalists and) manufacturers, traders who | Never inthis world has any race of men been OR Oe Ae Oe on West Madison street, anc $s frightened by words, In fiteen. years {1 ARTICLES OF LIMERICK hover look beyond their ledger, and. whose po- | treated with such prolonged ihumanity as the The frat dn Mine apreading with incredi ity, evo destroyed the ehitire struct followe ver? $ terneas 44 Sahithre ny soho q f *) 4 1 , vd Fifty horscs were burhed (o death, ‘The fre exten haitcllewing ie tha ceadlt of THE COUROAm Ona sown titcracwilderase Aue brat i e ance sheet of the succeeding year, To admit | violently by thelr chief, they were plundered | tive works; and «large delgat J oN b to deat} a ing is the result of th Were drained’ and eee fren. Mewes | and reproaches for broken faith et dee | Trotand to union would have been to admit 1 afterward and more seaudalously by forma of | Concord. “ihe Concord Woodehon pers toah sioln ytiree-story gram ee provinces which wey litical foresight looks no further than the bale | Trish peasantry. [Appl wnd-co The Hostous i8¢.] First plundered wal thus treated tiad | and Galway, the root of endies ‘i anted afresh with trees; | seribe those articles and what b Ket and Hor: ores, aod the upper | @ame tn Iitlatelphia yesterday between the Bostona dwel uses Sprang up and substant ane of them TT tand to free trade, aud there they saw ruin stare | law, Except during the short interval that | created quite a rensstion, They had (wo meu dromed | Qos was aleo entirely destroyed, | ang Mutua iad y a. Prang up and substant alfarmn | must ask why thus universaily, again and avain, fee rants cen Puritantam waa a living belief inthe Scotch and | State brison uniform and chained together, one ear | Cie gee inet their furaitue vale ‘ felds were fenced and vlothed with | the rebeliion of Ireland was uccessfuls why 5 rt lish settlers, the do: ‘and horses th tth DY Frying 4 transparency with © Yerkes” upon it, tie other WO) insurance, Insinus. Tet, 2d. Sd. 4h. Stn. 6th, 1th, On, corm: Grading ships came back to the harbors | a race whose courage was and is beyond sue TLELAND WAB DOWN, PiDuIES ROR BESs ne reORIVOR, fae mere | foe eercer” Bal im @ larae Urauaparcacy | 9 Hench inthe cit | Rost Yh Whey Agere Wel a aod the rivers! mouths life and property were | plcion, why inen who tn other felds and under should remain, England refused, and | juition from. tl A tend and leasa holders | Creche Rite Hed ous to vole TOF | Foie and He 4 in the Aina. | MUU O88 pk Male worure and Anish peasant and Mnclisls | Gther standards lave won botl fame and adie Tish Parliament was left to find some other | than the human beings by whose toil they were | thieves" and son of Cinclnuall, Bight or ben barpe Gud ohabies I the ae sinerunder the rule of the Comwellians lived | ration, why such a race when Aghting for thelr sof selfeprotection, What this Irish Par- | Gnabled to exist. Applause.) Horace Greeley. Pr BOABWSEP Bre RULOUE! ean Mr. Ei. Jamea'n Honea poe by ides and each wdded to the ather’s wel- | own Country and in thelr own cause have it should have done was to havo mad: SA aed eget a er 1 soldiers who sy) Mr Ou. James will have a grand testimontal te Hit itl (he read to industry open euvally toatl, | behaved” always #0 unlike themaclvas,. 1 Hestantism ote a reality by giving the Non- SHR PAME FAULT faraney bearing t tamoutth lad by the Por Justice Dusklor's Muceeneer, Marry HiNi's Theatre on Thursday evening, ¢o enable hata ay tiupgh of Cromwell, Tas “au Gusiishivan | have alrendy” indicated. the. answer, “and | contormiats thi hae rights ahd privileges wa | roate with England. (Applause.) ‘Tho Tutlaly | gerry tan foumytvitan ite tt 14k, | yoqtorday the Common Council of Brookiyn | (yess an spree eerrormed on ls ogee, fu aioe eater lum and glory’ in bin as the vreateat | Uist ugain, repeal it-beonuse, the hearts of | enjoyed by the menbots. of the Hatabtished | for thoir own purposcn, had taken poswension of | Btlunestuver siuu trent were lu tue prooseaon aid | appoisted Wallinm M. Maben Justice of the sooond | {9 NE bihee"Stauatlos here wil bes sparring tan Wahowinan and the groatent soldbor Lat our rare | thy masses Uf tha people were notiniho matter, | Chureh, Rut this, would not suit the bishop, | Leland, and hud muds thomiclyes responsible | the duaplay te opuseaed to bare bop We boas over’ wit | have \‘Guurt-tie age duetioe Borloy-secdoe duu war | open ca’all Ugatwolghs Pugiliea, for shunting’ vduced, (Applause) What ls more, coo: 1 The Irieb peasant would #hvus for dardeld wad | The areud vuryos of tue bishops tn | for the goverumept of |t, As thoy bad ty wuawor oeeed ta biaagboster oapirod Forms wubll Olay, LITE eon, nr a ia

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