The Sun (New York) Newspaper, October 24, 1872, Page 1

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j oC a = ———=>= a ers —== = > casa oa — ——— ———————E— FORTIETH YoAR. NEW YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1872. PRICE TWO CENTS re , sit ‘ ‘ " 7 ; o bedectdod | landiords, Mouros were burned and vill Jan tet at Killalta and wore, joined by only a | thistyening of an Irish Cathollo priest, whos | sided. ‘The Hon. Wm. R. Roberta delivered @ q ENG ), | Tar GLa HO nroetnces, ahe was atetpped for bate | [om ital ceurte; and anposie trerp to be yepra ia | plundered. Apiyed,collisiona tok place weakly dful of native irish. The french werg | tay recommend \ sort is thi r 4 ‘was follows 1 i she was fever mo h Courts, ypeala wor tu u Armed collistons too! OF native athe : ly reco 16 ortin that he is | mogt effective specch, and lowed by Mr. IRELAND AND ENGLAND, | iiehsnaiowas nse nore tore the last instance ty un Irish House of Lords, | between the defenders and bodies. of soldiers | obliged to surrender, Wolfe Tine bg lod tal | a Oatholls press and anettobmen coum buen 1 Sk@tenon whe roused up Bis codioees, «2. ca ‘i mi fro. ti * fi pt, muUat be an 2 e%Wrence, bled Pladt helt sin daha ‘The first cage was one in which there was great | who were sent to crush them, Hun- | was notlost 80 long a8 ‘sone aury Onoo | answer to any cha 2 Maas by hin or any othor | highest pitch of enthusiasm an ro drew & contrast MR. JAMES ANINONY FROUD Phen, rhen tt psemed that she was beaten upon | aimcuity. It involved @ large pronerty. ‘The | dreds were killed. United lodges ware | more he annealed to ¢.¢ D.rcovory, aud onve | man who attempteto fis upon the Irislpeople | between the honest men nominated at Omoln- ‘ FOUR ; her knees. [Applause.] judges Were so pearly balanced that the de- | enlisting and drilling throughout the re hot in'y ins Again an expedition was des- | the sins that come from want of hoart, nati and Baltimore, and, the men endorsed by FOURTH LECTURE, But her experience nore had not been thrown | vision was arrived at by the caating yoto of the | whole island, while ship loads of aria wero | paiche to thes north of Ireland and Tone | ‘Ihe speaker said the question they had como | the bread-and-butter Convention in Philadel- - pivay. Sho understood that if ate waste Keep | Lord Chancellor. ‘Che cave was carried on ap- | being sunpiicd by the Pench and armies were | wont with ft, ‘They “fell in with an | to consider temperance, one of tie | phi What Grattan Did for Iretand—The Effect | her ren Hut av Irish noble | everywhere recruited for a glorious revolution | English gq adr mare of them escaped, The std wonupy the aitenc |” Me. Lawrence also spoke at a ratiftoation meets ef the Ame: nd the French Itevalu= 4. who beside his peerage was w clerayinan | of Ireland, Now, ouce more, Lreland had areal | suip was unable to escape mblles or of States. After speaking a | Ingin Germania Hall, on Seventh avenue an Bea Hae tee wiveees or tre | is An engagement fol- | few momenta on the benotita of te ning colonies she must listen to thelr | peal to the louse of Lords plait dd shedid not care to provoke | § domes ar. A boginning was ma: of Derry, actun'ly wrote ty one of the litigants | chance. Englan lod . d a erance, | ‘Twenty-sixth street. The hall was filled with @ Lt tel’ Wolt irr UJ iantee the fh Mad ie and with the repeat at once of pome of the | and promised him intoa war with France, cess of the | lowed nN which Tono personally distinsulshed | and the terrible effects of the vice of drunken- | hearty and enthusiastic auditory who applauded Mi abld le daleidt taste A his | tertetions were Sica from of the wrinte of the 118 Vor® Fon 200 POUNDS! revolutionar” Armes priming 1 ne, and mont | himself by the most heroic Uravery, ‘Lue shin | ness. ‘The effects of rink allen’ ed Fearon aud | Mr. Lawrence's eloduent utterances to the echo, Mr. James Anthony Froude dlivered Gis | irish merchanta and manufactirers. Bo fast as | | Whet was Grattan about, now, that me had | brared to he at lust united with tle CaDenios. "A | ros Tune wie tater lee foe tere eeine HOF | Foul from man everything that would make Litn | Three times three wore given fur the next Mayo to a er wiled house last evening ento be cloarly wrong and tin | emancipated his c uusand of this ae passions in me and the meeting separated, sank een e fourth le Tt makes him, atry? Waa Grattan discuss: | jy ndred th tin Ulster had n With tie Assistance of a friend. | breast. he said, incapable rn Re RN RR NE eee “@ ’ e and now made has ye ton the peasant’s burden, of bow orn inte the pss 7 " ‘ oo His subject was, “Gentian and the Volunteers Fngland now made haste to repeat ity | ing how to Mehton the 1 » bow | oan aworn inte the ant | ly penknife. The wound which he had given | recognising, or obeying, or’ appreciating |REELEY DYING. Bt: Froude said ving once entered tho caroarofre= | to feod the pensant’s starving children’ The | posotutely determined to hartdune with Church | himself was thought at first notto be mortal“ | law. ‘Tho’ best thing. that. God gives to aT eee i ‘ form in very few years sha would have Left | members of the House of Commons were chief. | hud tandiords and English dominion. am abad anatomist,” he said with a nigh, as | man ts to place hin under a very Hb- | heik ~ % oe LADIRa AND GentteME: Thave described to ] the Trish no longer one social or elvil grievance | Iy wngaied in obstructing the Admizisititon, TWO HUNDRED SHOUSAND CANTON the surgeon gave iin hopes that he would’ re- | eral government, wher> the powers consult | Her Dent omentarily Expocted-Cons you the principles of vovernment. which. pre- | to complain of, had it not been for one cause. | snd Gra tan had no longer powor to Jead them ora te ‘ ‘ cover, His hy tuuately had served him | every citizen be r on him the obliga: | sumption and Dropay Developing ‘Them Sioa in fretaxdhduring’the greater part of the | Kasay there was no, practical wrong at that tine | they had discovered that by thelr new position | had bean enrgtied tn. tha other proviness. and | more truly, ite in his coll, Hons of law. ‘Thore have been Governments and nelvea—Dr. Greeley Unnerved. Se te ey We haseeno treht tobe surprised | of which Ireland had. to complain t nid | their power of embarrassing the Government | the towns of Dublin axt Bel ast were « States where the iy was the mere express) ble Fee ea ey ee anal gutinteetory. ‘Phe nates | not have been removed completely ino was increased. | ‘They were engaed In ad~ | the for the cause. Somothihe ought to have 80 ENDED THE IRISH REDELLION ofa despouc tyrant’ will, Such was the Govern. | | All day yesterday and last night Mra, | foiled) Was fevevation; and if tie Irisn could | Years ander the Constitution as it stood at the | justing their demand to the higher pri come at last from such mighty preparations, | of 1708, That rets tthe natural eons | Cent and low elich told doiak urcnis they | Horace Greeley's condition remainod tins made a fevoiction hl they posse ed sufe | Hime of Lord Comwaliiy’s surrender. Ireland, | ® ich their new position could now demand: | Then, if eyet, Irteh nattonan., yught to have on of Grattan's elfurts to establish a freo | Were n » longer At to educate thelr childten-Such | changed, She Is perfectly conscious, Since & ficient 4 Jar prone, MUTHCIeNe tutte . | forsaking the cleay road to the redress of griev= | Cocruption, which was be ore 8 aad | become a fact. y nation, ! a toand such the laws that Pr W@asaday a b AU AI HY: cS ae ces, demanded fegislative isepeudenco, And, | how hecome infamous. ‘The ordinary business | ‘there was, however, from the first visible in 1k back now over the course we have trav. | FR AY” ity ii corm their | O'clock on ‘Tuesday evening she has not had | tue, sufficient patric. lan inthe proper. sence of | Ances, demanded f r, forbade the Catholic priesis to. po: : H Te EE ia a TaN IO Unt Aeoere thee they | ery pinion: sie the substance In grap: | of administration could not be carried on antil | the proc United Irishmen a the ther, ‘the form changes | the reality | duties. ‘That lew was not the reflex of religion, | another of there terruss would ond [tor trey would. the whois | ingat the shadow fgovernment shadows | nemters of Parhament had been rewarded | atrical ture of no promising auguty. Wolf Tone d. Under tho Plantagenets, | ror ct reader uty Weenetiocs Lee Che etry | Another of those ternur ne ownien | Pound end tr ok ndetied | Sou inay say; “Teeland was the best judge of | according to their own estimate of what they | aspired to be another Franklin, vs tho Stuarts, and the Hanoveri¢ns | Of one of the most vile monsters that, « ey ed fx mich alert | > 1 te judi “eery and contd not p this, dae 4 ee me stl ant cy v1 my ' 4 Pete bd hae ‘ pha out that le was w whether poopie | her own diturders, and the best dude vf the | dasery LU a LEC CL Siteeatel tar a ng lecturer here read a florid and rhetorical een Oe the | Peat AN hi) thle Aeth a me was Hilan- | Mrs, Grecley’s ailment hos taken & hew turn, Bro sttinigeniich (9 take revelations cr not, | remedies that would cure them.” Lreply that | Hose cf Cominons held the puracestrings proprnnine for (hé Oiranleation of & secret mieations, att the | beth of iaucland~ Queen be j Consumption i its most terrible form has fully SMuoetallnwae cay crane hee toc BUNIC IRS | og ayy fame e aPNERAMESE ISTHE MEST |] Dublin Caste tecaie Aa Oyen marketstiacy | aoctety In the Interest of the Trish royolution, | siranwer, tho wane demand for political act | wit Ware niie, menor, ah and, American | hein developed, and drovay has set in. Dr. Justice, Miszovertinent. ike curses, always | atau ft pquitesine beet Kind of Wen. to nde | Mere penmons and sinccure omMces: harcnetie 8 | ending with the following appe d Healey, the dare reese tiie iene utes come of Celtic not J Hoek. “MY own | considers tho dropsl {s}mptuins a sure slgu ot s home to hat freland could hot Kind of men to a and peer eexprsed for publicsale, Iris | “wis is there that has enthuslann enficient fo make | ccaillity, the a Fee nerd A isin- | name of Burke, it is true, is @ nan Haine, rowching dissolution: a 1 for bersed ho] it rogti res experience, credit was pledzed for loans te be spent in sup SEtDATinAt MoaTd Gel onchine wil tn eR Mipake VaR Pattoeriee oe ifete: | Butit tea nome that came down to me forseven | ‘The stomach of the sufferer is already filed <i Fedlom, welf-restraint vision. path Bing Trish political morality if that could be ata tiiueclt to make. te wilt live in the hited hopes, ronson whe ee ances: dist | hundred Soak from men who Knew how to | with the fluid which ts gradually encreaching AMENICA Hegeea te tise private iocaroater a waned te Re mapped whtely tiv L no existence to Wer | awear that he wilt redress tt? Who ls there -"ho? {Spun Because \t Wik teow piiy | bleed and die for Irelane, from a father and a | onthe heart and lungs, When either of those j Fora century aud aba hot confer these virtues, Lt isthe rew Wilton! BlupMikies Ausra i Echo might anewer, Whis fH not the stuf of | and the darkest feature of all, the dis. | Mother who were purely Ceitle, and who were ne Dagonies A A, death must necessarily | emigrants bad teal RONDOEUGaES BE AOEI. Exiting) nl Gane ce hie which revaiutions are made. This ts the stud [fonest ‘intormer reaping the ce etae cy | 8 pave as Hngland could mat a them. he sudden, All hope has been given up by tt Jreand to America, ‘The Cromwolliais, th : a : AN ARMY OF PLACEMEN, of which most admirable and t excellent ar- fy Be pervs y Father Burke then spoke family friends, and Mrs, Greeley» death ‘ far the missionaries of ry and the | Hut, ookin any 4 i stonate to uphold the system on which they fat | Attached testis Pee eas eatd Bitar od | trusted thelr own and their country's fortune to | ho aw. would be finposed until the citizen 14 | Me. (irecley fe completely unuerved, bythe ile a WT) condition of the Irish people, was there. b i eal f° i i the custody of a people who were never tried , ; Reformation, wio had t in the | endition of the Irish people, was there batter | tenod ao luxuriously. In vain Grattan thun- | fovee witpat | pole hes, avet pubs | fre cuatody of 8 people rever tried | hinwelf asked to consent to it, Notuing could | ness of his wife. He ls unable to obtain rest, island in the lucid tatersals mans 9 | Was enticely removed?) L wish to speak with | dered. In vain Cusran, with the must tremens | lished, and which contains a further account of | grous’ weakinas. wie the, WEE ene | mar its progress except prosnerity, whieh would | night or day. and with his daughter, and M had eto America | Sdmiration LA boi HEM Ll. Me | having sen to the surface of politle | English’ eret. hat. [rel Ve nis country? Ireland. when the American |" After speaking for some time on the influence | Scores of anxious friends, numerous letters of ‘i tan one of the most brilliant orators of his own La ts tigtish ence, and therefore that Ireland | war broke out, lay under a code of laws and an peaking for some time on th p f ‘They had brought with them aconsclousness of | PUEPOSE, one of the moat honest of men. In the ganized majority which doomed them to | the Catholics. He looks at France and Amer. | &4PP¥ people to agek for a remedy, Froude. “'This learned and honorable gent are received with the same spirit which dictates Durning wrong, and they waited cnly for an op- joked intotiyetertes which the righthand | Helplessness, the free Ireland which they wel- | jca, and the Bope burned in emgy in Paris, A | ohitty'ge Teor the rebeltion In Amertea had | man,” he said, “has come over here to preach | them. portunity to pay England bome for her treat- | Qi¥e), td ghey Peale | Comed with So much enthusiasm assisted only | thousand arguments crowd him upon which | opened England's eyes, he restrictions on | that’ the irish have been badly treated, | Mr. and Mra. Johnson are assiduous in thetr } gociety Logan to show symptoms of the uneasy | trivieand treachery. 1 found trisnines whose | Was forthe trish Parliament to look out for op- | of cwo of threo of his friends who approve the | pauvolice, were fast disappearing. Ire did not know how to govern themselves, and it | their bereaved friends from the numerous call~ ich were working within her. Bouth | trixue and treachery 1 found Hrlshinen whose | jy Lies to distress the Government-not for | purpose and promise to stand by hint, Fimedies wore ausconted for Any atone heey | as A mercy to them that somebody took them | ers, many of whom. with mistaken kindvess | and North there were risings of the peasantry. | caved in transactions which show them to have | ®2Y tseful purpose of to obtain any useful end, did Efnd these papers but inthe | remedies were praceptiy appliod. The pevile nhand, No matter how many arguments Mr, | insist upon seeing either Mr. or Mrs. Greeley. The behave riitable te theme they | been khaves and scoundrels, but Pnever found | jubsiwply tigetoutilows of money for wen | English State paper office? The programne of ding her, and. the troubled and threaten LOR ee a OS RD reeyy at Brat mn ditable to them, Mbaves and ners, Sometimes wernment resisted, : c " reatening | can people that their Irish brethren hn POL DL CONVEN: tore down *. they houghed the cattle | $t#ln or shadow of stain if ite resistance was successful it was possible THE UNITED IRISHMEN, ndition of the world, would ave compelled Hehlly cerveds the stro THE APOLLO HALL CONVENTION, gest Would be to point at the Irish drunkards and say “There they are.” As long as he tells of the divisions between Red for which they had been expelled from their ON THE REPUTATION OF MI. GRATTAN only by a further use of the same dishonorable | of which Tread a part, was some time afterward | England to yield to every just demand of Ire- holdings, but to human life there was Httle In- | Tsay nothing of the temptations to which ho | Influence. printed: but long before it, was printed. almost land, even had she been inclined, which she was District A® ury or none, They petition ly to be al- | wasexposed, There yere hohonore with which | | Such was Treland in the palmy days before the | before the tak was dry with which It was writ. | Hot to pursue another course. But the condi: | ugh and O'Neill, of Mccarthy, More in the torney, Co Aldermen Made-& wed to keep thelr litte farms on termanot | England would not Lge decor ated hi. There | Union, when the Constitution. of 1:8? was aliv- | ten, it in the hands of the lish Govern= main hae as not gyi [ee sine South, and O'Donnell Inthe North; as long as Strong and ¢ ndidate for (ity Jude. Wholly ruinous to them; and the Enclish Viee- | was no price so high tat she would not have | {ig reality. Such was Ireland when the aston. | ment, Notahalfdozen men were taken Into | Would have lor their county, he rakes up old English li of fables written by At 8 o'clock last nigut the Democratia id Barry, who never ittelling Reform County Convention met in Apollo Hell dof demanding a separate nationality, they | 4 W u shman named ¢ opened hismouth with: Foss allowed that never had people @ better | paid to have silenced hin or subsidized him, | ished eyes of Europe saw above the smoke of | counsel at the outset, but of this half dozen one | stead Justification for revolt, Allow me tu say that in | He was ane of those perfectly disinterested | the burning Mu-tile rive the portent of the | at least must have been a traitor, nthe Arst | had labore iny opinion they had a great many more wrongs | men who do not feel templations of this kind, | French Kevolution. Already there had been a | dawn of the conspiracy, some one of Tone's REFORM THEIR NOME LEGISLATION, Mr. Froude brings arguments from such sources | to make thelr nominations for county officers. to complain of ‘They passed by him and over him without give | demand for Parliamentary roform in. fret ds had revealed both him and it. | pae condition of the prasant was not amelio- | the'American people will feel nore kindly toward | ay, {inmense crowd thronged the a " THAN AMERICA HAD ing himeven the pain toturn his back upon | The House of Commons as it stood was buts of the soclety of United Irishmen, | rated, nor was the tenant protected fiom evics | Ireland, Ho nightas well go to whistling jigs | AP ; wed the ay proaches, j rtodherown | ‘hem. In every step of his life Grat- | vain mockery, It consisted at this thine of (is) professed to regard as the | tion. Political puwer rested With a Parliament | to amilestone. He cannot prejudice America | and inside the building, where none but dele» at the time when she rose and as tndepen 8. [Applause.) Lord who was Viceroy in Ireland, ina d Home Government, drew an inc tan was governed simply — and entirely | thembers, 04 of them returned for counties, and | holiest of causes, betrayed each other. [need for borough towns, Of the %) seats about | not speak of \ ne. Whatever we may were fairly earned, ‘The reat were the privats | think of Wolfe T re Is ho more aspot great lords, bishops, and com- | bis honor than there is upon that of Grattan, th re the ( finence was for t Ireland. But were T Mr. Froude, in- | gates were admitted with tickets, the room was of wasting my vreath in ® vain efurt to | nacved, Nearly all the prominent reformers of he history of a great nation, T would shman, put hi ie on | the Democratic party were present. among of landlords, who exercised ov As omnipotent a control as be tion was in force. Political | by want he conceived to be the interests of his niry. Whether he was as wise as he was uj right is . the | proverty of th in beside a ee t 1 ni i: . " », e eta unken of the landlords’ and middlemen’s tyranny “ iInoners. Protestants only could vo! rf Ny ; ale. ‘The representatives in Parliament placed | get 4 drun| H s f sand middlemen’ oy tb year, ever 4 . Protes- | through all of that famous history. Ido not | 3"; OD tele. ore the platform, twist him around, and say," Look | whom were notice y O'Brien, O'Dono' j CF8 ave Iuearfecea to Etiay careae’, aims ier was withdrawn from ireland. | tants only could be elected. Tartioniarhohlemen | know which one of half a dozen men frat be- | Sy Certain value on th rus Inch Commons Wiig there he is.” : Hosen. Grats plead Colle fr go ! tutional Goverhinent could only act by Pars | The people demanded arms fe iF OWn Pro OWNED TEN AND TWELVE BOROUGHS, traved Wolf Tone ; [know that one did. Other | were in the and as the Commons Father Burke concluded his lecture by an elo- anand bt oe NES ety THe ORs h ac law, and t nt law. unto lately, | teetion, and the request was one which could | ang returned twenty or thirty members. Other | Walters tn history can be identided with fatal | heid the p ment had t quent appeal, upon considerations of domestic | James Oliver, ex-Alderman John Moore, Edward t that time was landlords: law. The yearbefoce | Hot be refused. Corps of voluntecrs were formed | es Were openiy colds About LE Aw being the | detincthess, and this damning evidence of | bow to thelr willl Suinen ten chet duty and religicus obligations; to pledge al.tin. | N. Laffey, John Chesterfleld O'Brien, Larry Dube the ten Was eet floating in Boston har th all over the country. In a few months there BPuAL TUNE Ae THAN eee ad tends Ort treachery would alone have convinced me of | insurrection, and hoped to f id the delivery of | ence from drink, and at th jose administered ore, and mang others a Ulster grandees had sent out here a contingent | Were forty or fifty t nd of them enroll ta children are of fine clothes, ‘The Govern. | (he 6plire imposatb lity of asuccessful combina. | their country in arms, But wherever tw the pledge to many in the audience. Mr. Charles Bri vention to erendecs had sent A pontingent | and there was no other military force in the | 4 children are of fing hes: tue Govern. forthe separation of Ireland fron England | threo whore gathered togethorrcne wae ae iA Mie aula order, when Mr. cls Mi road the fee Gf cxasporated emigrants unusually numerous. | tang. Air, Grattan tock (he opportunity of de- Pag rarals nesrenes for, and would buy @ ver formed out of Irish material. The | bea traitor. The House of Coiminons sold the THE HARLEM COURT HOUSE. port of the Committee of Conference, appointed The Ulster linen manufactures had been devel- nalf dozen seats with the money, Mr. Grattan, | conspiracy went on. ‘The Goverament could ; BH 2 to At the last meeting of the Convention. Amid anding a free constitution for his. vid one an~ untry. | | atry, and the United Irishmen oped by the skill and industry of the nate rd Charlemont, the Duke of Leinster, and the | not meddle with it till it entangled iteclf Lert Rea breathless silenc d the followin i p ro fara’ fed to Ghee Bout ONT Inteers turned politicians and rapped thelr Rice Cel its HEEL U eee Le 2 e shapitators betrayed each other, and | a ] preathless silence he read the following nomlkae } province Th or Wartacatden, Land had risen | hands on the butts of their muskets. Ireland outer n cnt wputcd: rar caliente wile Olan IN OVELT ACTS OF TREASON, some were delivered to the prison | Where the Eime and I pled desde] ED ‘ i Greatly in'value, Capital made in tra dbeen | bad | peon a) proince foo dongs | ireland | tov promote Parliamentary reform; but what | Every step was watched ; every tmportant reso- K Seaifold, others were che recipients Some of the Werkmen—A Curious Pay- | | For Justice of the Supreme Court—The Hon. Henry 4 Sunk inthe soil. An educated and rising uid now ire ee a rattan | the reform was to be they could never | lution was reported. Nowand then come one | 9{ Government bounty and liberal pensions, Roll which Newedy bas Rxpisined, Mtr Justice of the Superior Conrt—The How. cliford : peasantry had converted b: din ain into | Ming absolute Indep: Peer EOS agreo among themselves. ‘The —diMculty | made salip— wrote, perhaps, atreasonable letter | Lhe quarrels of Presbyterians and Catholics, The Senate C ttee yesterday after. Hi vie biphezinas } corn and flax Gelds, ‘The noble lords to whom | did i tibet Amer! ore was the position of the Catholics, Generaily | to the French Directory, or otherwise commit- | Whom Woll ‘one thought he had reconciled ne hate Committee yesterday after- ity Judge—The Hon, Josiah Sutherland, (Loud a large part of this helunged (as it is called). but | that Treland should remain united with Engl in Europe, when Catholics came in contact with | ted bimwelf. Papers were seized, individuals | forever, were renewed with @ bitterness more on continued their examination into the al- ed cheerlog.), i i who had never, perhaps, so much as cast their | by the tle of a common sovereign but he Ine | the apirlt of reform, it was hot aa frieuds, but as | arrested and tried, None knew whence the in- | intense than before. The country was 1* AT iced Harlem Court House frauds, The Hon. Attorney—The Hon, William ©, Whitney. Syren on the sutlace of thelr property, claimed eee eee up aren itute Mintuay, enemies. In Ireland they were in the position | formation came ; but it came nevertheless, Mr. | Worse condition than before Grattan’s oe « ss | iCheers.| 4 i] that the Increased value did not belong to the clish Parliamentsthe English Ministry, Of petitioners for popular iberty. The old | Jackson, a clergyman, was tried, convicted. and | stitution gave it self-government, Erastus C, Benedict was absent. James Rogers | ‘For Curcner—Dr, Adolf Kessler. (Cheers.) | tenants who had created it, but to themselves, elish law c ue She shoul ny have, her | w nies who represented the rebellion of 168% | would gave been hanged; but he took polson, | “8 hastening to | mnarcny, and testified as follows The Hon. Samuel G. Courtney then sprang t who had allowed it to be created. As leases fell | Om Legislature and her own Cabinet. | Above | Knew not what to make of them in so novel a | and felldown dead in the dock when brought | Whom lay the fault of her misfortun Lam a lime dealer, and have reveral teams which Tet | his feet and moved the adoption of the report in they demanded enormous Shes before they Pen Gun oes Meas oprysencers situation, There was ap ugly score of grievancs P to fecclve sentence, Hamilton Rowan | May clamor against England for suppressing the | our'to thore requiriag trit Lee, L hed eerasion rouse | of the Committee of Conference. He euloglzed would renew them, or ren’s which could not | Such laws, and no other, oe the representatives scations, spoliations, and oppressive laws | escaped to America, He deserted the atmos. | rebellion; butifinsurgents are not strong enough | iny teame in March aud April, 1811, for Johu scallou in | the nominees in a speech of ten minutes in possibly be paid. They served of her own people made for her, ‘any kinds that divided Catholics and Prot- | phere of Irish conspiracy and meddied no more | tO overthrow @ governient, the goverument | carting lumber from the Manhattanville wharf and | length. ‘The motion was seconded by Mr. Henry : fe ENGLAND HAD HAD ENOUGH ante in Ireland. The Protestants held nine. | with it. Wolfe Tone followed, bringing his wite | Must and will crush the insurgents, Do you | from the cars ot the Hudson Kiver Haliroad, LE. Clinton ins long specoh, aiter which the j beady Stila cM Rg ea tdci eth ust then of attempting to coerce unwil- h de which once had belonged to | and children. ‘Tone, however, was leas prudent | funvase that Irish:nen would have done betiter | rersivcteasnicre fie janore, wer Gare Oe, toi | nominations were again read,and as the question ; Families who had been fifty or one hundred ting dependencies, English statesmen did ‘The Catholic majority admitted | or more heroic. He went back over the At- | had England given up her titular sovereian- | Pie gh dviack walnut, Gia tecc ree Poe. ht tee. Comes BORE a | sears upon the soil. chiedy Protestants, were | not conceal from themselves the danger Lise, it was feared, might revive the | lantie to Paris to urge the Directory to invade ay a ie casy enough to «i leave Mr. John T, Paliner testified—I performed some ma- | With a very red head and a very large black i {'thed adrift. Thovsands of neo. women, ad | of the experimont that was to. be tried, | hopes and schemes of the Parliament of James | Ireland, The people, he said, were willing to | [Feland alone, but those nations only ‘deserve | son work and was timekceper on the Harlem Court | moustache jumped up among the audience and } ‘hiltieen were made homeless and bouseless,and | It was not. without having considered | LU. 80 the matter stood uncertain when rise, and Ith spark of help from | Independence which have strength enough and raf tha Geta ca the Cours Mamas Tene bet | CR ttt for Goce Coe ece reies a Gere Tabbed fer no other word can be used | the question from a point ot view little dreamed THB FRENCH REVOLUTION BROKE OUT. abroad to Kindle. the pile. Lord Haward Fl: | poe ce ahietory of Leeland that che epeer | sesod maetps ced sasons recrivealDe per ‘sare t | CRUsmuIN sor Corones.” The Chair deciered the ' © haye be of by patriots, that the: a e cont s oFy O! : . * :@ Hoe ae eee ee a ee ae the saperinrent eheul recetne s | _ For the frst year or two of French liberty alt | Fora We"'nad ‘an interview with the Froneh | sary qualities are not to be found in her, and | received 6 peing heard, at which another volce sang oul, pent Neom to New tngland. In-the | trialy They gave way. The constitution of tet | Were th ecstacies. As the sky darkened and the | Minister of War on the frontier of Switzeriand. | that to her political independence has been and | | ‘The pay roll was here produced upon which | “Put him ot put him out.” ; « MAGS TATE as CROBLETT TIGE Wiha | wane eatantininds and amid true meaning of ‘thelr tremendous transactions | A'ijttle bird ‘carried. the matter. to” Dowining | Will be i Palmer is credited with receiving $4 per day. | ‘Tien amid cries of question, order, and the “i ts Phere one | nastionie alantanor heribe pecaine apparent. weak spirite were dismayed oF | atreet,, Lady Rdward, his wife, had a hove at A CURSE, Withess was asked how it sras that upon the | sound of the Chairman's gavel, the friend « } y. at le t res wit the | and a volley of fifty th eds and estab- | Hamburg which was the rendezvous of the Irish But wheth people be dependent or inde- | Pay Poll he is credited with $4 while be was only | Mr, Churchill stood up on his ‘seat and said $ insti tively drew to | conspirators engaged with, the. Ti Rave aright tojueticn to a juet | receiving $2.50, Witness did not know the why | T'd like to see some on put’ Tete ae toni tO | conspirators engaged with the | y have aright to justice, to a just ee ¥ d like to see some one put me out J was declared a natic ory. Une | pend sentatives of his © ors in the War of | Irela ndependence: Esto perpetua! exciaiined Grattat food the | der Lady Kd ward's roof the most trusted friend | governinent that will apportion to each man’ his | OF Wherefore. The question was then put and carried, with Nor, as I told you in my frat lecture, were the | the passionate peroration of the finest speech declared war against H@ | she had was cuiling like asnake upon the hearth. | share in the world’s good things that he ae- Testimony continued—Stephen Cartwright was on | only one dissenting voice. A sonorous and Barber bbe exiles ChE AOl® Aicelilanine aehie that was ever heard in the Parllament house on | Jobing. The | relatic of England, es- serves by his honesty and industry. ‘his e the pay rolle, He was only cuployed for & few weeks | lonely "No" came from Mr. Churehill’s friend, Irth Protestantism contriated to the Ameri. | College Green, Ifthe curtain could then have | becially toward Roman Cathoica, became im- Eebhet) tall Rites t Eta) people have @ right to. ask rendence 1s we Court House. Subscquentiy he beeame a mem | at wlilch everybody laughed, aud all was seren Gan chilner Whe: wat wha the: feckouliia oF Gens |/qalen if trend Gad frome shat momant: wit mediately changed. Hitherto disposed to pro There came one midnight to the houre of | aright to those strong enou ies Sout | Bejot the Fire Department: Jona Donohan wae on'y | again, Fico wtih the a oncontormiats of | drawn among her own mister we knew no | tect the Catholics by the execution of penal | Lord Dow nslire, in London a ten mufted in 4 | gond government fe the rh The Irish | Credited on the pay Me ie AL ae fewas cae | A, committee of five was then appointed to England and lreland. ‘The entire Protestant | more of her fortunes, we should have taken | (admit Shans: 40; TUL HANIA, Lee the Loree, Sina Hecedbe ha wan afraid to. tka have mis the substance in grasping the | ployed on Heary W. Genet's house at izéth street and | Notify the nominees of their selection for the population left in the tsland, except the clergy | leave of her at that mo with the bellef that admitting them to full rights under the | was disguised bevause he was afraid ho might | shadow have failed to take measures to | Fifth avenue when bot on the Court House, Isaac | offices specified, and to request their attends Heitish Constitution. Now they thought with | be tracked and murdered. ite had socreta to | Secure redress off the Church's help they could rely upon Ireland | tell of conseguence, and was willing to tell ‘or legialatic heir o' 1 sh Par inthe cause of order: and Pitt and Dundas | them. He sald be had discovercd that the | (ieee gimlation of thelrown. The Trish Par- and Burke took up ‘the of Catholle | approaching rebellion was to end in the estab- | world had ever seen, Catholics and Protestants emancipation, On of inciples an | lishment of a Catholic tyranny and persecution | Were tearing each other te p) Mud winilitare alliance with the Cath was sought | and perhaps the destruction of the Protestants, | Zovernment was heeded tochock the fact Helny nee i th wae a" fiddler, His nate aieo appears on the | ance before the Convention, During the absence . ae Ebave,no ree jection of his being employed | of the committee another committee of ten the witness, purporting to be for material furs | jgoid Friday evening, Nov. 1, sad nished on the Court House, Some of these goods Mr. Clinton and the other members of the of the Established Church and the landed | she had shaken off her mourning weeds, and gentry, saw thatthe American cause was their | that her regeneration was at last completo. His- wh and, with thelr whole hearts, did what lay | tory dispels the allusion, How. could. It. in them to further the American s: 3. There | otherwise? So little hope bad England that {eno occasion for me to say anything of the re- | good would come of this rash adventure that at fons which now exist between the Irish | one time in the English Cabinet thoughts were oppressions, in clamor Rt bs SA TOAOAN enoloctie ial Phe tnt Gi lie Teouane at the sanctum of another party who were said, therefore, that his conscience chy. Cromwel ace! cent were proven to be delivered at Mr. Genet's house. | og oon retu Y Catholics and the American people the gen- | seriously entertained of taking Lreland at her | ty ieave their mark upon the history of the coun: | would hot allow him to jotn with it (Laughter) | ARAFehY. Cromwell had aeen it century ands | “''eytimony continued ROM MRes abo arare LATER EDT Lemont in their distress, the affectionate and | Constitution was refused, they would th an Trelan the Lreland oF rising | He told what he knew. His inforn jon tallied The Stuarts had brought back what Cromweil Louls Baker aid not rene any service upon the | cheered, and then each delivered a short ad= which, ib the Old Country yarristers, physicians, poets, men of letters, | with what the vernment had already learned. had destroyed. Confusion followed a Court House, Lnever heard of hin, Tnever beard of | dress on the unexpected honor donethem, I® grateful hope wit civil rsity students, had taken fire like all | They saw, therefore, that they Philip H. Joues, why | have since le ed drew pay as : r y on both aldea ls BREAK PROM ENGLAND ALTOGETHER, and univ Hight trust wod | war, and the Irish Parliament had they look to America. So deep n je at at t etitioned on | Emily H Jones, whe I have Wwerned drew pay M* | was particularly noticed that Judge Suthe that fe now that [am e and to it What If England had told them to Itshe | other, bleh aoplrited. ardent men. when the be- | use him. At Mr. Pitt's desire he went | its knees for admission under the act Incorpor- | ceilsr was being excavated. ‘I neret enw'e sate denver, | land, the hom'nee for City Judge, received the sist on the bonds, now forgotten, which or retain no control over the legislature of noe aE Hue TRC OLUEIOT Bras seetaes o prom: to Hanourg. @ lived in Lady Edward's | ating England and Scotland into a Union, Eng- | ed while L waetheres No saud wae ever seat tothe | Most tremendous applause, and was the recip= existed between ireland, and no control over the military forces he advert e millennium, and they had | house, He saw and H s. | Court House, Tnever saw auy black walnut umterde | tent of three times three, when a gentleman } unsuspected | Jand might have prescribed her own condit voled less rapidly than. their Seni The | with every one who came there, Ir ortant the an it orth bi while t etain ely a SI | lound d Dy acce 4 livered at the Court How ‘he sand which was exca ealled for it fe 4 Si . ol AMBNICA AND THE IKISH PROTESTANTS Hiuarteoversienty c What it che had biden | agcendaney of the Jacoblns had failed to dese | correspondence passed through his hands. He | tat “narrow caunelt: Careratiod md Hug: | ated trom the celiarz was brought to isd nircet' wich | herseeer © oF SoeSutherland, the old war Whatever opinion may now be entertained | the million Protestants and the two million Ho- | thw Ndrh had been Hepublicank Trace tan ene | Kane Wufurmmation which enabled Pitt to inter- | tana declined the irish Parliament's humble | sas %t the time undeF contract for Teeksctcenert) | Mt, Bixby then read a further report, recome | here on these. Iriat silons, there was a time | man Catholics, sities they were so anxious te be | gest Phoy retained the traditions of tie Long | aplendidly paid while he was employed: gmt | betition. At this later period the Irish Parlia- | Wheelbarrows ins hardware store on Third avenue and | Mending the following gentlemen for hominae seien the. [rh stants Were hearer ty [ Independent. to take thelr independence then Th] hn kdl aed etal, he was employed. and | ment was considered the high road to fortune. | Tad street, A portion of these were delivered at the | tion for Aldermen : Parliament, and the success of the revoluti America had quickened the ashes of the old | from the Crown fires. timer nwhil Ysomne penal Thad b han and settle their own differences? It is quite n +d shail | certain that this alternative was seriously con- 4. Lord Rodney had dastroyed the America than the Cat Of mine has been 1 prove what I say, lies, As this atute awed ivan at. It cost and for money ouly was a House, while others Weat to Mr. Genet's house, men who Were At Work on Mr. Genel's house re ived their pay at the Court House, I do not know It cost money to get into Parl money to stay thers Seitto be parted with, ‘The members of that Willtat Joye, questions t allow me to read | templat CALVINISM WAS DYING to you an address from tho leading Catholics of | French tleet in the West Indies; America was Ineclous of the treason which | Parliament were not golug to surrender the Abou O0 harreds Of coment, that were said (o enaing Van Ser aick, # Fitzgera Ireland tg the Irish Secretary, Sir John Bie | strong. enough to strangle. the. wer. | @wWay. and the spirit of it had passed from reli- waa undermining them, the Irish leaderasrorked | pavilegen without mibstantialrensonae in ple be aelivered Ne 4 uid Mot see ab) barrels Joseph A. Monheiuer, ‘Frederick Germad. Quiere, ine momentous year 175, Itia sig pente that “came to “seek. her in ‘her | gion into politics, and animosity against Catho. {| With wnabating eagerions. TC nwilling to pre: | fic, hefore thelr constituents: they wept andpros | geiuehls MAY barrels Aug. vs, or of | Mr. William C. Barrett moved the adoption of } by Lora F’ nd many others of the Cathol cradle, but too. young to go out in search Nes was altered to resentment against landlords, | Cipitate a collision while there was a chance of | tested that if Irelaid’s hationality should be exe rele of line. the report, and Mr, Burton N. Harriwn se: ’ nobility, and: as sou Will see, It purports to repre- | adventures. {n the other hernisphere, No other | With rebellion blazing throughout Europe, the | escape, the Government was content to watch | tinguished, they would sigh forth their last a0 Twas foreman for Mr.Seal- | the motion, which was carried nous! sent the feeliug of the Whole Catholic commuu- | power would have been able to interferes and a | idea that Catholicism could be any longer dan. | their movements, prepared if necessary tostrike | hreath over ¥ lone begia Mon the Court Siouse, | after which the Convention adioured tossed ! nity. few years’ experience of “home rule’ under | Rerous to liberty was laughed at asa dream. | &t & moment's notice. they showed most My duties were to waten over the men, to see that they | the nation of the athena idermnn tor eeek vida such conditions might do more, it was thought, | And some of the more ardent spirits at Belfast | *ingular daring, those men,and In some respects THE DEATA-RED OF THEIR COUNTILY., used bo tobacco, and went into no liquor stores during | future {lines eee or Some 4 Mr. Froude hore read the address In which | than any other force or lesson to tiuke tretand | and Dublin thought the tle hind come when | singular skill ‘The English figet waa the great | | In private they acted Iike more genaibte men, | Morhate Mouts. Jokm GAnDeH! was w Loy. and. was : ee ; or c other signers proclain dd Shelbourne was Home Minis roland might. tise out. of. the ashes, | Obstacle to the coming over of the French. A | and gave England to understand tuat there was nployed on the Court House for only a few weeks Per Lord Fingal and the r signers proclain gigrd Shelbourne was Home atinuster | Ireland | miei Protestants mien ei | number of United frishmen enlisted. in the | away of Diinuing them to tenis thee hat Tnever signed cheater ike Gaia ef earaiene FEMARKADLE DIVORCE SIZ, themselves his Majesty's affectionate, loyal, of Portland. The Duke of Portland, | bands’ and an effort to establish | fleet as seamen and petty officers, and brought | been s Hing thelr con fences fc hteen years, | Judge Waterbury—Then you did not receive any of nei dutiful Roman Catholic subjects, and expr tying certain conditions which he | n Irish republic. 1 need only mention to sou | about and thoy ware willing to sell thelr consent tothe | Wemsteriay sa nave ‘| A Roman Catholic Husband and Wite Sine Chale GERARMABAT Ct CHACO DRnksan Taralitan pexact from the trish Parliament in ta panies of the two Emmets, of Wolfe Tone, WR FAMOUS MUTINY OF THR Noni Measure which was to terminate their inde- | | Withers I didnot. I would have been glad to i ink: fer Divare’: BG % new pyaibion, We bus in & most private, wilton, of Rowan, of Arthur O'Conne Wolf Tone in Paris gained the confidence of | Pendent existence. They resolved to be | WA. eiding (ey ee aus 3 th Y: ordi » » of the American colonies, and their readiness ty | 18 y poaon fev fe thus ¥ and Lord Edward Fitzgerald. They were patriots | Carnot and Hecho. The tater oe Meso cf | once more incorporated ‘with. England. Witness was sake if he knew the names of An extraordinary suit for divorce was Aid * the best of Kings” in suppressing it, and in nanan! true patriot erous, brave, enthusiastic, | with a powerful e 6, They descended to accept a share in the condi- | Certain persons who were on the pay roll, There | up in the Superior Court yesterday, before ¥ The refasa) of the Triah Parliament to consent would & powerful fleet and 16.000 men, taking F were several which he fuiled to recognize. H putting down bis enemies “of what denomina- | re suchan udiation ct analerdesguaanwoun war | ANA noble. They were ‘possested of a par: | Tone with him, When they arrived in’ Bantry | tons which gave England wealth and strength, | Porson ine oy by the name cf donn W. | Judge Sedgwick; extraordinary in this sense, tion soever, in any part of the world where they | [ahi jour divretiun ¢ lu thro# we the Governinent | sobate conviction that political independ. | bay a gale of wind prevented their immediate elle lis nat tine the or patitical adtan. | Palmer, as inspector; did not know that Louis | that both husband and wife are Catholics, an@ ‘ her | sessed not one sinele social or political advan- ir brethren inthe sister isl i rave thin to that fate Which thelr folly and | ence once achieved, all other blessings would | landing Froude then continued as fol- | treachery havedeserved. It gland was able to concen: rat Nehouid be thelr course | follow, They were under no illusions as | forces ina few daya to hold Noche ineheck if he | tage over th Haker Was employed as perintendent; neither ough Judge Sedgwic Ay divorce ‘ Maker was employed although Judg lewick may divorce the may be." M nd ex- after us huevery endeavor (o brite them tom bene a sir re "They di ; tthe loge of being more heav : was any one known as ; lows MEE Candin an i? theeemce iene amet | to their real end. | They did got stor | had tried to experiment: butthere was no news | cept the privilege of being more heavily taxed, "| Ghd he ft iploved as assistant Inspector, | Parties, the Church to which they belong will should hesiiate ite ty order the yacht and vole.ve | Short like Gratt vey meant separation from | of the insurrection of the people, and the at- sring in any form a separate Legia, | Witness further testiied that he never kept any | not recognize the decree, It was siated in th This remarkable address might tempt English | fein to be the victiine of their awh sasauitye as Teuoud | Bogland and nothing else, As a step toward | tempt of Hoche failed. The Irish organization | dream of restoring in any form a separate Dhaene parce Gener tae) ne Hever MObk apy, en * slated inthe adininistrators loss is than Me, Gladstone | ace it would te tsclees to attempt ty eucree thu, aud | that, they demanded parliamentary reform, and | was still dangerous as ever, As soonas It was | lature in Ireland,T recommend the et penters Bee OY Raasona ase c8F> | court by Mr. Sheehan, counsel for the husband, to reconsider their policy toward the Irish | that the country on euch terms would not be worth | $0 far were Willing to sit with the Whig club: | relieved of all alarm from abroad, England ve what was said by Chancellor Litegibbons Tho Comm adjourned to meet to-mor- | that he had never heard of a similar suit brought Catholics. Eighty vears of penal laws had pro. | possessing. but they did not conceal that, reform once ob- | tured. to attack ft, and issued. orders for arate Trish Partiament is a contri; | ae to the attention of any Court before in New ‘ mate devotion to "the best of IF THE ENGLISH CABINET tntned, it waa to he the wedge which waste | s general disarming of the Irish people. ‘The | Vance, to generate, national discontent, s ; —_ Vork.or inthe United States. The. parties to years have followed, years of | had been untroubled with moral seruples, Edo | read the (wo countries asunder, ‘They resolved | Irish leaders now felt that they could wait no | perpetuate disaffection. The Government m OUR NEXE MAYOR, the suit, Patrick and Bridget Coleman, are live a nvessions, and justice to Ire- | not doubt that to have left rotund While | themselves Into the body of “United frishinen,” | longer, ‘They held a meeting to arrange thelr | ely on Parliament for resources to maintain its ing in the Iarve tenement hon-e, 10 Oak street Lib aud weare called tyrants aid oppressors | Ih this way to herself would have slustlifed the | With central lodges in Usifast and at the capital. | plamaf action, "They were, of cous power, dhe Ministry fe dependent on the mAalorie silo Rastacation af ihe Neniluation || he commisint ar tee mites tor atvarteesh an Irish problem for all thine,” No ‘ther | and subordinate branches scattered over the | (the police aurrounded their, houses n Parliament, and the favorsof the crown, in- ( Nomiuaties | ony, and tody of their two ehildren Reaiuatun OR IRIATUTCRREae | RMR Y UOUa Ata enamel vine la Pre" | kingdom, and every true Irishinan was invited | then. Lord ard Fitzgerald was, ab stoad of being bestowed as areward for meritorl- A. R. Lawrence for Mazor-The Cane | Cain bee ohn tates gael two children, Tint ant aneaule hase ob theses ns of the | Lextant and Cathetic would have t to | to enrol his name. His hiding place was revealed. Ho resisted ar- CUS PADIS Rabvis a are given te en pare didate's Speech at Clinton Garden, 1 and inhuman treatment. She stated in te jarties intreland to Ameren and oy tho | Sent out ‘helrown battle in thelr own way. |” THK GENIUS OF REVOLUTION reat, and wna wounded in the struggle, and died | (eee ne ee rluahing ogrontene tkeens | last evening Clinton Garden, on Clinton | her examation ih detal the pumeras. in eof thie sadrese # the Cath ies Tw lay ibey EA hat wane tha onUcatinne otc the ad cought tho Trish harp and wont ite hands inder” inferior ‘leaders, ‘They “had ng | ow cor Tuptic non th ok ne’e tn laters, Buch and Broome streets, was jammed with enthusi- | 4nces. of hla PES raly toward | id thas ne Vileroy to Lord North y arms; the ene an vd ee EG Serine. Ane passionate heart of the | iroper direction, and acted ber nu f pinion o! al lor Fitzgibbons, Jo citizens who ssembled to D (ay, 1872-- 1 tis : wi'iton ht precisely tne same time: ine Trish | Min cnt mt contoritlsty and Kone totad | neaple chanted responsive to the mocking | {here as impulse “moved “then.” ‘They | formed in twenty yours’ experience of tretands | Ste citizens who had assembled to ratify the | and in May Iwi rhe had in arrested, and hie fouse of Commons was composed almost ene | je eee dance m thelr common. anen promise of unearthly melod Hetween the | surprised a w detached — posts, and | Separate Parliament, and [say to the union | nomination for Mayor by the Liberal Republi- ] Wa* sent to Blackwell's Island, the fret time for tirely of the landed gentry, members of the fad ? nm wry | Government and the United frishmen, sued to | oy Ay lew com rye eliwh y | what Grattan sald to the independent constitu- | cans and Democrats of M b w. | #8 months and the last time forone month, Established Church, of all classes of Irish Prot- | Would have forced them into union. I. for my | hy both, and alternately lost to olther, the | Gigi! heces & few companies of English aol | eee a ee tua bs tr, Abraham Re Lawes | both of with hi periods he served out Aiants, there least likely to syinpathise with | Mat’ time, the numerical superiority of the | quilolis weuttys Dishops, aud the clergy saw | Ulster the insurrection assumed atoncethechar. | Mr. P-oude retired amid applause. The Sux | Tense: An Immense crowd was gathered in the | He: tn hiadefence: told the story of hie mar ecrng’ had! succeeded tn earrsinng. wit vere | Celtie Catholics would have availed them little, | for ever with tele theaters cand cee | Actor Mich Long sighted peoplehad fromthe rst | reporter questioned Mr. Froude in relation to | Steet, Afeworks fizzed and cracked, and pane | edo. th St. Andrew's Catch, ti [hatte streets y had succeeded in carrying. with ve and their probable fate would eliher have been 1 maT. ~ 1 seen to be inevitable he union of the cwe 4 a nons boomed at Intervals, half past T o'clock | py Path ele a : great ditlculty as he confessed. and with the cover their full privileges as citizens; but | & , the name of the Irishinan who ls charged by the y Father Curran: thai Uy after thelr mars extermination of complete subjugation, creeds revealed itself as. an iinpossible. chimera. wan who is charged by the | ¢y ting wae called to ord 1 Mr. Rich ; ! fall of purchacad MAldAty. a bate vole con <termination or whether they were tu receive theiremancipaion ve i , ie meeting was calle order, and Mr. Richard | riage he became jealous of his wife by reason ; Be The answer of the patriots was not satiate i ‘ y oman and tho war at once beeams a war of religion, | historian with having betrayed the secrets of | pe . 4 DE ihe (eneHUVikite at Ureoar hunt nce y es of Portiand was owed At his threa iy y Ob easy LO Benige Mey¥. | of roving bands of rebels; Protestant: churches ad ng Of resolutions endorsing poral Repub | Hey its ie i: tut na fair trial mow ta OUAReYA TINE al |] mis elve their probable sentiments, Some A CATHOLIO CRUSADE, jake it public.” spirited address, as follows “| quarretled a great deal; she was violent and i ou will have now to cbserve the value of | of them—the bishops eapecially—were doubly | Once more tt evident that, however falr _ WELLOWCITIZRNeT L have been selected to receive | grossly Insulting to hin, and irritated. him be: H ivre in | Soliceovornnienl 19 6 countey Hewes a8 | shocked at the French excesses, and shuddered | thotr promises cm paper of @ united Ireland. t FATHER BURKE AFTER FROUDE, | \}e,Democratic and Liberal Republican nomination tor | Yond human endurance, Ho gave that as a reise ! A hath \ vith atthe thought of an alliance with the assassins | insurrection meant hothing else—to the end of ayor of thiselty, This choice hus been made, noton | son for having struck her; but he thinks thet Hi direct authority, but, to hold the empire tox | Mf fhe thought of an alllace with the asi inaurrection _pothing else to the i - account of miyeelf, but inrecoguition Of the gicat aud | the Jolswas pit tyson torn Kiiressed 1 ther, it was necessary for her to have. so! ) if verume ould do | tine could " else by stragule « r 's Meo . » | glorious principles which | how hold and alway. he np vin, | lity gh g | Berner. Ik way neonesary for bar to Nara sn thein justice, they wer » inclined to stand | the Celts to recover the soil and of the priests t Kuthusiaatic Reception- He Claimsto be | glorious prikelpice whieh | iow hold a seats | by his wife and her friends to get rid of iain eee ee eee re et Berend iegclation wick | Uy the Government, It became clear, however, | recover Catholic ascendency, L need not repeat of Pure Cottle Stock—Piain 1. & Democratic Mayor. L elain to be the only Demo: There were several other witnesses on both out the noure «f benedc Hon which | that tie hotter spirits had visions which thers | the. story_of Wexford, the. battle of, Vinezat Concerning Mr. Froude, Cratic and Liberal Repuuliean candidate for Mayor | sides, who substantiated the facts as given You will seo that Lines ad earaiaenincd (nth yan tro. | Nas Re hope that Mr. Pitt would rewlize for | ii or the burning ofthe barn of Seullabowue. | ‘The Rink at Newark was crowded tact | POM ,tere Mie’ publleg “Tsay Demveratie cand | above i not misstated the twos land had obt 1 judicia ndonce. 1e.) went Horrible thingy ere done and will be done when regen fiberal epublica. for the org fon that Judge Sedgwick reserved his decision for twe Hons ofthe inhabitants of Leland at the oens | liberty and independence were wordranytilig | a cuucilation had made progress, Catholics had | moha of undisciplined men get power: “Hut | evenlog with an audience numbering fully dve | ae pur me tt uomnicdtion hae alco voitioated for tren | weeks an ing of the Revolutionary war. (Applause how et inat the Helds would begin to sinties tive | Alt’ dy recovered thy ia Vis. | armed mobs never suceced [In arcomplishing | thousand persons to receive the Rev, Father | {tend aud pruioueed cheer Democratic. oF y Srorl sine Sl Tera wanid tis BRobRA te OnE Le They had ll put uy conered 8 , riait b0. itin | more than miseh fis thoy ottack ih cher’ | Burke, who it was expected would reply to y Ravlation that has voc put me forward docs not support hid Pine tat Mi i) Hear fer oe nae Min QENTL 1. buck, and Justice, long deposed, would asst n he King objected, butit is impos | mous numbers, ‘Twelve or fifteen thousand Seni) the regular Democratic nominations for President aid | At430 o'clock yesterday afternoon whi aha Aicatican Seililenthenie the ‘ahalonic? nea Busta: | # dep d, would assume tlble ta vad the private correspondence of Mr, | would fall upon’ a few hundred imilitia, ‘The the dast lecture of Mr, Froude on tre. | Vieo Pres ub Dil te boliey be ready to throw in Ten wore putting up an iron work Whe wew Dutide Ireland Catholic and Protestant, ‘ike Pu erercarnine fist ang An Dundas at that bine witi sited gs | came on howiing aud driving hords of madden: | lind’s history, Tho audience was enthustastle | simi perps tune Traut, corruption, and shot aon, | (6g at Third avenue and Twenty-third 1, the toa Samo question was at stake on both aides uf the | 1. hag wlamoared for pulitical freedom vere po | Rrsee. thelr claims in a peaceful mi the | ranks, Battles are not won by such Ly thelr applause when the orator entered. "Fe low! titan’ sit want ter ty in Voth | old gave way precipitating en lato an excayateg Utilize her go-called dependencies for h 1 | Slut wove Inclined to lighten the chains of the | Government mast and would have given way. | ‘Tho Trish fought bravely—sometines magni. | Mt J.J. O'irlen, the President of the New / (i@sumight and on wilh you ean de, cid foraubevect | ACeAtAh, whe taily Gadutod about the bead ceed have he benefit; and the struggle when decided in one | Peasant, Dean Swift sary somewhere that th pnd Sage ove ydisability they claimed would ¢ ntly but bravery amounted to nothing & Jorsey Temperance Union, called the vast assem | adn ai Eration of the elty'e ature, | You have mad Hiaright tow tractared . Uatriek Rudder uf af country was decided inall, Twill not weary you | gceatest benefactor to his country is the man | bave been at once removed. hopelena slaughter. In these fights there wa wo to order and heid out a shamrock brought | Chved and cheated by politenl charlatans lon first avenie, received ioternel iniurice, and Michee with dataite of the familar ators Avthemertie | who ukes two ears of cory grow were buL one BUT THE SPLIT OF 104 WAS Awane | NY guarter given an either sido tram ‘Tipperary by Father Hurke to presont to | wie tas ustberd Must aun trevee Act ats | Maun, PEaue ak tea cero elrfed, wan cat Bae With America grewat tense, England » | grew deform. Guatian's reformadtett Ireland as | again, It was made painfully clear that « Penal sedtney Gee han @ society, Whon the speaker presented tie | aidgt Whe le sac leadces have uninihated me tothe | The tir two mene were Hut slightly. lajired: Tie over enemies tuck Ady Of her dimeulties, | barren as they found It. ‘The Constitution of | Matt uf thot athe eee Pian ane shy they toy bev 1 society en the speaker presented the | omee. You want a ian who wile the wort idimicn were taken to Hetleve Hes Teta er au then Holland: she arpa, Pai hal ety wuarane RMDL AMES, | settee of puch a tpint further cncersions wate | qn yd Whey pursetered. tex etuld Meehan: | (Helen then introduced the ev. Father Doane, | RUMELPERAAE Sanam AMR WRC OF THs | awa pays More for Naturalization, Site Pe pa th hei ial UO | Ae apes Pabland daccetian ti, Byeewitiens | pecessarily dj and t wradually ‘> . ove . Mire ta dc | Chancellor of the Newark Div us the Chair. | him, and not an octogenarian. wi Meee onion’ It In not generally known that under the fr Strongest powers ep, Ate Home, bY He | TO rer dithinone year of thut averapomarable | iflshdiscontent pawed under the direction of | Haan if ’had In the South “Hue when, thy | Manof the evening, ‘The latter, 1 a, bref | were torined th HHLGiHH | iiactibg ai LORMRRDER HR ALE Mee strongest powers in Europe, and fighting | 10 IT), within one sear of that ever-memorable | the Itepublicans, Buch were theirulteoften years | (Ran ft had in the fouth. Hut when, tle | een introduced Father Hurke, who, began | aud fret because more’ money had to he aent on tie | Blection oreignebOrn males, desiring wacUrollee sperately: to ivalntaln her hold of this | tflumph efliberty—hberty which had been held up by | banner was in the feld again, the alliance ae. | ls address, anid a storm of applause FY hon witha onuianian of yiion, Mah when ite | thon, are required to tuke ott thelr etticeuahlp palate fant on continent i, : nijust at aro; weet sip, warenurers, live gn the spoil like wasne Grattan pi dawn of » now orm of euce, con: | at an end--the fantastic Vielon faded, Th jug that a gentleman had came to Ame Roh Bass HOP t pomtnae fen days tn advance of the election tn orter t0 vote, an ne policy Which had plunge chiuig the peuple’ vloud, The fariuers are vuln ent, and pros Pho Constitution tied tie | 3 ; , are aaa: Kngland to tell What he knew about Irel Hlowin the expectation of being riccted, wid L cond. | QU, NO More daye remain ther for choi (9 her into her didi ultios, 1am proud Hed | the pessantey starving. and obliged tu veil their provi i ie Saw with waking eyes that Ireland was still tl f nthe expectation of heiig dt conf: | quality themerives teas Co nate ft for thon Ushinar’ tu the very bottom offing hearteat tite | slona toeatioty the landlord, whohinown!”calscardeaun | Haute of the Governnient. ‘hey saw) the rel same treland wie thety fathers had ienowi, |G i ava patho putly wow to gh Liberal Repaiticate auld Democrats | deened: aiimisahie for adopted cidiecns. wh have togk courage with which she bore herself in that tre- | tre beset by sarving manufacturers anger ton remedies | HOrcheck it. In th 1 he Vistor Lodges of the United Irtalinen be meri’ mil % “i Certain ; i Help naturalization pavers to procure copics (ran We th wht ¢ are beact by starving manufacturers angrr forremedies | HOF check It Tn the provinces, in connec “ 10 Ludg the via S. | the American’ people that in tracthg that his: | certain Court to-day oF to-tns mendous conflict. (Applause) She could not | against approaching famine, The sivas of thn city | with the United Irishmen, there were hodi fame the Orange Lodges, and the right arm of | tony even withall ihe preiudico of his race and | Immense applause followed these remarks, lg ti De aquer America, but she could still give ace | are doubled, and orfiered to hold titiaselves in ready | defenders formed—defendera of the peasantry ; (| af his Protestant religion, although he may be | and after a fewuther speeches the moeting ad: Twelve Horses Burned (o Death. f ighbs i kngland's strength, A few montha saw an en re int of those helghbors of hers who thought to | peas to massacre the people already perisiing by | There were combinations against. landlords: able to bring home to Ireland aud the Irish peo: | Journed. . : ay quilthelr reckoning with her wh fainin of the rebellion, but It was not extinguichod (ill CHIcAGo, Oot, 3.— A fire broke out Inst eveme y oping with her when her hands G tyranny formed at tirst, with the announced | {it hy febel Je many an impulsive and ill-considered and |” Mr. Lawrence also attended a very large and | a Lira pout, tled. Her Hodneys could still shatter the | In the midst of this came a signal illustration | intention of getting the potty gardens at a lowe : foolish act, although he may convict us of | spirited ratification meeting at the junction of | (Min 4 large barn on Twruty ninth strvet belonging to wots of France. Her Kliota could still make | of the value of the udiclal system. ‘There | rent than the seven culneas an acre at that tine COST IRELAND FIFTY THOUSAND Ly want of ‘head, yet 1 defy hin or any | Canal streot and East Broadway, Over 5,00) per- nmon aud spre, nfires of th 4 i Mural fi delta pari the Gonting batteries that thought to | was nothing for which Grattan had fought | demanded. When they failed In this their in | | ‘The French made two more efforts to save | other man that speaks of the Irish race to prove | sons assembled in aplto of tho rain. "A large Bi with thet contents, “Tiwclse ROCee Ler from Gibraltar, ipped though she | harder, Thore were po more anneals to courte of | tention was to make (yeland uncomfortable for | their unhappy ally, dgain # few French soldiore | ayalust thew a waut of heart, Your reception | platiorm was ereyted aud Judge Shandley pre ty deaih, Loss, 61500, Go lupuremge,

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