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THE SUN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1872. wh A fevers ; ; N OM ) | undoing tho Gorman Confederation. = FROUDE'S LAST LECTURE, Haneef the wopeelatmed) mintveral supa: i acy, and to be the monarch of the world, Was Kogland to leave the Irish prelates and clergy in SENT CONDITION OF TRE- | @ position to wield power and Influence while . ; et appiense.) Tamis the | Br. |. sehootey, Cot. PR . y , sonra. temev ak eppeteecrtn | omuateandrrttaane er eatrd | Rect Mare, ret eee} um oe | We re ota LIFE IN THE METROPOLIS, diagraceful. A scuffle in a cabbage garden! | made profitable was more ragry. lature, untees wholesale bribery te trted again, | sages rather curious, point on MF. tard teen A hand of Irish police sufficed to put an end | evicted came to America at te own cos these ‘results will follow if the lature 18 a werting that he was I the pay lorious uprising which was to restore CORSING THO TYRANNY more than a cipher. 1. at loas most earnestly FES ee incre ie ebjet was torevive | DAS EA HERE AND THERE DY THD ; eannot however, th SUE PR rik roclaiming themselves subjects of Rer most | the ancient glories of Ireland, (Applause, hope that the rash and dangerous experimon| the religions opink SUN'S REPORTERS, regain old LS Er befell iclont enemy? se - per. | Eallure tna ban the fat ofthe ttl, nt hover [Pak hed ott era eter late semel ore will paver, be ere Vlas peribtes tare te Lt Fite “ipeticreashed, “Who, kngwe set eam ' 5 0 pele 8 us ¢ done? or can anything wi A 9 = Daniel O'Connoll an Over-Estimated Man— inna end the massgere oF taint Hartholamen, Wanners had waved : tens of thousands Of ladies | f0F thelr own protection. with codes of laws of | Gone? T micht. say tnuch. Lwill content. my- | Frvmde te notin ehe pay of the Kadient party bey =n npg hd t the Pi in Ferry: Gladstone kas Doue More for Lretand than | that the priests were proscribed, and the penal | and gentlemen had melted into patriotic fervor | thelr own, en! ony Se hel, only Wepens Fag? Of at present with alittle. = SS Trae ae re How the le Ratiway has Lost Thou OConneti O'Concel Keaponsible for the | hive attempted to be onforced, Toleration came | on the songs of their national poeta, tn whien | could command, tho and the ‘tH LANDLORDS HAVE COME DOWN, THE TRIAL OW CHARITY LITTS. Ferry Tickets. The Erle Railway Company has discovered that one of its ferries, the Pa vonia, has been systematt- Greut Potato Famine-Proude's Farewell, | back with Charles the Second, and toleration was followed by civil war. Lconalder that nig- Mr. Froude lectured list evening on the | find is more to blame for her treatment of Non. “Unton and the Ireland of To-day." Before | Conformists than for her attempt. to supprans Unton and the Ireland of To-day.” Dotore | fomaniam. After the pattie of Atahrin the bowinning his lecture he sald: religious question woutd have bean rattled, had 6 pl bludgeon. Crime Is erie, ‘The ain of murder they joined their voices over thelr planos ; and remains what it was when the first ourse wae | too iAiyonewlo knows the fenhditnot venture to | laid upon it by "the Almighty; but ‘I Fepeat | widely dierent from what they have now come | Testimony Showing that her Tasband had do. the whole movament waa hollow, When | What T sald at the beginning, although | to mean. The great noble might be lord of a. reatened Suicide—T! a wed. ‘aally robbed by some of tne employess to seb an em then whatthey would doit thoy otthe | Men require to be governed in thie world | county,but his duties were too weary for hia | MonTicELto, N. Y., Ovt, 2.—The exami | fi’ nut tne amount stolen cannot be eetieuteds ee ower no one could give a reasonable anawel Must be governed riahtenusly fe they'are to | Investinentok money would neerr have gocurred | AAtion of witnesses ta the Litts murder tttal is | gong time it hae been known that fraudalent tickets from times when they, meant something 4 tbe yovern ney would Hey {wish to correct a slixht inaccuracy which oc. | Hot Lngland Ued the handa of the Frotestant | The delusion wan trom the lips outward. It | Lost Th Rel er gacount. Where the lawn are | to hie Chomists tellus thet heasand motion | completed, and the counsel will presont thelr | were a eireutation, but In what quantities of by weer quired, any at bt He Vhoweh the erroe | gentry. ‘They would have made complete wor raperey cog ed ac Foam | apd polleonan's prighteous the gullt of the crime is ah by | are the samo force, oxhibiting Itself in diferent | arguments tothe Court and jury to-day, Tho | they were issued, and in what manner they were dis eit ts as well to ger it | Of It. and driven every priest out of Ireland. taht. tn quoting from the f ‘trecht, the Triah Catholtes on the Constitution spoke of the 4 ; k ; peal the auclety which provokes It. ‘The landlords | forms, Gutof heat you can gencfite motion ER A Ppormiaes Mruaket, Mould that that vison would perieh | would have had their handa thed for thom | Motion you van generate Into. its equivalent defence established by two witnesses that Wm. | porcd of, tas puzzled the company. During the past oF torn dable ag allies of England’ c re ete, ot | of het ’ Ol a foes | td srent times mado arations | Week @ clue has been obtained by which the guilty { Porcration. “The fact is the words occur neat to death on account of his | upon their escutehe Rome fell giosoudy | (he revival of the chron misfortune | of 8 Je tha, same in social | to the effect that he was inclined to take hisown | PI in paid that a boy Wa found salting the ferry tleket ' the besinuing.. 1 ia a alight tiatter, but It is Wien It became anderstood thatthe | under the Amerie: others served tovally | (rMiaare every monauro designed. for tts | higher classes asthey aro ented irony cintee | Mfo—the last time about three years ago—and | jMNeh are tiie cents cach, at Atty conta « huadrod: j better to be exact about these things, (Ap. thoes owed no polliieal allegiance to a petty | in colonies where they have learned that Kiye- | to thwart every fon, tbaritish, pe fe tntotiledon, tadons ind ahereue. chasing Jo | dectooures linplisated ‘Biven ferre asia ‘and & | | pause foreln aoverelun, they berame citizonsusmuch | laud has & shore inemury for treasuun, Cape | benodt political agitation, ‘The Irish people | —the intelligent, Induxtrtous, and energotic | that he was in the habit of purchasing arsenic | dire Toeuren implicated seven ferry ein loyaew, aad & Twili now procoed with the last lecturo of the | as any other mombers of the community, When | plause.] Freee ee ere alten atl sabes hanige | sepia ce be powertul, they must be content, a | and feeding tt to his horses, ‘Those witnesses | (Mihir yinestivatton ser caled the Tat iat ay rere } course to be delivered In this hall. Those who | the French revolution broke out, the Aret desire THA OFTER RVPAC OF SuB PAUTIR the Republic, helte vag with other Inatitt Ney Care LO Hee He pent eee ee eee | were Daniel Barnhart and John Peters, Alfred | What the actual rum te of which the company hes berg 4 would estimate worrectly the political or eco- | of England's statesmen was tone thels own treland might be ap brosperous | they care to live in splendid luzury theif polit! defrauded In this way cannot be defnicely agcertals fomleal condition of acy province or coustey . . Woe more substantial. ‘The English Parl ne erica, ‘The creed of Wolfe ‘Tone | cal importance will pass from them. Power Is | Clayton also swearing that he had bought | fac‘cne ot the director esta. tos cue representative i Ought not. fn ny opinion, to fix thele attention | 72 PLACE TH® CATHOLICS ON THE SAME FOOTING | — the Iandlords’ parliament was revived, that the remedy for Tre- upon respect. We respect those Who | arsenic once for the deceased, in the month of | “lt ie a iest tiny thonand dollars; more. than wi Chetly on ihe foro: of the constitutionor the | Mother subjects, and but for the revolution of | that the Irish land. should land's ills was to break the © connection | labor and live for a noble object. Strong | prone once for the dee tore, Hortonville, | i tueatlh Oita, £9, the Feperier’s inquiry, “Could svernitug body, but should look both at the | 8 Cathoti 6 |} poor; that not a shilling of tent should go | with England. 1 do pot blame the Fenians | aristocracy {4 in ite habits always Spartan A Ap deat h ‘it ante ners heh tt (enfegtd i fois ayatern Lg trend ia operncien no, lonk suc as fuicesial and opiitual vondilion of the muse of | GEthe conditions of the act of union. It tailed | thenceforward Into the landlord's pocket intil | any morethan I blame Tone simply for desirinie fApplanse.) Mmes have changed | aristncracies | Wich was tog eet ae dos ceccured The Dee, | tana Beoortattadice “er erica cute of fakoeees tie inhabitants Phe question ts whether a | tbe then achieved, and years after it was care | every human stomach Inthe district should at | to see Ireland free. Tn all discontented nations | have not changed. ‘they have yet to learn that bona: Litts had urcheaed oF procured tis CHUB. | eavetessubes su leet! Higa d 1 u pie Wwhether cach indie | Heal with « struccie by Daniel O'Connell, Butit | least be supplied with food. A noor Inw was | there isa sacred rlaht of revolution, provided | true rank dons notlie in fine houses, retinues of | |, The aspect of the care Is not encouraging to | Cmremn at la aay ie te not. known we the good which is his share, and | O'Connell had never been born, circumstances | passed which in some parts of freland amounted | they are str ng enough to achieve it; butan | servants, and cham ne and grouse Reena th heard of a dies or in other words, | Whether any will be. The porkons accrsed of being tach cliizen enjoy personal liberty, Just hiwa | Would have necessited that ect of Justice. And | at that time to confiscation, The days of idleness | armed revolt, if unsuccessful, is merinie. Tam | If these are the objects of auch high pe upon the hazard of @ die’ or jn other iy | Connected with (he iaud have heen discharged, and (16 | tiene tiake possible eather material wealth or | [1880 With nearly all great social” aud political [of quires and aquireens are over, Spend- | not one of those who make tleht of ‘politi- | they must content themselves to forfeit w upon the amount.of sympathy she has obtained | Eiperiutcndent has teen superseded vy Mr. ‘Thowas | if oF ‘atid t tae Of & reform A grent: man becomes great be- | thrifts who had encumbered thelr estates with | cal offences, excusing @ futile rebellion as | portunity to meddle in the busy working among the jury. She seemed to be in the great- | Brown. { ertal prosperity, and the advantage of a gov- & Vt h f Prof. Stoment of the people over adesperiem im that | Cause hé discovers the tendency the se, | mortgages were ruined. Delicate ladies, brought | the result of miszuided enthusiasm. It is last | world, MA recclaneaant: cincthed Hae chal ated cesta { ihe jrdenent of oWecman is wipresed to be | and Has the skill ond cournce to. phice | up inluaury, were turied out to battle in the | expedient. justifiable only when all other means TE QuEETION OF LAND nel evidence, and clutched her chalet aid Frida! Retls and Shot Gans. tind Havlato he Mased hy gelf interest. Above | Himself at the head of it; ‘The Catholics w ranks (of alvalitood, 1 was staying a year be: | have failed to obtain Justice. and when the | aon not concernigeland alone; it concernaboth | a eeeotraauNely. tn the moning she laughed | on chursday night about slzty men and bo | ull qucations of forms of governiuent lice the | Chdowed with the rights of citizens, and O'Con- | fore the famine on a great estate in roland. males : a8 | ielandy equal eand Seatlond even | The te rot, ee i rounded the house of Moses Elller, the 72-year-old i ells ne fore 0 04 ° ain wished to glow me ehboring sure that intellect and con- | tslands equally England and 8c c 1) ‘The testimony of I Seeley was . babi ctta ibaa thirst frumprottelimous toleration: truvthe revaite ‘ ney Ane lent Hin ths perks Twohundtel ae well as Imaginative dreaminess, are | More than fretand, for freland has now boocs | yexterday with breathless interest. by widower who married Miss Joste Lyman few days ago, | hiGUT OR WRONG. thon when falls achiowed, opened one grievous | eat down toaluncheon, I found nesttomyselfa | won over to the Inaungent aide. Then. and not | laws than ittitaln, But even in ireland the iaw | jury. and assembled multitude: He swore that | and with tin pane, fh horns, and lunze inepired by Kin, et men eir minds onan ong tobe [| sore," i Velie emancipation | Seotchiman who had come over to make a fo Hen, is it perinitted: t » the infernal | isnot what it ought to be. ‘Tho tenant must | le made all te tests usual and necessary to de- he mor olleal racket eve Whit sodbeason or Hastade lt HOS MER TOCTT RIS Cert Raut RAAT Nia Taleaat we ite wan bitterly des | tunes Tremember the Wwelnklos of his mouth | apleics ofire ail taughter fur the usccrran | be compensated when he ts evicted, but stilt he | tect ursenie, and found small quantities of that | set OP Oa Uicios exes tua piceslhab dag sider dee? } manding Justice, Justive will not long be delayed, | celved. Emancipation came, but he remained | as he sal “There you see the ance Independence: A w that | may be evicted. In these days, when dee - | drug in the duodenum, ¢ ‘able in the in- a iy the Government. perslat, In a false, cour the same down-trodden belie that the world | of the co: Amo over wie there an Insurrectionary Iree | este command such enormous. pric when | teatines, and three-qui ® grain inthe | snd 6% Thea they weat to the howe of Mr. Henry hen, and not til thon. le it me wo attack ths | knows, In fact his condition waa worse, He now | gentlemen, thero ero certat ly not two but be d which could plead so litte justification as | Your American millionaires are eoming over | liver of the de nding there evidence ntly marricd, and dupticated the din stitution. A. rovelition undertaken wich | had avote.and waa placed politically betweenthe | fleve they came. into the world for. ne other se last moveneuts of to our litte Island to ecmpete for mountala | of the poison in the remains examined, he did d'Mrs Stiller. Mr. W the definite object of removing a wrong Kd | hammer and theanvil.. Mia landlord aatd If he | purpose than to ride in fox hunts, shout snipe ; ranges In Seotland and raise the prices of them | not open the jar containing the stomach, or the wi ' pnd wien the Wrong whic occasioned it in tes | did not vote as his landlord wirhed he would be | and lose theis money tn horae races. ‘They: will Lett tallana’ to fabtlous suma—at stich atime as this it will | one. in. which —t kidneys and st wate late | druused ; but rovomuons generally begin with | turned The priest told: bim that HW he | find come day (hat that was not the purpose for | The rebellion of 1844 cotlavmed ing | pay well toaweup a barony clear of tts inhabl- | were — senled. ‘the amount “of arsenic | Wins pa runt Dend in anarchy. the power is | filed to vole avcording to sacerdotal Inetruce | which they were aentintothe world at alle’ My | Did Fenianigm succeed ony better? | tanta, even 1 it do cost an enormous | found in all the organs analyzed was, tw i} ade ttouiy i | transl the king Wythe nobles: trom | tons he would be deprived of bliss t friend's prophecy was fuldiled sooner th rot. (Laughter) A tow | price'ta clear it. Mut anch power ought not te | grains, enotzh to case death. All the evident We torture longer, he nc t feclake tom thet tt Pua se ei 'y whe pre he contd chee have deeaiad. ‘The taming carne fF tho potioe, or the blow. | be allowed to any men upon carth pplause.| | as to the coriainty of arsenic hav n found way sta tire people and by the people back aguin | to kay anything aa " weeping them all away, and the very memory of an Tug vison, with | A landlord may now pay. a ten were exhibited to the jury by the Professor, and ple, and by the f URCK REA Peer e Plat y beating ‘ Be he ME ti OeteG ihhey beonene os ated ruction of a ecetatn quantity | rent if he wiahes to get rid of him. T have kn he was positive that the reliability of the tests 4 The mistake of the Irish was that they left tt carried cmaacipation. and then stayed. to | away ontof froland... This was one wreat mea Ite, may sufi re wen PRs Desnenta wh pao Id ed their mn ant al Innda 1 ade wan wh aueating ble A bottle of the aleo~ { A EM stor ashi | olamortor repent. we ra knew We fire orw he io drama, but the wi at they suid t would eave for | bol, the sane In which the remains were pre- SaLagicticn, Pecis aerate Grew Goneetiane: | LE RGTEA Deter OhiLine SAG NE (ROU Rete Ee re Anoent wie re." Has Fentanisin, | one hundred years” rent; and. te such «| aceved, was also analyzed. without any susplelon ra. WhO Until this, had ete i i from conspiracy revenion, ‘Kebell {Had totrocite tee 1 THE EXODUS, relthd-on ene Canadian fron: | Beautiful feetlyie as this “tobe Ceranpted | of wrsnin entering int its cor nponl tion belle Steve and edie wb defeat, and when the fre burned ‘ its! » AC There were nine millions in Treland in 18 Manchester. ori well, shown under foot because some spolled child of | developed. Particles of the subemttra eived Fourteen buck shet in his } Ware ink wcren eendle a Cre beet Seated There are now. five and a half tullllonee romote su fashion {€ ready to give five. thousand pounds | muth from the satue jar that cortained the drug adiy. Me will either lose te Hin! ont and fury, the victors took away old | Walch would have stopped unjust evictions | a’ quarter of ® milion have. died, Al ¥ say Lodo fora month of deer shooting? Let the value of | ax administered to Wm. Letts by Dr. Kemp was . ges, and made tho y hook away, many years before Gladstone stopped then: | ivw tor the natural rate of inerease, and | wishing to ee their country free extates be fairly estimated ; let the owner ré- | also examined by Prof. Seeley, aud he pro- reece i ne of S¥siphus wos again. rolled to the bore | RUE tWo measures for the wood of Treland | yi dnd that between four and five millious | them for undertaking so grave e matte ve the full value of it: but there his pow nounced {¢ free from arsenical pulaon. Vestorday's Registry, H tom of the Niland the Work had again to be | (ellowed emancipation, (One was the f really emigcated the half, and as many again | Hethe tisicht their own resources, with so udend. Beyond that the law should be th In answer to a question Vrotessor sald he | Assensty et Toute } Rs If there had been no revolution tu tivo | M8Uon of & police from: 12,000 Trish pease as inhabitants of Seotland. Inthe first | many. traitors & em, for thelr nit torrent and power. Let the Grith was considered ai pert n detecting polsona, | Distrets c! ‘ would teen no penal laws Which ts equal if not superior to any pol ook of calamity t way by the hun- | confident boasting erformarice, ple and the [righ people stand side by side | and gave ine "detail the many pros | Rirst { 1s on whieh {t took ninety y force In the world; the other was the crea | drod thousand vy of them the passazo | for conducting the angry sehool a comes which he subjected the remeins under | Brood... i f reform, ‘Then (Fa Hon of txceliont wud unsectarian schools. | money was pald by the landlord. Rerothers | boys, breaking furniture to spite their peda- DEMAND gesTiCR analysis to before. he could satisfy himself for d, the lawa acainat Gatholl where ebildren of both ere juld be broucht | gubseriptions were ralsed here, Those who weat | goxues, (Laghter.] The eect of Fenianism | tn thia ter, and thoy will hot a @ certainty that there was arsenic present in i fod) Catholics wore being admitted | together ai Ushe oc mimon lessons and sown | first went howe che savings from their wages to | was to coawaken angry feclings and to compel | Vann Gur bartlaaent tenot tke Perlion thom. On the cross-examination the Professor rH ' ts of eh izen Mayr | that tu able to live together without hat | rescue thele families, Were there nothing else | further measures of But England satis : ‘| acknowledged that arsenic might have been in a4 rights of chizens. and. Maynooth i pee Oe private class; 1 is th went of the na 4 tablished for the education of Bs A r Firvoate do mot tke this | go be sald in favor ofthe Erish peasantry, the un- | was determined tha Ireland ued thon, and the will of a ed nation. will | the alcohol, that portion in which the duode- r 1 bel nt net arrange They consider that thelr young | sur tion and atection they showed In te rebel again ‘shi have no ke the “3 1 ould | num waa in, he analyzed as a preliminary opere Led | r elie that Enetand was afiaid of | peopie are tainted by being educated. with | 2° fl 4 yhe-¢ 1 ‘ " ¢ she | make ,, the a whee awe should i bet etected, by pouring off i) j them, and (he ¢ nee was thet Jes would alone commond thems | tiete practical wrongs to justify her. She | he: Ldiers who live only (or pleasure and in- | Von, without it being deteoted, by pouring ¢ rd " ' ’ horetics. They wish to extubliah bard and fast | tg porpetual adiniratic Was willing even to strain the Constitution i be trusted 4 h | from the top of the Jar. Not being readily sulue 08 THE INBURKECCION OF ‘96. Hines to divide the sheegy from the guata before | “sieanwhile, in Ireland, there was agrent social | ts mect theexigencies of the dimcult ease, and oe Omere TNT they ee chai | ble in slootol, tt ml at gravity sini “135 This threw Ireland back into a condition of | He day of judgment, (Laughter.) Some peo- | revuiution. the lacce landiode tte he took office four years ago POR An Gaede Tn Titan Berita tis | bo the botkans OF the tar end 1 vn { confusion and misery, from wideh she was par- | ble i Bugland are inelived ty wrant this desite | fortunes enabled them to weather the storm — | ty carry h reforms, @ larger inajority Pacis: whem toe conor of land | Sanne & He ‘said the a arn ts hoped that lrelan: snes Prot Were ot ; property. nan elt Lease nt. or ye | Ott a i Mit alll ree | presence of poisons In substances uid | Reventer ee) Would be temperately considered and national | Jesuits, and that an education by priests ie the | Rife agents Cook the place of the middie men, not, for admire in detall | maine true thet thare: aro hee thts ats | dysin, but the Reinch and Marsh processes wore | Kigaieente wo ' redress discovered for thei. Lt was expected Small holdings were discouraged; rents were | tho way ‘that he set to work. Me | Of living posaitie In this world chy working, | Considered reliable when made by a competent | twertern that whatever grievances Ireland complatied o INFUSING SOUND, PRACTICAL ATHEISM, cut down: wages was raised to’ double | denounced Protestant ascendancy + he cated It | Punting of begging. Te beg ie tatamoues to rol) Twenty-first coniplain would be removed Ly legislation. | Even for sucha beautiful result as this Ishould | treble what they were before: and half | a Upas or polson tree. He said it had three | fy criminal. Ifa inan will uot work helther shall se for the de- Heh aympath wld deny He tug. But (he pe be disinclined to rum the risk. ‘The world has | She revenues of well-adininistered property | Uranches the church, the land, and tl he cat. How to apply thin principle, how to. ap- . testified to the fact that Litts had ex- Totals....... t complaining, and Mirabead salt “the | sudered enough from sectarian bigotry, aud no | Were DOW expended in Improvements, On | thou; and hie Orst measure was to portion to each man his allotted task, howto | pressed twice in his presence, six years ngo and } Registered throe days last year, 129,099, Total registry fo Bacthe mulutude in | wise statestuan, if he can help it, cancoun- | many great barontes, | know, where the burdens | chureh. Well, no one will suspect me of } see that fulfils it, how to punish him | three years ago, that he entertained intentions | Mast year, 183,iu4, w tu have Lad a good foun | Tonence the splitting ofa nation into heatile | Bore heavle the peagautry, their coudi- | lig any very” great adimiration for ‘the trish | {ey “a” mutinoue euiigent—this is | Of putting anend to his life, The wi ess had iva Vines to Maida, ; veesnatey wan "mention wees | Camiys about matters of which one knows as | Hon le aureat deal better than that of the Hig. | clinch, but Vt wae | not as a church | th problem "wiih "Wve "have. to wulva, | als purel senic for the deceaseu, which Oe ee A pmuustiy: yet tte country was neither quiet | much a th Wall of us know nothing. | jisl) sticultural laborers The good taudlords, | (hat it was mischievous, but a8 8 land ta the solution of it all countries are | he unders e gave to his horses With their | Joseph Dykes was tried yesterday in the Gens { tend to 1M when the ‘ition was etit | (Applause. Dre mete weer ey theory meg ceric pei era ar moet har WaT ehh Pl cor Mit aL Md rtieirg ick | @hgawek, Tretand among them. Let Ireland took | feed eral Bersious for the murder of his mother, a hard froland, fo 1S when the Conscltutlon was att nt of th Neo and the establishment | eee osh Weners end 6 Mee Teer hela ie | The tune ae spnnected disestablishment with | to lt. Let the English nation stand by the Irish | | Thomas Davis and John Peters had also heard | Working woman who lived alone ina tenement om the Hefect. What would vou have scent Three | tthe Irish national edieation, were adrnirable, cites masters and a ald « the taunt rotestant.” It was att entirely | nation an this common platform. and itwill be | Hitts declare that he would conimit suicideyand | Working woman who lived aloge ja & tenement om the H quarters of a country richer in soll than Seotland the serious difficulty’ that remained ster but the law of his ¢ 1 essary taunt, +, again, has the | well with. b. If, instead of attending to her | the former had bought arsenic for bim at Gar le. Dykes frequently and aa Fic ae the be sof Bugiand lik eed was the. system of land peud “upon wothing but his own ; ablishment roduc dal “the | fruits I needs, ireland wastes her ‘energies | dine's store in February, Isl. Peters swore | the induenee of liquor and beat her, On Aug. 18, he waa wilderne Red with potat ren A portion’ of the. soll, wae eotly true, But violent changes are proverblally | that were expected of It, A young Catho- | {n'olamoring fur an -indepentionce which ake | that Litts liad not owned @ team Fe ge oe aT HO ES TT the poasant aut bis family living ened by absentecs, One-half of the rest be- | short lived, The frst distinction to be drawn frend of mine tn” Treland, an en- wstablish, and which she could nut | Phabe Sear and Mra. Alfre Seciivice vind oa the doer ovtered ith teelean ate reo or two of land reclait fonzed to needy and unthrifty gentiamen whose | Was between thusiastle home-ruler, was talking to methe | Gye except to plunge herself into. worse evila | that Mrv. Litts had i old the onicer iat her aon wae trying to KIM ber. the bog, families of twelve or thirteen huddled | Lonzet to needs te the Brie WhO wer b RAkTRDEA Gi FER Bin, other day. Tasked him what good his homes | than those of which she now has to complain, LT | days prior to her husand's death. Joseph lay on the bed exhausted by his brucality, He tuto cabins with thelr hogs and, poultry, the | Gycat elt enants, With How a sil. tbe let alone for the present, | Rusid mage ay taken the United Parliaivent | trust the vice of America will not be heard en- | Dr. Thotias Tenuett had tiade @ chemical an- | waa arreeted. Mrx Dykes lingered ia Mellevue hoa al Sonrlig WHAT Tatura Hare teR EL Caecte Tree, | Mneton ! Whences, If they them | Gf the otiiers were at least sume. who could be wae Whi Satie eae Phat IS Just | couraging her in a course which can but end avs Gira OF © POTHUR OF She. lives Of Likes and | Aen t eee itaused by the Perites, Comage, tonnes ea at tha ue fas - ves were disposed to be indulgent, the eredi- , aa Our Saxo ° voking | a it has ende undred dy, isas | detected no fndication of arsenic, “ x i ing ve or six pounds a year for an acre of land: money-lender—-exacted t «ounce rediately disposed of, Vart were bankrupt: | ft. You will 1 understand us. What \t ad Sentraet ioe TAT TY! Cieee eet Gecioy, reexamined by the tprosecutio! BE lusninenh atts Cit fouss alee abd ee Bent the p) the pound paying the rent and tie pound of flesh. Tn I the popula. ni Bt: SE tt bac yoke rites | do wo care about goods (Laughter.) Th 4 p—ven- | Sore that the testa made by Dr. Bennett were | fo Pate lrisun for two year 5 privat’s dues, and the han eariug about six | tion was but three millions. In IM@ ‘shat | PFOberty one-half of a county might was the Established Church; sure it did us no | THE IRISH QRESTION FINALLY SETTLLED—VER- | Gefoctive and not feliable petits pounds and a half a year, enougn to buy acoat | three mili Men" teconas At bea drowned tn debt, and yet unwilling | harm; it was a great thundering grievance; DICT AGAINST INELAND, Prof. Seeley, his re(xamination for the i § e millions had me nine Hullions. mt ke r AG cs it lars A od. for hitself, a cloak the wife, and acolored | ‘The Catholic clergy encouraged early mar. oF unable, to. pelt. 4 jaw was al | wren the world asked us what was the matter The Rev. Dr. Hitchcock spoke as follows : defence, acknowledged that he bad made no jang of ventle ‘slare Arre: hondher ir two for the girls to wear t0 | pages, “hecaise taey “prevented fumoraltty, | forthe sale of Incutubercd estates, and the | with us, we could awas point to the Church Taprrs axp GeNTi wen : {t Is proper that some re: | analysis of the soil where Lilts was buried, as he | Joseph Blair, 13; George Routh, 16; John Hy- thas on y wid the landiord encouraged then because | Cheditar who held the in | But vo took Larlevane. and you | sponse he made to those inaeteriy Chapters of If] | did. not think it necessary Ih the case land, i, and Morris 0. Crawford, 2%, were arre:ted on TiS WAS THE CONDITT With more ve he could exact @ higher ront a enner tt Hanw | call that fustie (Laughter, ] i eles history which have been addressed | The prisoner, Charity Litts, swore that she had | tnursday night in Harlem, baving entered the Harlem ‘The youn faut young las secured an acre ni . y be | and yet ‘the response must needs be ceasion pt hased arsenic at Gardner’ the Pensantry of one of the three kingloine, | The young lad aud young Ins secured an vere | many tiltions of acres have been wld under TUE EDUCATION, TOO, Au eure we ere. all of tne very Tere ae Tee eee | Rattroad office at Mott Haven on Monday night, and ' ey were ght a.m s long | GoW and a £5 note ‘ho were as well haacia be raaenh* be ey nin dretand at this moment is the best | Lamb ha Ned attention to the fact that | in for poison of any kind. ot some of tne tickets @ { a they wereblossed With, folt Conti oe petted | furnished as any of tt Ihborse ‘They pro- | Hament would consent; but consent they id. in In any part of the Hritish empire. | we reed alwaye moreur ies withourcarvaswel es | Physicians were examined as to the propertics | Coveted, tnd some Of the tlekets were tound om Blair bebe Ac Haley ie thie » | duced a de pious confide olvent landlords took the place of ins The priests now want w have ntrolof | with oureyes.” Hereafter the picturesque pages of “ir. | of bismuth, One witness, Dr. Perry, had obe | Kepe. Wie sd rack another place mere contented, The only thing they | duced.a ducen chiliren with # wous Me the | landloats. and a revolution was advanced ance | it at east so fat as th people are | Frouie witt be also te We shall hear him think: | served poisonous effects in his patients after ade ris at ny Ag a } i waa eviction, The jandlord still had the | Chat the Mme how provh me | Moke which wilt at last give back the Irish soll | concerned. All ove even in Catholic | Wut Rat nowt concert re, lectures ta thelt | nuinistering this drug, Dr. W In forty es, and receive the Plenerceet The | see yan arith | ao trace sr vig amtutrce ae thia: acts countries. it has cessary to take | {hiern I mignigcance, | Ragland bee come over | four years’ practise, had 1 any dele eS La higher led Be 1 The ist the Working ¢ a the exclusive cor of the D which inofitert’s tort | serious effect from its Ww Aud this er ar andl Ee a ever, | able and so character priests hands. If tat | i Pauital eeoa Wakeve |. tive auchattng un bealne to-day Finding Gold Coin on the Palisades, gerne 4 ri, ANG wherd e fae bE? ile a ph penpee in ts that branch of th will Jndemien taints a Yesterday forenoon, while oue Thompson tabor 1 a t ' ish you to sce how far the pera Hecren atts rears lie Men eet SR ANOTHER ARBITRARY ARREST, bd two others were digging on the Palisades west 0 lat { © zive abut t acres whom L chiefly care, would bi iio tana Renerat oar nie demand te absolute ia - Hoboken, they unearthed with a shovel a quantity of . 1 wore tr ! nj ra > benefitted iC the thing asked under t depende A Citizen Takeu lute Castody for Malotaine | gold coin had been ¢ou: Ht batyat ll sp hey ca Wa tad BY THE ETERNAL potato. © hame of “home rile” were « neded, Before y industry THE ANSWER, jug the Sanctity of bis Home, 4 thas bus I : ne wo niseeited sat wanton OR Tne : ies hare: wars nthe higher frre, sia | ¢ anawer fe Farly yesterday morning Henry C. Bow. | tei pi and 3 th yer ve | re that at least tw After the famine apport been den! nder ono Aterien ers. a special deputy marshal, called at the house Ing to ameliorate and eleva condition of | te wires who were abs : was thin i © | pleaor another, Under chiefs’ law, under Norman ay Whelytofe | of Mr. Jevemiah Keeley, 300 Pearl atreet, and | ihe weet Mit eine Merde ere eat ap prousenerine | Mwy under Scot and Saxon under vgvishi agent | are then dependence began questioning him as to his right to have Jersey City's Chief of Po! ; f : and Urish mide he peasantry have heen a that icean ont geourn ; r ‘ , “¢ MeW. Trad ne tah Bed gy ag rea G1} Pee rful coms There were very rarely robbed: and it fa this systematic. plunder whic tc” Ragland ana tetiedah: Z| his name romain on the registry of voters of the | The trial of Chief of Pollee McWilliams and Prehoee duty Ie was to get the largoes possible | pati n A Landlords liked at al ir | has deprived them of the natural motives toe apical unit, witch tiight just ae weil. district. Mr, Keeley said he had been fully exe | Detective Doyle of Jersey City was coutinged yester- Mei Reate aia enti Re omton HPigerad aerate bath ad Ce Sad ein hand that j Cruion, and whieh bas bred, aa tna bot bed, frag Into two. | (App amined when his name was recorded, and re. | ay 1 the Hudson County Court House, The three bur pepytha png Ae ths Rome (hee Roe be edad nny wig MMAND THEIR VOTES | uuthrifty, Improvident habits we all deplore, ; neste ae. We bes lars gave their own listory, eweariug Wat the Chief and and who permitted tt nls th Balke bentite: | despair waact i} fom _ tho | They bad before encouraved the multiplication | 804 has smitten one of the most beautiful cou 0 fused to subii: toa further Inquisition, Bowe | the devetive hall been theirconfederates In eri them on LOU and vained tholr | famina-atr A of wart f them. ‘They now turned around and anid: | ffeetn the world with b se, [Applause be otberwies ers became indignant, He threatened to procure | {eWiimis on te recuen feo Philadel pia favor h itu t stot tons. | | wen auindeds | Verne bad | "There are toy many of yin here: four millions Ne land auestion ent i elds. [Apriauees; | 8 Warrant for the arrest of Mr. Keeley, and he | Decause Doyle had ‘not heen warned to) an En , ere. COUntTY (Gh | aw e pene i ce. One we cannot allow trrenaim’ Bene, | ments set to work to remove Wo pity the Trish, and we rejoice to kouw that justice | kept his word, He made a complaint, and Mr. | gh Ai ade to the | i das vest | deweugent fo [wing ona single preerious | clally this. lununce was used by the pure Irish land act, passed” three years ago, | *t l#t ls promterd. Keeley was soon taken from Lis home to the the |i oh be hi Be an Invest | devcudent for their living on a single precarious | clally this languad ne pureh at by Mr. Gladstone. is the most healing measure AS FOR IRISH INDEPENDENCE, office of Commissic tts, where he was ar- won + vai ane valloved It but Cobliett, | Set | Ander the Uy a that bias been devised for Ireland during two | meaning ast does and must mean, the dismemberment | Faighed on a charge of resisting a special deputy LUPTERED WITH PAUPEY nas . € “ centuries atleast, Ith not perfect, but it ex- Jidecay of the Brity no D hal of the United States. dd that Si hh On 1 cipatton ait people eee ate fresh, estate sold tee at Ii pert F marshal of the United States. It is sald that Cox, a telegraph operator employed he would proceed te drive th away anid He pro 1 grandest rhe} al effects | ten years they were tends aprotection tothe Irish tenant which the | Awer! cam prow favor of it PATenns twould have nted the warrant but | so ine ofice of the Pullman Palace Car Com hae ie we ve Woy maid 9 f his ura fen yoare’ ju nancy WES | farmers of England tland have hither ap) | We for Judge Woodruff,who suggested the propriety | ee + Company, Dare ee tari De acre nee. Te nua gh BEIHGReT ee THnINaR te CNOE Pitelanne inchascrs were In Yances IHshmen or asked for in vain atherday one of the struggle | fo of hot mix his ‘¢ AUChiet Supervisor of | Mysteriously dieaypeared, He loft the ofive hurriedly Ve'improved until the ve they we Ir Hugiand had turned under the dominion of | busines who had-made money and wished ta latest farmers In Scotland, « man who-it was | redetot thotiea Fae craeeayote eiran: ences ORGIES Ts Meets eee ete OLS eRe ARLE called, were cl away, Hut these vert Jan Smith, whose goapel taught that this | invest It to mdvantage, and ns the worst tyrants fald opetly in the papers, and it was not con- | Grecse ewore ly Maratiion, Fo we Mine | antic . | Saree BSG oie wh etoune woman te tho cats were hum ngs aud believed they had « | chief business of governiuent was to do noth! that appeared in the oughteenth century were ; Yaity ved had Beek fur many years sinking | Geityshy ho tant eek te tana CREME raga eat es egy oe eee seniny | bo have beeu married ou the 2th lust, Hs accounts FEAL 40 linhs EG: rare ShtNeied 1G ahaT MOK | GRE LAR URE aie eee coke he ec teeteee | chat tran piddiemen. ‘so new. the ici. o M aterting a: manures and Improves ly to aout back (o them | avid he thought he had not committed any | Mei and the eaics in which they bad been torn. and | ment which left every one alone; that the Irish | bouxut under the Encumbered Estate act ents on his farm, sad whose family had held Hhitoas, san0 by y | offence in declining to answer any questions put + they did not believe that they ougut to be de- | landlord and the Irish peasants ‘ware the best | guile the hardest land owners. Besides the bond the same ground for several gonerations, groat- sir, (addressing Mr. Froude), for | fi,bim by perfect strangers in hile h S20ns A Partin! Improvement. brived of a livelihood merely in the interest of | judge of thelrown Interests; and that it was | fe landlords, piers sere SPeculating Ravens enen. teas rade ete Fe Dress Shine ree hive antacten eee bea els Altation ndaaclunts Vaid, The Grand Jury have been investigating | ‘ tnd the bai otek Bid Rieu crenmennce: | pat the business of minlaters ef Darlament to | Lure Rie eke would kar ae cele erie | pred marly Ronee bis polltive di€ered trom “Tu with ail thediouerssan?, 4 | Commissioner Betts sald te would eastalne | various butidings under the charge of the Comm ind the i ight And bimsell dragged out | Mtertere with thera, ‘The potato felled and slx | Bolling, Dut who would buy an estate giving ® | Els iatdlord'ss Noting of coat wind ui Bpeches with 'whicls" yuu have, bee the case next Monday. He fixed the bail at | ers of Charities and Correction, Itt» sald that ( ‘ the English or Scotch landord w ain etaple of their subsistence ! ich | Iubabitane) sell 1 wt an. lunproved valution and 18 NOW POSSIBLE IN IRELAND, Ought to De tempered with compassion. enport ¥ subsequently appeared with | Staite Stee Goetoatean teal te tinete if he. snd, file childron escaped | credit calinl be awarded to the patience with | pckel he diterence. Rnormousturtunce bave |-1 wisn 1 could aay it was Impossible in any MR, PROUDE'S FAREWELL. Bis'bonasinan and was pelea putinder ie fils pracecr teal bs ot iealand valtac. Eaudand Rad eovertea Te ee ee ee ee Phese evicing gentlemen claimed the right co Marter of the world: (Applause) If a land- | Ladies and gentlemen of New York. It remains ———— Tianired to furalsh previous to regaiuiug bie own tour hundred soars. In laying the founda. THOM DREADFUL TEARS, do with thelr tsasthey pleased, In vain the aaiene OF Ble kind 1a Aree Bo idiey | forme to take my leave of you. TL eaiinot dv so AMUSEMENTS, wise f ice tion for the new under of t four points | The Irish peasantry, from our first acquaint. | tenants pleaded that they had paid thelr rent, * wade to pa s indulgence a higher price | however, without offering te you ny toes o us = — FOR SS. new, Usher Sth four polnts | ance with them, have showna capa ity beyond | that thes had lived perhaps forhenireke a? gency than he uaually likes to afford. He cannot evict | Less ten neces (eet et e great kindiiess | tratinu Opera—Lucca and Kellogg tu “Den Monument. ih oe iy exan durance of suferiug. ©. that spot. They were biddeu simply & th Hest peasant now without compensating ve shown to me, [have talked Gynt Hl The unveiling of Sir Walter Scott’s monument hen Ste A out ay n wrongs where | ty go to the devil, if they could find no c hi nee every stroke of honest work nights on a somewhat, dry sub- F oe fu Central Park, which was announced for to-day, bat push Bll BEDE distinvtiy. traceable “injustice had | place. So they came to America. (Laughter,) | Wun be quae pal into the soll and jhe | ject, which Lhave been also obliged to lun. | If one might judge from the great at- | jen mmroued on arcouat of the lack afte eae was wanted. ( oc the masses to misery, they have accepted | Whu could woader that they came In ne must pay a further fine for disturbing him. The | Me ‘far less freely than T could have wished 1 he perfo of oD Ho» | the wo a briigh are ' ws wanted. Civilization waa. inconpat) | y DLAI TRICE Of TREE eighties Gok Ketones tendance at the performance of “Don Glo- | the work. with the kulfe an‘l pistul; burit the laws were | i a8 alloted to them by an inscrutable I'rovi- | gentle humor? 1 belive if 1 wad exh rnious value of this measure can be no bet- | to do, because T knew that I should. be | Hee pen edie ag gt a Tobe catcrontt din coicartenion vintace denee, and when the time came they lay down | froin’ my holding by the landlord's crowbar ter evidenced than by the fact Tam ni te | called’ to account most strictly for every | Yanni" on Monday evening, and by prhalilicted A Lesson for Wife-Bonters. v on of the laws must also be removed, &4 died uncomplaining. (Sensati Aquarter | would not feel very loving toward the Gove sure that Tstate the proportion pomuretely, Dus word that I should utter on the subject, | dience that assembled in spite of the inclemen- | Kerrigan, the Long Island wife-heater. wa: Terignta of the poor must be protested, and | of # million, doubtless, perished from actual nt that allowed it. Men are not always r that aatearian, chien ne tare, When 1 say | both here and in my own country, ‘Therefore | ey of Inst evening, Mozart's masterwork would igen, the Long t ‘sant protected from eviction . hunger. Past as the Adininistration could move, | souable under such conditions, and canuot be | that agragrian erime has fallen at once to one- | | have been obliged to be most scrupulousip care- matt ey | entenced to Btate Hrison for seven years for beating thors was the religious difficulty | ship loads of corn were sent around the Irish | expected to be reasonable, ‘It ts absurd to hold bepbi OF Wiae ik wae Upelause.} 208 fri ful as Lowhat words I did utter, Doubtless I bon to be the one opera that gathers popularity | biswite to death, half reforined Episcopal Church had been esta, | Comat. Agents were scattered over the provinces | England answeraule for the necessity for are not yet od ey demand Home | have sald many things which must have grated | with age. eee ' primed Episcopal Church had boen estab. | Comat, Amenis wate eqateered aver the provine ae For She by Tule. Ithas heen thelr invariable custom wien- | nate Sd, many things which must havo grated It was @ hazardous experiment for Mr. Tet ee enti which belonged ta the Catholles before the Ke. | Hons of money to give the people enplovinent TRISH IMMIGRATION 5 } ever any practical messure has been passed in | pained and wounded senalmiities which are tas ee P ar, 1. Walsh Association have endorsed the whlch | Hihat compromise hat ancwered f | and Wages, and eight millions of it,1 boleve | but she might, tn my opinton, have played a | their favor. W hy fot grant ity umay ask. | turally dearto you. If that has been sor 1 am | Maretzek, with his somewhat weak company, to | I Ki * Democratle uouince for Ae cnecountey, and itwasexpected that Itwould | Were etubezzied by intermediaries, and never | Hobler part than she did. Had she availed her: ireland inust understand where her own shos ut Leame here to speak my own convie- | bring out an opera that tires so much from | #w>ly tH the Fifth Distrlet 4) equaily weil in the other. Four-Ath of the | Teached the hands of those for whoin It was | self generuusly of the opportunity, t conceive pinches.” First ard foremost Tanswerbecauseno | tons as true and faithful as T could oer thet. | those who undertake it. Macart’s mache la nan Spr peipls wore Catholics, and determined tore. | Wtended; but that was not England's fauit, | that Tnstead of en isting the Irish against t sh Legislature possible would have over pass: | ‘ain most happy to say that I admire. ti MES, GREELEY'S CONDITION. Inain «0, and f the Protestants not more than Enormous sums were despatched across t j she tolgnt have eerablished claim upon Trish i vies pend bt 1tyou had polled sae. resident | extreme forbearance with which you have of the kind that sings itself, and "Don Glo- - e-half Velonged. tabitched re, | Channel, Wealthy families of England cut down | gratitude. “Had Ebeen an English Minister -a | landiords of Ireiand, Catholic and Protestant, | borne with mer and allowed me oye 1,"" ss y well give: yt to be a : 3 16 reat Derg ed f© the Fetablished Churchy | qieir'luxuries to send help to thelratarving fele | Wry extraordinary supposition, butwe will aug — You would have found three out of four bitterly’ | enene out what Fiiad eday Whee Lene Bue. | Vanni." unless very well givens te apt to be &| Another Alorwing Kelapse—Mr, Greeley In So encesceeat iin pweeitizens. Mnerica sent maguitcent contri. | Itt stand forthe present—had T been able to opposed to it. “The peusanta are not fools,” | fand I felt so uncertain as co the bature of teks | Melancholy failure, Itisof the class of operas | ———_perilting hiv Own Health, favour en tion of the Rev ahilsne | Butlonss ani, all the, world was ‘sisicken with | enchant Parliament nto giving tt sanction: {| x01 tay aay : they alow their own intorestn rprise that {had undertaken this Quexatle | that takes signal revenge on indifferent arti The storm yesterday caused a sudden y not rest on the question ° sh- | sympathy. At length the plague waa stayed; | Would have siid > th ish peor and if the landlords are opposed to them they | enterprise as so many of my friends have told | Six of the rélea are of almost ec dif- | anda ng relapse vase o! " i t hevause IT do not believe that Baylind | putt was not ed until every peasants cots | It ts true that we cannot keop you in Will choose other representatives.” Leay they | nie that it ie that T hud’ detcuni ey: Hie Sons t rie 5 a a 1 Hy “ a ta : . alg relaues 18 tie apa guilty In Inipos > | toxe had been scorched by unspeakable agonies; | Ireland; there has been mismanagement for , will do nothing of the kind, and they cannot, AN | [would | make New “Yorke gaat, AE feulty and importance, a 1 ts rare | Gresley, who showed encouraging signs of tm- ureh, but. b poy | And. as Woual in this world, the blow bad fallen | many generations, and \i.ere can be no improve. | Irish Lexislauire would consist of gentlemen | teat and Judgo as to whether L, tudved that they are all adequately filled, Don | provement on Thursday, Yesterday. ho nna a en teas a crime than | heaviest on th who bad least deserved to | ment Until large numbers of you leave the couns | Who eitherowned land or aspired to own land, | should on with it or nets) and | Oftapio's rile, for Instance, Is one that seldom | she became exc: gly weak and de ate a BCOn TE 9 utor, try. But we havo lands in our own colonies, 1 anda Partiament 40 composed would do justice | if the verdict of New York had been unfaver finds proper interpretation, Mario is almost the Ftc f the Fog. | “+ Hue they ovghtnot to have been there,” the | & thousandth part of whi re vectipied, land | to the Irish peasant at Doomsday in the after~ | abie, [ iutonded slimply to have printed my tec | only tenet whoever did. It Justice in this soa, | ad toward evening expericaced much difle Wh trish narch, nor do Lquestion | > ¢ says. Aye, doubtless, ‘ho | Which needs but the spade and the plough to ft | Poon, and not thea if they could help it. | tures and thrown them on the wor try. And the fine music allotted to Donna leva | culty in breathing, At about? P.M. her hand eenormous good Which bas been wrought tn veunts of Conbemara ought to have been ine | it as a home for millions. If” you wish | (Laughter) What have l teen myself? When | held my tongue for the rest. of the | ia almost sure to be slighted, ‘ became cold, and Hing » Mrs. Jobne Lethe by the Reman Catholic priests, Thoush | siructed in thelr Mallhus on Population, (Laughs | to leave t you have had enough of Ex the land act was known to be com-| had been here. inmany ways thatw | ‘The strong points of the present perfor. | Son. Who was at | (side, * ve here and ; TH lathe | ter.) Why dues not the mist fall t m {and the English tag, if you will be happier in | ing a poor fellow came to me and | made my. visit’ persoually. more agreeat manoces aro th tina of Mme a. the | clap my hands toget During th sie e Dean Swift who recoimended to persons tn | the United States, we cannot blame or hinder | begged me to help him. He held tits {But it is to your kin encouragement | Donna Anna of Miss Kellow nd the Leporelio | complained of aw { fresh air. and from time : DAN: 1- | 9 an extremity t the. babes Hd be | Yous but if you Would tke to remain ours, wo | farm under a middleman: an Irish Catholes | that is di y rsent deterinination to | of M. Jamet, The weak ones are Miss. to time the windows Were opened at her reque house in | egoked and tl ter.) iit ago.a fam. | Will give 200 acres Lo each family, we will take | like biinself, Hi t had been paid punctually | lecture elsewher phi ¢ i shail ever look | Dorla's Douna at Signor Viz: on | She frequently attempted to cough, but su 4 ul fi i i i \ " ine lighter than that which desataced Ireland | you out free of cost, we will settie you and help | for owenty-five years. and neither on thisnoron | Mack pnt to Rew hark aide a the |i pace ae (PHBE OEY ESS OLR LAG | ae Tet aliat weal hone ike atthe cieta wie aise the ntry, Isler ef 1 Palestine, and a Hebrew king fell | You there during the first’ year until your first | any er ground had he given any cause for | kind frien: T have made | between the two; ines, us in the La ci in only painful gasps, which shook hor ¥ 6 duurs being with more | yon b ein stekeioth and cried, “tL have | crovs are grown.” England might have sald | complaint. but the middleman had given bin and the widiences which have « darem duet, belt rable, at other times rane, AUD P.M. she was somewt a vy CINE to wy, wed and done evils but these sheep, what | this, might have done it and it would Botice to quit, Why? Because the middleman Ht aftor night to listen to me, with feels | weak. Of coures Honcontis all that a Macie | easier, her friends had slight hope of her the oxperiincntin elder at tatee nhaceee y | Have.they done? et thy hand, Ob Lord, Gen | Rave cost her perhaps twice what itvost hee for | Was willing enough thar the land ‘act should feratitude which no words that Lean now W be, though his ef these days be. | surviving wntil this ery the experiinent in either of those placca. I} j b tay father's house, and wot on iny | the A pysainiat war, but not one quarter what it | protect ht a aalnst t e naad lends rd. but had | use cam really adequaccly expres ‘ather to the dramatic than to the vocal A SUN reporter cal coot Mr. Paradise, as far as being exposed to danger, The | Perle that they should be plagued, feck as We aaan inveetinent CP nGR IR etna ait | khculil bs protanied uasioat Wineais” em enaee A WORD TO THE itis art of his profession aaa we ith street, Se Eh ais aaa : 00K wean investment ol nonayy L cot should be protected against biniself, Hi @ opera brags e prima ¢ ye. | last evening. Mr Johnaon Mra, Gress gence Of crime is due aliketo the innate honor | 1 WILL SAY NO MORE OF THE FAMINE. that it would have paid her better (h 3 And now, ladies and gentlemen of tretand, if | got fe, chore brlige both the prima donnas be. | Inst evening: | Mr. Johnson aalt that i re rish chargcter and the influence of the | I have to speak of the con: es two #ig- | those speculations, AN (KISH PARLIAMENT any of you are here nt, E would) part also | £0" bie py FO tS ETDS indie rag tune Piracy her dared hope halle clergy. Ido not know th at thoy wor ne wit consequences, 1 will take them up one IP THE IHIAN BxITRD returned by the present constituencies, would with you on od terme. in vate BiPeyaibil Sy Adlty OHO SEE theres | he would Liv tn : Mr, Greeley, itdown the agrarian consyiracy. If they are | The rst, naturally enough, was to revive the | had taken herat her word she would hove her | for ‘vrotestant land owners to part wits | papers, in’ -pamphiets, aid Cather’: pubtive: | Miletof Zertina and Don mids ‘The one is POO Hi asi aN creed i tically lovad, Tamm nut disposed te blaine | political diigrum, Grattan wastoharccrestad « | Colonics wt this ue twice ae ‘productive: ee | fable for Urotestant land ownen of the three | Hons, Tam told that I have come hero | fender ight, and coquettishs the other mi ik Test and hazard his (nor do'T believe that the fault of | millonium, ‘The fruits of his endeavors that way aro. She would have had a loyal ireland at | southern provinces, but the exchange stone set | to be the vindicator of murderers and assassine, | He: broad, and almost sombre. ‘Phe latter 1le ‘On Thursday evening he was peraiaded treland's religious troubles 1s to he lald upon | were curruption and Detonderiau, petty gardens and willions of loyal Irish subjects in | of landlords for anuther, Would be ninply to oxe | My lectures. are Jen toxt from which to dis | {Hot one that appeals ureatty to the public ear Hedat wen Up neatly the prie If the waters aro hitter, the | at seven guineas an are, and the rovelion of | Canada and Australia, If they had pretorred Ke crocodile for an alligaror, and the alil- | late onthe. necessity of eternal hatted of t Be HORLE 78 DiC ad. PEUSIUAL DFebS FASE SHB In night before), but o'clock he was Mitterness is in the source. from. which 4. O'Connell's Catholic’ emancipation was to | the United States, as many or most of than WH pode, Would be the worse of the two, | Hind and Englisiiven, Well, ladies and gontie- | Set melodies, aud it tall the ore to an artist § azain and at the bedside of his suffering Lf, waters run. treland’s religious trou. | have brought in a millentum. ‘The millentum | probably would, yer the offer, made tn god | (Laughter.| men, Pam sorry if that is your teeing. For mys | ire of praise in due to Mise Kelltae fot the | wife Krom that time until morning he scarcely View had thelr source at the Reformation. | came in the shape of a population starving en | faith, would,’ “1 think, | have taken one reason why Tobj@t tohomerule, | self’ Fenn only say. that 1 will yield | [ire gn, mraine in due to Mise Kelloge for the | Meee ie the room. Stine Ida Gredley ie still 1a From ‘the cholee which Ireland then took | potatoes, two millions of beguara, and last of | the ‘sting lit of the’ banishment, {| Another ts that the lrisii are notane rationsbug | to mot ‘one Of vou not te Fathee niece sings this difficult part P which | ptendauce upon her mother spring all her relly The Church of | aila famine. O'Connell bad said that the one | Rever knew un brish peasant who ” was | two. When we have abolished Protestant as- | loyal and faithful to God and his country a Pose who saw Mine. Cunce’s othar Berténa.io a ~ Rome showed) Knowldgementthat | thing lacking was repeal. Young Irelandera, | Bor instantly canquered by ueneroslty ; Taup~ ) cendancy Ido not wish to sea Catholic ascends |X koow bin to be—T will not yield to the most | aurore Spuet tiene: winea’s other Zerlina Id | A Charge of Bargain aud Sale in City Poll {ts Inatitutions fn thy gontury wem | maddened at the wretchednors they saw around | pore because they have never experienced too | ancy In the place of it, LApplause.) Por good | ardent Menlan of you all Twill yletd tone Irish~ | Augers,” Fra diavolo’ will not need to be wads wad ane IR SEY eels raking to vieves, Germany and England end | thom, took O'Connell at his word that repeat | much of It. It iW ueediess to say thut nothing | orevilwehaveplanted acolony of Protestanie ie | man other bere oF Ii tte ald eoantey in my de- f ugh they both belong to tt ma he EMitor of The Sun tice? other ¢ jes declared that her doctrines | was the needed remedy, aud then let tall tal be | Was done of this kiud, Economie formulas for- | Ireland. ‘They are there now, nearly a tuiliion and | sire abd iy determination, so fat as tiny. teaule Het Po GLa Pyurett te ay oe PR a nap oes ad dla fe Hot tribe ab truth could not be | made the reality, ‘Che revolutionary fire again | bade it and fora time seemed to forbid also any | a halt of them, possessing Wealth, intelligence, | health will periuit, to promote the entire enane {nan begutifaly and thee og] Sits it was claimed last night at the Fifth sustained. Ione burst over Euro ou terference with evictions, Owners of land sa | energy. Twill not say we are bound tomain: | cipation of the Irish peasant fom the yoke of uly , 1. ¥ Trelanders velignted | 1 Fest the torch. of 1ib8'in the french contagtation, | Ireland appealed to the, practice. in F and insurrection was preached tn a hundred | and Scotland, English landlords turne yoore the strug- | newspapers and from athousand platforins; and | thelr tenants when they pleased; Sco: ‘aiely so. Congressional District Convention that Mr. W. It receives a very satis. | Roberts owned the vou gland | tain them. I believe they are perfectly capable | the laucilovds, (Applause. Me: out | of maintain oh the opera, on the wh. eed factory rend of all (he Munster men in thot ing, At ‘the matinée to-day rlet, and if he received the Apollo Hall nomination wherever f gle for religion: themselves; but we are bound not to place | Keucrally in au inverse ratio to euch other. J I co he te seusrty, | bow he 40) 40 tell Yerted land which was worth pothiow inte tne “ 1 hem in # position in which the a nie Dic es Oy Fiasoe renal | many vic- | ayain we heard of 400,00) Irishmen who were | landlords turned out theirs when they | may be driven. to irrecular remedies to pro, | James Haggerty Makes un Ass of Miuself. | * Faust’ will be given uld stand by O'Drien for Mayor. The meet.rig perienad ! he sta ee? f : ; a Mone oft Hon + long as th FE he stake. | prepared to pleased why not they? Keonomsis shook | teck themselves against the votes of the | A mass meeting of the Saniuol J. Tilden Six ‘ wif PICT nue of Met ouvention, ais Sloe ah Unieneay oe, aly Aloe: oA NG a pe ey their head. It we fonrtul phing to meddie | Catholic majority, Nan Irish Partiament they | teeuth Assembly District Apsociation war beid last JOTTINGS ABO » Ward. ties public cueniles: li eine 1s mys ; 4 hts of prope ul happily there | would be outnumbered three to one, LE UKIOW | rent Pes asa eva pei = a re neqities public oneniies. I t eth was myself in Toland at that time, 1 wan wus one diference whicn dld adwit at being es | anything of the high-spirited, determined men “gy Opie The Attensance watery | Nineteen gnnce of Rouievard Inhorers were ta fevor ' ad to be ear *- | possessed Of the romant pellet that the | tablished even tu the economists’ satisfaction, | of the north of Ireland, they would. ho more | M8 And exceedingly cuthusiastic. ‘The CPR eee Oe ee eats aon eee P { Heese Rei thas Ptr ‘ the sy of judgment was come at last | In England. the t of the wn ‘ovemne: submit to be governed ‘by a Catholte major- | Horace Greeley, Kernan, Cox, end Abratam R, Law: | ay ten ® * tay ai Con : i fron England ud] for unjuse authority, £ conalderad, as nd w Hy paid by the landlords. | ity fu a Dul Filament than New kng- | ronce were meutioned only to draw forth the loudest | The unveiling of the Scott statue has been seutions 1 r th Hewtante. tro to) wen under thirty are cometines apt to ds ralsed farm buildings, and advanced | land would dinittod to he governad | cheers, Many wer avn poned, Pervee } \ Boh ant wae 8 ett thing to overthrow a | money for drains and fences, Lrieh landlords, | by a convention of slave-owners sliting at Kich~ Kerean’s vam Basan ieanlay ad Gof TH Ninth avenue. fal) men that wich i td scelal system, and substitute a better for it. | veing #0 embarrassed, loft these expenses to the | iron (Applause) Within year England root u vften Loterrupthig Ut fell from acart at Turty-seventh ef and Bleveuth Apollo Halt and ’ ite Thad goa over ty see what the Irish could do. | tonants, ‘The tenants either took thelr holdings | would have n to Interfere, oF there would with fee cheers | fei team 9 cars ok Carty peranitn q Bove rw HAA woe any that Lexpected very much, ‘There | in a state of exhaustion, of found them mete | low “evil war In IECLUnd. iteels. and ie | ROMTWE TREE. t ier the, neat Henry Wilson, of 63 Prince street, was found h ‘ had been too much blowing of trumpets, and Tt] waste iver or mountain, hey, by their labor, | the” protestant overborne by 1 mention of hia Ah cheers, which were ini | yeaterday forenoon at Mercer and Bot th street, au i! wi 1 leorned already that noise and action are | turned tue moor into pasture and cornfeid, and | numbers there, the hation would | Bginaehr gt need by CounLT chores for kawrence, a fracture Of (he obull, Ue ref ndoby) abd bee them crushed. ichusd Lyyue presided, aud Major Jusee yew at