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oo: FORTICTI YCAR TRELAND ANDTHE ENGLISH | Si cu Art eagttn desis and parceliing | Pore thee ie anabivents of tny river tum PRICE TWO CENTS. Mun then GHeb Clbar Hoople ecu utes, | tree croronte it obetina the crates ofits mints ee mie ae LIFE IN THE METROPOLIS. ree then: his own favorites and friends. | They sought utterly to banish from Ireland ntinued laughter.) He had agood de dof | they seized all che most valuable furnit . att Pie Certstet cheat rare ne’ and me | “Great Gad a iaed the Elzhtn) ty the Fic. ‘Artemus Ward’ gays he wast quice | sale without decency of reserve.’ A name “ Eilaves tae Presieiga, Mar DASHES HENE AND TH : a RUKKE'S SECOND RE- o<*) Pogiish setters retired, came in and re | Great ¢ is (Henry the Btzhtns ty the | tion Me Artemus Ward) says he waa “quite | anke without decency or reserve.” A num YD ToRR ee BLY 40 41 FROUDE | Fontes de themesives Of these estates: wbich | man that Nr. Proude telte ce le the friend of Ire- | contented to see bis wiles fret cou ngs wethe | huncry, advenwuren! were Int inode upon Champion Gourmand Nowhere. wero: I} , | here ils Swen troperey. And inark my irlenda, | Tand.” Tusa’ ie the man eto ip ene reat 20: std, EET HY Pente ware to | Micabeth: ther wok ogly robles: Gmere James Kernan, better known as “Teddy, = thateven had th 0 no title & at | mirer of order and the hater of disorder’ Cer- | © irelan. in x er not only rob om taal rs pars = He Anatrars Mr Fremde's Review of Tree 055. q their ancientand God even inner: | tainly he was about tocreace a tmacni@cent or- | thetr Bngtioh Utles lundered their churches, but they the Fat Copy is attached ty Capt. Ulm Something New at n Srremade-How to Save Innd—And Fights Watery with Mistery oo cy bad the right which is everywhere | der of things. for his ides was, if, the neable are | Ate Pith ADOEY LANDS tho blood of the bashoos and, priests and | Mand. Teddy is a good-natured oficer, welghe City from Fire. He Dissects tre Charncrers ot Ht recoenived—lona dereitcia aunt primis capients | troublesome and you want to reduce them to | nverte and churches within thetr poe | aa mo” gioude, hin jan in torrents. | alittle over three bundred pounds, and meas- Last evening a serenade was given to David B. nd Queen Elina bethen Which, 18 plain Bagileb, means that broiete) “mes fnew ot ms. The consequence was be enriched | faite ty that atten tite teocna Tenere or dig | ures ein feet and two inches below the cheat. | Meluish, Congreswoan cleat from the Nini Distriot, by with Sarcasm Che Quest THINGS ABARDONED BELONG TO THE MAN thew, and to the eternal shame of the O'Nelil | Geraidines, such was the staie to wich :he fair | AS an epicurean he bas no match in the Pourth | th+ Young Men's Glee Cr of the Eleventh Assembty hols - Just look atit It ta juct like those nurses yh Ww , The Arademy of Musto wae well filled Thode tinh te take them, But much wore Jutt | wn ta the baby farmine tm England on ene | Rady cy Dep Meas qturke. and Flt; | Prosince of Munster was reduced ‘that you | Ward. To thie (ack Mr, Oruner, ar Laurant | DMtrict aod the Islewld Que-tet, There was e large " hy cy oO i” G iy faut evening nthe ocmaion of Father Burke's | by the English. ‘The lands wore their own. (Ap. | Privciple, of {arming out children. When the | weskness to accept those things ab hie hand, a Ep (proweh the Innd trom the farmost | veeper in Peart street, oan teotity stuendenes Mr. ellish. efier touching l.brk cond lecture, “Ireland under the Tudor.” 1 su-¢.] They hed been unjustly dieposecseed | a him adose of pouonand ieauiets | Quezceme come Sits ike shall af the moves | camer plains of dinnerary. and you would | Teddy has been stationed for many years at | riley ‘an rived Boston, and gare aa cBlllne of & pk Most of the aud ence v dently belonzed to the 1. therefore, had twe titles ‘The land was | tim. (Laugher| Do you know the reacon why | ware before the day when the Irish chieftains Raughbor or behsld the tase ot Siiving sare | the Roosevelt street ferry, and is weil known. | ol'drew “Thetoyeiem proposed cletated 1e-e1¥. (tate face whose righ s and wrongs were the subject ti. rs he. suse they found it untenanted ; theirs | Ticnry the [ani y blesses une | pied iy Re | Proved false ty their country. (Applause) hut the’ trenches, and ‘witches, were” Bilsu | During the four dars’ registry be wa: ‘ctailed to He ag Ey ef pf the elequent orato,'s discourse, Father | Proause they lad once oened it, ad never lost | this great English monarch. While he made an | wogogreeg {he Previous Liitary of Ireland do | with the corpses of the people. and ‘he country fth Eiection District, at 8) 0! = street, | {5 ‘be Ty odapebdsat of (ke prsen forth tones. the rent to It. (Appiause.) But Henry being a | this eeat English monarch. | While t an | we find the clans rising againat t cir chieftain, | Was reduced to des late wilderness. The (« ‘ohn O'Toole keeps A sailors toarding | system of sirdog pipes suapte! to the purpoae. ante Burke was recessed with applause, He said lover of order, disp ased the abeentecs of | OU shor conciliating them he wos medi: | Nowhere do we hear of the O'Neill or O'Donnell | Spencer describes it must eniphatically, ty, | house. When Teddy ‘revarned to the police G08 Bloc Lapine AND GratiEMEN: We now come to ates. and turned the property ove r to | tating the utter ruin and destruction of the Triah | dispossessed =o by his own rple. But | he, ¢ ‘0 or mr wivo would tive tn dre: | face, aud be had the good sense te keep It to | oi. th opeabion, when they «came | tee reitreneaed “ecresctonseiTenrege: | ceepare ama wakite, Of esterday Cape Ute 4 and on the land. and Mr. Froude claims | himeelf, and it only comes out ta bis | home mark wha, followed. O'Brien, Bar! of d that the state of Munster was such | man received the following bill: sted well for the Irish peo- | Stee ain harount of eounveey ‘and potiteness, | Fogmond, when he arrived tn Munster. found Meee coud, Revi G, Hl 8 our history, and takes in three reig € | ple, Mut the doing of this involy sd the driving | 8% ott aif bis dominions in rebellion against him ohn O'Tan Ey Lomm: Now. 12, 167 feign of Henry Vill, the reign of Ehizabein, | Sf the Irish people a second tine from their uw n bales was a man of learning, accomplished. and | With reference to McWilliams Burke, Earl of | XO MAN COULD LOOK UPON rt WITH A DRY EYE. Kernan to Jonn O'Toole, Di s the First. I scarcely roperty. Suppose that the President of the | Of very elegant manners. id | Clanricarde, when his people heard that their Sir Henry Sidney, one of Blizabeth’s dep ities, Bod the reicn of Jam Consider tie reign of Faward Vi. or of Philip | United States should seize your property, smile who could give you Teader had accepted the Abbey lands, the first | speaks of the condition of the country as foi omsider the second lecture of the eminent bug. other Bogushmen, 0 historian Wh as come among us, It covers | La: a+ of the most iu eresting and terrible passages | that in 80 doing be acted Fira Day of Heguiry, f Sucr fysten ge Ibe porterhouse steak. 3 gte. potatoes, 7 | etilized eo as to make the sanitary - ¢.$ Bot rolls, and} Ip. butter tion of tow city superior to any otner tm the nd Mary worst counting. Mr. Froude began | give it toa friend of bir, y to you, No It ts true the next day he might have your head | thing they did was to set up against him. | lows: Dinper—i smaii baked pig, ¥ Dol. greens, 3 gts. ee, | World. Tis woulusunply consist In flooding the gut: fie secand le tire wish a father starting para- | my {riend and fellow eitizen, remember I ats cyt om Caughter), but, still he had the manners | Another man, with the title of McWilliam | such horrible spectacles are to be beheld oe the bare. owls voup, 4 bottles Beoteh sic, and? custard Ah water every morning And (bea having strret ox Iie asceried tris: Henry VIVI, wae a hater | lover of order: Lhave eivon ou a resident jand- | Of gentleman, And otilt i ts afact thatthe | Cio de Hurgh O'Neill, Bari of Tyroma, was | ing of vileacs, ine ruin of towaecyen ine tee ortee | guphittemalt holier of hash, $ plates of mnie toast, ? "ord f disorder, Now, my dear friends, every m lord. Laughter.) Such was the benedt which | t¥O most gentiemanly kings of England were | taken when he came home by his own son | boves and skblle of the dead, w! forge p 4 L . partly by marder tee of ham and exes, ¢ pos of tea, screen Ottis world bas his hero; and consclocsdr er Henry conferred on dretand, in turning out the | the two greatest scoundrels that ever lived on | and put into confin- ment and died there, all bis | 804 partly by famine, have died in the elds. It te euch second Te * ity . Ubconsciously. every mau selects some charac. | Irish owners to give place to this earth, namely, Henry the Eighth. and Georee | people abandoning ul. O'Donnell of ‘Tyroon- that bardly ‘dae Cnrisiion cas benaie with's dry ene t i aus. potatoes, 3 | pase through ft. Rnes the “only Rer out ty that he admires, until at | ENOLISH RESIDRNT LANDLORDS. the Fourth, (Applause) Accordingly he dealt | heli came home. and his own son and all bis Her own Minister—I take his testimony of the heads caovage, 1 pies, 5 bot London porter removed by the carts would be the cc Tength, by cons .ually dwelling on the virtu: : “ with the irish people with a certain amount of | people rose against him and drove him out from | state to which this terrible woman reduced un- | Sapper—2 \e-rc cold tonguca, | small measure potators, | that would gatuer abou, these screens ad envellencios uf ule hero, hercomes to simost | i Tn 159) Honey sent the Earl of Surrey to Ire. fipllity and courtesy, He did not go on like all | the midst of them, (A volce—Served bim | happy Ireland. Stratford, another Baglish au- Bet rolls, Spee tam Ee, tore Seeeenl ot © @orhip him. From among the grand histone | /\"d. Surrey was a brave soldier. astern. rigor- | his predecessors before him, saying q right.” Applause.) Now Tsay in the face of all | thority, Dinper—2 bolle codtien, 5 bowls ela thee lore a in the world’s anne us man. Henry thought that by sending him | the King’s enemies; you are to Le all putto | th as i “ e . 5 bowie el ee ee eae nas STSFE nat | over. and backing bim with an army, he would be | death: you are without the pale of the law; you {his ste Broude ia not right fa tayin se sable | GUXBew It was bad. and very bad in Ireland, but that it tote, a palions Husseys old ai from aiid te privilege, Mr. Froude haa | able to reduce to order, the disorderly elements | are barbarians and savages. and I Witt bare | came home not Protestants but schismatics, bi? ray Lal ao a ie co 4 Suppers broiled fresh mackerel, 94 ql. potatoes, § : euler selection of wh * | of the Irish nation. That disorder reigned in | nothing to say to you.” Henry said. “Let us the midat o' ‘ eytion, Pe % , made the galar selection of which you ish hi biroed (8 | posmllg to say te yous teary cela nar us AD VERT BAD CATHOLICS, in the midat of all this persecution, what was faves Dread, § pots tem b e { lrelam readily admit. But in tracin, an n Fourth Day. would be cleaned evel jay by salt water. Stay aah Pour aime tet to suse 1 Hoecrmment ees tent cat aad Co enters the | Dinner-t whole leg mution, t pair of ducks, $y te, | interest on the donde aett created to carry oui these order to jetness? | And the Irish people | and Ireland would not stand tt. M Apesks volumes te cause I claim that the cause isnot | peace and ¢ (Applause) Government? Oe eats cneame ou nees fr (Be | tote found in any inherent restlessness of the | were charmed with his kind magner. Ah! iny | — Henry died in ii, and 1 really believe that | the irish from thelr own land, added to which fatoea, ¢ ‘bowls mation 'ororn,"t loures ‘broad, | measures wil Fay the rat covt oa uhe idade, steam Manet that he pursessesa charity mest sabe | [ish character—though they are fond of a fight, | friends, it is true there was with all the badness of his heart, bad he lived a | was now the element of religious discord and pracng. forge LAsieod tooa! the debt. #0 that i Peniinitunter! tat he ls enabled ¢o discover | Lerant that (laughter}—but the main cause was A BLACK HEART few years longer bis life would oot have been @ | persecution. It ls exident that this was still in | Suppers ott toiled gooce « milk toast, ¢ Improvement, use Wirties 1 the hatorical character of the unjust and beneath that smiling face. and it {s also true | {ure huts blessing to Ireland) for the reason | the minds of the English people. Elizabeth. ot rolls, § pote tee, ¢ coth Irish putch, ONE OF THE GREATEST MONSTERS INNUMAN LEGISLATION OF ENGLISM RULERS | that the very fact that Mr. Froude acknowledges | than ‘himeelf, He was, succeeded by his | Irishman of an sere of land, during tbe terrible The whole family dinner aad the suppers of two hat ever cursed the earth. (Applause.) But he | for four hundred years and to the presence in | that Henry the Kighth bad a certain amount of | \nfant son. Edward the Sixth, who was under | war which sbe waged Inthe latter days. of her boarders. ee as succeeded in tis to us apparent impoasi- | Ireland of the Anglo-Norman chieftains, who | popularity in the beginning among the Irish | the care or guardianship of the Duke of Somer- | reign against O'Niel threw out such hints as i i ity, aud discovered among other shining vir- | Were anxious to foment disturbance in order Proves that if England only knew how | set, He was @ thoroughgoing Protestant. | these: . The Third Avenue Railroad Employee Guards Sues ia the chasacter of the English Nero a great | that, they, might escape the payment of thelr Treland with respect and courtesy and | Stnentet avdnre Relitie inate people's supreme: ‘te maak GWA U6 bor Westlig tagtlcnre ce tatercinney, | wenton their first annual target excursion to Karty ; Waifs | dues to the plause,) Surrey came | kindness, it would long since have gained pes- ‘The more slaughter thi is ftaen, jar and hatred of disorder. Well, we | Over and found Grave, accomplished general as | session ot the Adelity-ot that unhappy country, | (Z,eka Tae opposed to anrubing that favored | wy March subjects, the tours and ticy Will get deal Park yesterday, They nombered over 10 men, nob fe oc orate i arned geiitieman and inquire how much truth | he Was—that the Irish were too much for him. | instead of embittering it by the Injustice. the | put his laws in force against the Church. Conse- | This is the woman whom Mr. Froude tells us ee HH | withstanding the storm. The oitc-ty of the railroa@ ere ish if, and how Much culy a fement of | He said to Henry: “The only way to subdue | tyranny, and the cruelty of ber laws. (Great | Putty the churches Gere piitased the Catone | Dever confiscated and would never listen to the and various others ga ¥valuante pr imagination. "All order in the stare is based on | 30ls people is to conquer them utterly: togo in | applause.) And that le what Imeant when on | Vests were driven outs and ae Mir! Froude ruts | idea of confecation of property. "TAG woman beth teeth Re it Bad Al Joweet of which was $10 1a. gu nivert Bir ' Ruree grand principles, my friends: First, the | With Ore and sword. This Surrey feit would | last Tuesday evening I aald that the English | h''S‘ne'treptemonts of naperstivion were cat | when the Geraldines were deattoyed took, the Carers ibe he Br tothe next dest shot. he Buoremacy cf tie law second. respect for and | Rot be dove. for the country was too extensive, | contempt for Irishmen is areal evil that liet at | down. The implements of superstition, aa vir, | wh f the vast estates of the Earl of Des- | The Canvassers Discovering all the Beauties ib, Geo. W. Mantle. orcerly Ser: Riberty of conscien es and thitdives tenderres | the situation too unfavorable, and the popula: | the root of all, and the bad spirit that exists be- | GONTj, gine implements of superstition. as its, | Minie Ot tive them tower English settiors, of the Election Law. eo eegenten Chee Pe TR ard for that which liee at t tion too determined to be subjected. Then | tween the two nations, for the simple reason | the statu his blessed Mother, and his | She confiscated millions of acres. And in the The proceedings of the Board of Can- red. Ward, M. Smith, W. H. Kelly, L. MI BUMEE Borie Hanen Henry took up & policy of conciliation. Mr. | that the Lrish people are too Intellectual, too | Saf. atatuge, of bis blessed Mother. and bit | oie ciminet truths recorded and stamped b cM marriage tie imu Froude gives the English monarch great credit | pure. too noble. too herotc, to allow themselves | Gestroyed, The ancient statue of Our Lady at | bistory, I cannot see bow any man can com: ers were delayed five hours yesterday be- i) | patie iat clone! TStder tn every Stat for trsing to cunciliate the Irish, “He did ithe: | fo te humbled and enchained.aud their pride tw | fyi (County Meath) wayburued, forward andany, Of this“atrocious woman that | cause the returns from several districts didnot | 5 Yesterday's Great Trot uupremacy cr tir law very 1 plus , pplause i : whatever she did she intended it for the go endo o ’ fe owners of the fast trotters who have ff obed Lis peedOre Mike of RiGee: | Tee A passage, my frienda, "And now, my friends, Mr Froude went onto THE CAURCHES WERE BURNED of Ireland. i Be ee earn ree ere COON acon wuabad 41: Hoes WOE WEAK AEE MIVEE COUR e law ie + sed to be, according to the | Correspondence between Surrey and Henry | give proof of the great love tue Irish p id torn down, and, as Mr. Froude puts it. “Tre- | witay RAPPENED AFTER ELIZABETH'S DE. of the envelopes. The negligent Inspectors were aide a Mednition cf Aq inas.thejudgment pronounced | NHC, speaks volumes. | The | Hart le have for Harry the Eighth, He says they | land was taught thet she must yield 10 he nem | ae a ener ee ad arm. | ent for to supply the omissions, orae Pr ervaea. wil other mes Grae ihe suika7s: O8 found reason and {atellec n ng abe en he arri in Ireiand he ing that actually. at the | order of things or stan the Pope.” (Ap er reigning irs. le e t. y. | ph Agar Bk aa 2 Fehrs ng for the putlie goad: ‘The taweis | people in the miust of war and contu c List $d | ing Ireland at the hour of her death one ¥. A communication was received from Johm | park, snd a'match ws ie vetweok thew to rece to vest, Ireiand threw the Pope over- plause) * Her ideas became inseparably linked ons dow. to One Hundred ana a Bhercfore, the expression’ of reason—reason | the people who were really the source of the Y was it that they threw the Pope | with religion.’ Glory to you, Mr. Froude. He Munster was reduced to the | Gillin, in which he said that he was a candidate | $** Backed by autboriss, reason infiuenced by the Mision he declared to be not'se much the | overboard?) We will see. Now, Mr. Froude, | has forgotten to mention the factthat from that | state described by Spencer. Conuaught was | forthe office of Comptroller on Nov. thas | fac bootiens’ ‘Barus weighee s50 sousans wate Wi @oble moure of the public Kod. This beng | Irish as the Anglo-Norman lords in Ireland, | fond as we were of your glorious Harry the | time to the present hour Ireland's in- | made a wilderness alter the rebellion of the | (1, tthe i Risction Di "he @he nature of jaw. the ve.y fret thing that is | Here tsa passage Bighth. we were not so ensmoured of him as | dependence and Ireland's religion _ he- | Clanricardes or the Burk family. Ulster, through | the returns of the Eleventh Election District of hey starte’ equarciy amid inten: xcitememt. Wile If the | the agency of Lord Mountjoy, was left the ve the Seventeenth Assembly Distric’ had not been | #000 drew ahead, andat Harry Bre owed sev. ‘ demanded for the law is that every man snail | | The two Ir cOge and McCarty | you think, We had not fallen so deepiy in love | came inseparably and irrevocably. 0 ow down to it and obey it. [Ap No | Rosh, or Red Mc arty, arc more favorable to order thi With him as learned gentleman were present I haveno doubt | picture of desolation. The glorious Red Hu ° or | fal lengths ip froot. Going up 't ver, Burns’ aman in apy community hes eny ri some Eugiishineu here. To orve UP THE PorE that be would rise up and bow bisthanks to you | U'Donnell and. the magnifcent. Hugh O'Neil | Sent !B, and be petitioned the board to send for rength, and the extra +4 of Wilson's t law ; In the letter of one of Ireland's bitterenemies. | for him. [Appl 1], What are the facts of the | for the hearty manner tn which you have re- | Were crushed and defeated after Afteen years of | taid returns. and to bave his vote canvassed. | Host and ihe Orne A pie One Oe Wi esfed is found the answer to Mr, Froude’s repeated | case? Henry. about the year 1S®, got inte dim: | ceived his sentiments. (Applause.) And Iam | war, and the consequ was that when James | 112. Clin further says Uist ihe oftce is an. el put on weport, an) at Mark Maguire's bis head wee epresent the na assertion that the irish are 90 disorderly and so | culties with the Pope. He commene db sure that. as he is not here, he will not take it | I. sieceeded Elizabeth be found Ireland almost | t¥e office, and that the term expires Dew 3). for | Pvei'e. bind wheel. s tovive to the p averse to good government, that t> reduce them | serting his own authority ash TiheCathote | lilof me woen I thank you in his name. (Great | @ wildern which Mr. Green was appointed to Blithe va- |’ porpoise, while example of virtue edience t to urder you have to sweep them away altogether. | Church, and picked out an apostate monk. whe lause and laughter.) : Mr. Froude, in his rapid historical sketch, says | cacy made by Mr. Connolly's resignation, Re | Joneoy iy ) stroggled i ‘Was Henry Vill | Thenext feat {Surrey's, police’ was to set | had neither och for togahee ace that all this fruit brought revenge. and he telis | f¢rred to Committee on Protes' ntly on unttl the go ithe jade the obedient to Ei Uieftarn against chieftain “He writes virtue, and had him consecrated the frst Arche Cath vegan bell gcach ae eq | Us tbat in 16H the Irish rose in rebellion Jona C. Rapp presented &, Dictest agsinet re- | trolling. ends territe row ensoed, Wisalit” heden Rave the evice x HE CHIRFTAIN's FEUD! Hishop of Dublin—George Brown, He sent | er Protsntant sutdoctee Speckle Peay iaked, | they did: Now the makes one statement, and | Corin tne ante ee neg tured. Hefsrrad be | Beld up epeany tart, and odered to give i to the mas ‘denial, and to prove that Henry Vill. was Ream eaca Tarte te Soreunlb: Ine SaaS bes LE B to Dublin with a commission to pet the | Ref Protestant sutgecta. Pete aratined ho haven, me Hears ME roaE ale tictaac le ike Nieves ten neeent. provarec: eesertec.at | (Whe smree ete 5 OSE OF THE GKEATEST ENEMIES OF FREEDOM | tween 1) att ia iste aid be | iish nation to follow in the wake of the Bneti hy | cution of Protestants in Ireland, because there | rising under Sir Phellte O'Neil in foe, these | Supervisor Plunkett said that th ; tend law that ever lived in this world Wa ghd eceorth edge Henry's supsurnacy Hien ati nad a | Were ho Protestants to be persecuted.” And he | were 340 Protestants massacred by the Irish, | #xteen hours to get the siguatures end consequentiy cue of the great Weill may Mr. Froude say that when the Trish | Difin die ‘called t Riana ton {0 | goes ont Those who were in Ireland when | That is a grave charge, and if it be true, alll can | 0b envelopes, and if the Board d TRenewed 2) Is nly are a unit they will be invincible, and no power | ang gala, (SI think Fou meet eeeehee | Mary came to the throne fed.” Tmust take the | say is that 1 blush forimy fathers. But if it be | Patticularin trivial things he sh out of ten thousand wh on earth could keep us slaves. (Thunders of | $00, . es 208 he Change | learned historian to task on this. The insinua- | not true, whv repeat ity Why not wire it out | 8ction. He offered a resolution that the la " 2, legiance. You must rive up the "9 c yn from the ry of the time. When | applause.) Surrey says 4 care, Mine Gt fine i tion is, that ifthe Protestants had been from the re ? complied with, which requires tb, Pope and take Henry, King of England. in his | jang "tne’ teh - wand hove : jooras: properly endorsed by the inspectors Sion hie subiest to) acknowledge hity asthe | wredner’ Poatekece acy Muname ae ee taedetem | stead.” Cramer. the Archbishop, anid. What | them, The tnipression he, desires, ts ieare ou 4 LYING mtsTORy. Placed Upon each return. essen foram pita ig iene woiritual head of the Church. There were three | it ena be for your gracio.s Majesty's thie that I hear? Ireland will | the mind is that we Catholics would be | Itistrue that Ireland rose under Sir Phelim | | Supervisor Van Schaick moved that every pro. | T89t4* O'Neil, on complaint of John Clark, Clark is Abbots of three hurer houses in London—the | Bere Hele, ange, ber faith: renounce ber cathow | only too glad to stain our hands in| O Nell. At that time there was a Protestant | vision of the law be complied with an actor and reporter. One day last week he awoke Abbot of Londen. tue Abbot of Asciclum, and | | Mark the spirit of that jetter.showing asitdoes | nouatine the head of the Catkette Chogehes | the blood of our fellow-cltizens on the question | paren in Ireland who called himself a Minister | Supervisor Cochrane strenuously opposed such | froma dream in which the Sgures 81, 88,70 were com bi Ae ie Ly of religion. But what are the facts? facts | of the Word of God. He gives his account of | action. He said that any omission made by a | spicuous. Daring the day these vumbere were conting- ‘the Abbot of Helaval. These three Abbots re- icy Of Engiand’s trea’ ae $ fused to ackno« edge Henry as the supreme joes not speek of the Int {Applause ) And toe Bishops of all Ireland fol- | Qre'tnat during the reign of Bdward V d | the whole transaction in a lotter to the people | poll clerk or inspector invalidated the whole | #\ly before his ey ed with the conviction jowed the Primate, all the pastors of Ireland Detective Powers, of the ‘oor subjects dof tne Chure ; sare orien 5 : Riba : fs anon win | of England, 3 r the mn r 4 that (hey were lucky Rum bers, he determined to p'ay on Soeted aud held {\rethal-and ajury of twelve | Consideration for the untoruuate Insne wis | {euowed the Primate, and George Brown wrote | the Catholic: church, there. were sent aver to | low Pritestants of ireland. Here arehis words: | applying such construction their labora would | tet, Om eyay to hue aditeas he stepped at ihe nglish legislation and freedom, is the perfect | swept away, and the better it will be for your | Seture ke lan toast rai e King | almost every crime. As soon as Mary Suaday to seize all their cattle and . and on Mo! sustained his own, that the iaw was directory | witu the assurance that should they come out he would liberty of a jury. Aju free not on gracious Majesty's poor subjects here. The | weeuid ep any bes en off. Tam afraid to | the throne these gentlemen did not wait gay they were to cut all the throats. Tne | and not arbitrary, and he asked that its provis- | reevive $2". Mr. Clark never belleved much tn polley. from coersion but fro dg- | hole object of Henry's policy and Henry's | Turte years eter however: Brrmet and rhe Led | ordered out; they went out of their own accord. | former jug) cecsted ; the third Whe tuassacre— | fone might have a discretionary construction, | His object was merely to become coveraaat with . ury must partia > re- i prot = MJ te + or i Presi ‘ono’ e) oe 4 other te 47 i" re arte Bate in bd Hl Bs rrertrig hr plana basta eabaeidien Maan Deputy summoned a Partfament, and it was at Aaey Carlene wetaene emcee BiAY £0 | mattis, another Magtish guthority, tella wai | five bier mics were Ierewcian foe wane ct tne phe Re ament has arrived. Thse twelve men refused to | Sir Jon Davidson, Attorney-General to Jamies this Parliament of 187, according'to Mr. Froude, | frfen pesple. claim for my native land that she that there were | S00 | Protestants hasan | the ticket referred to; but he believed it was an Pemoart tat hed Trneie decision was Grounded om “this it has | Mundreds of years it bed beeu merciless te Ire: | IRELAND THREW THr Fors ovenBoanD. — | [Shecral} Tam proud-in addreming anvamen: | May. foote It uo” af 3000. T'suppore, he | “After 'a want Uircuscione avers conte quese | Hetomied inthe pitch seep ard ueand f hetmsecy: ever deen known in England that it was high | Jand, Now, what are the f A Parliament was as. | can audience, to be able to lay this high claim | tought in for @ penny in for a pound. | tion of tabling the resolution was lost, it being a | ()'Ne!l laugh: Rimi. and soked if he really did tala! freaaon to deny the siiritual supremacy uf the A WMP TO DRIVE rRELAND sembled, and from time immemorial in [reland, | for Ireland. The genius of the Irish people But there was an honest Protestant clef. | tig vote, Mad tae cabve teeulin'te aie Ing. Henry cent word tothe Jury that if the Ree : whenever a Patllanat. was sescanled there pd . = syman in Ireland who examined minutely || ‘The canvass then proceeded. It teh one Lec cote Faery Se } did hot nd the accused guilty Le would. vinit | Then. the Earl f Surrey having failed to re- | were three delegates, called proctors froin every IS NOT A PERSECUTING GENIt into the details of the whole conspiracy and of | by Col. Biss, Commissioner Davenport the pies AN) OBFEESS Bits 089 RO SeMED, { upon the jury the penaltcs w he bad ine | teed home sory according to Mir. Froude. | district in Ireland, who sat in the House by | | There is not a people on the face of the earth | all the evils that from it, What does he omas E. ‘Stewart, and others. Protests ar —— } fpon tbe Jury the sigh be bed ie | tried homer and. Here Mr. Froude | Virtue of their office. When the Parliament was | $0 attached to the Christian religion aa the Irish | tellus?“ have discovered,” he said-and. he | being prepared, sud an exciting time le antici, Night's Fi | fights guara: e people int Fries to make a povnt for bis hero. dpetinen. | called, the frst thing they did was to banish the | face, There is hota people on the face of the | gives proof State papers and authentic records pated . ; | bah deh a ebarteruf E Magna Charts, j Admire the: nan. who tried the experi. | three proctors and deprive ther of their seats | Carth so unwilling to persecute or shed blood in | “that the Trish Catholics in that rising massa | AY o'clock in the evening the board took a] At@ o'clock last night Gre was discovered on ‘ pr mentof home rule iB your country. and hnding | jn'the House, Without the slightest Justice, | the cause of religion as the Irish. “And here aro | cred 2.18 Protestants; that other Protestants | recess ‘until 11 o'clock this mornings bit. the | the third floor of the threestory rick Dallding ST ' TRAMPLE UPON THE Finer GNAND exeatest | 2 UTE tet Able togurern yourselves. he tad | without the slightest show oF prete of ities | my proofs: Mr. Froude says that the Protes- | sald that there were LOM mores and that some | cretesiore who have in charge the corrections cupied by George Bain & Sons, i t Fe ite at eiead aoe had pogmuudimagige | right or law’of justice, the prociory were ex- | taits made off as avon ae Queen Mary came to the | Insh authorities themiselves say there were 30M, | on the envelopes containing the returns. wil os on stock and me { Uberty of the | tha: th. te means 2 cluded, and so the e: ical element o rone ; but Sir James Ware in annals te making altogether 660) eet hour earlier, at which time the in- Srey | ATET Ee FOU eee tre Bor home rule tegaan thie ee | [end was precluded us that the Protestants were being persec This is the massacre that Mr. Froude speaks | spectors and poll clerks who bave beet suine the, Barcancut wee eae treason by twelve | their own laws, For home rule means this oF | Then, partiy by bribes to England upder Mary, and that they actualy | of. Me toanes off a0 ealinis in) Protestants | moned are expected to attend The damage to the build: he United Stat little’ “boroughs that surrounded dover to Ireland for protection. He gives re massacied—that is to say he multipliesthe | The following 1s the of canvass of the ist find you guilty or the | Snare. orit means that the [rish people hi took an oath that Henry was head of | even the nemes of some of them. He inal mber By ten; whereas Mr. Warner, | Second Assem ly District : nalties ld'be tisited on them? | Fight to assemble in Parliament. the Church. and Mr. Froude calls this the apos- | tells us that Jobn Harvey. Abel Ellis. authority in question, says that there were here w rty and law with which | tives. and make their own law tacypolthe irish nation. With that strange want | Joseph Edmunds, and Henry Hall, natives cf | 2.100, and 1am unwilling to believe in the addi Rade meatoreney Teo ae 4 you are essed. if your trials by Jury | But Henry's bome rule meant Br of knowledge. fori can call it nothing elec, he | Cheshire, in Bngland, came. over to Ireland to | tional numbers that have been sent ip : wtueriand 1 on the second were. afer the pattern of Me. | Bi outment of the Bar] of Kildare t imaziges that the Irish remained Cattoles,even | Stold persecution in England. and they brought | | After all the suferings and persecution, which FY ‘aressusking sea Proude's lover of order and nater of disorder, | Lieutenant or Deputy” Henry dd not savto the | though he asserts they gave up the Pope. ‘They | with them a Welsh Protestant minister named | Ireland had endured at the hands of English His Bedford's may aa ‘ oder. The tre Menry VIIL? (Appiause and laughter.) When | Ifish nat Your representatives to a | tlck™ he bare. the cathe bishope and all—and | Thomas Jones. These four gentlemen were re- | Protestants, Task you set these two authorities CORONER. Uy the eas com ec with some eury pr ¢ Catholic religion amon onal Pai and wake your wo laws thereby acknowledged Henry the Fighth’s su- | ceived so cordially. were welcomed so hospita- | before your m| Contrast them and give me #44 Woltman 4 | Gresece wlich were hanging on the wall. Damage te Nis subje 1 he give them in e didn Feifieh chieltains to govern | premacy. But, nevertheless, they did not be | DIY that they actually founded a bi hly respect- | a fair verdict : Ls the etock $600, insured, “No dainage to building. Certainty ns ta for to the | ut an fhe (abate? Noell, McCarty. oF | Come Protestants, they still remained Cathol able mercantile family in Dublin. Put we have | Is there anything recorded in history more | Kernan's maj... rresarpared ef his Iie it ne could have ind bands on Berane a tags "tae ash We HENLEY p> | and the reason ‘why. they didnt take tot Soother magnificent proof that the Irish are | terrible than the persistent, undying resolution |, ° harok. Augustus Millroy’s Improvidence. / uld have ast of him ter.) and line govern Irelan eth was because they wanted to entail on them | Bo ecuting race n James IT, asssem- | so clearly manifested o: English Govern | Lawrence 001 Food, of } He beard mas bis death. and after his | MAld to the Anglo-Norman lords. the most | the Protestant religion as well as tue oath of | bled his Catholic, Parliament, in Ireland, in | ment to root outs to exterpate, and destroy the | Gaines : k aoaynieon Nendengrornoe dbs agnibacd ido ‘death as gh mass was celebrated quarrelaome. unnatural, and restless class | Supremacy lems, after they had been for more than | people of Ireland? Is there anything recorded | Havemeyer.... : ‘Trirty-second eirest, calied at the Thirtieth street pollen i Bis infatea hat the Lord might have | £ at have ever read of in b TRE CATHOLIC CHURCH oni fred years under the lash of om and sald th ¢ bad jost $¥ from her room. some other | Tuke the ernment in yo: @erey on b friend: foown har neir Pro- | in blstory more more unjust than thissystematic | Lawrence pin " foci testant fellow ¢ zens, after they had been tutional rol she OOF 801 ‘i o! And see the consequences. The Norman lords | 894 its doctrines they abided by, and they be- | Poh ived ‘ people whom the LIEUT.-COVRANOR. J sent Augustus Milroy, a colored servant, aged Boor ou J supe beneBt of that | sno sooner left to govern than they make | lieved then. as they do now, that there {s no yobbed and plundered. Imprisoned and put, to ghty God created in) that island. ty whom | Depew 15, to the room on an errand. t time afte h4 1 The second grand element is respect for eon | War on Ireland. The Qrst thing that Kildare | 10 & Catholic who is not in communion with | AC Vast the wheel gave @ turn and in las tre Bets every ince of trial: soll” On the thar ee Nasde'don At t ‘science. ‘The conscience of wan, and conse. | does is to summon an army and lay waste the | the, Pope uf Rome. (Applause. Henry the | Catholics were up and the Protestants were | bard can biteey prac t: OB the ether | yews may E Deco see treating | Quently of anation, is supposed to be the great | territories of his Irish fellow chieftains around | Eighth, who was a learned man, bad too much | qown. That Parliament assembled to the pure sediigod Canal COMMISSIONER. | Spencer's pla a | heintended to of ae io W | wulde in’ all the relations that individuals or the | bimn,and after & time the Anglo-Normans fell | leei¢, and too much theology, and tow | Serof ac3 members. ‘The eltic onCathilic ele. |, | (A MORE MAGNIFICENT srectact preea’s fiesi Roberty nen tn.... oeee || Regooten aoe nis sent ey j Derr] 0 God, Conscienc 0 out among themselves. e@ great Anglo-Nor. uc ot o1 w Ly \ le ol 1 i 8 oberte. ugueta enjoying ienlghty God bimeelt respects it, Tt man farnify of the Butlers were Jealous of Kil: | &Fotestant. | He never embraced the doctrines | Bret iawihat thes made? Tbe vere hee fg | hich Ireland siood li detemce of her reusliee | enna menar @ | Opes ' Titeal axiom tat fa mat does wrong when he | Gare. Who was a Pitzgerald. They procured b Luther, but held on to every idea of Catholic | that that Catholic Parliament passed was asfol- | 89d. gave up all things. rather. than Lg bal fe RUE cd et ; Saat y | Shinks he is doing right, the wrong will not be | Imprisonment for treason, and in truth Kildare | doctrine to the very leat day of his life lows: sacridce, what’ she conceived to. be the bevoasiboar- "| Manat tt { Srtributed te hitu ty Almighty God {Applause ) | did carry on & treasonanie correspondence with © acknowley 0 wee : ot | Cause of truth? Mr. Froude does not believe Sk Berns 2 Sweep Wen this saan Hendy a tetecter of Coppienee) | Francie 1. of France and Chatles ¥. of Germany. on the day that Henry the Eighth refused to | ssuod inet geiinee now ner ever aguin shart asyincs | that It was the cause of truth. T dy not blame Deupoy HS | Col. George Bliss and other Radicals have de. ital two thousand} es of bis contempt | When Kildare was lodged inthe Tower of Lon- | 8! dge t pe he refused t aCatho~ | pe persecuted tor his religion him; every man has a right to his religious mad. ‘, = eided to present abilito the pext Legislature, provid. ; for liberty of conscience, let me select He | don. bis son, Silkin Thomas, revolted, because | lic. To pretend that the Irish people were so opinions. But Ireland believed that it HE] CONGRESSMAN AT LXkoe | Burns's may = +0 ered th sPie ct England to change their | be believed that his fatter was i ignorant as to imagine that they could throw | . That was the retaliation th on them. | Chuse of truth, and Ireland stood for it like one | $23 AB sieht ime seo enmeg. | | /08 {98 he tera) 20 all tee Sepoiaie ends OF tae ! oriered the people of England to change thelt pe IRL Nee ae the Pope overboard, and ail! remain Catholic Te Was it not magnificent? Was it not grand: a | man OF truth, and treland stood for It like one | Tremeis seeeeree Wt MMrpT 1 | County Departments, and the eetablishuient of State and t ‘ 70 I. to offer to the cenius and Intelligence of Ire! manifcent specimen t spirit of Christi. peak o ‘ cox" sa ouupiesione iB this city. The *bill Riurenl wate starr ean knows eran tole Bing Henry declared war age im. and | 8 gratuitous Insult. (Cheers and appiause.| It sat ip PRIE OF form vances and Sharity with aogetnatns Eteieony tater Naver |cone *l saurps Cicag eneepot tne departinenie cf fh ato, wh , ponias against the King, ‘The consequence of | is true that some of the Bishops apostatized, I | “ hich, if it be not ina man, all the dog: bet animes > belle ; fiandings. Police, @e. It sleo provides forthe appolat: ’ L4G) » 0. and a part of Leinster were ravaged. people de- premacy to Henry the Eighth. Their names | him. ee Shi . r One district mi ; hajority. The Democratic to the pecple of England? He simply said to | stroyed, and villages burned, until there was | will ever be held iu contempt by the irish peoe ELIZABETH’S POLICY. Ree Ta ee oes ante SP BOt sive] Stwo district missleg, ana two ip doubt tobe ate frei the apollo &heim ery man inthe land m with ROPnIng HAE te fem fen OF boas: and Fale was | ple Now, coming t) good Queen Bess, as she is | that has no right, nor has any other The votes for District Attorney and for Alder- | P&lmeuls are tu be reappointed. ex in whatever I decide te Teligi haan | the result of Henry's home rule.” Kildares | Here Father Burke recited the names of the | called. I tnust s.y'that Mr. Froude bears ‘very | man the right to come before the audlence of | men were mot caurassed Al, Shia. his Pat ; ment | appointment ae Lord Deputy aumO+ | ave venerable But apostate luminaries, whom he | heavily upon er, and speaks of her really it | America, of Anierica that one never persecuted a The Great Traveller's Return, Suis making it bigh treason to disagree with 4 willask'me did the Trish people | called McGuinness, Roland Burke, Bishoo of fd uses anid far more, forl have not the learn- | spects the rights etem of the nee cet at ts | OMicial and Reported County Majorities for | Yesterday Deputy Sherif Harvey Scoteld, who Qhe King in anything that he | elieved. but that | take part in that war soas to justify H. Clontert, the Bishop of Clonmacnoise, Matthew | ing nor the eloquence of Mr, Froude. He says | upon herimperial soil.and tu ask that American President aud Goveruor d trom Herlem 8 Bridgep i Go man shuld dispute atptiing which tte | Bight? A will auamer by saying they took no | eee gn cEaughlin, (wo other Blabope, | Ope tue thing of her, however, that is wortuy | peotle to sanction by their verdict the tober Grant. Diz a a forfeit on t von, Fe | r nould even believe at any future time, o 01 * PS. | of remari an ci oh Es Counties, DS ie w eighed 3 Laiehter and'ay lau ah was auowed | beginning to the end. Tne Irish chietiai Father Burke then continued : Elizabeth wae reluctant to draw the ew ord. but when d persecutions of which England is guilty. Feit in Weighs Be geld tthe uation, fan dour infaliple | OCaml and O'sbore ot Ontony'and auother, | FIVE nianors aroeratizen, freedom wes Aued upos her beuuct, uever to pele | | NO FUNDING OF THE STATK DEBT. s uide in What you have to believe and what you | th es ne only Irish chieftains tha he rest of Ireland's Episcopacy remained | ‘That isa very eloquent ; but thi 1 Pay ams | ave todo, and any man who disputes my in. | tovk part in the matter at all. These th: faithful. “George Brown, the Apostate Arch- | of “} ttictly thar | The Law Sa the Questi the Peo- withhim, They ur Mallibility is guilty of high treason, and 1 wil | chieftains of whom I speak were of very smail | bishop of Dublin, acknowledges that of Gi Seayence, russ, Te rs bus serieely thee - an order to tieke ss from them, ScoBeld wi letone arch of sccistyotne sanity et theme rine Kid yet {rom thie very fact we are made | Of apintual allegiance toHeary Wilke Thee | ter of, elind leat carne to feign tn | Atnanr, Nov. 14.—Comptrolier Hopkins bas | | = = ‘Srlewe Rearrest of Lura & Taylor's Clerk. | wiage vow. Whatever else le interfered with, | to believe priest in Connaueht, Dominick Tirrell, and i i‘ ; issued the following ciroular : be RT ld locto: old employee o' Boat must not be touched, for the Lord say THAT THE IRISH PEOPLE JOINED took the oath nf allegiance almply because | What de you think of the laws ct that Pere: | Br Naw Tors, Co bechdhaaat BB oster, ba nls) emnplores of tary joinm togetber, let no tuan put as offered the diocese of Cork. Alexander | meat Cay was nine Ok the, laws of that Paris: Aan Ha Sek, Oosecoeere, ey + Atban: Mandiog is Lore & Terior's Grendend Cary {applause No pomers inHteages | a2d.acreed with tne party of whom Henry the susrabbots of Dunrody, was atrerave | monty, It wesnot eCathollo Fartiemen or 85 | Os meer auperetr ine) | Albany, who wae arrested by Detective Brauet some weeks ago Gee Or aurrlage: tit this hefon tae lenereeat | ME Proude goes on to say. The Trish people | dyace¥e, Vn forays, he County of Wexford: in | Generally speaking, Parliaments in Ireland used | , Sim Under wiaw passe’ at’ the last seasioa lot ihe | rarmane fee of pearly, 4 ’ jo sot to 4 . m > af + nts Paritas o to th 1 ulekly) w order and hater of disorder, had su little res- | £0t t like Henry the Eighth.” If they did Id nglish King. These are all the panes that | ePele fiicurerte eco eee rss optls Parla. | Cifrent gear wires aod e half milions.of dollars of the ceed ect for the san tity ot marriage that he pus | hit admite their taste, (Laughter and ap fepreiant the nellonnl a ment of Elizabeth consisted of 76 picked men. | {ots) equalised valuation of the State, to meet and me peu Sway from him trucally his lawful wife, aod | «(lie pleased he might have said blessed) th Gfgo many hundreds egie were found manting, | 1he laws that that Parliament made were, frst: | cover {ke State arti ar deseieney in the treassry of Breadway and Henties streets han Oecnefuraun took in ber stead, while she waa vet living. a | AMG Mr Froude. "and they got fond of him." | gnd sul Mr Froude tells us the Irish behets | pARL ClereTmaa wot uring the Book of Common IM are. SU ner the authority Con, |S ESBADES Sith Amportuat facts to warraat the actcou of the Brus Frama, ube yeed to pe is own daughter. i1¢ | that Henry never showed any diapoation to | S04 prieste threw “he Fove overboard. (Great | fori, either in public vr ta private, "he Brat tine: that n, the samme Legislature, ey act chapter | Cortiand tn the rearre n dd six wives. [ ter.) Oo he repo Bah a tL ee M opt y ‘oude) makes another as- | he is ered, eb of his beneare for ed on the 1th of May, authorized the question | Pelaware ane anaeaeed diated, divorced; two he beheaded, one died | “isrossess the Irlsh people of their lands oF | sertion, and I regret he made it. 1 refer to it bes | one year.and suffer iinprisonment in ati f ng this debt to be submitted to ® vote of tne | parchess qiomphine How § s dh chila-birth, und the sixth and the last, Catha. | ty oyterminate thei” | Honest Heury’ I | cause thera ts much in the learned gentieman to | For the second ofeuce he f people attine nat election, "The last clause of tnatee:~ | Ulster Lien TAR He Eating te Bhlelteds estined victims in Henry's book, and would | (v ).i0 * & ish Bistoran "of Iretand in these days were immoral m To be let out. whenever she thought fe io be vows epon wit jomthe eof the ding in the General Sessions agatae: Baye had ber bead cut off, bad the monte | eee ee ae oe ie a erate rere | Lae they had families: that they were not like | For the trird offence he was tobe put in close | tincriaw or aby bil sraty faeutiment te ibe taut? tue notorious Spence Pettus was called twice seater ied "a fow “cays “longer, (Applause) i | equate, Mat dothe State vapers of tbe tego | theveuerahe men we see ih the eviscopacy of | coulnewment for lite is the lady that was | tution shall be subaiitted (o be voted for or againet Fellows 1 wk you 9 Dot tc uehy in | Vf Henry the Pighen tell vat Tey tellus hats | to-day. (Applause.) Now I assert there fe not | unwilling to draw the sword, and this was the | Ou (te 17th day of May.end (wo daye after the. pas. ot te taken from his: | ionarch'to bring the whole. Ish mation ints j # *2red of testimony to bear up Sir, Froude in’ | very year she was crowned’ Gueen-the very | gatofeald set (Ceapiey i. the Leyiclatare pale vide to, Come before an | Connaught, which meant dispc jon, or i THIS WILD ASSERTION. year, She scarcely waited a year, ne ip oi ing intelligent ‘American: publ aught, which n poss , or in N. 797, authorizing the question of an amendtient to the Shem ty belies the american Pale | other words exteriniuation, Of this fact there | Ihave read the history of Ireland—national, THIS WAS THE Woway Cobstitution providing for the continuance of the Co ™ ¥ ; gad pak ther to believe the abaurd 3; | feuoduestion, Henry the Eighth had a procia: | civil ecclesiasticalnas far, eres ’ : Inisslon-of Appeals. If accordance with tbe concurrent |_| Majority in Missour! 23,640, | A Public Box to be Seen from a Private B that Henry VILL was an admiter of order, and | jndyioh sued totharedect. he Counsel gov, | howhere. have Vaten ¢vett an allegst reluctant to draw the sword. So inuch for the | feslvtions paged iy Nepreceding Legiamiuren tate | St. Lovis, Nov. 1t—Heturns from 112 cou Messrs. Dooney Harris and Johnny Aaron Hut dir. Froude inay say this is not fair; I g ireland senctioned tt snd the peop lays '@ proof of immorality against t If a layman was discovered using any other | {+ Damed act, having been passed at a subsequent day, | '¥ thl# State give Grecley 25,640 majority. Keturne from | have cousented tu give sm exibition of their kill tm aad in my lecture that eT hareuoieto | gland desired it; su much ‘ao that the paper | clergy or t pete ishops BE the tine of the Hefor- prayer, Book except Queen Eilzubetuts prayer {00K the precedence and virtually repealed the act | 18 counties give, Woodson, for Governor, 21.871 ma | sparring in the Harry V)! scene of the new play Oo wi 4 ve e. a daiead . ow U On. “ Mr. a} ‘0 be Vor ye vote op fun ul , ity, Col. , Re] 4 he i uae th i on to be produce he Gi ja nOrY. A RALSTONIA SFRDOROH ORs | eae vana of aettale. promnlabe broneh’ Froude sald this he meant the apostate bishops, | Pook: he was to be putin Jail for one year; and | tdtoavote ct the people at eeidelection’ ee” | defected byw UnEN ie ania wiih Hetes Me ome | ofesuad the Black. "even, to be produced at the Grand MR. FROUDE, YOU WERE wise! tnere thal no Irish be onthe aide of the water of | Lf 60,1 am willing to grant hin whatever he | 4 26 %ae caught doing it a second time, be was | T understand t a have been cast at the recent ual delegation 4 Kepublicans aud ¥ Democrats, | tile prize ried, aul Will thus aiford the upper Leu cape Ms Mh PRORDE, F00. 8B! Shaawon urprosecuted, u a, and unexiled. Then | Charges against them, ahd the heavier it is the | Every Bunday the people were obliged to sy | Se there wey tere majority eae te Suniel tal dppurtustly vi seeing Low the” bunch Of By Applause and laughter.) But at leasty pialliie Pepa pale be well two hucdred ‘mire it | more pleased I au to'ses it going against them. | to "the ‘Protestant “chureh, and if"anycoke | tue Thelcave it folate cbinica of a rant Thinking of a Third Term. beast —— f that by" wae a Vater of disorder,” aud Sara thie thls arp bare the ‘the next Passage in the relation of Henry the | he'was ‘aned’ twelve, peuce-that wotid te fore, be levied and culested in parsusne Wasiixotos, Nov, 14,—A prominent Repub- A Homicide of St. Hele: ‘ proofs he wives are as follows: Bighth to Ireland goes to prove that Ireland did | 2¢,, inpgncesthat would be | ler neretotore had a recent interview President Award Richards, the seaman who is accused First, he says that cue of the curses of Ireland EVIDENCE OF THE STATR PAPERS not throw the Pope overb friends, in | 8" LM swelye palogs GY our present circular is iasued (hat there may be bo din that he |* seriously thinking of « third Ghat absenteciom in the edt way imagine | aweesing away. and. destroying of the whole | of Ireland, ‘They bad book fore hardral oud | freedom,” says Mr, Froude, " was never to pale. | ey have been the vote on th hens Aden - able. “He took the estate Irish race, for we Bud the Lord- Deputy of the | and more Oghting for that ttle, au The Queen drew the sword in the cause of the | credit of the Biate oud the wealthy conaition of he and gave thein to other people who Ww Councilot Dublin writing to bis Majesty, and | ft ts conferred’ by thee Irish ng | S8e OF freedom Bub my, friends, freedom Abances, in case any portion ci tie St Ould OMI OF Convicted of Murde Fre Ble isthe, Tit hovlds ery th pound at Dublin Upon then Enalish monarch,” ‘Twa. veuss | paank Whatever, waa'in /Eifaabeth’a’ tind. | refuse to pep tis subwitted tre | WASHINGTON, Nov, 14,—The jury in the case of Let us analyze it, During the wars of the Roses, | They tell him thath later, in gratitude to the Irish Parliament, | the addition -? religious ere tai mice | amenteaea'yt fos DeiRE | Charies H. O'Brien, charged with killipg Samuel) Cup Datmeen Lancair “ue sree which wroceded | will vty arg cut Hany caifed tho rah chiettalne together ‘ai | Heaaate fein, Etna be Meets tisal | Bossa fl Mathis el? | Biagham ie August last, this eveciog returced aver | Alliger Brothers of 10 Pine street, agente of 2 » ng oi om nbly, and on the frst A eee cul lot of guilty ua indicted, wuich wae forwarder ib the | the Merchants’ Ineurance Company of Provitence, Norman fais tled tn ireland eros Duinbers would be 60 ere day of July, 143, he gave the Irish chieftain | thestar of freedom, sii I can say is the sooner | “Ali, you pease submit this communication to whe | Bret decree. en M4 and and joined in the Bight, It was an | (ued that would conscicntiously allow a9 weay 6Ub- | their English tities. OWoll of Ulster gottheritie | “uch stare fall from tHe osnopy of heaven and | goad cf supertisore of your county, io J reported as eaterday roe question, and an English’ wi nd the | sects depart out of bis realm of the world's history the betier, teh from t e, company of Earl of Tyrone; the glorious O Donrell th 21 full wud coutlaue, consequence was that many English settlers in | Not enough of English subjects to Sil up the | title of Earl of Tyrconnell; U ¢ THR CONDITION OF THE IRR CHURCH. Greland abandoned their estates to take part in | place of the irish. Humanity, indeed! Extir- | Burke, Earl of Gunticenie, Piispetiek eat In what state was the Irish ‘church? Upon < it. Others again left Ireland because they had | pate the whole race! was the cry. But this could | the name of the Baron of Ossory, and they re- | that subject we have the suthoriiy. of Ane The Felsoned Clergymn argo English properties, and preferred to reside | bot be done, considering the great dimculty the | turned to Ireland with their new titles. Henry, | Protestant historian, Leland There were | PuitLapecrasa, Nov. l4.—The Key. J. Brinton io Kngland. When Henry VIIL. ascended the | new inhabitants would have to contend with. poor, generous fellow | 280 parish churches’ in Meath, and after | @mitn, recently poisoned Ia North ae Very respectfully yours, “Watos K- Adraiss, Comptroiier ssent by E Barsun senta full-grown a8. open-| the English pale consisted of sbout one- | But then she document goes ou to say | ashe. was really nerous—gave those |e few years. time th 15 raine, was ot one he assertion lion by the United States Bxpress to bait of the counties of Louth, Meath, Wicklow, | This ts « dificult thie exterminayou—con. | Shiau Sal the titles, but them i Lupe pastor of the Ot. Jo scope! ehureh of Fails: ted 8 cb of bis suow is now exhib) WDubiiasand Weatord, Accordiog vo its Froude, | wifsrine'ch‘atnry Gove trakges cow sodas, Yas J of vroperty, only happousd ve be moleu irom | the Kipgdoyu,""s6re Lalande ths peonie wore | Ma) tha thysetem® SanmeeY Wedge Se. Has A Weel of his who la now exbibipg, the people were sity. t Ud qaumels Uy aprons,