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ee PRICE TWO CENTS. CHE EXCIT “NOVEMBER 27, 1872. nion and in the name of the of Ireland, and that man was the elo- rious Daniel Two or three of dof tacit 1 need hardly, tell NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY. your own fault? (Laugh. TIETH YE IRELAND AND THE ENGLISH FATHER TOM BURKE'S PINAL RES PLYIOME what made you rebel the half million Protestants were not fairl represented. The Parliament was composed 0 AM) members, of whom seventy-two were electe by the people and the reat were the certain great lords and landed. proprietors, may be interesting to American citizens to | know how these nominees wero ¢ landed proprietor went to a village on his do- he wanted sich aman re .and the tenants returned time against the Passed. He speaks words of moat eloquent the terrible vialtacion of 194047 brought ears to hose words of compassion ople whose sulfesin, od to biess him and Cheers.) He has words of gener- htenment and statesman-like symba- he tenant farmers and t d for these words, Mr. Fro rusand thine over, I Jes Hot attempt to speak of the Perhaps that is dan suppose that house and a great Buronean hive for American has manufacturing a, which in turning wheels by American ever that day comes; if ever that it will be no degradation to Ireland to join hands with America, because America dues hot cepts them on terms nd she reapects the rights of the peoples who cast their lots with hers, CONCLUSION, w, Thave done with this aubject. and with t one word , d ting the course of EMENT IN PARIS, ANOTHER TERRIBLE REVOLUTION PREDICTED. compassion o: —words the readin, my eyes—and for Seek : r power fo This is the argument which the learned gen. racer power Sew established. laws would I witnessed, I prayad been carried reward bim for the rebellion in Ireland in 1600, Now the 160) means that of Hugh O'Neill, nieen Elizabeth ; and emancipation friends, that the were only too willing to pass any measure the English Government would require, red before the Catholic © Here are his words. are the words of the Catholics of Ireland : It is my sentient, and Tam satioted it ts the yo! every gentieman that hears me le of Ireland, that If our c hated measure of inion comes, revohition ¢ Postion Turned by Solid Lovicand made in Ulster against jonable Historical Rarke's Eloquent Apostroph: ent Work of Da Father Burke delivered the Of luis course In reply to Mr. Froude Inst even- The Academy was filled by an enthusiastic and patriotic audience, and every strikin iment uttered by the great was loudly applauded A Revolution Th din Case the Thiers maine and. said that enslave her fri of glorious equality the consequence he fixes the date i Remember, they el O'Connell. Postpoued. r arried them in his pocket future of Ireland. yof you travelled Drogheda? (Voices. " We have that aid on the way Law a miserable friends, here ts the re laws began to operate in If bishop of Armagh, the Primate of Irelond, and laughter.) rd of history, tte, Nov. 26.—There are no indications whatever this morning of @ settlement of tho differ_nces between the executive and legish tive departments of the Government. President Thiers and the Committeo on the Ad: ply to his message, firmly adhere te their respoctive positions, and the regarded by all as very serous Loter.There is great excitement inthis .city and throughout the provinces over the aspect of affairs at Versailles. ing that the members of the parties of the Right and Right Centre in the Nat come to the determination to su of the committee appointed the message of M. Thiers, Dut of the Catholle pe éition to this injuriogs, Inauiting, and raw upon us tho renewal of the penal laws, we would sooner Doldiy meet the persecution and id be testimony of our virtue, 4nd throw ourselves ouce more under the mercy of o Protest ant brethrea than give our assent to the polltical Ido know that aithongh ex. wourly held forth to have some reference to the ruture, the verdict that Mr. Froude looks for Is nota inere verdict of absolution for past iniquitie He has come here, though he is not a Catholic, ke @ man going to confession. i loudly and generously, © have sinned, and the verdict whic regard the future nore than the past; for hi in the name of common sense, Low | J history, can an the roll o! of, crueltie shed. and wrong which we entero lating ‘in company with Mr. Tt must be for the future. WHAT 18 THAT FUTURR TO BR? Well, my friends, and first of all my American grand jury, you must remember that Tam only a monk, not a man of the world, and di d bout these things, mine, and T will give you their class of men who love + They think that f Ireland is to be wr «by rising in arms against the Olds Ireland ensla which Mr. Fr Us teaches us anything, It teaches us that there is no use in appe or to armed insurrection for ireland. Mr, Froude ved when the Irish people have two things which they do nut seem to v fess now, namely, union as of tion not to sheathe the sword I know that TI to bay betore these five OP HALP A DOZEN WHETCHED HUTS, ing place Lever laid eyes on. and that village returued a me: Was put into Jail and leftthere for denying the Henry the Eighth over the Chure ind applause} over Henry the kighth's reign, passing over the under Edward the reign, aid wo find ‘oppression, which distinguished T tak On the plattorn ¢ have sinned, we have ' grievously he calls for m rd him before he as<s me. that such a word never came wilful mind or from =m: he loves Ireland, lights, he does different from hi murder of our conntry, ye advantages ms; the Irish Cathone to se owes (0 his C0) of Ireland still re OF Menerper I beg to assure him Sixth, we come to Elizabeth | that she assembled a Parliament in 1500, forty years before Mr. Froude's one of the laws passed by: All officers and Parliament of 's% represented the [rien peo) Three mililons of Catholles bad not a vote Parliament of “8 now (lat the Catholics Lapirs AND GeNTLEWEN ame under ty i ‘Our lights are But stil, Almighty God will judge every inau according to bis lights. longed applause.) THR VERDICT. After the applause had subsided, the Very Rev. neral, came forward and na New York tan ask fore i let justityiny heartrendiug re: nisters ecclesi also take us in, to take the oath of surremacy to of in other words to acknowl destroy them ee @ pec} The Irish people knew this and the moment the Parliament of 's? waa de- clared independent of the Parliam wer to originate It is announ anact of ¢scourte ide. my, learne In the name of the al tender to the learned apologios, and Thee to a 4 my Irish countrymen in this lat ave by invlination te ab with that ¢ as never refused, even Applause.) Mr. Froude has Among tis as an enemy of Ireland. ple. and Lam willing believe bim, and when Tread in the report of about to reply te no one in bts ed this morns © Were bout. Queen Elizabeth, ecge her as Shade of the ed truer words! SHADE OF THE GREAT O'CONN ELIA true Irishman, priest, and layman, sub- e glorious sentiments wherever great departed, you never utter- land, with th nal Assembly have THE © POPEsS, the was the head Church, that she was the successor of the Apus Was the represent Fasher Starrs, Vicar G p| ple, they eried. be represented fairly, and make | (Laughter.) a prand sucecss of independence. teers, to their honor, clamored for reform, their Qrst meeting at Dungannon, the first thing they demanded was reform for the Parliame as embraced in ite LADIEe AND Guuriannn : Ihave merely a fom words lecture of the course by Father Burke in reply to the lectures the Fogiiss historian ; 1 that you must afl feel satisfied. with the maa: Ber io which he has replied to the lectures of that di Unguished gentleman. Port walty to mov fo eay to you before know that this is the Jas Froude goes on in an Innocent sort of way (laughter.) tragae thing after the Uaton wa THE RADICALS THREATENING REVOLUTIO! 26.—Special despatches from n papers say the (Applause) take this oath ris to the London aft Radical journals of the former city are viol They declare that a terrible overthrow of thi . Thiers. The same were obliged to fe) fing was nota fair, open, and loyal, einbractng the FINST NAMES AND CHARACTERS IN IRELAND, 0 first inter T for the pur- rable society, but Ireland, and love her the future by Insurrect iritual supre t= less, L take this op: se 1 ta i» i ther Burke for the abie,-diguided, aud earned planed his purpose in the just coucluded in their language. jon will foll overnment of nse the Logitimists rialiste of having formed a conlitte downfall of the present Government. G Changarnier i# also churged secure power. GEMMANY THREATENING TO KE TERMITORY, words. Good God! idem can this pe was to forte! offence all his Catates, real and personal; and tf estate, and If he was not worth pounds, he was to be put for one year in Fthe second ofence penalty of premunire, and f Th America, what anid he yielded t utleman have Rh eaten tt What joss did this Union which he adinired so much, what loss did it {nflict on Ire- He seems to think that it did absolutely nothing. and Task you to con irst of all you req % t Ireland before the Unio: own national debt, as she had her own mill- And the national Maawer in which be bas acco course of lectures which he Voices—I second the motion. Father Starrs—The u ready for the question? q f the history O'Connell sald to of the nation se of forcing ref y be interesting to citizens of Ameneca to Principles on which the society That the weight of English banded toge ling to the Id yield to no vtion has been seconded. with aiming to know the thre was formed Influence in the ¢ 80 great as to reta and, and that ite remc balance essential to the of our Mberties ai Saye it will only su Father Starrs—All iu favor of this motion will vPY FRENCH please say aye A tremendous" Aye” rosounded in the vast from pit to dome. All opposed will say “3 » response was heard Father starrs—It (Tremendous applause.) » enforce them, Parliament, appointing magistrates to go out and enforce these laws, and these were made forty years befor Froude alludes How, then, ew the penal laws as the efter in my philo: man and a de- Nhe was a Laceure this gentle would gain I of America and speak uage in the ears of my fellow he will receive $ ofthe Iris citizens of Am butthe same courtesy, {he same polite hosy and attention that he boast of having r fary to maintain th: amount to three millions of money. r 18a), the year of the Union, the national debt d to twenty-eight millions of increased it nine fold In six years. Englard had in Ire- ution to wh ch the revolution of 1 an ask us to regard Mf that revolution and 1 believe tn the philoso- f America—the effe plaudits from t more popular juny d the welfare of | Mr ral impress cireles here that the removal of Thiers from the ly increase and eompll cate the French troubles, and would endanger rmany. In connection with th portion of the indemnity claims still unpaid. The German Governme accordance with this view its deteriminati: whole of the d¢ the event « ireland amount tional means b: Wy the intuer an efort at rad {the people in Parliament st that does not in- | ‘unanigously. | Presidency would xr to this class of Irishmen, U'That’s 80.) I will tell sou how. p that we Irish the rights of Ireland more dearly than I do. ‘here are those flectively and serve her with but there fs no living man Ireland more tenderly or more sin- I prize the « I prize it next t Talo prize the popularity wh ever unworthily, 1 possess among them: but . American citizens, that for all that for all that good will I would hat no reform is clude every Irishman of every religio Applause.) There you hav: this formids ask the people of Ame fe 50 soldiers. of ‘keeping Ireland down in those days. (Laughter.) She (England) didn't her own money for them order to carry the Union, England 9 mous sums Pretty tough Mr. Froude will Repiy. Mr. James Anthony Frov Je will reply to Fatder Burke and his other eritics on Satur evening in As: | business that English philoson forty years abead of the caus Ireland, he (Henewed Inughter.] Froude tells ts, second lectur greater devotion the matter, has {o- programme of the cerely than I do fellow Irishin ation Hall. at, my friends, ake them ap great nation. blers retiring from dency, whether voluntarily or (nrough compul- The effect of this al situation much interest, THE POSITION OF THE MINISTRY. Pants, Nov, if there is anetbing | Letter from Father Burke. Brien, 142 Nassau street thon of my leet tieally established fu this $n such resolution land opposed and binder sad the Parliament m not of ther ntatives of only 3 easity of her situation the Way he argues the question rd to allow Ir Toland were Cath eighty-four nehised at the time of the Union, id to those who owned those had the nomination of them dred thousand speaking on this that Ireland to pay for the knife with which Costlerengh awaited with Wh, will And appre neither would [state what Ido not believe to ig and England b iurey of Archbishops Hayiey, Manni and venal repre NOT BELIEVE IN ENSURERCTION ARY in so divided a country as Ireland other class of Lrisht should endeavor t fay, and T th quired by ind. Utleal induenc Irish at home. b e with the ree ity have adopted a reso. bly the nurninas -five members of to present @ bill r what he belle nagines to be and T hone th: * me for menti eth was not a legitimate c n parlance ist Clear Proof of The Su a Special Despatches, | port made by th SAN FRANCISCO, Noy, 26, Ly Te BL, M, Baring and 6, B. Mee special inv eu who hold that the Irish mulate wealth justice, that fy brings with it power and po- | that Queen Bliza i dy, with instruction shing ministerial respousibulty, and eu afterward Lord ral of Ireland. these few years fr Elizabety's m Attorney Gen stigution by nager for the’ © © King, Janin ible doubt that the ted. Press des- the regular working NoT PLIZABE loughter and a Knew as well f a republican Gov- oh has been submitted to resses his ent four hundred and fty and one half s the debt of Engtar Bost, proves beyond any po ground was salted batches sent Last night were made up from h niu's written ustries and di in the mean time blessed uni of your country, ‘Ery on, veh h wa. A etent buadted po Ways and m ral Mac Matic anise Ireland w marked by Uh Ladmirault, Paris, who was present, said d The North Carolin for United States § iM, Nov. %#.—The all important business the dallot for Un Mcers of both Houses, when exislature Ralleting ur bundred and ff and thirty-five mil- ime they say tothe men of I yand wealth, ‘Tht b ihe parties das fong as the and as long The presiding MAJORITY REPORT rity report of t PITT WAGED WAR WITH NAPOLE exhibited whea now! Now, Task, judging from bis lecture, if Eliza sbliged to pass thes @ tell us these pe the Radical party. istrinn army. as a leans of 4 largely entrusted ademands of f rane, truthful ant when tt was, DIN Was twenty Ist PROPIE WERE e-half millions Ked for the ‘ Minority moved that it be pustp attain by loyal Jegitimate means. 1 gives ty every Innd was only ti eland, but he + laws against Irishmen were formed hg all Erishmen ns of England. before was d risen to one hundred and asseven hundred and four th: t tyne and bigh pos ANE PALTHPUL of 30 yeas t result ts regarded as a very fay TO AMERICA America will be faithful as the great sin wealth it r; and the poitti- wert Atierica in a few tain divisions saythat onthe day when Irshmen were united A ndred and five th sixteen years the but the debt of | Ireland was made four times as mu in the year that the Union passed me how did that happen the fact that bel rters in the virtually ends the ¢ this vote isis, and that a al re for the Governue: te Donth of a n unknown , Went into E. Morris’ and asked to bo + and he select da pair of pant ored man, about elovhing store shown a coat next Thursday. influence and pow influence and years Will overshadow the wh Minister of England Pitt (hiases), re- to disarm the vol- twenty years ol | iY Amertean friends, you m f business and Wak CLAIM. second, to dri and third, t HIS WORD BOG ypened froru Justice far k was disp!aye meane a marsh The Sinte Suing for the $300,000 Uniaw- by Geo. O. Evan Fails to Appear om Account @| Sichuess The Case Postponed, HARRISBURG, before Judge Pierson, in the Court, the case of the Commonwealth again orge O. Evans came to recover $3%,000 alle properly detained by Evans on the war clatr Attorney-General Wayne MocVeagh appeared for the Common- Wealth. and Judge W. Hall. and R.A. Strahan for The defendant asked for a continuance on the ground of the continued iliness of Evans, avd Produced an affidavit sworn to by hi Sth of November in New York. Irishmen kept t man in the world Mr, Froude o he turned toward Wes! ross West wud stumbled at the bt Ireiand, was tebt atthe time of t ¥ facts and the lens believe the lea tieman is too much of a phil 1 auphin County f years and LT) rise, and a boat was | back and Ine j This was an action have been im G ad g (Applause and laugn hey granted t ewere (hen Used in the search, bub ng lease of fity acres of in » pay the inte Insurvent Dew Mannip, Nor pinet Council, mad: day of the c sin Spain, Ia, President send to Irelar men and to obtain fr Itis easier t re than half an Furthermore it was A. Lamberton, L the defendant. enable him land Auould pay one~ 0 on this very ques that empires, like men, run the of thelr life ans w great their power; not how vast their armies, the day A if half the be ed within twenty-one ts against Ca se risings were revoli: were not re. Years the lease was I share alike, so as to Within obe-sevent. Insh were o ndred and Ofty mil before the Un! unteer Inidt « Ireland were f f the Engi Interest on the four ons that they J taken piace wo with hin Scriptures tell us th was Very cruel t it King Pharoah of Hebrews because he or- Invincible the 4 placed under THE INEVITABLY DAY, that brings with It decay and. disruption Was with the e:nplres of the Medes and ans, thus {t was with the mighty empire of the Assyrians, thus it was with the keyptians of . nd thus with Rome. it says Mr. Pro’ THEY DEMANDED » been slight ot Oviedy, There th the proviner advised by cou nt my defence fh that in the course of one or tw al condition inay be so improved that l may be able to give ny evidence. This aMidavit was H. White of New York Ryans has been under his care sii » for ulceration of the in the words o! Were being cone llustrious Jonn Mitchell (crest applause), iia said but little Lup ‘Vernment to the dem THE CATHOLIC n Irelard that in ASCEN DENCY p Stlached by the companied by one from ma's Rival Legisintures, MoxTooMeny, ed to every oO! he Protestant religion. ws reached England had surrend imagined that wer that was converted to wn island Aung and known only tLe operation of thet in the Western n. Burgoyne mittee to walt orted that they 4 that be would com- H ‘This afidavit of the time to bls b supported by one froin Ernest Ringer, an elec jan, to the effect that the which they te Win. Jackson. a facturing mac prived by expre had waited on the Governor North, then Prime Minister of and expressed an ardent to relax the penal laws on Catholics | January, 1774, the following year. the inde; dence of America was acknowledged by @ iD) the Fret Judge Pierson agreed t following entry ed by a cert, They thea waje puol.can caucus. purport of the Gow Tdon't want t al than Lord Stacaiilay,and he describes aday b he foresees, when the travel his stand upon the broken arch ndon bridge to sketch the ruins of >: Isthe wheel of England rising or is Is Eugland to-day wi England twenty eis continued om a w then, 1 Bot Kn ce Of ten Wan appr Like committee from the Conservativ: and cries of “Hurrah for F: moment that plece of pews reached England THE SOCIETY OF UNITED IRISHMEN inthe again continued for the aame of thee defendant Nat, will be pers hen again on the i nwealthacrees to lake a society organized for the att of the penal laws me year the English Parl Catholica to get m lease for 9 yours Were to get out of the bog at Inst They also, in that cause on the n Catholics, Look Out for stolen B the 20th inst. an attempt was 1 she Was tw Nn was forced. Uy trance of Eng said Dr. Johns 4. throngh tbe let tunite with us, sir, “we stall rob you r Burke here detailed at some length the trodden and di beautiful old hous pride and boast On the night ¢ ‘al of restrictive be agreed ape ten days’ Botice be agreed upon, without Interrogaturies, ‘The case ca end of January, e time cannot year, repealed the u nation in the Irish Parliament, and the wer among uder of the society Howing deser al currency, were partial distrbut [religious beliefs probably not ther ay has no 1 affairs of Lurope than the Emperor of China has (che ked that der Three Wayne ¢ eto Lewis Cane, onivent abd prosecution into asylums revolutionary ide thein ou the he never atten and the like. He then contin wave back to the # the power of electing rliament—the power of voting ave then aright to certain com- 1 Prussia ca: Deouth of Ove of the Projectors ef PITT PROMISED THE EMANCIPATION, months after the union was retired from | King would ther in Berliu to Ox the ma Premier was of the British The Hon, Robe ruing at his residen tecond street, ihe army of AND TO-DAY The German [ 8 West Twenty. hold offices as judge Ke of New Jersey, 1 Was that his ¢ | Hental policy had talled TRENTON, Nov | were tired of bis sof wood and drawers of wa- y years held offices learned Knelishmai Wars and were clai He was one of He was too proud to sign even a terns : and when he athe would wid not put 20 ing the trade at reland were str ntinental schemes Tary peace with Pr was under the pretext t PROUDE'S OPINION America as Tappeal to y give bim a verd The insurrection o gentleman, threw f contention and misery, from which sie was partially delivered by the act of Union t of that proposition T emphatically deny why did she n OF RELIGIONS FREEDOM, of Ireland 1 vahnon’s 1: Lime later, with the Adding! is iteny wonder Ut he returned n administration, to offee a second time, when be proved that be was as great an enemy f Ireland as ever poor old fleshy mad Tt was only after twenty-nine t had au example active part in furthering the pi nof the Le ect, and durin, lature of IN he labored passage of the b A ago, Was presented with @ wo. continues t Ireland back ave fallen in will tecalled Westuioreland, and reut over BARL FITZWILLIAM fore golug to [relai ompact with Pitt that he would p thing, and be George 1V, was Lord-Lieutenant, years of heroic effert that { perpecual revolution? tthe Irist people said, ur own Parliament igland, to make our own laws, to nd take thought and ard was held rued to hold loner for several years. Tadmit that the un- | ceeded for a uniting all the threw Ireland int of misery, and unsuccessful rebellion Awords, and putting the hi Johnny Bull's hand n Mull paid tue t Challis Afler Maxwell, > was a witne: Juke whichever youl Wn interests ste for the wants of “clamoring for political ag lends, I expect my ver bumber of our noble-hearted Protestant fellow nnell came k Parliament with the band turned out the destinies of the constru esford=, who bad swayed nation—and the Irish patriots be for them and theireou deny, and that euphatically, that the act ooner Lrisha ors of the Britssh IS A NATION and bas pr Market, was ar: that he would labor for anda Ireland not Messrs ny, aud Mr. Hl. i bled to the sound of Joshua's healing whate land, that It was nothin er for the we in the shape of a ben: atthe act of Ur Commons tremble while tts dours burst op at mighty land, enclos did not origin ) h Lreland lost nd an evil w lics of Ireland The Engligh bis Say that the Englts! tlon willingly On the day that L m left Dublin the k the horses fr e carriage through the y down to the wharf whenc h must be ren es of Ireland are ever to be redressed dwell upun the wi sale bribery and corruption by wh fernal Castlereagh ried that detestable act of Union Vsense to pass byt tan (Mr. Froude) g granted Catboli ¢ granted it as # man w b to @ dentist that mighty ed millions of 1 nd gave ther ydeinand a Parliament Yemain subject to the English Parli er be granted anything, exep : The oppressed © (Avplause.] tHe ot Was Lo take al perial. bosom tind liberty that potitical apostate The whole nation was heurtrending ¥ American friends, to con has bad the gc Ject without touching hii HENRY GRATTAN but I, a Catho! ciliate these two short mont had changed so much. English Government world what K Efigiand was af was In the ancient « complained of would be removed by legis the act of Union oh It was expected, my dear friends, it is quite true. Then the Catholics expected s promised in writing & emancipation hsented to iledged himself, through bis Lord-Lieutenant, Never to take office, hor to minister or serve the Government unless Catholic emanel; made a Cabin this, the unfc gaged, and when the new exsful struggle was known, Pitt sald in to those written ‘by Parliament, TAY ENGLISH PROPLE. if they could glorious heart » change color in the presence of atiy nelpated Pariiament of ‘8 failed to F manufactur wred ufier a Six dd George LV. wept for sorram whoo the splendid gratit but which they oF never tried tr They (the Eng turned the very honey of human nature Into the gall and bitterness of batre: s broke out and it and a3 Mr. Froude truly says. * the victors heyold privileges aud made the yoke de that lies ecalise the Irish are incapable (Hisses.) That 1s a seriot ‘any people, my friend ¢ a philosopher, « pposed not to b ay by Martin Doe Irish parent. The man who b nquered Nat Fish pay elieve she in, to rise rapidly poWer that will « people) have nther nations in the abdouven a threatened wearing the ha r In the American war {s more natural than that pe rebellt bose mistress of her destini stretch all the arms of her sympathy and lov the intervening waves aud be received AN INDEPENDENT STATE into the mighty confederation onged applause.) cht and assert my convietic ion OF race und of self-legs onsult the t ‘n that there is ne der the sun that ! bot a right should ture and her Failure, ory in Patkrs rai here, but he a butiths forced You must either sign that re for civil warand revolut I regret to be obliged to say riends, the history of my. Bi tive land proves to me that F Majnsty.no wore than you m you and me on failed yeater nearly recovered f thy Atlant! ntto New Lond His health vontinued to be compara ¥ good up to a few we suddenly stricken wi a ouisiaua Troubl Naw OnLBANS, Nov. 3. of freedom words similar entleman wishes to, Froude means the tri ir Nabilitles are but kis Uw very weary, And If the learned g. real cause of that failure, ghter.) ‘the emanc! Although it included wit names as Grattan and Flood ot represent the Irish nation. 1’ ilions and a half of [ri bout three millions were ( alf @ million were Protestants, aud '@ Feprosented the Protes- (Applause) Ney wo “1D MOURN TH English were HOPES THAT LEAVE MR. legacy of bitter- ated Parliament of ‘2, come here to get a verdict from you will be taught by that verdict that the right of human rivilege but the right of (Applause.) Then in the course of his lecture, golag back to strength- en bie argument, he say: You meat on, blame alisied Ob Fous bearier yoke Tam not speak- Remember, 1 said distinct afier Macauley's (Great laughter. ENGLAND NEVEM GRANTED ANYTHING from love, from a sense of other motive than a craven fear of civil wat ur uf some serious ingonvenienc Now having arrived at this point, Mr. Froude 1 must say, in a magnific duestions that bave day emancipation was 8 applause), did anded to jail tp Loudon until the 4th of December, when a hearing of legislation la not every nation on ab bonorea ustice, or from any | all this ts to come to Zealander lias arrive: ca will require an eniporium for ber Ireland lies there right between her and ith it splendid coast and vast harbors elter her commercial and other fleets, America may require @ great Buropesa store. the Pariiament was bribed with and the Catholic people of Lrelan by the promises of emancipation if they would ‘sod | Consent to the Union, Then it was that a Man appeared in Dublin, aud spoke for thi me ‘The Dificulty iu Prussia, aad about hi beat Lalf million, Of the Fight to register eid he Opposiag counsel perm lon, Thomas J Bagiaad for bei unter atidavita. The Hi: guinent for the defend Ubi be-morr umes made. eo Whieu (be cours adjourn oa betvre bore, ted Trelaud LZ i en a ee