The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, August 03, 1868, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    , .
--.. • .....- 1 ~., 1' ' --,
- .
..•,, , ,,,N o, , \ 1 1 ii,........ ,
_ .
. .
' -
...
.
~-
C: :: : ~ - 11: 2 1 1J 1 -1- . .-:1---.1.: I \t ."TI :fi;' ''
I - - ---
- --- - ' ------ - ' ' ' . - --
L ' '--. 7 _ ,• -- . • • - .
' 1 '
111 I k Z
. 1
----- - ,
-- _.-- _ -.. --- _-. 4,4 * , ±!-_-,:. ' ~_ -
_ 7 - -,.."-.„--• -- -- -- : -. 411 - -.l=-..- . -•- 7 -‘'.. - ?-' - ' , : . '
. ( II \ li t if t Y
1 8- (
~
. _
El
EH
Flit I o'.
o , c - zeocric., mt.
,-NEW :KO -Ric CITY AItATTBRS.
. ,
i• • ,
- ' (By Telegraph to the Plttalitirgh Gazette.;
• . NEW : YOB,II, • August :'1:-..-The steamer
- Louishina trim Europe has arrived;
" •• - -•••-
Jridgepirditze to-day rendered a decision
•en-the Supreme- Court that the Ternando
Wood leeses.must be executed by the eity.
This Invo lves the payment of a yearly ran
.
tal of 118,000 for buildings Nos. 115-and 117
r•Nassati street. The Judge also rendered a
' - - decision against the city in the claim of the
. • __New York Times for some /25,000 for ad
-,". vertising •• - • ' - . 7 -
The.deaths for the ' week, wereseren hurt
' • dre and thrrty, being fift y-one less than
the 1
receding week. - , .-- • -' '
c. ~ ~ T e anniversary demonstration. by _the
blacks" in honor of einancipatiori in the
British West Indies was postponed to next
' TUesday. ,
.. 1... t
-, ,- -- . - The Pacithi mail steamer 'Arizona, which
sailed to-day for Aspinwall, took one thous
- • :and and ninety barsi of, railroad iron and
-other material for the Central ;Pacific Rail
- • road, and 'one 'thousand and aeventy-five
t ackages• of inereluiridize for '•Japatt: and.
The new steamer-Alaska sails next Sat
' •••urday for Aspinwall: -
The injunctions against the Rock Island
Railroad Company were vacated today by
Judge Cordoza and , it. motion for receiver
. denied, the plaintiffs . bei n g given leave to
• . •discontinueeuits. -A
.. Mary
,Anja Broadwell was arrested for at-!.
tempting poisona girl. named Rattle .-
- • • Ball, both employes on A - canal boat.
An abeident befell the .diving apparatus
.employed in the supposed wreck of the Brit
, tish. frigate Hussar yesterday, the purchase
, to the bell -.suddenly breaking, but the
divers:were rescued uninjured._ - 1
An old man named . Newell. was brutally
beaten and robbed on hie bwn door step in
Washington street of /425. The perpetra
tors were secured. -
- - Col.' Fred Weod, nominally an Internal
': - Revenue'. detective, but supposed to be , a
•-confidence operator, has been committed on
a charge o f f htrespy for obtainiug a diamond
,;/ ring valued. at 11,000 belonging to Mrs.
• Harris; - • .
Jas. Van Dersurfe, a young German, who
- attempted an indecent assault on a young
woman named Gardner, who sought em
ployment in his establiihment on 'Bleeker
street, was convicted of assault and battery
• ..and remanded forsentence.
A sail boat was struck by a schooner in
the Hudson river this, morning and. upset.
A boy named atunphreys was 'drowned.
.His father escaped.
t NEW YORK, August 2.—The oil factory
•of S. E. Oppenheimer dl Co.,.located at the
foot of Eighteenth street, East river, last
.evening: was destroyed by fire. Loss
ispo,000„ insured for $150,000. The cause
of the fire is unknown.
The turning. mill? of Henry Wormer, in
Soliermerhoni street, Brooklyn, was , de
.atroyed by, fire yesterday. - t A plainer 'of
' Adjoining bitildingvwere dattifiged. -- Lost,
' - : - -WWO„ of which IM,OOO falls on Worlier;
partially insured. ' - • , .
The steamer Caledonia, from Glasgow,
has arrived. . v .
General Schofield, Secretary of War, is at
;the Metropolitan Hotel.
One of the masts of the London Packet
. ShipiYorktown was shivered by lightning
• on Saturday evening.
The long pending controversy between
the Board of Health and the butchers has
• resulted in a compromise. The latter are
allowed till the Ist of January to remove
their slaughter bowies from the city, and
have agreed ,to/ acquiesce in 'any health/
-ordinance or regulation the board . may
.
•deem necessary. . ' -
Heinrich Satwfer , arrested at Patterson,
- New Jersey;Tcharged with . the murder of
- his master, -mistress and two children in
the , GrandMifely of Hesse Darmstadt, was
brought to'New York to be transferred to
the German autborities.
From the - Pacific Coast.
-LB.r Ziassrapti tothe Pptalpitirti amens.
Srrat Fnsiiiox.sco, July 30.—The Golden_
Age, from Panatna, sailed to-day
-000 in treasure, $833,000 for •New York,
The United States steamer, Peitu3acola re
/ parrs the Suwanee a total wreak. Eight of
,4 'the Snwanee's orew,arrived here to-day by
the Pensacola. • • '
Afire at Coburn's Station, Central Pacific
Railroad, to-day destroyed fifty buildings.
,No Insurance. 1 •
- Late 'Arizona adVices State, this Indians
• attacked the mail escort befween camps
• - Reno and McDonald and killed four sol
diem of Companylp, Eighth Cayalry.
Miming .news: unimportant.'
The. United States , steamer - PetisacOla, -
Adriiiral'Tbatcher; "arrifed at Victoria-to.
day.
Algal advices to July 20t.; state that the
troops were well, Business dull. Coal
:Amines' had been discovered'near Sltka on
- the main land, considered unequalled in
quality and extent, the seam being over
thirty feet wide and traceable some dig-,- Sauce.' The United 'States steamer Saginfiw
"tried the coal arid pronounced it excellent.
It has the appearance of pi:ire anthracitb,,
and:superior to ally Lehigh.
Yellow Fever in New Orleans—The Su..
preme Court
LW" Tetestraph to the rittab taxa
.^AVEW OltiMANg, August'•l.--Cititena;
turning from the North report ;that the
~,1 14 ,PreSsiMi exists that ...yellow fever pre',
-rails in New Orleans. This is a great mis
.., take. But two, deaths have °canned from
- yellow feverfn .this city dUring the whole season, and both' were' sporadieEcaaea.. .The
city Was.neVer healthier, .
dovernai - Waimgath nominated_ the"
T igi3ilitettOnfirtileir .five Judges of the Su-,
rento Court "yesterday. . ,Jno. T. Ltuisling, :
• k
Chief Justice,viltea womlnent Otnum va
tivf3 member 'of the Convation and refused
:‘ 44 sign atatpublislu44l protest agidrist . the
°institution. J. G. Talliafero t . ono 'of the
'Ansothiteltastioes; Wail(PrAddent of the
Convention,' has been latterly a Conserve.
a. 4d.vei ..ftopnblitater - and was candidate "foi
Governor at the recent election.,Tivo-of
';,, , tha'athers were alp lady on theliench.
leneral Sheridan Arrested for Assault and
:Battery,. -
ins Telegraph lathe Pittsburgh essette.3
littsgt awnirrit,Auguit'll.-421en.f Sheri
ariested.,herato:day On'.xeripbtinC,
'at ' :of;l4r:Diturt forsseault and battery. Dunn
1s Postmaster Fort-
ti Leavenworth but
was ordered off the, Reserve " few' - days
ago for iilleged intscondnef, and rafting
to obey the order was forcibly ejected,.
A l thea tile Apt4ext for assault.
•
_ . Banker_Char ged w i th L arceny.
,
tRy Tele graph to ILe . Plttaburah Gazette.)
B rFAw Atignstll.--Chas.- Pickering,
formerly a bankerin this city, was arrest
ed to-day and confined in jail on a reaulsl
- =from the - Governoiof Michigan,
charged with grand larceny in relation tO
the sale df cattle taken. from an Island in
*the upper lakes. He be removed. to
Xiclngan for trial.
Ini
Departures of Hon. Reverdy Johnson for
.Europe--An Ovation. .
CBj Telegraph to the Pirtsiatorh Gazette.]
BAT:lntone; August I.—Hon. 'Reverdy
Johns/At and family sailed for Southampton
to-day on the steamer Baltimore, Balti
rnore-Bremen line, and was escorted down
'the river by a large number of parsons'
_
friends on the steamer Chesapeake and
aboti, a - dozen steamers and tug-boats
crow ,
dedwith passengers. The . Baltimore •
was decorated final deck to top-ghllant
Masi with flags and her, railing . fore and
Aft, ith evergreens. - 'Tlie entrance to .the
( slap from the gangway Ants arched with
flowers and evergr ni
evergreens. • Aong.theee. Who
escorted Mr. Johnson were "Baron Geralt s i
Prussian .Mu inter.. Senator 'Van Winkle,
"General Van' . ' Yleet, Iguartermaster's
Department,i General'. Brooke,' Com.
mandant - ' Fort Hon. C.
C. Cox, - Commissioned- of Patents, ex-
Governor; and many members of the press I
from Washington and Baltimore.: ,On pass-
ing Fort Melleriry a salute of thirteen guns I
was fired and flags dipped' on board the
ship. Mayor lianks,vif Baltimore, toasted
Mr. Johnson in-behalf of the people of the
city, Whom he claimed to 'represent; and
wished him a pleasant voyage. Mi. Johnson
responded in approp ks riate terms, and in the
course of his rem
tera r I go to Eng
land as a Minis of Peace.
.“ My imitrue
lions-leak to peace. And. if I am able
'to carry them out ~.an the spirit in
which they are given me, -- peace
will result. So obviously, is this the Interest
of the two nations that thel good men of
_both willlstrive to make More firm and en
during than everlhePeitee now existing.
We' are the same people, Aescended from
the same stock, and no matter , hew:- much
we may have differed in the past, and have
- Met mama Or land; l. we are now satisfied.
does not pay us to' be at • enmity. We
ought to stand together and maintain the
principles of political liberty. There is•
another government which has stood by us
in the past; whose interests and ours are
;,the same, and I ask you' to join, me in- a
/ toast to the King of prussic; and the able
representativesof that Monarch, who is,
always a consistent friend to the United
States, and endeared to ns all who have
known him during the Many years he has
represented his Government - in' thisl
country.” •
Baron Von Geralt expressed gratitude for
thiwkind recognition by Mr. Johnson and
reiterated a firm mid devotedfriendship to
the Government and people of America on
behalf of himself and his Government.
In response to the toast to the State of ,
Maryland and her Minister to England, ex- -
Governor Bradford. responded ineloquent
and appropriate language. •
The ovation to Alt. Johnson was by his
fellow citizens, .regardless of political feel
ing, and was a fitting endorsement of his
unanimous confirmation by the Senate.
The Chesapeake parted from the Balt'
more in the Bay at 5:35 p.
Shooting Affray in Columbia, S. C., Be..
tween Legislators.
[By Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.] ;
CISLI.I.M s rIIA, S. C. August 2.—An affray
occurred last nigh t, at midnight,' between
a party of ten or twelve negro members of
the Legislature and, tive.White.s, which' xe r
salted in the Mortal wtnindiag of one hi' tire
latter, by a pistol shot through the head.:
The whites entered a boarding house in n
disreputable portion of the - town, by Mis
take, supposing it to be a brothel, and were
truck by one of the negroes. Upon
the stick being wrenched from iris
hand the , whole, party ran in front of the
house and commenced- firing. Twenty or
thirty shots were discharged, and the
whites retreated, except the wounded - man,
and he was toe drunk and remained on the
sidewalk and Was shot down. The author
of the crime is unknown. No arrests were
made. Much , excitement prevails among .
the citizens. The whites are said to have
been unarmed. No weapons were' found
on the body of the wounded.man.
• Alabama Leglblalitire. -
By Telegraph to Vie ilttshurgh Clazette.l
MozrrnomMlr, August In the Senate
to-day the militia bill passed. It author
izes the Governor to orzanize the militia
when he sees proper: . -
The disability removalbill was.hotly dis
cussed. Mr. Pennington and others. gen
erally favordt, but 1(.0i - thorn Repu.blicans
oppose • ' • !
In the House Mr. McGraw speaker,
brought op the bill removieg Lim disabili
ties of the people •of Chambers county.
This, it is hoped, will be the entering wedge
for a geperal -
The common carrier bill introduced by it
negro: of Mobile, is a bone of contention
and is causing much 'hard feeling. The
negroes are - chtmerouti for lt, and the Mover
says if it does not pass it will cause serious
disturbance in Mobile. The bill provides
that - whites and blacks shall ride in the
same railroad cars and steamboat cabins.
VIE
Roi Vera.
(By Telegraph to the Plttaburgh Ossetic] ,
LouisviLlM , KY., Augustihun
and Simon R eno,charged with being en
gaged in robbini i the Expre.ss Company of
$94,000 on the ' th of May, were brought
back to New Albany this morning by the
(Sheriff of Scott county, Indiana, and placed
in jail, where I they - will remain until the
7th of Septemher, when they. will be taken '
back. to Scott! county for trial. Some dis
position was made to mob the prisoners by
men,from Jackson county, but tho precau
tions Which: had been titen deterred
them. • , •
Tennenee Leg'abjure.
CDT Telegraph to the Pittsburgh Gazette.; (
NASHVILLE, Tsurr., , , A ugus t
S. IL Cheatham, Forrest, i Palmer and ;
others had a ceniferene.e to-day with a
committee of the; Legislature upon the
politiCal troubles( •in --Tennessee. The
- result has not transpired, -but the chances
of a . liatisfactory solution of the difficulties
Eire good. The inclination to call out the
abating, though strong efforts will,
be made. by some Fadlcal memlberiito push
measure thiongh the - Legfalatuni..
zi.,
APplicationfor•Mandamus!
trig Telegraph to theglttsborgh Chtspttle3,
13. f. Lettni. Atignst I.,The application of
Hudson E. Bridge for a mandamuwtts cam
.lmb:sonata officers ..of tile -Pacific' Railroad
tqallmg him to examine the books, papers.
arid` rebordit of the company , 'wan 'argued
before Judge,,Rontbauar ra Atte_cirtatit
CouCourt, burtherittlit deMeion 'was reserved
Mom
,tday
c. •
Drowned at Atlanta pity
ttliTeciegei4h to thee - Pittsburgh Gazette.]
AilascrictOrrir, Att. 20-1-2Tenry Trough,
nlir.:Van• Pirk, and: a son Of Rev. l4 -flatia ,
Dalton, all ofThiladelphia, were drowned
here yetderdv While bathing.i This Undies'
* cases of drOwning which have occurred
at this place within the past few flays.
Allfged.bituderen 'Meld `to Ball.
tEty Telempti Witte Pittabargb Galiatc3
T CHAILLBSTON, Aug. 2—The parties charg
ed with.the murder of Mr. DWin, who were
recently turned over to the civil authorities
by the military, have had a hearing on a
writ' of 'habeas corpus, and have been re
leased ou bail. •
The statements recently published re
venting the financial affidts of the Post:.
;0 11 1 i 1 4 ,M , Partlnent. ere , unreliable. "The of
,ficial exhibit.wll.l not be-completed until
Sefacitilbf:r or Octoher, end the greater Pert
of whatever deficiency may be found will
bo owing to the establishment of expensive
mail rotites in ne'w western Territories.
Senator Harris, of Louisiana, whci
here, has received inarf.y letters from Louis
iana and MISSISSIpti, but none of thein al
lude to any orgattizedopposieion to existing
althirs in either State.
Specials state:
About three hUndred removals will be
— made in the-Treasury Department' next
week, mostly females.
Caleb Cushing has"resigned as ono of the
Commissioners to codify the laws of the
United States. ' =
The President tats 'appointed Ex-Gov
ernor Bigler; or California, United States
Commissioner to examine the Central
Paciticßallroad, vice L. D. Smith, resigned.
The Postmaster General is having an
official statement prepared to show the
actual deficiency in the Departinent for the
year is less than tour millions. .
Insuranct rompan) Depilate in Canada. —
(By Telegraph to tto, i'ltt,tvirgh Gazette.]
OrrAwAl A ngust different immr
once companies ( have deposited about ono
million dollars lu cub, a million in Cana
dian and British securities, and three-gum:-
tete of a million in United blades liecuri
ties in the TreSsury. Discount on Amer--
can invoices fel, the week is thirty per
cent. ' -
The Minister of customs has published
coasting regulations In lied df format reg
ulations of the province of Canada.
Non-Mien Feeling in Nova Scotia.
(Itrretegraph ter the Plttebarzl Uszette.:l
- MONTREAL, August I.—A dispatch from
Halifax sayslir. Howe has publish.:(l s 1t,4-
.ter rebuking the violent articles recently
published in the anti-union newspapers of
Noya Scotia. He advises tho people to
give the - Canadian-Ministers, now on - their
way to Novalicotia, a courteous reception,
and the remedial me9.sures.prorxmcd, a fair
hearing. It is reported Dr Tupon r. wi llre
tire from the Ministry, and that Ali. Howe
will.have a seat in the cabinet.
Railroad Accident—Mortality in , Boston.
(By Tylegriiph to the Pittsburgh Bazetto.! (
BOSTON, Aug. I.—A misplaced nwitah sent
a gravel train through the engine house at
Beverly, yesterday, demelisbing the build
dig and severely injuring ten men, ono of
whom, Richard Barrett, had eight ribs
broken. , • • '
- The Outaber of deaths 111 Boston during_
tho week was 158, of which 107 Were five
years old and under,,ebowing cut' Unusual
mdrtallty amorig'eldldren.
Reunion of Army Officers, .
TeleirstPlito the Plitobargb Osze‘te.l
Ns? You's, August I.—A Ball fora social
rignmu cif ex -officers of the Attu) , of the
James, viz: Tenth, Eighteenth. ; Twenty 7
40uktILlind Tseenty-fllth. 'Army Corps, to
meet at Boston, September 2d, is issued. It
is signed by Generals Hawley, Tarher; Fos
ter, Osborne and Shepley.
. ,
Republican M. Meeting Oi l Augusta Ga .
Telairlialo tie rutobaraanSzetta:i -
• Ammar-4 GA-, Aug,' 1.-4 Republiam
m a s a ideating was held's; the Mtn' liouSe
to-day for the ,Ps,r_potispf ap p ointing dele
gates to the State Convention at Atlanta.:,47
letter woe read- from' Joshua =Hill, saying
he would ettnip fo l and Colihr -
1111111
' ,San , Frpalciaefl Market.
City Telegiaoh to the .Plttiturfh -Gaztato.i- - •
• &tic. FRAlnctsoo, 44,aguet L—Flour and
Wheat quiet and unchanged. Legal Tea,
ders 70 e . XiningBtooka moderately active
'with a slight 'irdprdvedient on most, des,
criptions. - Alphasoldlat 48; ',Beldher;lls
Bullion, 21; Chollar, 143: COnfidence,ls;
Crown Point, 89; Empire. Mill, 120; Gould
CurrY,llos; Halo Norcross, 88 ; 3 niporla1, 500;
Kentuck, 387;.0phir, 22; Overtnan, 81; Sav
age 134; Sierra Nevada, 34; Yellow Jacket,
SECONI ENROL
vc•tta, .43v.cwelx.'
THE- CAPITAL.
Alaska Paid Fox--Ad nt ra ',Bah 1..
gren and Gen. Schafitel&-Patent
Extended Fiban ei al—Postof
_ -
kite Department—Altai:l*in the
South, &c.
. _ •
aty Tllegrapb to thelittithurgh Gaz,tte4 •
WasinnoTott, August
- ALASKA, PAID FOB.
, 'l'We'ciiirixal for the paymenb Oftlre pur
chase money for Alaska , 57,200,900 in coin,
was to-day signed bi- the Secretary off the
Treasury and submitted to liaromStoecitel,
Russian Minister. The, draft, fore that
aminnit, payable in New York, was signed.
by General Spinner this Morning, 'and the
following was . the.ieceipt !brit by. the
Rtissian Minister:
" The undersigned, Envoy Eatraorth—
nag and Mitditter; Plenipotentiarr of his :
Majesty the Emperor of all the Rrnssies, db
hereby acknowledge to have-„recciaed -at
,the Treasury Department in Washington,
$7,200,000 in_ :ooht, - being ,the full: amount.
due from the United States to Russia, in
consideration'of the cession by :the latter
power to the Ammer of certain territory de.
scribed in the treaty, entered into by the
Emperor of all the Runlet; on the 3011), day
of March, 1807
{Signed.]," G Srownisi.."
"Washington, August Ist, 186,8:"
• PINAIg6AL.
The fractional currency issued for tlio
week amounted to 5396,000; amount ship
psd 5498,778. .United States notes shipped
to national banktCsll;l66. National bank
notes issued $123,500; amount in circulation
5299,907,218. Fractional currency destroy
ed $563,158. • I
PATENT EXTENDED
The patent for. A. C. Alißich for making
paper from wood and. straw has been ex=
tended for seven years by the Commission
er of Patents. This is the patelit that has
caused so much, litigation among various
paper makers throughout the eunutry.
ADMIRAL DA.BLOREN.
Rear Admiral Dahlgren, Chief of the Bu
reau of Ordnance, arrived la§t night and
will take active charge of the office on Mon
day:
Rt7TIVATINO
Secretary Schofield 'left the city . last
night for Newport and will be absent only
a few days.
WAsuiricrrozr, August 2, 18613
ItESUMES ms, Dururs
Gen. Steedman left today for New Or.
leans to resume his. duties as Collector of
Interns Revenue. • .
• - FosToPricz nErmsrsrztrr.
AFFAIRS IN THE SOUTH
DM
FINEIZ
Y, A.TTGTTS
LETTERS FROM
The Scenery of the
Llputenantllublin
teTest—Trlnlty Coil•
England and Its Int
lIIC—The Reform 'Pr
ctc., .
(Spelal.Clorreapondence P!tsburgb Gazette.]
BELWIST, LAM), July 1868.
Ireland is 'divided i to four provinces,
and these contain, in the aggregate, thirty
two' ',counties It As nearly as long as the
. • .
but on
. ,
-State of Pennsyliania, but an average
not so broad. Its naturalscerieri is varied ,
and much of it very beautiful.: It has no
range of mountains as lofty or esrtensive
the Alleghenies,. but Henna Tove and Blne
.
Meuintstini around the lakes of ',Eillarny,
. •
lift their proud .summits /high .
up into the
air, pseserit a bold,'striking aspect, and an
their brow - rest the Clouds ere "thei,,depart
for the islandleaseen." rt . Much of the count
try is beautifully rolling; and many ,fine
landscapes Press , ' frifliemselies toyoufteiniv.
'There is-no timber, and rio forests but such
as have been planted by iannour hands.-
YourresAirs know that "turf" It the chief
fuel used bete, andr at this season': of the
..near thousands of loads of it,- dryingin the
sun, are piled up in meek:bog. The North
of Ireland is under much better cultivation
:than the South, : The towns and cities pre-'
sent.a better! appearance,: and them isniess•
squalor and . beggary Among the . people.
The &ub of Iceland is Catholic, tho Nords
:is Protestant. ' Father Becker's login to the
contrary notwithstanding, facts show—and
facts' re stnbbent things—that whereihe in
fluence - of - the, Papacy prevails, theran. intel
lectual vier, moral strength and progress
in all that's good and noble. and elevating
are wanting.
The highest official in. Ireland is Ville
Lord Lieutenant" appointed by the crown
of England. Beholds his office for life, Or
"during good. , behavior,". and has his pal
tial-residence near Pheenix Park in Dublin.
Dublin is the largesreity 03 the Island, and'
is well worth a visit from the traveler. It
loan old city, and though it has a few fine
streets, and some magnifiet buildings, the.
"back sluing" are narrow, 'very ditty and
crowded with wretched, miserable human
beings. Cork rind - Dublin are both very
dirty and I never before saw such filthiness,
squalor, wretchedness and poverty as In
smite parts-ot tLvtiV Cite&
/11 Dublin the Duke of Wellington was
born, and in the Park a large splendid mon
ument has been erected to perpetuate the
glory of his name and his services in the
cause of his country. Here also were born,
and here lived. sonic cif the most eminent
orators of the postage. Barke,whose noble
statue in bronze, is: in the front yard of
Trinity College, Curran, Grattan, Emmet,
ike., , and it is now the home of the acholarly .
French t s,uoCessor to lyhately;,in the arch
' itiPiatiOpater. -- ' Ditbliti has a fine Petit: Nis
not so highly improved as some part' of
-Oeitfril Park; New Voik, nor has it so much
variety of scenery, but it is much larger,
containing .1,800 acres, and is surrounded
;by a aubsantial atone wall; herds of cows and
Young cattle feed on its pastures; and hun
dreds of deer ream over its broad acres.
The 4 zoologidil gardens are in it, and when
at a distance therefrom, we heard the lion's
tremendous roar. One part of the Park is
devoted especially to dowers, and I may
here add that from our first landing in Ire
land, we have been constantly impressed
with the exceeding richness, gorgeousness
and brilliancy of the colors of the flowers.
They are very beautiful indeed. The ge-
Xaniums, rudder', Ike., of our latitude do
not compare with them.
One object of 'much interest in Dublin is
the Bank of Ireland. It is in the old Par
liament House. In the room formerly oc
cupied by the members of the Heuse of
Commons, a hundred and more clerks are
now daily counting money Item morning
to night. The.room used by the House, of
m
Lords is it was when they left it. The
large table in the centre on which they
wrote, the chairs - on which they sat, the
statues of King Wilhain 111 and other nota
ble characters that looked down upon them
are there. It is a place of historic interest,
and will not soon be forgotten by him who
visits it. •
Another institution to which a visit should
be paid is Trinity College, theoldest college
in Ireland under the auspices of the Church
of England/ It was !blinded by 'Queen
Elizabrih,'nearly three hundred yeare ago;
bud has shirty one acres of most beautiful
grottfltN iri rivilrt of the city. The
original desii. ; n :If the institution was to edu
cute and etinip for their worklnlnisters of
the Episcopal Church, but it has been en
larger', and is now a Univeisity. Physiciani
. are educated there, and barristers and engi
neers. There are now in the University
thirteen hundred students, twenty-six fel- '
lbws and' nine 'senior fellows. We were
condudted through its Musuem by a gentle- I
man who has resided in America, and Who ,
has for ns and inn! institutions a warm sym
pathy: Goldamith' ' as Irving tells us, was
at one time ejected from Trinity College'on
account of stupidity. He was considered a
blockhead and incapable of becoming any
thing. Ills statue, in • beautiful bronze is
now in the yard of Trinity College oppesite
that of Burke. He is represented as, hold
ing •in one hand a pen and in the other a
roll of manuscript: 'Poor Goldsmith," as
he was familiarly termed, immortalized him
self and - stands among the foremostof wri
ters in the Engliah language, but the wntld
has never heard of, the men whO thought it
best to dismiss him from the nollege.
While at'Dublin 'we went ifitd the. Chapel
Royal. :It Is a small building,tits Chapels
Royal tumidly ars, but elaborately finisheri.
Bare the Lord Lieutenant worships, ilia
seat is elevated and 1 0xiv"tLe‘ PldPitt,to show
that the State TS - above the church..:ap
points • the most -,eminent preacherA in the
Iristithurch: And hi turn they; fill time pulPit
In pay last laet;l ,ter &referred to the dissatis
faction and discontent that exhit, =tong
atop of the Irlslr people... It has been our
aim, while passing through thetcountrY, to
iningleasmuchm possible with Ms people and
to learn their habits and customs,to see how
'they live and feel - and what they think
!bout - And'iris evident that many of the
people Oflreland are no t content., Indeed
I should wonder if- theme , They • Are
disaatialled Withlhe existing statobf things.
They .:groan under the hiavy taxes, and.the
treatment they receive at the hands of some
of•the; large landowners:'-: The pressure for
reform, not only in Ireland, but thrOughout
Great Britain, is tremendous, and the Gov
ernment knows this. 'Why Ireland has to
day a police force thirteen thousand strong 1
Many of them are mounted—besides all are
regularly trained—and policemen are not
3, 18f8
'UROPE-=-NO. 3
only in the cities and large 'towns as with
us, but in all the country. They are every
where, and wherever yon go, you see sol
diers. Dhblin seemed to be full of them.
Nearly every other man you Met was
dressed in nniform. Think of e. police
farce of 13,000 men for so small a country
as Ireland. Men will tell you: . "It is neces
sary to keep the people in subjection, Law
lessness and violence cannot be tolerxted."
I grant it.' Bat is.not something radically'
wrong where so large a force is necessacy to
keep in subjection so• few ? The people
cannot be satisfied or they would attend to
the peaceful pursuit& of industry and not
break out so frequentl'y in violence and dis
order. JOILI Bright, M. P. =seen speech
at Limerick the other day. Be 'pre.
perly characterised the large! police
as an "armed force that should not exist in
the country." On last lientfrty, .Tuly 13th, '
there were "Orange": . precqinons and dem
onstrations lir all the eitieniind temp. Sol
diers were sent everywhere almost, even to
small places, to preserve order and preterit
outbreaks;. but notwithstanding all/ the pre-
• cautions taken, there were distnrbances in
,many plates, and /retire town of Monaghan
a man was murdered. The Catholics are
most bitter - in`-their feelings towaid tke
:Orangemen; and. 'could • not allow there to
. "march with fife Ind drum and', pla, party
tunes" without attaeking them. The Irish ,
have not learned, as our people hive, tr
'Wow' their.fellow-men to have and enjoy
their own opinion e.nd •think and talk as 1
they pease, se long as' they .keep is peace
and violate no law.
The Irish Church Question has been for
some time, and still is, excitingmncteinter
eat in this country. The question is : Shall
the - 14iscopat church in Ireland be "E'en
dd'wed" and ".fisestablished ?" The' Cath
-1 ellen say, "Yirs."' And I tan told that a
majority of the. Pt otestamt populistion; out
aide of the Church of England, also , say
"Ten" Of caorse, Dpiscopelialis . say
"No," at least most of ?herd. Mi. Glad
stone; however, a worthymember and firm
adherent of the Ohurch of England; is the
leader of the movement in Parliament.'Mr.
Bright is with him. i They both advocate
vigorously the aendowment of the Irish
Church.' What are the facts ? The
"Chu.-eh" population of Ireland, i. is. those
holding to and being reared in the faith of
Episcopalianism, is about 500,000. They
receive yearly from the Government .E600;-
000—three million. dollars in Yold—or, six
dollars for every man. woman and child,.
besides lands called:‘"glibes," amouming to
many thousands of acres- Every one must
aid in paving this enormous sum, no matter
what his . religious belief may be. The dis
endowment of the Church would lift a great
burden from the people at which they could
not but rejoice. In Cpunty Tyrone there is
a .church composed of one family. On a
wet Sunday the Rector sends over in the
'morning to see if ther family are "going to
church."' If not, he stays at home, -and
.'there is 'no service that day. And yet , he
receives, some hundreds of pounds 'sterling
per stimuli for Welshers I • ,
• 'A few days since Dean Stanley made a.
motion in the lower House of Convocation
to endow the Catholic Church in Irehind.
The Dean was consistent. ,Let all be en
dowed--nay, rather, let"all be disendowed,
. and the voluntary principle become univer
sal. The Catholics say they don't want en
dowment. The. Dean's motion, however.
will fail, and the signs.of the times indicate
that it will not be long till Ireland will . be'
delivered from the "intolerable burden of an
established church."
seen hle•--The Lord
nd Its places
In
ge—The Church of
ositlons on tile Pea
!,sidlrelrlob People,.
I had intended that this should be my last
letter from the Emerald Isle, but a few
words waiter concerning it and its people
I must reserve for another. I write these
letters curl-sato calamo, and I trust my read
ers dill not criticise too severely.
At eight this evening, July 17th, our
party leaves Belfast for Glasgow, Scotland.
(
JOSEPH KINO.
•
COLFAX'S SPEECH AT SOUTH BEND.
SCHTIYLEII CoLvax, returning to
his home at South Bend on ithe 30th, was
welcomed with an enthusiastic reception, by
a vast gathering ( °flls neighbors of all po
litical sentiments. From his speech of ac
knowledgement on this occasion, we make
the annexed extracts :
'There is one thing that embarrasSes me
in speaking before you to-day. As I address
you there comes through into my mind the
great issues which themilllons of the Amer
ican people are to settle at; the Polls at the
November electionk but my lips, -from the
position that I now occupy before this peo
le are to be sealed in regard to these issues.i
I can not speak in regard to the platforms,:
nor can I speak as I deem propriety forbids
me, of the candidates that are arrayed
against us. I havevot deemed it proper or
fitting, when one is presented by the people,
or by a party representing a large portion
or a majority of the American people, for
the national offices - for which General Grant
and myself have been presented, to go into
the political arena and there discuss these
exciting and agitatingspieslions. My record
is made up before y_ou; I If, is written on the
pages of our country's legislation for the
past fourteen years. It is inscribed there
where I could riot erase it if I would, and
where I would not-erase it if I could. It
is there for good or It is my convic
tions expressed in my rotes, in my speeches,
in my letters; the convictions of my life
and of my heart, believed in with all my
soul and strength and mind. Not one
word of It shall I ever take' back. Every
word of it is confirnied to me ,by the expe
`Hence of past years, and .there is not, as I
look back atit, one single sentence. that,
:dying, ',would wish to' blot.
What may be the fpture for me, depends
not, now upon the people of this district
alone, but upon the millions of the American
people, I have faith—you know.how my
faith has been in.the times of national and,
party reverses—never flagging, never quail=
mg, never abating—l bave faith to-day. I
think ,I can see in all the signs of the times
the triumphant victory that a*aits the great.
leader of our Union hosts, rivalling in its
brilliancy and its benefleient effects upon
our country,• the , brilliant victories won by
him against the armies of the , rebellion. I I
believe an overrruling Providence holds the
destinies of our Union in his hands._ He
proved us as a :Union when treason seemed
to threaten bur existence. Re strengthened
our hearts for every sacrifice retPlirei at our
hands. (.11e lifted us to a nobler. plane. of
patriotism because he had determined„ as I
believe; t i liat treason should•fiever rule in
this fair land of ours. - [“aoo4, good," and
applause.] He saved - our Union ['Or us, and
the same over-ruling. Providence that
watched over the armies of Ike revolution
and led them to press on, year 'after year,
until the glorious light of victory shone up
on their banners, and then, in this late war,
-- t----
saved us wlien the rebellion that seemed to
the world outside likely to destroy our na
tional existence, will stand by vs. in this
contest. And although the men who were
pet down by the arms of the American peo
ple may rise again and proclaim their trea
tson througliont all that region, Re who
ruleth in the heavens will, as I believe,.
bring upon them a judgment Which the
polls shell manifest at the coating November
election. (Laud applause.)" , :,
And now, my friende, to-en-Me to the con
clusion of these reniurks—for I shall not
talk to you at great length-if. there is one
thing for which , I long. in this world to-day,
if there le one thought that rushes upper
most and above- all other thoughts- in con
templatiug the ermditionrof our cnuntry, it
is that thought embodied' ill those fourbrief,
sententious words of the. great captain of
Our armies—embodyingaNnuch as a speech
of an hour's &maim, because it was suited
exactly to the exigencies of onr situation_
those fotir woads-ot his .... 44 WE 31 . 1157 'HATE
S'EACE!" [Cheers: ri
There is no country in the world; there
lotto land beneath the cire7il of the• sun
that longs for peace like this great Republic
of ours. % Peace. an it;.„,.„
consequent.
prosperity; -Peace andi, with- it, stability,.
lavr and ortler; Peace and, withit, progress
and develcpment; Pears—for lam opposed
to all. wars r as I have ofton told you, except
those wars forced-upon as for thqpreserva
tiOn.of our national existence• [Cheers.]
We want no-more war;.we want” no more
violerice; coo want no mare outrage—we
want peace. We want/to-more blood-sited;
we want no more carnage; we want no more
debt, we want peace, -and peace we shall
have.' [.Cheeks and enthusiastic applause.]
'3 l lidgrcat hero of the cotratiy, ;who leads :
the Union armies cto-day in this contest,
F i reside/it Johnson, "The will of the people
must be the lave of the land." And .so say
we all ! [Loud applause.] The will of '
commanded peace_ on the battlefield. •-
[lfearty applause.] Ilevill, in the Execu
tive chatr,e r ommand peace in this Republic
of ours [cheers with .a will] .from ocean- to
ocean, from frozen lahes to where the
flowers bloom inperpetual spring upon the
borders of the Southern pilf. [Cheers and
most - enthusiastic applause.] He will have
peace, by protecting every man within our
limits. Poor though he may be, down
trodden though he may have been, hum-
ble though he may be, iriendless;though he
may be, obscure though lie may be, the
hand and the arm of Ulysses S. Grant will
give to him:peace, because be will' give to /
him protection. [Shouts of applause=
"Hurrah, hurrah.for Colfax.."]
That ought to have been "Hurrah for
Grant," for I speak about him, as a candi
date, and not about myself. [Cheers for
"Grant and Colfax.] I haVe nothing to say -
Of myself as a candidate, for I have suppos
ed that if Gen. Grant should happen to be
elected /''should probably be. [Applause.
"Yes." ' "Thera it."]
They say-he cannot make a speech, and
you will:rtotice that I am saying nothing
about the principles, or the platform, dr the /
candidates of onr opponents. I have a
right to speak that which is in my heart
about all those who have come and stood --
with me around these noble Republician
principles 'of the past. ["You have."]
They say he can't make a speech. But ha
Imade one when the Committee of the Chi
cago Convention announced his nomination
rto him at his residence in Washington. It •
' was a speech of only eight lines, but there
were two- lines in it that were as weighty,
and that were as valuable as if they had
filled the teeming volumes that give to you
t the Instor,y of Cant/mins. They were these
works:- ! -4 1.1' elected; I shall have no policy ° t
to enfetree.a,gainst then will
,iif the people."
["Good' - good!" Immense applause.]
That is the declaration. [Renewed bursts
of applause.] It is a declaration worthy
of the men. It is. a. declaration worthy of
file cause. As he said in one of hie letters to.
the people enfereett, the law ;of ho land , ,
obeyed, we shall have peace, and with peace: 's
a progress and development unknown in:
the history of our country before. With ?
its magnificent area, with its boundless re
sources,
washed by the waters of the two
!neat oceans of the globe, checked in its'
edntinuous career by the horrors and losses
of war--with peace it will step for Ward
with gigantic tread, upward and onward,
until it attains a prouder position among the
family of nations than even it has attained
to-day. •We ,have,: within our limits, all
that makes a nation great. 'We have a ria-
tion brave, as they have shown themselves '-,'
to be; a people self-sacrificing, devoted, pa
triotic.
We hnve boundless resources, min- ! '
eral, agricultural,'. commercial and nuun i
i-
factoring: We lie in the gre,at Temperate
_Zone, which is the governing zone of the I
entire world,—for you see no proud and in
fluential
nations outside of the Temperate , /
Zone. We have within ourselves all the '..
elements of
' greatness. And with an ad- ,
ministration which shall obey the will of
the people, and which shall enforce the !
laws of the land, live are destined to a
prosperity whichin -- its glories shall
eclipse, in .the future, all the brilliant
records
of the past. [Great applause]. :',..-
.
FOREIGN NEWS- ITEMS -i!
—Thesteainer City of London, from Liv
erpool,' arrived at New York yesterday.
—A. statue in the marketplace and memo
rial windoW in Abbey Church, at Ramsey,
were inaugurated on the 21st.
—The Grand Duchy of Baden had de
clined the invitation of Bavaria to take part
in the Military Convention of the Southefn
States.
,--Princess Charlotte has passed into a
gage of violent madness, her fixed idea
b t .fir .that she is kept a prisoner by her
family, and that she must escape and go to
her husband. ,
—Gas from a still in Rockefeller, Andrews
Elaglers' Oil Refinery, Cleveland, ex
ploded ou last Saturday end:one man was
bear scalded. Loss, by burning of oil
'and building 47 000 to $lO,OOO.
Advices - .from S t. DemLngo state that
fifteene hundred of PresiAentaez's troops
were badly, beaten by the Revolutionista
and their commander, Gen. Brigham, kill
ed:. - The leported English loan is a myth.
Miramon a council of Austlian Min
'stem definitely settled the title of the Aus.
trian Empire as the Anstro-Rungerian
Monarchy.' The Holy See is dispesed to
recommend to the Austrian Bishops an at
titUdenn reomaillation and in particular
that thoy should avoid ail steps which could
be considered- as interference in political
adheren —Nw from
s roe
de Porto Cabello reports the
ts posed President to
number of fifteen hundred,- supported the
by
a flotilla of 11+e small vessels, had co n there. Laguayra is blockaded
by another portion of the fleet. The new
President; Monagas, has marched on Porto
Cabello, and is determined to crush all op,
positionto his
I