VOL. XVL 1 (' GLEANINGS FROM LATE PAPERS, Globe, Jan. in winter they could not be forwarded even by way of the States. (From the Toronto 19.) ‘would bring about, such a case could not oecur. There would be no port on the Gulf shore, south of Bay Chaleur, where goods could not be luid down within a week irom Montreal, during the summer and fall, by steamer, and in wirter by the intercolonial read. New facilities of intercourse and an extensive business connection, must neces- sarily result from the political union of these Provinces. INTERCOLONIAL TRADE, Some of our. contemporaries in Montreal and Québec have been directing attention to the possibility of bavigating the Lower St. Lawrence during the winter months. The subject is of sufficient importance to deserve investigation; bat in view of the Confeder- ation of the Provinces being ere long carried into effect, i¢ bas not the same practieal in- terest it would have under other circum- stances, The intercolonial railway, as an essential accompaniment of union, would afford an independent outlet to the ocean at all seasons. With this in view, it is of more importance just now to inquire what accom- | gives the following account of the organiza- snodation there is for trade with the Maritime: tion of the Fenians in Ireland: — , : ‘ en » } rovimees during the usual season of navi- We vow approach that branch of it exist- — ing in Ireland, and known as the*+ L. R. B,”’ At present the only regularcommunication which is in very deadly earnest ** a secret between Canada and the Gulf ports is by the! and oath-bound conspiracy,’’ its’ mechanism Lady Head, a steamer belonging to the Go- being as nearly spy-proof as human ingenuity vernment, which sails once a fortnight from) ean conceive or make it, audits organiz ition *Juebce tu Pictou, callir g at Gaspe, Mirami- having thus far defied the whole efforts, chi, Shediac, and other intermediate ports. money, labor, tyranny and seductions of the Jhia staunch little boat has, doubtless, an- British Government to break it- up, oc even swered very well as @ pioneer in opening | unravel to one-tenth of its extent any single trade to various small places, which bad for-| one of the many thousand cords which are meriy no means of communicating either gradually being woven around that now cor- —— - “ THE FENIANS LN IRELAND. The New York Heraid—in its usual style— with Quebec or with each other, except by| pulent and fast failing monster—the British | occasional schooners. Jbut for some time it} lion—in Ireland. If it be asin to be * oath- has ceased to afford the accommodation that! bound’ and “ secret’? where to be Open is to is required even by those smaller places,while| court a felon's cell and transportation to it has never been adequate to open a through traffic of the imp rtant character that might thausund very heinous and able-bodied sin- be established by this roate if the facilities! nerg in Ireland this day. In the United | were sufficient in frequency and extent. St. States the Feniars are not required to be | Joha has for several years been connected able-bodied, nor are they sworn into military | with Shediac by a railway belonging to the| service, nor are they compelled to drill as sol- | Government of New Branswick. The termi-| diers: beeause the object of the Order here is | nus ig on & picr at Point da Chien, where only to prepare Ireland by internal or sani- | freight can be convenieat!y transferred to the | cation, and by furnishing arms ordnance cars frum vessels navigating the Gulf. But! stores and officers for the fia ul struggle. | although St. John imports all its four, and| But ie Ireland, each Fenian, or member of | “a large quantity of 18 provisions, it gets| the «4d. R. b.,’’ has to be fit for the duties | wane, or next to none, by this route. Of) and trials of the camp; he must take the course, it ig not an easy matter to direct) most eolemn oath of military obedience and | trade from an established course; but the! readiness to turn out against the ** red coats” | obstacle of mere use and wont, we have no} whenever called upon by his next superior | doubt, would be overcome in this case, if the officer; and he must meanwile attend regu- | necessary means were supplied. The present: larly to the drill and other exercises which communication may be suid not to touch the! are now being vigorously enforced in every difficulty, so far is it from doing anything township and parish in the Emerald Isle by of consequence to remove it. Though a mer-! the officers, drill-sergeants and military sub- chant at St. Jubn can get his flour cheaper’ enyoys sent over by the Order from Americ d, frum Montreal than from Boston, he has no, and such other teachers in this line as may | means of bringing tt from the former place} be otherwise provided for their instructiun. | except by a great deal of trouble. A regu-| Even with the present force of the 1. R. B.,”’ | jar trade is established from Boston te S8t./ well armed and with from three to five thou- | John, a line of steamers of large capacity! sand veteran officers and non-commissioned | ranning twice a week, and sailing vessels, as) officers of our late civil war to command | “u matter of course, following in their wake. / them, it would not take a eampuaign of three | The St. John man has merely to order what.' months to leave no single red coat or red flag | be wants, and it is Jaid down at his ware-| from Kinsale to the Giant's Causeway. mm house at the time directed. But he dves| uot know when he might be supplied by way | wl the St. Lawrence. If he depended on the | gal societies—a matter to which Cul. O’Ma- eae | hony gave special and very useful attention nleted: while, to charter sailing vessels and | 127'%S, bis years of residence in Paris; and t : ’ e a ’| which ke some years ago transplanted in Ire- to employ agents te tranship the goods at! ; ; : ! j land, in one of his secret visits to that! Shediac, would imply a devotion to the cause conatey, wherein he was long ago proseribed of tntapnatanio’ trade which ts scareoly to be} 114 outlawed, with a reward placed upon bis | luoked tor in the way o! business. Merchants | head. This system we shall now bricily des- cannot be expected to bee ome pioneers when | cribe, taking care, however, while we seek they can get what they want more ¢ nw er | to iuterest many additional thousands of born ienly by the established means. They will) 4 wecicans and others in the great question o/ even pay # little more rather thao incur the) |, i44 independence, that we give no informa- trouble and uncertainty of a fe" cig chan-| tion to the British Government which is not nels on theit own account. They may be, | already in theitpossession through the spies und in thie instanpe, we believe, they are, they employ, aad the developments already quite Willing tu transfer @ share of their bu- made to them in the innumerable trials they sinces te & gow route, 7 meme are’ pave had of persons charged with Fenianism. phan’ a aa ee | To everything additional, or that can benefit e. ‘ " alka Sets dentl ‘ 1° 4he ®ritish authorities or mouchards in our nS See b peo ANG 1D | diselusures, we make them heartily welcome, shorter time, are put om between Quebee or! 11,4 irish organization being sv perfect as al- Mentreal and Shediac. ‘most to dety detection or punishment with In Nova Scotia, the line of railway now | any semblance of legality ; and these develop- | being constructed will connect Halifax with ments, as we hope, have a tendency to cheer | the Gulf just in the same way, and at about | all friends of the cause in Ireland, and to! the same distance as St. Jehn. Tie extension! grouse to greater activity and more fervent from Truro to Pictou is to be finished his! zeal all sympathisers with the movement on | season, connecting the latter port with Mali-| this side of tue Atlantic when we shall have | fax by a line about one handred miles bong. shown them bow much has beew already That flour might be laid down at Halifax by | done. | this route cheaper than by way ef Boston,! ‘The national power of the Feniaus in Ire- we have nodoubt. Contractors in the neigh-| land is lodged in # provisional government, | bourhood of Truro have found the St. Law-/ as we shall call it, (though it is not the true | renee route preferable; even with the disad-) Fenian name) consisting of four persons, who | vantage of hauling from Pictou, while there! represent respectively the four lrish provin- | is a railway from Halifax. Without a line! ces or principalities, of Ulster, Munster, | of steamers to and from Pictou, adequate tu | Leinster and Connaught. It is with these, | « considerable amount of traffic, the railway and through these alone, that the Head Cen- about to be finished must, to a certain ex- tre of North America holds correspondence in tent, labour under the same disadvantages [reland. These four members of the provi- as the New Brunswick road, of baving moj sional government we shall describe, fur | catiet. Pictou 18 in itself « place of jasport-| convenience, as the numerals Une, Two, | ance from its valuable coa! fields, and this, ['hree and Four—the mode. in which these | of course, is a reason for additional comma-| officers have been selected and commissioned | nication with the neighbouring Provinces by | being secret, and only known on this side o | | The Fenians in their native Jani are or | ganised on the French plan of secret politi- } such @ line of steamers as we have indicated. | the Atlantic to the Head Centre and Central | (1 L ', A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF POLIPICS, LITERATURE: “This is true Liberty, ‘commodation on board the Lady ilead, and With the intimate | union of the Provinees which Confederation | » rewny ar ’ aT >> Y ‘Ty ‘ HARLOPPETOWN, PRINCE ED oe edetmceeetie adenteah 4 ae - a ee poeeennnennentate property—these **O’s’’ or sergeants being) “Oh, they they drink themselves ¢eedeath,” the lowest officers of the Order; and each | said the Fan epane bot be ¥ ; Aa “O°” has again to select and swear in from; Scenes like these, It must hot be supposed, are among the neighbours he most intimately | Pestricted-to the Sixth -WerdePhey-hase 44 knows and trusts nine **D's” or private eol- Counterpart ay the tenement heyses, iu aust ofthe diers. wt » 66 fone) d. These Da? UP-town districts. ~~ Philadelphia, ~ too, * as “ We SERRE AES VS TOpse DISATURM. : raptes 8 showed the other day, has its share of them. are sworn in seperately, as in the previous jimy much has been dove, and is now doing, to cases, and, therefore, can bring forward no improve the condition of these poor outcasts ; but proof, if traitorously inclined, of the ser- |! we sometimes think if the great body of the geant’s having administered to them an’ clergy were to devote their energies less to po- ‘illegal oath’’—which is said to be a high litics, in order to concentrate them upon the crime, amounting to felony under the, works of practical charity, ever ready at their p** White Boy,’ **Croppy,”’ * Captain Roek ? baud, yet greater good could be accomplished. ~ aS 22, }and other Lrish coercion bills passed by the | - ——- . British Parliament. It is true the ‘D's’* TUE LOW LODGINGALOUSES OF NEW have to be brought together four times at | YORK. least for drill, and can therefore swear to each other as having been drilled together by [From the New York Times } & certain man. . This, however, compared The facts possessed in the Annual Report of the wit the administration of an illegal oath, is Metropolitan’ Police Coutiissioners, whieh owe a venial offence ; nor does England iike to ac- | published ou Friday, bearing on overcrowding, knowledge that ten poor peasants coming to-| are seme of the most striking ever brought to the gether and drilling together with long poles, | attention of the publie. We learn fron them that or pike-staves, can fright ber ebalky isl, i’ 4 siugle precinct in the Fonrth Ward— from its propriety. Innumerable are the ef- forts her ageats and spies have made during wretched poor, the criminals and the depraved the past four years to pierce into the arena resort to lodge, paying from ten to fifteen cents of this secret and dangerous Order, but, as | Pet uight for the miserable accommodations. yet, wholly without success. Some few traitorous **D s”’ have been found, and a They are mainly uvventilated or lighted, except WARD ISLAND, MO We | CQ v \ AY AX @ AND NEWS. AWFUL SHIPWRECK. “ see LOSS OF 270 LIVES. ee (that which we diav’ today. to anvounce. when Siveeeieaee Ramen 7 having to advise the Public, may ‘gumemla fone? Berigides. NDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1866, FOREIGN & MISCELLANEOUS. FOUNDERING OF AN AUSTRALIAN STEAMER-- Sees ee ptt as toa eae aaa event willappear the more appalling tour readers | from which they were put ashore at Palimouth on from the fact that a brief teu days ago every one ‘Tuesday afternoon, and the chief engineer and | of that ill-fated band of wen, women, and children, three passengers at ouce proceeded ou to London | whose corpses now tie far down beneath the ocean | by the mail train, | wave, were living, active, hopeful, and were guz- | foundered at sea on Thursday last, and that of | her erew and passengers, 289 all told, the ouly | survivors, 19 in number, had landed at the west- jernmest Channel port. The particulars of the | oecurrence, as gained from the few who have! been left to tell the tale, we proveed to give:—- | The London was one of the newest, and finest “There are sixty places or dens, where the lof the Australian passenger ships beloiging to! | Messrs. Money, Wigram & Co., by whieh eminent | firm she was built at their yard at Blackwall only {about ayear ago. She was 1,752 tons register, jing on the hills that shut in thé Mymouth Sound.) TOTAL latelligenee reached Falmouth eu Luesday that} the fine Australiau passenger vessel, the London, i > <- - - VRECK OF THE SHIP “ ROYAL ALBERT”’~—LOSS OF ALL ON BOARD. Intelligenee has arrived of the loss of this ve-sel, bound from Caleutta for London. The ) disaster took place in Bute Bay, Cornwall, aud the back of tremendous seas, and when day ligt | oa Friday morping came there was still no rescue, | | nor much hope of fiving out the gale. “At about | 41 a.m. on Friday, the Ith; however, a vessel ‘hove iu sight, and the attention, @hits.crew being 1 , | attracted to the boat they were picked up, after is wild excitement occurred. | twenty hours’ expostre to the pitiless winds and | | Many years have elapsed, since we have had to, Waves. ‘The vessel, which is an Ttalian barque, , record a disaster at sea so terrible in its details, | #48 commanded by Captain Carasa, and is called and involving so whilesale a sacrifice of life as | the Marianpate, on board which the survivors re- The ceived the utmost attention and kindness, and | ‘top of their speed. “The shats had been heard SPAIN. EXCITEMENT IN THE STREETS OF MADRID. | On the evening of the Tk at a guarter-i five, firing wae heard m the verte eal a rats and house dvors were being banged to with trembli _ haste ; there was a Warry-seurry of people ing. pushing, trampling; a shouting of coachmen madly lashing their horses and urging them on at from what areealied the Barrios Bajos, the lower | Quarters, at the foot of the Toledo and Atocha | streets, the abode of the most twiserable, most | Vicious, mast riotous population of Madrid. It has not been ascertained what the firing was | about—possibly a patrol of Civil Guarde ing sume groups of starving wretches ; ibly a few mutineers in the barcacks being put down by their comrades. Such seenes have, since the proe- lamation of the state of ’eiye, become ‘aw {re- quent among the military as among the populaee. | the report states that every soul on board perteh-| 1 made my way up the Carrera de San Gareai- | the cargo is strewn about the coust. ; } | ed. he captain’s desk and writing materials were washed asbore shortly after the wreck, and The Royal Atbert \ett Calcutta on the Mih September, aud is owned by Messrs. Fernie Brothers of Liver- pool, IRELAND. The places are chiefly in cellars, with naked | stone or brick walls, damp and decayed floors, | and was fitted with an auxiliary serew, her engines being of 800 hurse-power indivated. She was (built iu pursuance of the plan for steaming 10 | — DUBLIN AND WATERFORD PROCLAIMED. few ‘*C’s”’ or sergean's transported ; but the | through the entrance door. In condition they are | Botany Bay, then are there over sixty-five | went to the jury. ; with no witnesses present, and with whom | report of Captain Jourdou on the condition of the } amazed with many others of your readers at the jpanied by a detective, pushed up Chatham ¢ Woman under a heap of rags vear by them. Sropenery has never spread further, ‘f WO) filthy and disgusting beyond description, overfluw- *C’s”’ in two different Provinces turned trai-! ing with vermin and inlested by rats. | tors and attempted to convict the *B’s"’ or! lute these hideous places are packed nightly an | captains ; but the prosecution broke down in| average of ten persons tv each place, or six huu- | both cases so palpably that nollie proseguis | dred in the aggregate. were entered by the Crown before either case | Iu violation of the laws of deceney and morality, men, women and children, yuie aud black, with | ris . 7 juno regard to the family relation, sleep promis- No instance of a traitorous . 6 ee we camualy tugether, exhibiting less of te ih putece has yet been discovered ; nor, if any traitor | yf decency than the brute creation, shuuld Jurk among them, could he produce| From the character of these apartments, their | any evidence against his next higher in au- | owners and occupants, and the manner of their thority, by whom, in secret, he was sworn in| use, cleanliness is impossible, and hideous diseases of various classes aud types are engendered and | alone he holds official communication. propagated. inal | — YORK POOR. LIGHTS AND SUADOWS OF LUPE IN THAT CITy. hideous receptacles for bumau beings : No. 5 Baxter-street, two rooms, each 10 by 6, | full ten feet below the street; no windows or | other ventilation; bare stone walis; no furniture ; | a dirty, disgusting cave; twelve to fourteen lod- | gers nightly, at ten cents per night. First floor of same premises a drinking place, the resari of thieves. beggars aud prostitutes of the lowest class. The Captain Bays: oo Pave | seen as lodgers eighteen of both sexes asleep in | the place during the night.” No. 15 Baxter-street, a cellar, 14 by 18: five beds: naked stone walls; no window, light or | ventilation ; fourteen persons are accommodated at eight cents per night. No. 16 Mulberry street, one room, 14 by 10, with nine beds, and two beds in adjoining kitchen ; twenty persons, male and fewale, are lodged atsix cents per night. The building is the property of an officer of one of our city banks, and rents for} THE NEW [from the New York Express | It is well oceasionally to take a look at “ the Greeks at our doors,” While keeping our eyes constantly fixed upon Afriea, it will not do even the most sensitive any harm to be made acquaint- with the unspeakable human misery, in which thousands of men, women and children, of our own race and color, are sunk in this great wealthy Christian city, which boasts of its three hundred and fifty churches, and of its munificent contributors annually to evangelize the heathen | in Asia, Ethiopia, and “the isles” of the sea. $6 per mouth. No. 51 Baxter-street, second floor, one room 8 } by 5, contains three beds, kitchen adjoining; several beds on the floor; eighteen persons lodge here, at six to eight cents per night: rent $7 per month; owned by a well known citizen in Tweuty- third-street. No. 141 Leonard-street, second floar; two rooms, one 8 by 10, and kitchen adjvining; eight to ten lodgers, at eight cents per night. Other places are spoken of in the Sixth Ward, where young and old, black and white, thieves and prostitutes, beggars and drunkards, audevery kind of abandoued characters, herd together, sleeping promiscuously on the floors, and coming forth in the morning to prey on the community. The Captain of the ward rightly speaks of those places as ‘ poisoning the atmosphere’ of the whole ueigh- borhood, aud spreading abroad disease aud pesti- lence. Such lodying-houses are dens of crime and neats of fever. They poison the city morally and phy- sically. Tere are bread thieves, and robbers, and prostitutes, and murderers. Children are nuc- tered here fur crime,, 1t will be observed that iu a single ward ave an average of six hundred per- sons every night lodging in these nests of crime and disease. ‘The rooms, it will be notreed, have no windows as a geoeral rule, or light or veutil- ation, and are mostly below ground. These over- | flow with vermin and are infested with rats. Here typhus and stall pox hold a perennial feast ; here prevail diarrboea and dysentery and fever: the cholera will celebrate its carnival nexteuminer. [t will be noticed, too, that many of these hideous densare @wued by “ respectable citizeas,”’ oflicers in banks and the like, and are let oul probably by agents—these eitizens never taking the trouble to louk at their property and utterly regardless whe- ther their tenants are poisoned or debauched, or in what way their houses affect the bealth and inorals of the city. Surely if any one sin needs preaching against by the clergy, it is this cruel neglect by rich men of their tenantry, and their indifference to the condition of their dependents chat linini —"* HIGH DOINGS IN TAMMANY HALL. — Aud hence we need no further apology than these convictions, for giving the following :— [From the Times City Reporter. ] I had had my sympathies deeply moved by the poorest of the poor in New York, and I bad been startling and shucking revelations ou which you commented. I determined to visit them, and 80, accom- street. “ Let us go over to Cow Bay,” said the detec- tive, “and you will see how they live ’way up Jacub’s Ladder. That's the name it goes by. Cow Bay used to be whore the House of Lndustry is now, but there’s one building still staudiug— where they keep lodgings.” Jacob’s Ladder is au outside stairway, high and steep, which ends ata landing so ricketty and in every way dilapidated that it excites one’s wonder that it should be suffered toe remain standing. You land as high up as the third story would have been. ‘There were two doors. The roundsman rapped at both of thet. “ Who's there?” asked a female voice. **Oven the door, Suse,” said the roundsman. “Al! that’s Charley,” returned a voice. A little room, three wemen in it, a pan filled with cval cinders in the centre of the floor. One woman on ber haunches, warming ber hands over it. On a filtny wattrass, with one filthy coverlit over her, lay a woman asleep. No bed- stead. No pillow. No other mattrass. The rooni—how: filtliy, how cheerless, how ricketty no pen ean describe. ‘The gas from the fire was enough Lo suffocate me, Next docr—a devilish looking little German woman half dressed opened the door. Two men in one Ded—her husband in the other—perhaps her husband. Filthy, everything. Had I writ- ten about it then and there I would have said extremely filthy. But there was worse to come. We go up the narrow, worn out winding stairs. We enter—no I don’t, for I should have vomited had { dove so—the roundsman entered and J looked into three of the upper chambers. In one, ander the eavés almost, enrvall and low: and slanting, @ negro weman had three or four boarders—~she paid a dollar a week for reut. Next door there were five or six women huddled near a stove. Who is that man lying beside a ” The semi-centennial celebration of the battle of New Orleans was held in Tammany Hall on the evening of the 8th instant, when, according to the New York News, ‘* the ancient glory of Tammany culminated in absolute spiendor.’’? Speeches were delivered by Jobn Van Buren, S. 8. Cox, Mayor Hoff- “They are ail prostitutes here,” said the man, James T. Brady, Admiral Faragut and roundsman. . }severe weather that she was compelled for a | third-class passengers, which, with the crew of }room hatch, and the water svon found its way to Looking to the traffic, by sailing vessels, | Council. It is the duty of these numerals, | “ All five? others. Amongst the snvited guests who | Australia round the Southern Capes, and she has A special issue of the Dublin Gazette contains a been lost while on ber third voyage to Melbourne, | proclamatiun of the Peace Preservation Aet of Ou her two previous voyages her great excellence as a passenger ship has attracted to her a full complement of passengers—a somewhat greater number even than aceowpanied her on her pre- sent disastrous veyage, and her performances have fully realised the high expectations which were entertained respecting her. Her estimated value, exclusive of a full and valuable cargo, was from £70,000 to £80,000. She was commanded by Capt. J. Bohum Martin, a gentleinan in the prime of life, who not ouly had gained a more than ordinary share of respect from the thousands of passengers who had crossed the ocean under his care, but was reputed to be one of the smart- Again in the Sixth Ward, are the following | est and most trustworthy of the officers employed jin the Australian fleet of Messrs. Wigram, of He had previously | Wudress coat to match. Also a vest, a cartouche which he was senior captain. for several years been engaged in Colonial trade. | He was unmarried, haviug his ship his inseparable | life companion, and receiving in the cordial! friendship of the passengers who had sailed with him a reward for that assiduous attention te their comfort and safety which he had ever displayed. On the 20th of Desember,.aader oare ot Capt. Martin, the London left Gravesend and en- countered ou her passage down Channel such short time to take shelter at Spithead. She ar- rived at Plymouth op the 4th instant, ard em- barked a large number of passengers, an ususual- ly large proportion of whem were old ¢olonists returning lo Australia, who bad been awaiting her arrival at the various hotels of Plymouth. Iu addition to sixty cabin passengbrs, she had on boatd about ove bundred and forty second and about ninety, made up her complement of 28% sou's on beard. Thus adisirably equipped and fully freighted, the London sailed from Plymouth Sound op Saturday, the Gth inst. On the following day she encountered very heavy weather, with rain, boisterous and unsettled weather continuing ou the 8ih. ‘This increased next day to a gale, dur ing Which a series of mivor disasters betel. Her jibboum, foretop-mast, topgallant-mast, and reyal- inast were carried away, and the port life-boat was washed overboard and lost. This was in the morning, and the storm giving no signs of abatement, she was at 3 o'clock next morning put about, Capt. Martin intending to run back for Plymouth to refit. About this time a tremendous sea, Which terrified even the most hardened sea- men, broke on board, deing great damage ; the starboard life-boat was carried away by the waves, and the cutter stove in. At noon an observation was taken,.the ship. being then in 16 48 N., and longitude 87 West, viz., in the Bay of Biseay, about 200 imies south-west ef Land's end. The violent weather continued, aud at haif-past ten on Wednesday night the ship rolled and pitched fearfully, and shipped such quantities of water on deck as to carry away the engine the engiae-room, putting out the fires, and thus stopping the engines. The pumps were kept in- cessantly geing the whole night, all the passen- vers who were capable of rendering any help working with the utmost energy to assist the crew in keeping the ship afluat-by bailing with buckets in addition tu the pumps. During that frightful night—the night it will be remembered when thirty vessels were driven on shore in Tor- bay—the gale increased, if possible, in. violence every hour until it assumed the character of a hurricane with a fearful cross sea, which inces- santly made clean breaches ver ‘the hapless vessel. ‘The utmost efforts were made, but,with- out avail, to secure the engine-room hatch, and about 4 a. m. the stern posts were stove in’ by the sea, nud the exertions made to elose them np again were wholly useless, The passengers and crew all this time behaved exceedingly well, and worked orderly and withan energy which showed it was for their lives they strave. But the water continued to increase, and all command of the ship was lost, until it became evident that farther effort was hopeless. It was then, at ten o'clock on the morning of that fatal Thursday, that Capt. Martin had the terrible task of making known to the two hundred passengers that the ship was sinking, and that they must prepare for the worst. She was then as lew in the water as the main chains. An effort was then made to lower’ the whieh would be sure tu follow, if this line of | each in his own province—as of Ulster, Mun- | Ail in this building.” conveyance to Halifax were ance established, | ster, and so forth—to search out and discover | “ And men come here?” it is worth remarking that such vessels would | such prominent and reliable men, possessing| “Oh yes—they have no sense of decency.” never have to return in ballast to Canada, as |ycal interest and the necessary education, “as | One of these womed was sv frighttully diseased remunerative prices for coal are always to! they may be willing to approach with a view | that the foul odors of her oe wore distinguish be had at Quebee and Montrza!. to the formation of the cadare, or skeleton 0! | abie above the ae : or wre: 2 — a The present accommodation is just as in-/a regiment. The Numeral, forhis own sake, | Boe ieee eect ieee Seehinane Thee ate trafic as for freight. | must be very cautions. He Gree nmasnen A man had died of fever in the attic room op- The passage is too loug for those whose ob- | the general views of the gentleman he may | posite, only that moruing, and his widow aud her ject 6 to go direct to St. John or Ualifax. think of selecting to be his * A,’’ a8 We | Qnildven and lodgers were still living there, as Henze, travellers to these places almost in- shall eall it—a rank equivalent to colonel. ) filthy aud crowded togetber as ever. variably go by way of Portland or Boston. | He sounds him gently ay to his willingness to} “ We have to carry corpses from these places 7 pasesge to Shediac aod Pictou being| try one other chance, and risk his life ond ees said the roundsman, “ aud they are shorte y cutting off the Bay Chaleur, | property for Ireland's liberation ; and if he | crawling.” : which,ender an imguaved arr scigunint, toni | tte Sieh all right in those particulars, and | ‘ a . these women—all of them—of bad ‘ ; : ; : J sharacter ? a Sicitanetnes tank — Bons 4 a es ore — oo : cy ven one of them.” said the roundsman. 7 . : meral then broaches his bussmess more direct- | ita tastendad wearly tegleeted—the princi pal cities of the | ly, shows the intended A’? so much of his; "2 aoe ite Spheennhd thli-nebtadéimah at bol Maritime Provinces coald be reached as/ credentials as may be necessary, and then! «ta tea place near by, “over there is where | quickly by the St. Lawrence route as hy the | swears it. and commissions this * A,’’ if he is iz nigge: killed the white man some time since. | uther. At present it is a}iaust impossible | willing and properly qualified, as a colonel of They call it S—— Alley., Would yon hike to go for any but the most adventurous class of che ** [rish Republican Brotherhood.”’ Of Tover 1” ; pleasure tourists to go duwo the St. Law-| these colonels, or ‘ A’s,”’ there are from We picked our way over the half-frozen slush, | reoce further than the Saguenay. A lady twenty to thirty in each province, but not and came toa stable door, as I thought, eae! +8 sarely to be seen on board the Lady Head,| one of them is officially known to the other, was a heap of stable refuse near it. ‘he rounds- which is not surprising, seeing there is only | nor could give evidence against the other. | man rapped. By and by an old negro man ap- one stai@ room. Summer tourists intending | Rach ** A’? bas been sworn in seperately, | peared, with but ove article of clothing on his ‘0 Make the round of the ‘ Lieut. Gen. Grant, &e. Johnson, who, it will be remembered, was were pot present were President Johnson, li is hard to say which received the most severe drabbing, England or the Black Republicans. . Andrew represented nine months azo as everything that was brutal and bad, is now, aceording to these Tammany brethren, almost perfec- tion itself. Mayor Hoffman placed ‘him ‘on the ramparts of Washington fighting tho battle of the Constitution against fanatics and radicals,’’ and this stroke of eloquence caused ‘‘ enthusiastie cheering, the whole audience rising and cheering vehemently for the President.’* J. T. Brady, in defining his ** position ** as a War Democrat, stated that if the Democrats had acted right and done their duty in 1863, they would now. be in possession of the Government of the coun- try. ‘If he wanted to get the embodiment of @ mean attack upon the rights of the people, be would go .to that affected, pusil- lanimously miserable demagogue, Charles ‘*Sumner.”’ After landing the American Democracy, be appealed to his countrymen ** to remember the sneaking Government of England, Let them be like Darius, who boats, and the starboard iron pinnace was lower- ed with five men aboard her, one of them being a passenger from Penzance. Ir: the terrific sea prevailing she was quickly swamped and went down, but the five men in her were got on board the ship. This catastrophe had the effeet of in- timidating the erew from’ attempting*to launch the three remaining beats, and all ow board be- | gan to realize the dreadful fate which impended. | The whole of the passengers and erew gathered | as with one eonsent in the chief saloon, and hav- ing been told by Captain Martin that there was no hope left, a remarkable and unanimous spirit of resignation eame ‘over them at ence. There was no screaming or shrieking by women or men, no rushing on deck, or frantic cries. All ealmly resorted to the saloon, where the Nev. Dr. Dra- per, one of the passengers, prayed aieud, and ex- borted the unhappy ereatures by whom he was surrounded. Dismay was present to every heart, ing death, were pitifully inquiring the eause of so! much woe. Friends were taking leave of friends, | as if preparing for a long journey, others were | long known or long neglected. 356, “* proclaiming” the city and county of Dub- lin, the city and county of Waterford, and the county of Tipperary, from the 16th instaut. This proclamation, which is the result of a Privy Council meeting, will enable the police to prose cute their search for arms &c., without the impe- diment of usual legal formulas. Large: quan- tities of warlike muuitions are believed to be secretly stored throughout the county, and all such in the proclaimed districts will now have to be given up uader a penalty of twe years’ iia. prisoument. As ove of the first results of the proclamation, a civilian found in a lane at Dol- pbin’s Barn a new and handsome military tunic of the “ Irish Republic’ uniform—green, and elaborately embroidered with gold lace--and an belt, and a bayonet belt, Another suit of sinilar uniform was found at Kilmaiuham. They were doubtless got rid of in this way in consequence of the preclaumation, They are at present in the detective office. The proclamations were de- faced in several instances on Sunday. ‘I'wo per- sane. Marearet Reilly: and Daniel Hole ere brought up for this offexee on Monday. Botn were committed to prison fer 14 days in default of bail. Ona Sunday 91 pees of American oak, 18 ft. long and 3 in. square, and supposed to be intended for pike-handles, were handed over to some constables of the E division by a man named Fox, at Harold's Cross, who stated that they had been left with him some time ago by a man who [ie oe to call again for them, but had not one 80, FURTHER SEIZURE OF PIKES. The seizure of arms effected last week by the police has been followed up by another of not quite so alarming a nature. On Satur- day evemng last no simall exvitement was caused in the neighbourhood of Harvid’s Cross by the seizure of 20 pikes by the police vf the Kilmainham division. The constables, acting on information, proceeded to a field in the weighbourood of Liareld’s Crosa, in which a hayrick was erected, and on search be- ing made, the weapons were discovered concealed in it. ‘They were conveyed to the station-house, but up to the present no arrests have been made, It has been currently rumoured that since the proclamation was issued large numbers of pikes: and other arms have been thrown into the eanal, and we understand that a general search will be made for them by the police. THE DISCOVERY OF FENIAN STORES. Terence Byrne, Jeremiah O'Neill, Benjamin Marsden,and James Flood,who were arrested at a house in North Anne-street, where a quantity of Fenian stores were found, were brought before Messrs. Strunge and O’Donuell, at Capel-street police-court, on remand, and comwitted for trial—John O'Neill, Josepli Marsden, and Thomas Danne were thet similarly charged, and remanded for a week.—John Clewin and Henry Wilson, aiias Broughton, were brought up charged with liaving been found in possession of some arms and ammunition, along with doucu- ments, of an alleged treasonable character, at Gloucester-street North. The prisoners were tully comtmitted for trial— Patrick O'Keeffe, who had been arrested last week at Crossline, near Kantuck, was again brought up, aud committed for trial, THE FENIAN TRIALS IN DUBLIN. Cornelius Dwyer Kane was found guilty of treason-felony on Wednesday. When asked what he had to say, he said le was proud of the friendship of Stephens, In conclusion he said, “ Now. iny lord, T bave ouly one request to make, and that is that you will not give me any advice or lecture. as you haye done the other prisoners. Task you simply to pass seutence on me, and give me nothing in the shape of advice or lecture, for I assure you it would be lost upon me.” Judge Fitzgerald sentenced him to penal servitude for ten years. Jolin Ciobessy pleaded guilty, aud wae sentepeed to two years’ dmprisonmeut. Tuc Fenian Trtats.—The Jury ia the case of Cornelius O’Mahoney, on a charge of Fenian- isin, at the sitting of the’ special commission in Dublin, were unable to agree to a verdict on Sa- | turday night. At a quarter to six the jury re-| tired to consider their verdict. At 22 nninnates to 15 o'clock their lordships called them in.—The Foreman said that they had not succeeded in aggreeing, and that they thought that agreement was impossible—Jadge Keogh: We could not think of Jeaving the jury in without refreshment until Monday morning, and, therefore, gentlemen, we discharge you.—Mr. Burry said the prisoner would be again put.on Lis trial on Monday morn- img.—On Monday, accordingly, the Attorney- General proceeded with the ease again.—Mr. Butt handed in a plea, signed by the prisoner, ta the | effect that he should pot be again put on bis trial, because at the time of the discharge of the jury they were all in good health, and capable of ‘con- tinuing on the jury, and that no other necessity, | therefore, existed for the discharge of the jury (han the supposed necessity of discharging them betore the Lord’s-day.—The Court overruled the demurer.—The jury. was then selected, aud the vase then proceeded.—The jury found the pri- but disurder to none. Mothers were weeping | sover Guilty, but reeumnmended him to mercy. — sadly over the litle ones about them to be en- Mr. Justice Keogh pronounced the sevteper vl gulphed, and the children ignorant of their com- | penal servitude for iive years. MYSTERIOUS STRANGERS IN DUBLIN. One of the circumstances operating upon the ¢rouched down with bibles in their bands, en-{ mind of the Irish Government in the measores’ deavoring to snateh consolation from passages | they have just takeu, js the presence in the Lrish _ Incredible, we | capital of a number of strangers possessed of are told, is the composure which, under such} money, which they spend with freedom, but tiav- ody—a short, thick old man, who made his living course when they reach Quebee and find in. Gof, change their! and only knows the Numeral who swore him | He does not know any ove of the other | by begging. A low, filthy rooin, miserably fur-| was awakened every morning by his slave, circumstances, reigned around. Captaiu Martin} ing uo ostensible occupation. They have the ap- pished, but with more in it than the rooms up | and exhorted to remember his grudge against stationed himselfin the poop, going occasivnally pearance of Americans and a military sir. The there is mo sailing accommodation beyond | three Numerals in control of the three other Jucob’s ladder. | the Athenians. He was nota Fenian brother, | forward, or into the saloon; but to none could he some open bertha for about « dozen persons, provinces; and as the oath is administered in | aad this only oneé'a fortnight. On occasion secret by the Nameral to each ** A’’ with DO | 4 Gichy mattrasy. f g j y 7 . y . ere colered { vr one OF the last trips of che Lady Head, witnesses present, and as the commission is | at Jeast the old man said 60. They were colored | there were nearly 200 steerage passengers, couched in language of no logal significance, ), Near by, up one my a Vere tool ta the ost of whom caine on board at Perce. Not) and is only signed with a seal, there on bajsew 2 ee ‘Tines' tthe Soiuis led out | oa than one-fourth of the number could) produced neither oral vor written evidence re sestiavetletiell inevire-abiamdbdiaty nd <veb standing room below. ‘Lhe weather against any member of the Provisional Go- eS Four squalid and debauched wowen were Wae very rough after leaving Gaspe, and the vernment, even supposing (as has never yet, squatted down near the steve. A matrass lay | aa bad to lie to for 35 hours at Mont happened) some *+ A" should wish to prove | TN) a oe close by the fire, and on it, clasped | Sy Lhe Lady Head was quite able to| a traitor. or, as they say jn Ireland, **to eell | in each other’s arms—not a blanket nor rug nor | hota on her course, but the harches must) the pass.”* : lcoverlid, but only an overcoat over them—two | “ave been closed if she did sv, and the people; Each ‘* A,” or colonel, thas appointed, | jersons were stretched out. tuff cated, As an altercative, about two-| next procecds with caution, and at equal per)“ Who's that man tasked the roundsinan, ae them had to endure severe cold on soual risk, to select nine exbordinates, wt : nas ~ thle glanet™ “ek for four successive mights.. Freight had we. will style ‘ B’s,"? holding the rank of” rhe p 1 creatura,in unwo- tu..be 7 L rip oe tres =n of his “Me,” said a debanches creature, in un c refused on the game trip at several;eaptain. ‘These are selecte rom men ¢ manly rags clad; looking Up at the officer. ‘Mtadian fishing ports, because some five or most intimate acquaintance, who he can) umn Hlow came.you bere 2” suid thevtfiogs to, the | *'S hundred batrels of oysters ad been taken’ trust with his life. They .are suunded, ex- | They were man and wile—or, | on beard wt Shediac. ‘Tie frei che was offered amined and thoroughly tested before adirect le damien iene by poor people who wanted to exchatige | project is opened to them. Tuoy areswort)” .. 414 this crow picked you up?” ‘ueir fis at Quebec for wititer supplies. in seperately as “Soldiers of the Irish Re} yoy This was remedied next trip, but it was by publie’’—there being no ong prosent atthe | Phere are men who ay eae ca ear ae | ing in but the * A” (colo- i these women; but they eas re” Geeapeale’ nor areany of the | alleys and dens, and’ redeem themselves. nine ** B's" ever bronght togetber in official once there, a woman ean & contact, so ‘that théy could swear against a — ce pels athee 16 Seiwa —- ae ene lived: we went through apother house ; | ee ene See vd mga 7 this the abode of the better, or more properly, the | snows his colonel, so tliat two'' B's’? might | Laon wrashened Gine®, ele ‘be next door neighbours for, ten, years with- | "> You way make compromises,” out either one suspecting the other's senti- ..odsman. “This is on the way dow ; Otten gritos from the neizhbourhood of ments or fiiliations, Hyolt ** Bon aap tein, try to kéep up a — ores vi gra ce; ewes and they were not delivered to him. thus jedociainptet. has to solest. soups ont gney Bit go down td the cellars to ‘OF ‘ten months. be were sweat in nite ** C’s,”’ or sergeants, io NKe jast” : ‘ying at Quebee for ‘eae ue- | manner and at equal risk in his own life and “And'then? Tefusing oyatérs at Shediac, thus putting an 1 *ctual check on whiat ought otherwise to } cont trade. Uncertainty of this sort re prevented trade being even com- wenged $ . But z= lately remarked that it was not desir- © thee any closer counection with be bad once given an order for’ at? opponent of Confederation in Nova . ab Oa the floor lay a young man anda woman, On ) yor did -he know a Fenian sister, but he|(qer a orl of cata firt, “by telling’ therh' that police have uo grounds for interfering with them, and yet the iwpression is very strerg that they hated the English Government, which did not | theig safety was even probable. He joined new | ave upon un good intent, ‘Phe most that ean be have so many troops upon the field of Water- loo as were killed and wounded at the battle of Gettysburg.’’ Af] these expresvions brought tions, but his place to the last was on the deck: forth ** shouts of applause ’’ and ** tremen- duous cheering.’’ S. 5. Cox appears to have been the speaker of the evening. In the contemp!ation and eslebration of the glorious victory of New the waves in a boat rather than go down without astrugglc. Leaving the saloon, therefore, they got out and lowered the port catfer, into and then fer a few moments in the public deve- | done is to watch them elosely, and this is being )iuo, to that Muerta del Sol which aman must. cross in Madrid, no watter whenee coming, ne’ matter whither going. The great Aide of terrifieal » people was setting in aloug with me, and invad- ing the square, which had net as vet caught the alarm. 1 went up the whulelength of the square, and bad barely eutered the Calle del Arenal when I heard a great rush and some piereing bisazs. The crowd, pushing their way into the narrow. . streets, forced we on. Men, women aad ebildrea were borne along in awlaul confusion ; vast masses flung themselyes, pell-mell into the. side-streeta; with the remainder I made my best way into my . hotel. The shutting of doors and windows, the. utter disappearance of the terrified mob, were the work of a few seconds. Presently, as silence be- can to reign, there was a trampling of hoofs, a flashing of helmets, breast-plates and broad swords; it was the Queen’s coach and six coming back from Prado, preceded and {.llowed by its, mounted escort. At the table d'hote dinner the guests dropped in singly long after, their time, and every one had some tale to tell of his. share i; the scrimmage, One had seen the cafes and confectioners’ shops hastily clasing ; another hail been present at a charge made by the .Civil Guards with lances and_bayouets at some cage muffins, the effect of which had beento clear the Puerta del Sul in the twinkling ofia@neye. In half an hour the stillness of death prevailed, and continued to reign throughout the night, Such is life in Madrid in this latter part of the 19th century. The were fact of the population of one, of the principal European capitals becoming 8e easy a prey to panic and dismay speaks volumes in conderauation of a system of Government under high indigeviminate shooting daw « “sale he streets, without prov tien” and without warning, are matters of too irequent and too re- cent occurence. ~~> > o> —-—-—— - THE CHOLERA IN THE WEST INDIES. [Prom the Jamaica Journal, Dec 274 The Gulana Times of the 7th December reports the appearance of a diséasein Gaudaloupe resem- bling, though it is not by any means certain that it is, Asiatic cholera. Jtis described as a per nicious fever, but is not contagious—at leaet it _ has not presented that character. It first ap- peared at Poiut-a-Pitre ou the 22ud October, and has extended to Martinique, It is reported to have been carried to Gaudaloupe by a ship from Marseilles. ‘The Town Couneil of Georgetown, which js the local board of bealth for the city, held a meeting ou the 27th of November, when active measures were taken to clear the city of filth and improve its sanitary condition. The ar- rival of the French steamer Carabe, however, on the 29th of Novewber, bringing alarming reports of a disease resembling cholera, which was caws- ing great mortality at Gaudaloupe, and was re- ported to have spread to Martinique, at once called the council into greater activity, and @ special meeting was called for the next morning when the most energetic measures were adopted for putting the town into the best possible sauitary condition, : At Trinidad similar precautions are being takeg against this epidemic. Active measures have been instituted by the general and lecal beards uf health for the prevention of infsction in Ports of Spain and San Feimando. The Local Buard of Port of Spain, stimulated by the prompt action of the government, has displayed considerable energy in earrying ov. the rules prescribed by the general board of bealth for cleaning and purifying the town. In addition te the above diektien of the epidemic, we have been favored by a friend with the following letter from Pvinte-a-Pitre, dated the 16th inst., gwing a moet sppalling dee- criptivn of the epidemic whieh, calbitas they will, proves to be nothing less than ehulera: “ Pointe- a-Ditre, 1th November, 1865—I1 have most dis- tressing news to give you. ‘The cliolera is raging here in all its fury. ‘The deaths are about thirt ed that it was a fever peculiar to swampy lveali- ties; but they have been woehully deceiwed. The cemetery is strewed with unburied coffins for days, as the laborers cannot work sufficiently to suffice fur the graves required daily. The Go- veruor has been obliged to send the wulitary pri- soners to carry the corpses and the sick to the hospital, as well as to assist/in digging graves, More thaa a halt of the population has lett the town.” _—- THE MISCHIEF ON THE RIO GRANDE. The statement that the capture of Bagdad waa accomplished by a baud of adveuturers, organized for purposes of plunder, 1s not sustained by the facts, sv far as they cau be gathered from the meagre reports. it appears that the guiding spirit of the expedition was General Crawtord, recently au officer of the United States, now a Major-General in the army of the Mexican Re- public, regularly commissioned by President, Juarez. The expedition was under the immediate command of Colonel Reed, the Chief of General Crawford's Stauth. General Crawford has appor- ently beeo very active and successful in organizing a force in Texas for service in the Liberal cause. He has issued commissions to several ex-ederal officers, furnished them with money, and suthor- ized them to recruit for the army of Juarez. The coumissions thus issued read as follows :— ** Mexican Republic, American Division, * Near Matamoras, Mexico. “ The Mexican Government having duly author- ized Major-General Crawford to raise and equip a division of troops for the Mexican serviee, and to appoint the officers of said division, you are hereby appointed Captain, and authorized to raise a cotupany of sixty men. a! 26 “A. P. Reep, Chief of Stat” The affair assume a very serious aspect, in view of the system and activify displayed in or- ganizing an army of invasion within the lines of the Uuited States. It will be difficult fur the Federal officers in command on the Riv Grande to demonstrate to the satisfaction of Maximilian that they were not eognizant of the movement, - or that they made any effort to prevent it. There is no méasuring the trouble that niay ensue from this untimely raid. What is most to be appre- hended is that the thousands of reckless aad venturous spirits in this country may regard t bold stroke of the Texan ‘ilbusters” asa signal — to shoulder their rifles and march te the Sette { ip search of glory and booty uader the Li | done wo vigilantly that they cannot stir without | standard. A few successful enterprises like that About two o'clock in. the afternoon, the water | being underobservation, T fa gaining fast in the ship, and no signs of the storm | believe that there are considerable quantities of | give an in | subsiding being apparent, a small band of men | arms secreted th it determined to trust themselves to the awerey of | would not be prudent more particularly to men- | collisions tion the character of the information reeently ob- | France, Orleans over a foreign foe, he exhorted his |wixfeen of the crew and three of the passengers | | brethren to forget their domestic strifes. la. succeeded in getting, and in launching eulogizing the memory of Andrew Jackson, he could not help placing by his side his heroic namesake, “Stonewall”? Jackson. He | traced at length the history and dismember-. ment of the ‘‘Great Democrat Party,’’ which elected thirteen out of fifteen Presidents since Jefferson's time. “In dwelling upon the pre- appeals again ariso and pat on ber beautiful gar- ments. Prot ocean to’ oceen, a ihe Seiph, from the» gold-beariag sirras and Se yuy | Silver-yieiding lodes ofthe Pacific to, che fruit. ut! . q t ; eh . * : ful yaljeys of the Mississippi and the rich marts |. i Ba »of the Atlantic, ite Yoctsteps froin State otter * State will be #hose“of & domi-god’ on of the ship. These 19 men shouted to thin to come witli them, but | courage which was his ¢hief charactesistie,, he | declined to go with them, saying, “No, I will 'gu down with the pusséngere; but T with por | God. speed and safe te land” jpuiled away, tossing about helplessly ‘crests of the gigantic waves. ‘Searcely ie cap- on the scape in due way otly{ will have departed.“ The great party of | silent for dyer. }eonstitational hberty; whose. love: had no) jater street, where once a bounds si he limits of the Republic, will | ee : [DOU REA AAR tne Pe aban 'a rush was seen to be wiadé to thetwo remaisting te Nel, -voats, but: efiorts: to; ladivch: then sveke in-) which, wes attached to ae ee “1 e foundering | om Holyhedd at 11. 40 a m,. at—the London being an tron snip—prevent: | warders from the penal setiement received theun? . : rail Jed whatanludt hate been a successful sechad ate/at Helybead. ‘They bad all a very repulse andy, ay et Ope duleas™ é to save ai fpw more lwes, . The nineteen poor aypearance, net ane of thew, bentiug any ro prrcheune Pe hase § OH wy oe survivors, iu thejr dittls Jight buat, were driven | marks ofintelligence of respec — Exchange. mi y the }efore the galein the Boy of Bikcay al that Thura- : oo pathway of staps,!dbe lth." —T drento- rlblperday attergoems and 'evbping, aud aight, tyssed oy very Weakly bedilyappeatanver, . 9. <9 4. cifectual, apd the suddenness of cb her clear j Dublin, but at this moment it The authorities further | which resulted in the capture of Bagdad would lee to filibusters that this Govern ment would not be able tu check in time to avert that would calminate in a war with We need statesinanship wow. in the - tained with respect to the description of Weapyns | National Legislature, and it is bigh time that which | concealed. A-COPFIN FULL OF PIKES. The correspondent of a Dublin papersays that with’ that heroic -recently @ funeral party entered a churebyard | situated in a solitary part of the county of Wick- ‘Now, lowered 4 ceffiin iutoa grevé, covered it, and ‘Ehe: boat then }sent weakness of his party, he pathetically | gaye 80 yards, or been five minutes off the déek, | to his Soutbern brethren again to, when the fiue steamer went dow stern foremost: j] join their ranks, and the time would not. be with her os oe beings, from whem one petal: ‘long befere the glory of Stevens and Samner | confnsed ery of helpless terror arose, and all was | wo hud exenrtéd t pr rai been convicted and ecnteneed to vatious inrme of | For suel reasous,’ adds the Judge, * protesting» After the pinnace had got away from. the Lox- went Weir way. ‘Phe police of the distnet went to the cemetry 1n question, and, disinterrivg. the coffin, found it'to contala’a quautity of pikes. haa they | ARRIVAL OP "PENIAN PrisoNeRrs IN ENGLAND. ‘articles of the i ; at. be violated ‘by President : A company often Fenian prisoners’ arrived vlyhead, in the reyal mai sieamdr Ulelor, on They were in charge of 24 seldiers, selves force fo abstain from ail sbare jn gebie ae 4 them from Cork, where they had acts until the empire of law can bere r ( partixan intrigues should be abandoned, at least, , wutil the peril as over —New York Nears. i -__ The Mexican Republic has aesumed another phase of the “ Fenian Kapublic” —the leadera’ _ bitterly denounee each other. The dVorld says: — —* Senor Ruiz, one of the Suagwet hetrereay, | Court of the Mexican Repubtie, signe a formal | protest against the continued exercise uf the pre- | sideutial fice by Juarez, Due Judge reeites the onetitution which be considers to Juarez, and up by dselaring ‘bat ‘men of bonour muet feelthem- | y of a Judge of the Su vo rune fe { vears.and were | in my qualit ! foes _ penal seryitude, trum five toGfleen years and were Veoleniily against thé violence done to the funda. don, and in the briefinterval before she foundered, ev route for a London Penitentiary. They were two by two to a thitd-class étrriage, fable appeassuce. | “Ammig them Waa a short hur ct backed pér so) ut te | mental law by the decrees of ¢x-President J darez, the Isists Jimited .wail. | dated the Sth.of Ronin Laebice to prie iy, é Twelve | Tate fife, to seek in, the ba the support of my family, to fae 1 sball vetive with a own ‘beuwohed Reepactng America Mibustering in Metics, ja New Ovleauus belegram of the 2uth ult., te the: ll aE or thirty-five daily. Ac first the doctors pretend. ~ t + ‘ ; . . Lutte athe , lh