AND ADVOCi\TE • - Cincinnati Digital Library

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AND ADVOCi\TE • =----"IN NECESSARIIS UNITAS, IN DUBIIS LIBERTAS, IN OMNIBUS CARITAS."

TERMS--$2,OO PER AN.'IUM, IN ADVANCE. WHEN DELIVERED BY CARRIERS $2,50 SlNGLE COPIES FlV!': CENTS .

REV. S. H. ROSEORANS, D. D./ EDI'rORS VERY R!':V. E. PUiWELL. S •

VOL. XXIL~ CINCINNATI, o H I O. SAT U R DAY. AUG U S T 6. 1853. {NO. 33. :::::::

The Australian mail brings some u?usually leas:\llt intelligence from }h~ Gol~ R~gIO~S and ~an Diemen's. ~and.. S~I~h 0 ~l'Ien IS well nd cheerful, It IS said, resldlllg III a hotel at

New Norfolk, with a ~istrict of ten miles for exercise. O'Doherty I~ comfort.ably.loca!ed as

h sician to St. Mary s Hospital m nobart i'o~n. Mitchel ~nd M~rtin .are stilll'esiding. in comparative happmess III RIChmond. Patl'lck 0' Donohoe's adventurous and successful es­cape is graphically describe~ by some .of the men who helped to accomplIsh It, clem'lUg ~he narrative trom furtber doubt. Balfe, the Insh Renegade, has either resign.ed or been ~ismiss~d from his Government appolOtment. 'I he chief items from tbe land of gold are relative to the unexampled progress still eXh.ibited by the colo­ny of Victoria. The populatIOn of Melbourne and its suburbs alone have been computed as amoulltinO' to 80,000, and the town of Geelong to 20,OOO~ 'fhe value of the produce of this colony actually exported in the year. 1852 was in round numbers £ 15,000,000 sterlmg.

THE TWO GUESTS. There :ue two women claiming at this mo·

ment tbe welcome and gallantry of Irishmen. One of them is the crowned Queen of a

mighty empire, rich in all this ,,":orld's wealth got by a gorO'eous state, the favonte of fortune, courted, fl.atrered and obeyed with the most ob· sequious and unhesit~ting sub~issiven~ss. . .

The othel' is the Wife of a sllllple Insh Citi­zen, with no riches but the graces of her sex, her woman's love. and her husband's glory.

And yet between Queen Victoria and the wife of Thomas Meagher, wbat Irish heart hesitates in the ~l'Uth and intensity of its homage?

The first of these women---she who is decked with the .-diadEm of Sovt:reig:'lty---propoSts to visit Ireland; and ber flatterers and hirelings have to bespeak and organise for her a favor­able reception. And with all save the giddy and the venal, their industrious solicitations are in vain. Amid the brooding silence of tbe Irish People she will land upon our sbores.

'fbe second comes, the daughter of a foreign clime, without pomp or parade, and instantly the enthusiasm of the people blazes out into jubi lee and welcome. And by the magic of the title she bears---wife of a banished Irish Patriot -·-the honors denied to royalty are paid to her by their spontaneous suffrages.

Whose is the truer nobler ovation---tbat of the haughty daughter of a 1:; undred Kings, 01'

that of the simple wife of the Irish Traitor? '£hese two women! What a contrast is

tbere in their destinies. How dazzling the one -how unpretending the other. And yet what Irish won:an, with a mind and conscience, could hesitate in her choice between their sta­tions?

When the citizens of Waterford assembled the other day to greet the wife of their most i1-lustrions citizen; when they welcomed her amongst them witb the same tumultuous enthu­siasm with which they had often bailed bel' husb'lUd's glorious voice; what emotion·--wllat tender and sacred thoughts must bave swept across that young wife's soul as she gazed on the people for whom he lost his liberty, his for­t~ne, and his home. And when the City of his Buth blazed as for a festival, when the sur­rounding bills lighted their answering beacons, and the name of Thomas Meagher rang up to the firmament, did she not learn to love the faitb~lllrace so true to bis memory, so grateful fllr hiS sacrifices, so melted by his sorrows.

In the ears of the foreign Queen, if men were brave and true, no Irish welcome would be thundered; not because she does not come here. in her Merry Andrew attire, but because she IS the representative of a power which has crushed and ruined our glorions country!

Four years have passed since Thomas Meagher left bis island as a condemned crimi­nal whose life has been forfeited to this Sover­~ig~ of England, for conspiring in tavor of Ju~tICe and liberty; forfeited; but spared, as Kirwan's bas been, by "the cltmency of the Crown !"

And yet to-day, thanks be to the God of Freedom, he is a Freeman, where men are most free. And now tbis fail' and gentle girl, whose ov~ .he ~ad won in his penal banishment, goes to JOin him in his new career, with no passport to the w?rld's courtesy and homage, but that symbol. rIng by which her noble husband en­dOwed her with his love, and made her sacred and precious in the sight of aJl lovers of Jiberty and of Ireland. . The Queen of England will pass through our

CIty fo llowed by howling crowds of idle and un-rea . .

sonIng SIghtseers. And in a week her pre-

sence and her visit will be but an empty memory.

'rhe wi fe of our banished Patriot will not leave Ireland without learning holV fond and unchangeable is the affection wbich all good, true, and patriotic Irishmen entertain for bel' illustrious husband. •

His native city has spoken the true senti­ments of the country. And we trust tbat the citizens of Dublin, who cherish his memory and acknowledge his virtues, will pay to bis wife their respectful homage. It needs no public display, no bespealling agitation, to do this.-­Each one in bis individual capacity can dis­charge this happy duty in the most welcome and appropriate manner.

And may that guiding Providence. wbose protecting hand has drawn Tbomas Mea O'her from tbe borrors and sufferings of his p~nal exile, and conducted bis young wife thus far in bel' long pilgrimage to rejoin him, watch over their blended lives; aad bless them with the happiness and prosperity denied to them in this POOl' Old Country, because our banished Patriot loved her and attempted t.o libp.rate and elevate her people.--Dublin Nation.

AGRICULTU RE. ApPEARANCE OF THE POTATOE BLIGHT. We

were sorry to heal' it stated in the town of Monaghan on yesterday (Friday) that the old scourge of the country, tbe potato blight, had made its appearance in that neighborhood with­in the last four days. And we I could scarcely believe it, as the several fie.lds we had seen on our way there looked very healthy, several of them in blossom. B.ut to-day Wfl are convinced that the blight is already spreading in this neighborhood. We have before us at present several stalks pulled in the neighborhood of Bal­lybal'1'ac.k atoll Haggartlstov"!l, and they are quite black and.:.withered, as if scorched before a fire. They emit a very offensive smell. The small tubers attached to the roots are also dis­eased and quite black. 'fhe gentleman who brought the stalks to our office says that the disease has spread over tbe entire field from which he took them. Two of his neighbors have also seen the disease visible in their potato crops. We are exceedingly sorry to be obliged to communicate this intelligence to our readers. It wili be a sad story for many of the struggling farmers who bave gone to great expense in planting . large quantities of potatoes, and we fear will add to the emigration that is wasting the country.- --Dundalk Democrat.

We rcgret to learn that some symptoms of blight have appeared in the western parish near Dingle, a portion of Mr. Herbert's property near Killarney, and in some gardens neal' Cause­way. ---Tralee Chronicle.

We are delighted to be enabled to state that under the influence of the genial succession of sunshine and shower, which has marked the last fortnight, tbe crops of every description bear a most fl.ourisbing aspect. The oat crop, owing to the long run of dry weather which preceded, is in general rather sbort in the stem. However, it might yet sboot up and turn out more abundant than people anticipate. The potato crop, to which every eye is anxiously turned, is most luxuriant; and no trace of the disease is making its appearance. In many parts of this neighborhood new pdtatoes are being dug out in a perfectly healthy state.--­Tuam He1·ald.

LONGFORD. In the county Longford all thl3 crops give promise of a most abundant harvest. The late refresbing showers have had a most beneficial effect. We have instituted the most anxious inquiries relative to the prospects of the potato crop, and are happy to say the re­sult of thfse in q uiries has been most satisfac­tory. Not the slighest indication of the rot has made its appearance. From the quantity of land uuder potatoes tbis year, and if they con­tinue in their present healthy state, we may fair­ly anticipate a most pleGtilul winter.---Midland Counties Gazette.

VVESTMEATH. Our farmers are in tbe best possible spirits. We have in Westmeath the promise of most healthy and ahundant crops. The recent rains, unar.companied as they were by cold, have done great good to the crops. There is no appearance whatever of the dreaded potato blight.---lbid.

LEITRIM. New potatoes were sellinO' llere (Carrick. on-Shannon) on the 4th inst., ~ two­pence pel' lb., b:ougbt from Culleenamore, in the connty of Shgo. None have as yet been brought to market from the immedia1e neigh ­borhood. There is every hope, after the abun­rlant supply of rain we have had . 01 a plentifu l harvest. Up to the preselJt there is not the

slightest appearance of the epidemic. The other crops are making a most promising pro­gl'ess.---Ibid.

TIlE POTATO DISEASE. U nmistakeable evi­dence of this disease have shown themselves in the neighborhood of Bristol. In and aboufi Horfield and Filton, it has evinced itself in a very pJain manner, some of the (ubers which WE; have seen being decidedly deceased. One man has tried a considerable patch, and fonnd th em all more or less affected.---Moming Post.

Our Ardee correspondent says: The late rai n--·of which we had an abundance---has im­proved-tke aspect of tbe cro.ps very much. Ntarly all the Oats is ,shot out. A great dl'al of the crop is short, and on poor soils is not likely to prove an average; but on clean, ri ~ h soils it is likely to prove above an ave'rage. VI heat, wherever sown, looks well; this crop is all sbot out. Barley appears first -rate in every direction, and it is considered will prove above the usual average, from its present luxuriant ap· pearance. All the leguminous crops are of the most superb description, and nevel', at any pre· VIOUS year, do we recollect seeing tbem look so well Tbe potato crop is lOOking extremely well so far, and no appearance as yet of blight is manifest. If they escape the disease a large supply may be calculated on. Turnips and mangold wurtzel are doing well, and we have not heard of any faillll'es as yet. The cutting of meadows is getting on rapidly, but experi­enced some interruption from the late rains. Upland meadows are light, except fresh laid d~wn. ones, which ~re in general very good. Vlewlllg the country In the aggregate, the pros­pect is a gratifyiug one . An early harvest may be calculated on.---Loutlt and Down Pilot.

FAIRS,' CLONMEL, JULY FAIR. rhe usual monthly

fail' was held in this town on Wednesday, and was well attended. The supply of stock was large and business brisk, advanced prices hav­ing been asked and freely given. The weather was very fine, and this contributed materially to the forwarding of purchases, which were over at an early hOllr. Fat cows fetched from 14l to 16l; milch ditto, from III to 13l; two year oles, 6l lOs to 8l lOs; yearlings, 4l to 5l. lOs; calves, 2l to 3l. Sheep were in good de­mand at from 33s to 37s 6d each; lambs, ISs to 203. In the horse fail' there were a few good animals, which were speedily purchased at a high figure.

The fair of Al'dee, held on Friday, was what may be termed a smart one, tbat is, every kind of stock sold went ofr at high rates. The lots of beef were numerous, and some of them as prime as we recollect having see n for a long time. Prime qualities sold very near 6d pel' lb. In fact, a few lots we saw sold realized something ovel' that. Inferior qualities sold ~rom 5d to Std. 'I'here were a good many Jobbers from England, and some from Dublin. The supply of lambs was the largest we ever saw on the green. Prices ranged from 18s to 26s each. There was a large supply of mutton, which was in good demand; wethers frotn 50s to 60s; ewes, from 38s to 46s each. There was a. large supply of springers which met a good demand, at high rates. The stock of cat­tle for grass feeding was small, the demand brisk and high rates were obtained. There was a large supply of yearling cattle, whicb were in good demand. The pig department was but poorly supplied, and every description brought bigh prices. Had not the day been so very hot it would have been one of the briskest fairs held for a long time.-Dundalk Democrat.

CONVERSIONS. 'rhe Cattolico of Geneva has a letter from

Naples stating that no less thanfifty tIme petty officers a:Jd soldiers of the Swiss Guards who are ill tbe service of the King of Naples, have abjured Protestantism and have been received into the Catholic Church, between J an nary 1st, 1852, and March 1st, 1853.

Another Conversion at Naples is that of tbe British. Vice Consul at Galipoli, who being taken SICk earnestly requested and obtained leave to make his abjuration of Protestantism, aod received piously the sacraments from the hands of the Bishop, :Mgr. Lascala.

CONVERSION OF THE DUCHESS OF HAMILTON.­The Constitutional has contradicted our state­ment, that Her Grace the DuchesR of Hamilton had be'come a convert to the Catbolic faith. We merely deem it nel:essal'Y to repeat our statement, and to assure our readers that it is strictly correct.-- Glasgow Free Press.

OONGREGATION OF OUR LADY. MONTREAL.

On Wednesday, the 13th inst., we were pre­sent at. th~ A~nnal distribution of prizes in the above lOstltutlOn, and have to thank the Ladies o~ the Congrega~iol\ for a treat of no ordinary kllld. It had otten been our privileO'e to assist ·

h . 0

on su? occaSIOns, but we must say that never, e~en m the same excellent institution, have we witnessed such a disP.lay, whether as regards tbe nll!~ber of the pupIls, or their proficiency in the vartous branches of education.

The music was well chosen, comprising some of the most charming compositions of the best masters, Mozart, &c., and was executed in 11

manner tbat reflected the hig'hest honor on the teachers, Messrs. Brauneis and Sevbold with. some of the Sisters of the Congregation, ~hose names we woul~ not thi~k of giving, knowing that these admirable ladles seek not, in their­actions, but rather shun, the applause of meD. Some of the pieces were performed in a concert of nine pianos, and others on all the instru­ments, consisting of pianos, harps, guitars &0. The effect was exceedingly fine, especially on the national anthem of the Empire, God Save tile Queen, and the lively ail' so dear to our Canadian Brethren: Vive la Canadiennl!.

The Vocal music was also very good, some of the young performers evincing a high de­gree of musical talent, together wi~h extraor­dinary vocal power. Amongst the most dis- • tinguished. was Miss Crowley of Boston, Miss Watson of New York, Miss Hennessy, Miss Mondelet, &r. One of the most interesting features of the exhibition was a historical and geographical drama, composed and represented by tht p.upils of the Con.vent, each young lady personat1l1g some partICular country. Miss Crowley, already mentioned, took the Dart of "England"- Miss E.. Watson, of New· York. that of "Ireland"-MIss McCulla, of Montreal, represented "Auld Scotia," and Miss E. Mond­elet. also of Montreal, ably sustained the part of notre beau Canada. Miss Coffin 0 f this city personated Italy, and Miss Sexton, fair, af­fli~ted Poland. Austria and Spain were fitly represented and, so, in short, was every country both of the Old and New World. The conception was a very good one and was really well carried out.

The golden medal was awarded to Miss Glen, of Chambly.

The Superior of the Seminary was present with a large number of clergymen, and a nume­rous assemblage of ladies and gentlemen, con­sisting' principally of tbe parents and friends of the pupils. Every one seem~d delighted with the exhibition, and we will venture to say that m.any, many hearts were animated witb grati­tude towards the accomplished sister-hood whose lives are devoted to the education of youth---who move silently "along the even tenor of their way," undisturbed by calumny--­unmoved by praise---doing all for God's sake and the welfare of society, in the true spirit of their vocation, Ah! Gavazzi! Gavazzi !--­poor Gavazzi! what a comment on your vile words was that scene---what an answer was there---silent but overwhelming---to your ruf­fianly strictures on convent education. One of onr judges wbo was there present, delivered a short address, in which he st.ated that several of his daughters had been educated in that ad­mi rable (Jon vent of the Congregation, and that he was now taking another from the 'hands of the good sisters with bel' education complete. Many of our first and most wortby citizens were present, who could have said the same, and many more from the various cities of the neighboring republic, and each would vie with the other in :extolling the benefits everywhe re dullved from conventual education. Alas! for the mountebank Italian, anu alas! alaR! for those who could listen to his filth y ribaldry !--­Catholics have only pity to bestow on either.---· Montreal True Witness.

--~.-..... ---CONVERSION IN DUNGARVAN.--On Thursday,

the 9th inst., Mr. William Fran('is Glassey (a northel'U) was received into the bosom of the Holy Roman Catholic Church by the Rev. MI". Mooney. A large c?ncourse. of people as­sembled on the occasIOn to wllness his recep­tion. and the Rev. Divine delivered a very im­pressive discourse on the occasion.- Waterford j\Tews. .....

CARDINAL WISEMAN AT CARSTAIl~S. -.- His E~i nence, ~he C.aruinal Archbishop of West­mmster. arrIved I~. Scotland on Thursday last, from York, on a VISIt to Robert Monteith, Esq., of Carstairs.--· Gla.sgow Free Press, July 2.

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2 CATHOLIC TELEGRAPH AND ADVOCATE ~

THE · SLIGO ELECTION. . 'l'h'e most (.xtraordinary scene ever presented

befi)re the Irish public, was that got up in Sligo by Mr. Sadleir and his alliE's. We give a re­port of lhe proceedings, which conveys a very faint picture, indeed, of the disgraceful and .in­decent events which characterized tbe SlIgo bustings. We trust we shall never witness sucb a scene again in Ireland. A ruffian mob, infuriated with drink, and trained to ev.ery de­monstration of rAscality, was crammed mto the court-by whom we will not say-let the pub· Jic Jud.ge ortbat by their connuct when there. This mub assailed a body of clergymen-some 0'1 them electors-who had assellibled on tbe bustin's to t'Xpress their opinions..:....tbese opin­ions b~ing ad verse to corruption -:adverse ~o tr!Citori$m--adverse to pledge-breakIng, and m

,.eonCll ' renee with the opinions of the whole kingdom-Mt'8srs. Sadleir, Keogh, and Com­pany, a nd the paid mob alone t'xr:epted. The venei'able priests--the pastors of the very dis­trict-- were assailed and assulllled, w bile MI'. Hanly, whl) was repudiated by the Conserva­tive p>lrty in Sligo-Mr. Hanly. from the Mum ­ing Advertiset·, that first started Mr. Sadleir..,.­Mr. HHnly, the blasphemer of all that the Irish Catholic holds sacred--was cheered to tbe echo by the same throats that hooted the patriot priest.

~urt'ly, we have fallen on strange times, and b1essed fruits are already being reflped from Ule teaching that tramples on morality, and laughs at the idea tbat oaths are binding.

The maslerly and eloqu~nt speech, even in its mutilated form, with which the venerable patriot, the Very Rev. Dr. Feeny, the Vic'lr­General, inlroduced the name of' Mr. Cantwell to tIle electors, will be read with unmixed plea­sure. Such a !'peech--such a protest against tbe hideous iniq uity of electing 8adldr, the a~ · complice of Banlt'y, to rt'prt'sent a CatholIc constituency---such a protest against the doc· trine wbich justifies the violatiun of the most solemn compacls and oaths---redeems bligo, even tllough treachery to truth succeeded in re­'turning Sadlt"ir, find will stimulate the country to renewed acticlll. While there are such men as Dr. !<'eeny to guide---such to lead to virtue, and sucb to denounce enemies, the country may be of good cheer---treachery cannot harm or falsehood d~· ceive.

The Rev. Dr. O'ConnC'r ably sustained the Rev. Dr. Feeny. But what shall we say of Dr. Phillips? One word we shall not say. We ask him to judge of his supporL of Sadleir by the test he offt'red to have his own conduct tried by. "II," said Dr. PhillipR, "you ever bear of me taking. or geLting, or a5king a place, then-call me 'rotten.''' "I could not,'~ be add­ed. "be independent if J took a place from the member for tbe borough." And wby, then, does Dr. Phillips select a plareman for lhe bor­. ou.gh?---.Dublin Freeman, July 9lh.

THE ELECTIONS.

:8LIGO---NOMIN ATION OF THE CANDI­DATES.

(FROM O~R OWN REPORTER.)

. The nomination of candidates for the repre­-sentation of the borough of Sligo in parliament took place on Tuesday in Sligo. 'rhe proct:ed­ing was of the most uproarious and disorderly description. 'rhe candidates and their princi· flal supporters, together with the reporters, .!laving been supplied with tiekets by the may­,or, were admitted to the court· house before el~ven o'clock, the hour appointed for the com-~e~cement of the proceedings.

The Mayor of the borough, Mr. Verdon, pre­sided, assisted by his assessor, Lucas Alex. 'i'reston.

The right of lhe court 'was allotted to Mr. Somers and his friends, and the left to MI'. S adleir and his supporters. A large numner of the constabulary were stationed throughout the building.

At eleven o'clock tbe doors were tbrown open, whereupon a tumultuous rush was made by the hundreds that had been assembled out­side, and In the COlme of a few minutes the court-house was crowded in every part. includ­ing the bench. The crowd immediately began shouting, groaning, and screaming, in a most vehement manner, and conlinued doing so dur­ing lhe day with little intermission, till they were expelled in the evening by order of lhe Mayor.

Mr. Sadleir, on presenling himself, was loud­ly cheered by his supporters. He was accom­,p -tnied by the Rev. Dr. Ph~llips, MI'. hs. Kidd, ~~I· . J. B: Kenn("dy, DuhllD; Rev. Mr. Healy, R. C. C.; Rl:!v. Mr_ M'Mahon, -P. P., Ki0!5's County; Rev. Mr. White, Mr. Filzpatrick, Ma­ryborough; John Gore Jones, MI'. Sadleir, Mr. P. Browne, Mr. Thomas Strickland, MI'. H Stonor, Mr. C. W. Costellue, barrisler; MI'. Owen O'Connor, Dr. Tucker, Mr. J. Madden, E. Pollock, solicitor; Thomas 0' Dowd, solici­tor; Dr. Fallon, Athlone.

.M r. J. P. Somers arrived soon after and was received Wilh cheers and hisses. He was ac­companied by the Very Rev. 0 wen Fet'ney, P. P. and V. F., Riverstown; the Rev. Dominick Nooiie, P. P. Geeva~h; the Rev. E. Henry, P. P ., Allghana; the Rev. Thomas Ribbits, O. S. D.; lhe Rev. B'rn~\I'd Goodm'ln, O. S. D.; the Rev. Michrel M'Evoy, O. ·S. D.; the Rev. Peter O'Connor, C. C.; Andrew Kelly, Esq.; Mr. L~urence M'rernan, solicitor; Rubert Peyton Gm bam, agent; Micha.el Kelly, J,)hn Delany, Patrick Keyron, E~q~.; ¥essrs. Crt:ighton, Dub bin, Mathew Frenq, .\torman, John Henrv. Patrick Hennessy, MICI~ael Wildrick, Brenna;,

Martin , Geraghty, (}iblin, Heally, Gilgan, Me- mFair play is a jewel. boyi hear him, and I Carthy. and P. H. O'Collnor. promise you I'll polish him off (laughter )---1'11

Before the writ was rea.d, Mr. Hanly was varnish bim intellectually (continued laughter.) heard shouling from behind the bench, "Mr. There bting a slight approach to order, he Mayor, how am I to get in with my proposer said, with a broad grin and ludicrous contortion and seconder" [great laughter?] of countenance- .. You see I bave more power

The Mayor ordf'red that a way should be here than Sadleir (laughter.) made for him, and several persons in court Mr. M'TerDlID (vehemently)---You are hired cried, "~ake way for Anti-Christ," which assassins (a tremendous groaning.) You are caused some merriment. Mr. Hanly, after a earning your wages (groans.) 1 beg leave to little delay, forct'd his way to the front. He second the nomination of Mr. Somers (great was greeted with loud laugbter and cheers confusion.) from the crowd at Mr. Sadleir's side of the Mr. Somers---If we were to remain till mid­court. Palling Mr. Somers on the bRck, he night, we must be heard (screams, yells, and called for "a groan for the old fox," whicb was cheers.) Youare afraid to listen to argument responded to bv Mr. Sadleir's fril'nds on the (continued shouling.) Your cause is a bad left, and witL cheers from those of Mr. Somers. one. Several disputes occurred amongst those assem- The Mavor---Mr. Somers says he will remain bled on the bench, and in consequence of the till midnight; it is optionable with bim to do so, confusion created thereby the MfLyor ordered it but I wont do so; I will take away the precept, tu be cleared of all excppt tbe candidates and and adjourn t.he court. their proposers and seconders. Mr. M'Ternan was understood to say, amid

'rile Rev. Mr. O'Connor, who, with other the noise which still continueu---I don't mean clergymen opposed to Mr. Sadleir, occupied ' to trespass long upon you (groaning,) if you plact:s on the bench, here stated to the people, are only patient for a few moments. 1 trust the amid the uproar, that MI'. J. Kidd, the seconder mt:n of Sligo will prove to the world, they are of Mr. Sadleir, had told one of their priests to equally incorruptible as the men of Carlow go into the dock. (loud gruaning.) I trust they will show the

'fhe police began dragging from the bench world, tliat lhe r~jected of Carlow will not have various gent lemen, who re~isted, and repeated · Sligo as a safe harbor. 1 hope Sligo will never Iy called to ~he M'Lyor for liberty to remain. dpgrade herself by showing she has lost so

The Mayor said he would clear the bench al much of her p"lriotism, Spilfit, and honesty as the point of the hayonet, if necessary. to elect the r~jecled of Oarlow, and tbe viola-

While the shouting and pulling was going on, h:r of plt·dges (tremendous groaning, and cries Mr. Han'ly stood upon a chair and shouted, "1 of put him out.) In conclusiun, I have only to don't see why I should not be as tall as any 01 say, that de!'pite of ~houtin;j lind mohs, we will you" f10nd laughter.] ~Iect Mr. Somtrs by a mHjurity that will aston-

The bellcb havin!,l' been partially cleared, and Ish you (cheers and groans.) . some dEgree of order having been restored after Tht! R ev. Mr. Phillips, P. P., then carne for-the lapse of some time, ward and was received with loud and continlled

The Town Clerk read the writ for holding cbeering. He said---lt is my pleasing duty, the election. 1l0W Lhat we have been deprived of a man who

The M"yor said he was perfectly aware of has lost his seat by means the most dishonora· the position in which he was placed, and that it ble, by perjury, black and gross (interruptiori was his bounden duty to show to evpry person frum the righl.) present the most perfect fair play. No , mal ter Mr. Graham (conducting agent for Mr. Som-how much he had been maligned, he would ers) .. -No, no. leave it to public opinion to justify his conduct. MI'. M'Niff, solicitor---lt is true (prolonged A !though a vast amount of calumny had been confusion.) circulated ' against him at tbe last eleclion he MI' . Somers called on his friends, as they helJ tbere, yt:t he wa~ not ashamed of his con- valued fair play, to bear the Rev. Dr. Phil-duct, and he stood before the people of Sligo a lips. ' stainless man. After alluding to a letter which, The Rev. Dr. Pbillips---I have done every­he said, had been surreptitiously taken from his thing in my power to get a patient hearing for establishment by an alderman of the borough, the proposer and seconder of Mr. Somers. I and unfairly used on the election pelilion, he did not bike the stt'ps for that purpose I did al said although some latitude and license were t 'le last election. And why? Because when usually allowed at a contested eJeclion, yeL he 1 put up my band at the last elecliolJ to req uesl hoped no one would lorget himself in bis cbar· of the people to be patient, MI'. Somers SWlJre acter as a gentleman, If any man did so, how- 1 shook my clenched fist in his lace (groans ever painful the duty might be, he would cer- from tbe left for Mr. SOlLers.) tainly commit him, wilhout hail or mainprise, to Mr. M'Tern"n--'l'hat is true (groans). the county jail; and he sbould do so wilhout re- Mr. M'Nifl' (warmly )-You are a liar (con-gaI'd to person, chara0ter; 01' cloth. fusiun) .

Mr. Andrew Kelly, amid loud groans, briefly The Rev. Dr. Phil1ips-I do now, however, proposed Mr. John Pat. Soooer8 I\S a fit and what 1 did tben, 1 implore of you to hear every propel' person to represent the borough of Sligo man p~tiently and aLtentivHIJ. Let every man in parliament. who has been calumniated get an opportunity

Mr. Laurence M"l'ernan came forward to ot vindicating himself. I do not intend to utter second the nomination, and was received with a word that can in any way injure personal tremendous groaning. character, or burt the feelings of any man, and

Amid the din Mr. Hanly was understood to tberefore I trust I \\ill be heard patiently. It solicit a patient hearing [increased uproar con- is my duty to stand forward, as an elector of tinued for some minutes.J this bOlough,to have the honor and gratification

The Mayor, at the top of bis voice---You of proposing the man to whom I have given are only delaying t.he proceedings. I call upon' my influence and support. I will never deceive you to give fair pl>!.y [continued confusiun. 111m; and no mailer what course I may take, I Nearly ten minutes having elapsed, during bope he shall never be able to say I acted which the shouling was vigorously kept up.J treacherously towards him (cheering). The se-

Mr. Sadleir came forward, and was loudly conder of Mr. Somers said he buped tbere was cheered. He said---J have taken the liberty of as mll~h virtue, honesty, and patriotism to be addresE'ing a few brief but anxiuus al.d earDe~t fuund in Sligo as in Carlow; and as the proof words of appeal to yuur jud!5ment, to your and fruiL of lhat honesty and virlue, he calls on chivalric spirit, your generosity, your manli us to expel Mr. Sadleir from this borough (cries nf'SS, your love of justice and fair playas Irish- of we will, from the right). You I\l'e justified men [hear, hear.] In tbe ualtle-tield or in the in duing all you can fur the man you support, senate, it is not the custom of Irishmtcn to and 1 claim the same right for myself (hear). shrink or shirk from their obligations Luh, oh.J Mr. M'Ternan calls upon ~he constilUencyof We are not afraid---I have n~ver been afraid to ~ligo to imitate the Orange constituency·of Oar­me'et an honorable or a dishonest opponent. low (shuuts of no, DO, YI:'S, yf's). He calls upon You do not ~pring from the luins that wlJuld me ab a priest to do the same. Would I be tremble at the assaults of the calumniator--- wOrLhy my position as a prits! and an elector, you are not the men to shrink from the sarcasm if 1 were to take up the politicai creed of tht' of the renegade [confusion, and cries of order, Orange ejectors of Carlow, and preach and act order .] upun il in Sligo (cht'ering). Witb what fate

Mr. Somers energetically protested against cuuld I infuse inlo you the senliments of POlil­Mr. Sadleir being allowed to proceed in this ical reclitude I am I.lOund to expound to you, if way [cheers and groans.] 1 were this day supporting Mr. Somers, who is

The Mayor said he could not allow it [great sustained by all the Orange party of the town confuoion, cbeering, g-roaning, and shouting] of tlligo (cheering). .

Mr. Sadleir-You would nut tremule under Mr. M'Ternan- He has numbers of Catholic

. ~ ceptton of one gentleman, who proposed D Gray. J forwarded to Mr. Sadleir the r . of the mee.Ling, and told him of lhe eOLhu:~:lt that prevailed, as far as I could judU'e an) ill Lhe Liberal body in h~s favor. I ~::id tgst sdtisfied he would be returned. I invittu ~.as to come. Ninety·five plectors Bltended ~ill meeting, and yet MI'. M'Ternan says Mr Sot e ers has all tbe honest, honorable Catholi~ Ill!'

. I h . e ec· tors In t le town, t us pronouncing the ni five to be dishonest and dishonorable (U'ronety). M M"r . - h' ... ans r. ernan, Il1 saymg t Is, has but I' bl' echoed the sentiments of the learned la

e; y

who pleaded for Mr. Somers befol'e the cyer . fl·. J Oil!. mlttee 0 tle -/louse, anu who stated that aU

~ho opposed M r. Somers at the previous dec. lion "were translormed to beasts, witl; acc I

I - "( I d . en s not tlelr own ou groaning and u. roar). I have no pers~nal hostility to Jr. Somers, an~ I opp()~e hIm solely as a public man on pubhc g~ounds. The reverend gentle. man th en went Il1to an eXplan'lLton fur the pu pose ofshowing that .MI'. t:lomers falsely charg:d 111m before the paritamentHry committee with baving ~tated that whoever voted for Mr. Town, ley voted for Heaven, and whoever vOl,cd for Mr: Somers voted for hell. Having appealed am~d loud cheers to the ~embers of his congre. 1:\'atton prt'sent to pear Illm out in his CUOlra~ic. Lion, he proceeded to eu logise in the hi"h~il Lerma Mr. Charles Townley, the late O!t~ber than whom ·he said there was not a more hon: arable or upright man. He d"nied Imin. brought Mr. Townley to 8ligo. On his arrival in tbe town, he found lhe bonorabll:! geotleman supported by the great body of tbe Liberal electors, an.d he at once determined lo unite corc\lally wah them, and supporL him also. Mr Slon@r, the fti ... nd of Mr. Townley, i5 present: and he can corroborate me wllt'n I declare thai I never asked nor received a single fal'or from that most honOl'able and high-minded gentle. man (cheer.ing).

Mr. Stonor--You never did (loud cheerin.), The Rev. Dr. Philiip,---And when Mr. Sl~d.

lei r .. -who is virtually the member for the borough( cbeers from the left and crit's of never tl'Om the right) .. -is sep:trated from us, I trust he will be able to say lowe him no acknow. ledgement for any favor Save one, and that is if be faithfully, honestly, and fearlessly dis: charges bis dUly as the represenlative of this borogh. When yon see a man receiving favors from a member 01 the legisl alure, it is time for you to s~spec t him, and at least to regard him as not Independent of the member. If he is under a compliment to him he can never come furward and act a fearless, independent part towards him, unless witb 1\ blusb in his faQe. In a word,' if ever you hear of me rt'ctivioa of a favor from Mr. Sadleir, you may look upon me as one that is---to use a peculiarly mdodi· ous and expressive term.--"rotten" (hellr, and loud cheering). ' After declaring that Mr. Townley was elected for that borough by a trio umphant majol ity eflected by honoraule find in. corruptible means, the rev. gentleman proceed. ed at great length to canvass anc! condemn as unjust the decision of the committee by whom Mr. Townl~y was unseated, and in support of bis statements he quoted from speecht's deliv· ered upon the subject by Sir J Shelly, Mr. Bowyer, Mr. M. Gibson, when tbe quesLion of issuing a writ was under consideration_ He tben said MI'. Sadlier was not there as his nomi· nee, but in obedience to tbe call of the great body of the Liberal electors, aT\d they would stand by h!m come weal or woe, corne calumny or detractiun.

A voice from the )'ight---Or come money (grt::at uproar, groaning, and shoutin~).

Rev. Dr. Phillips- .. Should not ·thos", I ask, who are opposed to the Liberals .on principJe think more favorably for tbe course I am pur­suing than if I co operated with them, although in my soul I could not approve of their I'iews or sf'ntiments. Whf"n Mr. Sadleir rt'ct'lved the invitation be wrote to say he would come and tight the battle with them constitutionally, and he bad done so like a man, tbough the most puwerful agencies were used to prevent bim. Everything tbe power, influence, and ingenuity of Lord Palmerston could do or effect to impede him was done, in order that tbe friend and nomi­nee of his Jordship migbt be elected. ' .

Mr. Somers---Hear, hear (cheers from hiS friends ).

The Rev. Dr. Phillips---Mr. Somers does not hesitate to cry (hear, hear). he is proud to de­clare that he is the friend and nominee of Lord Palmerston (groans).

cil'cumstanees such as 1 have stated. I ask clergymen, and all tile honest Ruman Catholic you, as men, will you now interrupt-wi ll you vuters (ShOULS of no, no, yes, yes, cheers and howl gt'lltlemen who have a perfect right [in- groHn,;). tel'l'\1pli~n froID. MI'. Somer'''. tlr.iends, and cries Rev. Dr. Phillips--Mr. M'l'eman sl\y~ MI'. of be. has no flght_ to be maillO~ a speech-- Somers has all the honest Roman Cathohcs of shoullng and gl'Oalllng frum tbe left.] ~ligQ (crit's of he is a liar, and prolonged Cull-

Mr. Somers-This language is calculated to IUSIOI'), but it is not the case (cheers). Whell

Mr. Somers-No, no. J am proud to declare tl)at Lord Palmerston is my friend (loud groan· ing, cheering, and prolonged confusion).

The Rev. Dr. Phillips- Lord Palmerston waited on Lord Aberdeen, and said he was Ihe friend and supporter of Mr. Somers. (To Mr.

excite tbe people [uproar.] Mr. Townley was unseated I assembled tht' M.r. Sadl~ir [aiLer. oume d~lfly ]--1 ask you as Liberal electors of the borough. and a largf'l'

honesl men, and .f!'lends of Ireedom 01 aClIon m~etlOg of them I nHer saw. I proposed I~)r and debate, to give to those ventlemen who Lhe sake of unity th aL lhe iOinoritv should be have a perfect right to bp on th~ hustings, and ruled by the majority, and I stated that I would to b~ my 0pronen~s, a full, patient, and mflnly ~uppo:t whoever the majllrity declared for (here hearing. _ 1 prorrJl~e you lhere is not a state- sume Interruptiun was occasioned by pt'fsons ment winch tlwy s.hall venture to make, unless on the lelt applying opprobrious epithets to tt ?e a truthlul, Just, and honest statem~nt, othl:!rs on the ofJposite side, a system which whICh I. shall not rebu.t and refute [cheers.] was kt'pt up during the day). I beg of YOIl

NUlWtlhstandmg Lhls appeal, the noise and not to use a word, or call a llame, calculated lo disorder was I enewed as vigorously as eVt'r. ext:ite bad feeling, 01' w'JUnd any man's mind,

Tbe Mayor repeatt'dly bt'gged for si lt'nce. during tr.e elecliun, and I say this in all sincer-MI' . M''l'ernan altt:mpted to speflk, and was ity. Berore Mr. Sadleir came to this town, I

met with groaning, whistling, shoutinlF, and n ... ver saw him but once, and that was aL a din screaming. "' nel' in A thlone. He was adopted by the meet-

Mr. Hanly r raising his voice above the din] ing to which 1 refer by all present, with the ~x-

Somers)-I suppose you will aHow Ihal? Mr. SomerS-YES. The Rev. Dr. Pbi!lips-And that it would

be quite offensive to bim if Lord Aberd~en should be in any way a party, Mr. 8adhir gOlDg to Sligo to oppose Mr. Somers. Lord Aber· deen bad an interview with Mr. Sadlier. who, as he had pledged himself to come to Sligo, ~aid to his lord$hip "my word is pledged to go to Sligo and fight the battle, and lhat pledge I will redeem, rio matter who may bp ofrt'n~~d.:' He came accordingly, and tbe enlbuslasliC greeting that awaited him, the succpssful can· vass he has made, all proved to him thHt tl~e men who inviled bim are resolved to sustatD him. and they are certain he will be triumphant­ly elected: Since his arrival the le,tter of the Bi~hop of Carlow has boen received by Mr,

p ~~=====C =A=T==H=O=1=r ~C==T=E~L=E=G~.R~A P H AND ADVOCATE. 3 ::==- MHdden of tbis towll, expressing his Rev. Dr. PbiUips---Whoever does so is acting J~~es <teem a;d approb~ti0n of MI'. SHdleir, wrong. Father Feeny is a clergyman. Ire­bl~ I;' (1n" that nothin~ would give llim great- vere and respect, and I implore of you to hear an 5':rac500 tli an to fiod the Liberal electors bim [renewed and prolonged uproar]. efr ~~[~o supporting that gentl" man in the com - A.t this stage there was a partial cess'Ition of o . I"ntt"st I have recf!ived myself a letter the noise for about twenty minutes, during iD.~~LlDeltn· Burke, which I read for the people whieb time the various parties nbout the bench, [~st Sunday, and which has been placarded worn vut by fatigue and oppressed by the heat,

bro uu.h the town with my consent; that let ter were taking some refre.,bme(lt, and when this

t Ol~enels in the strongest terms to the Llb- was done tbe noise and confusion were renewed rec

lo

lucrors of Sliflo MI'. Sad leir liS a man who and kept up more vigorously if possible than era e ~ ". lIb f will be tbe greatest posslb e support to t Ie pe~- e ore.

I 'n parlillOlent, and the grea test honor to IllS In the midst of the tllmult the Mayor said he p e \ y' and I have also received II similar let- would not wait any longer for the Rev. Mr' cou~r~,~ lhe Rev. John Ryan, of Cashel, a gen- Feenv, but he wou ld read out the names of the :f:man of the highest standing as a priest and candidRtes pr<,posed. Having done so, he called

t iot [n addition to all ,hese I have wllh on Mr. Somers to address the assembly. a patl

r p'ractice of my own revered Bishop in Mr. Somers declined to speak until the Rev.

me Ie . DB' . M Fbi did Atblon," The ~Ight Rev. r. row~e, IS In r. eeny, w 0 was an e ector, an 1a a can-R e and in his absence, I can only Judge ot didate to propose, was tirst heard. hi~~e~tim~~ts by bis acts in Atblont', where he The Rev. Mr. Feeny, P. P., V. G., remained

rL~d Mr K~ogh, a gentleman boldlng the all tuis time standing on a cbair wai ting to be sUPPopolitical' views and proressing the same heard. Ia the confusion, noise arrd uproar, same I' It' B' I th d tl 1. 1 t II b d . s Mr Sad t:1l'. my IS lOp was at e reveren gen eman COli u no we e ~re\ '~nd d~3ired me not to sur port Sadleir, I heard. We collected the following as the sen­w~~ld deny him .at once, b.ut not havin,! any timents he endeavored in vain to communicate d ire or sut>'gestlOn from 111m on the subject, 1 to the tUl'btllent mob with which the c@urt was

~ ;" of his "wishes by his acls, and I conclude packed: Mr. Mayor and fdlow.counll'ymen : l~at~1l tile course T am pursuing I am carryi~g A pprehending that my silence might be taken out his wishf's- Ever): hberal minded man In fur consent to, or that my dissent from tbe propo­the world will ag~ee .w.llh me wh"n I say we silions already made might be ltttributed to un· should look witb SuspICIOn o~ Mr. Somers when worthy and improper n1o'.ives, I feel it my du­he avows himself to be the fl'H:nd of Lord Pal- ty to avail myself of my privilege as lin elector merston. The R~v: Dr. C:;.hlll (loud cheenng) of this borough in speaking my mind candidly _thllt eminent dlVlne, called the noble lure! Hnd honestly on this occasion, confident t hat, "the C"ptHin Rock of Europe," because tbere for "Old Lang Syne," JOU will give me a fair is no part of the world with which he has been and attentive ht,al'iog. Tis to me, I assure officially con~e~te~, and whtJre he has foun.d you, a source of sincere regret that my views, Catlwlicity eXlstlng, that he has not. done all!n and those of the clergymen around me, should his power to Cl:ush .aod destroy. It for .ever be at issue with thoBe of the Rev. Mr. Phillips. (ch~~rin!l',groanmg and prolonged 1l1tenuptlOn). Not having been consulted on t~e subject of

Mr. O'Connor-Mr. Sadleir is his paid ser- his choice ere he formed his determination to vaDt (uproar). support Mr. Sadleir, I am left noother alterna-

Tht! Rev. Dr. Phillips--In the county Sligo, tive unlef's I pursue a course at variance with be has been the supporter of Orangeism, and principle and the interests of Ireland. For what in the borough, of Mr. Somers, who will tell with propriety and consistency could I call on you whl'lher he is, himself, supporting Orang~- my spiritual parishioners who have contributed ism or nol. (shouts of yes, yes, no, no). I will so mucb to achieve our country's independence give you another instance of the love and afl'ec- in the reoturn of Mr. Swift to bl'ave the land l0rd's tion Lord Palmerston has for ' the Catholic frown at any futu~e contest, were I now to church. It is not long since tbis friend and sup- support the man whose treachery was the re­portel' or Mr. Somers was wait~d on by a depu- mote cause of their being still without anything tation Irom the Protestant AlI.lance, to request like security of tenure? 'L'herefore have I taken him to use his influence to secure the passing of the liberty of naming that ever-faithful and con­tbe odious bill for the inspeclion of cOOl'ents. sistent friend and advocate of popular rights, Tbey wante'd to know if he would support a Jobn McNamara Canlwell, as a fit and proper measure that would bave the effect of destroy- person to represent us in parliament, and fill up ing all the conventual establish?Jents in the~e the place in (he Irish Party vacated by the de­countries. Lord l-'almerston saId to the depu- sertion of SaJleir. Would that Mr. Phillips tation, "My opinion is altogether with you, and his political allies had thought of him, or I am of opinion convents should be inspected." preferred th'it pure and incorruptible man, Dr.

Mr. Somers-That is not the fact (tremen- Gray, to the rejected of Carlow. But no; f'lledg-dous uproar). es were made by some placehunters in London,

'l'bt! Rev. Dr. Phillips-I appeal to tbe press whose views the great mAjority were solicited to corroborate me, and I am sustained by the at an aftertime to carry out. Not having been fact that he slunk out of the house from the di- apprised of the meeting I had no opportunity vision on tbe bill, and did oot vote against it. of dissenting from a resolution so disgraceful to

Mr. O'Connor---And Mr. Sc)dleir is his paid the party Hnd so far faLal to the interests of tbe servant (uproar). people. Guidpd by the sound moralily of the

The Rev. Dr. Phillip.s having tbanked the as- church, so ~trongly inculcated by our illustrious sembly for the bearing they had given him, mptropolilan, John, Archbishop of Tuam, called on them to act similal'ly towards all the whose pure patrio~ism, talent, and learning other 8pe»kers, and concluded by proposing must command the respect of his l(Jrdshi]1l of Mr. John Sadleir as a fit and proper person to Kildare as well as that of Dean Blirke, I would represent the borougb in parliament(loud cheer- feel it my duty, were I even left alone, to pro-ing). test against a doctrine which seems to be spread.

MI'. James Kidd seconded the nominalion. ing from one extremity of this diocese to the Mr. William Gilmore proposed Mr. Jobn other, that solemn promises made to a nation

Hanly. may be violated with impunity; and I im!Jlore Mr. Robert Henderson seconded the nomi- of you whom Ioften had the pleasure of in -

na'tion. strllcting, to pause ere you adopt it, and become Mr. James Madden proposed MI'. H. Stonor. paFlicipators in such guilt by consenting to the

He was seoonded by Dr. Tucker. evil by wbitewashing the delioquent, and p.ro-Mr. Michael Kelly proposed the Rev. Peter nonncing sentence of absolution over the im-

O'Con[lor, C. C. penitent traitor who glorie's in persevering, and Mr. Follis Clarke seconded the nomination. would if he could break up the only hope of Mr. John Gore Jones, it was stated, was also Ireland, our independent Iribh- party. But you

pr()po~ed and seconded, 'but such was the noiEe stall not succeed, sir--and confusiOll, that it was almost impossible to "Is it come to this sh ade of immortal Dan? heal' a wo~d tbat was said. on the bench. Can Carlow's vomit perpetrate his plan?

Th.e Rev. Owen Feeny, P. P., then present- Kick back the traitor, scorn him every man." ed blln~elf, for the purpose of proposing Mr. Yes, we will send you back with increased Jo\1n M Namara Caotwell, but he was met with io·nomony . Your association with tbat foul­such a storm of groans, hisses, cat-calls, ~outbed Antichrist, who forgt>tful of his ob­sc~eams, &c., that he was unable to proceed. scure and dishonored origin, presumes to vomit He remained waiting for nearly a quarter of an forth his abominable blasphemies of God's own hour, in the hope that the beastly bellowings church, proves the reality of your pretended Would cease, but to no purpose. indignation at the offensive language of that

Tbe Rev. Dr. Phillips implored of those pres- leader whom you are paid for followiog, and ent to hear Father Feeny (shouts of no, no) , I while it holds out the prospect of disarming say y~s, though (renewed cries of no, no). No some of your Conservalive opponents will· no In~n IS an honorable opponent unless he gives doubt be advanced as a proof that he is not faIr play. your paid tool. But thanks to the Conserva-

. The Mayor also entreated for a hearing, but' tives who, forgetting their religiOUS prejudices, ~IS ~ppeal was followed by more violent shout- have repudiated him as well as you. If you be 109 and yelling'. an honest and pure man, box your corner man-

A Voice-We won't hear you. fully. T(:lI the electors that you are a ma-Father FeenY---More shame for you. Iligned man, the victim of a press conspiracy, Rev. Dr. Pbillips again asked for silence. that your friend the mayor was one of the Mr. Hanly bere st(lQd upon a chair and com- arch-conspirators, that your patron, Mr. Phil-

menced. waving a white pocket-handkerchief lips, denounced you wi~h your colleague in in­round bls head . . This appeared to be the shr- tamy, Mr. Kf:'ogh, but now that they know you ~al of a ~torm of shouts, groans, and exclama- better they are become )lour apologists, your Ats, wblch were kept up for several mintltes. admirers, your faithful supporters. Secure the I tel' the lapse of ahout five minutes Mr. Han- service, Sir, of editors, reporters, briefless bar­Y eXClaimed, bear bim, and I will answer him. risters, and quack doctors a~ld you will bush

The Rev. Mr. O'Connor---Mr. Sadleir will the voice of public opinion, and make us all ~ot be allowed to speak a word if Father Feeny abandon the morality of the great McHale as IS ~o~ heard r groans, whistling, and screaming]. the obsolete doctrine of the old school, and as-

e R~v. Dr. Phillips---I beg of you---I be- pire to place and pension on the overburthened seech of y I' I ' b k f b t ddt t I F ou--- Imp ore of you to hear Father ac -s 0 a e raye an pros ra e peop e. d ee~Yh' You are injuring the cause if you The Mayor next called on Mr. Sadleir to

on t ~Rr every man. speak. tb Rev. Mr. O'Connor---Dr. Tucker is inciting Mr. Sadl(:ir then came forward, but was met

em not to give a hearing. with tremendous shouts of no, no, yes, yes:

Father Feeny first, cheers, groans, &c. He price .of the sale in his pocket. Then I say to waited for nearly ten mintltes, at the end of YQU, In the name of the Jiv ing God, away with which time seeing that he would not be listened L~le man .who stro~e to mal' and blast the glo­to, he withdrew. no?s. Un!tY. of I:Icqon that was springing and

The Mayor---I cannot get a hearinO' for Mr. tlmvlOg In Ireland, and prove to your children Sadleir. 1 now call upon MI'. Hanly~ and your children's chiJdren--,to England and

Mr. Hanly jumped upon the bench, amidst a to the world---that you prize more thall the' hurricane of groans, yells, and exclamations. apple of your eye Irish truth, and Irish faith ~fter a few m!nutes he got down, and wrapping and Irish honor. ' bls handkerchIef around his head, lay down on While Father O'Oonnor was in the act of- ad­the bench, as If about to sleep. This ludicrous dressing the tumultuous crowd, he was struck proceeding caused great laughter and merri- on the back of the head (as was generally ment. The assemb ly, however, were not lono stated ) by Mr. Hanly. in striking up their old tune, when Mr. Hanly~ The scene that ensued almost bam~s descrip­thiokioghe had a favorableopportunity,juml"ed tion, Mr. Hanly was seized by the back of the up, and proceeded to speak. He next ad - neck and pressed backwards over 1\, railing be­dressed tl.e reporters, a proceeding that roused hind him, he was struck Bnd kic.ked severely. the assembly to the highest pitch of exasperation The reporters amid the confusion, cou Id see They sllOuted wilh such vehemence as to pre- Mr. Somers, who was much excited, shaking vent the possibility of hearing, and cried to the his clenched fist in his face, and beard him ex­reporter, "Don't take down a word he says/' claim, "It·s wdl for YOll, you cowardly ruman At intervals he was understood to say tbat he that Somers hasn't you elsewhere you pof.. was known in Sligo . before any man on that troun." , bencl~. Their disorderly interruptions would I The police in the body of the court rushed not dtscomfit the son of hon~st Jack Han1y, and I?n tIle ?ench across tbe reporters desk, scatt'er­he had honestly av.owed hImself a Protestant 109 theil' papers, and endeavored by thrus ting (tremendous confusIOn). the muzzles of th tir muskets bet ween the n ame-

~r. ~tonor next stepped on the bench but rous' belligerant panies to separate them. Two retl.red lO a few. m~ments, so ~reat was tbe ~on- or three of them seized Mr. Hanly by the collar fUSIon. All thIS time Mr. Hanly was .geshcu- and dracf(fed bim into a room behind the bench. latin~ most vi~lently, and to ju?ge by his face As he ':::s f311ing in he was struck in the faee aod !lps, speaking away most vlgorosly. and knocked over a chair; his hat was kicked

The Rev. Mr. O'Connor then stt"pped for- and trampled into pieces, and w,ere i~ oot.(or ward about the same time and proceeded to ad- the police, who handltld him pretty rouO'hty dress the meeting amid loud groans and shouts lhel~selvfls, h~ must r.a~e be'en seri~usly inj:red. of no, no, yes, yes, go on, go on. The rev. Durmg tbe riot the M'ayor had Jllmpedfrom gentleman could not be distinctly heard amid tl~e. bench on the desk under~eath.1 ana was the tumult, but we give as careful a note as g1V~ng repeated and .vehe.ment dIrections to the possibl~. Since I have been proposed and police officer, Capt am Glbhons, to remove the secomled, I tell you tbat if returned, you mAy Rev. Mi'. O'Connor. depend npon it I shall speak out plainly in the Some delay having occurred, the Mayor British parliament. I shall utter unpalatable stated he would report ~be offieer if he did! not' truths for Lord John Russell's ears. I shal! obey his orders. He directed that Father 0'_ repeat that language for which tbe Evening Connor sho~lld be t~eated as a gentleman .. and Mail and the Standard, of London, called upon removed Without VIOlence. The Rev. gentle­Lbe government to prosecute me~-I shall tllll man in the course of a few moments, left Ihe him that his hands are scarlet rpd with the court at the solicitation of his (riends. AU' this blood of my fellow-countrymen. It is impos- ti?Je the body of the caart-hoase presentedl a sible to exaggerate the ma,gnitude of theoppor- fl'lgbtful aspect. The peG,ple were endeavoring (unity nuw before you---lhe eyes of Ireland are apparently to force their way to the bench, but this moment fixed Gn tbese hu"tings, and she is were stoutly and successfuily resisted by' a watching with an anxious heart the way in strong array of the constabuillry, who, in sQme which the men of Sliao shall meet the great instances, used the butt ends of tbeil' muskets, crisis now upon them. <> May tbe great Goa in- though not with much force 01' injury. Some spire you to ri::;e to the lofty level of the noble of tbe electors about the bench, Uaptain Gio­opportunity now before you. Use coolly and bons, and one of the reportE'rs of the HuMin calmly the reason God gave you---don't be Press, 'were struck by stones flung from the gulled---don't be blinded into the disastrous gallery at the left. delusion of voting for Sadleil'---tbe justly The Mayor immediately ordered the court abhorred of Ireland. I forget and forgive the and galltlTies to be cleared. indignities a few blinded hirelings offered me 'rhe execution of this order caused intense yesterday. I forgive them. I forgive those confusion and ('xci tement in eourt, so much so fellow-townsmen. Any tlting you can do won't that a serious collision was several times appre­vex me---I can't be angry WITH YOU when I hended. The clearance was effected in abOUl recollect the awful scene at my dpparture as half an hour, but from the cheering and shout, curate from amongst you---that day I will never ing outs!de, it was evident that (Jere was gl'eat forget. You assembled round me in tbousands commotIon. ---you did your best to keep me---I recollect Captain Gibbons rep6tted to the Mayol' that how the tears ran down the cheeks of stl'ong- several parties had been taken by his men with hearled men. The wail of the chaste womftn pistols loaded and capped. is still sounding in my ears. I recollect how Tbe Mayor ordered tbem to be detained in ~he boy, springing into manhood, bit his lip custody. He then stated to his audience, con­and clenched his hand. That scene, that honor sisting of the candidates, tbeir agents, his a8-I will never forget. And should not your good sessor, the reporters, and a few policemen, that sense tell you that I wuuld have a brute's heart he had taken a show of hands, and that ilwas , if I came here to delude you? Do you know 'in favor of MI'. Sadleir. He also declared the who Sadlt:ir is? His character, as Dr. Gray, court to be open. the people's faithful frienel, said, stinks in tbe A poll was demanded for Mr. Somers and nostrils of Ireland. See him now en,ployi\'lg also for Mr. Hanly. Han ly, who blasphemously designated Christ··s Mr. Gort> Jones, Mr. Stonor, and the Rev. ~potless churcb as an "abomioation" in the Mr. O'Connor resigned. world! Oug'ht not Sadleir's association with 'fte Mayor stated the polling would com- ' tbe man wlio has dal'ed to call the annointed ri:1ence on' Thursday morning at eight o'clock, ministers of the livin<Y God "the special in~tru- ~~nd continue till four in the evening. He then ments of tile devil"---~uO'ht not this friU'htful fact proceeded to swear in the proper officers, and be enough to open YOUl'~yes? Tn th~ name 01 the proceedings inside the court-bol,~e termi-God, I say, away wi~h the man! He shame- nated. , fu llv broke the proluise he solemnly made to On the molion of Mr. fLaniv, seconded by the "nation. He shamefully broke the promise Mr. Somers, a vote of thanRs was passed to the that vitally affected the comforts of millions of Mayor. God's people. He shamefully broke the pro- A vote of thanks was also passed to Mr. mise that vitally affected the tenar.t, and the Treston, tbe assessor, on the motion of Mr. widow, and the orphan in this land. He Somers. • shamefully broke the promise that vitally af- Considerable excitement prevai\.ed in tbe fecLed a fair portion of God's church. Away town.

We ha"e heard many a rich ~tory or how Protestants succeeded in converting Jews i but it seems we are now coming to the statistics of tbe business:

with the man! I cannot let it into my mind that Y0:1 will place trust in the man whose treachery the great MacHale so clearly aod so powerfUlly pointed out to Ireland. I cannot let it into my mind that my fellow-townsmen shaH in any way assist in the propagation of that system of morality whicb teaches tbat there is THE COST OF OONVERTING A JEW.--- After no crime committed in breaking and trampling- some twenty years of labor---after the erection undel' feet legitimate compacts, freely, absolute- .of a churcb on Mount Zion, at an enormous Iy, and solemnly entered into with a nation be- cost---after the expenditure of hundreds or fore that nat ion 's God! May heaven to·day thousands of pounds, the "London Society fur guard my f,,"lIow-townsmen from such bliod- promoting Christianity among the Jews" (a ness and from such disgrdce. It is undeniable mission presided over by a bishop and endowe.d ---it is incontestible that Sadleir publicly alld by' tbe joint efforts of the kinO'doms of PrussIa frt:ely pledged himself, in language the most and England) produces as it~ lruits, according clear, expressive, and solemn, not to take office to its own ' statistics, and congregation of Just from, never to support, always to act in opposi- 37 Jewish converts. During the whole of last tion to any and every minister not determined year the result of its labors was the conversion to pass inlo law the three great questions on of one Jew. The cost of this one convert was which the nation's heart was fondly and pas- tbe annual outlay . at Jerusalem alone, besides sionately bent. One of these questions was 'the Bishop's slippnd of £ 1 ,228 expfmded on tenant· right. The wide world Imuws how Sad- the missi.on, £445 o,n tbe ~hurch. £1 1173 on leir acted--·shRmeflllly casting bebind his back the bospltal, and £4GO (we beg pardon, £399,,­the compact into which he fredy and ahsolute- 19s. lId., see Report, p. 11~) ?n the Hou_se of -Il' enlerea before the altar of his country--- Indnst~y. The Jerusalem mISSIon, then---~f we greedily took office the moment it was offered a~d lo ItS cost the, ~1,20() per annum paId to him, and, like a thief, he sold tenant l'ight--- II BIshop Gob'l~, arlslOg from the e.ndowment-•• he sold the noble people who fondly con- has actulllly, lU tbepast year, baptJs~d converts fided in him---ar.d, like a thief, he sold thAt at the moJerate )'ate o! only £4,44378. 2<1. people'S religion! lie is here to-day with tbe I per head.·--London IngulTe1"

CATHOLIC TELEGRA PH AND ADVOCATE A1t ff.t 1+ AI' 1 h t7if~ t ments tell sufficiently of their robberies of mo­~a tsJO tt \&It tgraptsJ 't>~~ J?Wnora f nasteries, their murders of Catholics, their open

war upon al! who adhered to the old religion, OF~ICE.-No . 95 Walnut st., West side, above Pearl to justify all "the edicts" ever passed against

them by kings or councils. CINCINNATI, 0., SATURDAY, AUGUST 6,1853.

So of the other heretics, whom those falsi-TOLERATION. fiers of history-the Humes, and Gibbons, and

There are two kinds of Toleration-the one Mosbeims, and Milners-have represented as Intellectual, the other Political-the one a tol· "persecuted." They were the open enemies of eration of thought, the other of corporal action . civil society, and for this they were punished These two differ from each other as widely as by civil society. t he eternal from the temporal, as the spiritual Time passed, and another era was ushered from 1be corporal. in. In the sixteenth century, Nortbern Europe

ImeJlectual Toleration is the interior beUef revolted from God, and, for political reasons, that a:! religious opinions are equally true, and said "non serviam." These revolters took wilh that in them salvation is equally attainable. them, trom the Catholic Church, the theory of This is the state of mind called Indifferentism, intellectual intolerance, or the positive belief in and' is a practical negation of all Christianity, some revelation; and since the flame of divine and a profession of Deism. In this state of charity was, by schism, extinguisbed in their mind, there is no charity, because no actil'ity- breasts, they added to it the practice of polit­nothing but torpor. Men infected with it are leal intolerance. Political intolerance remained fiercely intolerant of intolerance-are morbidly among them, after infidelity had banished posi­eager to propagate their opinion, that all opin- live belief. In France, Voltaire, Rousseau, and ions are a matter of indifference. Of course, the otbers made religious opinions a bye-word, they are not intellectual men, but are quite and religious persecution an odious thing; and wrapped up in the material. tbe followers of these guillotined tens of thou-

lntellectual Toleration is, as everyone sees, sands, of priests and religious, for their relig­absurd and impious. To say that God has ious belief. In Prussia, Frederick declared made a revelation, and that its meaning is of that all views of Christianity were indifferent, no jmportance, is to accuse God of folly or of while he was imprisoning, nnd confiscating, and mendacity. exiling Catholics. In England, theoreticallibe-

Political Toleration is tbe allowing of COl·pO- ralism invaded the public mind, while practical r ill liberty to the expression of opinions, what- persecution was exulting in the exile, imprison­e"er tbey may be. This toleration implies no ment, confiscation of property of English Cath­admission of the t'rutlt of tbe opinions tolerated, olic families, and in tbe brutalitie$ of the Gov­but only, that they are not injurious to the ma- ernment towards tbe wronged Irish. But, amid terial interests of society. Such toleration is all tbese fluctuations 01 heresy, the Church re­not only proper, but oftentimes necessary; and mained unchanged. Her principle, that there .such toleration has always been granted by the is no Salvation out of the Churcb, and that no 'Church. to those without her. man is to be saved by violence, was ever the

It is a great principle of Catholic Doctrine, pr.omulgated by St. Thomas, that force is never ,to be used for tile propagation of Religion; and this principle St. Thomas learned from the pmc­lice of the Oltu1·cl!. The Church has ever been, politically, charitable, and tolerant of false opin­jons; while, intellectually, she has always pur­liued them with unrelenting opposition.

The Martyrs on the rack, in the dungeon, and the flames, were, intellectually, intolerant towards their judges and tormentors; but they, praying for the conversion of their persecutors, ·cannot be accused of political intolerance. St. Athanasius, in exile, was sternly intolerant of the Arian "opinion," that Jesus Christ is a mere creature; yet surely, Constantius, his per­secutor, dare not say that be tried to deprive heretics of their civil rights. So tbe entire Church from tbe beginning-- acknowledging and believing in tbe distinction between the temppral and eternal--bas ever, intellectually, proscribed and "persecuted" error in all its forms; but, materially, she has allowed it every liberty, leaving to civil rulers to judge whetber ()r not it was dangerous to the well-being of

society. A glance at the history of the Church will

verifr our assertion. For the first three bun­dr€d years, Ca tbolics were in the political mi· nority. When Constantine was crowned the 1irst Christian Emperor, he left the existing <OO"der of things, as far as it was positive, in the condition in which he found it. He abrogated penal laws against Christians; but he made no edicts against the existing forms of Paganism. Two hundred years passed and Christianity still continued to impregnate the public mind, yet no law 8brogated Pagan rites until the Priests were left alone in their deserted tem­ples, and the universal voice of the people be­gan to cry out against the defunct system, "cut i t down, why cumbereth it the ground?" Then J ustinian declared, in an edict, heathen rites to b e forbidden.

An~tber five hundred years passed. Tbe E mpire was shattered. Barbarians came down from the North, and,in a short time, knelt btl­fore the Cross. Europe was changed. Faith became the only guiding pl·inciple of the peo­ple; all beside being passion and crilfle. Slili the Church showed her tenderness towards Pagans and Jews, scattered up and down, through Christian countries; she protected them from violence, by benignant laws, and by fur­nishing them with a retreat from the rapacity

. ~f' the powerful ig every city. .In the. twelfth and thirteenth centuries, the

heresy of the Albigenses began to infest Eu­rope. Catholic society never molested the ad­herents to this error, until they, by their crimes againsl society, rendered stringent measures, measures of self-defence. Cotemporary docu-

/

guide of her actions . Charity ever moved and quickened all her works-Charity that loves the errorist too much to keep silent his error-­that loves God too much to wrong his person­Charity that loves trutb, because it comes from God and calmly defends it, witbout. fear of ty· rants or penal laws, without buman respect of erring demagogues or popular young men, and without boisterous elation in the hour and in the place of its ascendancy.

ST. MARY'S COLLEGE, NEAR LEBA­NON, KY.

This in$titution is situated on an agreeable and healthy farm in tbe country, four miles from Lebanon, Kentucky. It is a Catholic Scbool, intended for tbe education of Oatltolic children, and "no Protestant patronage is solic­ited." The branches taught are chiefly those which comprise the English and Mathematical Courses, intended to fit Catholic boys for agri­cultural and mercantile pursuits, and to pre· pare them also for entering on a Classical Course in Colleges of higher pretensions. Such an institution bas been long wanted in the west, where there are multitudes of Catholic parents who wish to impart to their children the ele­ments of a sound and Catholic English educa­tion, and whose means will not enable tbem to defray tbe expenses of more costly establish­ments. For a great number of years, St. Mary's has heen in a flourisbing condition; during the last year, the average number in attendance was one hundred. The terms are very moderate, not exceeding one hundred dol­

lars per annum, every extra included. The next session will open on the first Monday in September,

'l'HE EUROPEAN WAR. The probability of a war between Russia and

Turkey is waning, with each fresh arrival, from Europe. Such a war would be a clllamity to the Catbolics of the Turkish Empire. They enjoy, under tbe Turk, a liberty they could not hope for under Nicho'las, or the domination of English influence. 'l'he only restriction of relig­ious liberty consists, in the severe laws, against m)1.king converts. When a Turk wishes to em­brace Christianity, he has first to expatriate himself. The war, too, would be a calamity to Europe. We should be sorry to see England and France on the same side, in any war.

, .... n"'The Met1"opolitan has been enlarged 64

pages. The August Number contains some excellent articles. Copies of it can be had at Mr. Maboney's, on Sycamore street.

------.~.~.~.-------

JfE1"We hope no one of our readers has passed over the beautiful memoir of the" Last of ,the Irish Martyrs," by our excellent con·es­pondent, "Milesius,"

-================~================= DIOCESE OF LOUISVILLE.=-:::::: CONSECRATION OF ST. JOHN'S CA'rHE­

DRAL, MILWAUKIE. According to previous notice, this beautiful

Cathedral was consecrated last Sunday, with eXlraordinary pomp. There were present at the august ceremony, Monsignor Cajetan Bedi­ni, Archbisbop of Thebes and Apostolic Nuncio to Brazil, the Most Rev. Archbishops of St. Louis, New York, and Cincinnati, and the Rt. Rev. Bishops of Milwaukie, Pittsburgh, De­troit, and Chicago, together with about seventy priests, of various dioceses. Monsignor Bedi­ni performed the ceremony of consecration and celebrated tbe High Mass, to the great edifica­tion and delight of those who had never wit­nessed these im posing ceremonies performed by one direct from Rome. Rev. Dr. Sal~mann acted as Deacon, and Rev. Mr. Obermuller as Subdeacon, in the consecration; and in the Mass, the Rev. Messrs. O'Donahue and Norris, D. D., newly elected· pastors of the Cathedral. The consecration sermon was preached by t,he Most Rev. Archbishop Hugbes, of New York. Text, St. John xi. 47, and following velses; subject; tbe continual gathering into the fold of Christ of all the nations of the earth, and unity tbe distinctive feature of the Catholic Church. 'fhe sermon was in Archbishop Hughes' happiest style.

All admired the taste and the accuracy with which the Gregorian Chant in the Psalms and Antiphons of the sacred ceremony was per­formed, both by the Most Rev. Celebrant and a selected choit of Ecclesiastics.

The solemnities of the day were closed by Solemn Vespers, celebrated by the Most Rev_ Archbisbop of St. Louis. After Vespers a ser­mon was preached by the Most Rev. Archbish­op Purcell, in wbich he developed with most powtlrful effect the arguments which demon­strate the Real Presence of our Lord in the Holy Eucharist. The whole was closed by Solemn Benediction of the most Blessed Sacra­ment.

On Monday, the participants separated deep­ly impressed with a renewed feeling of brother­ly charity towards each other, and overflowing with gratitude towards tbe Rt. Rev. Bishop Henni, whose apostolic hospitality and courtesy endeared him to all.

Mons. Bedini intends to leave Milwaukie by the first opportunity, to visit Lake Superior and the Indian Missions; from whence he will proceed southward and visit Cincinnati in the course of a week or ten days. At least we may hope to see him in Cincinnati by the Feast of the Assumption.

U-Four Sermons, by Cardinal Wiseman, on the devotion to tbe Holy Eucharist, and the celebrated Lecture on Science, delivered be, fore the Catholic Literary Society at Leeds, have bEen published in a small volume in Don­ahoe's best style. Cardinal Wiseman is un­doubtedly one of the clearest, most elegant writers in the English language, while in pro­fundity of erudition he has but few equals in the world. He shows, too, in his writing, a vein of deep, tender and amiable piety tbat is truly charming. We commend this little book to all our readtn·s.

Murphy & do., of Baltimore, have published a small book, being a translation from the French of Father Boone's discourse" on .lash· ions." It is a learned and severe diatribe against immodesties in female dress.

Both of these little works can be had at John O'Hea's, corner of Eighth and Western Row.

--~.-.... --rr:r W e call the attention of our readers to

EPISCOPAL VIsrfATION---CATHOLIC EDUCATIO

On Sunday evening, July 24th, the Rt. Re:' Bishop of Louisville visited the Church of St' Boniface in that City. This is the first Church which was built by the Catholic Germans of Louisville. One hundred and twenty-two were confirmeu on the occasion. Tbe modest de­portment of the children, and the order and decorum with which they approached to re­ceive the Sacrament, were truly edifying.

The German Catholics, more perhaps than any other members of our Holy Church in this country, are impressed with the importance of rearing up their children in the principles and practice of Religion. With them, tbe paro. chial School House is invariably reared by the side of the church, and a sound Catholic edu. cation is bestowed under the influence of Reli. gion . Children thus grow up, corporally and intellectually, under the shadow of God's sane. tuary, and faith takes a strong and lasting hold of the youthful mind. The English and Irish Catholics of America may learn a useful lesson on this subject, from their German brethren, and it is refreshing to see that the system of pal;ochial schools is becoming more and more extended throughout the union.

'rhis is as it should be; for ed ucation is the great question of the day, not only in America but throughout Christendom. Satan seduced Eve under the pretext of bestowing upon her and her race greater light and knowledge; and he is now renewing the contest against berde. scendants in the same spirit, and very much with the same weapons. He seeks now, as then, to instil the poison along with ibe fruit of the tainted trse of knowledge; and alas! now, as in bis first essay on the human race, be sue. ceeds but too well in his baneful efforts! Error, infidelity, and crime are fearfully on the in. crease, under the influence of an educational system, which rather fosters than checks the evil tendencies of COl'rUpt nature.

The German Catholic population of Louis· ville has steadily and .rapidly increased. Not only bas another congregation been organi~ed

in the lower part of the city, but it was also found necessary to enlarge, nearly to double its original size, the old Church of St. Boniface. This addition was completed about two years ago, and at present the edifice cannot accom· modate much more than half the congregation. On occasion of his visit, the Bisbop addressed the people, and pointed out the necessity of erecting a new church. His appeal was reo sponded to in a cordial and generous spirit; and the new church, to be dedicated to God under the invocation of St. Martin, will be commenced and probably completed during the present year. A lot, 150 feet by 159, on the corner of Shelby and Keller streets, has been already purchased for this purpose.

On the following Sunday, July 31st, the

Bishop visited Carrolton, at the mouth of the Kentucky liver. Here, after administering con· firmation to six children at an early hour of the morning, he performed the ceremony of laying tbe corner·stone of a new church now in pro· gress of erection in this town. l'be cburch is to be dedicated to God under the name and pa· tronage of St. John, the Evangelist. It will be fifty feet long by thirty-seven wide, and will be so constructed as easily to admit of enlarge· ment, when the increase of the Catbolic popu· lation shall require it. The lot on whicb it is building---one acre of ground---is beautifully situated in a central position; it was bestowed by Mr. Henry Grobmeir, who also contrihutes $300 towards the erection of the Church. The the advertisement of Mr. Enright, announcing

tbat he is about to open an English and Clas- temporary chapel in present use is on tbe premo sical Academy at Neff's Building, corner of ises of Mr. Rodenbacl!, another liberaJ German Eighth and West em Row. We are personally Catholic, who has lately settled in the town.

acquainted with Mr. Enright; and independ- The Bishop was assisted on the:occasion by ently of his most flattering testimonials from tbe Rev. J. M. B1"uym·e and by the Rev. Leander learned men in Ireland and from the Most Streber, O. S. F., the latter the pastor of the Rev. Archbishop Hughes, we arrived at the infant congregation. There are, at present, conclusion that he is a scholar of thefi1"sI01·dl1'l'. in Carrolton thirty-three Catholic families, of Those parents who would have their children whom twenty-five are @erman, and eight are learn more than a smattering of the Ancient Irish.. The number is steadily increasing, and Languages, can, by sending them to Mr. En- there is every probability that soon the Church rigbt's Academy, have their wishes gratified. now building will have to be enlarged, and a

--~-..... -. ~--- new one erected for Catholics wbose language U""Book ·Making was not a trade, in ancient is tbe English.

times. A man used never to write a book, un- A large concourse of the citizens of Carrol· less he had some intellectual object in view. ton assisted at the ceremony. The Bishop Professional authors are public nuisances-their addressed them for about an hour, frolD a tlxistence shows an unnatural state of society. stand erected within the foundations. He sel Just as a man ought never to talk, unless he forth the claims of the Catholic Church, and bas something/to say, so a man ought never to answered some of the popular objections against write without an end, beyond his bool1, to ac- our Holy Relio-ion. Afterwards, he briefly eX· complish, plained the solemn ceremonies of the day; and

CATHOLIC TELEGRA EH AND ADVOCATE. ~b was performing them, the utmost de-wb!Ie e h

revailed amongst the assemblage, w 0 corUJD P ." I t . d the greatest IDterest III ntes so nove 0 evIDoe • .

and so ImpressIve. theJD. onsoling to the Catholic heart to see

It IS C • • •

h hes thus sprlDO"lDg up on the banks nelV 0 uro " '" ., .

h "beautiful river. The tIme IS not dls-of t e b the Cross will greet the traveler's I nt w ' en . a '. every town and hamlet along IlS bor-

eye In VIATOR. ders. ... ,

p-St. Thomas, of Aquin, wrote a book on

b . s and Sir Isaac Newton wrote a Com-P ySIC , I . t Y

on tbe Book of Revelations. t IS ]lleo ar bard to tell which of the two made the greater

d St Thomas was the prince of The-blun er. . . . Sir Isaac Newton of Natural Phlloso-

ologIanS, I' I St Thomas knew aI, of PhYSICS ( lat phers. . . N

- k wn at his timp.; but SIr Isaac ewton was no . , had not read every thlDg on St. John s Apoca-

Still both books are failures. lypse. , -------.~.-.-------

NOT BAD.--Some ~f the secu~a~ papers have . t d " contradictIOn to the ndICulous story, !DSef e " that Ex·Bishop I ves was to be separated from his wife and ordained Priest. -- ...

ST PETER'S BENEVOLENT SO ClE'l'Y. The regular monthly meeting of this society

'11 b held in tbe basement of the Cathedral, WI e .

t ~unnay (to-morrow) afternoon, Imme­on nex ~

diatelyafter Vespers. ----........ ~--DONATIONS TO THE 8'1.'. JOSEPH'S OR­

PHAN ASYLUM.

John Farmor, Mrs. Boyle, Mrs. Smith, - -Aaron Smith, -

-'

Collected by Edward Boyle. .....

$1,00 1,00 1,00 1,00

$4,00

For the Catholic Telegraph.

"THE LAST OF THE IRISH MARTYRS," MOST REVER'D OLIVER PLUNKETT, PRIMATE OF IRELAND.

( CONTINUED.) Lord Chief Justice-Look you, Mr. Plun­

kett, it is in vain for you to talk and make tbis discourse here now; you must know that by the laws of this kingdom, wben a man is in­dicted and arraigned of treason and telony. it is not usual 'to give such time; it is rare that any man hatb had such time as you have had­five wee"ks' time to provide your witnesses: if your witnesses are so cautiOUS, and are such persons that they dare not, nor will not, vt'n­ture for fear of being apprehended, or will not come into England without such and such cau­tions, we cannot tell how to help it ; we can't

I furnish you witb witnesses, you must look to get your witnesses yourself. If we should stay till your witnesses will come bere, perhaps tbey will never come here, and so you will escape out of the hands of justice. Do not be dis­couraged in this, the jury are strangers to you, peradventure, but thpy are honest gentlemen, and you shall have no otbers upon your jury; and you may be confident tbat if there be not some fact proved against you that may amount to treason, you shall be discharged; tbese are persons that understand so much, and we will direct them so much. You shall have as fair a trial as if you were in Ireland; but for us to stay for you]' witnesses, or send you back to Ireland, we cannot do it. Therefore you must submit to your trial. We heard your affidavit yesterday, and we did then tell the gen tleman that moved it, as much as we tEoll you. You are here to be tried, look to the jury, and ex­cept against them if vou will.

Plunkett-My lord, I desire only to have the fa'wr of some time, some time this term.

Lord Chief Justice---We can't do it. Clerk of the Crown---Swear Sir John Rob-

erts.

Plunkett---I humbly present this to your lordship. I am then in imminent danger of my life, if I cannot get ten days to have my wit­nesses over; I desire I may have but to the 21st of this month, and then, if they do not come, you may go on.

Lord Chief J ustice---W e cannot do it, you have had five weeks' time already.

Plunkett---I desire but a few days. Clerk· ·-Sir John Roberts, take tbe book;

look upon the prisoner; you shall . well and trnly try, &c.

Plunkett.--My lord, 1 desire to know whether they have been of the juries of Loughorn, or the five Jesuits, or any that were condemned.

Lord Ohief Justice--. Wbat if they have? 'ft'l . .a, IS no txcepLion.

The following jury were then sworn: Sir 1667. For then Col. Miles Rely (O'Riely) things are those he had undertaken? Did he John Roberts, Thomas Harriot, Henry Ash- and Col. Bourne were sent to Ireland from the explain himself? hurst, Ralph Hunknall, Richard Goure, Rich- King of France, with a commission to muster as MacMoyer--No farther than those words; ard Pagett, Thomas Earsby, John Hoyne, many men as they could, promising to send an but I did conceive this was his meaning; be­Thomas Hodgkins, James Partherict, Samuel army of 40,000 men with a commission, upon cause I knew partly of it myself, knowing of Baker, William Hardy. St. Lewis's day in August next, following, to the former plot.

The Clerk of the Crown then read the follow- land in Carlingford, to destroy all the true sub- Lord Chief J ustice-I ask you only what jects, to destroy the religion as it was estab- words came from him; and you say they were. lished there, and to set up the French King's that Duffy had not the wit to manage what he authority and the Roman Catholic religion. had undertaken for the general good of their And one Edmund Aryle, that was a justice of religion.

ing charges as contained in the indidments :

" First, that he had sent letters by one Neal O'Neal to Monsieur Baldesche, the Pope's sec­retary; also to the Bisbop of Aix and Principe Colbuna, that they might solicit foreign powers to invade Ireland. Secondly, tbat he employed Captain Con O'Neal to solicit the French King for succor. Thirdly, that he exacted money 1rom the clergy of Ireland for the purpose of introducing the French and maintaining seven­ty thousand men. Fourthly, that he had this force in readiness, and that he bad given dir~c­tions to a friar named Duffy, to raise two hun­dred and fifty men in the parish of Foghart and county of Louth. Fifthly, that he was to sur­round all the forts and harbors of Ireland; and that he fixed upon Carlingford, as a fit harbor for the invasion. Sixthly, that he had held several meetings, where money was collected for this purpose. ~eventhly, tbat there was a meeting in the county of Monflghan, at which three hundred gentlemen of three several coun­ties had attended; and whom he exhorted to take up arms for tbe recovery of tbeir eslates."

To tbis indictment he pleaded Not Guilty.

Attorney General (Sir Robert Sawyer)­May it please your lordship, and you gentle­men of the Jury, the character this gentleman bears as primate, under a foreign and usurped jurisdiction, will be a great inducement to you to give credit to that evidence we shall produce before you. We shall prove that this very pre­ferment was conferred upon him upon a con­tract that he would raise 60,000 men in Ireland, for the Pope's service, to settle popery there, and to subvert tbe government. The evidence we shall give you will prove how it leads to des­troy the King; and, I take it according to the resolutions that have been, to raise war in the kingdom, and 1.0 introduce a foreign power, will be certainly evidence of an attempt and machi­nation to destroy the King. As soon as he was in possession of his primacy he goes about his work. There are too great mean neces~aries to be provided, men and money,-for men, hnving this great spiritual jurisdiction, whereby, indeed, all that are under it are become slaves, he issues out his warrants to all the clergy of Ireland, to give an account and make return from tne several parishes, and all the men in them above fourteen and under sixty. And returns were accordingly made by them, that be migbt accordingly take a measure what men

to pick out for the service. 'rhe next thing was money, my lord; and your lordship takes no­tice that when the mind is enslaved, the purse, nay, all the body bows to it. He issues out his warrants to his clergy to make a collection of money; in all parts great sums were levied, and, when they were levied, we shall give you an account by our proofs that several sums were issued out and sent into France to further the business. There was also provision made of great ammunition and arms; and we shall prove in particular several delivered out by this gen­tleman's orders, to carryon this thing; and to go through with this business he takes a view of all the several ports and places in Ireland where it would be convenient to land; for they were to have from France an auxiliary force, and upon this view he pitched upon Carling­ford as the place. We shall prove the several correspondences between Rome and him, and France and him, and several messengers em­ployed and monies issued out from time to time for their maintenance. This will be the course of our evide'nce; and we will begin first with some that do not speak so particularly to this doctor, but prove there was a general design in all parts of the kingdom of Ireland to bring in the King of France, and. extirpate the Protest­ant religion. And then we shall call tbe par­ticular persons to the particular parts against him. First we shall call Florence MacMoyer (who was sworn).

Solicitor-General--Are you sworn, sir? MacMoyer--,= Yes, sir. Solicitor-Genel'al-Pray give tbe COUlL and

the jury an account of what you know of any plot in Ireland, to introdllce the Romish reli­gion, or to bring in the French King.

MacMoyer-Yes, I know there was a plot before Plunkett's time and in his time; for it was working in the year 1665 and ] 666, but it was brought ~o lull maturity in the year

the peace and clerk of the crown, sent for all MacMoyer-Yes, and then again, in his as­the rebels abroad in the north to come up into .sembly kept by him, he charged his inferiors to the county of Longford, and they marched into collect such several sums of money as he thought the head town of the county, and fired the fit, according to the several parishes and digni­town; the inhabitants fled into the castle: then taries, to assist and supply the French forces they came up to the gaol thinking to break it when they came over. open, and by setting the prisoners free to join Lord Chief Justice-How know you that? then with them; but there Aryle was shot-- MacMoyer-I have seen the money collect-received a deadly wound, and dropped off his ed; and I have seen his warrant. "subpcena horse---and they fled. So then, when they suspensionis,' ~ to bring it in, to redeem their were without the town, one Charles McCanal religion from the power of the English Gov­alighted. and took away all the papers out of ernment. Again, there were those rebels that his pocket, which if they had been found would went to Loagford-discover all. This occasioned Col. Bourne to Lord Chief Justice-What time were those be suspected.; and being so suspected he was collections? taken prisoner and turned to Newgate in Dub- MacMoyer-Nine years, eight years, seven lin. Then Col. Rely fled awa.y again to France, years ago, and the last year of all. and the plot lay under a cloud during the life Lord Chief JusLice--Then it was several of Primate Rely (Edmund O'Reilly), the pris- times you say'! oner's predecessor. 'l'his Primate Rely died MacMoyer--Yes, and he procured the Mac­beyond sea. 'rhen many of the Popish reli- Donnels a piece of money out of the exchequer, gion would have had tbe primacy conferred pretending to do good service to bis majesty; upon one Duffy, but the prisoner at tbe bar put but he sent them for France, meaning that they in for it; which might have been opposed if the should improve themselves, and bring them­prisoner had not engaged and promised that he selves into favor with the King of France, and would so manage affairs tbat before the present come over with the French King to surprise government were aware he would surprise the Ireland. This one of the rebels told me. So kingdom, provided the Pope and King of France I have seen the prisoner's letter directed to the would send a competent army to join with theirs grand tory Fleming, desiring that they should for the effecting of it. So the first year of his go to France and he would see them, in spite of coming over I was in the friary at Armagh; I all their enemies in Ireland, safe ashore; and was an acquaintance of the friars, and they in- Fleming should return again a Colonel, to his vited me; and one Quine told the prisoner that own glory and the good of his country. they tbought Duffy would have been primate. Atturney-General---Do you know his hand? Said be, it is better as it is; for Duffy hath not MacMoyer---Yes, as well as my own. I the wit to do those things that I have under- have seen Captain O'Neal, son of General taken to do; meaning that he did undertake to O'Neal, coming every year into Ireland and supplant the Protestant religion to bring in po- carrying three regiments to the French King pery, and put the kingdom under subjection to into France; and he used to come over to lre­the King of France. land every year to get a recruit; and he did get

Solicitor· General-How do you know that? my brother to go with him, and so much impor­MacMoyer-Those were the words, and the tuned me that I could hardly wilhstand him:

meaning I knew before, hecause I had heard it but I did not yield to his desire. He told me talked of. it was to improve me for my good, to improve

Lord Chief J ustice-Who was the first of myself in:military discipline; and then I should these primates you speak of? return to Ireland a Captain under the French

MacMoyer--Edmund Rely; he set this busi- King, to surprise the Kingd.om and settle the ness on foot first. Popish religion, and then I should be restored

Lord Chief J ustice--About what? to my estate. MacMoyer-About calling the rebels togeth- Lord Chief Justice-Who told you this?

er out of the north when they came to Long- MacMoyer-Captain O'Neal. And, in the ford. meanwhile, says be, 1 hear Dr. Plunkett is the

Lord Chief J ustice--What year was that? only man intrusted in Ireland to make these MacMoyer-It was in 1667. preparations, and get things ready against the Lord Chief Justice-When died he? French King's coming, who is to land at Carl-MacMoyer-He died a little while afterwards ingford. Lord Chief Justice-- Then Duffy would have Attorney·General-How often were you in

it conferred upon him? the Doctor's company?

MacMoyer-Yes, after Rely'S decease he Mac Moyer-Not very often. would have it conferred upon bim; and there Plunkett-I never saw bim before with my was a contention between him and the prisoner, eyes in my life. who did engage that he would bring things to MacMoyer-I have seen him in the priory that full maturity, that before the present gov- the first year that he came over to Ireland; and ernment were aware he would do the work. you know the meetings held at George Blyke's

Lord Chief Justice-How do you know this? house, in the Fives; and I bave seen him in his MacMoyer-I know this because I had an own house.

account of it from certain school· fellows that Justice Dolbein--How came you to know the were with me in Ireland, then studying in prisoner's hand? Rome; they wrote this to me desiring I would MacMoyer--Because I was well acquainted take a good heart with the rest of my country- with his band, seeing his band among the men, and assuredly in a short time the king- priests. dom would be relieved, and the Irish restored Justice Dolbein--Did you ever see bim write? to their former patrimonies. MacMoyer--Yes; in the priory and in his

Lord Chief Justice--This you speak of their own house.

information. knowledge?

Justice Dolbein-How often? Wbat do you know of your own li ld MacMoyer-Ten or a dozen times. Is ou

MacMoyer--AlI tbat I know is, he coming into the friary of Armagh.

Lord Chief Justice--About what time? Mac Moyer-It is either ten or eleven years

ago, and there was a fast tben, and I was in ­vited by the friars, being tbeir acquaintance; one Quine, one of the friars, told him--­. Lord Chief Justice--Told whom?

MacMoyer--The prisoner, that he did expect Duffy would have been primate; but tbe pris­

oner made answer, it is better as it is, for Duffy had not the wit to manage the tbings that I have undertaken for the general good of our religion.

Lord Chief Justice--Now tell me this: what

know his hand from all tbe writing in London. if it were among never .so many; let me but see it, I will know it.

Lord Chief Justice-Have you ever heard Lim own himself primate?

Mac Moyer-Yes, my lord; he writes him­self, "Oliverus Armachanus Primlls et Metro­politanus totius Hibernire"--that is bis style •

Lord Chief J ustice·-Who did he say made him primate?

MacMoyer-The pope, my lord. Lord Chief Justice--Have you beard him

say so? MacMoyer-Yes; I heard him

it in the priory. (Continued on 8th page.)

discourse of

CATHOLIC TELEGRAPH AND ADVOCATE. TRALEE ELECTION·--THE NOMINA­

TION. ter some time order was somewhat restored, SECOND ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT OF Music. and SAINT JOSEPH'S COLLEGE. Oration by James O'BriEn-Subject· T

Wrongs of Ireland_ ' he The nominatinn of candidates for the repre­sentation of tl e borough of Tndee, took place at Edev(!n o'olock on Monday, in the court-lwuse. U Plo tl:e opening of tlJl-l court, there was not the least t'Xcitt:'ment obsf:rvable throughout tbe town; but as the hour for the nomination ar­rived, and the doors were opened, tbe rush to procure admission was very gr~at, and in less tban Len minutes every available spot was occu-pied. .

The CAndidAtes present were--- Mr. DAnIel O'Connell. Mr. D. Shine Lawlor, Mr. Thomas .Fitzgerald, Q. 0., and Mr. John Leahy, barris­ter: at-Ia "'.

The ,writ directing the election having been read:_

Tile High Sheriff opened the proceedings in the u;'u,,1 torm.

Mr. N~ligan then came fllrward amid cheers, and, litter >Ill e:oquent speech, concluded by for­mally propo~ing Mr. Daniel O'Co.nnell as a fit and prup .. r person to rt:'present the borough of TralC:!e ill paliiament, hnd retired amid loud cheers.

Mr. Daniel O'Connell came forward to ad­dress the assl'mbly_ He was received with the most enthusiastic cheering, waving of hats and handkerchiefs . kept up for some time. Mr. O'Connell and th~ other cRndidates then ad­dressed the meeting, Mr. Lalor and Mr. Leahy announcing Lhat it was not their intention to go to the poll.

The Sberiff then called for a show of hands for Mr. Daniel O'Connell, when there was a complete forest of tbem held up. He then 9sked for a ~how of hands lor Mr. Thomas Fitzgerald, when th~re ~ppeared but six hands; Lhose of bis proposer, seconder, Rnd tbe re­spectl'd g~ntlernan's own. The sheriff ,announ­ced, amidst df:Rfening cheering, the show of hands to be in favor of Mr. O'Connell. .

MHjor O'Connor-Mr. Sheriff. on behalf of Mr. ThomRs Fitzgerald, I demalJd a poll.

'rbe Sheriff--We will proceed to a poll at tl!e several booths itt eight o'clock on Wednesday morning.--Ab!·idged {1"om the Southern Reporter.

CLARE ELECTION. Mr. Richard O'Donovan saill-I feel great CLOSE OF THE POLL-TRIUMPHANT MAJORITY FOR

pleasure in seconding Mr. 0' Connell, as 1 am sure he will p'ly every attention to the wishes of his conslituC:!IICY, lind will do all in bis powf"r to discharge llis duty towards them, ( !oud cheers.)

Mr. Thomas B. Hurly came forward and was received Wilh a complete storm of groan', sllout­ing, Rnd Fils, which prevented his proceeding.

A Voict:'-Why didn't Shine Lallir corne for­ward for the count.y ~nd beat Herbt:'Tt (hear, hear?) Eh, Hurly ,bear, hear, and loud yell-ing?) .

M.r. Hurly--We have nothing now to say to the county.

[Tbt! conclusion and uproar became so great that it was impossible for the speaker to pro­ceed, and notbing could be heard, although M!. ; Hurly "ppeared to be speakmg, but the mQst uproarious yelling, cat calls, and groan­ing. Aller the lapse of some time, wlwn the occupams of the galleries and body of the court were completely exhausted.]

Mr. Hurly was heard to say-Only a few wCj))ids (cliC:!s of no, no, and turn him out.) We aJl know that Mr. Denis Shine Lalor is a gen­tJ~trlan. (Here another burst of yelling took place, which lasted for abouL five minutes t ..

A VOICP--- '" e don't want liim. Take him home (loud cheering.)

l'HE LIBERALS. Tbe Liberal interest bas once flgAin triumphed in glorious Clare. At nine o'clock Friday even­ing the final returns were received from the poilmg districis, and nothing could well exceed lhe frantic joy of the people wht'n the anticipa­tions of victory were confil med. The following is

THE GROSS P LL : Fitzgerald.

Ennis - 334 Tulia 461 Sixmile-bridge 1 tl4 Ennistymon - 270 Kilrush - 101

O'Brien. 312 475 160 288 139

Vandeleur. 281 220 102 226 468

- ,-Total 1,350 1,374 1,297

Mjority fbI' O'Brien over Vandeleur 77 MHjority for Fitzgerald over V fllldeleur 53 The majority for O'Brien at the la:;t election

was but two, and the majority for the present is a practical answer to Colonel Vandeleur's cb;H"ges of priestly interference and intimidation.

The people wele addressed from the platform by the Rev. Mr. Lynch, Rev. Mr. Quade, Sir John Fitzgerald, Mr. Coffey, and other frit:'nds of the popular interest. At tbe bour I despatch the messenger (eleven O'clock), the excitement and enthusiAsm contillued unabated. The hill tops throughout the country are lighted up in rejoicings.---Dublin Freeman, July 9. Anolh(;:r V oice---'l urn him out, turn bim out

(gre~i chet:ring.) Mr. H urly having several times endeavored ' The English and Scotch journals present

to:'(}l'iJtain a hearin!! and failed, said be wou ld some striking pictures of tbe social life imme­conclude ' by proposing Mr. Denis Shine Law lor diately underlying this exuberant missionary as a fit and jJroper person to represent the bor- zeal. Here, for example, are a few striking ough of Tral~e in parliament, and retired amid groups: "In Glasgow, the wife of a collier, the greatest uproar. nan.ed DRwson, was given to drink. One

·Mr. P. O'Loghlin Byrne, proprietor and ed- evening she returned home helplessly drunk itor of lhlJ Keny Examine!', next presented him- and went to bed_ In the middle of tbe night, self to addre~s the electors. It would be ut- with a razor, Daw(,on cut into the tbroat of his ter\Y i~lposs ible (0 convey to the reader any still insensible wife, making a two and a ·half­thlng' lt)!e an adeqmrte description of tbe scene inch gash in tbe windpipe. He then lay down of ~onjusion wbich bis appearance on the hust- to slet:'p, tbe woman bleeding to death beside in-gs gave rise to. The dense mass of people him." Another trait of Sco,tish life has been wbo occupit:'d standing places 0n the wit . ess's narrated thus: "Alexanrler Boyd returned table, J.J1·t'ss,·(} forward to the bench at w hie}l from Valparaiso to Glasgow, ris native place. Mr. Byrne was standing, anu there contiDl~ed He met an old friend, and for old acquainLance yelling ilnd shouting up into bis filce, and usmg saJle they drank freely together, until tbe night menr.cing gestures, for a considerable time. wore away. Two womt:cn prevail~d on tbem to Now and tht:'n might be beard above the up- enter a bouse in a bad street. Here alloLher rO/If, "kick him out," "beat him," "shame," drillking match took place. When Boyd and "rair play," &. c. h'" 'bl th ,; IS compamon were msenSl e, e women

A V oice-·-Ah, you pRuper, we will burn stripped tb em of their clothes and watches. your pil pl'l" , and the Nation, tbO (hear, hear, Boyd, half conscious, faintly struggled, and and cheers.) threatened the police; they dragged him to the

LA tbird Voice- Ah, boys, hear the little window and threw him out. headloremost. He schoolmaster (hear, heal', laughkr,. and loud fell a height of three stories; his sku ll was frac­cheers.) tured, and he was killed on the spo\.' , Some

Mr. Byrne, after repeated ineffectual attempts salient characteristics of Londou society are to make himself heard, desisted, hllving first thus epitomised by tbe Leader: "The utter seconded the nomination of Mr. Shine Lawlor. savages, both men and women, who surround

Major O'C011nor thtn presented himself, and us, seem more numerous than those driven to was receivt:'d with cbeers, groans, and calls of vice or crime by necessity." "Hear tbe Major." He said--Mr. High Sher-iff, gentlemen, and brother electors, I mean t.o THE NEWMAN DEFENCE FUND--ApPROPRIA.­detain you but for a very short period (bear,) TION OF TilE SURPLUs.-We have to state tbat I come forward here to-day, in the performance Dr. Newm an bas presented 4001. of the sur­of a very simple duty, to propose for your ac- plus of the Defence Fund to the Rev. Mother ceptance a gentleman who aspires to the honor of the Norwood community, in liquidation of of represenltng you in Parliament--a gentle- tbe expenses incurred by her in meeting tbe man of the county·--a man of honor--- legal procecding which were directed against

A Voice---Sure be's cracked (hear.) her last year. It is understood to be his inten-Major O'Connor rontinued-I propose, as a tion to devote the bulk of the balance which

fit perbon to represent this borough in parlia- has come into his llands (that is, as much as m~nt, M.r. 'tbomas Fitzgerald, one of bel' M<lj- 3,0001.) to some purpose connected with tbe estv's counsel. Catholic University. Various influential per-

1\. Voice-Poor old Tom (loud laughter and sons have expresseli a wish that the whole, or cheeriug.) at least a portion of it, sbould be reserved for

Mr: Michael Long presented himself to sec- the Birmingham Oratory itself; and several on,d the nomination of Mr. Fitzgerald, and was considerable sums, which are included in the received wiLh the most deafening yells and balance, were contributed with a ' know ledge shouts, and cries of "Look at Long, the bail- that the necessary amount had been already iff," "who stole the eow?" "how much were raised, and with an express desire on the part you paid for tllis?" and similar cries. of tbe donors that they should be applied to

Mr. John M'Gill then proposed Mr. John personal or private objects of his own.:. It Le~hy as a fit representativll. seems, however, be has not thought it right to

The nomination was seconded by some per- let these circumstances interfere with the gene­son. but the uproa\' was so great we were una- ral view of it,s application, which he had previ· ble to ascertain the gentleman's narr:e. ously formed. , He has it also in intention to ' . Mr. Moriarty proposed, and Mr. Jas. O'Con- print and circulate a list of the subscribers, as

nell seconded, !VIr. John O'Connell. far as this is possible.---Tablet. Mr. Justin Supple was also proposed as a fit ---...-.... -.~.---

and proper person to represent tbe borough. Daniel O'Connell, Esq., youngest son of the , At this stage of the proceedings another liberator, has gone down to canvass the e lectors

seene of indescribable uproar took place, which of Tralee, in S~ICces8ion to his late lamented was caused by the falling of some soldiers from brot her, Maunce. Mr. Reynolds has with­their stAnding places, carrying with tbem in I drawn, as he says he would never oppose a their dtscent soml' forty or fifty persons. Af- I son of O'Connell.

Near Somerset Perry County, Ohio.

ORDER OF EXEIWISES.

Mu~ic. Oration by L. J. Jackson-Subject; Our

Adopted Citizens. Distribution of Premiums.

4th Class, Spelling and Reading-Premiums -Louis Hernan and Alf'xander Brown.

2d Class, Spt:'llinrr ;ilnd Readin T-Premiums --Thomas Batt'ma~. '"

3d Class, Readmg--lst Premium--Joseph Lynch; 2d Edward Maguire. '

1st Class, R«ading--lst Premium, Valentine Orndoff, 2d James Poland.

Music. Oration bv

Gove1"llment~ Stephen Byrne-- Subject; Self-

Distribution of Premiums. Class of Penmanship--lst Pr{;ruium, Francis

Carroll, 2d Michael Daly. 4,h Class, of English Grammar--lst Premi­

um, Joseph Lynch, 2d Patrick Holbrook. 2ND CLASS OF ARITHMETIC-2d Division-1st

Premium, FrAllCis Prenatt, 2d Joseph Cum­mins. 1st Division-1st Premium James Po­land. 2d Francis Carroll.

.Music. Oration by William McGaban-Subject;

Beauti(;R of History. Distribution of PremiHms.

1ST CLMS ARITHMETIC-2nd Dil'ision-- t st Premium Patrick McCabe, 2~d Premium John Duer. First Divi~ion--First Premium J_ A. Crt:ighton, 2nd Rob.tirt Boyl and F. Mahony. Distinguisbed- Philip Monehan, James .tloyle and 'Micbael Ryan.

2ND CLASS ALGEBRA-2nd Division-1st Premium William Duer, 2nd Joseph Poland. Distinguished-Thomas Owens, Patrick Mc­Cabe and A. J. Hedges.

1st Division--lst Premium Michael Ryan, 2nd Charles Magruder. Distioguished--Jo-sellh S0war and J. F. McBrearty. .

Mus~c.

Oration, by Wm. A. Owesney--Subject, Perry's Vict0ry.

Dis~ribution of Premiums. 1st AI!.t:'bra--lst Premium L. J. Jackson,

2nd J. D. Duffy. Distinguished-- T. C. Lynch. 2nd Dlvision--Surveying - 1st Premium

Wm Carroll, 2nd T. C. Lynch. Distinguished C. B. Ewing and R. Boyle.

lst Division---lst Premium L. J. Jackson, 2d J. H. McCormick.

2t1.usic. Oration by Bernard ' Menge--Subject; The

Rewards of Diligence. Distribution of Premiums.

Georretry-2nd Division -- 1st Premium Wm Carroll, 2nd Robert Boyle. Distinguished V. B. B(tnnett and S. H. McCormick.

1st Division--Medal, L. J. Jackson, Premi­um J. D. Duffy.

Book-l{eeping, 1st premium, T. O. Lynch, 2nd Patrick McCloskey.

7TH LCLASS ATIN- premium, Thomas Owens. 6TH CLASS LATIN-1st premium, L. J. Jack­

son, 2nd James O'Brien. Distinguished­Timothy Mahony.

Music. Oration, by John H. McCormick-Subject;

The State of Ohio." . Distribution of Premiums_

4TH CLASS GREEK-l st premium, J. L. Finu­cane, 2n(\ James O'Brien, Dislinguished­Timothy Mahony.

5TH CLASS LATtN-lst premium, J. L· Finu­cane, 2nd Joseph Fitzgerald.

Distribution of Premiums. CLASS OF SACRED HISTORy-1st premium J

L. Finucane, 2nd B. Mt nge. ' , Distinguished-T. Mahony, James O'B .

and Joseph Fitzgerald. tJeQ CLASS OF PROFANE HISTORY--Medal C

Ewing and L. J. Jackson, premium J. A. Cr~igBh' ton. .

Distinguished--T. C. Lynch, V. B. Benn and John 1-1. McCormick. ell

1ST CLASS LATIN-1st premium, J. Rotchford 2:Jd Stephen Byrne. '

Music. Oration by Martin V. B. Bennett-Subje t

N atural Science~. c ; Distribution of Premiums.

1 ST CLASS GREEK--l st premium, Stephen Byrne, 2nd 1. F. Rotchford.

BHEToRIC-Medlll, John F. Rotchford p mium, L. J. Jackson. ' reo

Distinguished-S. Byrne, W. Carroll and J H. McCormick. '

NATURAL PIlILOSOPHy-l ~t premium, V. B Bennett, 2nd J. H. McCormIck. '

ELOCU'l'ION--rremiums, V. B. Bennett C B Ewing and J. L. Finucane. ' . ,

Distinguished--W. A. Owesney, J. D. Dut. fy and J. F. Rotcbford.

Music. Oration, by J. D. Dufly---Subject: Indepen.

dence not Libertinism. . Distribution of Premiums.

2ND CLAns OF CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE---Firsl premiulll, John Lawles.

1ST CLASS OF CHRI'STIAN DOCTRINE---Firsl premium, Lyman J. Jackson.

Dis.tinguisbed for excellence in Cbristian Doctnne, T. Mflbony, V. Orndoff, J. L. Finu, cane And James McBrear.ty.

SUPERIOR GOOD CONDuCT~--Medal, Stephen Byrne.

GOOD CONDUCT IN THE 8ENIOR DEPARTMENT ... 1st p;,cmium, Bernard Menge · -. 2nd James H. Rudd, James Boyle, Thomas Owens and C. E. MAgruder.

GOOD CONDUCT IN JUNIOR DEPARTMENT-ooW, L. Rankin---premiums, W. Ryan an'd A. Brown,

Music. Valedictory, by John F. Rotchford.

Music. Address, by Rev'd Joshua M. Young.

--'---...... -.--~ ANGLICAN DEVELOPMENTs.-Considerable ex.

citement has been caused in evangelical circles, ?y th~ o{len renunciation ?f their distinguish. mg prmclples by one of tbelr most popular min. isters, the Rev. Mr. Forster, the pastor of a numerous congregation assembling in a modern built edifice in KC:!ntishtown. The rev. gentle. man has announced his farewell sermon to be preached to his present congregation on Sun· day next. A large portion of his hearers, it is said, sympathise with their milli'ster's new views, and will accompany him to another p lace of worship in the neighborhood. Rumor mflkes ·free with the names of other men of note in the .1j:vangelicul world as being likely to fol· low thIS gentleman'S example.-Morning paper, We have been informed that Mr. Forster in' tends establishing a li'l'e(J C/l1'istian Church, tbe basis of which will be: The Holy Scriptures, not human creeds , the only: st!llldard of Christian belief; tbe dllty of all mfn to inquire for them­selves; toeir individual r!,!sponsibility to eacli other for the conclusions which thev may reach; ' and diversity of opinions no bar to -l'l'ligious fd. lo\~ship, In this project hC:l , has received ample promi~e of support.--E.-vaminel',.

..... 4TH GREEK CLASS--tst premium, C. B. Ewing,

2nd Solomon Boyle. A WONDERFUL LocK.-The Scientific Me· 4TH LATIN OLASS-1st premium, Micha0lchflnic has the following notice of a very woo·

Ryall, flnd C. B. Ewing. derful lock: "The most perfectly secure arid 3RD LATIN CLASS--lst premium, T. C. Lynch, efficient, unpickable, unhreakable, and un burst·

2nd James H. Rudd. able lock ever introduced, bas recently been in-Distinguished-Michael Ahern and Solomon nnted and perfected by MI'. S. L. Cbase, of

Boyle. Lockport, N. Y. It is susceptible of 743,000" Music. 000,000,000 changes of adjustment; has no ac-

Oration by C B Ewing--Subject ; Battle of cessible aperture into which gunpowder can be Yorktown. introduced, nor could not be picked nor unlocked

. Distribution of Premiums. in seven years, even by the mannfacturer tbere .. 3D CLASS ENGLISH GRAMMAR---Edward L. of, with the key in his possession, unless be bad

Bennett. locked it himself; and as to tbieves, tbe more 2ND CLASS ENGLISH GRAMMAR-1st premium, they would examine and investigate this lock,

R Boyle, 2nd J F M('Breart.v. by indents, impressions, or otberwise, the more Distinguished-Michael Ryan, J Sowar and they woulJn't know ho~ to open it."

H MoCloskey. 1ST CLASS ENGLISH GRAMMAR--lst premium,

Wm Carroll, 2nd J L Finucane. Distinguished--V B Bennett, J A Rudd, J

H McCormick and B Menge. GEOCRAPHy-lst premium, Patrick McCbs­

key, 2nd C E Magruder_ DisLinguisbed--E L Bennett and Solomon

Boyle. Music.

Oration, by John L. Finucane--Subjec t ; Fidelity to principle.

Distribution of Premiums. 2ND LATIN CLASS--lst premium, Bernard

Menge, 2nd W. A. Owesney. Distinguished--Joseph Sowar and James

F. McBrearty. CLASS OF ENGLISH COMPOSITION-premium

Stephen ByrnE: and L. J. Jackson. Distillguished-J. D. Duffy and S. H. Roch­

ford. 2ND GREEK OLMS--lst premium, Bernard

Menge, 2nd W. A. Owesney. Distinguished-Stepben Sowar and James F.

McBrearty.

, .... ,

INJUSTICE.--To ascertain when it's noon, watch the paralysis which seizes on men wbo wotk bv tbe day. Twelve o'clock strikes them as pow~rl ess as a mallet would. We witnessed a man the other day, while going up a ladder with a hod full of bricks. Just as he reacbed the top, old Trinity told him that "time was up," when what do you think he did? Stepped upon the platform perhaps, and dumped tbe ob· longs. Not a bit of it. He just let go .the bod, and tumbled them all back to the SI?C­walk. He could not have taken anotber stnde if All New York had depended on the exertion. -N. Y. Dutchman. . ... ,

'rhere is a negro in Arkansas, twenty·one years old, wl;o is an idiot except in the com~u· tation of numbers. When asked how many seconds a man has lived who is seventy years, seventy days, and twelve hours old., he re­plied in evton less time, thal i~, in a mmute and a-hall, 2,210,500,80U seconds, which is the cor' rect answer.

===-=- . f\ MILL STONES. PANESE MANUFAOTURES. -:- The .KIng 0 FRENOH BURR MILL S'I:ONE MANUFAOTORY-;-Gen J~ h. ' t to tbe UubiJn ExhibitIOn a uineDutcbAnkerB~alldBol~In~Clothsofallnumbers,Mlll

Ilolland as sen Spindles',MilI CastlIlgs; HOlsLlng Screws; TemperIng do; b . of specimens of Japan manufacture. lJamsellrons; Screen Wire; Smut MachInes; Plaster of Pa.

num el h h' . e of silks and ris always on hand and for sale.

AmonO' ot er l 1l1gs, speclm ns All work sold at tbisestablishmentwarranted of the best t s~id to be equai to any of Euro;oelln quality, and if not found to he sucb upon tria,!,tbe money

velve~, . I 'Ik n cords of various thick- will be refunded. Jas. Bradnnd.&' Co., No 6a W~lnut8t. anufacture, a so, 91 e, , between Second and Pearl, Clllcmnatl, O. la.n 1

:ess, painled wax c'lOdles, to.l lp-tte cablOets, and ~'l\. JU~J<.:.PH':S lJULLtJVJ<i, NEAR ~UMEIt-. 01" of these latter arlicles, the p ,lrt that .ET PERRY COUNTY O.- This institution, conducted by the

parasd " f ilk wilh us is of paper creased inlo Fathers of the Order of St. Dominic, was opened for tbe IS roa e 0 s. . ' I' d b reception of students on the first Monday of September. Tbe

Y fo lds; the nbs are of Lllln sp Ice am- Bystem of education will comprise the ,:ar!ousbnnch~s 0 maD and c lORe with g'l'eat ease, and tbe a~ts and SClenceB usu.,lly taught In Similar InstitutIOn boo, they open b In thiS country.

milch belter derence from the sun t an The college edifice iB large and ccmmotlious, the grounds are a, '-translucent silk. Specimens of attached. to it extensive, and the lecality one of the most shades o. semi . . . 'il healthy In the Ul1Itetl StateB; affordlllg every Inducement

, of <rold and sliver >l re found In the co ec- anti facility for the promotion ofstuuious habits and the en. COlDS" Id' i orth tlVO hundred joymentofbealthful exercise. fon' the lal'gesl go COIn s W • A mild anti paternal system of government as far aB.may I d' filly dull:lrs, of an oblong shape, with be compatible, with the stncte,st attentIOn toestabllBhed

an B L more intel'8stinO' than discipline, Will be observed. 1 he moral and Intellectual unded COrnel s. u . " Improvement of the pupils, and also theu domestIc c~mfort

TO 'e the printing types, which are of wood, will be attended to witb the utmoBt solicitude. Their diet tbese al b . '1' d . 'I with the Will be whole.ome and abundant. No student will be al· tbe body of tht< type emg c~ Itl. rica, 10wedtogobeYOfldthecolle~egrounds,unlessaccompanied

t one end The warlike Instruments are by one or the ProfesBors or futors. letter a " I h fi ,. I 0' nd The eullegiate year will consist of two sessionB of five

t very formldab e; t P. re·arms ale on" a r.lOnths each; the first commencing on the first Montlay of DO • tl slVords are short, wIlh daU'()'~rs at- September of each year,and ending on the Sat,!rdayaflerthe heavy, le I d' "f l' I bst Mon,lay of February; and the secontl beglnlllng on the , I d and th!' w huie enc ose ID cy !Danca 'Hond Monday M Pebruary, and closing witb the public ex.

t,te lei'. tl e al mor is a woven fabric, suffiCient· hibition some time in the be:;;inning of July. sheal lS , I . T.b:RMS. I thick to resIst the thrust of an arrow or 1'01' boarding and tuition in EngliBh branches, waBh. y I . Iso a hilThly finished Japanned ing and mending, use of betl and beddIng,perses-

spear; llere IS a. . E> . ' "ion, . '" $45,00 b' Id which prol"CIS 'n the centre, /Iom winch Hoartl, &c .• &c., (as ~bove) With tUitIOn III AIgeb~a,

S Ie , . I and missal would glHnce Geometry, SurveYlllg, Bool, I_eeplng, RhetOrIC, an arrow or any I , History, anti the use of the Globes, per seSSIOn, 50,00 'u The Japan wlll'e IS more hardly fin- Boanl, &c., &c., (as above) witb tuition in the Clas. aSI e. L' ,I. . fi d i om- sics, Mathematics, and Pbilosoph~, per_eBSlon. 55,00 ished than that W 1.1e.1 we evel n n c . French, German, Italian, and Spanish, each extra,

• ' the col!ecllon IS a tea-set of tbls per session, . . . 5,00 merce, In . It' d . t, t Stationery, Books, Iliedlcmes, &c, when furmshed, at cur· ware and other arllc es to ,e u~e I,n con ,IC rent prices. . ... . .

. I I t ·ttel" from the u ges to whIch mHny To tbose who remain at the institutIOn dUrIng vacatIOn, Wll 1 IU IV, , I' d . . 'd an extra chalge will be made of $15. Or tbese ~fLicles are lo be app Ie , It IS eVI ellt , . ' . TERMS OF l!A Y-SCH?OL.

, 'I u · t he of a suptJl'lor quallLy and For tUitIOn m the common English bIanches, per ses· tbelr varnI$ 1 ~ S, .ion, . $5,00

naffecled by hq U1ds. Tuition in all, or a,nyof the other branches, In l'roportlOl' U as above.

DYE'S H ANIIU NG HOUSE, luo. S. Dye, - - PI'olll'ietol'.

S. East Corner 3d and W~ln~t" Ci.n~ inn,ati. Buys ,and lis I!::xchallge 011 all Lhe pnnclpal Cill es In the Unlt~d

~~ales and Canadas . All klUd::i uJ ~IlCUrr~lIt mon ey .dl::;. unted Ircoly at the lO\V~8t fa.tes. ~h~ Hlg hes~ preml,um

C~ili un golu.llntl SIlver. Interest p aId?u ue~.\)::Hts subJe~t fo be drawn at pleasure. ~lso th~ tt.:~pol.l~m .O,f j!~e.8 Balik Mirror and 00unterfelt ,Detector .Whillb b dl::itn· buted monthly to 75 .0UU SubSCrIbers . PrIce montbly $1 50. Remi moutbly $200.

IN'l'RODUC'l'IOti'TO THS SACRSD SCRIPTURES I BY Rr;V JOSf>PH lJIXON, D. lJ.

JU"T RECJ<;IVEIJ-Dr. Dixon's IntroLlucljon to the Sa­cred Scripture, This l::; one of the I.nost celebTated WOl ks ofloe acre a.nti wortllY of a plact> III every Llbrary. For sole by 0 , JOHN B. MA HON J<;Y, 167 Sycamore sHeet.

CITIZt<:N'S BANK-R~lEA.D, C~~L,A.RD & H,?GliES, Pro prietors-Mai n street, bel ween I hl~ tl atlu. F uurLb, ~ 111-plorR uver u J\HLulO.~ 01." lJOL"A I{::S, and dlscouuts fIee· ly at all seasolls. Money depo:::Ilted hi payable on .ue~,'nLl ]VitI! six per cent inte rest. June~5

FARM FOR SALE.

GENERAL REGULATIONS. No. J.-No student will be admitted fOl' a shorterperiocl

than asession. Nu deduction will be made for absence, uu ­less in case of sicl( ness, or dismissed .

I\0.2.-All letters al d communications to orb¥ the stu· dents,except those tu and from parellts. and guardIans, WIll De. subject to tbe inspection of th e Presldent.

No. 3.-No bookB will healloweu to circulate among the dtudents, unless previously approved by th.c.Pre~ide,nt.

No.4 -No advanceB will be made bX tIle lllstitution for 'clothing,or uther expenses,unless a sufficient sum be depos­ited wi th the Tl'easurer for that purpose.

No. 5.-The religion professed and tau~ht in the inst.itu­tion is the 'patholic. All tbe Btudents, Without excel'tJon will be exIfected to attend the public rel lgious ~xerci"es of tlle college: uniformity.and good ord.cr so e~ger~tlal to every well regu lated institutIon ,render thIS rule 1 nllispen~able.

No. 6.-E\"l'ry student is to be provi~eut ,?n ent~nn& col. lege with two goou suits or clothe$, SIX shuts, SIX palfs 01 socks handkerchiefs, towels, &.c..

No. '7.-A t the cloBe of each seBsion bulletinB wlii be sent to Parents and Guardians, ~iving a corr.ect s,tatement of tbe health, deportment, and progress of their c~lldren or w~rd8

No. B.-All payments to be made Beml·annually, In a

V1~\c:~tterB and communications relative to the institution o be directed, post· paid. to the ~residellt .. :,omerset. Perry coullty. Ohio, R<v. JAlVfER WR~.I<I.AN. O.R.ll ..

lll!.olley KeUllUeO 10 Hie 0161 ";OIlU ... 'Y. THE undersigneu has made arrangements to trausnllt

money direct. to England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. Persons wishing to remit money to ~hetr fnends In an)' part of 1 he Old Country, in large or small su ms. call do so, 1I~ the most safe and expeditious manner, througb t~e ~ubsc1'1ber who draws drafts payable at sight, In all the pnuClpal towns of Englan'l. Ireland Scotland, and WaleB. Monel' may be enclosed in a letter (post·pai~l from any part of the West-

Catll(lil'C Book !!!itol'e iu Colunlbus ern country to him, giving the name of the l>p.rson who IS to receive it, and the al ldress plainly wntten, wblC~ WIll be

Wn,LIAM O'DRIBCOLL, on Tbird otreet ntar State, Col· lorwarded without delay, by the firBt ~teaJI.ler leavlDg Bos. lImhus Ohio has constantly on han,l a lal'ge as~ortment of ton or New York, and a guaranty receIpt gIven or forward. CaU\OlicBo~lts, in various billdings, at Easte~n prices. ed immediately. .

J!ngliBb, German, and French Prayer Books, He may be Been at hiB reBidence, north Side of Kemble street,5 doors west of Western How, ncar .the new Oat~e, Beatts. Pictures, Crossr s, Medals, Stationary, etc. ral or at hiB Office on Third street, North Side, near MaIn.

OrderB are respectfully Bolicited. W. O'D. is agent for the opposite J'rust Company Ban Ii. . WM. A . O'HARA. Bo.tonPilot ; and HAS TH.b:·' CATHOLI0 Tl>LEGRAPH" REFERENCES.-Most Rev. ArcbblBhop Purcell; Very Rev

E. T. Collins; Very Rev. Edward Purcell.. anrl the Rev FOR SALE. mar~b26 Clergymen in the <.:ity and throll~hout the Illocese <urr

John O'llea, Catholic Booksellel', Fayetteville a, ""!IiIlOI'd. omilibus and. WEBTUlfROW,OPPOSITETHECA.TBEDRAL, U. S. Mail Line.

The subscriberB baving the contract lor tbemail hetween Keeps ponBtantlvon hand tbe best selecterl Btock of Milford and Hillsboro. daily between MillOI'd and Fay. Catholic Baal,s in tbe West. wbicn be is prepared to sell etteville and tri.weekl~ from thence to HIIIBboro, beg wholesale and retail at the lowest Eastern prices. lea~e to inform tbe public that they have procured a new

BreViaries, Missals, Bibles, frum 1 dullar to lU; Prayer and very comfortabl~ Omnibus to run daily between Md-Books from 15c to 10 dollars; Sacred Picture" Me,lalB and ford and Fayetteville. . Prayer Beads, plain and Bilver. All New Books received Leave Milford at 4 P. M., and arrive at Fayetto.vllle same 'B Buon as publisbed. Foreign workB imported to order. evening. Leave Fayetteville at 5 A, M ., and arnve nt. Mil. A liberal diRcount al lowed to tbe Rev. Olergy and tralie. ford at 9 A. lvI., connecting with the 10 o'clock train 01

OHURCH ORNAMf>NTS. cars to the citY,anti with the 2% train from the City, P, M Tickets can be prout'ced at the D<pollfl the City, througb

Vestments, Candlesticks, Remonstrances, Chalices, Ci- to Faye .. teville, and at J. & W. Boy lett) store I~ Fayette .. bonums, AS(lerges. Cencers, Oll·stocks, Franklnceuse,AI· ville to the city ,-and from Milford to F'~yette'vllle at the tor Varus With glit flame., &c. Also, Montauk House in Millord. We hope, wltb tbeadvantngeB

. . . CATHOLIC ~OOKS. of good teams, comfortahle convey." flce, careful and atten-MIssals, brevlane.s, martyrologlums. works. on .Theolo~y, ' tive t.lrivers. to share a Ii nera 1 p,ubllC patronage, anlJ wlll at German and Hnglldh Prayer Books alld MedltallOIlS, wlth the same time endeavor to ment the same_ sume Book. 01 Dovotioll ill French and lJutch beads, me· sepl8 J . & w. BOYLE, P«yeu.eville, Brown co., O. dais, vases, pIctures, ami other articles 01 devotiOIl, ~chl.lol , , r u ' '

bOOK', .t,tionel'Y. and every other arti cle kept by Catholic ~T . MARY S lJOLL~;" ~:, N ~~AH t-MI\'JlI I sBU IW, Book.ellers, all hand and solu at 10weBt prices by FREDERICK Co., MD. The annual commencement of

KREUZBURG & NURRE, studie. at MOUNT SAINT MA.RV'S COLLEGE. commences on dec 4 Main Btreet between Twelfth auu Tbirteenth, tbe lOth of ~ ngust, and ends 011 I,helast Wednesday of JUlle.

New Ca,tholic Book Stol·e. .JOHN MAHO~EY would .espectblly all"ounce tn bis

fnends and the public, that be has opened a store at No 16a Sycamore street one door above Fillh, West side, IOr tnt. ~asoICA'rHOLlC WORKS.SOf[OOL BOOKS, Stationery, . nnts, &c, &c.: as well as INK, wholesale and relail : He I?a~ent for the Bostoll Pilot, American Cell allLl Catholic VltIz.n and Catholic Telegr~ph; and trusts that by careful attentl.oll to the wants of Ilis customers he may merit al\ ertenslVep.tronage, No pains shall be spared on bis part to 8Ult all Who may fa vor hi m wi th thei J" orders

JOHN MAHONJ<;Y, 167 Sycamore st one door al-ove 51b tb N. S. The three above namell pape;s can be obtallle(l at

e store which will be open on Sunday moruing from 7 to balf post nine O'clock 'sep 18

ST. MARTIN'S, BROWN C()., uHIO. Mrs,. Grogory .. wilJ on the fifth of July, !lpen a honding

:,ouse III the VICllllty of the Ursuline Convent at St. M lr. .1~'S, Brown co" Ohio, And sbe wou ld re:=tpectfully so . lCll the patronage of persons vi~i ti ng the Con vc 11 t. j 112,i

~ManufactorY of Lotze's Patent Hot Air l.4'UTIlaCe for

I ~en~ing public hUiltlings,dwetUngs,stores,&c A'lso egl~ters, Ventilators, and a general as~urtment 0

ller ~OOlllng and heating~toveB Mantle Grates; tin, cop ow on Sheet Iron Ware; all of which he willsellat

A ~f~ p~l~e, No, 2] 9 WaIn ut street, west side, ahQve Fiftb ocns'o bing done with neatness and uispatcll.

• ·12m ADOLPHUR LOTZE

Dlagness, I-Iea~el & Wheelm', ::nUfactu~ers ofTron Raitin~, GnLt.ings, Balconies .. ::;tair. BIl~k and CemEtery RaUiligs. v{ all patterns. Abo, trau I t~

\Ro 'dOOl'8 ~nll Rhuttel's neatly made to ol'(ler, on Wet-iterl1 na~'~~~t slll.e, between Mason anti Ann streets, Cinciu ~o. Oct1

The terms fur Bonrd tlnd TUItIOn are $182-per annum, payable half·yearly in advance .. The onl¥ extra charges are, fur Music atld Dra wing, (whleh are. optIonal,) ~a,ch 84l! per annum j and for German and f-ipanlsh, (also opbona

eil;.~~e$l;tit~~:~llU;~e· always under the supervision and control of their Professors and Tutors, a!Id for~ .hu~ one family witb them. As all are il1s~ructed 111 the pnn.c1P!es of the Catholic Religion and reqUlre~ to. comply wltb ItB olIi; ltiODS, none-but Catholic patrouage IS ~ohclted.

Y vuths 1I0t qualified to en ter 011 the CollegIate course, are admitted into the Preparator, Department.

july 24 JOHN \1"CA FFREY, 0, n., PREBIDENT

i'ateut [Ueta,1I ic "ul'ia' '-Jase. THE Bubscribers having recelllly maue ar·

rangements with the Patentee Iff tbis new and valuable invention, for the mAnufacture ~nd sale of the article in the West, they havlllg been manufactured heretofore, exc lut:;ively in the East where they are superceding the use of wood~n coffins, tal(c this method o( inform· ing the public, that they are now manufac,tur. iug eighteen different sizes of the MODERN SARCOPHAGUS, varying ill length from. 22 inches to 6 Yz feet, with wiuth anti depth sUlta· ble for bollies of orLlinary size, and for th~se who desire spate for cushioning, or f~r bodIes of unusualllimensious,have :-'Ieveral SlZes that are deeper and wider. This invention, now coming into general u~e, is pronou n~eu one of the greatest of the age. Thesf: Bunal Case~ are cOlllposed of various Iriuus of , metals, but principally of iron

They are thoroughly enameled il~flide apd out, and thus muue impervlous to fl.lr anll III destructabJe. They are higllly ornameutal, anu of a classic form-are light and portable, wbi Ie they combine the greatest stre,ngth that metal is capable of, in a given quautlt}'.

\I\,-hen properly 'secured witt, cement, they are perfectly air·tight.and free from exhalation ofoffen~ive gases. They cost nu more than good wooden coffin~,and are be-tter than any utller article in use, (of whatever cost,) for transporta . tiOIl. vaults or ordinary intt! rments as haf': bePll prfJvt:11 by actual experiment~,al1d cert.ified to 'bysome of our most sci­entific men; a Iso by the Hons. H,f'lay, Dan ,Webster, LewiFl C;Hl 8.and other distinguisheu Ren<ttorl': who bave witlle~l:led

FLr:SH AhRIV ,LS AT TH~' their merits. whose letters. t.ogetherwith oth-r evidence. CEN'I'RAL 'rEA. S' ~'OI'E of their worth,m ay he seen at our Agent's Buri"1 Case De

No, 19~ l1ncJ 19"' • _.' pot, Nu . :174Main street, tbree uoor .. hove I\inth, where we

.eH AND. ADVOCATE The undersigned would call theattentlOn of hlo

~~!!!IJII!r friends and the public to his removal from hiS (lId stand to No, 2:16, one door South, to the eautiful store formerly occupied by Eaton &

Kitrige aB a Gun I<stablishment, whicb he has . fitted ul' expressly for the retailing of Hats and

Caps of his OWD manufacture. He now feels it in hIS pow­er to accommodate the wants of his old cu~tomers, who baveso long favored him witht.heirpatronage. Heilltend~, also, keeping a large assortmelJt of Summer Goods, and respectfully SOlicits a call.

. JAMES ERWIN, No. 236 Main street, ap3 East side, between Fifth and Sixtb.

I{J~NTUCKY LAND FOR 8ALK--A TRACT Of 1 022acres of first rate land.lYll1g in the county of Union and State ofKentuckY,aboutS mileB from the Ohio River, bacl( from Caseyville. In paint of soil, water, timber, and surlaLe,this tract of land is inferior to none; its richness of soil and contiguity t.o water transportation, render it well calcu lated for profitable agricu Itu]'e: tbe soi 1 and climate are al80 well a,lapted to the culti vation of tobacco.

There are, in the county of Union, a Catholic Priest, two churches,eight stations,anu 700 communicants-a fewIrish and German Catholics, but mostly Americans . TLe Priest (Mr.Durbin) resideBin Morganfield,the county Beat orunion /.jounty.

T') GERMAN EMIGRANl':3

There is a largeuody of land ill Coff"e cllunty, Ten­nessee, fl'om 1f),UIIO to 20,OllO "cres tlll'o' the midst of which a Railroad is beillg "uil t and 'ral)idly aov~ncing. This road will bring the laud Wilhin 4 h"uls travel of Nashville,s'l that au easv market is affurd .. d for all luuda of prodnce, We recom illend this land to all emigrants who wisl! for a cheap and happy home. tead, exce llent water. fiue pastul'age, el", everything ill a word needed for farming purposes. The price we COfl­sider low ind~ed; the quality of the land, or at least a portioll of it seen by us, is 2nd rate; but we advise tho'e interested to come alld see for themse lves, well convinced that none will regret their journey.

J. SCHACHT, Rector of the Cathedral , Nashvill,', Tenn.

N.13. We should have stated in the above notice, that Ii ve h u lid red acres of land, part of this tract, have been appropriated for the building and elldowrnent of a Catholic Cnurch. Reference had at Arcbbi;hop Put·cell's.

C. B. ROSB. Esq" living adjoining tbe land, iB my Agent anti Will show it to anyone wishing to purchaBe. I will 4 500 AORES OF LA~D FOR S:\.LE, In give a bargain in this fine tract onand, and make the pay. " ll'acts to suit settlel's. ments eaBy. WILLIAM S. WALLER, C

octll·t! Lexir.gtOll, Ky 'fhis land-a1Joinlllg the St. Clam [G~I'mIl111 01-TO PURCHASERS OF MUSlC.-The sub.cTibers bave ony, in Doddridge cOllnty, Wes er:1 Virg!uia~45

again enlarged their Music Printing i>stabli.hment, aud miles from the 011 0 River, [St M<1ry s Lalldlng] alld are now prepared 10 supply Music Dealers, Book·sellerB, 12 mIles fl'o 'n the Buitlmor( and I 'h;o Rail Road to Heaus 01 schools, ProfessorB o~ Music, and tnose wbo pur I Pal'kersbul'g-i~ of ,nore than ord'uary fel·tili'y~ alld chaseto.sell agllln, at I,?wer rnceB ,than goods of a silllilar particu larly well adapted to c>1nle raising The col-descnphon cau be obtained at the East. . d 50 . . I G

Our Mu.ic is all engraved and printed at bome, by Cin- ollY coutallis upwar s of families-Illost y er-cinnati workmen,and our catalogue is equal to any other man, and has Ii CatholIC Chnrch, attended every ill tbe Union. month by the Oatholic Pasior at Westoll.

B¥ comparing our priceB with the pTices of other pub· Price of laud per acre :fl;2,-and upwHd., "ccording h"lllng houses. purchasers Will be conVinced that we sell to quality alld locality. J F M811NE from 15 to 25 per cent 10 wer. '. . .' ~ ,

Persons enclosing two po,tage st.mps, can have a full a,,19-610 TllIrd st, oppo'ite Buruet House. catalogue 01 our Mu .<ic. (witb a lisl of prices al tached), for CH URCH BI"LLS TIlf' subscri her 11 fit'T many warded per mall to any add~~s(./r~e.E°ff1fR~t~esONS, years experience ~al1d ~UCb ohservation in tile form, selec • G01'. raja 67;n Fourth and Walnut streets. tion, and p~ol?er conlp~u.l1d of metals, to give the greatest

degree ofsulH.lIty, elastIclly, and strength,and the most rnu­THOM A S ~ULLIV AN, GENTI.EhtEN'S FASHIONABLE sical tone,assures the publiG that Re,lls ca~t at hi~ (ountlcl'Y ROOT MAKER, 1'20 Walnutstr.eet, two doors abovE" are unexcelled ill ~onorousn ess,purity,mel(\dy oftfwe, and

JEl lis&Morto,ll'sBalik. As helf!1ports hi~ own stock quality of worJunanship,by any manufactured in this coun--selected With great care-of first rate quality, and try.

confines himselJ to a respectable CUSTCM TRADE. he nOAR' Peals or Cbimes of any number of bells, or single bells ot ANTE!<;S a splendid fit and All exquisitely finb:hell article, a particular tone or l( ev. c.a~r, t.o orrler. made for the highesl wages by men who have worked for the Bells of various siz"es al ways on hand, with the latest bestshops in Europe a.nd. America. d.I.I ~ most approved plan of yoJ~ es, wheels, and springs at ..

N. B, Sboes and Gaiters of every style and m08tcomplete tached. finisb. made to order And on hang. july 17 Further information that may be desired on this Bubject,

Consulafe [01' FI'anee will be cheerlully communicated by addressillS the subscn· , ber hy mail or otherwise. r;EO.I,. HA!'II<R. SARDINIA ..

BELGIUM, SWEDEN,

alld NORWAY, No 99, West Tbird st<eet, Cincinnati.

J. F. MELINE, VICE-CONSUL AND CONSULA.R AGEH'l".

--(ii)--Having made arrangements with the HOUf~e of HOTTIN' GUEUR & Co ., Paris, and ether responsible BdJlJ{crs on the COlltillent, I am prepared. LO remit money ill lar !:. e or small sums to any partof France, Switzerland, BelgIUm, Italy Luxemberg, Rhenish Prussia and Baden,

Persons at a t..iistanct' forwarding me by mail the amount they wish to remit, with the all<lress 01 the party to Whom they wish it seut, will receive, by returll mail, a rec.eipt, or2d or Exchange, alld advice ofremittallce of 1st 01 Ex· chnnge to addre~s by the earliest steamer.

Cullections of claims, i 11 htni lances , pensions, a nnuities t &c ., &c., made in the above named countries.

.J. F. M.b:LINF., mar5 3d street, opposite Burnet House.

Second Hand FUl'nitul'e. Counters, shelves, show cascB, side cases, deslts. and store fixtures in general, platform scales trucks, &c ., ice chests,

t refrigerators, bellows, anvi Is. and tools, with a general aB­sortment of furniture, stoves, &c., al ways on hand at the Second Hand Purniture and Val'iety Rtore, NOR.28 and:lO Waterstreet,between Mainand Walnl1tBtreets~CinciDnatit Ohio. my29 L D AN lJ.b:RSON.

O'CONNOR &BROTBER dealers in staple and rancy dry goods -no.30 Firth SLreet,b~tween V\ralnut and Mai n,CillCinnat..!.

ge. JOHN TOBIN, LARD OIL M~NU'ACTURER.-Fac­tory on Reventh s wreet, east of Hroau wa}'. where

~~orders will be thanl.:.fully received anti pUllctually attp.IHleu to or at lis residence, No. 224, ea~t siu~ of Broad­way, a few doors south of Seventh, Ci!lCinnati, O,~b22-

~PIERCE SHEEHAN. Wholesale and Retail Gl'o, ~ cer, deaU'r in extra Family Flour, Foreign and Domestic Liquors, Broad. way, bet ween Court and Hunt 3treets. Cincinuati. Ohio. july]; TV

Jas. Riclla.'dson's FUl'Ilii .. hin; st.ol'e. S~JIRT AND STOCK MANUFACTORY.

No 4 East Fourth street, one door EaBt or Main, Cincina!!

HIDES, OIL .~ND LEATHER. T. Cronin & Co., dealers in Hides, OIL ANl' LE,ATHER,No.2 Water street, between Main anu vVaJnut, Cincilllfati,O.­Skirting, Harlless, black and fair Bridlt:~eatliel',H o~ Sk~ns, Sheep ~kills.Sole and Upper Leather, KIp and Oalf SkInS, M orotco, Linings, &c., &c.

P. CODY, WHOLESALE r.ROCEH, Commipsion Merchant, Dealer in Prouuce. Liquors, &c. Nos. 17 and 19, Water slreets, between Main anti Walnut.

EAGLE INSUJ{ANOE COMPANY p, H. O'HARA, RETAILRR OF GROCER1ES AND PRO · O,OINCINNATI-FIRE A.NDMARINE. CAPI1'ALSTOCK,$100,OOO

VISIONS. Insures property of all uescriptions against Loss oru~mage Soutb West corner of Fourth Btreet and WeBtern Row,- by Fire. Also, against the perils of the Sea, or Inland Na-Give him a call, all who arein wan I of such articles. vi~~~~~. or DIRECToRs.-lsaac C Copelan, __ _

OSBORNE'S New Floua' Store,

128 FOURTH STREET, Near Race, Oincinnati. The foJlowing articleB, all of the best quality, are al

ways on hand, fresh ground, and delivery made in barrels, balf barrels, or bags:-Extra Pastry and Whit. r,orn Meal, wbite and yellow; Wh~at Family Flo~r; Hominy, four sizes; Buck wheat Flour; OaLmeal; Whe"tmeaI; Graham or unbolted Flour; Wheal Fari.na; Rye Flour; Rye Mea!; Wheaten GritB; Maizette or Corn Farina; E1lgli~h Split Peas; Orvis' Corn Starch; Pea Meal; White Beans; Erkenbrecker's and Fox's Pearl Harley;

\0\ beat Starch; Macaroni, Vcrmicellij Purifietl Pearl Starch; '1 apioca, Sago.

Bishoprick's B'kg. Powder, etc. Sbippers , SteambIJats, HotelB, and Grocers, Bupplieel at

wholt8ale price!7-uelivered free. Country orders promptly filled.

T.b:RMS-CAsH ONLY, june25

Newand Second Hand FUI'niture. JOHN CAHILL's

New anti S~cond Hand Furnitnre and Genera I HouBe Fur. nh~hing Depot, ~u.3:l5 Western Row, between

.b:ighth and Kemhle sts Beusteads, mattrasses, wash stands . carpets, chairs,tahlee, stovcs,rocl{ lng cbairs, burt:!aus, w anJrobes,glasB and queens ware, constantly on hand. and for sale low for cash. noJ3

CABINET FURNITURE, No. 125, FIFTH STREET WM, CRAMS~Y. begs respectfulJy toinfcrm the citizens

WmWood, Richard Conkling;Sarnuel H. Tart, Henry Res­ler, anu George W .Townley, Isaac C. Oopelan, PFesidel1t. James B. Stoc]{ton, Secretary.

The Office of t~e Eagle lusurance Oompany baBbeen re . moved to the North West corner of Mai n an~ Front streets - over Burdsal and Brotbers Drug <,tore-sign oftbe Gold-en .Eagle. J. B'STOCKTO~, ~ecretary.

FRlt>;L, M'GUIRE &. GO., MI<RCHANT TAILORS, No:256 ""alnut Sireet,

BETWEEN SIXTH AND SEVENTH BTREE!fS, CINCINNATI.

Have just received a largE" and beautiful assOFlment of Spring GoodB,consisting of Cloths, eassiruercs. Ve~tingBt &c., tugether with a variety of Geutlemen's Furnishing Articles .

We feel confident we can give satisfaction to all who may favor us with their patronage, both as to prioe alld quality. "1,123

O'OONNOR & BROTHER, DealerB In stal,le a:~ fancv Dry G, Ods-No, 30 Fifth st.,

between Walnut nod Main, Cincinnati.

BOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE. The house and lot next the Orphan Asylum, on McFar­

land strt;ct. a vl!ry comfortable resideuc;e for a small fa.mi Iy. Apply to rM. ll. 'BARRY, or P. CODY. ju .. e IB

DR. NEWMAN'S SERMONS Just received, Dr. Newman's DiscourseB to Mixed Con

gBregations ; Gury'B 'fheology , aut! Nil. 15 of Haytlock'-ible. JOHN B, MAHON.b:Y

June 23 16, !lycamore st., above Fi fth.

I of<':incinnati, that h' keeps constantly on hand a general Dr. J. J , qUinn, assortment of Cahinet Furniture. milde in the best manner OFFICE AND RESIDENCE.-RoUTH SIDE OF SEVENTH STREET and in the latest style of fast-ion. that he is prepared to BETWlI:EN HACE .• AND l£LM .. ,,~(~!'I~0~.~J~~~3~) _ _ ______ _ execute orders for lurniture or for upholstering, at the shortest notice on reasonable terms, and solicits II. Bhare POLAND &: HENRY, ofpuhlic patronage. Hi. wareroom is now otoc l,ed with (SUCCESSORS TO CORH & POLA ND" an aSBortmcn t of sofas, couches~ ,I ivan s, chai rs, elizabeth Wholesale Grocers, T.llqU or and Com misflioll Merchn nts.

I cliuirs and rockIng chairs mouelcd to tb,e latest form, to· No, 38 and 40, corner of Second and Sycamore Streets, Oin­get her with centre tahles, dining I ables, penbroh:e tablcEI, &innati. worktable, dressing tables, and everytbll1g necessary to Agents rOT the sale of Bourbon Whisky, &c. furniBh a house. Call and examine ihe goods before you ____ _ buy elsewhere. june 4 CITY INSURANCE OOMPANY.

Best Congo '1'ea. FIRE AND MARINE CITY INSURANCE COMPANY OF CINCINNATI Our" OLD COUNTRY" friends will please remember that insures property of all description against loss or damage by among the great variety of TEA on hand we have a fine fire; also, against the perils of the Sea, or Inland ~avigation Congo which we are Melling at 33c. 'I his Tea sellB in DIRECTORS.- E. B. Reeder,J. O.ThHp , J.P . Kllbreth, W. EnglaL .. , Rcotlttnd, and Irela.nd, for four or fi ve shilli ngR.- Rurnct, J. M. Blair, E. S. Haines, GeOl·ge Oarlisle, H.'Raper, A 11 other deseription. of Tea cheap~r than the cbeapest, in and H, L. Hoffman. E. B. Heeder, Presiuent. N. Gregory, packages of not IMeBos toh!E~ o&neCPHoEu~,nTd·ER. Secretary, OFFICE-No.8 Front street, between Main anel

n. ..... Tea Det:1 - rs, Sycamore, Cincinnati, Ohio oc25 my32 corner Seventb and Walnut sts CU<.."NATI.

LA W PARTNERSHIP

The undersigned have formed a co partJlership in the Practice orthe La w. UDder tbe uame of Wartlen & Paddacb -Office, No. 21 :r'hird Btreet, opposite the Franklin Bauk .

TUDOR &. FOLEY, House Carpenters and Joiners, Soutb side Richmond lI.ud Western Row. All orders attended to with punctuality.

11 Weslern

(l'KEEFI< &. VO., MEkCHAfiT TAILORS, Row, West "ide betwP.en Fifta and Sixtb sts"

Cincinnati, Ohjo.

P. TUNDY, , CA RP];NTER A~D BUILDER, PEA RL STREET. I Between Plum and W~stt!l'n RoW', opposite Market House

CINO INN A TI. • Alljobbing in the Oarpo"ter lirre, promptly attended to, Por competence and ablli ty, refers to-Messrs. J oh n <ton

& Jacl(soll, W. P. DeVOll & Rockwoorl, and Geo. White, Fiftb ;treet. june 4

DOUGHI<RTY & BROTHER, Whole.sole Dealprs in Fo'ei,gn and Domestic Liqnors,

STONE OUTTING. WM. BROOKFIELD & SON, MA RRLE WORKR, O'n ~he west side of Broadway. between Fifth and Sixth sts., Om· cinnati, 0., manufacture to order, M-;Hlument.s. Tombs and Graved Rtones, Mural Tables, BaptIsmlll Fo.un~s, M'antro Pieces, Urns, Vases, Italian and Americllll Tiles, &~., &c. Cabinet and Counter Tops, Rtatuary aml Gar~en FIgures Designs furnished to orller and work executed III the neat .. est, most approved style, sculptured or pillin. . dec 27

DI{Y GOODS STORIi. T COSTELLO' dealer in staple and fancy dry goods, Fifth at'reet bet ween Main and Sycamore sts., sells cheap for cash, , ag 21

IligRCHANT TAILOR. EDWARD CONNOLLY, Mr. rchant Tail?r, n~. 18~ Wal,nut, 8~· between Fourth and Fiftll, east sLie, Cillclunatl. A .. l or,iers attended to with p~ptness. Oc16

.BANKING HOUSE. Money sent tolreland,Scot1and,England, and the continent of Europe in large and small sums.by

, GEOI{GE MILNE & CO., Third Btre,et, oc25 Opposite the Lafayette and Franl<lin BanI,".:...

FORWARDING MERCHANTS

200 pa k ;) CO:- \\ eRtt-'rIJ Row alld t' It lh 8tl'pet8 i lltend to keep on hanll at all tlme£:l, such CI stock of all sizes imputto~ioages fine green and blacl, TI<AR, from tbe 1,Iest and de.ree,B of ornament and finish aB will suit the most STEAM MARBLg WOHKS, gOlle, ns. Call aud try them for tbey will soon be di-,ersifieu ta:-:tes. CHARLES RULE-late-LoWRY & RULE.

Segars. etc" No 7 Water street. apl:l3 Paul &: Murdoch, steamboat agents, FORWARDING AND cell( MISSION MIl!RCHANTS, NO. 12 W ATI!:R ST . , near ,\1.iline,recelve untl forwaru all kinds ofgooLl. to Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York, by Bingham's Transportation Lin.e,and Ceutral T . . J. W. TY"ON. I We invite thea'tentio)l olthe public, and o.f un,dertakers Corner Hroa<lwlLY ILnd Fifth streets, Cincinnati,

--------:a Store, corner FIfth and Western Row. particulrrly thl oughout the "Vest, to an ~Xamll1atlol1 of ~he . Dealer in Foreign and A mf'rican Ma.rble Tomhs, Monu. CAT l' article,Hnd r~quest therr~ not to rely.upon the repr~sentat l o_n I ments, Grav(> Stones, Bap!f!;IDIUi Fount~, Mural Tables,

ta print !JOLTC F.L1WR jl. PH AND A DVOCA1'F.. of undrrtalrer~ not. USlng the Mtlcle, whose Interest It I Urns, Vaces. Statuari, and Garden Figures. CArll ed every Saturday morni ng, by JOHN P. W ALBH. at would be to I.1lsrep~esen~he!", W, C, J)A VI I' <'V ~O. COli st. ntly on hand. ltallan, I<gyptiall, and American

OL1CTELf>GRAPH PRINTING ERT~BLISHM'NT EAGLE ~HO.b: ~TOPE, Marble Mantles; hurenu, coullter, pier, and centre table No 9 - m I '. I I No, 34 F fth "treet, is I be pi" ce to bt ~nod Boots and .hoes 'lOpS. The Trade supplied wllll Marble .l:!locks, 01' maLlo

. a rra nut street, abo'lle Pe:lrl at a very low rate. Cal before you PUl'l.JJ.se elBewhere to order, may 14

Pe" , , , 'ani, Canal andl{ailroad. s4

P • .T. llIoOl'e, Plumber, Pltmp and Hydrant Malrer, 223 Fiftb Btreet, be­

tween Elm and Plum, Uincinllf1ti, haF: on hand and wl11 'urnish Leau Pipes, Water Closets, Ba.th~, Pump. and ~y. Irant •. All orders for tbe country Will be executed With aeatness and uispatch. mar3l

8 CATHOLIC -~~-~~~~~~============~

TELEGRAPH AND ADVOCATE ~ For the Catholic Telegraph.

"'fHE LAST OF THE IRISH MARTYRS," MOST REVER'D_ OLIVER PLUNKETT,

PRIMATE OF IRELAND.

(Continued from bth page.)

Attorney· General--He was a public officer, a nd they might well know bis hand ..

Lord Chief Justice-I believe any body tbat batb seen us write but a little, would soon know

our hands. MacMoyer-His hand is as well known over

Ireland as mine is among my aequaintance. Lord Chief Justice-Well, go on. MacMoyer-During the time of bis imprison­

ment, I bave received bis commands to many of bis inferior dignitaries, commanding them "subpoona suspensionis" to bring the monies assessed for bringing in tbe French army; and that there was no hetter time, tban the time of bis impl'isonment, to bring it in.

Lord Cbief Juslice-Wbo were they, you say, tbat were commanded "subpoena suspen­sionis?"

MacMoyer--Since his taking, I bave seen in the time of his imprisonment bis commands to bis inferior dignitaries, not to be forgetful of the monies that were assessed towards the sup­plying of the French army; and tbat tbere was no better time to bring in the Fleneh tban wben he was in prison.

Lord Cbief Justice-How long ago was that? MacMoyer - The 1st of February, 1679.

'fbe second and last of it was in July and No­vember last.

Lord Cbief Justice-And this was to bring in the money?

MacMoyer--Yes, to supply the French army. And that there was no better time than during bis imprisonment, and they sbould not be so much suspected.

Lord Chief Justice--And these mandates you have seen under his band?

MacMoyer- Yes, I have, my lord. Attorney-General-Wbat do you know of

bis summoning or issuing out these warrants fO'r lists of men?

MacMoyer-I bave not seen any of the war­rants; but the pl'iests have told me they were cOmmanded by his warrants, to let him know how many there wl::re in all their parishes from sixteen to sixty.

Attorney-General-.-You say you never saw

the mandates? MacMoyer--No, I did not. Sergeant Jeffries--What do you know about

the prisoner's viewing the ports? MacMoyer--I have seen him going about

from port to port; to Derry, Carrickfergus, Corily, Down and Cal'lingford, and all about.

Sergeant Jp,ffries-When he went to take a view of these ports, can you tell to what pur­pose he did it?

MacMoyer - Yes; I heard it among the Church, thilt he went on purpose to view the

sea'ports, to know the strength of all the gar­risons, to see which was the most convenient way to bring in the French army.

Sergeant Jeffries-Did you ever speRk with the prisoner at the bar about his going?

MacMoyer-No. Sergeant Jelfries-What place did he pitch

on as most convenient? MacMoyer--Carlingford. Attomey· General--Were you in the prison­

er's company when he viewed the ports? MacMoyer--I have seen him go to and fro;

I did not go all the circuit round with him. Plunkett·--Did you ever see me at Carling­

ford? MacMoyer-No.

Plunkett-Did you ever see me at any other of the ports?

MacMoyer-I have seen you at Hamilton's, (loming back from Derry. Do you not remem­ber that you lodged at Sir Geo. -_

Plunkett-I never lodged there in my li fe? Sir Francis Withins-Have you any thing

Imore to say concerning the plot in general? MacMoyer-No; in general, I have not. Sergeant Jeffries--He hath not only given an

accounL of the general plot, but fixed it upon the prisoner.

Attorney. General---Dr. Plunkett, will you ask him any questions?

Plunkett---You say, you remember you saw me at my first coming as primate, ten years ago; and that you were at the priory, when I was there?

MacMoyer--Yes.

Plunkett--You were invisible to me. Lord Chief Justice-If you will ask any

questions, do; but do not make these kind of observations.

Plunkett-Tell me this, why did you not ac­quaint some justice of the peace then with what you knew, that which you had heard seven years ago?

MacMoyer-W hen I first lmew it, I was as willing to have it concealed as they.

Lord Chief Justice-What is your question, Dr. Plunkett?

Plunkett--He says, my lord, that ten years ago I had such a design in hand, and he knew the money was collected for these very ends, and lle knew of the design from that same Cap­tain O'Neall, whom I employed and sent abroad; and that I had a design to. bring in the French at Carlingford, and went about to all the ports in Ireland and pitched upon that as the most convenient; and yet it is so incon­venient for the bringing in a foreign force, that anyone that knows anything of the roaps of the world will easily conclude it otherwise. But I say, my lord, why did IlC not tell some justice of the peace that I was upon su"h a design, but let me live in Ireland ten rears after, and never speak of it till now?

Lord Chief Justice-What say you to the question?

Plunkett--When he saw me all the time, and to the time of my being taken prisoner and never said one word; for I was a prisoner six months only for my religion, not one word of treason spoken of against me for so many years; why did he not acquaint some justice of the peace with it before.

Lord Chief J ustice--What religion were you of then?

MacMoyer-I wa(a Roman Catholic. Plunkett-And are you not so now? Mac Moyer-Yes, I am so.

'J ustice Dolbein-Tberefore it will be no won· del' that. you did not discover it.

Sergeant Jeffries-But I ask you why did not you diecovel' it all this time?

McMoyer-Because I was a papist myself: the first tbat did discover it, he and I did con­sult about it, I had him charged to do so, and I had set him to work; but he was ill paid for having discovered it: you got him to be tre­panned, that be hath gone to danger of his life for it.

Plunkett---wbo is the man? MacMoyer--- Moyer.

(To be continued.)

DIED, At his residence in Chillicothe, Ohio, on the 26th

instant, after a lingering illness, MI'. Walter Walsh, a native of Carricl!-on·Suir, County Tipperary, Ireland. May his soul rest in Peace. Amell.

-----------. - - -Receipts.

Edward Hassan, BradysvH!e, ~dams, 0., March 1, '54, 2,00 Rev. J. F. llIcSweeney, MaYSVille, Ky., August l2, '54,2,00 John Hawley. Kinderhool! Pike, Ia., up to May 22, '54,200 !II. R. Murphy, Louisville, Ky., paid up to April 1, '54, 2:00 John Elder, Hardinsburg, Ky., paid to January 24, '54 ,2,00 E. L. MattIngly, " .," " 8, '54, 2,OU J. L. Mattiugly, " March 6th, '54,2,00 Joseph McGill, " " II U 2,00 J. K. Keenan," ,." " " "2,00 Timothy Murphy, Huntsville, Ala. , to January 1, '54,4,00 C. B. l\Ifinlll s, l\'lihJ(en's Bend, La., to January 1, '52,5,00 Mrs. Postlewate.lIomer P. O.,Ohio,to January 1, '54,2,00 Mrs. A. L. Rousdel, Alexandria, La., to August 1, '53,4,00 Wm . P. Skidmore, Springfiel(l,Ky, to February I, '53 , 2,00 B. R. Clarl<, Fairfield, Nelson, Ky., to August I, '54,2,00 John Smith, CinCinnati, Ohio, paid to August 1, '53, 1,25 G. Milne & Co., Cincinnnti, Advert1sing" 1, '53, ],50 J. Richardson, II U '" 1, '53,2,00 J. Richardson, for Tel'gh. to April 3, '5<1,2,50 E.O Dowd, .• to Feb'y 1, '54, 1,00 John Fitzpatrick, in full to date, 2,50 Mr. Hart, to May 24, '54., 2,50 J. Erwin, for Allvertising, July 3, '53, 2,00 Denis McMullen, to Februury 2, '54,2,50 Hugh Kenedy, to August8, '53,2,50 Jas. O'Conner, to January I, '54, ~,50 Ellen O'Bden~ to August], '54,2,50 J ohn Mahony, to July 23, '53,25,00 Edward Flood, to July 4, '54,2,50 Farrell Cusack, to August 1, '53, 2,5G Ellen Beaty, to !liarch 1, '54, 2,5G Thomas Walsh, Cf to August 1, '53,2,50 T. Kelly, 363 3rd st ., " on account, 2,00 Samuel Martin," to September 1, '53, 1,25 James Casey, to January 1, '54,2,00 James Casey, H for Prh1ting, 9,75 J. McDonnell, Keokuk, Iowa, paid to February 6. '54,1,00

Standal'd School Books. J OUN MURPUY & Co., Publishers and Booksellers, 178

Market Stl'eet, Baltimore, Desire to invite particular attention to the following list of Standard cchooillooks, of their own publica­tion, most of them baving been compiled, or careful­ly revised, by !VI. J. Kerney, Esq., a g~ntleman of dis· tinguished ability, and a l'i'actical Teacher of many years' experieuce. The others, with two or three ex­ceptions, were originally published by the Metropoli­tan Press, uuder lhe auspices Ilnd careful supervision of the Eminent Professors of St. Mary's College. Bal­timore. These considerations they trust wlil be suf· ficient to invite a careful examination from the prin­cipals and conductors of Schools throughout the couutry.

Teachers, ano others , who may desire to introduce any of the following works, will be supplied with copies for examination, Or Catalogues comaining re­commendations, on application personally, 01' by let­ter, pr~paid. Just Pulliished, 1 vol. 12mo. illustrated with upwards

of 100 Fine EngraVings, cloth 7il cts.;

A Catechism of ScriptuI'e History, compiled by the Sis~ers of Mercy for the use of children attending thell' Schools. Embellished with Engravings i1lus· trating the subject. This, work has been usen for some years in Manu­

script in the Schools of the Sisters of Mercy, Limer­ick, Ireland, having been compiled fol' the more easy instruction of their pupils.

The object in compiling this Catechism was to give th? c~lildren not only an accurat~ lmowledge of the prinCipal events recorded iu holy Scril)ture, and a clear idea of the time in which each of these occurred. but also to familiarize them with the propher.ies relating to our Divine Lord, and thns to lead them to regard the Old Testament as a fignre and foreshlldowiug of the New. The connection between both has been de­veloped as clearly as the limits of a school book would allow. The Catechism form is adopted to render it less difficult to commit the facts to memory. Two 01'

three hi.tories have, however, been iutroduced, partly a~ exercises in reading. and partly to accustom the pu­ptJ to relate eve 'I tS in detail. A~ a medium of conveying a knowledge of the

lead lllg events of sacred history to the minds of the young it appears to be weJl adapted, and worthy of earnest commendation. It is a convenient book for the use of families an.d schoots, and we trust it will soon be extensil'ely adopted by those engaged in the moral instruction of the rising ge neration. The IIU­

mere us cuts which adol'l1 it, represenling scenes re­corded ill the Scriptll1'es, are well calculated to attract the attention of young readers."-Catholir. Instructor.

The Publishers have the pleasure of announcing that this work ha. been introduced into the Academy of the ViSitation, Georgetown, St. Joseph's Academy, E:nmittsburg, fi nd several others of the I~ading Cath­oltc Institutions in the United States.

Just Puhlished in 1 vol. supel' royal 32mo. stiff papel' covers, uniform with Irving's Series of Catechisms, Pri.::e, 1276 cents;

A Catechism of Sacred History: abridged for the Use of Schools. Translated from the French by a Friend of You tho As an introductory work, this will be found to pos­

sess n~ally advantages; its style and arrangemeilis al'e peculIarly adapted to the nature and capacity of chil· dren. It presents to the mind of the learner, a clear and concise view of the most important and interes t· ing events recorded in the Old and New TeSlaments.

The Catholic Miscellany says: "An excellent little work, conceived in the true Catholic spidt. The Church wisely trias to teach children what is in the Bible, whether of history or moral teaching; while sectarianism puts the book itself iuto the IhUlds of childre n that they may try their infant hands at the Protestant work of private interpretation, with great danger to morals and almost certainty of losing all reverence for the sacred volume."

Just Published inl vol. 12mo., half arabesque, 38, THE CHEAPEST AND BEST LATIN GRAMMAR!

Ruddimall's Rudiments of the Latin Tongue; or a Plain and Easy Introduction to Latin Grammar: wherein the principles 'If the language are methodi· cally digested, both in the English and Latin. With useful.Notes and Observations,explaining the terms of Grammar, aud further improving its rules. By THOMAS RUDDIMAN. 1\1. A. Thirtieth Genu­ine Edition, carefully Corrected and Improverl. By WILLIAM MANN. M. A ., Classical Teacher. 1\1urphy & Co. have the p leasure of announcing

that they have purchased from Messrs. Thomas, Cow­pertbwaite & Co. the stereotype plutes and copy-right of this popular work. In making this announce­ment they deem it unnecessary to enlarge Oil its mer­it~. The work is extensively used in the principal Colleges and Academies in the United States, and is esteemed as the cheapest and best Latin Grammar pub­lished. Copies for examination 'v iil be furnished gratuitously; on application, personally, 01' by letter prepaid.

Kerney's First Class Book of History, 25; Do's. Catechism History of the U. States, 1~; Do's. Com­pendi um of Ancient and Modern History, 75; "Ker­ney's Abridgement of Murrav's Grammar and Exer­dse, 15; Do's. Introduction to Colnmbian Arithmetic, 13; Do's. Columbian ArithmetiC, 38.

"Thi s Grammar has been Introduced into the Public Schoo Is of llaltimore.

Irving's Series of School Catechisms, in 12 parts. Revised by M. J. Kerney, Esq.

Catechism of Astronomy, 13; do. Botany, 13; do. Practical Chemistry, 13; do. Classical Biography, 13; Catechism of Mythology, 13; do. History United Stutes, 13; do. G,ecian His10ry, 13; do. History of England, 13; do. Roman History, 13; do. Jewish Antiquities, 13; Grecian Antiquities,I3; Raman An­tt'quities, 13; Catechism of Sacred History-abridged, 13; Murray's English Grammar-complete, 20. Fredet's Ancient History, from the dispersion of the

Sons of Noe, to the change of the Roman Republic into an Empire, 88. FrAdet's Modern History, from the Coming of Christ to the year of our Lord 1850,8tl. These two volumes form a complete connectio n or

continuous chain of historical events from the creation of the world to the year 1850.

McSherry'S History of Maryland, with Questions, &c., 75.

Office of Ihe Commissioners of Public Schools, Baltimore, FAb. 10, 1852.

Messrs. John Murphy & Co. Gentie'lllen,-The Commissioners of Public Schools,

after a careful examination, h'lve unanimously adopt­ed McSherry'S History of Maryland, Abridged, for ~se in the Schools under their . supervision, believing It to be admirably adapted to the instruction of youth.

J W. TILYARD, Clerk Commis, ioners of Public Schools.

Epitome Historim SacI'm, 30; Villis lliustribus ROfl1m, 38; Phredri Fabulre, 30; Setectre Ovidii Fabulre. 38; Fables Choisies de La l' ontaiUf', 63; ABC und Buckstabir und L esebuch, (German Primer) 13; Katholisr.her. Katechismus, (Ger. Cat.) 19; Biblische Geschichte des Alten und Neuen Testamentes,25 ; Etementos de Sicologio, (Elements of Pyschology) 75 ; Pizarro's Dialogues, Spanish and Engli.sh, 75 ; Catechism of Scripture History, 75; Ruddllllan's Latin Grammar, 38. ~ A liberal discount is made from the foregOing

prices to Booksellers, Teachers, and others, pu rchas­ing in quantities.

n:::r J. MURPHY & Co. have the pleasure to announce to thp,ir numerous friends and p~trons, that in addition to their own list of School 'Books, their arrangements with the principal publishers, are such, as to receive all new works on Education as so Oil a. iss lled-alld to keep a large stock constantly on hand, which enables them to suppty orders with the least possible delay.

SCHOOL and CLASSICAL BOOKS, PAPER, STATIONERY, &c-A large and we ll selected stock, comprisiug every varietv, eomtantly on hand.

FRENCH SCHOOL BOOKS.-The latest and best editions ~f French School Books kept constantly on haod--or Imported to order at short notice.

BOOKS SUITABLE FOR PREMIUMS.-Col­leges, Seminaries, &c., will find their stock of Books in this line extensive, and welt worthy of their atten­tIOn, as tlJey are seleCted wiih care, as regards con­tents, as well as style and prices.

n:::r ORDERS are respectfulty solicited-to which they pledg~ them~elves to give the sam e careful ahd prompt attentIon as If selected in person.

PartIcul ar attention given to the packing and ship­ment of orders for disl3nt points.

NOTICE.-My patrons who tal,e the SUN NEWSPAPER on the route bounded by Seventh;Miami Canal, and Main and hlound. slreets, will please pay no oue forthe papers but the uuu~rslgneJ, owner of the route. I will setLie with Mr. Whlteluck, who bas surrendered the bool's and accounts.

MICHAEL MURPHY. . Mr. W. has (lelivered the paper for me during my recent lilness. au6

NEW lUUSIC BOO~ Will be issued on the 1st of September Tn y

OLIC'S VOCAL CLASS BOOK-Published with t~e oU'G CI~ of the M~st Rev. Archbishop o[ Cincinnati_J'P~rOblti. the use o. CatholiC Schools, Societies and b ~. A collection o[ Hymns witll appropriate wClla I for School purposes , consisting of selectionsOr . C~thollc c0ll!posers, arranged [or two and In the \,: wlth a Practical Course or Vocal Instrllcr three '01'1 Pete}"s. Royal 12mo-bouud in Clot.h-Price'~~' by \V. (

lcrCathohc Publishers and Book Dealers cents. plied at n liberal discount. Will be

Heads of Seminaries and others desirous o[ . the worl! iu their classes, will oblige us by se,nJ!O<!OC4 orders early. W. C. PETERS n ln~ t~,

au6 Publisbers, corner 4th & Walnut St c& So~S, -:::~-=~== __ = ______ :"':"':::'::':".:::lnclnn.t(

ENGLISH AND CLASSICAL-­DEMY.-:-Mr. ENRIGHT, begs leave to inforAC&.

publ iC tllat hiS Acarlemy will op~n ia Neff's Burn!~ corner of Eighth and Western Row A Ildl~ in whic~ wil I b~ taught an extensive c~urs~g:r t5~ and Latill. English III all Its departments Fr ~llti German if reqUired, Mr Enright will r~st ~?C .~ to ~atron ?~e on the proj!Tess of his pupils, andl~Cllla pOI t of (llslllterested and competent judges 1 he~. be invited to attend his examinatiou. ,W 10 'h~

Ref~rence for character and ability, to the most ~rchblshop, Doctor BODner, and many other ReI. slO nal and ii teri1ry gentlemen in this city. prol~.

CinCinnati, August 1st, 1853. ENLARGED TO 64 PAGES M0N'!1iry-­

THE METROPOLITAN FOR AUGU' A MONTHLY MAGAZINE, DEVOTED TO RELIGION L ST. 'rUR];, AND GENERAL INFORMATION. ' IT!~. .CO:"TE~TS ;-1'..rt. 1. Are we to have Fiction ?~

CIVilizatIOn and the Church.-II1. The Proph ·.n Malachi.--lV. Mission of ~Iowers, Poetry.":~:li i Ba~ Books.-Vr. Joul'Iley 1Il Tartary, Thibet ~ Clll11a, 3 fine IIlustrations.-VIT . .A Gentle V/' Poetry.-VIII. A Mass dnring the Reign of Tet on I'lustration .-1X. Memoir of the Very Rev. !;:~ Roothaan, General of the SOCiety of Jeslls -X p ral Letter of the Archbishop of Baltimore.~xi S~:l Answers to Popular Objections against Relig' ~ XII. The Fathers of the Desert.-XIII L·:Ol

, Notices.-XIV. Record of Events. . ,elilf

Each number of the Metropoli'an contains Ii jour pages royal octavo, printeJ on good paper ~zf1 a good, clear, bold type, forming at the end ;r ~ year a hal.ldsome volum~ of nearly 700 pages,ol lit n:t0s t chOICe CatholIC hterature, with Fine lUusl M= ~

. TERMS.-:-~he Wor!, will be delivered to subscliltu III the prlllcipal Cit ICS, or sen t by mail, at S2 annum, payable invariably in advance. " ~

CLUBS sUPPLrED ON THE FOLLOW ING TF.RMS: 3 copies will be sent by mail, (to one address,)11

one year, for ......, 6 copies f~r .' . . 10 13 copies fol' . : ~ No SUbSC!'lptlOll Will be received for less thaoll

months, commencing, in all cases, with the I ~ number of the yolume_ .

n:::r A :3pecimeu Number will be seut gratuitQu~ t~ s~ch. as I~ay. wish to act as agent.s, or olhelWl Rid In dlssemmatmg the Work, on application lolt; Publishers personally, or by letter prepaid.

n:::r We gladly avail ourselves el this opportuni~ to return thanlts to the Rev. Glel'gy, aud others,W~1 hava taken such a lively interest in behalf of liIl work. As all evidence of our appreciation of ~l generous efforts, and our determination to menll continuance of tbeir kind favors, we refer with pi", sure to t~e present number, which has been cORsil1 rably enlarged, sixteen pages haVing been added loti! usu.al ~umber, The amount and variety of rnallll willch IS here spread before them, will show thal ~ are determined to spare 110 effort. or expense, in 0111 t? co-operate in the diffusion of a truly Catho~ literature, and to furnish a monthly periodical wbid w!1l .be worthy of general patronage, and at apriu wltJlln the reach of all; with the assllrance thal li effort will be wanting on our part to render the wo! worthy of the generous and zealous co·operaUon l our frlem!s throughout the United States aud Cans/!

JOHN MURPHY & CO., PUBLrSHERS, 178 Market Street, Baltimort,

~W Agel1ls wanted in all parts of the country. P. S. To be had of J. B. Mahony, 167 SycRrnorat!

POUGHKEEPSIE NEW CHURCH, MESSRS. EDIToRs.-In addition to what hi

already been said relative to laying tbe corne stone of St. Peter's Church, Pouabkeepsie,it i only necessary to say, that our g~od ArcLbii\ op seemed well pleased with the design ad progress of the edifice, as well as with alll~ !lrrangements of the "auspicious day." Hi Grace has not only permitted, but request~ the Pas~or to solicit contributions towards E

speedy completion, from all outside his or. district wbo may be charitably disposed. Thl is but jusl, because the parishioners have slru~ gled for the last sixteen years, without anyeI' ternal aid-what can be said of but few Call· olic congregations in tbis country. Tbe edioH will be cruciform, on which acconnt 55 feet« the present building, wholly inadequate 10 is sacred purpose, must be taken down and rr built in proportion with the new. Tbe cGil will be not, as one of the daily pape rs stnl~ 6,000 dollars, but about $11,000, and hen~ the necessity of the appeal.- Oelt.

, ••• I

PROHIBITION OF ADVERTISING VANS IN WI' DON.-On Monday next the new law to probi~ adverlising vans will take effect. By lbe 1.6~ section of the 16th and 17th Vic., CAp. 33, II . provided "that it shall not be lawful for al! person to carry about on any carriage, or ~ horseback, or on foot, in any thoroughfRJ'!~ public place within the limits of this aC.I, tol~ obstruction or annoyance of tbe inhabltanls ~ passengers, any picture, placard, notice, or ll vertisements, whether written, printed, ~ painted upon or attached to any part of S~" carriage, or any board or otherwise."

Of ••• , ~

The magnificent Cathedral of KiJlal'l1?Y-'. largest ~qurch desig~ed in Ireland. sw~~~ ReformatIOn-and deSIgned by PuglO--I',/

are glad to hear about to be completed l1.n. , FI~' the superintendence of MI'. M'Carthy. ~

situated, overlookino' the Lower Lake, an~ 1 of the greatest desia~s of its illustrious artis,

b d 'nlf~ only needed the cultivated tasle an ~ I devotion to his art of its present arcbl~eCt render it---what, in a few years hence, t fi server will pronounce it to be-ooone of tbe ~ 0

religious edifices in Europe. v ~ ••• D¢8

Died, on the 6th inst., tbe Rev. JO~ll til for upwards of twenty·one years parlsb P of Saggard.