Show 1 1 r 1 CORK 01 0 iv i V 7 rahe x 01 past few days the telegrams awe hie contained allusions allu alons to scenes of iw and excitement in cork conk but with th I 1 usual lack of perspicuity the they y nave fled failed to convey any intimation of the cause of the trouble in ia to days d dispatches there is a paragraph which Y furnishes a ke key to the he matter it states thattie tul uil atthe strike kas ras has hah become gen crail crall that laborera in all au the depart ment menti i of industry have topped stopped work eveh even the workwoman work women are staying at homeard home and the newsboys news boys refuse t to sell the papers 0 in fin a populous city like cork one of the largest in the three kingdoms such a state of things gives cause for mu much ch anxiety maniam Fe is rife and discontent against the british government is general in ireland and if this report from cork be not exaggerated there is evidently an organization and union complete limong the masses of the people ae for bome come concealed purpose that R ft is merely for an advance of wages is very questionable for discontent so deep rooted in all branches of trade as US to induce them all to strike is not very probable the union is far more likely to have for its end something of a po lotical nature A day or two since it was said that barricades had been erected and that some hand to hand fighting had taken place this thia betokens tokens be a state of extraordinary 0 excitement even in I 1 ireland reland at the present time when emancipation from british rule is so earnestly desired such a mover movel movement neut is more than ordinarily significant the british arm army has thousands of irishmen in its ransa ranks there is little or no love for aristocratic to cratic rule throughout the entire nation and if the irish people have at last seen the folly of dissension and party strife and have been able to effect a union as complete as that indicated by the cork dispatch in to days telegrams the day is most likely at hand when if force is to be the agency to effect any amelioration in the condition of the irish people it may be applied much more effectually than tha u by the ridiculous moves of the irish redemption party on canada tre THE experiment to construct a cati carl canal alfrom from the atlantic to the pacific through the isthmus of darien is not likely to prove a success the explorations go to show that the ahe difficulties are almost insurmountable the expense of cutting through the ridge of mountains running northward from new granada almost to the northern boundary of costa elca rica would be immense there would be two hundred mileson miles cutting required by this way another route talked walked of is the nicaragua route where there here is a navigable river from the blan bian sea at Grey town to lake nicaragua large and deep enough to float a navy from the west side of the lake to the pacific coast a cut of twelve or fifteen miles blies would have to be made through a soil soll soft son and comparatively level the emperor of eranee prance thought of this route several years agnand considered the cutting of a ship canal from nicaragua lake to the pacific practicable practicable captain bedford pym a brith ish naval officer not many years ago made a survey of this route and gave as his opinion that a ship canal could be constructed through there in a satisfactory manner for twenty millions of dollars this route would possess an advantage over the darien route in that it would save r between six indred hundred hi and a thousand miles sailing on each side cf the isthmus and fully three weeks time the route seems to be provided by nature for the purpose and the opening 0 ening of a ship arhip canal through ty by way of nicaragua would make the distance between e the parts of the gulf guif af mexico and new now orleans six hundred miles shorter than by way of darien if the latter route were practicable which it appears is not the case many speculative minds have been occupied with thoughts of this route and if the darien expedition should lead leaa leaa lean to this or any other better line of communication ni with the pacific the failure of this first is not to be regretted y k THE trl philadelphia press tress in an article on the feeling which red bed clouds Ol daas duas dads rough eloquence has occasioned cr makes a rather broad admission at the close of its article which might be used with damaging erect effect against the nation if the indians were other than they are it says the extermination of the american indian is a mere ene ere matter of time the march of civilization westward will soon leave him without hunting grounds ills his days are numbered and wo we should endeavor to alleviate his condition with all possible kindness we have robbed him hi M of hisil varned so often deceived ig t t ho he has learned to place little faith in 0 our promises A friend driend to american manufactures hla hia countrymen will attend to procuring homemade ho hol hollema nefa neMa e articles as much as possible for themselves their families ana and servants gor for tho the ens ensuing I 1 g winter it will be a real service to the landed interest justice and brotherly kindness to the in manufacturer and a kind and prudent chari charl charity to the poor tha that was the policy 1 icy lcy urged upon the people odthe oatho old loates states through the columns of the pennsylvania gazette dated dated september 1788 and it is the true policy in 1870 for every community which alma aima to be independent |