THE DAILY EVENING TELEGRAPH TRIPLE SHEET PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1870. AMUSEMENTS. jgy ACADEMY OF MUSIC. TIIE 8TAU COURSE OF LECTURES. HON. CHARLES SUMNER, On MONDAY EVENING, Oct 81. Subject "Lafayette, the Faithful One." rETKOLKT'M V. NA8BY, Nov. 8. MT8S ISABELLA OLYN, Nov. 8. UEOROE WM. CURTIS, Nov. 4. Admission to each Lecture BO cents. Kewrve (I teats 90 cents extra. Tickets to ANY of the Lectures for dale At (Jould A Fischer's Piano Rooms, No. a OUE8NUT Street, Doors open at IX. ; lecture at 8. 10 89 St SPECIAL. , SENATOR 8UMNKK will deliver his ?reat Oratinn n Lafaybttk, in place of "The Duel between France and Germany," as heretofore announced. E T T W W VT T r T mm rwnTtTi - rr WW Jll J. EXTRAORDINARY ANNOUNCEMENT. FANNY JANAUSOUEK, In English partx, nndnr the management of Af'GU'STIN DALY. MONDAY, October 81, FOR SIX NIGHTS AND ONE MATINEE. MLLK. JANAUSCUEK Will appear an MARY STUART, DEBORATT, FAZIO, LADY MACBETH, and THE DSBUTANTE, Supported by a superior Company of Dramatio Artists from the New York Academy ol Music. PRICES: Orchestra Beats, 1 j Orchestra Chairs, l-28 ; Or chestra Circle, 7 cents; Hecured Seats in Orchestra Circle, f 1 ; Dress Circle, 60 cents ; Family Circle, 25 ents; Private Boxes, IS. 10 21 8t C IIESNUT STREET THEATRE E. L. DAVENPORT, Lessee and Manager. LAST NIGHT OP TIIE LISA WEBER BURLESQUE OPEttA TROUPE, EHNANI and LA SOMNAMBULA. LISA WEBER, the unapproachable hnrlexane ac tress; ADA GRAY. BELLE HO WITT, CASSIE TROY, OEO. ATKINS (the inimitable Comedian, Tragedian, Gymnast, Vocalist), and ROCi ICO, Artist. MATINEE, SATURDAY, at o'clock. MRS. JOHN DREW'S ARCH STREET THEATRE Begins V to 8 o'clock. GREAT TRIPLE BILL. THIS (Saturday) EVENING, Oct 20, Positively last night of "tS.V.,n BY MRS. JOHN DREW AND COMPANY, Followed by the musical farce. NO: OR, THE GLORIOUS MINORITY. Concluding with the nautical drama, BEN BOLT. ON MONDAY THE 1WO ROSES. WALNUT STREET THEATRE. BEOINS AT TV. THIS (Saturday) EVENING. Oct 29, ENORMOUS ATT K ACTION, MR. CLARKE IN THREE CHARACTERS, OUR AMERICAN COUSIN, TURNING THE TABLES, LONELY MAN OF THE OCEAN. GREAT SATURDAY MATINEE. MR. CLARKE IN TWO PARTS. MONDAY FOX AND GOOSE. MR. JOHN 8. CLARKE as YoUNG GOSLING. Chairs secured six days in advance. FOX'S AMERICAN THEATRE. NEW ATTRACTIONS NIGHTLY. For one week only TnE WONDERFUL FRENCH ATHLETES, Three in nun,ber. SPLENDID BALLET TROUPE. GREAT MINSTREL COMPANY. COMIC PANTOMIME CORPS. GRAND OLIO ENTEKTAINMENT. 1 Burlesques, Local Sketches, Voralism, Etc ADAM FORE MAMMOTH P A u o ns MENAGERIE AND CIRCU8. THE LARGEST IN THE WORLD. THIRTY DENS OF LIVING ANlMALS. CORNER BROAD AND WALLACE, XVERY AFTERNOON and NIGUT THIS WEEK, IN TWO SEPARATE TENTS. Admission to both Shows only 50 cents. Children under 10 years, 20 cents, A. FOREPAUGH, 10 24 6t j Proprietor and Manager. TVTEW ELEVENTH STREET OPERA HOUSE i TUB! 1HMII.V WKSOHT. CJOtNCROSS A DIXEY'S MINSTRELS, The Star Troupe of the World, Every Evening in their Ethiopian Soirees. Box ofllce open dally from 10 to 1 o'clock. After 1 o'clock at CarncroBS fc Co.'s Mnslo Store. No. 6 N. Eighth street R. F. SIMPSON, Treasurer. J. L. CARNCROBS, Manager. 8 88tf ARCH STREET OPERA HOUSE, ARCH Street above Tenth. THE PALACE OF MINSTRELSY. SIMMONS & BLOCUM'S MINSTRELS, THE CHAMPION TROUPE OF AMERICA. OPEN FOR THE SEASON, With the best Minstrel Organization In the world. Box ofllce open from 9 A. M. until 4 P. M. for the ale of reserved seats. 9 B tf DTJPREZ A BENEDICT'S OPERA HOUSE, SEVENTH Street, below Arch. THIS (Saturday) EVENING, THE LADY OF LYONS AND JOSEPH'S COAT. GRAND MATINEE THIS AFTERNOON. ACADEMY OF MUSI C nASSLER'S H AK SLUR'S TniHD MATINEE, SATURLAY AFTERNOON, Oct 29. 10 27 at MARK HaSSLER, Conductor. MUSICAL FUND n A L L. GERM ANIA ORCHESTRA. PUBLIC REHEARSALS, EVERY SATURDAY AFTERNOON. at8)tf o'clock, Commencing November 6th, 1810. Tickets, 60 cents. Package of four for f 1. To be had at North's Store, 10-44 Cheannt street 10 29 It RIANOS. ssPN GEORGE STECK & CO.'S PIANOS, Grand, Square and Upright 4X80, HAINES BROS.' PIANOS. Only place In Philadelphia for sale of Haion & Hamlin's World-Renowned Cabinet Organs. Tor tale or rent, or to rent with vieu to purchase, and part 0 rental apply. iiiOIILU At FISCHER. J. E. GOULD, No. 023 CHESNUT 8t. WM. G. FISCHER, No. 1018 ARCH St Km STEINWAY & SQHS' tf Grand Square and Upright Pianos. Special attention la called to their new Patent Upright Pianos, With Double Iron Frame, Patent Resouator, Tabular Metal Frame Action, etc , which are ui.uchlesa In Tone ana loucn, ana unrivauea in auraoiuiy. CHAULE8 lII.AHIUsJ, WAltEROOMS, No. 1006 CHESNUT BTREET, 1 13 tfrp PHILADELPHIA. CHICKERING A WORLD-RENOWN ED SONS' GRAND, SQUARa, AND UPRI3HT PIANOS, Attention is lnvuea 10 me ceieoraieu PATENT GRAND UPRIGHT AND TUB NEW SCALE GRAND bOUARE PIANOS. Great Reductions. Plied Prices. DITTTON'tf PIANO ROOMtt. Nob. 1124 and 1128 CHESNUT btreet 10 21 lmp W. H. DUTTON. COPARTNERSHIPS. THE COPARTNERSHIP HEKETOFORE EX luting between ADOLPH WINKLER and COR NELIUS C. HOPPER, as WINKLER A HOPPKH, tethls day dissolved bv mutual content, and Corne lius C. Hopper, No. 240 S Second street, Philadelphia, la alone authorized to act as liquidating- partner, to whom all debts due said ttrm wlU be paid, and all claims strainst them le presented. AlXil.HH WINKLER. COP.;EJUi C. HOPPED. COOPER & DRESS GOODS. Our third opening of FRENCn, ENGLISH, and GER MAN DRESS FABRICS is now arranged for sale. Many buyers not suited the past few days by reason of oar running short of stock can now be well supplied. The prices of the English po ods are about one-third less than they were three weeks ago. 37Jo. for Wide Da den Suit Cloths. OOc for Wide Imperial Bops. 50c. for Wide Glossy English Serges. 5 ic. for All-wool Paris Satin Cloths. 62 ic for Oood Wool Empress Cloths. Tive cases of these Extra Cheap Ooods. $100 SATIW CLOT 113. $100 BEST QUIA QXIS. '00 PARI 3 rVTDRinOES. $100 SXliXX POPLINS. Wide Double Corded Silk Poplins, $125. Best Trench Silk Epingiines. Passavant Best Boiled 1470ns Silk Poplins. One case Extra Glossy Silk Poplin, $123. Ready-made Suits, or made to order. Diess XfcXakingr at short notice for first class custom. MOURNING DEPARTMENT. Fresh arrivals of all the New Materials. All the Btandard description Mourning Fabrics. Some special attractions in this stock. The Alpacas and Wool Poplins show great inducements. Conrtauld's English Crepes, bought before the advance. Black Kid Gloves, Crape Collars, Veils, Etc Etc. 000PEE & GONABD S. E. CORNER NINTH AND MARKET STREETS. G1ECULAE TO FRENCH DRESS FABRICS. Although both Great Britain and Gesmany f urnish this country with a very large amount of Dress Textures, nearly all the finest and most fashionable are of French manufacture, and hence a great scarcity of French goods, owing to the war, was anticipated early in the season. All the French goods that can possibly reach us this season are now here, and after a careful exami nation of the market we find that although the BTTXiTC is not quite so small as we expected, yet, to a consider able extent, it is made up of large II7DISCMIXZVTI XfATB purchases 'of UNRELIABLE XVZA11XSS, which would not have found a market here had it not been for the anticipated deficiency. This is more particularly the case in the article of B LACS SiLUS- We, therefore, advise particular care to pur chasers in the selection of these goods. In Fine Worsted and Woollen Dress Goods there will be a DECIDED SCARCIT3T, and we would invite an early exami nation of our stock while it is replete in the most re cherche textures we have ever imported, and CAN NOT 3E DUPLICATED. Our BLACK SI LIT BTOCXX contains nothing but the most CELEBRATED and RELIA BLE of Lyons makes. HOMER, C0LLADAY & CO., 1412 AND 1414 m BULBOUS ROOTS A large assortment of Hyacinths, Tulips, Crocus, Iris, Narcivscs, Crown Imperials, eta, Im ported and lor sale by D. LANDRETH A SON, Nos. 81 and S3 South SIXTH 8treet, It Between Market and Cheannt streets. S RUSTIC FLOWER STANDS AND HANO INQ BASKETS, Terra Cotta Vases, Flower Pots, Crocus Pots, and Hyacinth Glasses. For sale by D. LANDRETH A SON, Seed and Implement Warehouse, Nos. 11 and S3 South SIXTH Street, C02TABD THE LADIES. CHESNUT STREET. I U O N D A Y, OCTOBER 81, 181 ' . . i i - ...no i r i TjfVs T t7..ii jtciuuuiDir unsold xi 1.017, vunu.i tvuey vil e), iDilfS from Philadelphia, on the Wrst Chea ter (Media) Railroad, at auction on MONDAY, Octo ber si, at o'clock, on tne rttKJHistuj. Terms ol sale, $io CAS U on each lot when sold, ana 110 MONTHLY until pfld : or one-half cash, balance In one year; or tdlcat-li. Interest on all deferred payments, Deedj lr-e ol expense to purchasers. A FI t EXCURSION Train will leave the West Chest, i lx-not at 8 o'clock, precisely on the day of fa'e, a d convey grown persons (ladies and gentle- u.eu) to ana rr' m tue saie rree. none out grown persons. HO tickets n-qmreu. T, WR:1I A HON. Auctioneers, HS, 1110 CUS4.NUX Street. bWINQ MAOMINE9. f II Is WHEELER & WILSON For Bale on ay Term. KO. 914 CHESNUT 8T11KET. 4 aiwai PHILADELPHIA. JEWELRY AND SIL.VERWARJE. 1124 CHESNUT STREET. 1124 NOW OPENING, Bridal Silver. Tea Services, Table Ware. Fancy Pieces for General Presentation. (Special designs and monograms fnrniBhed.) NEW IMPORTATIONS A Very 8elect Assortment of Paris Clocks. Bronzes, Vases. Tables. Centre Pieces, Etc. ALSO, A MAGNIFICENT STOCK OF GOLJ) EARRINGS, Entirely new styles. ROBBINS, CLARK & BIDDIE. It No. 1124 CHESNUT Street JACOII IIAItLKV. O-X No. 13) U IIESNUT Street, Phlla. Watches, Jewelry, Silver and Plated- ware, a good assortment at MODERATE PRICES. Watches and Jewelry carefully repaired. IS thstn3mrp CLOVES. 'BARTL EY' 99 K I 1 41 O V 12 Black, White, Colors, Opera, Green, Blue, Wlue. Fourchette, Manchette, S Button, LADIES' AND GENTS' 600 DOZEN Now in stock, selling a'. per pair, TWENTY ran sjhb i lesstnan oiner parties seu a first-t,iass glove. Alsc every pair guaranteed ;if they rip or tear another pair wm oe giveu in exenange. We also offer SW) down Genuine "Bajou" Kid Gloves at lu-uopt-r pair. Also, our unparalleled "La Belle" Glove at f 1-25. Btst l -86 Ok ve In America, at the GREAT KID GLOVE EMPORIUM OP A. & J. B. BARTHOLOMEW, No. 23 NORTH EIGHTH STREET, 10 28 iBtu PHILADELPHIA. FINANCIAL.. DREXEL & CO., No. 34 SOUTH THIRD STREET, American and Foreign Hankers, DRAWS EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PRIN CIPAL CITIES OF EUROPE. DEAL3R8 I N Government and Railroad Securities, Drexel, Winthrop & Co., .Drexel, Earjet fc Co., No. 18 Wail Street, No. Hue Bcrlbe, New York. I Paris. NEW PUBLICATIONS. QOOK8II BOOK 8!!! ONLY SIXTY DAYS MORE OF THE CLOSING OUT SALE At No. 724 CHESNUT Street. On and after January 1, 1871, the Store will be oc cupied by another business. Now la the time to furnish your Libraries. I. ASIIltllSAU, Act., 10 1 6 stutb4p tf No. 724 CHESNUT St., Phllada, FOR SALfc. FOR SALE. OR EXCHANGE FOR 23 City Property, one of the finest FARMS the country. 8 18 thstu tf R. J. DOBBINS, Ledger Building. FOK BALE OR TO LET Nos. S10, ,108. 110, ::: m and iVi'i WALNUT Street. Prices ranrlnk Toui 122,000 to t&S.OOO, or will be rented. Address, ny now, . u. buj nu, jr., t 30 24t No. 818 Walnut street. FOR 8ALBE TIIK nANDSOME RESI. "1 dence. No. 804 FRANKLIN Street, oonoalte the iuuare. Aouiy u WM. UUS-IL,1. ALLt, no. S3 WAUifl ' btreek luxist ft. FOR SALE DWELLING HOUSE NO. 1S19 ti' KKI ANUY rLAtK. Apply to C 11. A 11. P, MUIRUE1D, No. 80ft SOUTH SIXTH St. 10 8a 6t TO RENT. rpo RENT THE STORE NU T29 CHESNUT A Street. Apply on the premises between 10 and 11 o'clock A. M. 8 IT tf NEW 8TORE. M1 UN. F. 41. Y. tlUMDGUS, Fancy and Mtaple XrlinuilBgrai, ZEPUVR linODl, ETCt No. 224 South ELEVENTH Btiwet. f omadi s, Koapa Powders, Perfumn-ie, Ho-icry gioyes, tuUUJita, Jto. 10 Uudmrp Cardinal In Conclave The bell ot the Oapitol had sounded. Pope Innocent the Tenth was dead. He had died quite alone in about his eightieth year. His Bister-in-law Donna Olimpia, and her nieoe, the Princess of Romano, for whom the weak old man bad made Bale of everything daring his pontificate, from the red hat of the cardi nal down to the office of spy of the police, and even to the sentences of the courts of justice, left him to his fate as soon as they found that no soups or essences, none of the cunningly devised liquids on which he had existed since he had been nnable to take solid food, would oontinne to keep him alive. Donna Olimpia, indeed, took to her bed as mearjs of avoiding further trouble about a moribund pope, and gave out that she was too ill to nurse him any longer. Both ladies, however, took care to have his palaoe sacked before tre breath was out of his bodv. and Donna Olimpia surrounded her own house in tne Piazza Navona with six hundred soldiers. to preserve all old and reoent spoils safe dar ing the critical period of papal interregnum, wnen tne populace were more riotous than ut-u&J, and until a new pope should be elected in conclave. If, however, the populace did not besiege her palace and relieve her of her ill-gotten cains, it was not the fault of Paaquin. Each morning the headless little marble figure was covered with pasquinades of bitter and terrible force, directed against Olimpia and the wealth she had amassed by her extor tionate abuse of her influence on the late Pope. Olimpia, however, replied that public report did her injustice; that she was in re ality poor, frightfully poor, so poor that she was nnable to pay for the funeral expenses of the dead Innocent. Who would have buried the old man nobody can tell, had not a friend of early days, a poor canon whom Innocent had ill-treated on his advent to power, taken on him the charge of the funeral, which was of the me'aneRt. Mo torches or wax tapers, only two tallow candles, lit np the wrinkled and painted face of the papal corpse as it lay in mockery of state beneath the dome of St. Peter's. Ihe day after the Pope's interment, Janua ry 18, 1(355, the cardinals met according to custom in conclave in tne Vatican. There were sixty-nine of them. Unhappy men! their fate created much commiseration among some of tne ambassadors and envoys of the European princes, who, according to rale, visited their cells on the day on which they were to be shut np, to Bee that all was arranged in due order, and the conclave established according to rule. Sixty-nine cardinals, accustomed, most of them, to fare sumptuously, and to live in vast palaces adorned with the finest productions of ancient and modern art, to what a wretched sojourn had they to sub mit till it should please Divine Inspiration to be merciful to them, and enable their saored college to combine in the election of a new pope ! Two cells, one for himself and one for his two attendants, were allotted to each cardinal; and there they must live, and sleep, and eat tneir meals, wnicn nave to be Bent through the little wicket at the gate, till the close of the conclave. The present conclave. however, was a fortunate one for the poor cardinals in one respect. It had among its members many excellent players at pioquet, and two or tare ecclesiastics of a very humorous spirit, who aided considerably to enliven the monotony of its confinement, which proved in this instance a long one. The maddest wag of them all was Maidalchini, -wlio, howvr, labored tinder thla disad vantage, that he was obliged to shut himself np every day for a considerable time to paint his face and make his toilette, in order to hide the ravages which disease and debauchery had made in his appearance. Maidalchini, one night during the conclave, lost fifty dou bloons at play to a kindred spirit. Cardinal Medio!, when Medici said he would let his Eminenoe off if he would dress himself np and go and announce, as by vision, to poor old lame Cardinal Caraffa, that he should be pope. The joke seemed too good a one not to be put in practice, so Maidalchini wrapped himself np in a white sheet, put on a false beard and wig, pinned two sheets of paper on to his shoulders for wings, borrowed a pair of green spectacles from Cardinal Trialzi, and made for himself a golden aureole, by the aid of some gilt paper and a saucepan, which he pnt upon his head. After having oompleted this disguise, he took two wax candles, one in each hand, and got in by a secret passage to the side of Carafl'a's bed. Poor old Caraffa had the gout, nd was not asleep when he saw the phantom arrive; he understood the pleasantry immediately perhaps, indeed, he had been forewarned so he seized his crutch silently, and as soon as the spectre was near enough, laid on lustily, crying out: "Incorrigible joker, it is thou, is it ? lake that, and that, and laugh again Maidalchini did not wait longer than he oonld help by Carafl'a's bedside, but blew out his candles and ran off, leavinar the door open, from which latter circumstance the joke had a more serious ending than was anticipated; for poor Caraffa was too much troubled with gout to get up and shut the door, and the draught gave the gouty old man such a cold that he died shortly afterw arris. Maidalchini, indeed, seems, acoording to faithful report, to have provided the gaeatest part of what fun there was going in three or four conclaves. During this oonclave, be, with some others, gummed together the pages of the breviary of Cardinal Lmgo, who, how ever, was not sorry for an excuse to get rid of the trouble or reading it. lie put, too, some powder made from the euphorbium plant ia the missal of Cardinal Filomarini, just befose he bad to Bay high mass for the conclave; and Filomarini was seized with such a fit of rineezing that he had to stop short in the middle of service, and could not go on. It was not in this, but in another con clave that Maidalchini had a furious dis pute with Cardinal Colonna, in which they nearly came to blows. Colonna went to visit Maidalchini in his cell. Maidalchini, who thought Colonna a bore, had told his servant always to Bay he was asleep, that is. "not at home for uoionna. xt nap pened at this time, when Colonn called, that Maidalchini was in his inner cell, tamog with another cardidaL Colonna beard him, and cried out in a rage to the servant, "Toll your master be is a blockhead and ill-bred." Maidalchini heard him, rushed out in a pis sion, and said, "It is you who are a block, head and ill-bred; for my part, I have never bad in my family any relatives who have dio I by the rope, feet m tne air, like the uolou nas." They were about to come to blows, when Cardinal Albizzi and others caoie up an 1 separated them, and Albizzi cried out. "Maidalchini is right. Why Bhould Colon m try to ride the high horse, and apply hit 'blockheads and ill-breds' to fellows who are merely rascals and knaves ?" TLelsst popo before Clement the Nitt'i (Koenicliosi) was Alexander tne hevent i (Cbigi), who came pope out of the con clave which met, as we have said, afwr Jrmncmt th Tnth bad, bnen K'd rnt i'i j Bute wim the help ui two uuow candles, and of whom Alexander Pasquin said the gum total of his pontificate consisted in doing "very great things for himself, great things for his family, bad things for the sovereigns of Europe, very bad things for the cardinals, and nothing for God." Albizzi. in fact, was bnt Pasquin inside the conolave. In the oonclave whioh met to eleot this Alexander the Seventh, Albizzi was more man usually brilliant. One of his mots deserves reoord: when Cardinal Spada said that be must vote in suoh and such a way, since he had a debt of gratitude to pay, "I presume it is a gambling debt, then, said Albizzi. Spada had the reputation of paying oniy gamDung aerjia, ana not always tbese. There were a good many cardinals to whom this election was no laughing matter, and it was none certainly to Donna Olimpia, who was busy working the conclave to tha best of her power from without, and making secret promises of all Borts, and giving secret bribes in ready money, to get a pope elected to her choice; but with little effect, for the cardinal she strained all her resources te keep out was Cbigi, and Chigi was elected. In tnis conolave of Bixty-mne cardinals there were, indeed, twenty-six who were recognized as passable, that is, possible popes ; but not one oi tnem but was, for some reason or other, considered by some great authority as impossible. France and Spain fought des perately in this conclave against each other, by the aid of bribes and promises, in order to get a Pope to their liking; and neither would accept as Pope a cardinal known to be de voted to its rival. The Urand Duke had his agents in tke conclave, the Emperor of Ger many had his, and each was determined on keeping out a different set of candidates; Mode- sa pulled oneway, Parma another; one cardinal could not be elected because ho had a sister in-law of whom all were afraid; and all the cardinals had had enough of Donna Olimpia in the way of sisters-in-law. This man was too poor, that man was too ill; this man was too well, that man was too dissolute, and that man was too devout, troppo santone. too much of a saint. Barberini would not hear of one, and Medici would not hear of an other. The delay and difficulties of the con clave excited the humorous fancies of some peasants at Arquato, near Asooli. They dressed themselves np as cardinals, and held a mock oonclave, in which they chose an unfortunate shepherd for pope, who began his mock pontificate by abolishing the tax on grinding corn at the mill, and fixed tne price ol Bait at a giulio for ten pounds. Taxes had, indeed, been laid very heavily on tne uoman poor of late- and bread and salt had been foroed np to starvation prioes to enable the popes to lavish away millions on insatiable nephews and nieoes, and sisters-in-law, and parasites of all descriptions; so the poor snepnerd was not a bad legislator ac cording to his lights of politioal eoonomy. though his amateur legislation oost him dear, for the Inquisition laid bands upon him and put nun in prison, where he died in less than three days of a very speedy natu ral death. However, after nearly four months of one of tha most entangled and confused of all papal elections, the conolave did, like all human things, come to an end at last. The game of conclave is on saoh occasions a game of patienoe; the parties try to tire each other out, for whioh purpose, doubtless, one of the best lines of conduot you can adopt is, to try and prove to your adversaries that you rather like conolave life than otherwise, and ate ready to wait any time for them to coma round. On this occasion the Frenoh car dinals, at last seeing that Medici had made terms with Chigi, out of sheer weariness, and in despair, withdrew their opposition to Chigi, and Chigi was elected unanimously. Up to that time his opponents had always managed to secure one-third of the votes of the conclave, the necessary number to force exclusion against him. Chigi, aooording to strict precedent, shed abundance of tears on his election the lachrymatory glands of the cardinals were always in good condition for this purpose and a'ked the cardinals to be bo kind as not to press the tiara upon him. He knew, he was so modest as to say, that he was not fit for it; however, they were inhuman enough to insist, and proceeded to adoration, as the rite is called, falling on the knees, kissing of the feet, hands, etc, while the chief of the cellege went to- the loggia of St. Peter's, and an nounced in the regular Latin .phrase, a "mighty joy," "gaudium magnum, to the people, the election of a new Pope, Alexander the Seventh. He was not any worse, nor much better, than the popes immediately before and after him; they were nearly all deorepit, worn-out old men, in the hands of relatives who preyed upon them. Clement the Tenth (Altieri) was eighty when he beoame Pope, and his faculties were so feeble that the poor old dotard promised the same offices over and over again to different persons in the con clave in order to beoome Pope. The gene ral motto of all the Popes about this period was "Tutto per la casa e nient per laohiesa." "All for the house, and nought for the church." Alexander the Seventh was only pope for about two years, when Maidalchini, Albizzi, and the rest, went into conolave again to elect another pope, and their practioai and other jokes were as lively in that as in the pre ceding conclave; however, this time the car dinals bad less need of amusement than before, for they only remained shut up to gether about a month, llospigliosi (Clement the Ninth) was elected, but he, poor man, only enjoyed his papacy about two years. The tiara jumped from bead to head very quickly in those days. AU the Year Hound. Anecdote of Bilr, the Composeb. The following anecdote is told of Balfe, the com poser, who died a few days ago in London: At the first rehearsal, which took place at Pavia, of Rossini's Afose in Egitto, Signer Holla, brother of the celebrated Alessandro Rolls, leader of the orchestra of La Scala at Milan, was leader of the orchestra at Pavia, and having perceived that Balfe was taking upon himself to give directions, not only to the chorus, but to the musicians, became an noyed and disconcerted at his interference. At a passage for the violin, whioh oocurs in the first act, Rolla said: "It was not written for the instrument," and being bo difficult was impossible to play; at which Balfe ex claimed, "Rossini was a violin-player, and knew what he wrote. The Eassage is easy enough. Shift your hand igher up and you will do it !" On hearing this poor Rolla could contain himself no longer, but bursting into a torrent of passion looked np at Balfe and exclaimed: "Signor Dottore, venite qua suonate per me, ed io audero cantame per voi.M (Learned air, come and play for me and I will sing for yon.) The challenge was at once aooepted; dorn Balfe jumped into the orchestra, took up a violin, and played the disputed passage in snob. masterly manner that he was applauded by every one present. So deep waa the impres sion made on Rolla'a miud by ttU discom fiture ib be took o Lis bri as J in a few I weeks died.