_Cal3 / 50N PEACOCK. Editor VOLUME XXL-NO. THE EVENING BULLETIN PULMSTIED EVERY EVENING excepted); TUE NEW BULLETIN BUILDING, Cliebtnnt Street, Philadelphia,. 111"111 E EVENING BULLETIN ASSOCIATIO PItOPI:IETOIL8. ' -• 4 . / lIISON PEACOCK, ERNEST C. 'WALLACE. / 1F: 1. FETLIERSON, THUS. J. WILLIAMSON, CASr'ER 130111/EIV4e.:, FRANCIS WELLS. The Dur.r.nriri in eerved to isuGecribers in the city at 18 cents.por week. payable_ to t 1 carriers, or . lBB per annum. fistresii . BCILOMACKER 44, CO.'S CELEBRATED Pianos.—Acknowledged superior in all respects any made in this country, and sold on most liberal Germs, NEW AND SECOND-HAND PIANOS constantly on hand for rout. Tuning, moving and packing promptly attended to. Warerooms. 1103 Chestnut street. jel9-Sug, I:I;GGEES—STEVENS.—in New York, on the 224 of by the, Rev. (tr. A. Lawrence, Horace, 31. Itgkglev, irpinia Oldfield, daughter of the late Cotatnodore Tleni:o , H. Stevens, C. H. N. WILSON. -HARDESTY. —ln Baltimore„ on July 22, by H Dr. Pinkerton, General Edwin U. WHAM], of Erie. Pa., and Nary E., eldest ,daughter of Richard H. I fettlelty. DIED 'DI flio.7s. —On Tuesday, July 2?d, Richard W. 'Dorlf , en, I'Vlindeiptlarformorly-u7 Ea etern SI/ orc of .tar, I:we . Sl,":o.l:ingteu (I). C.) pupern twi to t Newport, R. 1., on the 13th intt., Tillie N., e of Alfred 1/..leta.up. In the .13,1 year ,of her age. Due notice will ho given of the funeral, which will take Pl.c_*!. (Pint the rt..!hienc4; of her bumbaud, 142.) Walnut tf; Ns'lll . l2l:CAl:—.(in the Nth Instant, Wiliam) WWII 11 hit, cm, in the:List year of his age. The relatives and frienda, aly,f, the 10.1 th P. V. Regiment, ate incited to .attend attend his funeral. from the roddenee or hir 1 oele, 11. liecond.:*treet Pike, above Nieetown lie. On haturday. et 10 oirlock. A. M. •• Liy'itE LANDELL JUNI: THE BEST.ARTICLE Of EA Black Iron liarege, two yards wide; also, the ordinary qualities ti YEE & LANDELL • .124 Llama rode,..eci all the Summer Silica and Spring DreEa Gooclog A nalE Q eaNNA .11a mil Nrturera, •ti N. Fifth gtrect. MP-altazt - .'m to f.orOr thf, huert grades of Bo , * ; 4.y:0wl quality Book and Nem, epocre, at r,liort no tac.a. tny's.l-3Ta iCIAL NOTICES. YLVANIA MILJTARY ACADEMY BOARD OF TRUSTEES. 11' I. .1 illlt .. rOiI,CIT. , I.L. 1)., !Tee., Capt WM. A ppk, Ni, , m, ... ly, 1.. 1.J,,11..r, E -1., SeCy, J. H. urno, '1;., 1 , 'II , , . la hu,. Mott t,, Sim p,,,,n, I h D. I;,.v.ltichard D , . , -„ t ~,...,].). 1), kr,. V. ilti.,:n h. Dr• ...:4, It. I /.. lOU. Cila... 4.,'5• i 111. It OIL iV. E. L. L. au. Mai. I ~..m. : 4 ,- NV. f,:awf , ,rd, ' , col. 51,',14.13 , -‘1 Waddell. Major Wayne - M,A eag:i. 'l'. IS, ,\ j• •t, , -on. 1_4, 1 .j:twee L C1agh0rn.1.,4„,4:, It. Duw!an,li,ol., 0 1- A F,lton. 1.e.i., Jimoul A. CroZ,r, Eol , John , 4chran, i: 1., C I'. 1,:0rt.+1:,„ Ersq. 11,- Eiv.tl. Ant.al zie,rion of tide Academy op,nr, Thure. e : . r‘ipt.mbi-r sth. Pr i 7, En. e'iti , nal atlant , ,g , ~ of a hizh ~ rd--r'arc afforded. -Tn.. De T,, ,, ttu(-nt, ot Eauonect Log MPS Milit iry In,truc .ti -0 :,r; l,lide.r tic ci arge of a ~ ',",,t'• Pant graduate of high ~ c t,,,•,lfic ast,inioent , . . , Claadral aid 1..vg1i, , 1i liepartmente 'are ,conducted 1 ..ypeT hm ..ed und tl.oroughly competent Profel.,ord and In , trt. , torr. P.ll tic Aar ott-ution giN en to the moral} and pereonal h •idt,. of I 'octet-, -., 1.,,. („irc•slar.l. apply P, JrIIIIPA li. 0/ Ili'. E. 1.. ~ ...4 (1 , 4121Ut. -tr,,t, Philadelpia.a ; 'l'. IL l'et , r, , on. E. 4.1., 30.1 CheAnut 0:r. et, Pliii.A , 4P,i4 •. or to Col. TILED. IIYATT. Pri,. I'. M. A, • " • , ,-r,lh.laware co.Juty, Penna. l 7 .. `cl. (trill:SE COULlnertert , ';3ll 1../L . DA 1%, 13ei , Wh et Unutlldnte.n for nellnipeioh lo.a....vettlit/t the any pt , :nber Ilth con:ITCSDAY.-Jr.ly '...11tb, the <hi the Atamal I:outitiencetileut Ex,rel-e4 :ippy or to - Prof. Y(/L-SIIMAN, J.,2,,-,; 3tir Nowni I'ENNi3I"I,VANIA ItAII.ROAD AND GREEN LANE STAIION.—The underei..orol have a fall e•ippl.. of thy bard, .E iid pur,t Lehigh Coal at the absve 'daze. No trelvivlkil coal kepi. Partied in Ger. niantown or A i , :inity %hu d -ire a Hiperior article for pre. sent ure, cr the winter, ran have it pr , utaptly ',implied and delivered.. by addr,•,—inir to It.".:( •,, Germantown l', ~,, t 0:11err, or 'Paving order, at the Onice7No, Ili South Seventh st , oc t, Phlla it F:7-luArl4, j I'd •ndad,.. • illy. I i,67 sor RD HOSPITAL, NOS. 1518 AND IL Lamtatra t,t!sledk•al treatmett and medieitleo furniehed gratuitotAy to •the Mexico. The fail of Maximilian has undoubtedly cp , !ned the dour again to "chaos" in Mexico. As one evil: passes away in that distracted count4:„.amper arises to keep the, nation in continued uncertainty of its fate. To give au idea of the number and variety f dynasties whieh have followed one another in rapid succession during the tumultuous cpochs of the past forty-five years in Mexico, We' append the folloNvmg list of rulers in that country since the time of its independence, in the year 1S•_!1. Iturbide, General-in-Chief. - I 4 . 2‘..t. Durbide, Emperor. Generals Guerrero, Bravo and NeuTote: Dictators. General Victoria, President. I General Pedrara, President. t 829. Guerrero; Dictator. • 8:to. Bustamente. President. 5:.;2. Pedrazza, President. ts;.t. - .. Santa Anna, President. I SZ;7. Bustamente, President. t 8.40. General Pariotts; President. 1811. Bustamente, Presillent. 1812. Santa Anna, Presiilent. 184:1. Retirement of Santa Anna; saccessor not known. 1811. Santa Anna, Dictator. • 1845. General Cavalyo, President. 1817. Jose Justo Caro, President. I 847. Paredes, President. I 818. Santa Anna, President, I I:). Herrrea, President. /850. Arista, President. 1852. Juap Celiallos, Presidbnt. I 85:;.: hlnnuel Lembardini President. .tBi - ;:t: Santa Anna, President, `April 20. 8.'4% 1 Santa Anna, Dictator, Dec. 20. Alvarez. Dictator. 1856. Comonfort, President. 17: ,8 Miramon, Vice-President. Zuoloago, President. 1860. Miramon, President. tB6l. Juarez, President. • 1861. Maximilian, Emperor; . and Juarez, besident. - 1867: Maximilian fallen, and Juarez Presi dent. By this it will be seen that Mexico has passed the forms'of q Republic, Empire and Despotism, Tettyuing to a so-called Republic, but not to tranquillity and repose, as shown by the uprising which contending chieftains and factions have commenced afresh since -Maxaniillargtfal :1 7 = ---:t-Clitio-s--has-come-agaimn --Paris consumes, as butcher's meat an average of two hundred horses per month. This' meat is (sold only for what it is, viz.; horseflesh. It is oaten consciously, and because it is palatable and nutritious. It takes all the formsofrother meats, ouch &13 steaks, chops, sirloins, cutlets, rumps,rlbs and so forth, and Is subjected to a -similar va riety of culinary treatment. A h Qwrrru WANTru.—A push-cart is await lng an owner at the Sixteenth District Police iMation, in West' PhD a del phis. E ;I t.lerk of the Faculty EINES la SIIEAFF HASH STEPS. 1 1:CaTeipOLIFI , IICC . of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. I think Florence the haughtitA among I looked down upon it from Flecole, the Etruscan town to which it owes its origin. Florence cut below, eloien by the bright Arno. I traced its streets paved - with enormous flags adapted to tile feet of titans. I speculated over its grim and menacing architecture, constantly Massed into squares. The square houses. The square churches. The Square steeples, The eight-square .13apttstery, the eight-square Dome. The .Palace of the Signory, shaped like a vast, squat, square tower. The Pitt' Palace across the ricer, that last expression of, s arehltectural trength, where glants.,..haye heaped together rocks that are the measure of five men into a rec- tangular .mountaln, angrily flushing in the sun beneath my eyes. Behind the Pitti I could see the Boboli Gardens, the biggest, the gloomiest, the dreadfbliest gardens in Europe, I bpieve, where ancestral trees, that desire to grow in the - ofilnioriaffd and kinky - ways of their are lopped and shorn and made to grow square. Thcr. I recalled one of the squarest faces I ever Ea* . Li portrait or in life; that of Lbreriza de Medici, the Magnificent, who had for title the astounding one of Duke of Etruria, _a title that contemptuously - overleaps the whole Roman Empire. And then there passed Wore . the the faees=mostly faces of a particularly square jaw—of men whom we more intimately essociate with Florence: Dante, Cimlbue, Galileo avonarola, INfiehel Angelo:, the procession of greatness being strangely enough closed by the painful steps of a suffering woman of our time, Elizabeth Blowning, whO sleeps outside the l'orta a Pint'. in an inlaid tomb, which is the perfection of elegance—and squareness. . °Joe) too rigid, one would have said. of this °stony City, for that all-sensitive intelli i•tippo-..-;-lie :could lie awake 5 Onvqinies. in ri.,r6r(qn- ofd etuanlier in the. Gui.ll, and :cci , ••.-t, t, Nc Ith the IktletratiNg ilflaginaLioll of a 1;00. ,61nC OM Florentine fatniiy tale. That k.,of-C'w-itn0.1. , , for exitinple, father- Of the square headed and 3,lngoilicent Lorenzo, and father; according N. the . popular verdict. of his country. Thi s 'earthy, Idlydig other fatherly amenities, poisoned his daughter. caused the death of the lover of his dauuliter, killed his son,wlM had kilkd his brother: a second daughter was; stabbed by her husband, which caused the death of the mother: these attentions were resumed in the following geheration, poison and assassination being hereditary In the race.. As you pass through the superb chambers of the Pitti, furnished f,y these Nlediel with tables of malachite and - cabinets of ivory,and lumg with Ilaphaels and Titians, this benevolent Cosiwo beams upon you from every ceiling in the allegories of Corttma, encouraged by Apollo, congratulated by Hercules, led by Minerva, und'firially received by Jupiter and all mpus in processiop when life it overand Ely sium begins. Elizabeth has many a time shaken her curly head, in passing with all the world through thee rich galleries, at the Wicked flatteries of an indifferent painter. Did they color her dreoris at night? Did they enter the dreams of Milton when, escaping from the courtly Floren tines.-he slept one day in the foliage of . Vallam-, brOsa ? Italian dreams are made of these splen did scenes and sins, give me a good plain night .mare. at home, with precipicewd the regulation comforts.' Mrs. Browning. In fact, during the latter years of her painful life, found the essential acridity of Florence tcci eharp for her, and spent her winters in Home. "I used to prick up an enormous box of books ,in the autumn for Mrs. Browning to read at Rome." saui a good woman who kept a circu lating library opposite Casa Guidi. • What bind of books? I asked, curiously. "Frenelr not els. Sir. Perhaps a Cerman poet or so, but almoSt exclusively Dumas, George Saud. or whatever was new among the Paris roman- It was not • ? reeisely the idtal I had formed of the author of 71,, Seraphim, that she should lie on hei in\ alit sofa devouring Cunsue?” and Monte Ci .- 1.416: we used to heir of her reading bound like an nnnual, in that, position. But I ha% (2 long since learned to unseht my traditions and illusions. however pleasant, in favor of truths aecidentally let -slip by disinterested witnesses and Side-lights on the snot. The same woman, oddly enough, who knew Elizabeth Browning principnily as a disciple of Dumas, knew Robert Browning - solely as a painter. And lint kind of things did he paint can hardly tell you. Very strange 'What I call fanta,le. He never hired any of my hooks. - I should have liked to see some of the fantasti cal thingst but the Browning:6 will neither of theni ever -return to the beautiful rooms on thy Via Maggio, and the household gods are disl persedi. and though stepped softly. through the chamber where the poetess used to lay her fair boy to rest, and the study from whose ceiling the frescoed genii used to smile over the toil of the dramatist, I found the associations all altered, the furniture renewed. and the desk of another man of letters basking.in the smile of the dimpled genii. Casa Guidi is all modernized, the front yellow-Washed, everything renovated, to the utter loss of that antique air for which the poets loved it: and between the windows, between "Casa Guidi Windows," the municipality have set a tablet, a loquacious tablet, which, hbWever -be coming, is less satisfactory than the simple "E. B. B. ob. 1861," on her gras'e. The loquacious tablet delivers, in Italian, the followim:i• legend : "I fere wrote, and died ELISAIEITA BARRETT .BROWNINI. who in her woman's heart reconciled the learning of the Sage and the spirit of the poet, and made with Ircr ruse a golden link between Italy awl England. Gi•akfurFlorenee places this mem4ial, The Casa lies In the old-fashiuned regiOn on the left bank of Arno, just within the city limit of the tithe of Dante, quite outside of the regions galvanized into an ill-sitting gayety by the court of Victor" Emmanuel. The street "is lined on either side by gloomy old palaces, .perverted to modern_sSrviceln_the most unsympathetic- way, gossiping libruriuri fine spread for books and photographs in one of the oldest. The Consulate of my country-has fastened upon another. And upon the face of a third, a palace built by Bianca Capello before her marriage, an Italian cook has written; in three languages, among the ancient grisaillos (arabesques in monochrome fresco), that-be sends dinners out into-the city, and that he deals in coal. But the stones ofFlorenee do not often speak with such unworthy sermons. It Is impressivo PHILADELPHIA, TH i :DAY, JULY 25, 1867,E wli c i i ots duty for a royal palace. lam afraid it all seemed very shaggy and -mean Whim after his reception in Paris. 7 There' the Emperor 'and Court, thronged boulevards, a fine military dis play; a charming weledme from the Empress, and apartments in the Tuileriesbere, the re verse ; ..andeven English officers in ' Egypt! arc lodged in palaces and grow enthusiastic over the hospitalities of the Viceroy: I must say, how ever, that the English mean well and have the heartiest desire to do the right tiling; only they are notin - the way of It. - They do their trek, but national and royal hospitalities are among the things to which they have never given any seri ous attention. • The Reform Bill is going through COmmittee at a slashing pace, and the great. Radical, Mr. Disraeli is having it all his own way, in spite of timid Conservatives like Mr. Bright and Mr. Gladstone. It is probable that the question on the third reading may be taken at latest on Mon day. Every effort to stop the bill has been of no avail; Tbe_iffberala get all they want. and more Ann they want; but the hard thing is to be obliged to take it from and with a Tory Govern [Correspondence of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.] ment. "You want a Reform Bill," says Mr. Dis- Palos, Friday, July 12, 1867.—0ne of the most raeli; "by all means let us have one; go as far as y attractive portions of the whole of the Universalou like, gentlemen; we can stand it if you can." The result is that England goes to Homsehold Suf- Exhibition. at this moment . is,, without doubteefrage-under the leaderehipf Derby and - Disraeli, that little group of American erections which backed by the Tory and followed by the Liberal now stands in the Park, at a short distance, on) Party. The Liberals Mean to put In kr Gladstone as soon as Reform is Settled: but aria they be able the right from rile-Grand Avenue. That part of - - to do it? Isif likelv that a - nation will ungrate the grounds has now been got into complete i • ' - fully turn against the man who has just done the order and neatness, and there are to be 'iseen work required of him. or that those who have-left fper:iin6ils of an American Western 'Aar met'S 'Mr./Gladstone to carry a Reforni Bill will go back Borne, of an United States Free Oommon I to him the momentit is carried? It seems to me School-house. together with a pretty paVilion, that 41r. Disraeli may retain his leadership as in which the celebrated " Red, White and g ite asily .:i i i n i she gained and. hat held it hitherto. No. ,surprises he may have in store Blue" is now exhibited under the national for us:'- tell what. ii: , ;.. This grouping together is singularly fell- i The Sultan has had his review in Paris, and eitous, showing as it does the wonderful mastery now with him, the Viceroy of Egypt and the Bel gian' Volunteers, all in England at once, we are aeldeYed by - Americans Over sea and land, and their .eoingto have a yery busy My dine Theo personally Queen can ted. he expected to have i'thing to do lei.reli at the head of civilization and haulm . ' progress on either element, combined with 'the I with the Head of the Mohammedan religion and spread of education and of moral. intellectual and a gentlenran of the Sultan's personal domestic relielous enlightenment throughout all classes habits, - but be has commanded the: Prince of 11;:)1 1 (s e t t ( . .) i go in state with him next Monday uight of: their population. I have seen nothing, indeed. to t1e•I lion oper, . where he, is to be received in great state, and hear the English and Turkish na andwhich exhibits America under a more favorable tempting aspect to the populations of as- tional hymns and the opera of Mos-..-aae//,;. By eembled Europe than this little nook of Yankee- royal commend. also. there is to be a grand _ land, which reflects the highest credit upon the concert and state dinner at the Crystal Palace next Tuesday, when the Turkish hymn is , lchoir of the Any:dean Commiseion for its arrangement. The whole thing is a little epitome lel sollie of the best It be sung in Turkish by the alian opera, t t. :illned and led by Signor elements of the country—ag'rienltii , :e; "maritime - Vrdith On Wednestiiay we sh all go down to Pert. enterprise, public instruction, intelligence. The mouth to , see the grandest naval review ever given in 'British wieters. and return on Thursday locality itself, too, now looks charming; the . in hot haste to attend the greatest ball of the cen grais is green and fresh, the shrubs and flowers run% Iv hffili. with ionmia and half-guinea tickets are grown np . and flourishing, the walks in good which anybody May buy, is to have royal and order: well-watered, and herd:red with a neat ! other most distinguished patronage, and is guar eel ing of trellis work. Looking eit the School , affixed to be of entire respectability. Each aris r tic ladypatronesswill redeem a certain Douse and Farm House thus pleasantly situated ' tra amount f inhe);rity. . 1 royal highness . will act together side by side,: one might almost fancy - upon the mass of the assembly like a refiner's oueself on some border land of the far West- tar, while ;i beautiful duchess will have the purl- The Farm house stands on a little plat of grass Eying effect of father's soap. A little leaven of and shrubbery, looking the picture of neat , nobility will leaven - the whole lump: and a half , c i rt t ne t :: :t tieket to the Belgian ball will equivii and homely comfort. Large placards, placed on presentation at Court. which is the most the oi(i tside, iell the, passers-by its nationality thorough whitewashing known in these deeuer and d -signation, and few There, arc who do not, .ate days. The distinction of dancing in the same , room with the Sultan of 'Turkey, the Viceroy of enter and admire it aek a thousand questionri ilbOilt. Egypt, the Prince of Wales, and those by whom its mes;'applianees and cost, and leave deeplN' they'iwill be surrounded, for the small price of impressed by what they have seen and heard, 21 ;billings, ladies half price, supper and wine The bdittling itself, as I think. I have before men- ,: Me' uded, is •soneithinge.o . "`much ahead of Paris, tioned, was forwarded-from Chicago, Illinois, by that it was not even thought of in the French Mr. Lyman Bridge 4, and adopt6tl by the Aneiri- ' en'll-a/- ~There all the invitations Were free. , They- cost :nothing, but money couldn't touch earl Commission as "a Btructure chiiraCteristie of . • • them. It required all the originality of an Eng and serving to give sonic idea of the inner lif( An of - ii. , L , Reeeption Committee to eke out a subscrip their people." n extremely wellwritten. Y . : den list by .ach a speeffiation. The longer I live k., sheet, entitled The .Imeriean Cottage," is placed its this fouarkable , couutry, the mere I admire its manners and customs, and ways /of doing things inside for distribution to all visitors, giving them - („euerally. a correct idea of the nature and uses Of what they ' Att Irishman does not more anrelv make a bull see. In one of the rooms, on a LINT table and than John Bull makes a blunder. When the few on shelves all round. are found numerous cx- • thousand troops possible to collect in England amples of what may be termed the literature I Were ordered to concent ra stponed on account le in Hyde Park the . ) of the district, showing what food is offotherer day for 'the review, p 6 ered , f the murder of 31axinnhan. a column of cavalry to the minds of the people. here visitors see- was left eight hours without food or forage. such publications as the "Trausactions of the illi- It was worthy of 'the Crimea. There is a beauti nois State Agricultural Society;" the "Geological ful system in the seryiee by which, when a soldier, wantata stirrup, or a/ farrier wants a bellows, it Survey" of the same State: the " knnual State reqUires the labors/ of thirty or forty seem ment of the Trade and Commerce of St. Louis;" tines and the chiefs of several departments the "Wieeonein Agrieulteral Transactions:" with jto get them. 4 was quite possible that a Love's volume of "Wisconsin in the war of the eolumn of 'cavalry should perish of starvation, Rebellion." and many othertocal books.and pun- , nieu and horses,/ within tea miles of the War : Office, just as it.' was true that thousands ofhorses cations, ail touches; to the improvement and infor and men perished in the Crimea for want of, food mition of the people. In I . a .I ei, if - may judge and clothing; spoiling within a short distance both from what I hear and see respecting this por- - ender charge of general routine and general MlS don 'of the Exhibition. I should say- that ' management. iNeiw, as then. we have a series of carcely anythin has ever before brought indignant sarcastic and eloquent leading articles sg - . home so vividlY ti; European minds. and on the sobjeet, questions, in Parliament, and so . on; but Alio -,, , , wiext ate it will be, the same especially 10 - the ennuis - M. of -.die : pupa- th i ii , - oVer scam. But theyAwill- pull through lotion who now begili to frequent the Champ de : somehow; they always do. It is England's phi& Mars, the idea of how much the moral and in tel- and England's luck to come out first best, in spite leetual condition of the people is eared for both of :11 sorts of blunders. by the local and central authorities in America, hile the Court and aristocracy will make the in Ist of Sultan- and Viceroy, it is evident that the and how much their trell-beiny is the one grand popular favorites and real guests of the nation aim and object of the whole systedi of - govern- : / will be the 2,900 Belgian Volunteers. The wel mend It is (mite a rikp..,:itire, indeed, for an 7 come .-Oven to the English Volunteers in Belgium last year iswitrmly remembered, and there is the American to walk through this commix-uncut and/: t •=ee l] what a excellent representative type it or' hbl disposition in the world to make-thema lsome return. The Queen invites them all fers of certain elements of his country / f , to Windsor. Mr. Smith invites them all to Cre which he has such good right to be proud. morne, and has got the permission of the Chief of Police to keep openuntil -F o'clock in the _mound the walls are -hung; maps and plan); of • the States_ of Missouri and Illinois, / with morning. As thefete begins at noon, -it into last • .. for sixteen hours, which is as long as even the de t)cellent photographs of the / port lights of Cremorne can keep mirth and music, 1 ipal public buildings , le:15111)&11d dancing,from proving tiresome. Then several of the latter re- the manager of the Alhambra gives a Belgian ball, vast blocks obuildings and opens his doors to 0,000 visitors, who are practiced. ,In the par- allowed to dance until 3 o'clock. As nearly as I , can calculate there are to be, next - week, ten or , WI ruislie (-1 ( Is twelve ',Treat public entertainments, besides the press James L. naval review at Spithead. Enough 'grand testi the f; Missouri, I vals are crowded into a week to last the whole containing a large collection o' is of well- season with proper economy. How am I to do known Missouri men. A cem ic United it all, and then write an account of it all? I must ' go to the dramatic college of at the Crystal States and, above all, a Report -'Commis- Palace with my pockets full of shillings for the eioner of the Central Land Office, translated pretty actresses to pick; I must see how Enland into French, assist • in/ completing th e entertains the sovereigns of' Turkey Mid Egypt; - large stock of information respecting I must see how Britannia hears her thunders on Am erica, thus most efficiently offthe briny deep at Spitheadand how England en ered to the tertaius the brave Belgians. 'Asit is only once European eye and phut. Nor can I pass over or twice in a lifetime that history makes' itself without unetiOu, in Illii;"iionnectioni the highly -with such rapidity, I shall endeavor to be squat intelligent young person placed in charge by the to the occasion. " American Commission, Mr. Louis D. Combe, an '' • 1 fumigated • Yankee write of the vengeance taken' s by the Italian 'to the ']'rat e s to Italian Weldensian by - birth, but now coniplam a citizen of - GoVernment on those who have passed through the United StateS, and recently a settler and resi-- Italy to Rome to attend the•recent festivals., On dent about thirty or forty miles west of St. Louis. their return they were all—bishops, priests Mid laymen—shut up in close rooms and fumigated/ Mr. Combo is both able and willing to afford under the pretence that the cholera had at last every ,information e lo visitors, speaking, as he broken out in Rome. That does not seem to be• dues, admirably e q'rench, Italian and English. the fact, thoug,h it actually:exists in London. The and I am happy to acknoWledge here his-polite- seeds of the disease are scattered over Europe, tiers and intelligence. end recall:him to the- re- .And may be developed anywhere.; but the preser membranee of his Western friends. I have nation of Rome. so long is certainlygremarkable. stic visitors to a allowed myself to dwell on this subject. until I the POpe-have been .Among the most enth usi many thousands of the pea -1 ave filled my paper, but it is, I think, one sentry of the former Papal States, now annexed which offers great interest to American readers, to the Italian Kingdom. Whatever may be the as lam sure it does to European lookers-on. ' sentiments of the upper classea in Italy,llie lower feel-bitterly - the'bUrdens'ottaxatienthrown upon ,thentr y. the mew . ..GOA - cm to ent.L_TritYulersiassurs _ me that discontent In Southern Italy is alMost universal. The older people would gladly return. to their former political condition; the younger hope that Garibaldi and a republic may help them out of the hard times they'experienco at, present. : There is great hardship, and all-but starvation: : There is little 'doubt that by December wo shall he at war with Abyasinht: An expedition: of 10,000 troops is to be prepared at Bombay, and an-officer has been - sent to wake oil VIC news. sary arrangements -for. Visit*. _Wilding In Africa and the march into the:. Interior.: The opinion now 'phial - hat Dr. Livingstone is still alive. enough to rend, on the face of an old 'house in a gloomy street; that this was the habitation of Galileo, the star-gazer; • who Sleeps under the navepf Santa Croce. Or, on another, -that "In (jthifita Casa degli Alighteri nacquc it divinopoeta". (In this house of the Alighieri the ditrine poet was born). Or, pa sing a simple mansion on ,the 'Via della Peigola, to find that it was, behind that plain facade, Cellini led his heated life, now rush ing in to escape from a street-brawl, now jumping up from the table to see how the bort - were getting on with the casting of his Perseus, out in the garden; the proud Perseus who -Stands in eternal , triumph among the masterpiecesZhat people the Piazza della Signoria: EUROPEAN AFFAIRS. LETTER ER40,1111 PARIS. ims , 'wrwltrwlrruirrmnlr;mmi The Sultans 'Wilt to London. [Correspondence of the N. Y. Timeti.) Lobiripii, July 13.—The arrival of the Viceroy of Egypt at, London on Saturday evening made a very sligh4rkensation. The railway company made a small display of bunting and evergreens in the station: There was a small military escort, and a few Government officials bade welcome to the Royal guest. But there was no sovereign to re ceive him; 'only a royal carriage in which he was taken through' the miscellaneous crowd which gathers so readily in Loudon, to Dudley House, OUR WHOLE COUNTRY. EtirANT PERM LATER NEWS FROM MKNICO gANTA ANNA SHOT. Mare Court Martinis Ist Mexico. HAVANA, July .20.—The French steamer Louis inual which arrived on the l7th, has brought Iviexican news to the 13th inst. from Vera Cruz, announcing.; among other important matters,. that Gen: Santa - Anna find been shot at Sisal, no denial of the fad having been received at the sail ing of the French steamer. The adventurous life of - the old chieftain keolllB to have been closed at last. Affairs in the city of Mexico aro still in a very unsettled state. The following persons have • been placed in jail for political crimes, and will be judged by a court-martial, 'viz: Miguel Andrade;, %Warner° Beker, Tomas Benavente, Jorge - • llielfoli, Ricardo Martica, Sostenes Montejano, ' Rafael Rubio, Franeisto Hernandez, Mariano • Saba, Eilipps f Eloin • Augustin Fiches ' Tomas Murphy, Jose Maria Pena, Francisco Trevino, Juan Maria Porter, Jose Maria ()surto, Ulises Ur, belie Lassepas, Rafael Diaz, Jose Miguel Alva, Jose/ Maria Bernal, Carlos Schaffer, Guillrmo __Baron Tintitutt_. Juan_ .L:-.--Barfet :Ladistao Tello do Mums, Leon ardo Juan, Ventura Tomei, Pedeo Evarsto. PI - cart, Juan de Math. Dames!. Pineda: and the fol lowing Imperials ex-Generals are confined in - St. Bridget's: Ramon Taberm - J. Velasquez - de la Cadens. Fr. Cossio, Carlog Palafox, P. Cabrein, Mienel Andrade, V. R. Lands,..Pn von, Ossori, and -- tgerte, the Imperial Chief of Police. Their fate has not vet been decided upon, but the taste of the Mexican people has become fearfully craving for human blood and victims, and' hardly any doubt exiSts that most of the Generals Will be tried and condemned as traitors. - A commission of citizens and members of the City Council has been organized to receive Presi dent Juarez in a befitting manner on his entry in 1.1141 Ca p i (al. from which lie lied four years ago as a persecuted and exiled patriot, but which he now enters victorious. but with the stigma of a cruel and lavage Indian chief, whom the 'advan teams of a' 'lengthened - residence in the United Stetes have failed to civilize, and whose' latter _ acts have. only _afforded the world at large the opportainity of admiring the rare combination of the relentless, cruel and barbarous cha racter of the • savage Indian, blended with the deceit and hypocrisy of the ma joilty of the Mexicans. The clergy have again been admOnished not to forget that they are once rnote under the iron hand of the repub lican leaders,,and that. they.must_not. wear their sacerdotal robes in pu'ilie. but only when per forming their duties inside of tlic church. Nuns and priests arc again emigrating, but their depart ure will be no loss to the country, and the abolishing of nunneries and convents deprives the Church Party of splendid hiding places. The municipal authorities have presented an address of thanks to Gen. Porfirio Diaz, and the mer chantS have rshanurily loaned him $200,000, quite a rum uric in Mexico. President Juarez was in Queretaro on the sth lust., according . , to a telegraph despatch received, and his arrival In the capital-was expected on the 11th or 12th inst. All the public documents is- I • sued during the Empire and In tervention are being collected and placed in the archives of the State Department. General Videurri was shot on the 12th inst.,at 8 in the morning, having been found in a house on San Camila street. having diSguised himself with a pair of false moustaches, and was well. pro= aided with funds, over $5,40 being found in his •' possession. 'Marquez has not been found yet, and Lacaunza also is still hid, somewhere. General. O'Haran, was found in, a ..box which a carman was taking outside of the city, when the populace threw themselves On him I and hacked him into pieces. Don Pedro C. Ne grew, Chamberlain and Master of Ceremonies -under 31aximilian, was caught on the 2d at , the Paso del Mariam Many Generals and other offi cials of the Republicau army are sending in their resignations. Gen. Escobedo arrived eight days ago at Que retaro, after having passed some time near the President at San Luis. Vera Cruz is •assuming its ordinary appear ance, Gen. Francisco Zerega having taken charge of,the government, but for present he will re side in Orizaba. The laws before the 14th of De cember, 1861, have again been enforced. Provi sions are arriving from Havana and the interior, and are again assuining'their old prices: but the health of the city is very bad, the yellow fever making. sathhavoc. ' Remarkable Arrests in Rome. The Pall Mall Clu.:ette says: • "A start ling event has followed close on the heel of the great demonstration of episcopal con cert in the arrest, without asigned reason, and in the depth of night, in their apart ments in the Quirinal Palace, of the two chief' conspiratorstiair deputy, Father (Junta. Both are of course Dominicans, and to, them' is entrusted the delicate duty of - censorship over all publica tions... Father Gigli himself is still in his re •sidence, though cut off from holding any in tercourse; but his deputy, stripped of his monk's robe, has been carried to the prison belonging to the Holy Office. No explana tion has been given of this most astounding occurrence, but it is understood that the' charge brought against these high dignitarieS implies treasonable connivance in printed 'at tacks on the Pope. "It should be known. (for the incident will yet be much heard of) that both these Domi nicans' have long been objects of special offence to the Jesuits ever since a publication of that body in illustration of the Syllabus, and replete with incendiary abuse of the Italian government, was stopped by their in fluence. Every opportunity was then taken to excite the Pope's suspicion against them. Two months ago Father Carnelitw,as actually menaced with deprivation as a disaffected revolutionist because he had , licensed the publication of a sermon at the end whereof is a string Of blessings, and he • had passed one called down on 'ltaly and those who rule her.' "This story gives the measure of the secret machinations to which these two ecclesias tics have been exposed for some time. We have reasons for knowing that the extraordi nary measures now taken are uue to Father Ciumelli's Whig let pass his revise it'publica don treqiiig of the proceedings adopted it. ) against CU al Andrea. It is admitted that the tone of th book is Bush as to make its contents har :to criticise oia - ) the score of pro priet,yr ' : Cumstance Which adds no doubt to the effect of its arguinents; 'and explains the fury of those who wince under its lash. The Pope himself directed the arrest, and. is re ported to be excessively wroth. It is difficult to foretell how the incident will end. An arrest of this importance has not happened since many a.day." q . 131power , dress cm:tites the attention of Paris, where the at present; • but another female who carrieb a ßloomerisra" to even a greater extent than "Doctor" . Walker has attracted no little - attention at the Grand Hotel. She Is very pretty, and dresses in the height of the fashiou—buelt is "Man". fushlon—with the jauntiest little hat and the neatest fitting• coat, nitli a robe always in one' of its button-holes, tight jest. Phowing a:fair 'development of chest, *and light pantaloons, with patent leather boots. 'This young temale;whose dress.and presence have horrified some:of time mere staid of her sex at the hotel, if. an Englit4lt 641. AGAIN BEPiltl F. L FETHERSTON. Pubßam PRIOE THREE OENTS FACTS AND FANCIES' . • 11 , 1iformoh4 had a grand bail on the Fourfilp tchetit $1.7 Tor gentleman and one wife only. —There are 13,780 Quakers hi England, and or 'these a majority of B.iB are women. —The bank-book of a professional thief was produced in a London court. lie had some .£5OO standing in his name. —The - reason the breakers knoek you head over heels at the sea-shore is, becaUse it is sum mer-salt sea-bathing. , —The new- slee p ing-carsp on the, rennaylvama* Central arc called Palace Cars became they' haye _Palliasses to sleep on. • . • ' —Edwin FortestlS in Beaton on a visit to his friend James Oakes and is at the Tremont.flouse l Forrest and Oakes is a neat combinations, —A Kentucky peach-grower has sold his.estire crop, as it hangs on. the trees, to a house its Oin einnati for $14,000, or about $2 75 per tree. —A Russian Prince In -Tnrint dressed himself elegantly, put on hia yellow kid gloves and com mitted suicide.. —At the rate shown by the returns of thefirst six months of the year, the total immigration a - thevear - frora-Europ_e_wilt_prolmbl • exceed two, hundred and fifty thousand: —A gentleman in Oxford, Me., has built a sum mer house in the top of a large willow tree, and connected it with-the second-story of his I;ottse by a lattice bridge. -The London Globe suggests that a peer's. . political majority he put at the age of thirty-one instead of twenty-one as at present. A direct attack upon the peer-age. • —There is a vase in the Paris Exposition valued at $2,800,000. It is made from a single turquoise. During the Sultan's visit, a Turk-was- there rated still higher. • —Henry Ward Beecher says that more public men of eminence have started from the business of type-setting titan probably from any other oecupa ti on. —One of the Andover theological professors recommends a certain work to the favor of his students by saying- It is "distinguished for the beautiful copses:littleness of its logical amnia -tionstiess. --An Indiana paper tells of a ease lately tried in one of the courts • there, where it was found, after proceedings . laid begun, that the defendant had been sworn as a juror and was actually sitting oh his rAvn case. - - —One of the India Governors, by name Sir Jung - liabadour. Wanted badly: to ,rastneto Eng-, __ . land. and could not be restrained until the Viceroy threatened to reduce his salute from 17 to -15 guns. Such Is the force of gunpowder. —Au enterprising old Man in New York has fitted up a street sprinkler on a small scale, which lie drags about the streets , on foot, sprinkling door-yards and bits of payemeut to order, for a pittance. Private gutter-scrapers might be intro duced profitably in Philadelphia. —ln Ohio. a man can vote if the judges 7cif the , election decide that he is more white than black. This leaves considerable margin as- td : the stand ard, and hi Oberlin, it has been fixed at a well polished boot. Nearly all the voters are .. whiter than the standard,- - - - —King William of Prusrila did not grille, know what to make of Louis Napoleon when he pointed to the Imperial standard, and gayly exclaimed: "A h, num frire ! fai aussi mon Bimilarck!" ' Ile referred to the Bees',mark on ,the banner,. hi:it William never could take a joke. • ' • —A witness in court at -Lynn, giving his tea timony iti•a very quick and-excited manner, was stopped recently .by Judge Newhall, when he replied : " t's the fault of my tongue. 1 should have riutde i better lawyer than a shoemaker, r kw." -•, -- —An Ohio paper furnishes the following touch ing gem of obituary Poetry : "She could not bp let alone; ah, no! Like a tiny flo*er, with fragrance rare, ' She must be called, the angel Death said, For my Heavenly Father's bouquet rare."' —William Swinton says of Alex. H. Stephens that in his physique he has just enough of the material to. make him subject to the law of gravi tation. He weighs just Imlay -Jour pounds avoir dupois. It is a comfort to know that there is some law which the cx-reherVice President hest(' recognize. —Jttlesburg, a Pacific Railway town, young as it is. is not without some of the characteristics of old settlements. A correspondent says it has already had several murders and assassinations, and at dinner one day his right-hand neighbor threw some crumbs in the face of an acquain tance, and the salute was playfully returned with a fist full of bacon grabbed from a public dish. —The New York Evening Post . is publishing "Umbrella Stories." Here is the latest: A. "spiritual medium" in New York stole my wife's nevsilk umbrellalhe other day. It had a dog's .earfed in Ivory, and. watt. altogether very ii. dsOilic and somewhat costly. Besides; it - was my first gift to my Betsy; and both she and rare in great distress about it. Has anybody fouudit? . —During the last Congressional campaign In. Orange county, General I ,'an Wyck lost a pair of valuable gold spectacles during a temporary stoppage of a train of cars at Otter= station,, in that county, near a bridge over a stream. 'A. feWdays ago the identical "specs" were found hi the abdomen of a huge pickerel caught at that place. The fish was probably going to see with. them. —The college regatta . at Worcester-terminated... with disgraceful scenes. One of the hotels Was. playfully taken possession of _by the students, who proceeded to destroy the furniture, doors, ii windows, crockery, bed-clothing, ,te. The pro -I.prietor estimates his loss at 4.1,500. The civil authorities and citizens seem to have looked on helplessly at the riotous boys, for nothing was done to put a stop to their lawless pro ceedings. ' —The Soldiers' Business, Messenger and Des pach Company of New York has commenced operations. The company has the power to erect and maintain stands on all the public streets— Broadway eicepted—and can use their booths for the purpose of receiving,storing and sending out packages or messages, and may vend at retail newspapers, books, periodicals, stationers' goods, conNettonery, fruits and flowers, under certain regulations. —The'lloyal Dramatic College held its annual fete and fancy fair on the 13th and 15th instant, at the Crystal Palace. In addition to the usual - display of stalls, which were presided over by • the Youngest and most attractive of the metro pollian actresses, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Paul made their first appearance in England since their return from America, In a whimsical eat ertain ment, "Faust in Five Minutes," which was given in an eleant little milk especially - fitted up for the occa sion. —A Kansas paper says: "An Indian agent's.. salary is about i‘1.500. By being economical in. the saving of his salary he manages to retire at the expiration of a four years' term with about VAN)°, and in the meantime supports his family in a style that corresponds with the dignity: of art_ official and representative of ,`the best govern- went the sun ever shone upon.' * * * A su perintendent who undertakes to , say that au agent shgllraot make it.Aooo_out of .-+ of 46,000 * * Is apt to *et himself into trouble," &c. ___Thirmiglintl - matnisiript of iiirWidter poems and several of his novels and, other prose . • works are about to ber.solti.,4 MiCtion, •by order' of the executors of • *r; , :ii.obert of Edinburgh: litlheis.6 4.46;1Pte are said •-/ te be • remarkable . for - the , OX• . ordituny , fluency' wttbv- - which they were written; and the very few Cur.' rections or alterations occurring . in them; lbw affording a proof of Bir Walter geott's wonderhl facility of composition. • The manuscripht 'ate btated to be all in a tierceet 'state of preserfa tion, and inaiforinty bound in Resold, whituhent • eel j;t+e.• •
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers