'GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME XXL-NO. 114. 'THE EVENING BULLETIN VUBLIBIIED EVERT EVENING (Sundaye excepted), AT THE NEW 1.11.1,ET1 N MELDING, BOT Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, BY THE .-- EPENINO BULLETIN ASSOCIATION. "OPRIETORR. ;MESON PEACOCK, ERNEST C. WALLACE, YETHERSTON, T1108...1. WILLIAMSON, T.L.SPER SOLIDER, Jr.., FRANCIS WELLS. The Stit.t.rnri L served to enhaeribers in the city at Ili •eente per week, payable to the carrion. or $8 per annum. M_II3CHOMACIIER & CO.'S CELEBRATED Plane Acknowledged superior In all romped./ agda In tide country, and cold on moat liberal term NEW AND SECOND-BAND PIANOS constantly on hand for rent. Tuning, movina packing promptly attended to. Warerooma 1103 Ch ea t nu t otreet. jol9-11rul MARRIED. 1100K---CONNOLLY.--On the lath Net., in Balthriore, by the Rev. Dr. Foley, of the Cathedral, Joseph A. Hook, of Philadelphia, to Amelia Connolly, of Baltimore. KELLER—MeCOMBEY.--Angiist lath. by Rev: F. Crouch, In Allentown, Pa., George L. Keller, of Philadel phia, to Ellrmhoth C. McConisey. of Lancaster. DIED. LIECK.--tin the lath Inst., Annie E.. wife of T. C, Bock, and daughter of Catharine and the late John McCormick. The relatives and friend," are renpoctfully Invited to attend the funeral...from the residence of her mother, Mrs. Catharine McCc.' ertnick. 215 Lombard street, on Thursday afternoon, Ana. f.l, at 4 o'clock. 3t IIRECIll:M114.—on Saturday. 17th instant, bier Anna Itrecheinin, relict of the late Louis Brechemin, In the 82d year of tier age. • The relatives and friends of the family are respectfully incited to attend her funeral, from her late residence, No. =t4 Routh Second street, on Wednesday afternoon, at 3 o'clock. 2t BULL—On the 19th inst., Richard Bull, in the 8,4 y. of his age. BUTLER.—Ors the Itlth inet., at thither Leland. Georgia, Pierce Butter, of Philadelphln.in the Sethyear of his ago' 2t ENNUI. —in 'Baltimore. on the lath instant. Harriet A o wife of Thomas ri. Hanle." . 11A IIBLI:T.--On Sunday, Aug. 18th, at Corinth. Missbt eippt. Howard Harbert, in the 27th year of his' age, youngest non of Charles Harbert, of Philadelphia, • JOKES.—e,in Second-day. the Mb inet., Rowland Jones, In the *di year of lit age. The relatives and friends are invited to attend hie funeral. from hip late residenre, in Wood street, Burling ton, N. J.. on Flf tb-day, they'd inst., at 3 o'clrwit., I': M., without further notice, •• 81NGEIZI.Y.—This morning, Pasuelia A., wife of Win. lit BinEedY. and daughter of flionian C. Jones, in the 324 year of het age. Due notice of the funeral will he given. • 111QL1380N & BON iIAvE coMMENCED their Fall impartation", and will open to-day three eases of BLACK ALPACA. POPLINS. at 6,4, Fs6 111, $1 and *I lo la.r yard. ata.61.1 &lOC SIOP.E, No. 1.111 L'heotnut rt. EYIIE& LANDELL HAVE THE BEST ARTICLE OF INack Iron Barege, two pinta wide; also. the ordinar7 .4na/11140 EYREI LANDFILL Hare reduced all the Sounder Saks and Spring Drees ATLEE (XMaper lARD, Pd emit Lenten, 44 N. Fifth street. Yaligfacture to order the Sheet grades of Book; also. mama quality Book and Newepapere„ at nirrikam hort no tice. t SPECIAL NOTICES. raw pARDEr. SCIENTIFIC COVIISE IN LAFAYETTE COLLEGE. The next term commences THURSDAY. September Candhietea for admission WIT be examined the day before (September Uth), or on TrESDAY;'JuIy loth. the flat before the Annual Commencement Exercises. For dream, apply to Prerldent CATTELL, or to Prof. R. B. YOUNGMAN. Clerk of the Faculty. iF3040 aisroor. Penna.. July. 1867 abr . THE STATED MI E"TEtit: AND IiISPLAY OF tbo I!...onsylvauta llortleultqrral Society will take place this evening at tbelr MIT 11111. Broad. al.ovr, Spniee street. Thia in log premium niaht fur Gladialur, a tiu rolleetkai way be expected trots Ore garden of 11. A: I kreer. It 4 1101:TICI - LTIltAL 1311( !I ETV. ou N ti i d l y 1-:.il;ibltion' and atad.ed lueeti s ar t g Tad EVENING. at NPR' Broad above S pruce . , I.IOWAItD HOSPITAL, NOB. 1518 AND lia) a ll a r Lombard Street .Dispenary Department—Medical treatment and medicinal tarnished gratuitourly to the RA3II STEPS. iCorreapvtdeace of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin. Ramon—you will remerubt'Hill i pretty picture, called Suter . ... Not at thane—one of the most fanci ful of French painters . . exhibited as his master piece in the Nairn of 1866, The Mimes at Pompeii. Like all his works, it was Greek in treatment, the figures looking pure enough to have come off an antique vase ; the Painter's life, which haalatterly • been a vibration between Rome and Naples, scorn . hilly Obliterates twenty centuries of. history, and dwells anion existences that breathe mythology, and wrap themselves outwardly in the peplum and chlamys. His picture, accordingly, looks as if it might have been painted by some ithodian exile. You see, glimmering in a cool, silvery, unearthly light, the long colonnades and vacant streets of Pompeii, the unroofed walls, the dried fountains, the chilled hearths; while overhead hang the pensive muses, pale, impalpable figures rising like exhalations from the ground, or sorrowfully floating from chamber into chamber. .This fancy .comes again and again to one who has made 're peated visits to Pompeii. Even thus,you are fain 'to think, the genii of these resuscitated homes must steal to them sometimes on bright nights; must repeat in secret the holy modes and pieties of those swept and garnished rooms; dwell and idle there from dewy hour to hour in the moon light, and enact again the dearest familiarities of a vanished society. The domestic places which the Pompelans have 'left to us areof such dainty dimensions, indeed, that you can hardly take them more seriously. It •is difficult to people them with the figures of pon derous, brown Roman) citizens. Yon can ani mate them more comfortably to the mind with some sort of celestial patronesses, who will dis pose of them in a kind of heavenly game of baby 'houses, and arrange the household schemes and interests and scandals in the grave and fatal way with which children legislate for their Nuremburg villages. It was not until after two daylight visits that I succeeded, in obtaining from the Director of Ex cavations the liberty of Accompanying, by moon light, au artist who was studying Pompeii by a night effect. Sitting, Yankee-like, on the table of lions in the audience-court of Cornelius Rufus, with the soft light silvering the marble locks of July unknown host,whose bust was regarding me, I felt a breath of the old life come back and inform the painted halls. Picture the scene. 'The pillars and pictures still firm,—the quiet artist working among them as if he had always lived there,—the owner's portrait all tranquil and hospitable,—the homes of his neighbors on every side,—Vesuvius, that had done the magic and mummified for me this town of ancient Italy, .sleeping behind me in the moonshine,-=was it in conceivable that I felt the old civilization crys talizing and shaping itself in my mind with the strangest distinctness.? The furniture and uten sils traveled back from the museums and placed themselves 'once more against the vivid wails. The. braceleted and jeweled skeletons were re clothed upon with flesh, mantled with the glow •of life, and draped with the stuffs whose tissues printed themselves, nearly a score of centuries since, upon their beds of ashes. That fair girl meek from the Naples museum, that moulded the •.---..f . ...t.(.ift).: . :' .. .''...':_ .. •.. -.. t.'''''.'..'.' . ..'..._ . .''7 : i,':.',1(t.'5*,, image of. its innocence and beauty into the dull mire so long ago; seemed to rise and .fall• beside mc, hung with pearls that Looked like_dew in_ the moon. I was on the verge of a tender sentiment with a female who was a thousand years old at the birth of my great-great-grandmOther. And the houses around me were perfect, with the odd exception of the roofs! Strange irony of an intermeddling fate! It is the roof that baffles our curiosity about our neighbors' affairs. But for the roof the aeronaut would be the confidant of all of us. When the romancer sends his hero for instruction among the various phases of life, it Is the roof that vanishes or becomes transparent at the fairy's wand. In a conspiracy with our impertinence, destiny has blown away the roofs of this entire city, but has laid a finger on nothing else. The volcano nods upon all the picture of an old arrested life; upon its business, and feasts, and worship; upon Its touching family scenes, and upon niany a secret that the citizen meant to guard forever, and which he would have con cealed In an agony of shame from every eye; the volcano nods upon its work, sleeping under the moon and stare. In the day when these drellings were covered, the volcano was hung with kardena of the grape, a sinewy and luxuriant vineyard from which Spartacus had woven scaling-ladders when he made the crater his fastness during the servile war. Beneath and beside the tossing acres of leaves and br aches stretched the flat acres of the roofs that re •v are opened. Each roof was a square frana vhich left exposed an uncovered court and fo ,taro in the middle, like that which collects the bowers in the place where lam sitting. Sta, , ies, and porticos with . gaudlly painted columns surrounded the courts: and there was the dining-porch, half open to the day, with its crescent marble table and cushioned beds of bronze: and there were the small, dim offices and rooms of this old life clustered around the square—the porter's cabinet, the picture-gallery, the roll-room or library, the room of archives, and the guest chanbers, all strangely little and gloomy: So much for the public and for sacred hospitality. • Behind, if the master was wealthy, lay his harem, surrounding its own proper garden, which was a fanciful. tasteless bower of shell-work, statuettes, mosaic fountains, and plants we can identify, still by their embers. Meantime his whole street front, except a most insignificant and narrow entrance, was a crowded border of pigmy shops surrounding the building as stores surround an American hotel: such tiny booths all' :of them that the tradesmen must have been forever crowded to their own doorways or into the street, Just as you find them in Naples to-day. The grandest householder was not too fine to vend his own oil and vintage by proxy in these cells, which often communicate with the mansion by interior passages. Meantime the ladles could lounge, if the day was fair, in their Own secluded back-garden. When there was rain they must retire to their own apartments, whiCh were surely _little mines of ennui. But few pieces of furniture, and room for but few. The Sultana,shivering in the dark closet, might wearily re-arrange the curls of her wig, or clean out the last of a rouge-pot, or review her 'elegant bratrelets and hairpins and fibula). When she lifted lier idle eyes, they might encounter the sullen espionage of the slave who abode in his little cabinet at the entrance to prevent intrusion; or, piercing the obscurity of the chamber, they would light upon a far mote grateful figure— some exquisitely poised stranger, some Mercury, or Ganymede, or Iris, who had floated into the room and settled in the centre of a panel with its garlands still rosy and its 'robes eternally flutter ing. That was her tribute from the conquered Greek ; the true legacy of Apace. The Pompeii frescoes are far from being above criticism, but they glow still from the -light hand that the Greek had, and was able to pass to no one else. Pompeii possesses of the ancient p,ictorial art, the unique collection of the world.' Some have gone into raptures over their beauty. In the seventeenth century when, s.pechnens were rare, a certain • Roman painting, now placed in the Vatican library, and called the Nozze A klobrandini, aroused the warmest enthusiasm in Ponesin, then sojourning in the Eternal City; ho praised it as a thing priceless, made a large and careful copy with his own hand, and strengthened from it the classical tendency of his genius. The similar relics at - Pompeii have in our day Suffered the deterioration of abundance; as they became cheaper they were slighted, and it is usual now to regard them as an an tique form of paper-hangings'. They are not nearly so low as that., but may be compared to the lithographs and mezzotints with which a citizen of our day adorns his parlor. They have usually a manufactured air, as of copies multi plied with facility from popular originals. A discrepancy often appears between the 'prentiee touch and the masterly conception. The design is generally more free than accurate, telling of the knack of the artist who had drawn the same things forever. Considerable evidence remains to point to a race of female artists as partial paling in this trade of mural decoration. The tints are always laid on lint and distinct.—a mo saic of shades. This method, though the oppo site of that practiced in the renaissance of Italian art, has taught its manly trick to some of the best contemporary painters—from 3leissonier, who employs it on miniatures the size of his hand, to Couture, who uses this vory Roman art to point his moral in that withering picture, the Orgie Romaine. ENFAtiT PERIM. THE HOLY LAND EXCURSIONISTS. The Italians Very Suspicious of the Iteligions-Minded Americans—They are elated 'Under close Watch at Leghorn.--Taken for Garlbaldians. NAPLES, Aug. 1 1867.—During the whole of last week while the American excursion steamer Quaker City lay at Leghorn, a government gun boat was anchored close by, and a vigilant watch was kept upon her. Victor Emmanuel's people refused to believe„ that the excursionists were other than Garibaldian . conspirators, with the darkest designs hidden in their breasts. When any of the pleasure-seekers had occasion to return to the ship after nightfall, they were faithfully followed by the police boats, and on one occasion the executive officer of the ship, Captain Bursley, and several passengerS, narrowly escaped arrest. The excursionists will be attentively watched in Rome. The Crops and Weather at the South. Monimc, Aug. 19.—01 d factors here who are in correspondence with most of the cotton States, put dowd the crop of the present year at .from two and a half to two and three-quarter millions of bales. The Alabama crop is doing finely. The; receipts of cotton at this port during the coming year (out of the new crop) are estimated at four hundred thousand bales. The grain crop of the South this year will be more than, sufficient for its wants. OUR. WHOLE COUNTRY. PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1867. THE CUBAtc, The Trip of tfiC"bitritia oni Tfavain a to ey Weut..Laying the Cable...lie. ceptton at Chorrera.. Ihe Return to Is ey ‘Vest-..Parting of the Cable.. Grappling; to Pieces er l t--no Success --Certainty of the Cable Being Laid.. The Compttny Protected from Loss. [From to- day , sti. Y. Herald.] CARLE STEAMSHIP NARVA, OFF KEY WEST. Florida, Aug. t, 1867.—1 regret to say that I am not In it position as yet to announce the annexa tion of Isabel's "ever faithful isle" to the United ', States by means of the electric telegraph, owing ' to an accident that occurred in drawing in the slack to make the splice. I will, however, give you a detailed statement of our operations for the steamer that leaves Key West on Sunday or Monday, with the hope that by the time it reaches you I will have announced by telegraph, that the lost cable has been found and the 'Thee effected. The steamship Narva, of Norwood's Bartle Line of steamships, Captain Dowell. R. N. R., commanding, bearing the cable, arrived off Ha vana on the morning of the 26th ultimo. but did not enter the harbor owing to the prevalence of yellow fever. General Smith, President; Vice President Nenninger; Senor Arantave, Inspector of Cuban Telegraphs; Mr. Everett, Engineer of the Telegraph Company, and your special corres pondent went off on the tug Union , and the same evening the Narva sailed for Key West, where she arrived at daylight on the 27th, as already announced by telegraph in a special sent, by way of Punta Rosa. The Narva was about twenty-six days making the trip from England. She is an iron vessel of large tonage, built more with a view to capacity than speed, and is admirably suited for the service in which she is now engaged, - being very steady under steam, and she rides a heavy sea without much motion. Her officers are Captain Dowell, H. N. B.; Messrs. Nesbett and Watson, mates; Mr. Turner, engineer; Dr. Dunlap, surgeon, and Mr. Charles Williams, pilot. She has a double supply of men and nineteen cable hands. As she has been chartered for this service the vessel is under the direct orders of engineer Webb, who represents the contractors. 'An entire week was consumed in erecting the gear for paying out the cable. Fears were enter tained that a longer delay would result, as very stringent quarantine regulations had been estab lished at Kt,' West by the military authorities. But General Smith obtained from General Pope, commanding the district, an order-excepting the vessel from the quarantine regulations, and on .Saturday morning, August 8, at daylight, the Narva steamed out to a buoy five-eighths of a mile from the island, accompanied by the United States war steamer Tahoma, Captain Stanton, and the light-house steamer Fountain, Cap tain Dove. The Spanish man-of war Francisco de Asis, Captain Montenegro,- bearing Commodore Alvarado, Captain Polo, of the port of Havana, Vice President Nenninger, and a commission representing the Spanish Telegraph Company, arrived on the previous Thursday, and followed the telegraph fleet out to witness the laying of the Key Weet end of the cable. At half past 6A. M. the Narva commenced paying out the large shore end, that bad been coiled upon a lighter. A warp line was soon run as hose from the Nerve, which lay off five-eighths of a mile, and was made, fast. ' The lighter was started ashore at twenty-flve minutes past 11, and'at one P. M. It was landed, and communica tion had.by signals between the telegraph houses and the ship at twenty-five minutes past 2. ' The fleet remained at anchor.tintil the meming of the 4th, when the Narva sailed at half-past six, paying out the cable at the rate of about threu, and-a-half milesper hour. At serenteen infants' past twelve P. H. she attached the cable to the “nun" buoy, and let go twenty and ahalf miles from shore._ The afternoon was consumed in placing buoys to mark the cable end, which con sisted of seven miles of large, twelve-and-a-half of medium and one of deep sea. The Narva, proCeeded by the Francisco de Asis and followed jay the Tahoma, arrived off Havana at daylighT4 the 75th, and, after a few hours' May in an aging preliminaries, fell down to Chorrera, the point selected for the Cuban end, four miles west of Havana, where a small inlet puts in about five hundred meters, and upon which stands the old Spanish castle of the Torreon. The point is well chosen for the reception and preservation of the cable. , The depth of* water near the shore is from nine fathoms to two hurt died and five at one mile distant, and one thou sand at less than fifteen miles, when it gradually slopes until it finally reaches the Sand Key light bearings. Only a single wire now connects Havana with Chorrera, but the company contemplate putting down a subterranean wire two feet in the Solid rocky formation, which will enable them to work in all weather:and give them an entire sub- marine and subterranean line from , . Cuba to Punta Rosa. not subject to atmospheric influen ces, and proof against rain, lightning and thunder, which in this part of the country is very frequent and severe. At half-past ten we anchored off Chorrera, half a mile distant, and in a very few minutes the indefatigable captain of the port, Jose Polo de Bernabe, late commandant of tile frigate Carmen, was alongside in his tug to proffer assistance in the work of landing. A consultation was had with Mr. Webb, Captain' Polo departed for Ha vana,, the decks of the Narva were stripped for action, and by noon everything was ready. Half an hour after Captain Polo came steaming out under the royal standard, accompanied by a flotilla of ten launches and boats' crews in tow. As they eased up by the Narva and the neatly dressed tars of Spain rested upon their oars, exclamations of adiniration were heard upon every side. Astern of us frowned the old castle of Torreon, standing boldly out in the foreground, while in the background rose the casas of the creoles, decked with bunting, upon wing). were displayed appropriate mottoes in honor of the enterprise. Strange to say, in honor of an 'international work of • this kind, the Stars and Stripes were nowhere visible. At this early stage of the work, hundreds of the inhabitants of Havana and Cho %sera lined the shore, while the road leading from the city was dotted by elegant equipage's, hacks and volatile, and silver studded liveries, heading for the telegraph house. Several steamers made excursion trips from Havana at $2 per person, and steamed around the Narva. The bay per haps never before presented so gay an appear ance, and the Cubans certainly gratified their cu riosity, as far es outside work was concerned. None werendruitted to the decks of the vessel. A few minutes before one the warp line was run ashore and made fast, the cable was coiled into one of the launches, and at half-past three P. M, it left the 'ship in tow of Captain Polo's boats, Messrs. Webb, Pearce and Polo accompany ing it in a gig. Then the energy of Captain Polo and his men was exhibited,and the sailors seemed to partake of the enthusiasm of the spectators on shore, as they pulled the heavy coil ashore and placed the end, at -half-past five, inside the inclo sure, which was guarded by an ardent police. Just before the landing of the cable the Captain General arrived, and shortly after the Governor Politico, the Director General de Administration, and civic authorities, who were admitted within' the inclosure, as well as many of the ladies of aristocratic families. The cable was placed in a trench connected withthe telegraph station, and at half-past six communication was had with the ship through the entire length of the cable. Mr. Donovan remained on shore to test the insulation with Mr. Crookes, who presided in the electric room of the Narva,and the ceremony of landing the ; cable having terminated, the crowd dispersed, the fleet of sail,steam and oared boats departed,and the cable.fleet alone remained at anahor. Mr. Webb intended to start at once for the buoys off Key West, but tile receiving instrument, being out of order, it was impossible to. test the insulation: He consequently remained until next evening, with the view„ of paying out the cable at night,and making the splice by daylight. The instrument was soon repairqd aud during Mo. evening McMrs. Donovan and Crookes chatted through the cable. • The evening was spent in examining the charts and soundings. On board the Nava an excelleng dinner was served up in the evening, in which, Captain Polo, Prince Hereditarie Alberto de Monaco, of Italy, Maj. McFarland, of the United States army, Senor Arantave, and sonic Spanish racers joined us in drinking success to the un dertaking. At Id-past four o'clock on the morning of the Ctb, Mr. Webb's men stood by the cable, the Neff° movecrotr, slowly tightening up the slack, and gradually increasing her speed to two knots. At four o'clock and fifty minutes the large size went over the stern sheave and the medium size commenced, the vessel Increasing her speed slightly. Everything went on smoothly, and we were all in the best of spirits, when, at half-past five, one of the five turns of cable round the cylinder was pushed over the others by a disarrangement of the guiding plow, and for a mortient alarm took possession of the uninitiated spectators lest the sudden strain should part the cable. Webb, ever on the qui vice _instantly gave his orders, the engineer applie;l his lever, and the shin obeyed like a "thing of life" and reversed, when we all breathed freer. The critical moment had passed and the machi nery and ship were under thorough control. A few minutes only were required to readjust the plow, and we again started at the rate of one knot. At twenty minutes to six P. M. the me dium size ended, and the deep sea cable came bearing down the cylinder at a rapid rate as the Narva increased her speed gradually to three, four and finally to five knots. The Tahoma, with General Smith on board, left us early in the evening to go to the Nun buoy as a pilot for the Narva. The Francisco re mained by us. During the entire night the cable ran out finely at an average of about four and a half knots.but the lights of the Tahoma were lost sight of, and as Mr. Webb was under the impres sion that an easterly current was driving the vessel to the westward, he deemed it advisable to change her course more to the east. At half past six A. M. on the 7th about eighty-one miles of cable had been paid out,, and there were no signs of the buoy, Sand Key, or the Tahoma. As the distance was about seventy-four miles from Chorrera to the buoys, and we had run fully that many miles, eta quarter past ten the Narva stopped and the Francisco was consulted as to the bearings. It was evident we had sailed too far eastward. We lay-to in a pouring rain that made it impossible to see aynile ahead until noon. In the meantime it was found that there was not a sufficiency of Cuba cable to reach our buoys, and it was spliced to the Punta Rosa cable. About noon we signalled the British steamship Alice, of Liverpool, for her bearings. She left her course, ran up beside us and gave us the bearings, from which it ap peared we had \ steamed many miles off our course. Turning to west northwest by west, at a quarter past twelve P. M.,we again commenced paying out the cable. At a quarter-past three sighted the Tahoma, and at five reached the buoys, making the trip in twenty-four hours and twenty-five minutes from Chorrera, or twenty hours and twenty minutes under steam. Prepara tions were at once made to make the splice. The vessel was reduced to slow rate of speed,and a long detour of about a mile made to the left of the Nun buoy, to which the Key West end was at tached. The Nerve then changed her course and steamed back toward the Nun for the purpose of drawing in the slack, and during this operation the cable parted balf a mile from the vessel, as was discovered when the broken piece was drawn in. This occurred at half-past seven. Opinions are divided as to the eanee of the break, but ills more than probable that it was caused by the cable com ing against some obstruction, as the half circle was being contracted by tke power from the vessel, and had the slack been drawn in on a straight line the accident would not likely have occurred. There was a pretty stiff breeze at the time,blowing at right angles to the current, and the vessel could not lay to when the obstruction was encountered. The high wind made it impossible to grapple that night, and the Narva ran us near shore for anchorage. THE DOMINION OF CANADA. Election Agitation of the Irish and ulieds”..-4Fell. Davis on a Solitary Promenade—Care for Ills Daughter's InlormotAgainst Sur ratt. "" MONTREAL August 17,1867.—1 went to a rouge meeting here'lastnight. Monsieur Meddric Lane tot, the prominent rouge candidate to represent Montreal as against Cartier;having returned from a tour to New York, received a perfect ovation from Young Canada, and Yqpng Ireland com bined on the occasion to escofillhim through the streets in a carriage ,. decked with bouquets- and drawn were in regular Irish style. Ir. LanetOt t s opponents-in the press had circulated the report that his / Visit to New York was solely to get his pockets filled with gold and greenbacks—though be certainly couldn t have picked 'cm up 'So in Wall street—in order to influence the elections in an annexation sense. It was on account of this report that the meeting was held, speeches being made in French and English—l had almost said in Irish, so many of these were present. The orators, though inexperienced in the stumping art, made aver) , good bout of it, duly convicted their "calumniators," and uttered some very sen sible views, standing as they do on a platform of common sense and justice, as opposed to that of ignorance, blind fanati cism, aristocratic intrigue and fraud. I find that the papers this morning call Lanctot "a little demago ," and lay great stress on their con victions at our citizens will not so stultify themselves elect him." But from the fact that they besto many columns upon him I conclude that they really look upon him as being some where in the race. Indeed, I gather on good authority that he stands a good chance of elec tion, as Cartier is universally regarded as being too much of. a eider with the Britishers, and is, consequently, called a traitor to his French nationality. They • say "he regrets not being a thoroughbred John Bull, fauoris-cotelette and all." The papers this morning aro also taken up with Mr. McGee's revelations upon Fenianiann_ but, from their looks, it would seem they could-. not possibly do much damage to the celebrated confraternity. I witnessed a somewhat curious sight yester day. I saw Jeff. Davis walking all alone in Notre Dame street, tend immediately recognized him, though he seemed to be at that point of the street incognito to the passers. He was dressed in a black suit—he has.a very neat, tidy appear ance always—wearing a felt hat, broad brimmed, Southern fashion, and carries a cane. But this, be, it said en passant, he did not appear to need at all; for he walked perfectly erect, And with a very dignified step, diagonally across the little square in front of the cathedral, -and entered Little St. James street. Before he had gotten through the square, however, ho was recognized, and after he had entered the street'quite a crowd gathered at its entrance. All eyes wore strained to catch a good long glimpse of the perambulating celebrity until he had passed two long squares and out of view. Several remarks were made by members of the crowd; but there was no noise or other demonstration, and Mr. Davis walked on entirely unconscious of the assemblage so quickly gathered in his wake to stare at him. It was quite droll. "And that's Jeff. Davis." "Where's lie putting up?" "At a private house." "Where is he going now?" "He's walking out for exercise or going to pay somebody a call." "How straight he looks."llls.hair itt yet quite dark behind," &c. • The other day,' met a little girl who is au intimate of the :Saerd Cmur Convent, and who is ' now passing her vacation outrAde Its walls. Chatting; away; in a very lively way, she re marked that she knew Miss Davis at the. Con vent; that "she wanted to inai.e herself Catholic,. hut-Monsigur Jeffen3sonn Do' viz came And took her away:" It la true thetAb e -.child wats t a ken away and Matto bir's ! Gkedon's sellool, although, I would not vouch for the cause alleged for such a Course; more especially as it would have really been poor return for all the good offices and sympatl&ing,friendship received at the bawls and hearts of,l'ope, Cardinal, and the rest 415 f Catholiedom. St. Marie, the discoverer of Surratt, Is here, dressed as fine as a fiddle, and promenading with a huge revolver slung around his waist. Proba bly he is on the lookout for Surratt's deliverance from jail; for It is reported that his fears are tolerably lively on that point. He displays im mense handfuls of gold on entering the stores and bar-rooms, as I hear, but is everywhere despised in the clty.4—N. V. Herald. THE LOSS OF THE SACRAMENTO. Additional Reports of the Disaster.... ?he Men at Sea on a Raft•. Sufferings and Relief... Bravery of a Colored Allttn....Naines of the kermess Saved. [From today's N.Y. ilorald.l MADRAS, India, June 21, 1867.—Being a pas senger on the steamship Arabia, from Calcutta to Madras, I send you these few particulars of the loss of the Sacramento: We coalled at Coeonada'and proceeded on our voyage, when we fell in with some of the crow of the Sacramento. Most of them were on a raft and some of them were in a boat. The waythey got drifted out to sea was as follows : It had commenced to blow fresh and the tide had turned. This raft carried most of the men on shore. When they were drifted out to sea they were all on this raft. One of the ship's boats drifted near them, and one of the men swam off to her and made her fast to the raft, which light ened the latter a good deal, so the boat acted as convoy to the raft. The poor fellows were glad when they sew us.. When we came up to them-we stopped the engine of the Arabia and they gave us three rousing cheers; I myself returning the compliment warmly. The poor fellows had suffered severely from bruises. A good many were washed, off the raft and would have been L. owned, only for a colored man that swam off to them, fetched them back and saved them. He ie a very good man. He was the last man in the. boat when we hoisted her up to the davits of the steamer. The 'men speak well of their captain. He was the right man in the right place. He refusdd to leave the ship. I never saw a better sample of men on any ship than the men we picked ap. They never lost their discipline. When the boatswain piped the Sacramento crew on the port side, they all obeyed the order at once. I took quite an interest In the men and. their country too. I have lived some time in, the new British Kingdom or Dominion, in that line and religious town they call Montreal. I incloso you, from a Madras paper, a list of the names of the men taken from the raft, with the Journal's report of the loss of the Sacramento, as follows: Intelligence has been received at Madras of.a mishap to the United States war steamer Sacra mento on her voyage from Madras to Calcutta, . -which was communicated to the Marine official at this port by the Master attendant at Coconada on Friday last. The Bacramen to was proweding.from. Madras to Calcutta, by way of Coeonada,where she was to have called for coals but unfortunately ' went on chore 18 miles south of Hope Islam}, and' has now become a total wreck. The British India Steam-Navigation Company steamer Ambla,Com mender RIX lantinc, on her voyage from Calcutta. to Madras, picked up on the evening of the. 21st June at 6.30 P. M. (lope Island light-house bearing W. N. W.,distant ten miles), a cutter and a raft belonging to the. Sacramento, on board of which were the following officers and men :-- Lieutenant Commanding George M. Bache; First Lieutenant of Marines, Henry A. Bartlett; Assistant Surgeon, P. Babcock; First Aseistant, Engineer, IL Able; Second Assistant Engineer Fred. L. Millar;' Third Assistant Engineer. R. D. Taylor; 3lidshipman Murray 8.. Day; Captain's Clerk. Howard Walker; Pay Clerk, J. S. Stim eon; Sailmaker, J. Bradford; the Master at Arms; the Parser's Steward; seven firemen; three sea men; seven marines; in all twenty-nine souls. t , The raft and cutter left the wrecked steamer about thirty-six. hours previous, and had been without water or food; they were taken to Co conada and put on board an American vessel lying in the Roads. The commander of the Sac ramento is safe at Coconada, and other parties are reported to have left the steamer 'on rafts, but whether they have been saved or not, is un known. TENNESSEE. The New Delegation to Congress. NASIIVILLE, Tenn., Aug. 9, 1807.—Gov. Brown low's majority will approximate 50,000. We send a full Radical delegation to Congress. The Legis lature elected is overwhelmingly Radical. Not one Conservative in the Senate and three or four in the House; and, of course a Radical—probably General W. B. Stokes-,will be elected to fill the *ace now not very creditably oceuPled by Mr. Patterson, son-In-law of the President. With the members of'Congress returned by this election, Messrs. Maynard, Arnell and Stokes, the public are well acquainted. Of the new members John Trimble is by far the ablest. He belongs to the aristocracy of the South, is a man of liberal culture, high social po sition, and of considerable wealth. He is deeply read in German philosophy, cherishes the most liberal views of society and religion, and is re barded as a "philosopher." He made some very itter speeches during the canvass, but his nature is generous, and it is hoped that in his present high position, all classes of his fellow-citizens— not excepting the late rebels—will share the be nefits of his moderate counsels. James Mullins, of the Vth District is a most singular man, and he will make numerous sensations In Congress. Of his sterling devotion to the Union and the Radical party no one ever entertained a doubt. This is his chief merit. He is about 50 years. of age has the appearance of a hard-working blacksmith, is a terribly earnest man, pays no more regard to critical English than to criticizing Rebels, and speaks on all occasions, and during all the time allowed. All the boys say: "Hurrah for Mullins!" D. A. Nunn, of the Vint& Distriet,who takes the place of Leftwich, is a plausible, courteous, sen sible young man—a lawyer by profession. He will make a good, quiet representative. R. R. Butler of the Ist District, is tall, lean, gray-eyed, cold, and Scotch-looking. On the whole, our delegation to Congress will be talented, respecta- ' ble, and interesting.-t-N. Y. Tribune. MEXICO. The Executions at San Jacinto, Pue- bla and Other Places. [Orizaba (July 2) Corrmondenee of the New (Meant. - acayanc..l Since the Ist of March last have been shbt at San Jacinto, Puebla and other places north, Im perial officers, prisoners of war, to the number of two hundred. This does not include the exe cutions at Queretaro and the capital. At these places were captured fire hundred officers. There is yet no published list of those who lately fell. Fourteen Generals fell into Liberal hands at Queretaro. How many of these have been shot is not known, but all will be. The public know of the Emperor's death, and of the death of Mlramon, Mejia,Mendez, Costa, and seven other Generals. Cabinet officers have also been executed. In the capital the record is not yet made up It is only {mown that a course simi lar to that of Puebla has been pursued. 'The same General commands. To give some blea of the proceedingh in these places it will o.my. he necessary to State that Gen. Diaz entered 'she cap ital at 9 in the morning, and at 3 in t:ne after noon the Minister of Justice, Tares, ar 4 d another one of the Ministers of Maximilian., were shot. No General escapes, but few ,Col,dueir,, 11 0 civir Officer of note, and those who anrnot s h u t su ff er n from imprl onment fro two to six sears. Captains ri t so n n o fioerostwthoanyesao I .l3l %perial officers. pris rs It. would bo safe to g s t o o e state soners' of war, French, A:ustrian, Belgian and Mexican, have been shot Unce the first ofltfarch, and the work goes 0 , ,A yet. The butchery has been indiscriminate in, many ,places; in Puebla not one wa§eparcql,,, , - .. ! F. L. 'ammonia ramisitar. PRICE THREE 'CENT'S? FACTS ANIP FANCIEST' —King Alfred's old bonen , liarvir bees►_. raked Opt —The English drama is nor a enema in Payter., —The 'faller' Admiral PC7l3llllO' in reported bp sane. -14fra. Jeff. 13a119 has arrived far Richmond! from New Oricanik. —The late Wllliarce.E: Aytoutr Wits - r Viz ugliest man in Scotland. —f,. N. and Engdik went Ca' see' Sothern play Dtmdreary. —The Swiss. government Has' andett. 15,900 Peabody runes. „ • —Mr. Jones went to sler.p.►'on a alitdble sill its Cleveland, fell to the • grout d,•and 16avotr, oink in teresting widow.-• . —Austria smoked a thotaand miflon egroim last year. . —lirkmoli gives choice ulionvroni broakflustit 4 at Long /Thumb. —Denver papers Inv WI • indiserinsinallb' slaughter of the Indians. —A dancer in fit Petbrsliumy was presental with a bouquet that Wed an enidro carriage: —Modesty is like a sober fiewtr," says CM Lon-- don Fsa; it takes no more than —The Queen of Wurtembuir r has' gone tar Ostend for the Ostendsible objeevof'sea-bataing. —The Liberals say Maximilian did 'not. die gatre—that he broke down entirely^ Net before he was shot down— —A New York paper publisherthe fact Watt: Queen Victoria's feet are large and -darner She - should use them upon the writer. —Children who "from their age are , incapable of appreciating the talent of artists"' are not ad mitted into Paris theatres. —Mr. Arthur Skctchley will sail fronaLiverpoot In the Persia about the end of this month.. He is a very poor humorist. —Madame Ristori has, through the E'belety for the Encouragement of Dramatic Art "at• Florence, offered a prize for the best comedy. —Agassiz read a paper at Hartford on "The Circulation of Blood In the Skate." The mac roles of the skate say it stops the clreuPation of the blood —A servant girl, living in a family .near Liver pool, has unexpectedly come into a fortune of £200,000 by the death of a relative itim:te of the colonies. —A dealer in forage bag been murdered in. Paris by a butcher, who dismembered the body - and threw the limbs int& the Seine. The •sue-. petted party has been arrested. —Albert Edward is going to Baden-Baden for • the races (groans from Exeter Hall) and will be the guest of the, Duchess of Hamilton (more groans, and cries "He is a bad 'tin himself").—N.Y.World., —Ex-Glov. Buckingham. of Connecticut has - paid one-half the cost of a $P3,000 church build ing at Buckingham. Tama county, rOW9r, beside giving a fine carpet And Bible. So much - for • Buckingham. —Here ig rather a good little French COIH111.: • drinn : Qttette difference y entre lalirenlikiti lettre dune *Liao et eon clocheri ' 1 4 a ,pniniihre • lettre d'unoeglige est tine yoyelle; et son cloolter,.. vane eaves, c'eat la glean some ! • • --- 31188 Lotta is playlag h 4 Nem' York in •a, Ter-- 'sion of "The Old Cariosity shop," written tor , ter by. John Brongharn. she takes the part ,of both Little Net and The Marchioness, and, in'the atter character has the audacity to introduce' a banjo solo. Quite a Lot o' characters. • • —There is a plum of entertahunent in that: Cl limps Elys4e, Bar* on_whlcityoanuty jeati in large capitals, without _punctuation; thew* words, "Cafe English Spoken Here." "Cafe Rum. glish" Is a good name for the sort of language yqa get with your Mocha. —An elegantly dressed lady, evidently a Span ish woman, is attracting attention by promennt- • ing Broadway without any bonnet. Can't inuk gine why she attracts attention. There hasn't been a bonnet (worth speaking of) seen on Chest nut street, for a year. • —The Cologne Gazette, received in Pala on the, 31st ult., contains a column and a half intlanit. There must be something in the German edition,. which the editor knew would have occasicuied 111. seizure at the French frontier, antithereforti special edition was prepared for French readers -Some . 360 converts recently left Wales ..and. Scotland for Utah. ' The ladies are described as healthy, ruddy and buxom, and they bring 'stew seven thousand dollars in money with theta- A 'They may be ruddy now, but they will soon lose their old complexions and assume a no homy' off. (An Utahny one T , welygp to explain.) , , —The Freedmen's Relief Association in•.thls city received, the other day, the following..com- - position from a freedman in one of their..schoola in the South, He has known his letters but. a . few months i "I was jest satin.doun diamonds:4c_ . thinking I would make a big man or heakut7. : -.. head studying, for no man do not know . hOlSSlssati I *ant to lure but me and God." —ln a recent number of- the N. Y. Lferatd the editor reminds the public that President Lincoln tendered him the mission to France. Au..old, Roman maxim declares that "we should ,say. nothing but what is good of the dead,P but how, we should like to know, could Bennett say a worse thing of the departed President P—Bostms Post. • —A bottle was recently , picked • up. on. the English boast which contained a slip of paper with the following written on it : "Dear friends, our ship is just going , down. We are..ort, the Boston Band Deep. Our ship is the Grenadier o of Newcastle-upon-Tyne. Whoever Ws re turn it to 21 (illegible) street. Gateshead.; Good bye, and God bless you on laid."' ' —The Genoese Gazette says: "A few.days -back person bathing between Verniglitino andBestri; in the Gulf of Genoa, was seized by a large-pbly.- pus, and the creature so interlaced its-nneiterotes tentacles around lurn, tliat he spite of all his efforts, to free, hirase4 mi., watt., dragged under water and drowned. lioM,ot.thtt other bathers ventured to go to hisasidattuice,o . , -3'renelt local papers give a, =law 312001141 t the result of sinking an, artesian the 04 4 partnient of _Hide, near, Narbonne. , liihan:.the. depth of 180 feet had. been attainediatatream.df carburetted hydrogen gas rushed , 136,0 g • og l e, which, being lighted, has ennthiltiMil• tO • tbao l . steadily with a red. dame. Ataug wath.tbul_ water flows, which is stated•to.taa-extroWAY , bitter and cold. —The :tendon:: to very saretestioi Lerd, Stanley's refusal,to send :in exptdiOon to. Mufti, shale. The Frozmeh•paper points, out how coin-. pletely Lord Ealmeraton's policy, has been. abaft doped, and says: "Theadorus lea great mcoaareh and hencefoblia EngHallam' who, m the isiteresta. of:science and humanity, unture , among thee& barbariansotrost realtion only upon,Godiend,tinun, selves, for Lord Pabaerstou is dead." —The day boat from. A:bany to. Ne IV/ xork, Wednesday last, carried the ex-robaliGenerals. Beauregara and Magruder among her passenKars., They incited considerable attention. litia nelaMidt by a passenger that Magruder applied, to . denten who was quietly smoking bin cigar, fop*, light, for ; hie own, but was rebuketawltN. !KKon:11, have to excuse met I lost two kNaPa,bY 4 t# 1- fernal rebellion, and hallo sworn , o have friendly intercourse with any mitt Whet' took wil ling lot or part in your treason: o, e • - horrible secident 'llloy ooeurredinFng land on the Bristol and Exeter Railroad. A young gentleman and his safe entered a compartment r In which there were no other passengets, roused by shortly alter the train had started were rOUStla,bY a crash of glass ; and' beheld the 41004 face " a dead man, ., wh ich' ha 4 been violently foteed through the plate KISH{ of the window of the carriage, while his body was hanging enfold°. When the train stopped at the next station It. WRB discovered that its guard had left : Wa.b°_xi. and, standing , our. the top of the carrtage, , '111142 been watching the gentleman and his We; and that, passing under a bridge; he had s cup shtick by the side o f the arch and (Tutted tO, dettAr,,