GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME XXL-NO. 161. vHg., EVENING BULLETIN PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING (Sundays excepted), AT TILE NEW BEILLETIIN BUILDING, 607 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, BY TUB EVENING BULLETIN ASSOCIATION. PBOPBI MOM. •C;IIlSON PEACOCK, ERNEST C. WALLACE, F.L. FETBERSTON, THOS. J. WILLIAMSON, 4.:ASPER BOUDER, Ja., FRANCIS WELLS. The Bou.nrus is served to subscribers in the city at HI 'cents per week, payable to the carriers, or IS per annum. WEDD,Iti 0 INVITATIONS, EVGICAVED OR TY Written; new aided of French and Ensile!' Papere add Envelopea MARRIED. LOVEHINO—COWGILL.—On the 10th instant, at Oak 11 ill. 'by Friends' ceremony, Joseph M. Lovering. Jr., to Mary It, daughter of Dania C. and Susan b. Cowgill. Dour. e 1 wa re. • I'EMIIERTON—W'ILLIAMS.—At the residence of the patentw, on Thursday evening, Oct4l, o e.lott l ;- - p 5 67 by the Rey, Mr. scovel. ilenry Pemberton. formerly ot Philadelphia, to Agnes, daughter of the lion. nomad 'Williams, of Allegheny City, Ps. DIED. CLARK.-•Buddonly, on Sunday morning. the 13th Thomas fit. (lurk. in the 6th year of Ma age. Due notice will he given of the funeral. 2t DUTTON.--On the 12th Mkt. Charles 8., son of Eliza beth L., bud the late Thomas Inst., in the 25th year of hir age. • FINE.—In Lower Merlon . township, Montgomery counts, 011 the morning. of the 12th inst., Henry Mackie, ten ol John li. and AlYtta Fine, aged 11 months and 1 dark. • to} LEI:.--In Allegheny City, Oct. 11th, Anna E. Foulke. daughter of Colonel William L. Foulke,in the 15th year ot her RUDD.--On the morning of the 12th inst., Commodore John Podd, C. S. N. , SWARTWOCE. —At Galveston, Octrker, Major 11. A. Swartwout, 11th Unimil Stater infantry, aged 4:3 years. TANTO.N. —September sth. at Quito, Ecuador, S. A , C , lonel Phloem; Stanton, of Le Itoy, N. Y., artirt of the William, I. olirge OBITUA Wr- are called upon to record the death of n young rind (..dc fritud, WIWI' 111 iitthard , 9ll.lsllo after lirkf lint painful illneed, departed thir life nu Friday, the Ilth in-t,. in the Pith year of i I nge. Mr. Ricliardooli it IV fudti . ,triOlni And attiditive to bilidneri., while At the dirpueition and rarevicial tie eudedred him to all lib , arro , iatcy. Mira. PAW LIM but to love hint Now. lingo . him but t) urni.o:" ta fowl] m• hr, anov.:(l with their grief, tl. , row oliug refi , ellon that he di. d n elnrere chrbdian 11-in brile,er iu the Lord. I:e9tiftwat in Pare! It WILSON.--o,,ne, but not forg.tten. On the nth arthtt w ire Of MUM], nod dmighter of th.! Inter IN•tcr Abel. aged 53 yenN. The relative' and friends of the faintly are re,pectftilly Invited to attend her funeral on Thin-Amy morning. 17th nt 1/ , , Icloa. from thy riAden,e of her int.thAnd, 17u1Fraohl , ..rd rend. To proceed to Gerinnutown. ••• E lia: LANDELL. tiA.VE TUE tIRST QUALITY Lyon,. Velv,bs for Cloak_., Vc1t4...ir.D.3-fnelt. for Sack"! YI:E LA'NDELL. FOURTH ANI) Alte KEIW A title wiFirarrient t f Cae.frurrea for Bo e• Cio:tme, 'mere', for B PATENTED.—PANTS SCOURED . AND STRETCHED A Irma &tog iackee. at MOTTET'S French Steam Die ing and Scouriag. aelitlm• 2nai&eirth Ninth street and i3+3 Race erect. SPECIAL NOWICE3. immiEopATHlc MEDICAL , t:OLLEag vF PENNSYLVANI.A7. The (er.p.rtil Introdu tory to the ' TWENTIETII ANNFAL SESSION, I.e delivered hy Prefereor W. L Arrowetalth, is the COLLEGE' IDTILDiNG, Filbert Street above Eleventh. at Eli Arr u'CLoCK. MONDAY. P. M.. - ocrimEit 14th. are invited to attend. It. h. GUERNSEY, M. D., Dom ocl9t rl • 114Nitsiltiblill A- MP. ET ing of this /karts. held on the Tenth dit of Otto. Ler. 167, the following resolution w., unitiiinsously adopted: "Resedred, That we. the .litttnni of titritrd leg,. het . near,' with great satisfaction of the remiection of Prof. %m. It Allen and Miss .lane Mitchell to the p... . ' , Mons which thcv formerly held in the Institution, and a n d d el i h . tccesncv whic thyt h a e s r c , htaha tw with lso v m e u fcrho a m b i ou ty own knowledes and experience. that the bet interest, of the C,lieg • will ler thereby promoted." It , order of the Society. WM. tf. McCONNELL. Secretary. WL'LL RALLY HOUND THE FLAG.—The triton Republican citizens of the Twelfth Ward. favorable to the election of General GRANT to the I're.l. dency of the 'nited States.are remo.sted to meet on THIS (Monday , EVEN i NG. October H. NC. at 8 coolocc at the hT...0 of &aleph Edwards. tif th street, above &col. WILLIAM H. MANN. CONRAD 8. MOVE. • T. CIiALICLEY WOOD, M. HALL STANTON, CHAS M. WAGNER, WM. TOLAND. we. OFFICE OF THE AMERICAN FIRE INSUR ANCE COMPANY. PittL%l,El.l.lfll, October 14, 1k47. 'll.e Director, havetint* day declared a Dividend of Brveli Drliar, and ifty Lents per olotre, for the last six Lich will b paid to the Stockholder*. or their repro- , utativei, on and after toe 24th inrtaut, clear of ull taste. A. C. L CRAWFORD. orl4 !.tr, Secretary. sfir Til lii ANNUAL !If EETING OF the Union Ihnevulent As:ochition will be held on the tr•th in t, Id 4 (Mork P. 14.„ In the u , of the EL(e‘. , c.ilo tt , h, i,cuer of Seventh and dansom streets. An r held for Officers and Managero of the AP rocistion for the ew uing year. JOHN 11. ATWOOD. . ca llarl Secret sr'. ady..ll) , T OFFICE. P - lIII.ADEPIIIA, Ottol,er 11. IM;7.—The 31ai1t for I ;tat, 4 . ;la. per etegsinellip t , ture and Stripes. will close at thiw oilier. at TI ESDAI, October 15 1.4.37. ti o'clock. A. M. .11EN111 11. BINGHAM, P. 11. sir HOWARD HOSPITAL, NOS. 15tH AND 11.:4) Inn,lmrd street, Dispensary Department—Me 1;- t - . 11 treat tat IA and medicines funtiEbed gratultouelv to the KASII STEPS. ( , ; re-p•Aad( nee of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.? Ar; almft with a start, in the morning twilight. the murmurs of the Seine beneath my windows sera ed to remind me Witt I Was still in Rouen, and that I had proposed to hear first mass at six, in the great church of St. Ouen. • I found• reasons, as I started on my early morning stroll in the direction of the church, to modify a little my primitive impression of the lack of character among the Normans of Rouen. It was market morning, and the streets were 60111C' of them, with peasants in raw colors and disproportionate caps and hats, who argued, cheapened, quarrelled and struck bargains amongst themselves, Just as in one of the tumul tuous street-drawings of Samuel Prout. At tracted by 'a group of girls with pitchers, who laughed end tattled together much like those un charitable minxes in Faust, I was led to examine the old fountain around which they had gathered. It was the most curious fountain in Rouen, named from the Bishop of Lisieux, against whose mansion it leaned in a kind of petrified reverle,at a corner 'of the street of the Soap-boilers. On an irregular monolith, like one of the rude pillars of Stonehenge, some medieval %Phidias of the pro- Tinces had engraved his idea of the road, "slip pery and hard to hold," to Pan:assns. The road itteif, wade out in its whole zigzag length with all the dryness and conscience of the middle ages, was bordered with rocks, trees, grass and sheep. A very woolly horse with unserviceable wings figured as a prim Pegasus; the muses' were not wanting, adapting themselves in an abnegating .spirit to the necessities of the • general outline, pith a poor-relation sort ,of consciousness that their number was au embarrassment to the artist. Apollo played the harp in the costume of the old French troubadours, forming the apex of the composition; while Hecate, very sisterly and tame, hung below and looked after the horse whichshe could do in three directions, having three faces. Meanwhile, under the very ban ot Hecate, the gossips out Of Faust chattered and tore their neighbors to pieces, with the coarse re venge of nature and health against medieval pri .rity frozen into stone. All was activity and business: but it was the , half-wasted activity of stupid old Europe, not the calenlating, economical force I am accus tomed to at home. How many people does it take to shoo a horse? Looking In at the smith's, raw a handsome Norman cob, round as a mole ' .. ....11 -- . -. .....ai1i....:• - ' -, • - •....)1J.::• .- itit,.....•.1,44tn n .i.. EMERIME Eltatloner, 725 Arch street bright as 'a chestnut, strong as a bull, maid (rating with all his might against the divers in fluences that had convergial to subdue him. The foot to be ironed was drawn up almost to the tail with a great, awkward thong. A gigantic old woman, shaped like one of those bloated wrestlers they have in Japan, administered a . further restraint upon the hoof by holding it in a frightful vice formed with her knees. A sharp youth was commissioned to lash awtiy the flies with a cat-o'-nine-tails, and reveled in his office with a verdant enthusiasts. Amongst these allies the smith himself played his part with an air, eVidenily imagining himself ' the guiding spirit and noble horse-tamer. Thelindsomest Norman J saw, a superb Vulcan of the forge, with a back that was a great alto-relief of muscles he bravely clinched his nails and bore off the credit, while the animal expended his revolt upon the others. The Street of the Butcheries of St. Ouen was less animated. From the doorway of the char cutier'.l shop—one of those gay little bowers of pork and sausage which do not exist out of France—l was watched, as I often have been watched from the sty, by four little, bright, quiet eyes. The eyes belonged to the twins of the char cutler. The twins were shaped like ju g s, and shone like antique wrestlers in the ointment-room: life for them had been one orgic of unlimited pork. I looked with some awe upon these in fants—their diet was beginning to tell, and they were evidently upon the eve of a blissful metem psychosis. They were not human children. One Pulled up his little shirt and scratched himself— he scratched a filch! the other put his fat fingers to his head—he touched bristles. But I should not have called the hand fizr. "oh, call it not 1;,1 :" said once, with emotion, Charles Lamb, the high priest of sucking pig, and went on dilating tenderly on cream, natural honey and porcine flowers. If Lamb had happened to be passing like me, keen anti ,breakfastiese, on that sharp September morning, he'would have bitten . the . I;tile creatures with avidity' Leas enamored of. pig perhaps than the gentle poet of the India II OCIEC, ' I only grunted to them amicably. striking the electric chain wherewith they were darkly boom': they looked as If they comprehended, but were too comfortable to speak; while the ample creature who had f: rrowed them, and who spied me from her bower of bacon, rolled halfway over the counter to wish me a boyelour. The street of the Butcheries conducted me, with no farther ado, to. the church I sought. You need no better guide than a street when you Want the Cathedral of any old-time European city. The street leads you, and finally opens out ' antfehOws It to you. It was in no fanciful spirit that I described, the other day, the houses rank ing themselvtS on either side to marshal me to }touen Cathedral. The spirit in-which these antiquedy,eill a were put up ranged straight from thMeiff o the grand altar s —"true to the kindred poin 4 heaven and home." It is dif ferent now-a-days: the bright new streets Of Paris &boot with invree"‘" '",/^4°7 e, various at tractivegoals—to the Opera, arch ty r Aof Triumph of the Star—but to the Olin ch, scarcely!. .. . In effect, I could scarcely find a lets in R uen which was not closed by one of those transparent. spires, springing, aspiring, palpitating to the light, and entangling the clouds in its delicate; meshes. The tower now before me was the mOsi . beautiful in Rouen—a city of fair towers—and belonged to one of the most exquisite piles of florid Gothic In the world. Smitten wiik the elegance of lls .boill openwork octagon, with a dizzy wreath of thorns and fleurs-de-lys, I ex claimed suddenly, "I must be among those lilies within the hour!" But first I gave an enchanted regard to the in terior. The abbacy of Saint Onen is the oldest in Nor-' mandy. taking itepame from a holy archbishop of Rouen who died in 678. The corner-stone of the actual edifice was laid, after c long history of pre% loos turnings, pillaglngs and rasings, in 1318. Thefade was finished but the other day. The and , t glass Is well known to connoisseurs for its 14art}. • Standing by a black-marble font placed against the fir,t pillar, I could see the great nave receding to the choir foot by foot, till it had counted four hundred and forty-five of them. The font was brimming with holy-water, and in the consecrated mirror I saw the whole length of the vault swim ming back, arch past arch, till it joined the day in a blaze of gorgeous glass. To meet this vault the slender pillars on. either side streamed up, sculled to their gravity, shot, soared, leaped, adrnitticg no impediment, putting out no leaf or bud ; ~but rushed; fled, threaded, pencilled, sprang and flamed in the simplicity of very energy, until they took the gates of heaven withtheir violence, and hung themselves to the flying vaults, two by two, pillar and pillar, the last long threads losing themselves in the distance by attenuation. No stone was ever less like stone than this ropy Gothic. Its value was in its simpleness; the arcades were bare of ornament, as the prayers of Peter were bare of rhetoric. " Save me, or I sink!" cry the live pillars, and in their' magnifi cent agony straighten themselves right to heaven. —Straighten itself, does the ancient stone—but never mathematically straight. 'Neither nature nor her confidant, the architect of the North, en dures the hard line. These towering columns swayed and bent, like the beechen shafts of the forest. It was fascinating to trace them upward. When nearing the vault they scorned to contract a little;then they flared a little,trying to escape to the outer walls; then they.recoguized each other across the aisle, and moved together in one im pulse of supreme grace,to form the pointed arch. Thus the vista had more or less the profile of a slim, deep bell. Was it intentional, or the effect of age? I neither know, nor care to know. Similarly the aisle meandered a little, as if it was in two minds about doing, up to the altar. How human—how intelligible.-thow charming! I had to stand well by my black font, at the right, to get into range with the centre window of the choir. And a like waywardness pervades, to their minutest details, all the cathedrals I have seen or heard of in the North. Is it voluntary, or the effect of artlessness? I cannot tell. What does it matter? The nave 'was filled with kneeling groups, generally with women, as is the case in all churches. . The back of the priest, bearing its golden cross, bowed and rose at the 'altar of one of the chapels. The organ rolled, its lingering chords losing themselves among the arches. And besides.—as if the rich reverberations had taken light and hue as they ascended,—stains of glo rious color blotted the upper recesses of the aisle. The early, virginal, merciful light of a new day streamed level from the jewelled windews, pierced the legendary saints and martyrs who stood in them, and translated those doleful tales into a radiant Writing on the opposite wall—a some thing that was neither painting nor melody,but a richer language than either. • I• was soon spied by the sexton, who bore down ponyac in all the imptirtance of his uniform and PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1867. wand of ofilee, and set himself to show me the treasures of the building. St. Ouen's Is not rich, like its rival, the Cathedral, in historic tombs. The only monument the cicerone thOught worthy to show was that of Alexander Berneval, the architect of the church, whom I saw leaning his lean, intellectual head provisionally against the wall of a chapel, having just been picked up from the pavement, on which he had lain atpeaee for three or four centuries hitherto. Who were these magicians,, th se architects, who wrote with chisels, and sung litanies of stone? Who will tell us about them, as Schiller has told about the Bell-founder, and Longfellow about the Builder of the Ship? What order of men In the dark ages is so pregnant with interest and suggestion? I stood before the effigy of the ancient mason with my hat in my hand, doing him homage, while the cathedral sprang up on Its thousand feet on every side and composed his unique monument. Berneval was no mild, pray ing, whitewashing plasterer. His blood rose hot in him and he felt his work to be the child of his vitality. They say he killed an apprentice, whose rose-window, in the north transept, won more praise than the opposite one, his own. A similar story is told you as you contemplate the finest pillbrin Roslyn Chapel, near Edinburgh. uch builders must have animated their work like raging flames. The custode, having respect to the cal es of his legs, suffered me to go up alone. Directly, having found a wild varret of dust, cobwebs and beams, I was looking down at the congregation through the aperture made for dropping the lamp. A hundred feet below me, their forms, their prayers, the strains of the music, formed a sort of animated picture, framed in the circular shaft which pierced the vault, and penetrated by the long, strained wire to which hung the silver light. Then, climbing higher, I had the giant lilies wreathed around me,,a , morning wind reddening my cheek, and Rouen set below upon the bright Seine, bathed in the early splendors of the day. ENFANT PERDU. EUROPEAN AFFAIRS. GARIBALDI. Arrest of the General and His Con• veyance to Prison—His Manifesto Against the _Papacy—Proclamations 01 the Italian Government—City Scenes and Disturbances in Florence. Our Continental Elea by the steimslaip New York supply the following addition il •details of the manner of Garlbaldl's arrest, tiLs conduct "W hen on the way to prison, and the effects of the event in Italy, France and Germany. THE ARREST. From the Piedmonteee Gazette, Sept. 28.1 General Garibaldi was arrested in the house of 3131. Agnolucei, where he was sleeping. A lieu tenant of carbineers entered his room and pre sented to him a warrant signed Zobbi. The Gen eral smiled and said tranquilly, "I had been told so, but did not believe it. Be it so. Where are you to take me ?" "To Florence," was the repl,y. Its was then removeri away with Majorltusso, delf-Vecebior mud 31. Berberini, engineer. T3....7 proceeded by ran to add thee direct to Pistoja. When the General perceived that they had got beyond the canital he remarked, "We do not, then, stop at Florence?" Be was told that the orders were to take him to Alessandrii. It is unnecessary to say that he was treated' with every respect. During the journey he conversed with great calmness of mind with his, we will not say guards, but comrades. 3IAN FE6TO AGAINST THE PAPACI Garibaldi, while in the railway carriage going to the citadel at Alessandria r drew up the follow ing proclamation to the people of Rome and Italy:. The. Romans have the right of slaves—that of rising against their tyrants, the prlests 2 The duty ofthe Italians is to aid them, and I trust that they will do so, even were fifty Garibaldis imprisoned. Therefore, pursue your noble reso lutions, Romans and Italians. The whole world has its eyes on you. ancrwhen your work shall be accomplished you can march erect and say to the nations, "We have cleared the road of human fraternity from the most abominable of its enemies, the Papacy." G. GARIBALDI. THE EFFECT IN FLORENCE. (From the Florence Opiuione, Sept. "A] When Daribaldi's arrest became known towards seven in the evening, assemblages of thepeoPle took place in various points of the city. At the the head of each were men armed with muskets. A number of young men attacked the post of the National Guards on the Piaiza della Signoria, and disarmed some of the men; who, however, afterwards recovered their weapons. Some guards were also disarmed at the Palazzo Pitti. The shop of a gunsmith close by was attacked,but the attempt did not succeed; in the Via del Martell' the rioters were more fortunate, and took arms from another shop. Seditious cries were heard everywhere. SeVeral windows were broken in the Piazza Santo Spirito. Cavalry, infantry and the ber:sag lien' traversed the streets to clear them. Nume rous arrests were made, and especially of persons not belonging to Florence. Shortly after nine art nnusually heavy shower of rain put an end to the demonstration, and the streets soon became deserted. No accident is to be deplored; how ever, such was the apprehension which prevailed that the shops, even the co fes and some of the theatres were closed. The city had almost the appearance of being in a state of siege. PARLLtMENTAItY ACTION. The following protest, signed by twenty oppo sition deputies of the Florence Chamber, has been addressed to its President: Most Honorable Sir:—The undersigned being prelim ly moved by the arrest of their Illustri ous colleague, Gen. Garibaldi, call attention to the fact that the constitution provides in e..ipha tic ,terms for the personal inviolability of the national representatives. They hold it as certain that article forty-five of the fundamental law of the kingdom has been violated by the act which they now denounce. In consequence they have recourse to your most noble lordship, in order that as President of the Chamber and legal pro tector of Parliamentary guarantees, your lord ship, if you have not already taken steps of your own accord, may intervene with your autAority to obtain from the responsible power a prompt reparation of an illegality which cannot fail severely to wound the national conscience. The Nazione, of Florence, remarking on the above, says: The address of the Deputies of the Left forgets a very essential matter , which is that if Art. 4o of the !Statute establishes the personal immunity of the deputy it also declares that the privilege ceases in case of being taken in jla townie Micro. 'We do not feel ourselves justified in describing an arrest as illegal when the govern ment assures us that action has really commenced. Until the contrary is proved we must accept that statement as true and well founded. PROCLAMATIONS OP THE ITALIAN GOVERNMENT. The following- is the text of the pioelamation issued by the Cbunt de Cambray:Diguy, Mayor of Florence ; and posted in that city: SEPTEMBER 25, 1867.--Officm and Soldiers of ~4e National Guard:—Florence was disturbed yesterday by sad events. In thol,mTdst of "the calm and astonished population -a small number of Individuals attempted to spread disorder in the city. Florence owes a great duty to Italy, since it has become the seat of government; namely, that of being the first to maintain the authority of the law and not permit. violence, tumult, and riotous movements in the streets. National* Guards,' the best means of pre venting: a repetition of the scandal is your pres ence. You have never been wanting when duty called yon; give • to-day another proof,of your patriotism. At the summons of your chiefs rally to your usual places of. meeting. show once OUR WHOLE COUNTRY rut: l'ltot I..tmATIoN oF TM: 1 , 01.. k:. The Pope has delivered the following address to the members of the Consistory : Pelortd I:ruth,.en:—The Catholic world is well aware how many times we have bad to deplore and reprove the grievous wrongs, and grave in juries the Subalpine Government basin defiance of all ' , divine and human rights, and without re.:' Bard to ecclesiastical =censures and penalties, in flicted for a number of years on the Catholic Church, on us and this Apostolic See, ion. the bishops., on the consecrated ministers, on the religious orders of both sexes, and on other pious institutions. That same Government does not only oppress and continually reduce the Church by issuing orders which we have con demned for being contrary to the authority of this Church, but it has gone 'so far in its acts of injustice as to dare to propose, approve, sane tionland promulgate a sacreligious law,which has within its own territory as well as ' the ~ o ne usurped by it, deprived the Church of all its pro perty, to the great detriment of civil society, and has appropriated for its own use, and ordered the sale of the same. It must be clear to everybody how unjust and cruel is a law which defies the inviolable • right of propek which the Church claims by virtue of itadivine institu tion' a law which tramples on the rights of nature and all divine and human rights generally, a law by which the members of the 'clergy, who have such great claims on thegratitnde of Catholicism and civil society, and the virgins consecrated to God, are reduces' to the greatest misery and to beggary. In this distress of the Church - , and with the overthrow of all righta of the Church before us, we cannot assuredly remain silent, for it is a duty imposed upon us, by our apostolic ministry, to defend and avenin2 the cause of Wake with thy:..6...... , -- ~......v.iter m ,,. 2-nis re tae--reason why. We, elevate our Viiice in your Imposing assembly and reprove with our apostolic authority the liw in question, why We condemn it, and declare it annulled and cs without any nine . May the authors and evil doeri know • t they have exposed themselves to the; ~e siasticar penalties and cen-• surer which the sacred canons, the apostolic, constitutions, the deerees of the general coun cils .declare ipso facto to be Inflicted on those who violate the rights of the Church and usurp its property. May they tremble and be afflicted with salutary awe, those inveterate enemies of the Church; may hey be convinced that God, the author and avenger of his Church, will re serve for them the severest and heaviest chastise ments, unless they sincerely repent and endeavor to stop and assist in repairing the wrongs in flicted by them on this same Church. This Is our must ardent hope, and we must humbly pray to God that he may hear us. Intervention of the Austrian Govern. silent in Behalf of the Papacy. [From l'Avenir National, Sept. 3U.1 According to information received, the Aus trian Government has actively intervened with the Cabinet of Paris on behalf of the Papacy. A coall dential note from M. de Beust, sent a short time ago to Paris. recalls the engagements which the EMperor Napoleon entered into at Salzburg for !he maintenance of the temporal power. According to the same note the Italian Govern ment had decided, if It were left free, to put an end to the temporal power. It wished to act by itself, without the aid of Garibaldi. At Florence an early rising was expected at Rome. General Nunziante has received instructions in anticipation of such an event. He will enter the city under the pre lex t of watching over the safety of the Pope ; but, once installed, he will remain there, and the Roman State Will be administered hi the name of the K ng, of Italy. All that will be left to the Pope will be the Vatican and its envi rons. This little domain will be neutralized, and will remain under the exclusive sovereignty of the reigning Popo. His Hpliness's successor will not keep even this shadow of power; his autho rity will be exclusively spiritual. Such, accord ing to M. Beust, are the designs of Italy, and he calls upon the Emperor to counteract them. Charges of Treachery and Cowardice Against Gen. Prim. • [From le Figaro, Sept. 30.} .A meeting of Spanish refugees was lately held in Paris, to take into consideration the conduct of General Prim, against whom charges of treachery and cowardice in connection with the recent abortive insurrection , In Spain, have been very freely made in some quarters. The General, who does not think French soil safe for him at present, did not attend; but sent an aide-de-camp, who offered the follow.; lag explanation: General Prim twice enteredi Spain. On' the first occasion ho went to the neighborhood of Valencia, where it had been agreed that he was to light fires on the tops of several mountains. On two successive evenings he lit the fires, but the regLments that were to have risen at the signal, did not appear. The reason was that the Government,- having obtained full information about the plot, disarmed the suspected regiments and confined them to barracks. Prim escaped with difficulty by sea. A few days later he crossed the frontier into Catalonia in the dis guise of a servant carrying luggage. He wan dered about for four days at the utmost personal risk, for Narvatez .would have shot him to a ca- Minty if he could have caught him. It was only when he found the insurrection entirely hope less that he left the country. It is not stated whether the meeting was satisfied with this defence. Manifesto of Gen. Prim—His Views of the situation.' [From la Liberti! Sept. Sal We have received a manifesto of Gen. Prim. dated Geneva, the 25th, which sets forth -at con sider/1;J..., length his views in reference to the situation of Spanish affairs. Ho says the .enc mks of liberty need not expect to see him pursue a different course from that which he followed even at the moment when his hopes were destroyed. His firmness will not give way before calumnies, and some day the Spanish 'nation. and the- world will see that his cenduet and that'of his small band of friends was inspired by,generens sentiments. After expressing his admiration for the`. brave men who have made such herOje efforts to secure liberty for their country.and his profound regret that he could net take part in the recent s gle; ho explains how it was that he and a small - body of friends ho accompanied him found it impossible to ef fect a junction: with the insurgents of Barcelona and TarraNc t o.on account of the great distance . . • more that we desire and are able to , maintain our ancient credft for civilization. , .• . The Minister of the Interior he "ngdom of Italy addressed the subjoin otter to Count de Cam bray-Digny : Fr.ourzcn, Sept. tlitl, 1867. llonsieu, te* Biindie: The spontaneousness and promp ' ude• with which, on your appeal, the .. tional wardof the capital have, In large numla, _tak up arms . to protect order and public sec , which were • threatened by a thoughtless agitation, furnish' a new proof of their patriotism, and impose on the government the duty, of manifesting its entire satisfaction, and also its grati tude. The National Guard of Florence has acquired a fresh title to the acknowl edgments of the country, because it has shown by its attitude that it comprehends the hard ne cessity in which the government is placed and the duty of aiding it in maintaining tranquillity and public order inviolate. I shall therefore be very grateful to you if you express my senti ments to the National Guard of Florence, and as sure it that the government is happy and proud to have relied on it. I have pleasure in seizing the present opportunity of offering you the ex pression of my high consideration. N. RATA zz r. A3IRRICAN LAIHICS FLOI-M-11:ING FOR THE PAPAL ZOFATES. Since thelt , te of St. Peter a number of ladles, principally Americans, have been engaged in em broidering a lbw for the Zonaves. Four who, remained behind were charged with the presen tation of it, and on the sth of this month His Holiness granted them an audience. Tn tne ad dress which accompanied the presentation they describe the flag as "an emblem of the hearty wishes our hearts entertain that the indefatigable zeal of your Zouaves may become under all cir cumstances the defence of the Pontifical throne." THE SPANISH INSURRECTION. ; which separated Um); and he adds that they didi not consent to lose sight of their country until their numbers bad become so diminished that It Was impossible to effect' the combination and to resist the forces which were sent against them. In conclusion, he says htt wffl not consent to abandon bis revolutionary efforts for one day, until the governments in Bain have ceased to be the executioners of their country and the scaxdal of civilized Europe. , torialt.edlow ClainieWam a Callao lt Convprt, liondOn (13evt. 26) Borresprindence of the Boston Adver doer.] The Roman. Catholic party bore - are indus triously circulatkag a report that , !AIL H. W. tengfellow has oritered the Roman Church. Their authority for the statement is not easily got at. They point me • to. the following leiter from the poet to a well-knowa zealot of Rome;-Mr. D. F. McCarthy, but it is a. peculiarity of their echool that they are unable !to conceive of a sympathy which is independent of dogma. The ultramon tine paper, the Westminster Gazette, publishes the subjoined. • NAIIANT, n. BOSTON., Aug. 10. 1867.—ifg Dear Sir:—Before leaving Cambridge to come down here to the seaside I Had+ the pleasure of receiving your precious volunie of .11ipterits of Corpus Christ:, and should have thanked•you sooner for your kindness in sending it to me had I not been very busy at the time in getting out my last vol ume of Dante. lat onco read your work with eagerness and delight—that peculiar and strange delight which Calderon gives his admirers, as peculiar and distinct as the flavor of an olive from that of all other fruits. You are doing this work , admirably. and - • seem to gain strength and sweetness as you go'l - Belgians claim that they were tbtfirattodis— on. It seetrmes if Calderon himself were behind cover the,use of c 05.1,. a blacksmith; having. 0111-. you whispering and suggesting. And what' bet- ployed it in the eleventh century. ter M ork could you do in your bright hours orb —The Tupper testimonial Is to be a. silver- tea.-\, in your dark hours than just this, which sce . msi . I urn, capacious, freely flowing. It will be handy to have.becn put proyideni into your-Junius for Tupper at :,,upper. "The Extracts from the Sacred Parnassus,' in —The last steamer from California. to, Ho the ng : Chcbniel , which reached me yesterday, are,,, Kong took home seyetal'hundred Chinamen.who. also excellent. For this and all many and many" Song have got rich brtaking in washing.thanks. Yours faithfully. • W. LoNnrin.i.o‘v. D.T. "McCarthy, Eeq.. No. 71 Upper Gardiner atreet, • POLITICAL. The Impeachntent Project. The following resolutions, which were intro duced in the Tennessee Legislature a few days since and laid over, are, so far as we remember, the only attempt. yet made by any public body to assign specific causes for the proposed Impeach ment of President Johnson: Whereas, The President of the United States of America is sworn to see that the laws are faith fullyitxecuted, and after an act of Congress be comes a law it should be faithfully executed, and whenever any ()Meer who is sworn to faithfully execute laws uses his position and influence to obstruct; hinder, and delay the execution thereof, he is, in fact, a violator of the law and his sworn dut; and whereas, it is apparent to the world that Andrew Johnson, President of the United States of America, has used his position and influence to obstruct, hinder, and delay the execution o/' the' Reconstruction Acts of rimyress: therefore, Be .11 resolred byille General Assembly of Ten nessee, That it Is the opinion of the General As sembly of the State of Tennessee, that the House of Representatives of the Congress of the United of against the inOresaid Andrew s,:.ilusan, Acting Presittent of the United States of America, and w e heieby request ourTHeptasentatiVesitt Con gress to vote for the impeachment articles. against said Johnson. The next Preshlettey. (From the Toledo (Ohio) Blade, Pall.] Gen. Grant is, we have faith to believe, in full sympathy with the Republican party, and would, under no circumstances, accept a nomination upon a platform that did not embody its dis tinctive principles. If this is the case, nothing but his positive refusal to accept the Presidency can prevent his nomination in 1868. His status settled, there is no man in the country upon. whom the party would so generally unite. - We believe it is settled and beyond peradventure. Probable Appointment Mit Gen. Braun: lilts as Secretary of 'War. tWat[iingten Correspondence of the N. V. Herald.] At the last meeting of the Cabinet the question ofappointing a permanent Secretary of War was under discussion. and since then the subject has bad the'serious cOnsideration of the President. Notwithstanding the numerous guesses and con jectures as to who would receive upon his shoul ders the mantle of the Illustrious Stanton, lone have hit upon the individual who will most probably obtain it, which is Major-General John A. Rawlins, Chief of Staff to Gen. Grant. I have good authority for saying that General Rawlins _has been the subject of several grave deliberations at the White House within the past two or three days, and his appointment as Secre tary of War seems to meet with less opposition that that of any man who has yet beon men tioned. It is said that General Grant is urging General Rawlins for the position, and It is believed that although Grunt would be relnetant to vacate his position as Acting Secretary of War, and to surrender it to one who would undo all that he has accomplished. he would willingly rex tire and leave it in the hands of his well tried Chief of Stall; who has, since an early period of the war, been his counsellor and assistant. Gen. Rawlins is a native of Illinois. and was one of thePouglas electors. He is now on a tour to the Pacilfc coast, but is expected to return .to this city in a few days. It bas been stated that Gen. McClernaud had been under consideration for the office of Secretary of War. This must have been a mistake. lam informed from a reliable source that General McOlernand has not oven been mentioned by the President In connection with the War Department. Gen. Grant In New York. At a recent Republican-Senatorial Convention of Chcrriung, Schuyler and Steuben counties, the following resolution was adopted: • /er. , o/red, That our trust in peace, as it did in war, centres in the wisdom and patriotism of Ulysses S. Grant, under whose lead, in 1868, a grander army than he ever mar shaled before will rival with the ballot the wonderful achievements of the bullet which at, once made his name illustrious 'and the Re public a:nation. The Union which his valor re deemedwill crown him with its highest honors, and the suffrages by which the great act shall be done will come in equal numbers from the North and the South, from the East and the West. The whole country in all its borders will unit! in the great acclaim, and then shall De final battle be fought and won, which, will—bring peace, pros perity and enduring stability to the free and re- United States of America. Gen. Grant in New Hampshire. [From the Conrord (NAL) Statesman, bet 12.1 The elections of Tuesday make Gen. Grant the next Republican candidate for President, and he is already nominated in the minds of the people. We shall need a candidate whose name, inscribed on a legion of Republican banners, will eau SO one of those ground swells such as swept James Buchanan out of, and Lincoln the Martyr. into the Presidency. Such un one will be 'Ulysses S. Grant. The Democrats, with him as the Republican candi date, will shake In their shoes from the beginning to the close of the campaign, if they do not ac tually "come down" at once, like the animal of awaiting the di-- which appreciated the folly charge of regarded ride f Capt. Scott. Gen. Grant may . now be as next President of the United States. the Conventional no mitten and the November ballot being Matters of one. CONVICT LABOR IN ENGLAND.—TIie extension: of the royal dockyards, now in progress,furnishes work for all the able-bodied convicts in the prisons at Portsmouth, Chathim and Portland. The directors report that in the year 1866 a daily average of twenty-eight hundred and fifty-stiy9n menswere at work in these three prisops,,.and Wit' their total earnings amounted to £88,648; At - Chathani the value of the work done by' the con victs more than covered the c74penditure of the prison. F. L. FETHERSTON. Publisbet PRICE THREE CENTS 'TOTS AND FANCIES. —Four duels on the tapir in Kanto:kr, —The gout itt what alls•Dichens. -•-Military ballooning In Paraguay is cr !afire. --Mies Kellogg has ben . offered severO Aura tire. engagements abroad, -General McClellan is corning home' Map his family early in November. • —Edmund Yates has a new wave) ; "The Righted Wrong." —Gilmore Simms• projects a new papet_.frt South Carolina —The neat Welsh EffiteddibtflEPttr bellkeltDneasZt year in Ruthh. T. Thumb and family_ exhibla here ehorgr., The Thumbs re both wen/ • —Female clerks are emplbyed , generdir fiL Cork. --Arnong tho new fashicss In Pitriods - "wearint, the month slightly open," --Illstori weals seven dresses in pluying Mcrie• Antoinette. —F. , recent English work on•paroehlat. law ham In its Index this ILne: "Vagatonds--see Sheriffs.! —Baltimore hawkispropriated:s36,ooo for-nogrcr schools this year. —Flour in Ila,yt's is worth twenty dollars- Is : gold per barrel. —Victoria la builling . anothemmonument to the memory of the late-Prince Consort. She•seemO" to have a mania on the subject.• —Foster's music, once so very popular, hardly sells at all now. Irk, the technicalianguage of the music trade, it has "died out" —Lucille Western left St. Louis in a. cause one of the actors introduced- farce Into tragedy, and the city now has no "scars." the' Academy Richings Opera Troupe will produce at* the' Academy of Music this winter, Wallace's opera, "The Desert Flower." —The New Bedford ifprorry thinks the music to the Ancient Mariner wilh be writtemin thelcey of sea. —Mrs. Jaggers has a "baby farnP at, Tptte.nr ham. England, where very young childre.o are taken in and done for: It is simply a,model nur sery. C-ry is the principal product —Bismarck has ordered a governmenttransla tion of a book about Mosbyls campaign ! fbr the encouragement of, guerillas in the Ptlitildillt army. —Sheridan kissed a little girl at West Brook -PC field, and'remarked "That's the size thatdo tt;the other size won't." Instances are on record.. however, of "the other size" having - done . —The late Lambert Thiboust, an industrious- French dramatist, who died a few weeks .• wrote one hundred . and 61X plays. I3h was only forty years of age. —Professor Longfellow was so charmed, with. Mrs. Howard Paul?s rendering cf "Excelsior," in Boston, that he presented the lady, with. u' 318 7 copy of the poem. on the recalvinzahir k x;.„, shire, at. -Gosport-Natty zeta, paper called the Jolly • Tur. It is great of piteidur - _. into people. —Dark, eyebrows and golden tresses, or the opposite, a dead pearl pale complexion and light, - pink lips, are to •be fashionable In Paris this. winter. —The Hawaiian Gnulle of August 7 atumunces a game of base-ball to he played "on the lot makai of Punshon College . "We fet to hear by the next steamer th ° %titouslt game" has reached . China and OccuKix* Li, —A screw (company at ProvillaWilikitili. tained a hundred and sixty thousand dollar firer- diet against a rival company. Tho rivalmom pany had un-screw-pulously used . w the other's patent. „ . —The use of "hip, hip" before a cheer is. traced by an ingenious writer in the Cornhia ilfizgazine. 1 to the time of the Crusaders, when the letters H. E. P. were on the sacred banners, standing for Hierosolyma est perdita (Jerusalem is 1°54. A very doubtful hypothesis, in our opinion. —A new use for the tongue is to make it serve as a thief, bylicking up diamonds at a jeweler's-- the praetitioner pretending to be very short sighted, and so bringing the jewels gear enough to his face to lick them up. The Jewelers all want an anti kicker law. —Hecla has been taking a smoke. The brass of which the instruments of a yacht more than +two hundred miles distant were composed, was discolored. and the inhabitants' of ltelkaviiroi hundred miles from Heels, were- nearly suffo cated by the sulphurous fumes. —Some shabby people have shown a very petty spirit of malice in sending to the fund fig Mrs. Lincoln such insulting contributions as a nickel cent, a one cent postage stamp, and a three cent piece. There is neither wit nor delicacy in this; and the folks who would descend to the insult in question, are the very ones who would have toadied Mrs. Lincoln when she was the, lady of the White House. .., —An alphabetical list of ninety-two sects in' England. besides the established church and the Heinen Catholics, is published. Among - them some have curious names, but they are those chosen by the sects themselves. The following are among the most peculiar: Acostolico,baptised be lievers, Christian Israelites, Christian teetotallers, eleetics, hallelujah band, peculiar people, provi dence, ranters, Wesleyan reform glory band. —Secretary Jack Bunsby has lust spoken: that is, Mr. Seward, when asked what he thought of the election, replied that "experience had taught him that it was not always the part of wisdom to think too much; at the same time he believed that the signs of the times were indicating that the people are right, and that if public won were not fools they would believe in the people." What oracular wisdom! —ln a German paper is this matrimonial ad vertisement : "A lady, belonging to the higher nobility, who has lately become a widow, and who, since her husband's death, has been de prived by unfortunate events and by confiding trust of a fortune once considerable, wishes to wake the acqttaintance of a richgentleman with , whom when united, she would be enabled to satjafxthose claims on life which she formerly enjoyed." —An instrument has been invented by rather Seechi, who is probably an Italian, called a meteorograph. It is an automatic register,. of changes in the weather of all kinds, and the sheets upon which the record is thus made, bound into volumes, will add greatly to the ma terial on which the science of meteorology is based. It will also render it easier to make oh servations, increase the number of stations an& in every way advance this too little knoWs. science. —The widow of a deceased subscriber lately set* the following note to the Paris Opinion Nationclo, a paper not very popular in French retighma circles: I have just lost my husband; but my- grief WAS relieved in seeing him on his death.bed re gret baying so long entertained the ideas• imaz• tamed by your journal, As, thanks to God. there Is no one in my family who shares youz religious, opinions, I beg you to no longer send, me your paper. I willingly renounce the three months' subscription to which I am entitled). Your tier, ~ vatit, WIDOW OF M. BERTROLEV, ' "Notary at Mornaut (Rhonel,7 , in publishing the commmilcattots. th_fP ' adds: "We hasten to send to_l44me, Be loy, with our condolence, the money wh4t,' been paid for the three mouths she soliauey re nounces, We congratulate the • eltrtr of that parish on the memorable victory whiChAhov have lust obtained in snatching from the dawn of Satan the soul of a notary, for eight r Ares subscriber to our journal,"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers