GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME XXL-NO. 195. !THE EVENING BULLETIN winsialiHED Brun EVENING (Sundays excepted), AT THE NEW BULLETIN BUILBINO, 607 Chestnut Street, illaladelphis, ST TIIII EVENING BULLETIN ASSOCIATION. PIWPRITTORII. GIBSON PEACOCK. ERN EST C. WALIAO4.. F.L. FETHERSTON. TILOS. J. WILLIAMSON. GASPER (MCBEE, Js. FRANCIS WELLS, The 13manis la served to subscribers in the city at ii bents ..r week, payable to the carriers. or tS .r annum. DIARIES FOR 1868—NOW READY AT 723 ARCH street, containing! blank space for each day In the year, rates of postage, table of stamp duties. dtu.. pub lished and for sale by oeXtf W. G. PERRY. 728 Arch street. MARRIED. BIDELMAN—VETERSUN.- - On the evening of Nov. Oath, 1867:by the Rey lbog. Street, of New York, .J. W. Bide!man to Menlo Y., daughter of the late Laurence Peterson. COLKET—THOMAS.—On the 26th instant, by the Rev. Win. H. Fatness, Mr. Geo. H. Colkct to Mies Rebecca IL, daughter of Col. Wm. 11. Thoma•, nil of this city. • KECKLEIL-OE6S.—On the 13th of November, VOL at Baltimore, by the Mire. R. ki4mkle, Jacob J. Kookier, of Baltimore county, to Mime rerteen C. Gees of Baltimore. H KNIGHT—KUNLE. — At Ilarriehuri,Nov. a, 1887, by Bev. 0. F. Stelling Geo. W. Knight, of Philadelphia, to Tilie, daughter of (Marlon W. Knhnlc, Esq.. of Lebanon. NEFF—HAINES.—Nov. 2let. nt St. Uenw nt'e Church, by Rev. Treadevell Walden, Robert K. Neff, Jr., to Abbie B. Maine.. both of this city. • VAN 'REED—TRENTIBB.—On l'hureday inorailig, lath inet, at Bt. James'e Church, by . the Rev.lienry .1. Morton, D. D., Captain William K on Reed, U. S. Army, and lielena Jacoby Frenties , daughter of E. Freoman Frontlet, EN., of this city. DIED. COOK,—At Camden, N. J.. on Wednesday. the 20th Inst., Robot, Jr., Youngest son of Robert C. and Louisa Ji,. Cook, aged 2 Yearn and 2 days. Funeral front his father's residence, No. VII Kurth Siiith Altreet, on Sunday afternoon, at 2 o'clock. The friends snd relatives of the family arc affeetionatel, ited. • Iffielntant.—fiuddeuly, on the ihth inst.. Annie it., wife of Deo. D. Buckley, and daughter of Woe. H. White, of Philadelphia. The friends of the family Are invited to attend the funcral,from the house of Geo. W. Buckley, at Douglas, ville. on Saturday the Kid Met , at 11 o clork, A. M. The 5.16 A. M. cans of heading Railroad will stop nt Douglas. MARSHALL—On JIMA:My, 11th month 21st, 1937, Richard M. Marehell, in the 4Ah year of hie age. Ills friends and those of the family are invited to attend leis funeral, Pram his late residence. No. WU Spruce street. on First-day afternoon. the 24th inst., at 1 o'clock. went at south Laurel Mil. SAHEB.—At Beverly, N. J., cm the 21st Instant, Hariei fiagee, in lee 49th year of hie age. Due notice will be given of the funeral. • BURIAL CAtiRLT. PATENT FOR DTAIGN GRANTED AMY 9,1967, R. 8. EARLEY, CtilfriSTA KED, 8. Z. MEN= Or TX 47U A.ND CinEEN BTHEITS. I claim that my new improved and only patented BURIAL CASKET is far more beautiful in form and finlsh than the old unsightly and repnbdve coffin, and that its construction adds to its strength and due. We . the undersigned, having had occasion to nut families E. 8. EARLEY'S ?Al EN'f . AERIAL CASKET, would not in the future use any other if they could be ob tained. Bishop M. Simpson. Rev. J. W. Jackson. J. IL Schenck, M. 1)., Com. J. Bandon, V. S. N., •Jaclir Itevr. W. Rartine, D. D., • Geo. W. Evans. Ben . (hoe. Wm. flicks, .7. 1 . Clagliorne. D. N. Sinn. EYRE & LANDELL HAVE THE FIRST QUALITY Lyons Velvets for Cloaks. Lyons Velvets, :Mach, for Sacks. MIYRE & LANDELL. FOURTH AND ARCH. KEEP A 111 Pule amottmezt of Casefroereo for Boys' Clothes, Ow stmereo for BUSlllerll Sußs. SPECIAL NOTICES. $ COMPLIMENTARY TESTI MONIAL. °Row ;mum AND VOC gi AL ENTERTAINMENTENTERTAINMENTwin be ven ta MR. STEPHEN CAFFREY, (DWlled from Pulmonary Mame and Loos of Sight. contracted while in the Army). by Ida military and per. 'mai Mende., on • WO Evening, Reireinbeir 22, 1867, Al MANS - BALL, MUM AND MU BRIM Tickets., Reserves Sesta. H.c. 81CKEL,Airvt.. Maj... Gen, U. S. V. HENRY H. BiNGHAM,BIvt. Brgt firta U. S. V. W.M. B. THOMApy Col. u. B. Vols. WASHINGTON M. WORa ALL, Llent..-Colai GEO. P,II6LEAN,CoI. P. V. THOS. Y. B. TAPPa.R. L .IIrvt. Col. U.S. V C D. BROOKE. Capt. U. B. V. WIC HENRYEY. CaiLt.,U. B. V. Mon. D. 11008 E. JOSEPH B. HANCO(X. JOSEPH E. MARCE.II. W. hL PARHAM. GEO. P. oLlVP.R,El,l).. t .Sargoon U.S. V. BENJAMIN HAIM ia. per POPULAR LECTURES. Under the auspices of the YOUNG DIEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION, HENRY, VINCENT, The English Reformer and Brilliant Orator, will deliver TWO LECTURES AT CONCERT HALL TUESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 26th, &teed—JOHN MILTON, The Scholar, the Poet, the Patriot—the prodigy of 1113 own age, and the glory of all time. THURSDAY EVENING. NOVEMBER Sitth, Subject—GARIBALDL Tickets for sale at ABIII4E-Ap'Bi 724 Chestnut street. Admission, 25 cts. Reserved Beats, 50 cts. nol9.CtrpS scips. TEACHERS' INSTITUTE OF PIIILADEL. who' phia--Becond Lecture of the First Annual Course.- - Prof. EDWARD L. YOUMANS, of Now York, Wilt deliver his great Lecture on “THE CHEMISTRY OF THE SUNI3EAM,” AT HORTICULTURAL HALL FRIDAY EVENING, November?2d. Tickets of admission, price 50 cents, for sale at Trump Iler'N'M Chestnut street, or st the door. n021.2t,rp; move— OFFICE OF THE LEHIGH COAL AND NAVI GATION COMPANY. , PUILADZI.PIItA, November 16, Subscription Books for the new Five Million Gold Loan of this Company interest Six Per Cent. per annum in Gold, free of United States and State taxes, will remain open until the 80th inst., to Stockholders, to allow all of them art opportunity to' participate. Price. 86pe.r cent. Your billions have already been subscribed- for. The Company has reserved the right to pro-rate the subscrip. Vona If the amount should exceed five millions. - 130,..0M0N SHEPHERD. nolBt3orpl , Treasurer. inscgrs GANO'S NEW PATENT BAG HOLDER, NOW on exhibition for a short time at Merchants' Hotel, =eats - the wants of all FARMERS AND GRAIN DEALERS. The exclusive right for Ohio, Pennsylvania and New ork. is for sale. their Sale. This in Salo. Thin machine has met with great 811CCCSS in the Vest. DON'T FAIL TO SEE IT. air HOWARD HOSPITAL, NOS. 1518 AND MO Lombard street,: Dbspennary Department. —Medi. ea treatment and medicines furnished gratuitously to the poor. ISPIR IT OF THE DEMOCRATIC 'Sherman as a Candidate for Presi. dont. Err= the Le Crosse (Whs.) Democrat.] And ouch a candidate I Sherman—William Tecumseh lihermart—Vendal Sherman—Sherman of the torch and axe—Sherman, • prince of a band! of bummers, thieves, 'vagabonds and rutlituus--Sherman, whose "march to the -nee" would have'damned to all eternity a legion of pirates 'and' freebootent—Sherman, the lackey tool, leftenant of the Sangamon brother of the devil, the obscene, *mutat and boorish Lincoln—Sherman, whose hands are ,ted with the blood of thousands of American freemen —Sherman, Whose mostglorious acts can be writ /ten in 'two vrords—"Atlanta" and "Columbia:" This , anushronm of civil war, blood-watered, rank with the , corruption and wickedness , engendered in the hellish crusade for the enslavement and degradation of white - Xnen, and the triumph of Wagers—this thing a Demo ,eratic candidate for the honors!which, as a't party. • we lhave conferred upon Jefferson, Madison, Monroe. ,Jack. eon. Van Buren, Pierce and Buchanan? Proposed by Nentucki p 7i, from a BovereiguiY, thousands of whom acids rest unhallowed' graves, slain for the lore of liberty' b Sherman's minions. Great God I that a Demo. .rat should so disgrace himself and humiliate that grand .old party l • HELI6ION—WITH SPECIAL nuvromon To METHODISTS, The Lab Crosse Democrat le not a whining. canting, puri tanical, longfaCed church organ. having for ite miesion -the *liking o ver of the sin, iniquity, licentloueness 'morality, hardily actions, gross indecenclee, un c h r iai nu werf o rmancevot the vast crowd of clerical bloodhounds of Zion, who are leaders of the church, expoundenr of re- Von, dabblemolitics. on the contrary, it is a Mirror R a ghionjE w mab we give picturee of men and, sent'. Fano:its as thiy exist, wit caring ono whit for the good or all Ipinion of ,all the humbug religionists, canting • Lyp oritOs,:pulpirprostitutore , clerical indiscretionists, or their adyisem or endoreere, this or the other side of ghe home Of the Late . Lamented? We print .fesota. it ie bur duty to unmask villainy, to cream corruption, to un cover moral deformity , to rin open the cotton hattlageavr dust filling, which give* such plumpneor to the sneaking, gaunt, rotten skeleton . which "oh-abs," and n yee•ahe,ol Il4nd ••ok Lord-she." and !monde the hours of Betting day in talking nigger instead of Christ and leading eoule to —A Kentucky Judge deckles that greenbacks are not legal tender. • • , , :. '' ..,, ' , . .... _ ..., . , - . . , • . .. . . . - ' . ~.,. ' • . . .. . , • i 0$ ni o, , ... ' - ..',',. •••,,, . •-' 4 - - ' ' ''.• i , . • , ' - ....... . . .„,' ' . • . . . • ' . . . .. . ~ , , . • .. . • -4, . - • **ZI .. . .. . .... ..,. ~ . ... . ... . • , • ~. : , .•,......--- : ',..,••• ~ .. • ~ ..,. .-.... -.. . ~. • . „ ~ .. . ... , „ . .., • .4 , . ... f- - .111,1„ ... •- .. .. . . ... .... ~.... ........ . • . t . . . .. . . . , •........:. . , .. ~ . . • ocl94mrp mart SirEPN. [Correspondence of the Philadelobta Erening Bulletin.] After saying a thousand injurious things of the great show; after hailing It as a disappoint ment, holding it up as a monster, and dismissing it as a bore; after doing this kind of thing over and over, in the very spirit of Sir Charles Cold streain, now for the edification of a poor man of quality in Italy, now for the wonderment of a gaping -Breton of Finisg.re; after slighting it often to many a Parisian cockney as weary as myself, I went, like everybody else, to attend its last moment and "have its life." A. feeling of regret, almost of remorse, came over me at the thought of losing the misshapen old anomaly. Like its own Chinese giant, it was harmless, though overpowering, and I concluded to go and lean my pensive head upon the hip of the latter, with the confession that I could have better spared a better mandarin. But I found myself in a place for anything but pensive meditation when I had jumped from the carriage, sacrificed my franc at the turnstile, and plunged into the living river of humanity that inundated the palace. A new element of confu sion was added, to confound the eternal hubbub that has always marked the precinct; the build ing was not only filling, but emptying; they were wil cling off the goods in shiploads. Eng - was.. already half desolated. The French rovinces were drained. Russia,the first to fill her field, was retiring with the first. The "Kingdom of Italy" was hinting evacuation to the "Pontifical States." Prussia and Austria were rectifying their mutual frontier, while France, in a cocked hat, stood everywhere, in her familiar attitude of overseer, advi ier and oracle. It was a little disheartening. My favorite inner ring, the interesting "Circle of the History of Labor," was sealed up. The fair breadths of pictured wall, where I had been wont during the summer to feed my eye and fancy, were dis figured with unsightly gaps and gashes. It seemed as if banditti had been in wait behind the variegated tapestry, and had rent it in burst ing out. The crowd was immense, but it was different. It had lost the little faculty of discrimination it ever possessed, and filled all the alleys with equal density. It was more sad to see what it had come to like than ever it had been to see what it neglected. The cuckoo clocks, for instance: no person In his sensed had ever, till this ob literating day, been known to endure an instant's presence in the alcove where they were all wheezing together. A friend of mine, whose car is fine, always kept at least two continents away from the Swiss section. Now it was choked like the others, and a mass of ears of every size and hue was being tortured by the frightful birds. A great throng, however, is always a superb spectacle in itself. I examined my neighbors with the liveliest interest. Never again may I see a company of such contrasted nationalities. Auvergnat, Magyar, Hoosier, Campagnard, Orange-man, Andalusian, Brazilian, Cairene, Sioux, Pole, Mongolian, Biscayan, strangers from Rome, Jews, and Mormons ! To look at a thing so mixed was to have a dream of the world's great future, when national quarrels shall have died away, and progress, helped a little even by shows like this, shall have smoothed everything to the true millenium. The dark, slender Egyptian wrndered softly about, the three cuts on either check blue with gunpowder. The Japanese student, dressed by the great Dusautoy in the last Paris - mode, ex posed ,his topknot as he uncovered to some friend he bad spied out of his narrow eyes. The Austrian guard bore down the crowd with the white elbows of his elegant uniform. The su perb mulatress from the Mauritius listened to the pretty folly of a Paris beau. The Russian carpenter leaned against the wall,tipsy, his heavy cariocks in his eyes. Two young light weights in spotted cravats, whose littleness, dryness and pertness were the growth of London, and of no other place on earth, amused me by their patron age of the English pictures, of which they could sec but the upper line, as they laid their chins against the shoulder-blades of their taller neigh bors. Under "Moucelioe" grandiose colossus of "Hecate," I saw a pretty little Italian, with all the frank confidence of her race, tear her gar ments asunder with her little kidded hands, with the action of Paul at Lystra in Raphael's car toon, to serve to her child a repast of the density and temperature adapted to its requirements. Pushing on a little further, I saw another crouch ing or reposing figure, and this one was repre sentative and typical. A conductor of the rolling-chairs had found a safe corner, 'wheeled his seat into it, clambered ,in to the vehicle,. and lay there completely supine and unjointed, asleep, drunk or dead. You will not blame me for attaching a mystic and em blematic value to this unstrung, Jeremiadal figure. I fancied it was the Genius of the Ex position, in a human form and a blouse, swoon ing over tho decay of the occupation of the rolling-chair. How complete that equipage had been, how adapted to a sudden need, how peculiar to the Paris Fair, what a boon to the lazy! How often I had lounged deliciously along, one hand upon the oilcloth back of such a carriage, aspretty friend within it, and the ex cellent fellow in a blouse doing the work, re membering everything, and telling all about it through his nose ! Now the pretty friends are flying away amongst the petrils, the chair is still, its wheels are locked,and Pierre mounts the ruined throne of which ho had been the inspiration— and snores. I hear his nasal requiem .beyond the chatter of the throng._ It saddens me, and I escape. . . _ In the park; between the Caravanserai and the Chinese farm.house, I mot once more my old friend, the converted- Mussulman. His exces sively long legs were entangled amongst a press of crowding figures, and he was enduring—what no saint in the calendar ever had to endure—a modern Paris martyrdom. A throng of French wits, with the audacity of schoolboys, the malice of magpies, the persistence of Naples beggars, the relentlessness of inquisitors, the lightness of musquitoes, the readiness of Irishmen, and the polish of Athenians, had set themselves with one intent to harry and perplex him. Ido not know, I am; sure, why this harmless creature, the emplOyd of , a worthy British mission; should -enjoy, 'with Lord Dundreary, the honor of being the cii&ce butt of the season at Paris. But so It is, and I have heard him exploited. everywhere; in the studio and the eaf6, on •the Boulevara and by the sea-side, as the one joke too good ever to fade, the sure bringer . of a laugh no matter _where, the resource of flagging wits, and the sever of sorry jokes. Here he was, enduring , , X hope, his final torments. His white burnous ,was full of tracts, but his elbows were pinioned by 'the jam and his liberal intentions were frultleee. A hundred hands wore thrust PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1887. Into_his damp and troubled face, and demands, in every unintelligible sort of argot, were made for the Evangelists in Hottentot, in Egyptian, in Aztec, in Etruscan, in every unknown, unwritten or forgotten tongue—to bo riven to the speaker's mistress, dog or tom-cat. Finally the wretched man, completely vanquished, gave it up and bolted his face assumed a most un-Chnstian expression, he gathered up his mass of skirts,and rapidly directed his lean legs, to the inclosure of the Asiatic theatre, where I fancy ho renounced his temporarily-assumed religion in the presence of the three fascinating priestesses of pleasure from Pekin. A lively mason, In a. fresh white blause, came out of the encounter with hie lists stuffed full of tracts, and held them up trium phantly as he sent a ringing comment. after the missionary. "Regard," he shouted, with one of those grimaces that can only be made in Farle;•"ther re ligion-machine !" The touch of the theatrical in this latest dis pensation of the Loudon "Caiviniats" has upset the precarious gravity of the French populace: They have fastened upon its eenak.Ade, and they are laughing yet. When I finally suffered myself to be squeezed out of that Babel crowd, I had about as much form and consistency as a postage stamp that has gone through a paper mill.. It was in a limp and dissipated-lookingstate that I turned round, on the brilliant Mount of TrocadeVo, to look my last look, and sigh my last sigh. A few days before, one of the loneliest men on earth, I bad seen the ponderous Atlantic batter the precipices of Finistere. on shores so desolate that they seemed like a new world waiting for the creation of a race. My sense•ot solitude had never been so filled, so fed and pressed upon and emphasized. The naked, heather had been be hind; before, the complaining- ocean, sending off its battled waves to find another journey, another goal, another hemisphere, another upbraidin,g wall beneath the occident. To-day, Paris, the maelstrom of men! Paris, the enchantress, the Egyptian whom custom cannot stale. Paris, who is neither loveable nor fair ; whom we neither admire nor approve— only we stay. The queen of fascination, queen of intelligence, queen of tact, queen of art and science, whom we dismiss a thousand times, till w•e lied we cannot do without her.' And, for the crown and last expression of Paris, this glassy monster that has crystallized into a coil, and blends within itself every amulet, every charm of life. It was one of those steamy Indian summer days, dying softly in belts of yellow, lilac and blue. The mild air was so charged with trans figuring mist that even the Palace looked beau tiful, and lay upon the river like a pearl shell, over which dewy lights were beginning to glit ter. The Venetian pennons,a thousand of them, hung hardly stirring along their masts. I im agined I was looking at some tinted fancy of the painter Hamilton. That was mi . last sight of the magical pageant. To-morrow men would begin to destroy it. To-day, nature, anticipating their work, had prepared a lovelier, milder decay --the crystal wonder was just about to vanish. The fairy-work of commerce seemed turning to clouds and air. It was as when you watch the last scene of the "Merchant;" the towers and terraces of Belmont dream across the scenes, the moonlight sleeps upon the banks, the lovers chant to each other, with their perpetual refrain —on'stich a night, on such a night: then the little candles begin to throw their beams, and you know that the mistress will want her palace again. and that soon it will be over. A premonitory shiver hurries down the canvas, giving you to see the bright walls all tremulous, like walls. of fading fiame4 - ._ Then you know the curtain is going to fall; but fascinated with the long emotion of the play, you hardly perceive where or what you are, whether spectator in the box, or player on the stage, or only some painted man Upon the terrace. Evrs.NT PERDU. ODDS, MUTE( AN END. =II The Odds. MIL Einroa : Yon might just as well try to batter down the walls of Fort Sumter with half- Inch soap bubbles, as to attempt to get an idea into the heads of some men. There is Wilkins, for instance; he has an abstract conception of the fact that a conundrum is a certain formula, such as,•"Wby is a what's-its-name like a thingum-, bob ? "—and he knows the answer always is, "Because it's a what-d'ye-eall-it." But as for haying any definite notion of the sorfl of the pro position, he has no more than an oyster has of a dollar and a half. He never seems to get the exact hang of any thing. Only night before last some of his Cale donian friends were singing a good old Scotch air, and Wilkins, after listening in absolatly stu pid surprise,came over and told me confidentially that ho ' never could tell why these Scotchmen made such an everlasting fuss about `Old Lang's Sign.' It was no better than any other sign that he knew of." Wilkins never was happy in catching a mean ing. Be is a pigmy in stature, and he married a female .twice his size, simply because he had heard it positively affirmed that, it Is better to have loved and lost, than never to have loved a tall woman, and he has led a dog's life ever since. Ile was always unfortunate with poetry. It was he, you will recollect, who once went sere nading a girl, and struck out under the window with the pathetic line, "Ah, how can I leave thee?" just as the heavy father, with a heart of adamant, appeared at the second-story window and suggested that the best plan would be to leave her by taking the next Eleventh Street car, and rendering the hint imperative, by promising to send a policeman to help him off the premises if ho didn't accept the advice promptly. But neither force nor persuasion will sharpen the perceptions of a dull mind. I know the con trary thing is the popular one, as in schools where the pupllgrims on the road to knowledge are flogged to make them smart. You can't assist them' in progression ' arithmetical or otherwise, er give them algebrains if they have not a capa city for mathematics. There, for instance, is Girard College where flogging was, according to those ten directors, the rule. It seems to me, if their report was true, the whole enclosure must have been an un happy land of canitt', and yet the boys did not learn any faker than is ordinarily the case. Al len' I understand, is a stick-ler for the use of the rod, but mark my word, he will make a failure of his administration If he uses It liberally. If you adopt the right kind of suaalon,yott can mould youthful minds like. WAX, ytni but can't do it with whacks. The birch rod is Oran& of learning that ought not to flourish. That kind of tree-tment Ins no affinity for roots, square Or I approve of seats or learning, bat, neve r could believe that they are alwapi 'lochted , in small boys. You way say ,what you please of OUR WHOLE COUNTRY. the old adage. "Spare the rod and spot/ the child." The first part is good enough, but it is I • ridiculous advice which recommends a man, under any circumstances, to spoil his child. , For 'my part I am a prohibitlor.ist. Igo in lot an anti-ticker law. If you want a boy to learn his lesson, lessen your application to hie back, and give more attention to his head. Persuasion is is your trump card; oh schoolmaster! Speaking of trumps, reminds . me of Mrs. Bow ers,lhe "right Bowers^ of the whole pack of aatAars, I've heard euchre-ssten hot. I didn't want to see her marry Antoinette, but I did so, and didn't like thennlon. She and the heroine were not flesh of one BOIL M i re. Bowers faiM to identify herself with the character, and, I say it with due respect, if the Queen of France could have seen her in the scene—say at Trianon, she would have taken a sovereign dislike to her. I am beginning to surfeit of the Surf at the Arch, too, but I feel dlYerently about the Rich ings opera troupe, clef because I understand that halPthe good-lookiirg girls in town have their sonlA in arms, and eager firm the tria volo at tile Academy this evening. I hope Castle will find this business of Having a benefit, as the rest of the Riehings opera. troupe have, an en riching operation. ° As for Mr. Forrest, he Is a finished actor— finished in the sense of being laid out and done for. He is too tremendous for thin delicate age. There is "Spartacus" for instance. Now was fipart-accustomed to speak thus when he desired to intimate that be would "Ah-malte-ah-R-R-R- R-R-ome-ah-ah-howl-ah ?" I 'don't believe it. For my part I dilil.e a Forrest that is so entirely pop'lar. Ido not object to Mr. Forrest musenlar limbs as some do, for I like every Forest to have a heavy undergrowth, but I do think the leg itimate drama slightly too much for him. I will except—perhaps his "Lear,'.! kinglier King Lear than he makes, it would be difficult to find. He is "every inch a king," and if you will only think how very many inches that is, you will at once perceive how extraordinarily monarchical be must be. But he ought to abandon Ifamlet; aye there's the rub-bish. I always imagine when I' see him in that character, that the ghost has been scared away by his alarming convulsions, and I can't for the life of me keep the run of the play. If he would only dcigu to accept my advice, and abandon the melancholy Dane, how much better it would be! You have been on the stage so long, that I should think you would sigh for rest. Forrest, why not, then, bring your dramatic career where I bring this screed, to FROP, HAVANA. Cerreepoadence of the Philadelphia Eveningitulletilt3 HAVANA, November 16, 1867.—We are in a great dilemma. Is the cholera here or %it not here ? It would puzzle any one to give a correct answer. People say that many cases have oc curred in the hospitals, but I know there are four physicians who absolutely deny the disease to be epidemic. We see the government taking every precautionary measure for an emergency; but on the other hand they have not as yet published anything looking like an ofliclal declaration that the cholera is amongst us. Nevertheless, the nubile are again alarmed and some families are emigrating to the country. Trustworthy persons assured me that a score of cases have occurredin the military hospitalibut the victims were soldiers and seamen of profligate life. To conttterbal once this asaertion,one of the police chiefs states that he has not had a single case in his ward, composed of about 40,000 persons. There is a ward in this city, called "Jesus Maria , ,." as dirty, densely peopled and unhealthy as any other in the world, and it seems very strange that the military hospital, which is in itscentre, has not spread the disease over that whole part of the city. As the cholera is the all-absorbing topic, politics are dull for the moment, and even the last important events in Italy have attracted little attention, although Garibaldi has many sympathizers, particularly among the Creoles. On the other hand, the higher and middle classes have been affected by the death of some promi nee t and generally esteemed persons, among whom are Don Ramon de Beruete, Treasurer of the Exchequer. and one of the oldest and most honest public functionaries in Cuba, and Don Miguel Delmonte y Aldama, a gentleman of high standing and a decided protector of talented men. Between the 15th and 20th inst., the iron-clad frigate Tetuan, one of the most powerful among the few vessels of that description belonging to the Spanish navy, will sail for Spain. She has already taken in coal and provisions for the voy age. and only awaits the arrival of Ifer Majesty's frigate Gerona, which was watching the Cuyler, and has been replaced by the Carmen. A petroleum bed, 500 by 300, metres, hats been discovered near the port of Cardenas. On a tobacco plantation in the vicinity of Pinar del Rio a negro woman strangled two of her sons with a handkerchief. She is to bo tried. In Cienfuegos a Spanish passenger of the steamer Cienfuego had scarcely landed, a little after midnight, and was proceeding home, when a man approached him and asked him for fire to light a cigar, at the same time menacing him with a dagger. Immediately after he was ac costed by two other ruffians, who carried him, together with his portmanteau,to an open place, and after having robbed him of $ 2,000, some tickets of a Royal Lottery and a portion of his clothes, knocked him down and ran away. This occurrence took place about a hundred yards from the Civil. Guards' barracks. The ffilons have not yet been arrested. The prisoners who escaped from the Penitentiary of Santiago de Cuba, have not long enjoyed their liberty. In' my last I told you that one of them had been captured, and now the remaining three have also been apprehended, ono of them having been killed in the desperate resistance he made. The capture of these rascals was made by the overseer and three negroes of a sugar plantation. They were rewarded for their courage; but the Gover nor of the Grientat Department ordered $l7 to be given to each of them in presence of all their fellows as a token of regard and encouragement of the other people in like cases. As for the banditti, they will be shot very soon, as they are already sentenced to death. The same papers which announced the above capture give the notice of the death of the corporal who was on guard in the Penitentiary on the night the pri soners rebelled, and who received some wounds. Manion s,--Sugar (Clayed)— There has been little ant. nation in the market during the week, in consequence of the firmness of holders, who ask from 834 to 8,14; reals for No.lB, according to quality. The oilers of buyers do not exceed today from 834 to 83( reels. The market closed dull yesterday. (Today is a holiday' here). Muscovado— The market is very, quiet, on account of the very reduced atock. The exportation of sugar from the ports of Havana nod Matanzas from Ist January till the 14th inst. is 1,941,072 boxes, and 79,876 hhde, as against 1.801,9•76 boxes and 77,443 bhda. in same period of 1866. Stook here and in Zdatanzna,_62,B64 boxes and 847 hhda., as against 116276 boxes and 2,641 hhda, in 1866. Diolasees—tut the stook on band is very much, reduced, the transactions have been unimportant, with the exception of the cargoes sold at Cardenas, at 4Xreals. 'we quote' nominally from 43,4 t o Orealskeg of 4.6ayed.' Of the Muscovado, there is none disposable. SMITING Or 'rite POET OF HAVANA.—ArTiVOd, Nov. a, Amtriran brig 14,(1. prooks, from Bristol; Nov. 111, Amer. scan brig Harry Nvisden, from New Vork.LNev, 1),, Amer. icauschooner Anna Holten, from New You.. Nov. 12, American bellow:au Cecilia ' from Mobile ; N0v. 4 14, Arnett. can BehOODOT I IOII3, from Ngw Orleans. '. ma mma ., Nov, 0. Amecan brig Mosey' Queen. from Bristol; stetanzaa,,NM /8. American brig O. P. Storer. from it Matanzas. Nov. 14, isMeriseal WS Bath mut, from New I(w.s. - Daraeass, Nov. 0, American bark J. E. Efolbrok, from New York. sailed from HaVellt, Nov If, Ante Cap ichoouer P. S. ktazior, for New Otters; t0v,0 , 10,` *Merida* schooner Anne, for Pensacola; v.l Ameetoon schooner Duca• nor, for New OTT, Illitaftigh No v . 9, sI " a id. I ti Vann's, for New (irk* atiOnd; No.v. 14, Britlsh bark Grillitha, for new ork s t ertfuegoo, ki ov ,s, Spanish sag Hetteuradir, or 9bav, Courtesies Extended-to the negligees front Mexico—health of ft Lady Aboard the Cetuslabia. HAVANA, Nov. 21.—A thirteen-inCh gen, which arrived here recently, has been landed. The Prussian Consul gave a picnic yesterday in honor of Baron Magnus. Monsieur E,loin, the Prince and Princess 'delta-Salm, and the com mander of the Austrian steam gunboat Elizabeth, Captain Groeller. The Elizabeth sailed to-day, bound for Austria by wayof the Bermudas. The new, sugar is ttpected' to be in market in about twenty days. The.wife of Mr. Ardon, American Consul at Porta Rico, died on the pan sage out here from, New York, on board the steamer Colbmbia. The duty on wicultaral im plements and apparatus, machinery, &c., under Spanish flag, has been decided to be ace per cent. ad " valorem. tinder foreign flag it Is one-fifth more. The royal ordinances as published for Cubs are now to extend' to Puerto Rico ' with but slight modifications. Aa orderhas been issued regulating the Public Works Department 'This branch of the service here Is to comprise two hundred and thirty-tbur officials. In Porto Rico the same department is to have but twenty one. The Spanish mail steamers are exempted from presenting any freight list on entry to port. News from Trini. dad, Cuba, up to yesterday states that no Ameri can vessele were in sight. The American, is still confined in jaiL Wind at Trinidad yes terday, north. By the arrival of Her Majesty's steamer Vasco Ntinezde Balboa,wc have dates from Puerto Rico to the 7th inst. It is imposoible to peruse the journals of the capital without being sadly af fected at the details of the terrible hurricane which swept over the island on the 29th of Octo ber. More than fifty towns and villages have most of their houses, churches and other public buildings leveled to the ground; two hundred persons have lost their lives by the falling of houses, or been swept away by the torrents; thousand% -of cattle and fowl have been drowned., the sugar and coffee crops are lost, as is the Indian coin, rice, sweet potatms, and other eatables, and it is feared tbat an additional calamity. that (,f famine, will come over the island. They have raised subscriptions to alle viate the misery of thousands ot: familes who have now not a shatter, and the Governorof the island has applied to the Captain-General Cuba for aid. Thelatter has ordered t,50,000 from the Treasury chests to be sent forthwith to Puerto Rico, and has appointed some commis 61011n8 to raise volantarr subscriptions fisr the relief of the sufferers in that island. It is said that it will take four or five years before Puerto Ric() can recover herself from the effects of the hurricane. The Diario Official and the Mexican Biw a rd deny that Mr. Pritchard, editor of the latter, had gone to the United States with a commission from Juarez Government for negotiating a loan of twelve millions of dollars. The corresponding exequatur has been granted by Juarez to Mr. John Black. Similar exequaturs have been granted to Messrs. E. 11. Sauline and J. Ulrich, the first as accredited American Consul in Vera. Cruz, and the latter at Monterey. it is said that President Juarez, in one of the toasts given at a. banquet with which he feasted the Bolivian En voy, announced that the Government would, in a short time, take under consideration the im portant subject of abolition of capital punish ment. The rumor was current in Mexico that the return of Mr. Rend Plasson, formerly editor of the Frail irliniori, was expected, and that he would start the publication of his paper again. Tun Msn ? MONTREAL, Nov. 21,1867.—An uneasy feeling prevails in the city least the Fenians on the fron tier have recourse to retaliatory measures by an incursion and acts of violence on the territory of the Dominion nest Saturday (the 23d inst.) on account of the hanging of three Fenian convicts in Manchester. England, on that day by sentence of the Special Commission issued: by the Queen.. The idea of any Fenian attack in force is ridi culed. The Government newspaper organ says,. however, that it is probable that trouble- may be • made by , assaults on individuals and attacks on private houses by Fenians on thatday. TINE CHIVALRY SHOOTING AFFAIR IN BALTIMORE. Statement of E. A. Pollard. BALTIMORE, Nov. 19, 1867.—With reference to an extensive statement by George D. Wize of an assault with pistols committed on me by himself and another of the Wise family, in the streets of Baltimore (said communication appearing in the Richmond Eaquirer,after that paper had:invoked for him and his associate a suspension of public opinion until the case was judicially examined, and therefore especially , a surprise to me as vio lating the just spirit and plain propriety of that appeal), I regard such publication as so wholly improper when a case has been Drought to the tribunal of public justice, and committed to due course of law, that I can scarcely allow myself more than to protest that the said statement is false in whole and in part, in, substance and in circumstance. in letter and In spirit. Yet briefly I may say this much:. that more than a dozen witnesses, who, to some extent, shared my danger in the street, will testify that my arm was shot through and smoking with blood before I succeeded in getting out my pistol, to find it unmanageable, and to discharge It on the pavement; that. John S. Wise and George D. Wise both fired upon me without ; uttering a word—without opening their. mouths . —without signal, menace or Inquiry, I being even ignorant who .they were, having only been informed that "two men from Richmond' were hunting the streets to shoot me; that when the' firing took place my wife was near my side, not more than one pace to the rear: that John B. Wise ran from me the Instant he fired; and that all the circumstances leading up to this rencontre, such as leaving their names for me at the hotel, as "gentlemen from Philadelphia," and further requesting the clerk to have me conducted to • a private room to meet them, show a cartfully con structed and cold-blooded plot to take my fife without risk to themselves, which nothing on earth prevented but the bare accident that my elbow, by an instinctive movement, caught the ball that was aimed within less than two feet of my heart. When the case is called at the bar of the Criminal Court here, it. will be time enough to 'enter into details; and , when the statements of a "cloud of witnesses" are put In opposition to that of George D. Whie, the public will suffi cientlyjudge and the law finally decide between us. lam content to await the due legal course of justice; especially in a matter whore society is as much interested for a public example as can possibly be fora private vindication. With my life yet. In danger, and harassed by the torture of a shattered joint, I am in no con dition to, indulge in newspaper publications on any subject; and in no circumstances can I have any arena of controversy with those two men, John S. Wise and George D. Wise, any other than a court of justice. I will meet them there. EDWARD A. POLLARD. TUE VERDICT. OVER awe TEr.rusrair—Judg_es Peirce and Ludlow.—The jury in the moo of William Hornkeith, charged with the murder of Colonel liiddtedrave not agreed upon a verdict. Dr. Beaumont reported that the Juror he had attended wall no better. but was not yet dangerously ill. TEE A.LOOTT UOMICIDE. The case of Howard a leott. charged with causing the death of rfhomas t,ailagber (seven yearn of ago, on 0 ° 14th of Juno last was taken up. Skinrors were obtained Y . eaterday from the molar panel before it was exhausted. a pedal venire mut men Leine& returnable and ho fug. This morning tho Jury wai Completed, aod tho trial commenced. It wee stated to the , jury that the boy la t On Carpenter street. and wi he th others was at 'the hydrant erected on the aidawaik c O o a urn ha e gh o e f r w e rse reeti Oisi on ybig in front of a building for the workmen, When a brick was thrown. striking the child in the etomach, injuring him .10 eoriously thatdeath ensued in a faW minutes. It throw the brick. _ ye a s alleged that the prisoner Dr. kthapleith toatilled that the POl'Mfftlnb examhfa lion discloeed the fie that death WAR caused by humor. them in consequene,o of the rupture of the spleen. ' The emir wag not COgoluded When our O E 4 close& FROBI PORTO RICO. FROIIIMEXICO. CAN/LOA: THE COURTS. F. L FBTHEISTON. PabUttr. PRICE THREE GENTS;` 'FACTS AND FANCIIIIIA: ••• —Leo Flndson's limbs are in Louisville. —Mr. 8. 8. Cox will soon sail for Enrol's. —Scr much wheathawbcen exported from Chile that a famine impends. - • —John C. Breckenridge is in raris--lie wants to come home. —The Catholic church ad Baltinsore resembles the Pantheon at Rome. • —Carlotta, Patti I..tereatbgra senatitt ors kr•Him garY- —A table' once owned by , Merle Awe:Arlene Behr forsl,lso New Ycrk•last week. • , —Abyssinia ha cost Englbltd• 329 + 00044141,eie far. --Mr months' Impriennmeng Ie what' a. awa gets for abootthg a dog in Bombay. —Mrs. Summer's visit'to gurope was twattecol asister who wan very illart the south or Nance. —.At Maine raiihnid carries clergymen Itea, Indiana half-priia). —The question whertier. metallic depliefts. "grown* or not, •le still undecided. —Wild geese are husking it great deal of . corrit, InTrliana. &orge Ticknor Cilirtie ls writing. a• llfe of Daniel Webateir. —On opening a grave for'' the removal of , ea body in the cemetery at Oakbany a den of black enaLes-wao found Ere the eons,. • --ftuthern planters are urged to et oge bilker cultivation of the olive, which. thriVes 'well in' a& high latitudes as Virginia. -1 Connecticut sportsman itterntly "bagged" in one day's hunting 3 comae and 124 black snakes. —Semmes lkas ththe lectures on the Alabama-- one on her outfit and two on how she tlt after she was out. —Goodrnm•la the mama of an °Meer of We Pall River, Rhodo Island, Good Templars' Lodge. —A rich farmer in France receney hanged him— self from vexation in having made a bid bargain in horseflesh. —A woman is Franee has done a good busi ness in ridding mothars of children of whom: they were tired, at forty dollars each. --There are nearly seven hundred , Upplications for passage toLiberia neat spring. The Coloniza tion Society, cannot accommodate that number_ —An agrictiltioal paper, telling Lbw to fatten. geese, Bays that not lees than two must be shut up together."'" —A New Orleans paper calls the mimic tour naments In the south "absurd and half-devel . ()pa grunmoir,'r —bass Fanny Read, who translated-Mrs. Lan der'& Elizabeth, lies-written a new dmens---Mari quit.% —The ex-Elector of Hesse-Cassel holds more American bonds- , than any other Melt 'ln many. —The Emperor of Austria went bunting inc Napoleon's preserves at Bt. Germain,. and shot so much his shoulder was black and bltte. —IA Iceland the clergyman kissee Ms congre gation all around before preaching. New don't all make a rush ibr the ministry. —lt % contrary to Hindoo etiquette•Rer a wirer to address her Mu:thane/tip public. But - don't she talk to him in pthater. --They have struck petroleum at Luckumpore, India. There are the elements of a pun int "luck" and "pour." Tae fourth'wife of Sultan Salim 111., who was a wife when that monarch aseendeil the throne in 1789, has. just died. `• She was buried. with great pomp. - Obampdavine, in Blavette, NOrmandy, advertb3es himself as a seboohnaster, , addintr that he "receives boarders, and sells soup and fried potatoes."' —Arizona says that the life of a mail carrier on her lovely , plains is as safe as that of a color bearer in a first-clue battle; but thew Arizona wants more troops. —Three more 4walkists are sumouncedpGeorge Dickinson, W. J. Stevenson and 0. J. Cortney are to go from Hartford toNew Haven and return s the first man in to have a purse of $l,OOO. —The Savannah , Depubtican thinks prize-fight ing is the twin sister of universal suffrage. Of course; black ayes , and noes are the result of each.—Ex. —An Indianian applied for a warrant for the arrest of a man whom he feared was about to run off with his wife. His objection to the elope ment was that it "would get up a coldness between them." —Mississippi is agitating the question of re moving• the State capital. The present State House, besides bang inconveniently located, is cracked from roof to cellar, and there - is danger that some zephyr may blow it over. —A medical exhibitor at the Paris Exposition. asks $4,000 for one of his preparations—a human heart which grow on the right side of ltd origins[ possessor. Now, was that fellow's heart on the right side ? —A discussion Is going on in the New York Sun as to whether Robin Hood ever existed, the- Mat waintaining,that Robin Hood la as mythical a character as Robinson Crusoe. Bnt the Semi& wrong. —icorrespondent tells of a lake in Montana, covered with, fee 20 feet thick except where there are boiling springs, and which runs out down a. perpendicular precipice thousands of feet, 40 in a stream aslarge as the Missouri: —lmmense beds of peat lie convenient to, the city of St Paul, Minn. A company has been or ganiked there, and is about comman*g, opera:- lions to supply the city. There is some ta*.ing of changing the name of St. Paul to. St. ,Peater. —When yon see a young mam, and a woMan walking down the street, leaning againsteft* other like a pair of badly matched oxen, tt. a pretty good sign that they are bent on comma dation. —Napoleon 111. bought Biarritz. for s6o , whert was a bare waste, reclaimed it from.the sea:and. from sterility, made it thepicturesque village it now is, and one of the most fashionable watering places in France. —Paul Weber, who was cOmpelled,. under medical advice, to leave this conntrylor Eur Ope, has fully recovered his health, is hard at 'wink again, and hopes to be able to , return at no dis tant day to his adopted country and home- in. Philadelphia. ... —Several hundred sheeP_were on a sceW. er° 6 o. lug the,water near Grand Haven, Michigan, what one of them Jumped or fell overboard. Its Can panions: followed their leader, and nearly a han dred were in the water beibre the suicidal finer could be arrested. —The London Tomahawk suggeste a monu ment to Mr. Laird, the builder of the Alabama,. to be paid for by contributions from these mambos of the House of Commons who cheered,: Witt when he proclaimed the pride he 1 . 91 k 14„thei matte' r. --The Barol2CB9 Salvkic de "Srlel CAUL ' n t ece . of Mirabeau, and intimate friend andeqmp l imoo t of the Empress Josephine at Maintalson f died at, her residence in the Faubourg' Bt., GentUdilf.alk the 28th ultimo, in the ninety-seventh year,og her age. --Baur kraut has become an article of export in Doylestown. The stompers and cutters, wit are told .. 1 / 4: _„; und at hours in that locality now, a emniul3or this delicacy is so peas tha t) ;;44 entertabiSid of the ability of the • . '7;?" , r'' C' e., ‘ ime who - IMO.. proves Bat "!"1 e knees and thin I writes to one `-' z.,.cottittomers: "New Yot Nam: Them tiles. Bated your rim will be 6.1•+: when yoUget them on._ Bad figgeM plaid-out now they will caust 9 dollars." ---TheStates , a young man who obtained * a marriages _. from a city clerk ,. bargaining , for this return it if _ ; the lady,shotild sot say pr opositio. In shOnt a week ho rellitutedi tt with the remark; "It was no go; but Ova' mo another; I, guess I.!ye 031 a Stile thing* Wog" . . 181