GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME XXII.,—NO. 95. SHE EVENING BULLETIN PUBLISHED ETEBT EVEN 130 (Btmday. excepted). AT THE NEW IHJULETIN BDILDIDO, 607 Clicßtmit Street, PUiltttlelpUla, _ BT THE EVENING BULLETIN ASSOCIATION. rnorßiETOßs. GIBSON PEACOCK, GASPER SOUDEH, Jb- The BuixrriN la served to frabscribcrs in the city at 18 cents per week* payable to the carriers, or gfl per annum. Amebic a N Life Insurance Company, Of Philadelphia, S. E. Comer Fourth and Walnut Sts. tSTThis Institution has no superior in the United States. INSURE AGAINST ACCIDENT IN THE •TRAVELERS’ INSURANCE CO„ OF HABTI'OBD, tOSN. $x.000,560 Persons leaving the city especially will feel better eatia* <3ed by being insured. WIUUtI W. ALLEN, Agent and Attorney, FOEKEST BUILDING, Assets over if 17 Soalli Fourth Street, t*Hiladelpbfa« y jj23 th 0 tu 2m S' . INVITATIONS FOR WEDDINGS, PARTIES, &0., A executed in a superior manner, by DREKA, 1u33 CHESTNUT STREET. fe2o-tfC DIED. GILBERT.—On the evening of the 28th Inst, David Gilbert, M. D„ aged GJj year* and 1 day. 'ibe relatives and friends of the family are invited to attend tho Mineral pervicea. at hi* late residence, 731 Arch BtreeL thin (Thnrpday) afternoon, at & o’clock. • RAY.—In the city of New York, on the 23th inet., Mm. Jane Elizabeth Kay, widow of • barlea ki. Kay, and daughter of the late lion Beth Chapman, of Northurn* hr Hand. Fn. ** RLACK LLAMA LACE POINTS, 87 TO 8100. D WHITE LLAMA SHAWLS, WHITE SHETLAND DO. • WHITE BAREGE DO. WHITE CRAPE MAKETZ. EYRE A LANDELL, Fourth and Arch eta. SPECIIiL NOTICES. SST TO THE PUBLIC. The LOCAL EXPREBB COMPANY WILL OPES A BRANCH OFFICE On Saturday, August Ist, 1868, IN THE NEW BULLETIN BUILDING, No. 607 Chestnut Street, (FIBST FLOOR, BACK.) gy PAIiDEE SCIENTIFIC COURSE LAFAYETTE COLLEGE. *, The next term commences on THURSDAY, September o. Candidates for admission may be examined the day before (September 9), or on TUESDAY. July 23, the day 'before the Annual Commencement. For circulars, apply to President CATTELL, or to Professor R. B. YOUNGMAN, Clerk of the Faculty. JyUtf Eabtom, Pa., July, 1868. n*£»- PHILADELPHIA AND READING RAILROAD w COMPANY, OFFICE NO. 227 SOUTH FOURTH BTREET. Pmusorau, May 27, 1868. NOTICE totha holders of bonds of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company, due April 1. 1670 The Company oflor to exchange any of these bonds of 01,000 each at any time before the Ist aay of October next, at par, for a new mortgage bond of equal amount, bearing 7 per cent interest clear of United States and State taxes, having 25 years to ran. The bonds not surrendered on or before the Ist of Octo her nexttwiU be paid at maturity, in accordance with their tenor. my29~t octl S. BRADFORD, Treasurer. SMSB» WANTED.-AN EPISCOPAL CLERGYMAN.AT present without a parochial charge, desires em ployment as editor, assistant editor, or reviewer, or in any other literary capacity, connected with a Review, Magazine, or daily paper. Address G. J. L, sat this office. jy3o 3t MW HOWARD HOSPITAL, NOS. 1518 AND 1520 Lombard street. Dispensary Department,—Medical treatmen land Imedicines famished gratuitously to the poor. MW NEWSPAPERS, BOOKS, PAMPHLETAWABTE ""'Paper, he., bought by E HUNTER, ap2S-tf rp NO.-618 Jayne street. GREAT FIRE IN CLEVELAND. Oil Work! Destroyed. [From the Cleveland Leader of July 2a] One of the moßt extensive and serious confla grations occurred Tuesday which has been known in Cleveland for a long time. It resulted In the total destruction of the Rock Oil Refinery, be longing to Dr. Marcus C. Parker, situated on [Central Way. 1 The immediate occasion of the fire is unknown. It caught from an explosion of the still, but it is not‘known what caused the explosion. As may easily be Imagined, the fire spread with fearful rapidity, consuming everything about and being fed by oil. The explosion occurred at abont quarter past seven o’clock In the evening, and the fire burned between two and three hours. The explosion was terrific. The body of Mr. Samuel Smith, foreman, was thrown high Into the air, and falling back into the building was burned up so completely that only the skull and a few of the bones were found afterwards. He was an old man, aged fifty-seven years. He leaves a wife and an adopted child, fils wife haß been sick for some time. What was left of the body was put Into a box and taken In charge by his •brother, Major Smith. George Bowder, refiner, and George Silk, the . only other men on the premises, wero knocked down, and very severely, If not fatally, bnrned. —They-were..taken from the buildlng andcorried to houses on the Heights. Every particle of skin was burned off and the flesh badly seared They were enveloped in white lead and oil, and -Dr. Joneß was called, who did everything he could to alleviate the excruciating sufferings of the men. Both are young men and single. Mr ’■Bowder boarded on Cedar street, and Mr. Silk on Hill street. The fire communicated to Turnbull’s Diamond -Oil Works, but was extinguished after having damaged the works to the amount of about sl6o* Dr. Parker’s loss is $lO,OOO. He has an insurance of abont $5,000. Communication. “In God we -Trust”- to Grant ns Peace, with -Power to lead the nation, aided by the logic of cold/acts (Colfax) in the progressive ways of Jus tice and Equal Rights, that it may novor see more (Seymour) riot, rapine and murder, or hear the insane ana drunken blare (Blair) of treason and rebellion. ’ Milo. —Napoleon sits three-quarters of an hour at •dinner. Jlaxlj Bulletin A Fete in Econen-Hnir Tlmy iniurn Merry in Provlnclnl France—Rural Gamew—Some Frencli Gymnastics. tCon-fepondenceof tho Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.] Losdos, July 18,18(!8. —A mouth ago ono of my letters closed with a triumphant entrance Into the town of Ecouen, flogs flying from May poles, peasants decked in holiday finery, and village bands, followed by the usual crowd of curious and eager boys, who had no eyes for anything but tho little son of the drum-major, whose uni form and performance on a tin fife excited more admiration than the harmony of Strauss’s band could possibly have done. Of course, we joined the crowd obd followed over cobble-stones, up hilly strec>B, along by the ruined walls oftumble down cottages Into a wood os. beautiful as the oldest of old trees, covered with the greenest of green foliage, could be. Eight in the heart of this old forest was a square of about four acres, entirely cleared of trees, fqtJLhe express purpose of accommodating the revellers in these yearly fttes. At the upper end was .a large square tent, open on the Inner side, and . shaded by a, whito -scollopcd^-canopy,—edged-with"red“a“F«ncH flag crowning the pointed top. This was the evening ball room. Crimson divans ran all round it for the mammas who, according to European ideas, are considered first In fete or celebration of any sort. In this one matter young America might profit by a little instruction, though the extremes of Old World notions regarding eti quette could not and should not be carried out in an enlightened Republic. I attended a bill in Germany where about a hundred young ladies were attended by their mammas. When supper was announced all pressed forward, supposing they were to staDd in a crowd and be as uncom fortable as possible while par taking of the viands. But to their amazement the hostess stepped for ward and said, “As it Is the custom in Germany for the parents to be waited on first, the young folks had better continue dancing till their supper-time Is announced. "’ Some looked blank, some giggled, bnt all retired good-naturedly, and seemed willing to trust to the consideration of the parents, who had the first chance for a feast. It was really a charming contrast to see the comfortable way they were Etatcd and waited on, after the jostling into corners, and implied, if not oxpressed. idea that they were only invited as wall-flowers or foils for the brilliancy of the young folks, as it often occnrß in onr home parties. These peasant mothers of Ecouen attended their daughters to the fete, followed them everywhere, and sat be side them in the ball-room, and If they consented to their dancing, the moment the dance was con cluded, received them from the thankful jeune homvie, who left immediately, with a request to renew the pleasure sometime during the evening. No palace regulations could have been more strictly observed. On the side of the square op posite the ball-room was a circular tenti with saddled horses and swinging chairs’ revolving on a central pole, tamed by a crank in the hands of a man who seemed bone less and nerveless. He turue,d that craDk all day, with its twenty vehicles all the time occupied by men, women and children, five times round the circle for two sons. A hand-organ lent a charm to this performance, and I think the boy who worked it was a eon of the man who turned the other crank. On either side of this hollow square were the usual startling pictures of al l sorts of impossible reptiles, venomous, before their sting was extracted, wound in multitudi nous folds around the rigid bodies ol fearless in fanta, and huge placards informing the staring crowd that they had better embrace ibis rare op portunity to see a phenomenon that was unpre cedented in the annals of France! Every variety of fancy articles and sweetmeats were for sale, which the piercing shrieks of children and the deafening sounds of drums and hammers moele it impossible for any one with hearing to avoid discovering. In the centre of all was the attraction. Seating ourselves on one of the rash-bottomed chairs that formed a hollow square within a hollow square, we were prepared to watch the games of the peasants,that were to be followed by rewards to the successful competitors. The Mayor of the town conducted the games and decided disputes, while his lady sat in a circle of admiring friends (what lady Mayoress hasn’t friends ?) and held ihe prizes. First, a frame, with five or six cords stretehed over it, was placed on end, in the en closure ol people. The village girls stood in line, side by side, on a board opposite, about twenty steps from the frame. Then a large plaster-of paris head and neck, with eyes the size of a tea cup, only painted, not cut out, was placed over the head and face, resting on the shoulders tf number one. A pair of scissors was placed in her hands, and, opening them, to my amazement she walked straight up to the frame and with one snap of the scissors cut the centre cord. Amidst a shout of applause the mask was re moved and the blushing girl informed she had won the first priie— a gold chain and cross! To show that the task was no easy one no less than fifty-four attempts were made to win the second prize, when number one was allowed to try it and failed only by one Btep to the left of the frame, while others had gone in all sorts of zig zag directions, not being accustomed to walking blind-folded and agitated no doubt by the shouts “a droite a droite!" “au gauche /” “coupe.'" of the interested fathers and brothers looking on. The second prize was given to the girl who walked straight, bnt brought the scissors between and not over the cord. It was a silver chain and - cross -of- Genoese - workman ship. The ground was cleared for, the boys’ game. And of all lndicrons sights, it exceeded. Poor Fillieoddy would havo paused in his “solemn determination to eat poppy leaves and die,” to laugh I A frame with heavy posts was planted firmly ia tho ground, with a revolv ing shelf across the top, connected with short cords toaropo fastened at either end to tho posts. On the shelf a bowl of water stood directly In the centre; suspended from it was a pipe with a bright red handle. The feat to be accomplished was to raise the body by the rope, bringing the mouth on a level with the pipe,and seize tho pipe between the teeth. Number one took off his hat, smoothed tho skirt of his bine cotton blouse, pnt his hair carefully behind his ears and carefully took tho rope* in his hands. Raising himself gradually and steadily, tho shelf turned slowly, till tho basin of water over his head was on a s ant , Perilous to behold. - “Pronez-gardo 1" shotted tlie crovrd. Down, Uq came Instantly, the my27-tfB BDEOPEAS AFFAIRS A WOMAN’S EXPERIENCES IN EIIBOPE. MO. XXVI. PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1868. basin righting itself as soon. , Another balance was tried’; the crowd became enthusiastic, certain he wonld succcod. A momentary forgetfulness, a sudden spring at the pipe, and my gentleman dropped from the rope, drenched with the contents of the overturne'dbasiDjJilsßheepißhfacohttlfcovered with wefTocks, and his blonso dripping with water, on irresistibly comic speetaclo for the ovqrjoyed crowd. This was repeated sixty-eight times, when a rough shepherd boy, a natura 1 gymnast, ran np, and fixing his eyes on the sheif, raised and lowered himself twenty times without touching the ground, finally balanced himself just to the line, and brought down the pipe in his mouth', leaving the water undisturbed in the bowl. A moment after he received a silver watch from the “lady mayoress,” and was fol lowed about as if he had led tho Abyssinian Ex pedition. In this strain the games were con tinued till time for the ball, and we returned home, wearied with real enjoyment of these rus tic but innocent village sports. E. D. W. The Napoleonic Dynasty. Tho London Times maintains that, by the Emperor’s own showing, France has outgrown the leading strings in which she has so long been bcld; that she has attained bo much capacity /or self-government as to reconcile thejEmperor to the idea of entrusting her to the guidance of an infant and a woman, without .mßgiWng either about the welfare of the country or about the con tinuance of the Imperial line. Perhaps the ex pectations of the Emperor will be all the more likely to be realized tho more fully and promptly he acts np to them. France will.be all the more ready to declare for the peipetuation of the Napoleon dynasty when she feels convinced that it reigns by the nation's Ireo choice. Personal government cannot survive the person, and the strength of tho dynasty lies in a timely dissociation of its destinies from those ©f any Cabinet or party in the State. Of all dangers that may compass the Empire, none is ho winch to be dreaded as a blind reliance on packed con stituencies, too heavy a leaning on an artificial Parllamentaiy majority. It is in other matters besides political assassination that men are fool ishly apt to do evil that good may come of It. To have a corrupt legislature at the back of a minister mav seem to a short-sighted sovereign then e plus ultra of constitutional government; but honesty is tho best policy even in that respect, and the safety of a throne will be found not only in the true knowledge of the people’s will, but also in a timely submission to its unbiased ex pression, even if it entails the sacrifice of a too plausible and complacent minister, of a too zeal ous Arcadian policy, or of a teo obsequious set of prefects. Funeral of Samuel Lover. The Pall Mall Gazette of July 16 sayß: Mr. Samnel Lover’s funeral took place yester day at Kensal Green. The principal mourners were Mrs. Lover, the widow of the deceased; the Rev. W. Worby, M. A., the Rev. G. Morris, M. A., brothers-in-law to deceased; the Rev. E.Ham -11 ton Nelson, M. A., incumbent of 8i Stephen’s, Avenue road, St. Johnswood; Mr. Frederick Peak, solicitor; and the Bev. H. C. Davis. On arriving at tho cemetery the London Irish Volun teers met the cortege at the gates. The service was performed by the Rev. E. H. kelson, M. A., assisted by the Rev. H. C. Davis, M. A. The coffin was placed by the side of the two daugh ters of the .poet, Lucy and Meta Lover. The grove is in the eastern division of the cemetery, is situated between those of John Cassell and' John M’Dongal Stewart, the Australian ex plorer. Pecuniary Troubles ol the Pope. The Pall Mall Gazette Bays . In a letter of the 10th our Roman correspondent says: “The tardy payment of an Instalment of the Pontifical debt is, I am Informed, due to a threat Irom the Pope, in an audience which he gave to General Dumont on the 21st of laßt month, that he would shortly declare to the whole world, in a public allocution, that if he was reduced to beggary and forced to solicit alms of Catholics, it was becanse the French Govern ment permitted Italy to break her engagements with him. The words of the Holy Father were telegraphed by General Dumont to Paris, and the Emperor Napoleon, who has some reason for wishing to appear on the best terms with Rome, despatched to Florence a peremptory nete, which obtained for his Holiness' the three millions of francs mentioned in my last. The Holy Father is still very bitter about his re ception at the camp, and his exposure (here to the pitiless storm. He says that he ordered a chapel to be built of wood, not of linen. It was intended to invite the generals and principal officers to a banquet at Grottofenata, but the Pope was so incensed that, though arrange ments had been made for a dlnuer of sixty covers, he countermanded the order. He is ex pected to speak very strongly to General Kan sler at his next audience. There is also a rumor that the camp will be broken up in a few days. In fact, the rain and constant storms render ma nieuvres impracticable, and the unavoidable ex posure has had such an effect on the troops that no less than" 600 men out of the 4,000 in camp are sick.” Tiie Irish Church Question. The English papers have the following com ments on Mr. Bright’s Bpeech In favor of the dis memberment of the Irish Church establishment: The Daily News anticipates tho objection that Mr. Bright s speech, though eloquent, is wholly unpractical, and tends no one knows whither. Ii it tends to stir up the people of Ireland to hearty co-operation in the new Parliament with the policy of religions equality by impartial en dowment, which has been adopted by lie present House of Commons, one cannot imagine any thing more practical. Mr. Bright, however, may fairly reply that he has made his contributions to the settlement of the Irish difficulty; and unless the tone of the debates of the present session, both on the land question and on the Church question, be very misleading, the ultimate solu tion is likely to be found in measures not very remote from the propositions which he has re commended. Irish landlords and Irish church men may go further and fare worse. Behind Mr. Bright there is Mr. Mill on the one side, and Mr Miall on the other. A little injudicious delay may transform Mr* Bright’s schemes from revo lutionary projects into compromises for which the time has gone by. The Times is prepared to go with Mr. Bright as far sb religions equality in Ireland is concerned. Let ns have that at least. But when Mr. Bright repoats his scheme for regenerating both the race and the island by jhe artificial- production of peasant proprietors, he is attempting what is ut terly impossible, what has no ground in justice, or in the sentiment of equality, or in the public interest, and what can only .end In failure and disappointment. No doubt a peasant proprietor ship, or a large class of “statesmen,” as they ex ist still in some parts of England, would be bet ter, politically and socially, than a, reign of ab sentee landowners and the rest of the actual sys tem. But the peasant proprietors or small land owners must bo of spontaneous growth and must arise out of encouraging circumstances. When such classes appear the condition of affairs that produced them will maintain them, and will cither keep them sound or develop them into something better. But where they do not exist, and are planted by force of law, no law will ever be able to sustain them against the course of nature. _ Tim Standard is foolishly wise. It asks whether it is realiy Mr. Bright’s opinion that wo should restore Ireland to tne condition in which she was two hundred years ago? Is all that English wisdom and liberality have done for that Island to be obliterated, and no account token of any thing but of English errors and English follies? To what epoch does Mr. Bright propose to carry us back as our model Irißh period? To go back two hundred years is to return'to ah"ago pnof to the rise of nearly all that Mr. Bright would call OUR WHOLE COUNTRY. liberty and civilization in England. Wonld he have Ireland bo as though the battle had not been ’won by the Protestants, and the verdict of time reversed? To wish for this is a madness of which it is impossible to snspect Mr. Bright He is perfectly awnro how blind, how foolish, how im practicable are his aspirations. To niter such sentiments, therefore, to a Limerick meeting of Liberals is nothing less than a crimo against the very principles of liberty and of civilization which Mr. Bright professes. He does not believe se riously that Ireland would bo the better for tho reversal of the whole legislation of tho last two centuries. He only says so to catch the votes of the party in Ireland who are inclined to disaffec tion, and to attach them to the side of his own political leader, Mr. Gladstone. The Spanlab Troubles. The Gazette de France gives a curious, and, for the greater part, improbable account of the late occurrences at Madrid. The details, it says, it has from Madrid, from a personage, “highly placed, in a position to be well informed, and in whom it has every confidence.” With all this, however, the Gazette de France gives the information “with all reservo.” After mentioning that the object of the Alleged conspiracy was to depose Queen Isa bella, and place her sister, the Duchess of Mont pensier, on the throne, overtures having been mode some time before to the Duke, “who had accepted them,” it adds that, once the Rubicon passed, the Duke felt that tho of ’which he was besome the head, conid not go on without. “ a considerable alliance; ” and therefore ho addressed himself to Prussia. An'agent, of ..the Generals who took part in the plot nod already made the first overture at Berlin, so that tho ground was well prepared for those of tho Duke, which were favorably received. The Prussian Government promised without hesitation its countenance and good offices, and even to give the money de manded of it, but on these conditions—the new Queen should not seek to be recognized by France, by consenting to sign a treaty of alliance with the Imperial Government. Spain must con sequently remain neutral in case of war breaking out between Prussia and France, and Spain should take no step and make no demonstration calculated to impede the free action of Italy, but should leave her perfectly at liberty to make common cause with Prussia against France in whatever way she might think DroDer. manifesto from General Prim. The following address to the people of Spain, issued by General Prim and others, is published in. the London papers : "To the Nation-, “The present reactionary ministry, in • whose bands, by order of the Crown, the destiny of tho country has been confided, is an arbitrary gov ernment. For many years martial law has been tbe substitute for a constitution sunk down be fore to a shadow of Us original self, and in con st quence the liberal party has been placed in such a position that it has been compelled to ab stain from taking any part in public business, and to devote itself solely to the duty oi main taming that dignity which, In the presentstate of tyrannical oppression and anarchy, affords the sole guaranty for the future trUmph of constitu tional right. “The Central Committee well know that Spain is involved in notorious difficulties, that calumny is at work against them; and they see with sor row the miserable condition of Bpain—the dis turbed state of the public mind, the discredit of the nation abroad, the decline of commerce and industry—all the mournful inheritance of arbi trary administration. They are thoroughly con scious of the importance of any action on their own part, and it is only after the careful conside ration of every vital question that, guided oy jus tice, reason and public utility, they have re sponded to the principles of their hopes and to the wishes of the nation. “With a supreme government based on tradi tional tyranny, the situation of Spain to-day is what ii was yesterday, what it always has been and always will be until the reactionary political influences shall have undergone a radical change. Liberty in Spain, as administered now, Is an re sult to humanity. The electoral law has been made a government monopoly; parliamentary rights are derided; the municipalities are under arbitrary control, the press under a strict censor ship, the exchequer empty, the ecclesiastical property sold without profit to the state, ihe money thus raised wasted, the law su perseded, the public debt increased. Spanish paper with no value in foreign markets, agricul ture perishing, industry paralyzed, excessiye taxation still insufficient. Against such a miser able state of theeonntry, while the whole nation, with a bleediDg heart, remembers the sanguinary Dights of the 10th of April and the 3d of October, 1*65, it would be iomossible that the liberal party should abstain from protesting in the only lorm allowed to them, by maintaining a passive self-respect and wholly abstaining from public business. “In this course the Central Committee not only obey their own principles, but follow the path traced out for them by the patriotic words of the programme of October, 1804. If the pub lic resources are wasted (it Baid); if bankruptcy is the only solution of our financial questions; if the traditional obstacle, the Court, is ever in op position to Liberal principles, and ever favoring the reaction, we shall quietly look for the dowip fall of an order of things, strong and powerful yesterday,but feeble and tottering to-day,through ihe scandal of its own vices. And if we are pow erless to save from ruin the glory of our flag, or to enforce the principles on which true liberty is based, we are determined to save, at all events the dignity of Spain. “Miserable Is the condition of a state when, by the fault of those who lead her, she Is placed be tween shame and danger, with wretchedness on one Bide and revolution on the other. She gives all that she is asked, and gains nothing in ex. change, even the right of law—of that law over which she is the indisputable sovereign. “The ambition of the reactionary party has no bounds; it despises public opinion. Let the government of Spain seek its strength in an electoral monopoly; let it Dut to the proof every resource in its power. It may attempt to torn the religions sentiments of the people against progress; it may enrich evory one of its own members; it may seek an opportunity to revive the old inquisitorial regime, and the traditional prerogative of monarchial absolutism; but pub lic opinion iq on the watch, and if its light be not sufficient to dissipate the darkness of old times, it will become a flame in the hearts of the people. “The liberal principles proclaimed by the Pro gressist party have a natural tendency to draw men together, and to strengthen their wishes for perfect liberty. Habeas Corpus law, civil and po litical freedom, economy in public expenditure, reform m the system of taxation, independence of the municipalities and provinces,unity of right and uniformity of legislature, reforms in the army and navy, establishment of juries abolished by the-government; secured rights “of electors, freedom of the press, religious toleration, liberty oi education, right of public meeting and a&socia tion—these are the principles on which tho Spain * >ar * y base the future happiness of “Juan Prim, ) ‘‘Joaquin Aguirre, i Vice , ‘Prvxades Mateo Saoasta, 1 Presidents. “Manuel Lasala, J “(Other signatures follow.)” Opinions of the Englisli Press. r J* I) o CS . Ont , Government of Spain, says the London Saturday Reoien', is a despotism guided priests, and ■ ft has the sense to behave like what it is. It does not make tho country power ful or peaceful, or rich or contented, but it keeps up a governmentjafterits own pattern, and it con centrates its whole thoughts on the difficult task of continuing to survive. Up to this momont it has succeeded, and if it goes courageously on, and arrestß in good time every one It suspects; or whom it suspects it may someday suspect, It may go on for a good time to come. And,fortunately forjt, U has enlisted a very-powerful friend in Its service. The revolutionary party find that if they wish to avoid thq perils of a Republic they are almost inevitably turned in the direction of the Duke of Montpcnsior, and directly they areeo l p. ri >ed they mako an enemy of the Emperor of the French. The Spectator remarks that a country with seventeen millions of brave people, resources practically without limit, and tho geographical situation of.Spaln r i.s, whlleparalyzod by lts ln stltutions, a direct and most serious loss to the - general stock of reserved power in Europe. Her paralysis bas lasted long, but it will end the day tho people and the Government como into har mony again, and every cmeuie in the Peninsula Is, therefore, of Eotopean Importance. Tho mis fortune Is that as every erntute must originally be military, Europe tan never estimate beforehand its object, its chances, or its probable result. Incendiarism In Russia. A correspondent at St. Petersburg, writing on the 9th Inst., says: “Incendiary fires arongaln becoming frequent in various parts of Russia: whole villages are reported to be in flames, and several large towns have been partially bnmt. These fires seem to be chiefly attributable to the distress in which whole districts have been plunged by the famine which still continues, though on a smaller scale than before. The Si berian plaguo, too, is beginning to appear in several districts. “The animosity against the Poles is still very great. It is reported that the Emperor Alexan der will go to Warsaw in August to review 120;- 000 men In the presence of the King of Prussia I do not vouch tor the truth of this report, which however, is generally believed by well-informed people here." .... _ Castor Knott, the Berlin Conserva- Pastor Knak Is welcomed by the Berlin papers as a positive godsend at this time of the year. The municipality, the theologians of ail schools, and th(i Kreuz Zeitung keep up a brisk correspon dence on the old question of the sun standing still at Joshua’B bidding. Pastor Knak has lately addressed a new letter on the subject to his rev erend brethren. These, it seems,had endeavored to sav e the text by alleging (in accordance with ancient Jewish and Christian commentators) that Scripture always accommodates itself to the pop ular parlance, as we ourselves speak of the sun “rising” and “sotting.” Pastor Knak will have nono of that He says: “The Bible speaks dis tinctly of ‘God causing His sun to rise over the just,’ Ac., and, therefore, the earth must stand still and the sun moves. For the laughter I cause,” he continues, “I care little. I am as happy as a child. And what is more, I do not stand alone; I have some of the highest scientific authorities on my side.” He refrains, however, from mentioning them. i/ETTIilt FBOSf WASHING TON* Jolinson’s Sew Soutbeni Policy—Tbe Carpet-Banners to be Left to SbUt for Tb'emselvcs—A Session oipongrcra In September Probable—Tbe Bemocrats Trying to get Collector Cabo Re moved, to Control Ihe Custom-House Patronage for tbe Next Election— Tbe Pardon of William n. Cooper and Rls Friends in Quod—Tbe Demo crats Want Tbelr Votes—The Presi dent and Alderman racMullin, Ac. [Correipondence o l the Fhilada. Bally Evening Bulletin.] W AsuiSGTOs, July 29, 1868 The recent order of the President, re-arranging the military dis* triets of the South, la the first development of the line of policy he intends to pursue in regard to theBonthem States.' Hia object Is to give the unreconstructed rebels full swing—but not the kind of “swing” some should have, at the end of a rope—during' the coming Presidential electipn; and by withdrawing military protection from the loyal citizens, as far as he can lawfully do, it will encourage the Democrats to make every exertion to carry their States by intimidating the colored voters and over-awing the loyal whites. It Is asserted to-day that in spite of the law passed by Congress, in regard to the Electoral College,, elections will be held in Virginia, Mississippi and Texas for Presidential electors, who will insist upon the votes of these States being counted, ihe same as if they were represented in Congress.’ Cool-headed Republicans here, however, think that with the Southern State Go vernments in the hands of our friends, they ought to be able to carry all the States recently admitted for Grant and Colfax, but others fear that the withdrawal of all military protection to the loyal voters will discourage them and keep many of them from voting for fear of violence at the hands of the revolutionary party. To re medy this it is proposed that the Legislatures of all the reconstructed States shall be authorized to cast the electoral vote of their res pective States, as South Carolina did for many years. An act of Congress would bo requisite to legalize this proceeding, and it Beems probable that an effort will be made to have a full Con gress here the lust of September, to legislate for contingencies which may occur in the meantime, and to counteract any arbitrary acts which Johnson may commit, looking to the nullifica tion of the reconstruction acts. EFFORTS TO REMOVE COLLECTOR CAKE. A determined effort is being made by Pennsyl vania Democrats for the removal of Collector Cake. Charges of various kinds have been made against him, and laid before Secretary McCulloch, which are undergoing investigation. The object is to get Cake suspended and a Democrat ap pointed in his place, who will use the patronage of the Custom fionse for the benefit of the Demo crats in the October and November elections. It matters not whether the charges against Cake are groundless or not, they want him removed, and they calculate that if a Democrat is appoint ed ad interim, he will continue to hold the office till after the October election, at all events, be cause, if the President should suspend Coke, he is not required to send his reasons for such suspension to the Senate till within twenty days after that body meets again, and this would keep their man in the office till some time in the middle of October. Then, if the Benate should not meet In September, as some think probable, the ad interim would hold the Collectorship till January, probably,long after he had “done his worst” againßt the Republicans of 5 our city and State. This is their programme,' and there seems to bo some probability of its being successful. Senator Cattail yesterday asked a suspension of action by the Secretary upon the charges till be could have an opportunity of going to Philadelphia and investigating them, which request was granted, and nothing will bo done in the matter for some days yet. THE CONTRACT FOR PRINTING POSTAGE STAMPS. Postmaster-General Randall has not yet awarded the contract for printing postage stamps. The experts who examined the work manship of the bidders have completed their labors, bat the P. M. G. has not yet had time to | give their report a full consideration. TIIE TARDON OF WM. SI. COOPER AND OTHERS. A formidable delegation of Democratic politi cians from Philadelphia are hero, urging the par don of Wm. M. Cooper, convicted in the United States District Court of whisky frauds. It seems they brought all their Influence to bear for the pardon of Cooper alone, without reference to Orr and the others convicted at the same time. The matter was referred by the President to Attorney-General Evarts, who has addressed a letter to Acting District Attorney Charles Gilpin, asking information concerning all the parties implicated, and Mr. Gilpin’s report will probably de cide what action will be taken in regard to all the parties incarcerated. Attorney-General Evarts went over to New York this morning, to attend tho entertainment at Secretary Seward’s country seat at Auburn, and will not return till next week, which will prevent any action being taken in the matter for Borne days yet, as the President invariably relies upon the recommendation of the Attorney-Gonefaiin such cases. The Democrats are very anxious to get the defendants out before F. 1. EETHERSTOif. Pohlislier. PRICE THREE CENTS tho election takes place, as it will be several vote* more added to then* strength. Ar.DERMAX .MC-MULLES AND THE FBESIDEWT. The worthy Alderman of yonr Fourth Ward had a very interesting interview with President Johnson a few days ago, in which the latter re newed to the former the “assurances of his dis tinguished consideration,” and hoped the Do rn do better this year than last in Philadelphia. Tho President, in closing, said: Alderman, it’s a bitter mil for me to swallow. Seymour and Blair, but I am resolved to do all I can to promote thoir election.” And ho will— that s certain. Susqueiiahna. FACTS AND FANCIES. —Extra Billy Smith Is stumping Virginia against reconstruction. ■ ■ ■ • —Mrs. Lincoln has engaged apartments in the Rue Balzac, Paris. E —Victor Hugo’s new book Is to bo called “The —Wagner seeks the quiet of Switzerland to complete his new opera, “Niebelungen.” —The negroes in Austin, Texas, publish a newspaper called The Freedman’s Press. ~ ~ RlBl< ?y’ 6 Japs have been performing before the Spanish Court. Van Zandt has made a success In “Rlgo- — ono °f the evils most recently attributed to dMm 13 desirable; as when other’s cana^ 11 en * araenlc. in each. ♦„“ AI i exi X de £ H * ® te phena denies that ho helped to make tho Democratic platform. But It is vile enough to have been even his work. coo , k a Nl “S ttra hotel receives to us month. A stow-pendous price, it seems —'Hie remarkable haziness of tho atmosphere which has been perceptible for several days, is attributed In some quarters to tho influence of the fires now raging in tho Canadian woods. —The first thing Queen Eatonma of Mobehr ordered, when arrived at her Paris hotel In the July heat, was a big fire in the chimney-place., before which she sat shivering in a leopard skin. —A Vienna paper says that Grant owes' his nomination to the fact that he is the handsomest officer In the American army. Bnt we don’t claim porsonal loveliness for the General. —Fnmz Splegelrelndqflelogerman was arrested os a vagrant in Chicago on Saturday, and fined 84, and thought it a good thing that he was not charged so much a letter for his whole name. —Menotti Garibaldi's recently, married wife is ambitions of military distinction, and is moving to enroll a battalion of Amazons. It is to be hoped her belligerent proclivities will be exer ciacd elsewhere than on ner husband. —Three hundred and twenty yaehts, ranging from ten to six hundred tons each, are advertised for sale In English journals—nearly all of them the jproporty of private gentlemen, and built for confederate blockade running. —A statistician proves that the whole human race, since Adam, could bo buried in the State of Connecticut and nobody crowded. The Demo cratic branch of the race will bo buried there In November. —Two young ladles were examining aatatnette of Andromeda, labelled, “Executed In Terra Cotta. “Executed in Terra Cotta,” says one: •where is that?” “I am sure I don’t know/ returned, the other; “but I pity the Door girl wherever It was.” K slow a coach as Gen. McClellan was, ho bad Uiepluck to thus reproach Seymour when lie asked him to go to the eastern portion of the city and speak to the rioters. He said: “If 16hculd go to tho people, as you call them.it would not be with a speech, but with grape and canister.” —The Church of England is coming out ex tremely strong against tho re-marriage of di vorced persons. Dean Elliott has had to resign his place in Convocation because he has married a lady who had obtained a divorce from her foiv mer husband. —Offenbach is seriously advised by tho critics oi Paris to stop publishing more operas. Thor intimate that his verve has beon exhausted, anti that, in case the public should hiss his new pro ductions, it might commence also to dislike his old and still popular operas. In which event his copyrights would become worthless. —Admiral Farragut is said to be a millionaire. He owns a number of pretty houses, some unoc. copied lots, and twenty acres now in wheat, within the city limits of Vallejo, California. As that city is to be tho western terminns of tho Central Pacific Railroad, this property Is destined to become a mine oi wealth, and within a year has been trebled in price. —The Gazette de Lausanne says a considerable trade in ice has been lately organized by a person named Robatol, residing near Martigny. The ice from the glaciers having beon sawn into regu lar cubes of small volume' and perfect transpa rency, is packed in boxes, and sent off by fast trains to various centres of population in France and arrives with vory little waste. —For a debt of 8480, the Sheriff of Clay county, Indiana, levied upon tho through freight train to St. Louis, on Tuesday night, and kept 850,000 worth of goods for twenty-four hours. The superintendent of the road paid the debt at ten o’clock, and relieved the tram. The Sheriff chained the train to the track while the train was waiting. —Edward B. Moore, managing editor of the Brook]yn Union, haß completed his opera of “ Mooua,” which claims to bo the onlv original and entirely American opera produced in this country. The scene is laid in Salem during the days of witchcraft, and eminent critics speak favorably of tho work. When you se© tho char actors there will be no difficulty In determining which is witch. —A bachelor uncle, to whom his niece applied for advice on the question of choosing between two suitors, one of whom was rich and the other poor, the latter being the most ardent, as well os the favorite lover—replied, 1 ‘My dear, the ques tion being stripped of all illusory elements, your choice simply lies between love and beef. Now, love is an idea; while beef is a reality. Love yon can get along without; but beef von must Therefore, make Bure of your beef.” —The Knox (111.) Republican has the following: “A farmer near Oneida, one day last week, white on an unfrequented part of his farm, near & ravine, discovered that an oak sapling had been cut and dragged to the ravine, which caused him to investigate the matter, tho result Of which was he found a trap door covered by the sod, which opened into a room excavated in tho grounds This room was quite well fitted up with tables and chairs, containing stolen property of all kinds, and was evidently the rendezvous of ' thieves.” —Victor Hugo writes all his manuscripts with a very soft lead pencil, which he often forgets to ' sharpen, so that the letters assume a gigantic size, and eight or ten lines cover nearly a whole sheet of paper. Perhaps no other eminent con temporary author complies so conscientiously with the sensible advico which Horace gives to poets and authors, Victor Hugo corrects his manuscripts again and again, until the work often undergoes a complete change. Some of his most celebrated poems he rewrote so' often that his son, Charles, intends to publish, after his father’s death, aneditiop of tha poema of Victor Hugo, with the stanzas which his father “rejected. These stanzas, it is said, would form a volume of great beauty and value. Somotimes Victor Hugo works very rapidly; thus, for instance, he com pleted tho last part of Lea MUaablea in a week. The “Tollers of the Sea” was written in six months. Some of his best poems were written on the spnr of tho moment. Louis Philippe used to say of him, “Hugo is a queer fellow, but puts the brains of all Frenchman together and than cannot come up to his.”