GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME XXII.--NO. 107. THE EVENING BULLETIN ' - Ittsr.liumm EVERT zncamse (Sundays excepted). AT THE NEW BULLETIN BUILDING, 601 Chestnut. Ntreet,PDLUidelphia, EVENING Briaß " Twil ASSOCIATION; rwaysizrose. GIBBON PEA CASPER ROER, Jo, EETUEIIBTX% M THOS J. WILLIAMSON. I/ANGIE WELL& , The Bur.rxrns is served to subscribers in the city at IS *ants L. week. payable to the carriera or *0 er swum AMERICAN : LIFE INSURANCE. COMPANY, Of Philadelphia * S. E. Coma Fourth and Walnut Sts. , 1151rThis fietitutioss has no superior in tke United &at& INSURE AGAINST ACCIDENT TRAVELERS' ..LISSIIRANCE CO., Ol HARTFORD. CONN. Assets over - - - $1..000.000 Dana= lamina the city especially will [cal better Wis. fled bristles Were& WILLIAM W.ALLETI O Agent and di twiny, FOItREBT BUILDING, 117 South Fourth Street, Plelludelphla. Jb=ibautm. INVITAT/ONB FOR WEDDINGS. PAU=I3. &C.. ezetutail in a etupplior manner.T STREET. 14 DREKA. twa CHESTNU4O4I DEEM ALLEN.—('n the Ittb hut,' after a brief innate.. Rev. 7 honing G. Allen, In the 75th year of his age. The relatives and friends of the family. and clergy of the city. are Invited to attend the funeral. from his late residence t Lombard street. on Friday afternoon. at 4 o'clock. Funeral services at the Chuxcli of the Arcenstrn. —l..ombanlotborttEley•attisireet APPLETGN.--At the house ofhadatiglter. Ihno — lcAn. N attar a brie flares. Joan a Aoeletort.eged 71 year& IST - otice of funeral estrvicea in morning papers. . • CA.FiILLE.--Go Thursday morning. the 13th instant at Wilmington. Delaware, Catharine a. Capella. aged 65 years. 'I be relatives and friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend her funeral, on Saturday. the lath inst.. at 4 o'clock; withont further notice. se DERINGSII.--On the evening of the Llth instant. at Waverly Place, near Wilmington. Delaware, ifronaugh 51 Deringer. aged 49 y ears. Carriages will to at the Baltimore Depot, Broad and Prime "trees. 9.4 o'clock, Saturday morning next. To proceed to Laurel Dill Cemetery. KEYSER—On the I , th inst. Rater Reynr. • tier relatives. and :lends are respectfu ll y invited to attend her funeral , rem the residence of her brother. Intaw. Allen Bard. No 1616 Not ill 1 hirteenth, on Friday. 14th inn.. at 3 o'clock. To proceed to Mount Vernon Cemetery. PitELPS.—On the evening of tber, 12th Instant, Mrs. Catharine Singer Phelps, widow ef-4ne late Rev. Philo F. Phelps. • Her relatives and Mends are invited to attend the funeral. from the residence of het-brother-in law-John C. Capp. ,No. North Twelfth street, on Saturday after. noon at 4 o'clock • POT'Tii. —On the 11th inst.. Reginald Bhober. Infant son of Joseph and Resins S. Potts. aged sixteen months and ta - co.y.noe days. f• fl GOD BLACK AND COLORED SILKS. 8 1 OUT lILK. CORDED SATIN FACE GRO GRAIN PURPLE AM) GILT EDGE. BAG WNS AND BLUE GRO Oita DI. MODE COVE) PLAIN SILKS. :unit es LANDCLL. Fourth awl Arch. lIPECII/IJL. NOTICES. Ger UNION I.F..AGDE HOUSE, PIIILADELNIZA, August 12. 1808. At a special meeting of the Board of Directors of the Union League of Philadelphia, held August 12, 1868, the following preamble and res olutions-were unanimonalY adopted Whereas, It has pleased Divine Providence to remove from the scene of his labors our fellow citizen, STEVENS, late member of Congress'from the Ninth District of P remaylva nla; and IMereas o It is fitting that we should express our sense of the loss which the country has sus tained in the death of a man who has rendered sem-lees so eminent to the cause which the Union League of Philadelphia was orgarined to sustain; therefore, • Resolved, By the Board of Directors of the League, that we deeply deplore the absence from the councils of the nation of one so pre-eminent for unswerving patriotism, strict adherence to principle, and long experience in statesmanship. Resolred, That we shall ever cherish the mem ory of the true courage and unshrinking firm ness with which, in the darkest hour of the na tion's peril, he was ever ready to defend the right and to set an example of sublime confi dence in his nation's destiny. Resolved, That in the struggles which lie before us the recollection of the unfaltering energy with which he fought thegood fight to the last, until stricken down with the harness on his back, will stimulate us to renewed efforts to secure for our country those blessings for which he sacrificed rest and health, and finally life itself. Resolved, That the Secretargttbe directed to communicate these resolutions to the family of air. Stevens. it B. A. CALDWELL, Secretary pro tern. gARDEE.SCILENTIFIC COURSE U9.FAYETTE COLLEGE. The . next term commences on THURSDAY, September O. Candidates for admission may be examined the day before (September 9). nr on TUESDAY. July 23, the day before the Annual Commencement. For circulars, apply to Frog!dent CATTELL, or to Professor R. B. YOUNGMAN. Clerk of tho Faculty. jyl4 EASTON. Pa. July, lea. AND AD ` 3149- 061PANY. OF FI CE In NO. 227 BOUTU FORT H STREET. PHILADELPSIA. May 27, 1868. NOTICE to the holders of bonds of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company, due April I. 1 870 : The Company offer to go any of these bonds of e1„000 each at any time =ore the lstday of October nett, at par, fora new mortgage bond of equal amount, bearing 7 per cent. interest, clear of United States and State taxes, timing 25 rears to run Tho bonds not surrendered on or before the Ist of Octo. per rumtrvrill be paid at maturi ty In accordance with their tenor. myZst octl B A - OFORD. Treasurer. iassta• COMPANY ' REPUBLICAN INVINCIBLEIL A mettm&of Company C, Republican Invincibles, will be bold at o Club headquarters. Beyeritti etreet, above Ghee! fii liT - FAY EVENING, 14th inst., at : 8 o'clqck. All young men desirous ef joining this organization are to attend. aul3-2tre GEO. C. RENSZE,Y, Capt. —7 :BOWARD.HOSPITAL, Nos. 1518 AND 100 Lombard street, Disperusary Depaztment,—Medical trentmen end (medicines tarnieled gratultonaty to the : ":• A• A:: : • a :4: • ‘,14• •• : --The Einperor of the French has another pet instead of hie big dog Nero. It is a tine black raven ' bearing the name of Jean. It used to be. long to. Madame Walewska, who spoke to the Emperor about the bird, extolling its intelligence and amusing-ways. Napoleon said, he; Wohld like ,to form the acquaintance of "Monsalur Jean," and Madame Walewska promised to Send it down to Fontainebleau. When the , EmperOr saw "Monsieur Jean" for the first time,the latter, a verygiave - looking raven, bent a piercing glance on his Majesty, and exclaimed then -in a, croaking voice, ”Bonjour, asmi; bonjour, ami I" which caused the Emperor to burst into a. fit - of laughter. - He - sent word to Matame Walearska that she must let him have that bird, and "Mon sieur Jean" now,sits perched upon the Emperor's window at Fontainebleau, condescending to re ceive its food at the hands of Napoleon the Third, and rewarding him 'occasionally with a patron izing "Bon jour, anri; bon four, until" TWE SIUDIIIIIER OS THE ALLEGIIENIEB [Correepondeece of the Philade/phis Evening Batiatfei Leezpro &emus, Cambria County, Pa., Aug. 11.--Thotte who have been fortunate enough to reside or sojourn at this delightful retreat on the top of the' Alleghenies, have felt none of the terrible heats of this fearful summer. During the month of July, when at all places on a lower level the thermometer marked from 95 to 105 degrees, It ranged on these heights at from 80 to 85, the latter being the-maxin2um. 6f course this was not peculiar tothisi Particular spot; fon the same atmospheric luxury was enjoyed at the more 'crowded and faahleiaabbs resort, Cresson a few miles distant. But . the rural quiet of. Lo retto. die grand wends, and the comforts of a well-kept and not crowded hotel like this, make every luxury of the season ineltuling the Cool ' atmosphere, more enjoyabl;. 40"' During the present month the weather hero is • particularly delightful. All day there are fine breezes, and the skies are - snfilcientliovereast to temper the heat , of , the sun; oven if it were dis posed to be fierce. ' After the gorgeous sunset', such as can only be seen mountain regions, the air becomes deCidedly cool, and,ln. sleeping, blankets are absolutely , necessary. Up, to ten or eleven o'clock, however, ono can sit on the piazzas and enjoy the 'splendid stairlit heavens, in which the August meteors are,very numerous and brilliant We, are out of reach of all city sights and noises. Even the scream of the loco.;• motive is; only faintly heard ' as the trains per® Cresson or Giallitzln. This delicious quiet and repose are among the chief charms of the place to reek as have been condemned to pass the earlier part of the 'season in dto hot and noisy city. mrx-tti Five minutes walk in almost any direction from Mr. Gibbons's hotel—now well managed by Mr. - Johnhiclntost=cwill primeval," in which there aro dense shades and lovely walks. Huge pines and hemlocks tower above, while in many places equally huge ones, blasted and blown down in past stormsdie prone _andslecayingt.,themere-roots of-somo of- them, knotted i and gnarled so as to make new studies for even Gustavo Dord, tower twenty feet in the air. These are often adorped with luxuriant running vines and splendid ferns,several varieties of which are found in profuse abundance in_the. foresta. The undergrowth everywhere is luxu riant, and tome of the dwarf evergreens are re markably beautifnL Of the springs that gave this place its name, I have no means of giving any scientific de scription. There are many within a short dis tance of the house, and one immediately adjoin ing, which furnishes all the drinking water and that for the laundry. The water from a more remote spring is conveyed In pipes through the house, giving it an advantage over all other summer resorts, in the eyes of those with whom abundance of water is a necessity. A short dis tance from the house a mineral spring of great beauty, the water of which seems to be chiefly e.halybe..ate, and is said to be very beneficial in certain chronic complaints. The chief need of this place, to make it one of great resort, Is a shorter drive from the Pennsyl vania Railroad. Cresson is an overshadowing rival, and it is proposed to make a new road from Gallitzin, which will be only three miles long, and through a cothparatively lent country. If this improvement should be carded out, visit ors from the East could reach Loretto Springs very easily,without being exposed to the tempta tion to halt at Cresson. The village of Loretto, a mile distant from the ' prings, is peculiar, from its being wholly Catho- lic. There are no Protestants or Protestant churches anywhere in this vicinity. Gallitzin, the Polish prince-priest who founded the village, vas followed by many European Catholics, and their descendants compose the greater part of the population. His old frame church still stands. and is used for worship. There is also a very large modern brick church. Near it is a newly tinilt convent of the Sisters of Mercy. Beyond the village, on a fine elevation, is a Franciscan monastery, with a college, the buildings of which are substantial and in good taste. On Sundays it is curious to see the roads filled with people on foot, on horseback, and in all kinds of vehicles, going to the village to attend masa. One might almost fancy himself in a Catholic part of Eu rope. LETTER FROM NEW YORK. (Correepondenco of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin-) Nr:w Youx, August 12.—The great event is the death of Thaddeus Stevens. In all circles, espe cially political, his life and death are being dis cussed. By friend and foe alike his remarkable abilities are recognized, although-of coarse varied Judgments are passed as td his special influence upon the political thought of the age. The announcement of the presence of the cat tle plague at the great stock yards of Communi paw, and the further announcement that a quantity of diseased meat had been sold in the markets of New York and Broellyn,cansed much excitement, for a time. It is affirmed the sales of beef decreased fifty per cent, while the sales of mutton increased correspondingly. The "stamp ing out" process has' been vigorously used, the cattle being slaughtered when the plague made its appearance. The remainder of tae diseased cattle, about sixty, were yesterday killed, and the_ carcasses thrown into the render ing vat The. Board of Health are acting in the most energetic and efficient way. Dr. Harris. Registrar of Vital Statistics, pronounces the opinion that the disease is a malignant typhus. The excitement is abating, it being believed that the measures adopted by the authorities will be found adequate to prevent any very extensive spread of the scourge, and to prevent the sale of diseased meats in our markets. We can assure drovers and other dealers that the Board of Health have "got their backs up" about this busi ness, and any man caught trying to foist plague diseased meats upon our tables will be handled without gloves. Please remember that the wrath of the Board of Health means something, for that selfsame Board is about, the most autocratic body of men on this continent, having powers delegated to them, which, if they should ever be used unwisely, would be called absolutely de spotic. _ One good will probably arise from this evil, and this good may be permanent. This is in the inspection of meats exposed for sale. Neither In`this city orin any-other-city-of—this-conti nent, we think, is there anything like - an ade ,quate vigilance iii the matter of food, and espe cially of meat. 'Throughout the land there has been gross negligence, criminal carelessness in this, a thing so vital to the sanitary well-being of the public: An our own' Ws.shington market— the Meat market - of the metropolisso long ago as June, meat was sold which had every appear ance that the meat or - the infected animals now presents, -and- it is even affirmed, with a show of truth that a year ago cattle supposed to have the tans feverswere sold-from one of our yards to'be butchered, - A suspicious thing ,on the part of the butchers now is the fact that some of them'on. halt Saturday of $55 Et PHILADELKILI, THURSDAY; AUGUST 13, 1868. bead for a drove of one hundred and forty cattle, which were so sick that many of them could not stand. The butchers were even anxious to get these cattle. Of course, if the sales had been effected, the meat would have been , put upon the market. Ten years in the State prison—is that too flinch for such men ? And further, it is 11,3- rested that whole flocks of- sheep, afflicted with the foot-rot, have been sold to' the butchers of this city and slaughtered. This l r eity, and every, other city on ibis continent must, sooner, or later, adopt a rigid system of inspection or all anklet of food. As the proverb "they do thede things better In France:" We need a sys tem of inspection as arbitrary as those enforced In some of the cities of Europe. Among the passengers by the Ville de Paris, which arrived hero yesterday, was Count Lot tum, of Prussia, who gbes to Washington as • Semetaty to the Prussian Legation, succeeding . Baron • Van Hueserou, recalled by his govern ment at the instance of. Mr. fSeward; for being engaged In a duel with Gen. Lawremce. The bricklayers yesterday sent a committee to the muter masons, suggesting a compromise, whereby the former are allowed eight hours as a day's work, and the latter are allowed to employ more apprentices, and to work on their own jobs. A. dealer in building materials told molest night that the master masons would not yield. The New York Herald's making something of an ado about being suppressed in France. . Shouldn't wonder if Napoleon would be some-. what scared. "Brick" Porngroy's new. Raper is to be issued on Monday neat. Joseph Howard is to , be managing editor. -- N. D. Urr.er, he of the famous Barntan's }inseam fire literature; and. Caleb Dunn, are to write for the paper. The excitement In the gold market has very greatly. anbaided. The market yesterday was weak and unsettled, sales being effected at 146 X @145%, closing at 146%. Some of the operators, who so earnestly fought for a rise, must.have been "bitten." Money is still easy, abundant, with large lots offering, &c., at 3®4 per cent on call. The prospects of coming activity in trade are bright ening. Subscription books for the new Atlantic tele graph-eable-frumlmn-doirto-Bre-strilid-thiMWW New York direct—which is to be laid next slim mer—have been opened by a prominent banking house of this city. 111ADDEUS STEVENS. Comments of the Pemba= Press upon [From the Age—CoriperheaLl He stood among the most prominent men of our time. It will not be easy to name another man who has exercised as wide an Influence, who -has embodied so many of his ow'n peculiar ideas in the measures and policy of the government. The extraordinary quality in - Thaddeus Stevens was his force of charicter, joined to a certain simpleness of ptsrpose, and areal sincerity in the pursuit of it. Where be had do political end to compass, he was kind, courteous, and in his man ners singularly winning. In parliamentary tactics he was unsurpassed, yet not unscrupulous. Hie word pledged to the minority weedy/aye as good as his bond. He would crush them and their rights remorselessly for any political purpose; but he disdained to cheat them. When he said there should be a chance for debate, or ether fair play, his opponents ex pe cted it, and surely got It He was not, we think, bitter in his resent ments. He lately published a letter to show that he had not impeded, in the House, a resolution or respect to Mr. BuChanan: It Is, we think, about a year since we heard Mr. Buchanan. in this city, acquiesce quite emphati cally in a favorable opinion of Mr. Stevens, to at least- the extent here tittered:. They had long been townsmen and contemporaries in private and public life. We will not end this brief noticewithout adding that, to the extent of our know, ledge, the personal integrity of Mr. Stevens Was unimpugned. He cared nothing for mere money. He had too low an opinion of human nature, a contempt for it we might say, to demand honesty from his lowers. He let the hounds that he hunted with devour at their will. But , he was himself per sonally honest—that is to say, he scorned to profit by jobs and thefts; on which, however, he looked with indifference, if practiced by the men ho served him. We dare not call such a man great or good ; but he had qualities that often commanded respect, which now predominates in what we utter over his bier. He was a man, and he often seemed a giant among the pigmies whom he , ruled. [From the New York Herald—Copperhead.) In the House of Representatives he was the ac knowledged leader of the Republican members, many of whom surpassed him in ability, but none of them in audacity, and, we must perhaps allow, in sincerity. This one virtue his worst enemies must accord to him—the courage of an openly avowed hostility. The fact is thatjThad. Stevens was, almoSt independently of his own volition, 11151 instrument of expressing and for working out the predestined pur poses of the revolution through which the American people are passing. Male volent, even malignant, as he appeared to be and was in his capacity as a public man, his friends represent him as courteous andgenial in his private intercourse with them. Publicly he was an evil, but a necessary evil, and one naturally engendered by his antecedents and circum stances. Accepted, therefore, as a typical repre sentative of the party which recognized him as its autocrat, he must always hold a historical position. Nor will the death of Mr. Stevens result in consequences less important and historical than the position which he held while alive. It was his marvelous obstinacy, his Hannibal-like ani mosity against the South, which postponed the settlement of our national difficulties. His arro gance as a party leader had already received a double check in the failure of impeachment and in the postponement of the im peachment resolutions which he revived after the arrival in Washington of several new representatites from the Southern States, whom he regarded as irrevocably committed to his own revengefulpolicy. While we fally recognize the talents and the strong individuality of the late Thaddeus Stevene,and even whatever merit there may be in the honesty of his open and avowed hostility to all his opponents, we must regard his removal by death as a misfortune to his party rather than to the nation. [From the New York Times.) Tke death of Mr. Thaddeus Stevens deprives the radical section of the Republican party of its recognized leader, and the House of Representa tives of its most conspicuous, and, in some respects, most influential member. From the first an ardent politician, Mr. Ste vens was not always an extreme one. It was as a diligent committee "man, zealous, untiring and faithful in the performance of the duties intrusted to him—not as a glib and frequent speaker, or the devotee of hobbies—thafMr. Stevens worked his way to prominent usefulness. The rebellion developed exigencies and created opportunities which made the reputation of Mr. Stevens nationaL Until then his public influence had not gone far beyond the broad boundaries of his State, and his Congressional influence rested upon the thoroughness and value of his labors as Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. With the progress of the conflict came freer scope,Tor his peculiar characteristics. He com prehended the magnitude of the crisis, while the majority about him saw but dimly Re propor- Liens, and realised the necessity ..of bold, strong measures, while others, clung to hopes of •pacificatiOn and compromise. Ho was one of the low who are not afraid ' , tor grasp first principles and lay hold of great truths, or to push them to their remotest logical result. Thus he differed with the Administration and the, party tie to the relation of the rebel States, to the ilatons main° coarse that should be pur sued in regardlo them. He discerned .the expediency of emancipation, and urged it long before Mr. 4:mein issued hiei proclamation _. __- •MrSBtevens 'mama at that period tholegislt dictato; aftctvitird aspired- to In. 110 OUR WHOLE COUNTRY. never concealed his opinions and purposes, and never hesitated to do all that could be done to promote them. But though ahead of the Repub lican party, be was a steady co-worker with it through all the stages of the war, sustaining its every measure, and rendering valuable assist ance to the Government in the execution of its plans. • It cannot be truthfully said that Mr. Stevens exercised a happy influence over the Republican policy in the matter of Reconstruction. His most extreme views were not accepted by the party. He never obtained a hearing for his con ilseation scheme, and the territorial doctrine on which he predicated his plans weredenied recog nition. The Constitutional Amendment, which was originally offered as a basis of restoration, was se regarded in spite of him. And the condin tione of Reconstruction, stern and a weeping idi they are, would have been still more severe. had his plans prevailed. He desired, in truth,to delay rather than to hasten the return of the excluded States, and he would have kept them out till doomsday rather than tolerate conditions lacking what*: deemed essentiaL ilorazatkell. Y. World of today., Stevens'sMr. intellect was narrow, his rnation limited and much of it obsolete; but • within a eonfined range his views were abfien larly'dear and incisive, and were marked by a directness and consistency-borrowed from his moral character. He scorned deceit and cant, and had the courage Whet strictly ,logicak The policy which he advocated was outside the Con atitution; and without MILICIIIC matters,he frankly proclaimed it to be se. •Tira suppose he had" in him elements of kindness, but he was also s good hater, and the malevolent side of his cha racter was almost the moat conspicuous in his Congresaional career. On the floor of the House be was rather a skin:Weber, than a- regular de bater-Alrect, pungent, concise, adroit, - a great master of sarcasm and unsparing in the use of it. His business qualifications were excellent,and the business-like cast of his mind rescued him from many ..of the worst faults of average members of Congress—prosiness, irrelevance, a circuitous mode of approaching a subject,and a love of hearing_tbemeelyea talk wheri_they_havalittle_or_. nothing to say. Ho was a man who could have ade a considerable figure only in revolutionary times, and then chic fly by his strong will, arro gant temper and reckless defiance of the tiudi tionary. scruples inherited from calmer times. The influence of such a man will be interred with his bones, abe N. NY. Tribune.) /tie . Y.. Trib • eVP: f • 6 Thaddeus Stevens's contemptuous application of the epithet "scarecrow" to Mr. Greeley, does not allude editorially to the great statesman's death. The Empress of Russia (says a' fe - feign letter writer)lives at Kissingen under the title of Com tease Borodinski, and is Said to preserve the strictest incognito, only one feels inclined to ask the writer of this statement how comes It that every paper in Europe records her presence at Riarmgen, her travelin name, the number of g her suite, &cc. As yet her Majesty's two eons are the only members of her family who are with her. She appears every morning precisely at six at the Rakoezy spring, attended by her Mistress of the Robes, Countess .Prottt, 'soff; Comte Alderberg and Prince Bariatinski, aides-de-camp; as well as by Prince Alexander and Charles of Hesse, her brothers. Flunkeyism evidently flourishes In Bavaria as well as in Belgravia. The crowd of non-water drinkers which assembles around -the Rakoezy Spring for the purpose of Witr.esslng the Empress Marie take her glass of water' is so great that she has • some difticalty in making her way through the mob. She never appears on the public prome nade, but makes excursions on foot towards the mountains. At six o'clock in the eVertipg Empress Mario goes out to drive In the forest, her coachman wearing the livery of the house of Roinanoff; but the servant on the box, unlike his great prototype, the mighty "Jeames of Belgrave Square,' whose devoted love for "Mary Ran" for.aolong a period excited all our yafithy, is a Cossack parson, and as tonishes his rivals by his costume of brilliant scarlet, with the sleeves thrown back and Wstened on the shoulders, his - Astracan bonnet, antr,above all, by a gold plaque on his left breast, which conveys to the beholder the impression that he Is n the presence of a field marshal or some such functionary. A Paris letter says: "M. Henri Rochefort, whose prosecution for refusing to insert in the Lanterns the govern ment communiqué is, we are told, to be hurried on, wrote, in 1849, when a student of sixteen in the Mongo Lyceum, an ode to Bdranger of very great merit, which was acknowledged by the poet In the following charming letter, now for the first time made public: "'To the Lyceen Rochefort: I am under great obligations to your friends, monsieur, for having suggested that you should send your charming ode to me. You certainly owed me a cony since I was so fortunate to Inspire your muse. Is it true that you are only sixteen? When I re-read your verses I cannot help asking myself and you this question—are you but sixteen? Oh! if I, at that age, bad composed such well-turned poetic strophes, I should have fancied that a brilliant destiny was before me. It is true that you /y -cien4 are forced in a hothouse, whereas I, at six teen, did not know how to spell. Now, remem bering- all the means that have been taken to de velop your faculties precociously, do not, my dear child, allow yourself to be too vain of a happy dibut and the praises of an old rhymester, who may be somewhat blinded perhaps by your• incense. Beau merite, vraiment, de toucher ups cieillard que Pon ,Matte. But this old man has mind ana reason enough, and a heart warm enough to respond to the impulses of generous youth, and tram the bottom of his heart he begs you to receive his thanks. Stick to your themes and versions for a long time yet, and believe me, my dear Young friend, yours very truly, BERANGER. " Passy, December 9 0 1849.' " Thus one of the first effects of the communi que and prosecution has been to draw forth this certificate of Be:ranger to the genius of Henri Rochefort, now the most popular man in Paris." Among the other projects for next. session. rumor has mentioned one which most certainly will create a " breeze." It is said'to be the in tention ;of the Government to ask Parliament for an increase of £25,000 a year to the Prince of Wales' :income. It may be remembered that when the Prince wont to Ireland this year the Times, in a friendly way, seized the opportunity of putting out a "feeler" on this very subject, but it took it In again with remarkable despatch.. We live in an ago when proposals of this kind are certain to be very eoldly received. There can be no doubt that the general sense of the. nation is that enough is being done for the Royni family, especially as the Queen 'is known to be immensely rich, and to have hoarded a great deal of money. The Prince of Wales, on the other hand, is relatively poor—poorer, that is, than his personal friends andcompanions, and much extra expense has been thrown upon him by the duties he has had to perform for Ins Royal mothe.r. Sup pose, then,that the Queen give him help from her private purse? That is the solution of ttLe Prince's difficulties which will recommend itself most strongly to the public. There are yet some of the Prince's brothers and sisters for the nation to provide for, and the Prince's own children will require suitable provision by e&d . by. The charge on the civil list for the reigning family will be almost imprudently:large b, fore many years are over. It is to be hoped, then, that the applica tion referred to will notbemade. The Princehad better run into debt than expose - Mmself :to the very disag.reealde„cnmments which such a proPts sal would UnqUebtionably make.--Lendon Car. N. Y. Times. - - • tft):ii :AV:WA 4 1 ,:l I ;4: The Empress et Meseta. Beranger on Rochefort. The Prince of Wales. POLITICAL. The Rebel Spirit. • The Louisville Journal says: "What sort of Republicanism is that which would hopor Generals Thomas, Elheridarr and Meade, anddegrade Generals Forrest and Hamp ton? Forrest is as good a man as Sheridan, and a better cavalryman. No Radical will pretend to say that Hampton is inferior in talent, virtues or aceomplishmenta to Thomas. - They fought Fplenditily and *Wilily. They achieved the homage of the whble world for valor and abili4 ties. But they failed, and, the failure implying a restoration of the Union, they surrendered and. resumed their allegiance. To say that either might not have entered the United States Senate the day after Is to say that Republicanism is et dead letter. We are proud of them; and we pre set.t them with confidence to the people of the North, and we say: 'Here are our trophies.' They ere worth all the bureatui, and carpet-bags, and newt) militia, and tax-eolleetors, and petty military tyrants, and greasy contractors, and fat bondholders that a corrupt Congreaa can manu facture between this and doomsday." At Little Rock, Ark., Mr. C. S. CM/10nm, a delegate to the New York Convention. declared "In sixty days from the adjournment of the Convention five hundredrthonsand soldiers would be organized into corspanles, , , regimental, bri gades, and army corps,retuly, ifneedbe,,to march to Washington. We will send three , votes Into the ElectoralQ aWgA and , three . Representatives to Congress, andl n. Wade does not, count our vote, then comes the military otganization. with General Slocum Edits head, all armed and equipped." The Mobile Trarune•asserter - - - "The greet Democratic party will rise in its might and majesty, and pulverize and purge the Congress, just as Cromwell purged. the long Parliament. The signs of the times are pregnant with resistance to Radical tyzunny, and the dag ger of Brutus may aid in accomplishing our re demption from Radical rule, ruin and uzu_rpa- At the Democratic Convention held in Atlanta, Ga., last week, one of the speakers, Clarke by name, "pledged himself before God to fight to the last the new governments that had been set up in the Sonar TEXAS "BEOTINISIIOOD IN CNRIST." alatyra.af. ohms 73.-11—,-, - of excommu.nicaUon, addressed to an unhappy Radical: "Balmer.; ANDERSON Co.,Texas, March 2, 1868. —Brother King: On last Saturday a charge was preferred against you in our church, for incon sistency as a follower of Christ. The charge is hero below copied: "'I charge Brother W. H. King,aregular mem ber of our Church, and our former Clerk, with having openly avowed himself as a Black Re publican and Radical, by accepting of the ap pointment as County Clerk under the military authority. H. M. Mourns." "The Church wants you to be, In attendrce next meeting, and bring your Church letter. The Church will not fellowship a Radical. lam one of the Committee to notify you. Your Brother in Christ. H. CLAY." A good illustration of the fact that the South ern Democrats will use force, wherever practica ble, to compel the negroes to vote the Demo erotic 'ticket, is afforded in the following card, which is dated Aug. 7, 1868, and signedby Albert Pike, and published in the Memphis Appeal: "The members of the Democratic Club of col ored men can- obtain from the President of the Central Club cards that cannot be counterfeited, reccmmending them for employment to Conser- 1 1 vatives. No others need apply. We hope Lk hereafter, when any Democrat desires to employ a colored man In any capacity he will ask to see his card, and if none is produced will refuse to employ him. To employ those who have none will be to give aid and comfort to the enemy. Members of the Club desiring cards will please procure certificates of member ship from the Secretary. The Committee of the Central Club, appointed to registet the names of colored men needing employment or relief, and to procure either for them, consists of Martin Kelly, D. Danbury and Thomas C. Smith. To this committee, which is a permanent one, colored men holding cards, and needing work or relief, will apply and be registered. To the same committee it is hoped that those Democrats who want to employ colored men will apply. "ALBERT PIKE, "President Central Democratic Club." IHE REBEL INVASIOE S. Claims of Border Counties. [From the Harrisburg State Guard, August 12.] At the last session of the Legislature an act was passed, approved the ninth day of April, providing for the appointment of a commission to adjudicate and record the claims of citizens of the counties of Adams, Franklin, Fulton, Bed lord, York,' Perry and Ctmberhuid, for damages incurred by the rebel invasion of 1863 either through the destruction or capture of property by the public enemy or the appropriation of pro perty by the Union army to the public in suppres sion of the rebellion and Messrs.,A.S. Eby, W. W. Woods and W. S. Woods were, appointed on the commission, M. W. MeAlarney, Esq.,of Harris burg, serving as secretary. This act passed merely for the purpose of having the claims pro perly adjudicated and placed on record for future action. It especially exempts the citizens of (thambereburg from such adjudication, they hav ing been already paid a considerable amount by the State. Though the act contemplates that the General Government shall be called upon to set tle these claims, the State will doubtless be asked to pay them. Thus far the Commissioners have visited but three counties—Perry, Bedford and Fulton—in which the damage was much less than in the remaining four counties. The work has, how ever, been vary arduous. From the gentlemanly and obliging Secretary of the Commission we learn that in Perry county the losses will amount to but two thousand dollars. In Bedford county there are fifty claimants, whose damages amount to five thousand dollars. In Fulton county, which, owing to Its proxiity to the border, was most exposed, there-Care one hundred and thirty claimants whoa damages will reach at least forty thousand - dollars, exclusive of the loss by a certain party of over hundred and seventy-two fat cattle, valued at ten thousand dollars. So that the to tal amount of the claims thus far adjudicated is over fifty-seven thousand dollars. No accurate es timate on yet he formed of tne total amount of the claims of the seven counties named in the bill. General tavityl onr2: , llntor.vention in (From Ilichardeon'o "Pereonal History of Talynee S. Grant."] GALENA, I 1., 43ept. 1, 1865.—His Excellency A. Johnson, President : Seven weeks' absence from Washington, and-free intercourse with all parties and classes of people, has convinced me that there is but one opinion as to the duty of the United States toward Mexico, or, ,rather, the usurpers in that country. All agree that, beside a yielding Of the long-proclaimed Monroe doc trine, non-intervention in Mexican affairs rill leto an expensive and bloody war hereafter, or a Melding of territory now possessed by EEL To let the empire of Maximilian be establishekon our frontier, is to permit an enemy to establish himself who will require a large - standing army to' Military -statioWTvill be at ',pointS xd mote from supplies, arid therefore expensive to keep. The trade otark empire will be lost to one commerce, and Americans, 1n5te , ...4 of being the most favored people of the world throughout the length and breadth , of, this continent, - will be scoffed and laughed'at by tteir adjoinin. neigh bors, both North-and South—the people of the British. BroVilres and of Mexico. t 8 qa rrr, Ideu4Cont-Genoral, 4 EL. FETHERSTOM. Pablisluz PRICE THREE GENTS. A New Sem Adhesive Horatio Seymour (may his troubleakeease); Awoke one night, from dreams of fear, not pfeaCe; And saw within the shadow of his room; All deep and dark with murky gloom, An angel, writing, in ft book of brass, Of things that were to come to pass. So, to the angel in his room he said: "What writest thou ?" The angel raised his head' s ; And with a marvelotre look of prophecy, Said: "The names of Preside:6W Who." • "And is Mine one?" asked ficy—our. "Nay s tiot If . 90, The angel said. Them Seymour 'gm to blow,- -And rndelyjaid: •‘1 pray theer then Write me eTone who' ll never run ag ain I" • The angel wrote and vanished. The next night He came, with sm alklezzling ligkt, And showed the names the people's voice. lira • blest, And lo i GRANT'S namiledall the rest -Mrs. Lander has a new "Marie Antoinette.* —Napier of Magdala has sent anAbyasielimP, Bible to Gen. Grant. Mendeleselm is tokhave &monument In Leip-r„ de. —Heenan is eald to. have made $20,000 on thec Saratoga racer+. -"Diptizement" int the Connecticut name fors bap tlemat ceremony. —A man In Scotland emaehed Ida wife'a head'. with a board. to "aave'her see" —Don Alfonzo de BoUrbon has become a prl-- vate papal Zoltan). Edwin Forrest can- pronounce "child" itt fourteen syllables. --Dickens expresses great admiration for - American oysters. —"Ombra," a new comae opera by Flotowils , soon to be produced at the Opera Comique in Pane. —The submarine cable between. New Yorkers! Brest will be laid by the Great. Eastern next sum— mer. —Portland Episcopalians will build their new bishop a house, and have paid $lll,OOO for a lot therefor. —Dickens came near being, arrested for a Fe nian by the v*ilant constabulary of Doneralle, in Ireland. —Lord William Bereaford a young sprig •or —Flake's •. ••• • • ••••• • •v• ri :• I ing a costs, for breaking a gas lamp- in a drunken spree. —Alex-WidenMinna has edited and contributed to more than one. hundred journals. _He has-- written twelve times as much as Victor Hugo, , and eight times as much as Lamastine. —About, the French novelist, is of German. -- descent. 'The name of his grandfather was Abhu her. Ills father changed it into About, - Which - the French could pronounce more cagily. —Now that old Viennet, the Nestor of the French Academy, is aead, Alexander Dumas, Sr., and his son, will be competitors for the vacant. - seat among the "Forty Immortals:"" —M. Lords Dupont of Thun- challenges any person in Belgium to eat with him. for the chant piOnship. Be proposes -to begin with a breakfast. - • off twelve hundred mussels, to be followed by beefsteak. —We know a Meehan born on.the last day of the year, who always felicitated himself on his. narroveesthip from not being born at all. "Be jabers," says h , "and if it had been the next day, what would h ve become of me ?" manages Its-Btate Prition in a curious way. Two prisoners were lately allowed to visit- • the town of Joliet in citizen'adress and' without re guard. The warden was very much astonished - that the convicts broke their promises by failing to return. —Modern Turkish literature. has a great fe male poet, whose works are entirely unknown to the people of the Occident. Her - name is Lezda. Hayoome, and she has written five volumes o 1 lyrics, said to be so beautiful that they will cer tainly immortalize her name. —The Sultan having learned to read Frerteh---- one of his favorite pastimes Is now to peruse . - French novels. A large supply of the latter has• been purchased in Pans, and-arrangements have been made with Hachette,the great French book seller, for the early transmission of all new pub-. - 'teatime hi that line. Hachette is great ha fright ful ax-ideate. —ln a school of young ladies in France they.- studied physiology. The professor was explaining- Lhe theory,. according to which the body-Is entire ly renewed every 131. X. years-: "Thus,. Mademoi selle F.," said he,addreseing a jolly blonde with a - wide-awake face; "in 81 . 1.. years you will be no longer Mademoiselle F."' "I hope so" replied the unsophisticated, casting down her eyes. —A Mormon emiesary,eharged with preaching unmoral doctrines, has been arrested in Stettin, and will probably be sentenced , to six• menthe -- imprisonment and then-sent out of the country, with the warning that,.ln ease he should return, much heavier punishment would be inflicted on him. Thee North German governments are. - firmly determined to put down the Mormon emis saries infesting that part of the country. —"Yesterday," says the Linz correspondent of:' the Frankfurter Zeit:mg, "I saw a- distinguished old lady, with very white hair, cn almoat totter ing gait, and looking as decrepit as though she was upward of seventy-five years• old. Alas ! I - had before rne.gie once. so proud, and haughty - Archduchess•:(V4.ltiar Grief and despair have- madea complete wreck of hen He who sees her now can but take compassion.- on her, no matter • how much he dray have formerly hated her." • —They are playing in the-South German Pro- 'shield theatres a Wee entitled "Andrew John- - son, or the President in Hot. Water." ' Senators'"..,.- Roes, Fowler and, Henderson appear on the stage,. each carrying a. big bag snnposed to, contain, gold; on opening: them the-Senators find that the, bags are filled with leaden- bullets. Ben. Butler and A. J. have a vicdent altercation In the course of the play, anthem , . denouement Is the goddess of liberty scourging the whole crowd- from- the stage. —The hiehost prize has beers awarded this - year, at the - Iforlin University, tcp.an essay on then causes and effects of the American war. 'IL was. written by a young German nobleman whose... parents live bs Posen. In bin preface the suc-. cessful author deplores his very imperfect &mill., tufty with the English language, which, he says, rendered it exceedingliillicultfor to.e some of the most important authorities, and, to obtain information on many essenti.lpoints. - —Leon Faucher , says, 4 1n a recent 7,mph/et-- entitled "Sovereit„, , a Power:" "The Prix 'dent or- - the United Statts, even bound alert by the Senate, has at his disposal thr•zi times ar,„' mach patronage as the Ring of Prussia or, than - of - LtustriaTilve - timaras - mrch - aes - the --- King of Italy, and twice as much as the Ez.perer • of the French. The Emperor otßusem has mere offices at hir3 disposal, but the the patronage, Of the President of the United States is far more valuable." —The 'Emperor Alexander, of Russia; hen issued Pastructions for a revision of the barbar ous cr!.minal code, still valid , in Russia.. Brand ileg viith a red-hot iron ? to which all second-class conyicts are subjected, is to be abolished. This will put an end to the horrible scenes which wero regillarly enacted at St. 'Petersburg and other4l-. largo Russian Cities, whenever-a number of co , ,evicts were despatched to Siberia. They are no gr, on the morning of their .departnre, led, out of their cell, tied to a bench, and branded on , the _ forehead and on both cheeks; they then receive certain nrouher of lashes, are chaized--toguther, ' and Ariven off like = cattle: The screams of tiv) wretches on this occasion may heard for miles. Ten.execntitiners have all hands fall of business, as not less than or,o- hundred convicts Are. sent off to Siberia at a ',tine. About ono-flfth of the convicte(woihen se A d pereons belonging ta the W a g g er class) ere ° exempt fronailoggiag,waa rAOTA VANVIEN•