GUNN MMOCK. Editor. VOLUMN .XXII.-NO.lll. THE EVENING BULLETIN • mama= svasi zvlciUta (Bentleys excepted). • AT T NEW BULLETIN ENTILDINO, 607 Chestnut , Street, PhEadelphiat we ewe EVENING BULLETIN ABSOCLLTION. 11110111STOES. 1111B3ON PEACOCK, . OikEPER BOUI vitu n d it ai : .N.L.FETBEESTON_,_ THOM. • YEANOD3 WELL& The Etrusrut hi served to eubserlbers In the CUT tlB Awns • • week. payable to the Oarnere, or $l B • annum. 3t1111.10A A N 'LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, Of Phiiadelphia, SI E. Corner Fourth and %hint Stu. • arm, imatution Atm no superior in iho rftsfetd INSURE AGAINST ACCIDENT •TIMIT3II . LBW. , INISTIBANOB 03s, OF NARTFOND, CORN. :Assets over • • • $1.000,000 Persons awing tits eltY eepecialky will feel bedtes WI& tiled by being insured. WLittan W. ALLEN; Agent and Altenteh FORILEST /313ILDDIG. 117 Bonita Fosurth.Streets,ll4lll4delpllllt. j 23thetu2m4 A 1 e. • # • 1: i. MI4 il ltEra lu a t i pt ralESTNlWECTßEEr. [ go if EIt:I3II73—BMERICK —Tbla morpJAt. at the residence -of tho brideNs aunt, by the ftev. SamLll. 4: 2le*Y.Mc.Tbne iluithee to.st to Li •= ..W S. Emrich. both rhuadelehtn.• SCOTT—BOPKII*B.—In Philadelphia, en Tuesday. August tath. ISM by the Rent J. Wheaton fini Itb, Barnett "T. Scott to Miss Clara Id flopklna. both of Toledo. Ohlo. (Toledo papers please etollY.3 AW6—On Sunday evening lest, 14th inst., lire. Anne. Awl. in the 10th year of her age. The triers& and relatives are invited to attend the fn. =rat from the residence of Wm. Y. Dayly. Almendo a treetmortio ofjinn tin gton. and 'rest of Richmond street. In the late district of li/thwart& Eighteenth Ward, on Thursday morning next. at 10 o'clock.preci sely. Canis will be at the office of John .e. Franke, 't ndertafter S. E. corner Sixth and Nohle.to convey such of the Meads and relatives as desire to attend. To pro. coed fo Laurel 11111. •• GREEN° IJGI3.—On the 16th instant. at he* residence in E=l7. ers S i t ;ti fi a l: tix t.. Q J J . Greenough, wife of the lite On the 15th instant Harry /Darken. the Youngest son et E. J. and M. A. libiclosn, aged 5 years and to months. The friends of the family are invited to attend the femoral. from the residence of hie parent:l. Pio. 1515 Girard avenue. on Wednesday afternoon. at 4 o cleck. it • the lith inst. Elizabeth Hunt, widow of the late, irriah Hunt. in the 7lst year o! her age. • , The [steads of the family are invited to attend her funeral. from the residence of her amain law. Edward Parrish. Springfield. Delaware county. on 'fifth day, 30th instant. at 3 o'clock I'. hi. Carriages will meet the 2.30 train et Station's Mahar., Weld Chesftr Eallseed. Inter. manna ;Meads , Southwest= Urormd. ldEitllko.—Da Monday. august llth: Felix Merino; of 11 .drid. Spain. to the Sith year of his age. is male on niatneees are ted to *Feud bit funeral at o'clock OA Thundaymorning. from hie mid .1625 Summer atreeL Ceremonies at the DathcdraZ Logan i*re. - DOLFfie;-fhs the Dth test., Deterge 14edele. eigith ' , sera his age. , oi;cßal e ia.a n a tiordl i e nu mointie. Anguit 16. ISM any St-years._ F ISCIITICeI and mit OA NV - WitilehlY, at Veto* A. M.. in Doylestown, Pa. • Ills relatives and friends. and thoee Of the (mitts, ere reapectfully Invited to attend . Special car wil l ic +company the ILO train from the. Rath renneylvadia Railroad Depot. WASIIINeeTON.—On the morning ot the 15th instant, in Raltionore, James lL Washington. in the Bith year of his age. .I..srint. Brother & Co„ Dublin. onecase 01 Plan Black Poplins. - Nlotaning Dry Goods 11011110. anlB,3t• BESSON & BON. 918 Mesta= street. . 13LACal ALL WOOL POPLINB—TWO CABEIt OF A/Plaba Black All Wool PopUnsg s kt reasonable Priem , just optned by B ON &, SON. Motiltdott.Bl7 Goods noun.. anUtja* No. 918 Otke!ttuat street. ENGLIEDI BOlldigZiNgf3.—FALL STOCK OF B 1 3 1 -make of Engliati Bombazines; just received by , BESBON & SON. Mourning Dry Goode Moue% No. filzt <Zama larder ORD BLACK CO A.ND RDED M OOLORED BILKS. ' OUT al. N mop ento GRAIN PURPLE AND GILT EDGE. DROWNS AND BLUE GEO °HAIN. MODE COLD PLAIN Biqa& anl2tl EYRo LANDELL, Fourth MidArcb. 1.) tr.l rilaile d (1):A.111 PAIIDEE WIIMMFIC COURSE LELFAY,Vcrk.. COLLEGE. The next term commences on THURSDAY. September 0. Candidates for admission may be examined the day before (Settember 9), or sax TUBSDAY. July DI the any before Minitel Commencement. ' For circtllam. apply to President CATTELL. er to P . rotwor B. B. YOUNGMAN, Clerk of the Faculty. iyl4 tf EasTort, Pa., July, 1868. claim. PHILADELPHIA, AND =MOD RAILROAD W.. COMPANY. OFFICE NO. W aomi FOURTH STREET. • ..Prolarrimpins, Mar 27.18/R NOTICE to the holden/ of bonds 'of the Philadelphia said Reading Railroad Company, due April 1. U37o: The ComPanY Ofter to exchange any of thaw toads of -sum each at any tbne before the Ist day of October next. at par, for a new mortgage bond of equal amount,bearing •:9 perying cent. Interest, clear of United States and Mats taxes, ba 25 years: to ran. The bonds not ered on or before the let of Opta ter.. next' will be paid at maturi_l7_,_ in accordance with Chair tenor. nen octi S . afternivED, sg- Lo HOWARD HOSPITAL. Da NDEL - 1518 AND cowmen saa gu rt Arus Dl6 l=o4l P =u;b " •Mto cal o a r bIEWBPAPE u RI A BOO=TZEPHIABTES PaYer..ba. bo by • H apse-ant No. 618 Jayne street The Oath at _Consecration,. _ The following is the oath adrmidstered to the Xishopit conttecrated in Baltimore on Sunday:, "I will be from this hour henceforward oho idient to blessed Peter the Apustle, and to the holy Roman Church, and to the most blessed father Xope Pius IX., and to' his successors canonically r ehosen. I will assist tttom to retain and defend —sgainst any man whatever the Roman Pupedom, 'without prejudice to my rank. I will tithe -care to Preserve, defend .. an prompt() - - the rights, lotion,. privileges and authority of 'lite holy Roman Charch,,ot the Pope, and of this ,aneeeesora, as aforesAid4 With , my whole strongthl will observe, and cause to be observed' :by/others, the rules of theiloly Fathers, thede qcrees, ordinances or dispositions and'mandates of -rhe Apostolic Bee. When • called to a BynOd • come, unless be, prevented by a canonical .Impediment. I Will personally visit the Artos , tlolic Bee once every ten years,,and render aniac -connt'to out most blessd Father Pins IX., and this successor as aforesaid, of my whole pas rat -office, and of everything in any way appertain ,. In . to the state of my church, to the discipline of the clergy and people, and to the salvation of - the souls entrusted to my care, and I will hem lily receive in return the Apostolic mandates, and most diligently execute, them. But if Ibe pre- 4 Tented by a lawful impediment. I will perform" I-Abe—things - aforesaid-by-a-vtrtain-messenge specially authorized for the purpose, a priest Of - the diocese, or by some other secular or regular priest of tried virtue and piety, well instructed on nil the above subjects. I will not cell, nor .giVe - away, nor mortgage, enfeoff anew, nor in sny way alienate: the possessions belonging to - table-without the leave of the Roman Pontiff And should I proceed to any alienation of them I am-- willing -to-contract, by the veryfacti4the penaltiesspecified in the constitution published VA this subject." • ART 'TEMA. AB' ART GALLERY, to cost ORO MIIIIOII and a half of dollars, is to be erected on Fifth avenue, New York. Mr. Henry Keep, a wealthy railroad man, has bought slot two hundred feet square on Fifth avenue, between West Fifty-that and Fifty second stre.ets, where the building is to be con structed. After founding and endowing the ail gallery, Mr:Keep proposes to place It`in.charge of a committee of ladies of a fixed number, with provision to fill the vacancies' as they occur froM death or Otherwise. A' small' admission fee is to be charged' to, eticit visitor, the revenue coming from which Is to forte a' Auld for "two purposes: First, the care and repair of the building and its contents, and second, the Surplus for the relief of the poor Of all nations needing succor in the city of New york. - Tag MONDE Iwcrinax' Publishes a good en . graviog' taken from an American picture ex hibited at the Baton of 1868. - The pahithig re presentsA Breton Game," and is try Frederick Britman, formerly an engraver. in the American Bank Note Company's employ.; IL delineates a rustic interior in Brittany, with sii figures in the eccentric and picturesque ecistinneSf the region; an old man assists a group of children' at a gains of ball. It is very Seldom that the Paris illustrated press has thought it worth Its while to reproduCe painting by en American artist on itapages, and the fact is an implied compliment of con siderable vane. Mr. Brldgmari is a puPil of GerCune, aid cannot be more than twenty-three br twenty-four years of age. In 1866 he went to Brittany, and, becoming greatly interested in the manners of the inhabitants, remained there the greater part of the two intervening years. somewhat romantic adventure, in which he saved from drowning a young lady, daughter of ;a Marquis, who was bathing in'the Bay of BiscaY, gave him the freedom of tho best society of the place where:he iirdES staying; and enhanced the pleasure of his residence there. Bis progress during that time was remarkably rapid, and the interesting, plctUre now selected for engraving out of a considerable 'number of American paint . • • , proufOfitr aa,wlll -- as — gra - t - X.pe or his future career. THE AIIIB.I3ICAN PllOl - O.LITHOGRAPILIC COM PANY, WO advertise to work by g 'Osbome'S Pro cess," send as some exquisite plates in which me chanical. drawings, maps, and even pictorial de signs, are roduced with excessive delicacy and, of course, absolute accuracy. Nothing can be more faultless than the way irfwhich a dotted line, a bit of letteringotc.,are brought down to minia ture proportions. This invaluable art is adaptid to reducing every kind'of design In set -leant., Or eept those depending on light and elude for Meir effect, in which case a loss of tone results from the reproduction. 0111* 19 Herald New York. EUROPEAN AFFIMQ3 14101611 t, NOTIBIS BY A 15111111.111AEL TOUR, 'Wren& )110rIs tO Berlin OF 1y O*Sitittiro• vrigiuM46-larelihit -atiZteni tOorruiazileace of the Phitadebide Xrentrialtalletio.) BanrAN, July 30, 186&—I-have %rat-04d Ito rapidly since my last letter to the Butaarrni 'tato leave me no time for this desultory ek!nreltentid-: ence. From Paris to Bah), over a ' flit uninter eating series of landscapes an thirteen__hours; thence by way of Adion, Berne Fridboarg_aild Lausanne, in the inidstof superb Swiss mountain and valley scenery, to Geneva, whence I did niy self the extreme pleasure ot a steamboat ride to the.far rained Castle of Chinon, with, its, lovely Alpine and lake scenery, and its Mato:deal sata ciations; back again through Montreux, Vevey, and other picturesque towns, to the ancient city of Berne, where every street pump bears a carved bear, the heraldic emblem of the city, and from whose terraces-the BeltleSe Alps are seen to glow resplendently' at sunset, and finally, by way of Lucerne, from whence I ascended the Rigi and gazed nponits three hundred mue panorama of glorious Swiss mountain laridscape, and from where I croaled the Vierwaldstaetten Bee (Lake of Lucerne,] to fell'e Chapel, to Zurich, Schaffhausen, and across the Boden :See (Lake of Constance,) to Muni h, .that city of fine arts, pal aces, and cheap beer. Here I met our quondam Philadelphia pianist, Masseh M. Warner, whose improvement under Hans i v. Bulow, whom I had the good fortune to met personally, has been , very decided. He played a fantasia of Chopin and a posthumous _work of Mendelsohn in F sharp minor, with much deli cacy of expressioni - correctness of manipulation and accuracy of conception; and his distinguished teacher expressed to me personally his thoronAh gratification with the. diligence and steady improvement of his pupil. From Munich my route lay through Nurnberg, in whose irregular streets, mediaeval architecture' and intensely interesting antiquities generally, old Germanyi is teen to bestadvantage, to Leipzig, city of book publishers cheap music of a high order, end glowing historical reminiscences. Iheard in the Schnetzenhaus—a fairy-like garden ond palatial structure—a most superb , orcheetra, which dis coursed Richard Wagner with immense poorer, for one Silber'groschen--about. two and a half cents. By the' aid of a 'marvellously cheap drosche, I was furthermore enabled to drive over the vast plain whereon occurred the gigantic' three days battle between , Napoleon and the allied Powers, so familiar to every student ' of hiatory. , - 'The Saxon Government has Iso distinctly designated each pOint of_ interes by;, sacrum of steno tablets as to learkthe ilsitoros sessed 'conceptionof a clear ' of.' the. ,ense le. Yon' drivel' to the Moriarchea iiiii:o4, 'where, e ll, cording to report, Francis, of Austria;Friedet i ch Wilhelm, of Prussia, and the Czar, knelt to tot rn thanks to Altidghty God for a vieioty so.cosly ; and' Lard by stands a tablet, bearing the inse. ip- Jinn : , "Gent'Barelay, di T011i, ,, wi'w , 50;000 men." Further Probstheyda, '"Victor an . Lauristen, Niritb: 30,000'' ,M;" and close - thereto ,stands' a raanYlenerrlng indications of the a ntontentotts events; while beneath hia feet, -wher 'now the grain ripens ' tinder, the .noonday sun,hl the fall redundancy of a plenteous harvest, nufidderhe boneri - of thousands ; ,ho entered the gorystrife rapidl,y_beating-hearta-to- i nteet=the- dep,dlY bullet or the flashing sword. I After tarrying at , several dar, 3 l taw PHILADELPHIA TUESDAYI AUGUST 18, 'B6B Berlin-Anhanisch° Eisenbahn bore me rapidly on to this proud capital of the Friederich It has been, too, my good fortune to see Berlin more thoroughly than - any 'other city; for the half-brothers, Carl Bechstein and Oscar Agthe, partnere in the world-rinfowned Bechstein Piano Fabrik, who turn out fifteeninstritments, mostly gtands, •per week for all parts of. Europe, have been unremitting in their courtesies to Their handiwork is to 'be eii countered in • the RoYal • Palace, in that of the Crown Prince, - itithe music rooms of Liszt, Hans v, 13ulow, Tanssig, Dreyschock, and of every othur 'distinguished artist, as well as in nine-tenths Of the drawing,rooms of the conti nent; and Ido net , hesitate to pronounce their grand pianoes superior in, power,,liquidity evenness of touch to , any I have ever seen. BY the way, their beautiful walrus:cumin the Johan nis strasse are embellished with a, most superb portrait of Liszt by Ary Scheffer—a work of art upon which , I cannot gaze ,without committing the sin of covetousness.' It - wonderful how Liszt Manna= his precedence even in these latter, days, when his magical touch no longer works the inspirations of the old masters, nor his own, for the public. I have met with many superior musichms and alike on my winding way, who one and all declare hisinfinite superiority over all living end pest piturists, although the Deaster kapellnielster informed me that the Abbe • Lititz, himself prontnuicetl Carl v. TauSsig the greatest pkeformer of the present day. Gluten, which music and art combine to render beautiful and 'fascinating as a dream, stands not far fromthe Brandenburg Gate, on the verge of the Thku-gartett rark. Imagine a spa clone theatre on the one side, wherein a capital stock company offers an opera each evening at 0.30F.L We had La Dame Blanche yesterdiiy —the White Lady who -has haunted me all the way, from Paris to this point—given with some what less effect than the performance at the Opera Comione, recounted in my lad letter, but satisfae torily withal. All of the Entr'actes are whiled away in the , vast garden behind the'opera house, which -- blazerrwith 900 van-colored gas jets, and ?tea= witirsupt‘trintialMunuslied now by a brass and- of thirty pieces, and anon an or chestra of fifty. Young Germany seems, to throng the ions Wks. Here strut the he roes - of Kiinigrtgratz with polished sir eels and Immaculate kid gloves,, aide by side with the fair-complexioned: maidens of the wealthy Berlin burghers, while around the glistening, prim:Retie fountains, overdressed' Clear Mira the palatial stores tatter den Linden,dr,ive impromptullirtations with pretty specimens of the demi-monde. ROO species of amusement meets the-visitor between the illuminated parterres of flowers; lottery .11;4 target shootingwitnair.gnna r and 'hun dreds of contrivances:the bare mention of which would drive this corresPondence beyond its prO per limits. No sooner haii the brass band finished a "Prussian Parade "March of the Prinz Fried eric-Carl Regiment" than the Orchestra &whits, Into a :tube by Joseph Gungl, (whom by the by had the pleasure of meeting and hearing a ;.-Gerteva,)-or perchance Cicada-3 pot-pluni Of all the Operas .frout Lohenktin: tint& te::Marl qana.---. And when the little' belt nklPn_ ' N htio" the theatre rushes the mad crowd for the second act of La Dame Blanche. tras barid, orchestra, the eleableg of glasses, and the hila rious laofth cease alike for the moment—and the distracted Kellners (waiters) enjoy a transient . breathing ispelL At - the close of the Opera the grand nightly, and I maysay daily, carnival ap preaches its culmination. --The throng becomes denser with each . paming moment, and its spirits -gayer, more tumulinns,. after the Rhenish wines and the omnipresent beer have flown in rivers. Here glide hundreds in the merry mazes of the dance, despite - the high range of the thermometer ;at - another point groups ,of thirty and forty edge, their way to try the wheel of Mune Fortune, over which presides a luring, cherry-eheeked maiden; there three tall officers of the Anhalt Cavalry clip the wings of revolving pasteboard pigeons with rifles, loaned at one silver groschen; and around through the labyrinth of illuminated fountains pass the half suppressed whispers and reckless laughter of flirtations, both pyre and impure. And such is Kroll's Garten, day by day, night after night, the like of which Is not to be found n either hemisphere—a 'wonderful revelation from out of a gay, luxurious capital, whose com bination of internal and external attractions stands second only to Fags% I expect to journey from here to Braunschweig • to-morrow, on a visit to Franz Abt, whose bal lads have found a response from every heart the wide world over. Meanwhile, in haste, Yours, B. ENGLAND. , he great illetOrM 66 IMperinielli, ,, [From the London Telegraph of August 4th.] The country is about to make a great experi ment. The effect of the reform legislation of the .11)0 two sessions is,to change the constituencies of-the United Kingdom and to put. the supreme governing power into new hands,- and, although the ' extent of the change is 'at .present-very much a matter of conjecture, enough le known to stamp the political revolution as greater than any.which. the, present generation has witnessed. The Reform act of was -essentially a measure of middle-class enfran chisement. It created, for the first time, an uni form property ( qualification in boroughs, and gime a predominating , poWer to the ten-pound hop,seholdeirs.-Aat is, to a section of the popu lition intermediate between the highest and the lowest ip the social scale. That in itself was a vast amendment, but it was by no means a return to the most ancient democratic constitution ,of England. It is now clear beyond-dlspute that in the earliest ages of Parliamentary government the suffrage waslounded on the widest possible oasis. - Until the reign of Henry VL, when the forty shilling freehold qualification was intro dueed- in -.counties, _we do not find the slightest trace of any restriction of household suffrage in either town or County. ,* * * /For sev eral reasons we spay=:conclude that for the Present the extension of: the franchise will be less than' was generally anticzpatedwithin.the first year. We, have only just created anew and complicated machinery, and a considerableCtime- is required to get it into - full operation: It is therefore true only Almited sense .that the appeal is about to be made,to. the constituencies. Even if the cumbrous processes of the Reform'act should not be simplified and . amended hereafter-even if the. laW nextyear should bejustlite same as It fs 110 * — it is certain thist'apPthefrelOstratlon will be mere productive:than thittWhieliis now linpendlng, _ . 1 19n.V 1 4 15( 1u10Wf44 11 1W - 1 7 .14 their will understand better how to peer them, and organ izations of variant!, kinds will be invented to ; slat them in' enrolling: their names. We rePY ,knotv,verYlittle about the constituencies. Their nuMber and character, can he but vaguely gues4ed. Is the residuum excluded la'boroitglis? Will the great Blass of xyzhoneethiildpre in counties be,in depetident of; subject to 'territorial influence? ette, , and many tither essential - faetS of the problem which Is to be worked anti at the . nest general election are at present Pa , OUR WHOLE: COUNTRY. known quantites. But,• after all, e ignorance is smatter of degree only. We are rtaln that the, constituencies are made larger, th ugh how much larger we cannot tell. We see , distinctly that the governed and governing classes are brought -nearer together, though how much nearer is as yet conjectural. About the ten dency and direction of the late reform there is no uncertainty whatever., ,14 has rendered the constitution more in unison with the general body of the community—that is to say, rulers and statesmen now become more directly subject to the observation, criticism and control of the people. As a necessary consequence poli tical leaders of all shades of opinionNwill hence forth be compelled to bemore distinctin their_po- Bey and more emphatic in their utterances. The actors in the political theatre will have to epeak in the clearer language and to follow up their professions,with the more emphatic and practical action required by the increased numbers and the awakened Intelligence of the nation. . - 3111131110 de Ginnlln on the Situation. Itlssimpossible that France can disarm in the Presence of an aggressive powerlike Prussia, and -it is' qually impossible that France can continue to "endure the burdens whkh a•situation of armed peace imposes 011 her. Ile imaginea a letter from the Emperor to his Minister of Foreign Affairs, requiring him to ask Prussia • to call a convention to discuss thestate of Europe,and in case of non compliance., he puts into the mouth of the Em peror l'an address to the French Nation," which would be eattivalent to a declaration of war against Prised& "Supposing," he concludes, "that instead of these two ointments being the production of a Journalist, th were the bona fide work of the Sovereign : if, instead of-ap pearing in La Liberte, they appeared ; in the Monileur Univereel—What would Ge thought: of them ?"—Fram La Liberte. Appreheations of War. [Serbs dent Northeast Gazette.] Count oernesto Ohe Prase= Ambassattor at London, passed a few days; t Ems, and the views of the British Cabinet became-naturally the suit lea of conversation between him and the King of Prussia. The Count assured his Majesty of the friendly and etbeere feeling of England to wards Prussia and Germany. Lord Stanley, ad mitted the right of Germany to work out her own destiny, without any foreign interference, and Was of the same opinion as Prussia, that all intervention in German affairs from abroad o • • ht to ;7:Count - Berrieifolf.a • expresie. his belief that England would employ her influ ence in preventing any attitude of hostility to wards Prussia from any quarter: On all sides _there are assutences and --declarations of Pe-"e; and yet, strange as it may seem, there Is nothing .but apprehensions of war in all diplomatic and military circles. I have had - oppertunity_ot being convinced of this several- times lately, and the declarations of Marshal Niel , arid of - M. Rouher have put the climax to these apprehensions. Significant. Political Speech at the Vienna Sch tietzentest. - [Vienna Correopondence of London Herald.] The shooting was inaugurated en the 27th, in the morning. Thefetes will last till the sth of August. Banquets succeed banquets without in terruption, and at the one given two days ago, Dr. Meyer, member of: the diet of Wurlemburg and editor . of.. tho„,Btuttggrd Olopercer i was, bold enouglitogivea toast to n The•prompt re-estab =lishment of the Fatherland." He said ."Firtl4lV-01, We" the-state- 4 1 ., thingaln Delvatoiy, , ttrucli atilt is since 1866, can nel, we from Suable feel that the partition in pareels-of--Oa - Fatlifirland, granted- to - the German people in 1866; is unbearable. f 1 know 'too well that in tit° Whole of Germany even in the South—even , ; in my own country— there is an opinion widely spread about, nameik that thewhole Fatherland will be fused into the Northern Confederation. Howeveropealdngfcir myself, and in the name of themajority of the linablea people, let me - tell you that we holdthe firm conviction it 'is_ Another way which is to lead to the unity and grandeur of Germany. At all events. it is certain that my country cannot continue to exist Iblig under the present regime. [Loud cheering.] In 1866 it happened that a race of German people was vio l:n:11W expelled from Germany with foreign aid. f Frantic bravos.] But necessity is a statesman even streaker than M. Von Bismarck; and it will be, I hope, that statesman who shall in the end make the unity of Germany." It would be useless to deny that, in spite of all the precantiOns taken by the Austrian Govern ment to give no umbrage to Prussia, the festivals now going on in Vienna assume more and more a political turn. • By the steamer New York, which arrived in New York harbor yesterday, we have these items of interest: . —His Royal Highness, the Duke of Edinburgh, will start in October next on a cruise in Her Ma jesty's ship Galatea, - round the world. The fol lowing is the route decided upon! Starting from Plymouth, the Duke will proceed to Madeira, Fayal, Ascension. Cape of Good Hope, Mauri tius, Bombay, Trincomalee (Ceylon), Madrt}s, Calcutta, Penang, Singapore, Hong-Kong, Ma nilla, Yokohama (Japan). down to Sydney and New Zealand, then to Honolulu, and the beauti ful South Sea Islands, Valparatio, Lima, St. Blas, Megalhaen, . Ban Francisco and Vto conver's Wands, and so returning home. This trip is expected to last one year and ten months. —At the recent execution of the murderers °of Prince Michael a ball rebounded from one of the posts to which the erlinmali were attached, kill ing the ofticerin command of the iiring•party. —Six cardinals will be appointed at the Can slatory to `he held next month in Rome. The prelates disignatedi are Mei. ' Merode Chigi, Talbot, Rand', "Ferrario and' Sagretti. 'All the vacancies in the &wind Colleen will be filled up prior to the assembly of the Ecumenical Council. —Before .leaving, for Rissingen the Emperor Alexander of Russia signed a ukase abolishing, in a great measure, obligatory military service, by authorizing the men who are to serve in the army to ; procure substitutes on paying to the treasury a sum to be fixed at every, recruiting. For 1869 that sum has been fixed at 070 roubles. The ukase will be in force for five years. I • —The English Ambassador .to Constantinople has Signed the protocol by which Englishmen will be authorized to hold landed property in Turkey. The Anatrian Ambassador has adopted a similar course, in which, however the representativeslof Russia, ItAly and • the United States still refuse lo concur. . —The Governor of Cadiz telegraphed to Mad rid, Aug. 1, that he feared the Outbreak of Insr i rectionary.movements in different parts of t at province. He added - that he had taken Intl() precautions, and had despatched large bodiesiof the Civic Gutittlinto the threatened districts. It was stated Plat ft manifesto would shortly ap pear from -the-Neteran, Oarli.§t letuler,"; General Cabrera, prpposing to yitice . the' eldest ' son iof Don'Juan - nPorr the thread of Spain. i ~ , —The Emperor of the French, as a mark of the high personal, esteein. and admiration of the character and' public;'principles of the >late Mr. Cobden, itadlorWtirded the- handatinie'contribu tion of 1,000-francaAo Mr.. Charles Greene, hon orable Secret/a,' to ,the Committee for erecting a memorial to -that,-distingulahed" statesman at Camden Town:- ' ‘ -- i• . , , —There had been a litter between the famous M. Jecker add a:t . /triki journalist, M. Odysse Beret,. _ Annoyed . at some remarks from the pen of the latter .which appeared a few days since in the Lib4rth, ?Coker resorted-to -the pistol for satisfaction,;in ,the usual continental fashion. The conibatants met in the forest of Soigne, Bel hium, and dtdy exchanged shots. M. Batot was t, but the ball frOmtktely glanceeLolf.LTIPIMJI button at - At entered his waistcoat pocket. Though. somewhat suffering, 'he - was soon able to return to Paris.. FRANO2I.-Pitl7l9BgAl. GEBBILAIWITY* Foreign Sterns. (From the Toledo [ Blade) de AMU. Tile Election in Kentucky-The 010. rheum Democratic % - ietorr—BlLr. Alas. byre Account thereof. Pen OFFIS. CONS EDRIT X ROADS (With is in the State nv Kentucky), Aug. 6, 1.868.--Ef the Amerikin Eagle is in the habit nv iscreemin at Democrat victories she kin now test her capacity to the fullest extent The election in Kentucky resulted more • glee owier than ever we bed anticipated. Eighty thou sand majority is a big thing, and we knowd bat we felt that the eye of the the Dimocrisy eraz onto no, and we did our level best; we wantid to inspire the Dimocrisy uv the North; to set em a example in fact with wood arc: in em emula shun. .The election at the Co ers wuz the same ez the others in the !State. so in tin the history of this wan writin the history tiv • We hed held a serleany meetins, all with, with the exception ny',Elder Pennibacker's obstinacy, wuz harmonious and effective. Gov. Seymore'a letter mfz a great help tone. I hed been afraid that he mite say euthin in It wick wood bother us, but when'l got it I exclaimed hallelocwl He hedn't sed a thing! He hedn't tetched any= the questions at taboo and consekently 000dn't give no offence to nobod,y. Beacom took it, and swore that he was satisfied from: readin it in connec tion with his Cooper .Instoot speech, that he was in favor of payin the bonds in gold, while Peanibacker•wuz quite as" well satisfied from retulin it in conneckehun with thee platform and Pendleton's speeches, that: he wuz in favor .uv payin the bonds in gr.( , navo. They got to dis pootin over it, and releirtu the matter to me. Imitatin Beyzaore I never sed a word about bonds and, greenb ax, but went orf into a most elokent denunalaahrm Iry Judie Iskariot. ` It's always safe to abooze Judie, ez there ain't nobody nowhere to defend him. "But!" sed they in kerns, "does he perpObe to pay the bonds in gold orgreenbax?" Smilin benignantly onto em„ , ez Seymour did at the. Convenshun, I replied in these words " friends—for you are my friends, let us con= fine ourselves to livin ishoo4. Lot me ask yoo as patriots, and men who hey the best interests ny the country at heart, no YOU WANT yoon mean- TEES TO MABRY 1.1100ERB?" "Never!" sed they, strik.in tables, " never !" and'they rushed out in the street, nollerin "'Rah for Seymour." • • ' • filch porehens uv the letter, however, ez fitted our case I rtd to em. That paragraff into which he bewails the condishun uv men like us at the "Cornere,_ isielrhe - myles - theirrteillgerree :ay thb South, Kernel idePeiter and I red to every one at the Corners we bein all with kin read; and the paragraff in which he denonneee the men who assert that Union men ain't permitted to live in pecce in the South I read the first time to twenty or thirty nv our people with hed just re turned from a raid onto the settlenient uv AbOli tionists over on the Pike Run. Young Issaker Gavitt wnz so affected that he shed tears, , wipin hbi eye's with a 'hankerehlef he took from the body nv a Yoonyun man which he had just shot in the 'presence nv his family, wick refoozed to leave the settlement. .. . 1 The' eleeshun went off . ma gnificently. Never did I see in ail my-experience, wick .hez bin very great, sick extensive preparations made. _ Ras cora's bar wuz made free. - Deekin Pogram, Colonel Ale Pelter and myself, one nv with holds a Government oftis, and the other two expects to, hed a bar' nv new eleeshun whisky purebist, • wish Elder Pennibaeker, notwithstandin his Ells- affecalmn, fusnisht at cost, with wuz 22 • cents per gallon, ez no tax hez ever bin pade in this diatnek. I 0 ,T494 N Y-115#1PEW 3 1 13 ' fqx-ttkei.FPu 64 - 1 / 4 t ‘ in XI e.votin conuenstiffely. ' put in , ttt Beacom sllpt in' three under tliffrentnamesi an .., the -Mho' 4 1 444. onet..:SPledA:matty timed 2 they thaTileseary. .. - . - 4. Out ten o'clock Pollo ck `came np to vote, 'at wick I Wuz surprited. -- Wheh Lsity surprised I mean it. The very presence nv the man at sielf ' a time and place waz ptartiki, and it hed a terrible effeek on the populie. ‘. Wm!" sed Issaker Gavitt, indignantly, "shel a Illinoy Abllahnist--a mart not-born in hentaky-- a.man who holds views so tiltaily diffient from ours, persoom to vote at these Ore poles ? Never!' - And Issaker, bilin over with rage, went for him, in with he wuz assisted by the entire balance uv the Corners. The wretemed.inaU paid a heavy penalty for his insolence. He wuz car ried off by some eympathisin' niggers, a mete wreck uv his former self. A little later the "Yoonynnmen," ez they call themselves, upon Pike Run, come down to vote. But Issaker and McPelter reasoned with em. Kemp MoPolter's remark vntz pertikelerly hn preesive. They asserted, that ez Amerikin citi zens they lied a rite to vote, and . shood do so at all hazards. ' The Reml in reply statid to em that the Corners wuz a Stitt for her liberties—that no matter wt►t their abstrack rites mite be the Corners cood not permit herself to be contami nated with Ablishn votes. "Should yoo attempt it," sed he impressively, "the blood vv the Cor ners will be up, and I won't be answerable for the conseket ces. Itewin6il" .They pressed forerd, when from among our people a single shot wuz heard, and the head one uv em, a preacher, foil. writhin in the dust. I pitied the poor wretch, but wat kin we de? Why will they come about us, irritatin our peo ple with their incenjary votes? That man hada family. Wet reason will he give them, when he's earrid home dead, for his ontimely decease? Its ever thus. The' Abilshoists will never let us. alone. And yet I specie that a, hirolin and pabSt dized press In the North, in the face uv the pro vocashen we reeeeved, will accuse us uv murdrin this man! Our ambishen wuz to hey the vote clean Dime kratic. But it wuz not so. At about.one P. M., Joe Bigler, who had heard , of the doing, come to the pulls. hooker and McPelter wuz a goin to pervent him from votin, but the villain drawd a revolver the minit they lookt at him, and they partid, makin a lane for him to the hat. "Does any one challenge my vote?" sed he, cockin his weapon. ,"Ef so, lot em speak." But no one interfered, and I took it. When we counted , out Were wuz barely one Ablishn ballot in the hat. • It, wuz Bigler's. But we were, neer enuff yoonanlmens,anci wisperposcito_ke,ep_ so. The process is simple: It consists merely in shooting all who'differ with us. Thus we hey pecce at home. Our politikle prospecks are mixed. The re duckshep Ay the tax on,whisicv inclined many nv our voterd toward Republikinisrii, but 'I head ed this orf by swearin that the Democrisy wuz pltdged to taae it orf, all together. The North ern papers assertin that Blare's, letter don't mean revolOoshen•is hitrtiti uti some, -but thdt is more than balanced by the ease with which We kin organize. 'Yesterday an entire regiment in the Confediit setvis reorgimized as a.., Seymore and Blare Cinb—retains In their brlicers ez doorin the war. and yoosin the indontikle rolls, flags and Bich; It aidsus wonderfly. Pa - rnoLEum V. NASH; P. M. " ' • • (Wich is Postmaster). PRACTICAL INSTRUCTION IN THE LEHIGH Urn vnuarrx.—The Trustees of the Lehigh Usiveretty have initiated an excellent scheme of practica instruction. .R. P. Roihwell, C. E. a graduate. 1 of the 'lnstitute' at Troy,' and of the Ecole es Mines, in Paris, has bees appointed Demonst a tor of Practical Mining: He will give a sh rt course of descriptive lectures to the students in mining engineering, ' and then take them to the mines, at intervals during term time, and during the long summer vacation, not only to display the working of-the mines, but, to let them work there under his direction. ; H. Stanley Goodwin, G. E., Assistant Superin-. tendent and Engineer on the Lehigh Valley Rail road,-has likewise been appointed Demonstrator of Civil Engineering, and will, ;after preliminary' instruction by lectures and diagrams, take, the students hi that branch upon the road to see the details of location and construction, the building of bridges and culverts, the loading and unload ing of freight traine, and the methods of keeping railroad - accofetK — Th - ele - - ferin7an — ent,Weky new in collegiate instruction,: of which many etadeute will be glad to avail themselves. • . . . F. L. iiimimitSTON. PAW= PRIDE THAEE'OEN'ITS.' NAUSS AND FANCILY* —The spice of a policeman's ilfe--his mace. --Sword-fish are abundant all along the coast. of Maine. --Thre-atenbrig attitudes that never excite journalists ire—Raidng clubs for newspapers. —Never call on woman when , the,3 , are , absent from home; for they can't bear <to be &mind out. =The advantage of inheriting decal* ' is, that when you are sure of havratz nuttiral affection. —A plenant intoxicatlot: 7 to gel gmai-cornqd. —Ex. • —Dumas is an earbrbird. He goes to bed at four in the morning,. rising at noon. , —Ada Webb's prospective husband has a very enjoyable incoZoe of .5,000 a month. , the ePithet —"A rowdy little qui dnunc, " applied to a Gotham paper. —Leipalc is about to erect a mostuttent b • Mendelasobn. --Apples carried from Boston to-China, peeked In leo, sell at Hong Kong for s2 . a dozen, gold. —"Uniform Curreneyw--the money paid. telo the eoldiem. , • —To puff one's self, In the Chicago obieleet, to "blovlate." —Ben-cured oysters are becoming a , popular article of traffic In California. • —Father Fischer will soon isatte . tho account D Dia.xim.Ulan's, life in Mexico. —The Sing of Denmark haaluvented a lonely of refining coal oil. —Two Vienna editors have lost respectively an eye and a leg in a duel about a young actress.. Verdict, served them right. —A student of Bonn swank eight miles on;- the Rhine in an hour and three-quarters. sea. a. case of Bonny Dorn in the Rhine. —Mrs. Boit Bidden has arrived;. will make a tour of . 'watering placea and appear in Oa- —A , remedy for mosquito bites comes from Paris, and it is to cover the wound with a Mucll ageof gum and water. . —Ban Francisco given four hundred dol lars towards a monument to Fitz Greene Hal leek. < , < —lt is stated in London that Schneider_ , the original Duchess, and Dttprez, the original Fritz,, have received offers of $20,000 each to play a short season in America. —The Margitis Ca= head over eani detit, -- alat it is to meet this state of things that his wife is to remain live years Ipnger on• the stage. , , —Westchester, N. Y. has a fathomless - pond that reaches way to China.. At least, they found a drowned Chinaman there one morning—witli bOX. of Jergey cigars under , his arm. --Grasghoppers are still plaguing iJtab, and horses and children have been poisoned by eat ing gmes and trait that had been! partly con sumed by the insects. • - • —The Prince of Wales lately gave Mlle.Pchnel der, the French nctress, a pair - diamond ear rings' which cost .£l,OOO. Loyal Britlsltere paid, for_them,ami the Prince compWns of being poor ' Jndel Apato of Wilna, Prussia, a Jew w had been feeding at half price three hundred raml;' lies reduced to distress by the famine; has fast died. Ills funeral was attended by twenty thou sand people. —Among the old carbines sent to Sharpe's fac tory in Hartford for transformation, is one in the stock of which an ingenious soldier has inserted ri.oifee mill:- An excellent thing, too; littagella wanted to'grOnnd arm. Connecticht gunner says,he - does not vio late the game He'iily goes mit with his gen ' andidischaiges Itr.wbeli-If the birds fly up net in time to get hit, they virtually commit —Four, large folio volumes, In. manuscript, contairunir he. records of the Pernzzls, the famous Ilerentine bankers of, the early part of the fourteenth century, 'have ititely been dls - covered and are to be published by,a descendant of the bankers. - —The Emperor Napoleon is having an editio of all the literary ternainti of his uncle, the great Napoleon, printed - at the imperial office. -Evetyr thing is chronologically arranged. In the collee. Lion will be twenty-thtte quarto volumes devote& entirely to the letters written . , by,. Bonaparte,. 20,000 in number.. —Although. • , —Although the artesian well which ' Is :going doWn under the direction of kit.'Lotths comity, . Missouri, has obtained a dePtltkof B,Bolect,‘con siderably, tnore than halt" a raffia, tint , a 'mildi quantity of water halt yet been obtained .r r They are boring for• Hong Hong. l l o l 7 .- —The Sanduaky Register ha! the, toliowing-per sonals Blobbs Is doting In Philadeli)hia4 Muggiva bat 9aratoo. Browli is tw ht cafairh, at Nat.!tx , g,lng JOB _ - - • tuna. Jones is writing s'ico;re Atrari.- ean Review. ' • Siibbs is off for Europe. • , Smith is running for Congress. —The pions Empress Eugenie has mate:Ted in introducing bull-fighting into France. AAt , lla.vre. last month the sport was fast and furious, El,ght thousand persons were present. Gonzalo bio.re,in chocolate-colored silk breeches Idabel], with sil ver, was the matadors and picadersabdgaliall4ros were on hand in "untribers. Gonzale fought' the balls froth hand to horii,•elx animals were killed, and' the epectators departed delighted.. The fight are: announced to Continue. , , , • —A western theatrical manager hake knack of "doing " people out of their salary. A young actor - who had joined his company,. ventured after a two weeks' engagement 'to hint that he would like hie.money. - "What!" exclaimed the indignant manager; "you ask me for salary, after the Characters II have given you to play_? The fact is, My Alear sir, the man who Pb l 3's Claude Melnotte and other Ipeers ought not to ex- pest any salary!" Said the. Ilg_htvridated youth,. "but my , board .is clue, and I shallrget --turned-out-boarding-my-ixiardilig-housecand-thertrat le, I have nothing to eat.' “Keepcool, my boyr replied the manager, " blackberries will soon be ripe !". —Speaking of.the comments occasioned by,the'- reception ot, Jeff. Davis in Liverpool, the Rich mond .Examilier relieves itself as follows: - "Ono paper Saywthe-American people have `no objeo lion to his raising another loan,- if he can sue coed in sibtaining the cash.' That's forbearing, very!;Why Should 'Jeff. Davis' bo alloWedlo do any such thing? 'And isn't It a , mark • of; , the extraordinary clemency of the Government that he should be permitted to borrow money ? We shonldn't wonder, It it goes on in' thitirha mane way, if it should in time tender Kr. Davis —Jeff. Davis, so-called-layment for, this handsome property that was Seized; plun dered and confiscated during the war. Who knows?" , t • 7 ; —The following exultant, pathetle and triumphant poem, from. a Washington paper. etandd not be lost to posterity and: tb:e ' grant Glee Clubs: - • , Sing a song ter Sevrtiour And Blair lull °Ergo, Every Tammany 'Wan's Finger in the ple. - When the le is opened, "Seymour, Seymour Wants to be. But never will be king." . Blair in the wigwam, Feeling very . frlaky Full of high ambition (Synonym for whiaky). ' ymour_ont ordoo_m Showing off his clothes. long, comes Eflymes Grant Ancl Dips 4'141 nose.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers