GIBSON PEACOCIC. Editor. VOLUME XXIL-NO. , 151. THE EVENING BULLETIN • Peas LISFIED EVERY EVE:II.I4O, = (Sundays excepted).' AT TILE NED' BULLETIN BUILDING. 007 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. Int VIZ EVEN - LNG BULLETIN ASSOCIATION. ruotittn+rena. GIBSON PEACOCK., GASPER SOMME. Jtc... E. L. FETBERSTON.- TLIOB. J. WILLIAMSON. FRAN OIS WELLS. The Bur.Lzrw smell to enbeeribers ill the city at 18 , cents • • week. • flyable to the carrier,. crr S 8 per annum. AmEnicAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, Of Philadelphia, 13. E. Gamer Fourth and Walnut Eits. 1111/Tkie Institution has no superior in the United MAIL INSURE AGAINST ACCIDENT IN THE TRAVELERS° INSURANCE CO., OF IGULICIFORD, CONN. Assets over - $1,000,000 Persons leaving the city etpeciaily will feel better satlir tied by being Insured. WILL= W. ALLEN, Agent and ittoiney, FORREST BULLRING. 117 smith Fourth Strout, PhllatleWhitt. eet4tuthett VirEDDING CARDS. INVITATIONS VOR PAR- T ties. &c. New styles. MASON A . - P 47 Chestnut street. WEDDING INVITATIONS ENGRAVED „IN THE Newest and be manner. LOUIS DRERA. Sta tioner and Engniver. 1t 3 Chestnnt street. feb `Ol.-tf LEOTARD—PAERER.—On Wednesday. 80th tdt„ by Rev. E. D. Ledyard. of Road._n W. N. Y.. emitted by Rev. D. A. Cumungbam. Mr. Wm. W. Ledyard to Mtas Mary E., daughter of G. S. Parker. Esq., aft of tbb city. • • DIED. CRANE--At Elizabeth. N. J.. September 33th. the Rev. Jame% B. Crane. Funeral win take place from bye late reeldence, at 3 o'clock. bfonday. October Elb. m IB BLN.--On the moraine of the 3d teat., Witham C. MeEtbbin. in the 46th year of file age. QUIRK.—At midnislit, Oct. 2d. Jenne Theodore, only eon of Frederick T. sad Elizabeth M. Quirk, aged 25 years and 4 motrhs. life remains win be conveyed ma &fonder evening . to Greenwood Cemetery. New Yort for intertnent. ROIIIIEB.— On the morning of the Id Init.Mary Louise. wife of Earl Penn Rohrer. ardi daughter of Adeline and the late Alexander lianditon. The relatives and friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend her inners!. from the residence of her mother. 213 South. Eighth etroct. on Monday. sth hut.. at 2 o'clock. • /7 1 _000 ELA CR AND COLORED BILKS. na STOUT BLK. CORDEDSATIti PACE GROGRAM PURPLE AND GILT EDGE. BROWNS AND BLUE GRO GRAIN. MODE COLT' PLAIN EGLICII. anUtf EYRE Az LANDELL, Fonrth and dreb. UELI4ISIIOIIB NOTICES. ST. CLEMENT'S CITE • CH.—THE BISHOP OF S ti r Nebraska will preach on Snnday afternoon •ot 4 o'elock. wigs. REV. J. WALKER. JACKSON. PASTOR M., E. ' 'Church. -Greta street. above Tenth; preaches , to morrow..at 103 , 6 41. M., mud 73 , 1 . ihtsr.• GRACE CIII.7IICR. - TWELPTS. •"'" Service* tomorrow zuocatos WM o'clock. Retiagn Riefics) Carbon. of ficbracks. or. CHURCH OF TM, INTEIWESBOR. SPRING , garden below Broad, Rev. J. W. Benbam i ßector; nß— terries at iox A. M.. and P. IL Subject in tne even aid resp i tof j rnwsem ,,L 4mt ," w i t h po mad • WEST ARCM STREET PRESBYTERIAN' E ar Church, Elchteenth and Arch.L-Preachttut by Paa. tor. Roy. A. IL WUJIta. D. D.., los A. IL and 73 1". Sunday School. 236 ; !diction Sunday School at '2 o'clock. way-TIIIED bert are ll e f O ßMED CHURL!". TENTiI AND Fu Bev. John H. Leggett will preach to-morrow. Service nt DX o'clock morning and 734 o'clock evening. serofßg Square, will preach To-morrow at 1031 A. H. It and M. ST. ALABKI3 EVANGELICAL LETIIERAN Church. Spring Garden street above Thirteenth. Rev.J.A. BunkeArnim, pastor. Services Te-rnorreer a• EGO A. M. and 134 P.M. • It• ServlV AL at oritlfTlbj - ec i t tE ii:" Clinton Straet in the bowels of the earth, lay the foundations of palaces whose strength will en dure for ages, so quietly. deliberately and securely is the work advancing of embanking the Thames with a magnificent promenade and drive of Portland stone that gives the city along the river the same appearance from the bridges that charms travelers in cities on the Continent. It has the effect of the stone-facing or curb of the twenty-five hundred palaces on the Grand Canal in Veuice. Under thisVanbankment are great arches, through which an underground railwayNald in connection with those that already undermine the city in every direction. From Holborn Hill to St. Sepulchre's an im mense bridge is building, that will enable foot passengers, cabs and omnibusses to avoid the steep, muddy streets where drags and breaks hardly suffice to make, driving safe in rainy weather. A series of large sewers, amounting to 185 miles of pipe, is nearly completed, at a cost of four millions of pounds sterling! When all' the scaffolding is taken down,' the barriers re moved and the rubbishcleared away, some of the citizens even, who have accused the Queen of ab sorbing their profits; for her own benefit, will look on these magnificent improvements, and cry "God save the Queen!" with somewhat of, the old eanaestness and satisfaction. "Jus tiCe where jastice, tribute when tribute is due," but God save America from anything but Repub lican Democratic government. The benevolent institutions of England are in numerable; the patience of the people who sup port them is marvelous, they boast of their charities, and groan at their poor rates in the same breath; and while five hundrd and fifty charitable institutions under royal patronage, and hundreds of less note supported by voluntary contribution, open their doors to the wretched and hungry, signals of distress flutter in every quarter of London. France 'and England do more for their poor than any other monarchical governments, but America has no poor. I say it advisedly, that America has no class of people who are necessarily born to poverty. Crime and misfortune reduce individuals and families, in a ll classes of society, to beggary sometimes, but where is the Ameri can girl or boy who corresponds in caste with the English children who live out at service in fami lies where the very children arc their "masters'. and "mistresses," and their wages are less than 'a rag-picker's profits? They are in our factories, stores and public schools,earning a fair and inde 'pendent living. But I am forgetting my subject: Water in Lon don. While I fret over the necessity of so many charitable institutions, and rejoice at the good fortune of the Irish emigrants who find work'and good wages in America, I cannot help being in terested in the institutions called baths and wash houses for the poor, erected as a sanitary measure, to keep off the plague from London. Seventy thousand houses have no supply of water; consequently in every district there are two or three public baths and wash-houses,whbre women and men can bathe lime class (mark the Billy dis- Uuction) in stone tubs, for fourpence, towels, soap and mat for the feet included; or second class in zinc tubs, no mat for the feet, for two pence. In the wash houses each woman is sup plied with a tub, boiler, hot and cold water, a clothes-wringer, hot air chamber where the clothes dry in ten minutes, a mangle and hot irons for three ha'pence an hour l I have seen sixty-two women washing the clothes for. their families, and the offices filled with others waiting with bundles, that would be soon white and clean, while the contagion they might otherwise send through the city, would sink through Ole waste pipes trona each tub into the sewers that run under the city. At every corner of London there is a street fountain, whelre men and boys can quench their thirst, and save the pennies formerly deposited in the tills of the gin shops. Fountains for horses stand in the middle of cross-roads and streets, enabling the carters 'to avoid the hostlers' fee at the corner tavern. At Hyde Parlt,_ in'. the_ Serpentine, eight „hundred -boys plunge and Swim, morning and evening, while a semi-circle of life-boats surrounds them, with. commissioned Officers to: watch, them and pre vent their drowning. sThepoor are net excluded, but urged to, come; and it is a strange ert • to behold troops of bright'elean-faced boys', clothed in rags, Issuing from the gates of Hyde. Park at the hour when Fashion, wearied with pleasure, rolls in her carriage from the ;setae gateway, clothed in purple arid fine linen. ' There is an anomaly in the government and, institutions of all foreign cities, but most of all In London. Is it because the people call more loudly for their rights, and the Government hearing them alutches the crown with firtner grasp? ' . , UTTER 111101% AULUSEILIAJES• iCorreipondence of tho Philo. Evening :8111,10111..3 Vang&ILLICS, Sept. 16th, 1866..;- . -It la announced from Florence that the Government of the King-- of Italy have come to the deterMination td - adop vigorous measures for the restoration, of,'publi order, pnd for the repression of tito crimes wide OUR WHOLE COUNTRY. have lately been of frequent 'occurrence, in the Romagna. This is truly the case of saying "bet ter, late than never." It would be- idle to specu late as to what connection there may be between this resolution and the recently accepted resigna tion of Mr. Cadorna of his place at the head of, the Home Office. The portfolio of the Interior has been temporarily intrusted to the hands of Count Cantelli, the Minister for Public Works, and nothing is said about the 'definitive nomina tion of Mr. Cadonia's successor. But, what ever importance may be attached to this partial modification of the Cabinet in its political bearings, there is little doubt as to the beneficial results the change must have towards strengthening the admitilstration. The Home Minister in Italy is nothing it he be not a great politician, and Mr. Cadorna, although a politician of the Cavour school and • a man of irreproachable character, is now an old man, and can hardly he expected to display late in IM-1 xn energy for which men never gave him credit in his better days. Moreover, he had bound him self before Parliament not to overstep the limits of legality, and he could, therefore, hardly have had a hand in the recent decree which appointit General Escoliter as Military Commander at Ra vens, authorizing him at the same time to dis charge the functions of Prefect, or Civil Gover nor, and to resort to, stringent military measure 4 whenever the public, safety should appear to be endangered. In Romagna, as in Sicily, it has been found necessary to concentrate all powers in the same hand, and martial law 'can in both these provinces at any moment suPercede the Constitution. No rational man could wish it to be otherwise. The first law of existence for a State is public se curity, and to it freedom itself must be sacrificed till such time as freedom is so organized as to constitute the soundest basis of security. The repression of crime is for Italy a matter of honor as well as of well-being; for—it would be vain to deny it—that country hasa bad name in that re spect among its neighbors. It is simply outra geous to couple the epithet of "assassin" with the name of "Italian," as it has hte.n lately by a somewhat loose spoken member of the British Parliament It is outrageous to call the Peninsula the "Italia del Ladri, 'as is customary . with some clerical papers which can never forgive the happy events which have restored Italy to the Itali ans. But it is impossible to blind one self to the fact that the statistics of crime, as published monthly by the staff of the Royal Carabiniers, or gendarmerie, give results which do not bear even the,remotest proportion to the analogous documents issued by oilier Eu ropean States. It may, indeed, flatly be denied that the Papal city and territory are that oasis in the Italian wilderness which Monsigneur Tal bot or Sir George Bowyer is fain to describe, or that matters In the new kingdom are any worse than they were under the role of former princes. But the friends of the National cause expected improvement to set in with the new political life, and Ills a meagre consolation to them to hear it said that emancipated Italy is, in respect of crime, only no worse off than was enslaved taly. Note little of the evil, especially for what con cerns crime against the person springsfrom what is called the "bad blood"' of 'the people—from their passionate, jealons,revengeftil temperament.. The knife has been at all times the bane of Italian life, and it is questionable whether any exertion of the public force will ever have power to snatch from the Italian's hand what has been not unjustly designated as the national weapon. Still it remains to be seen whether the people have not been rather encouraged to than deterred from the use, of the knife. A set of soft headed rather than soft-hearted public men haVe sprung up in that • country, who look ,to jzdidness of legislation and leniency of punts . matt as invaluable specifics for the repression of crime. Morbid and mawkish Tuscan "philanthropy." as it is called,. has al ready Succeeded in pulling down the 'gallows throughout the territory of the former Grand Dechy,and aided by senseless Neapolitan clamor, it is now storming the doors of the National Par liament to obtain, in favor of the whole-Penin sula, the same immunity from the eternal law that "blood must atone for blood." The male factor in Florence is free to follow the bent of his worst passions, with perfect confidence that, happen what may, he will never coma to be hanged; and it is scarcely otherwise in the re maiming provinces,where capital punishment has nut been actually abolished, but where it is virtually evaded in almost every instance, either owing to some outburst of "humanitarian' tenderness of the jury, or to some crotchetty quibble of the magistrate; to craving for popia 'Laity, or else to abject dread of private revenge, ac dug with the same force upon all persons con meted with the prosecution, conviction and punishment of the most desperate offenders. And he who has managed to cheat the hangman has little cause for uneasiness as to any other penalty: for the fatal insenrity of gaols and bagnios, the in credible carelessness or corruption of the agents of the public force, have engendered contempt icr an imprisonment to which it seems as if u..budy need subject himself for a longer period 1.1 .in may snit his own inclination or convenience. 1! r. Peabody's Intended Residence in Hungary. According to the Vienna correspondent of the Post, Mr: George Peabody , the phPn throplst, is about to reside, part of next year, in the Hunga rian capital, and has commissioned an agent to purchase an estate for him at kprice not exceed ing 200,000 florins. On this estate he will build a large steam mill, in which only grain for export is to be converted into flour. It is said that Mr. Pt abody felt so attracted by the famous Hunga rian patriot Francis Deak, that ho entered into correspondence with him, and did not take the resolution to become a landed proprietor of Hungary until he had asked M. Deak's adviee;on the subject. The Austrian Army. The Memorial Diplomatigue says: \Valle the King of Prussia Is, employing his days in passing reviews and having executed new manwavres by the troops incorporated in the F( ceral army of North Germany, and ranged tu der his supreme command, Austria, on her site, is laboring actively in the reorganization of h' r forces. 'General Kuhn, Minister of War for the Empire, is making a tour of inspection, and everywhere on his passage the soldiers have been pat through grand military exercises. On his return from Bohemia he expressed to Gen. Gab lentz his great satisfaction, asserting the men ho bad seen equld. be regarded as picked troops ui surpassed on any point by the best of other cc untries. The Progress of France louder the Em pire. The Reveil publishes some curious statistics re, ative to the French Empire. It appears that the, salary, paid by_ Franco to Napoleon 111. in 15 wars is more by 4'7,Boo,ooo — than was paid to Emg LOUIS Philippe during the same number of years. Tife amount of donations, which in 18b2 was £400,000, amounted in 1866 to £920,000. The interest of the public debt in 1814 was about .£l4,- 500,000; in 1866 it . was -.Z over 26,000,000. The total of the civil list .donations and interest of public debt during the first lb yea of the Go vernment of 'July :was; in round numbers, 000,000; during the first 15 , years of Imperial re gime, £364,000,000; showing 'an increase of ex penditUrti lufavor of the Empire of £111,000,000. Frestich• Occupation of Rome. A correspondent writes: - This, more than anything else `since , the cac ciuta or expulaion•of theAustrlans, has been the source of trouble and/•difilenitles on all sides in the peninsula.' • The occupation of the city of Rome by• the -Finpertes - troops has lasted now nineteen years., and is likely ' , to , ,endure a good while yet through the powerful influence of tha French, elergY: Monarchists. and republi-' cans in Italy shout "'Rome for capital V' and the masses earnestly loin in the cry. The 're peated demands for a withdta wal of the troops are pointedly met by Officious and oftlelal statements • in the organs at raris•that as the Italian Govern- Ment has once folio:I-to .obstkve the treaty made --E D.' D. W. AUSTRIA. FRANCE. with France in regard to 'the' inviolability of the" Pupal domain when the troops were recently Withdrawb It cannot be trusted in a like manner again. It is certain that but for the very, timely turning up of French soldiers at Mentana tait, fall the Garibaldians, impelled by the national hankering' after. unity, would have played havoc with his holiness. Besides this Owe Irregularity on the part of 'the lindens, lc can scarcely be expected that the Enaperor will consent to withdraw his foothold from Italian soil when his relations with Prussia are so threat ening, and when the land of Plattorl and Orsbii is solavishingly coquetting with Count Bismarck. What between this question ofthe occupation of Rome, the bitter jealousies growing out of it, and the charge ot ingratitude cast into their face from France, "the Frenchman" is almost as odious to-day among Italians as was only lately "the Austrians." ITALY. New Meister to Mexico. FLonancx,, Oct. 2, 180.—Signor Bcovasso, pre- Fent Consul General at Belgrade, has been ap pointed as a diplomatic representative of Italy to the Mexican republic. Blgnorpcovasso has been empowered by hbt caovernment to act, for France at the Mexican cpital. ECIYIPT• The Attempt on she Life of the Viceroy . LcorDm, Oct. 2, - iB6B.—Advices from Cairo confirm the. report—telegraphed from Alexan dria yesterday—that there was a futile attempt to kill the Viceroy recently by an unknown per son. The assassin threw a murderous missile at the Viceroy from the roof of a building, but, missing his mark, made his escape. • TURKEY. Seizure of an American Citizen. A correspondent writes from the Dardanelles:' "The American Captain - of the port at 13c10, an Hellenic subject, has been sent up here under , oarrest by Ahmet Salserli Pasha., Governor of that island, for alleged share in the recent riot on the occasion of the rejoicings for the birth of the young Greek Prince. The man is said to have protested on the double , ground of his nationality and his American office, but neither availed him, and he is now a prisoner in the fortress. It remains to be seen what steps the American 'and Greek Min isters will take under the circumstances." We are able to answer the suggested query of our correspondent. On receiving the news Mr. Mor ris promptly demanded satisfaction from the Porte, claiming the man's immediate release, his conveyance back to Selo in a Turkish man-of war, and an apology from the Pasha to the Ame rican Consul. We have reason to believe that the incident has already induced a visit of Ad miral Ferrant i in the Franklin, to the island. Important Ceremonies In Hone; A correspondent at Rome writes: A consistory will be held at the end of this month. The Pope will then give the red bat to Cardinals Biagi and Ferrier', who were absent from Rome when promoted. The form of the oath taken by. the Cardinale on receiving their hats is Most extraordinaw. "Promitis defenders fidera usgue; ad sanguirie3 dusione ad inclusive"! is the question put by the Pope, and answered affirmatively, of course. Observe "Inclusive" included, which has been added, that there may be no mistake as to the interpretation given to the question. Betbre this ceremony there is another. In the presence of the College of. Cardinals the recipi ent must promise to defend the temporal power of the Pope and shed his blood In the cause if. necessary. Cardinal Pentini, created five years ago, added, "Hit be for the good of the Church." It seems that in the evening at his reception he had a perfect ovation in consequence. I am as sured that in this consistory-there will be no new cardinals made, nor will the Pope make an allo cution; at least it will be one of no political im portance. Curious Will of L!.lllonium 13aMono Prelate The Continental (Europe) Papers are publish ing a curious document, purporting to be the late Cardinal d'Andrea's last will and testament. The following is a translation : NAPLIIS, April 12, 1868.—1 trust very shortly, on the cessation of the ill-advised displeasure conceived against me by Pope Pitui IX. for the fri volous reasons now notorious to the whole world, to be able to return to Rome, my usual place of residence. Our difference is wholly unconnected with religious matters, being a more question of punctilio. If right were might the cause would be mine, but where might is right the victory is on the side of the Pope, who, during the severe illness with which I was afilicted,presumed to act as my pbysician,and because I chose rather to be guided by my medical advisers, subjected me to a most discourteous, treacherous and immoral persecu tion. I distinguish between John Baptist Mosta and the Pontiff Pius; but the Pontiff, retaining the nature of Mastal, is liable to error; and, in fact, through natural infirmity the Pope has erred in childishly allowing himself to be the dupe of Cardinal James Antonelli, of Pa triza, an Ignorant and ambitions ascetic and a mean-souled courtier: and, lastly, by that notorl ous scoundrel, Prospero Caterino, of Arnano, In the district of Aequapendente, province of Vi terbo. lam a better Catholic than Pius IX., who at the commencement of his Pontificate, and after wards, committed various acts not consistent with Catholicism. In my present uncertainty whether I shall be able to revisit Rome I hereby make a rough draft of my will and testament, in the hope of being able to revise it by and by after mature conside ration. I. In the first place, then, I appoint as my heir general my excellent and pious first-born brother, the Marquis Francis Xavier (The following clauses, from the second to the seventh,refer to thelegacles to various frlends,in eluding Passaglia, Modesti, &c., and to relatives and servants of the testor). 8• To certain charitable institutions in Rome I bequeath the sum prescribed by law whenever a will is made. The plate and the sacred utensils' belonging to my chapel are to be divided among various churches according to the note which I intend to prepare for this purpose. Should no note be found, a part is to be given to. the chapel of St. Januarins, in Naples—namely, the chest of gilt silver plate to St. Jannarius, the two remaining portions to .be shared between Sabine() and Sa bina. 10. My white richly embroidered cope to Si. Mary of Constantinople, the red cope to St . Agnes. 11. Five hundred masses for my soul, which I recommend to the infinite mercy of God, the Blessed Virgin, and of all the angels and saints In Paradise. 12. To the. Holy Father,_to the cardinals _and prelates, and to all my other enemies, my sincere and full pardon. JEROIIE CARD. D'Arrem, Bishop of Sabina and perpetual commendatory of Subiaco. THEATRES. Etc,:: AT Tin WALNUT, this evening, Mrs. Lander will aP pear in Mrs. liemble's translation of Nary Stuart. On Monday she will appear in Marie Antoinette., AT THE Ahou, tonight. the splendidly successful comedy week will close with The Belle's Stratagem. and The Willow Copse. On Monday Letts will -so pear in Little Nell. .AT THE ArtaitlOA/1, this evening„ a miscellaneous performanCe will be ff * - AT THE CIIESTEITT, this evening, Mlle. Betake will have a benetlt, _when the romantic drama Umbras will be given for the last time. on Monday, Boncicanit's version of Foul Plat/ will be producedmitls the:original cast from the Broadway 'Theatre, New York. We are unwed that this play will be produced in unusually splendid style, with handiome scenic effects, and the strictest attention to detail. The_ actors it already have established reputations in the several parts, and the. prolonged run of the piece in New, Yerk.under their auspices, ie a vertu:ace that it will ILA favor hcr.e. F. L. MMSTON. Pahl skier PRICE THREE CENTS FACTIS AND C&Pite/LEB. —some real or forged Davenport Brothers tun juggling in Toledo. ••'• • —A little girl in Ohio is in trouble from having swallowed a hoop skirt, or part of one. • —Tennyson t . Will print • Ida longest poem yet b,:fere the end of the year. • —The Spanish actress Civili •is announced in Havana. —Jean Ingelow's father is a highly solvent ban- —Prince , Dolgorouskoff recently died of—his name, perhaps. —Engel, tho artist, has returned front Germany to Albany, and plies an industrious brush, —The Lanterne is printed in Bross& on thin raper. in miniature type, and smuggled into -France in watchcases. • • • —A tight rope performer named Murphy, reit from his rope to the ground, in Ohio, and neartf.", killed blniowlf. • , —Bishop Davis, of South parolina, Bar con ferred holy orders upon the late confederate Brig.-Gen. Capers., • • • —A. New Ham young married man Watt Oa 1. pleased at becoming a father, that he galloped through a Ilsh• store, and was sent to jail —Anthony Trollope's new novel, . 4 ' He • Kiew He was . Right," has been begu day. n in Every fistar - —Gen. Rousseau has been putting on Amt.— 'as Assistant Inspector-General of his d.epart- , ment. , '—An undertaker in Utica had to bury one or his debtors. He got him snugly into' the grave, but refused to fill in the earth until the weephig 'family settled the claim which they did. = —The father of four o f the assassins 'of Prince Michael is_roaming about Hungary, unable to find a town or city that will allow him a real-. deuce. • „ —Secret marriages are so common In an Ohio town that the young women can't get beaux. Every man is afraid of courting some other moles —General de Trobriand's work on the Amerl. can war has been very successful in Paris. Three large, editions of It have been exhausted, and Michael Levy, the great Parisian publisher, has made arrangements with the General for the publication of another workon the affairs of the United States, which M. de Trobriand is writing. —Hortense Schneider denies that she made such exorbitant demands that American manegers had to desist from engaging her. She says .that no fair• offer was ever .made to her en the Tart of those gentlemen, ands that it would be foolish In her to be satisfied with the earn halary which they pay to her second and third-rater imitators. • —One of the certificates of death received at the Board of Health of New York ,lately, con tained the following original, statement of „the ,cause of the patient's death :, "In a word,epasia brought on from eokulinhad into. the stomach." The address of the 'physician making, the retgra was given'as "Avenue Bee," which makes his or thography less surprising. —Jacob van Lennep is to have a monument. He was one of,the most indrultrions and brilliant of modern Dutch writers; and one, or two of his tales, of which ko wrote a vast number, are well known in England : through translations.;ln re- turn, he translated into Dutch some of Shake speare's playa, and certain seleetiona from mod ern English poet& .He was born, in 1802; he died. on the 26th of last, month. Democracy dies to day, and is laid out cold by the Boys in„lllne. —The Count of Girgenti; brother of the ex - - King of 'Naples, and son of King Bombs, about whose reception atFontrdnebleau the French pa pers have made so much noise, is a pale, dark haired, thin-faced young man, of bashful mut ners, and not very prepossessing in appearance: He was the favorite son of his cruel and treacher ous, father, and is said to possess a great deal more energy than his royal brother, who seems to care more about card-playing than politics and diplomacy. . —ln Sweadish Lapland one single parish Moffett - as large as some Mngdoms. That of Galllvarei for instance, contains three hundred • and; fifty two square miles. Many of • the inhabitants live at such a distance from their church that> they: are obliged to start on the Thursday to•attend divine service on the Sunday. Thus the complete Liturgy is only celebrated once a month. Ther congregation is then always most numerous.' On these occasions the affairs of the world are also' brought under consideration, arrangements, are made, purchases are concluded; In fact, a species of fair is held. • —An aerial ascent was made last month by WE' ie Fonvielle and Tissandier from the Conserva toire des, Arts et Diallers,' in Paris, in . the 'Nep tune, directed by M. Duruef. The balloon; ' started from Paris at a quarter past twelve, Made a most perilous descent at five o'clock; near Ara nay (Orne), about one hundred and•twenty Miles • ' distant. 'i'he silk burst when at a great height, ' • and all came down rapidly. Fortunately the torn stuff acted in some measure as a parachute; and broke the violence of the shock. The car:, , fell heavily, and was overturned above the voy agers, but they were happily able is extrleate themselves without any injury. • • —Tn French Governraent circles Villemeisant • is held principally responsible ,for ,the etiecess, achieved by the Lanterns, and :the trorible which it has caused to the GovernmenL 'When Finard; sent for Villemeastmt a year ago, and ordered ' him to discharge Rochefort from the staff ofthe, Figaro, he said, to the minister, , "Your Mud- • know ' M. ;de ••, Rochefort like a book. He will revenge - himself - en you. Reis one of the ablest young journalists Nee have; and he never 'forgives hie enemies.'! "Bah," said - Pinard, - "we are not - afrfddef, hire:" , "I will discharge him' because I cannot• help' it," - said Villemessant; "but; I repeat it,,you' will, re gret this step." Pinard says , now , t,hat the sue cees of the Lanterns was due no less to 'Villemes pant's clever management than to Rochefort's pungent attacks. Villemessant cleared one hun dred thousand francs by the'sale of the first ten • numbers of, the Lanterns. The following nurilleers have beim printed at Itochefort's own , , expense. . , —Mere are some choice extracts from No. 14, of Rochefort's Lanterns, pubilahed at • Brussels: Ronlaud, an ex-Minister of Louis Napoleon, aud-now a member of the Council of State, and a Senator of France, said the other day, at this opening of the proceedings of his Conseil general: `The imperial family represent, in the eyes of all good. Frenchmen, a glorious trinity of genius, hope and mercy. The flunkey who uttered these words, than which the annals of, the .most= degraded times of the Roman Empire contain. nothing more sycophantic and fulsome, wants us. . to understand that genius is represented by the ; Emperor, hope by his dull and, sickly boy, said • mercy by that daei passee who can not forget , ' that ebe was once good-looking, and who never , bears in Mind that she is between forty and fifty , years old. Calling the • Emperor, a genius has -got tromewbat_OuLoLiashion.oflatc,ithollghl2o:L,. one but a genius of a peculiar description could., -Lave-got-France into --her- present -predietiment. TT -- M. Roultind, pray ask M, Thiers what he"thinktt; of the imperial genius,"—"M. DeLordhas put itia countrymen under obligations to' publluhing the Interesting episode - ft - 4am the ,life Louis of Holland, from which we sec that that good* king, by the grace of Napoleon the, Rust, xas, exceedingly_ansions_to _get_tr.:_divorce- from his---; ; - young wife. Hortense, 'in ISQS a few days after she had given birth to a son,. ,'Why did ho want -• to get that divorce just then? Why did_ he not rather rejoice over the birth or a son and an , heir?" .* * "M. l'hiard receives one -hundred, thousand francs a year for the services which he renders his imperial master. He is entitled to a much larger sum at , our bands forlthe services which he has rendered to.LaZaaterne." * 'na poleon, they say, looks unusually . pale. Pitt anybody Mention the name of the .Count in his prestnce?"—"ld. .de ,Glrardin - asks the Emperor to declati war against Prussia. Fain appeal!-.Be dare .not fight them, and to wonder. Success, will not .do him much good—a failure might cost him his neck ."-" M. - fiardou reports that , ho was recently assailed by three of the moat .desperate men to be found in or, around Were , his aseallanta, then, judges- of the Bixtia • - Chamber?" -