-GIBSON, PEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME XXII.-NO. 167. THE EVENING BULLETIN PITELISIIED EVERY EVENING, (Sundays excepted). /LT THE NEW BULLETIN BUILDING. 607 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. TIT TILE EVENINQ BULLETIN ASSOCIATION, PII.OIT.IETOLA GIBSON PEACOCK. CASPER SOLDER. Ja.. F. L. FETEIERSTON, THOS. J. WILLJAHSON, FRANCIS WELLS. The Ettrusrus is served to subscribers In the city at 18 • nth week. .ayable to the carriers. or A 8 per annum. AMERICAN LIFE , INSURANCE COMPANY, Of Philadelphia, 8. F. Corner Fourth aaid,Walnut Ste. or This Institution has no superior in the United State. Eny2l.tf4 - INSURE AGAINST ACCIDENT 119 TICE TRAVELERS• INSURANCE CO., OF 1:1111R1 FORD, CONE. Assets over - • $1,000,000 Persons leaving the city especially will feel better eatir 'Ded by being insured. WILLIAAIW. ALLEN, Agent and Attorney, FORREST BUILDING, 117 South Fourth Street. ge2. 4 . tn th • tt WEDDING CARDS. I3.:ITITATIONS FOR PAR, tbs. itc. New styles. MAHON & CO., eu2Stit fO7 Chestnut street. fly ED DIN 0 INVITATIONS ENGRAVED IN THE TV Newmt and best manner. LOUIS DREKA. Sta• Uoner and Engraver. LtKi Cheetnut street. feb20.1.1 V . •••1 OP •VI • V(' LESTER—BOWMAN.—In St. Stephen's Church. Wilkesharre. October 15. by the Rt. Rev. T. IL Yell, of Komar, assist d by the Bev.Williamson, Brevet Brigadiectienoral )l. D. htcAlester, U. S. Corps of Engi neers. to Louise. second daughter of the late Colonel A. It. Bowman. PRINCE BAILEIL-In Now York. October Met, at the Church of the Hay Communion.by the Rev Wm. A. Muh. lenbere assisted by the Rev, J H. Waterbury. the Rev. Isaac Prince to Edith aperry, eldest daughter of Jos. A. li•ker. Erti.. of Brooklyn, E TARP, -isAtX)N.-Ou the Hat imt.., at St. Epirctpal Church. by Rev. Wm. J. Clark.. Horace G. H. 'lett. of R.I. t on, Pa.. to "'gees Thomas, daueiter of Mae. W. Baum , of Philadelphia. 'ißtitTc.R.-JAtliidON—ln New York. Oct. 21st. by tho Arr. Phillips Brooke. Wm. Trotter Jr„ to Lucy 8., daughter of the hes Henry F. Jackson. of Baltimore. • F:A V.LII-31...IliTiti011 --On the evening of Tuesday. 30th lust- by the Rev J. W. Claxton, Edwin C. Weaver to Jono e, daughter of Mr. John H. McFetrich. all of Philad3lptda. DILL. BP.OWN.—At Lake Como. Mont-pot*, on the afternoon of •be Mb font, Slary J , 3 oungeat daughter of William }trout). Due notice will be given of the funeral. tfp Stil:Deß.—On Wednesday, e.ctober 2lst, Casper Bon der. Jr.. In the 49th year of his age. bin relatives and male friends are Invited to attend his funeral trran his late residence, 879 North neventh etreet, r.e esti rday, at 1 o'c.be k P. M. W EL CLL—October Mary Libbie. eldest daughter of John C. and Jiary X. Welch. Due notice will be given of the funeraL It OOD BLACK AND COLORED RILES. IPIOGTIILIC. CORDED SATIN FACE GRO GRAIN. PURPLE AND GILT EDGE. 135.0WN8 AND BLUE GRO GRAIN. MOPE COL'D PLAIN 1311.K.8. atILVU EYRS Ac LANDELL. Fourth and Arch. seir.usat. feOTIOEA. itiSr HALL OF YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOGIATOIN, 1310 CHESTNUT Street, I'IBLE STUDY THIS EVENING._ at S o'clock. SubIect—DESTRUCTIuN OF BABYLON. TO be conducted by Hon. W M. S. PEIRCE. I'nlon Prayer Meeting every SATURDAY EVENING. Young men cordially invited. RI air NOTICE—APPLICATION WILL BE MADE TO the Chief Coma/Wiener of liiihweye,at hie °Ric.° Fifth etc, et below Chestnut. on SATURDAY October 94, 'MS.-at 12 o'clock H., for a contract to nave Somerset et.. between Haverford street and Mary street, in the Twen ty-fourth Ward. Parties intereeted desiring to be present can do so at that t.me and place. MICHAEL CUNNINGI I AM, DANIEL MoNIOHOL. It' Contractor& THE FIFTY-THIRD ANNIVERSARY OF THE li g ir Sunday School of the First Baptist Church, Broad and Arch sneer/a. will be held THIS EVENING. at half. part seven o'clock. It ger zoimorage!tOSDiaperiAki,Nt,plslB4tDa3- cal treatment and medicine fartdahea gratuitously to the poor. mar NEWSPAPERS, BOWIS,PAMPHLETS, WAS' paper, Lt.c., bougnt by E. HUNTEEL No. 613 Jayne street. DIVIDEND NOTICES. sor OFFICE CATAWISSA RAILROAD COMPANY, No. 424 WALNUT etreet. Permarmum I A. Oct. D 3, PM. The Board of Directors of this Company have declared a dividend of Three per cent. on account of the dividends due toe preferred stockholders. payable on the sth of No vember next to those persons in whore name the stock rtands at the close of the transfer hooka. The transfer hooka of tbe Prefernd Stock wili be closed on the 316 t c f October and reopened on the 6th of No vember. NV. L. GILROY, ocalw a m-tnaN,c CRIME. DIMING ROBBERY IN NEW YORK. Larceny of $6,000 Worth of Wearing Apparel—A Portion of it ftecovered. A robbery that for daring has few parallels in the history of New York criminal affairs took place yesterday afternoon, on a crowded street in broad daylight. It appears that at four o'clock yesterday afternoon, the family of Mr. Black, of the firm of Ball & Black, jewellers, Broadway % returned from their country seat and proceeded to their residence No. 2 Forty-eighth street, de spatched the drayman of the firm for fourteen pieces of baggage that they had left at the depot. The drayman obtained the baggage, and pass ing by the establishment on Broadway left the wagon and horse on the street in the rear while he ran to obtain the assistance of one of the por ters in removing the trunks to Mr. Ball's resi dence. On his return, after a minute's absence, to his horror he discovered that the horse, wagon and trunks had been stolen. Re learned that three men had been seen driving the property up Mercer street. The Superintendent of Police was promptly informed of the robbery, and in a few minutes the entire force of the city were on the qui dire. The thieves; it seems, drove up town, and one of them, taking charge of the horse, wagon, and contents, proceeded to an ice dealer on the corner of Ninth avenue and Forty-fourth street, and requested permission to deposit the trunks with him. Leaving four of the trunks and a large tin box the man departed, promising to call for them. With the balance of the property he proceeded to some point farther up (own, where he disposed of all his load ex cepting one piece, which he abandoned on the corner of Seventy-second strbet - and Broadway, together with the horse and wagon, which were found by the police. Later in the evening, about eight o'clock, while officer Rose, of the Twenty-second precinct, was waiting at the fence on Ninth avenue where the trunks had been deposited for the return of the thieves, a man whom he supposed to be an em ploye of Ball Black drove up in charge of a horse and wagon. Seeing the officer approach ing, the driver jumped out of the wagon and made his escape. The horse and wagon is still in the hands of the police. The property is said to be worth $6,000, only a portion of which bed been recovered at mid night,up to which time no arrestshad been made, but it is more than probable that some of them will be secured. The exact value of the property still missing was not ascertained.—Herald to-day. —ln the prison at Bonrges, France, is a prison er aged about forty, who has never done a day's work. and is now undergoing his eighth sentence for begging. He has tattooed on his right arm this summary of his view of existence: "The Past has deceived me; the Present torments me, the Future terrifies me." EI7E(.3PEAIi AFFAIRS The Spanish Revolution—The Fate of the Bourbons Settled The over. throw of an Ellete Government %Le French Government Freels In a Had Iluitnor—Sapoleon Trying to sit on Iwo Stools—AL Charming Lot of Royal ricpockete In Paris. ;Correspondence of the Philadelphia Evening Bulletin.l PARIS, Friday, October 9th, 1868. Spain has always been designated, par excel lence, as the Land of Romance; and, truly, noth ing could tend more effectually to keep up her character than the romance of politics of which the first act has just been played out on the other side of the Pyrenees. At the very moment at which . that poor miserable Illustration of a worn out rasa and an effete system, Queen Isar- Nile, is "protesting," with a shriek which is affecting only because it does come from a woman—that a throne of fifteen centuries, more or lese,is not to be upset in forty eight hours—at the very moment she is with at her might protesting against the possi bility of this, as a fact, the thing is done ! The throne Is upset, and,by universal assent, so upset that happen what may, it is never likely to beset up again. However dark and obscure the future of Spain may be in other respects—and dark and obscure enough it is, Heaven knows—it is agreed nem. con. that the fate of the Bourbons and the old monarchy Is sealed irrevocably, however dif ficult may be the task of substituting anything else in their place. Never was the uprising of a a bolo people so complete. Never was the cry of agony and shame wrung from the national voice so unanimous,loud and unmistak able. In point of fact, the whole Spanish Rev .olation—for insurrection it can be called no longer—may be summed up in four words : A has les Bourbons Therein lay the strength of the leaders of the re. hellion, and therein rest for the moment the re sults of the rebellion itself. For the future. ad the poUrra! Come what, come may, let us only first get rid of a government and a sovereign whose very existence was a disgrace at home and a scorn abroad, and we will, as Macbeth said, "leap the life to come !" We will stand all risks and hazardsof the future and the unknown,to be quit of the unbearable contumely of the present and the known. Such Is the voice of Spain from the Pillars of Hercules to the Gulf of Biscay, from Catalan to Castile. If there be anything which inspires hope for Spanish re generation, it is this unanimity in protesting against national disgrace, and this exhibition of a people capable at least of being still stung to the quick by being thus made a spectacle and a laughing stock to gods and men. To be ruled by such a woman and such a government was too much even for Spaniards. And it will not do to look at what has happened in Spain merely from an American point of view. The downfall of such a state of things as previously existed will appear to Americans, perhaps, as at once a most natural and inevitable event. Not so with Spaniards ; at least with the mass of the nation. What is called " loyalty "is witn them a sort of creed, rooted by centuries into• their dis position and character, and almost wholly irre spective of the person for whom it is entertained or the conduct of that person. Then, again, their religion, or more properly speaking, superstition, pointed in the same direction, and Queen Isabella was still also Isabella the Catholic in the eyes of the vast bulk of the population. Both these long-rooted prejudices had to be overcome and violated before Spaniards could act as they have just done, and that such feelings have been s< t aside la the best proof at once of the excess of provocation which must have been offered to them, and also, as I have said, that it is still possible for Spaniards to be aroused and see through the middle-age mist and darkness in which they have so long slumbered. The government here and the government press con tinue,in a sort of sulky underhand way, to manifest their ill-humor at the above events. The Constitutionnel, for Instance, the other day, insists that "every one must agree" with that passage in Queen Isabella's protest, in which she inveighs against the "disloyalty and treachery" of which she has been the victim ! No doubt the sudden falling away of the royal troops, of whose "fidelity" we at first heard so much,ruid their fra ternization with the people, are incidents which have caused some quaking here in high places. Such examples have a strong tendency to propagate themselves ; and, moreover, they demonstrate very alarmingly the fact that when an army feels itself opposed face to face against the wishes of the nation, its moral strength is gone, however strong under other circumstances Treasurer. 0 ...111 iii I u I • 111 I r I I•c i I IC on y. It is amusing, again, to read in the Mon iteur of this morning the curt announcement that "a considerable crowd collected to witness General Prim's entrance into Madrid," at a moment when the Havas Agency, whose tongue bas been unloosed, telegraphs of the same event, that "it impossible to describe the phrensied enthusiasm of the population;" that "the multi tude was immense; nothing like it had ever been seen; all the city was ,afoot; army_marine u and national guards escorted the General; four hours were required to traverse the streets; French, Italian, and Swiss deputations were arriving on every side, &c." Rather different, all this, from the "considerable crowd" of the French offi cial mouthpiece! The Emperor is said to be expected here on Monday next. There is' evidently "distress of nations and perplexity" in the Council of Biarritz. As usual, of late, Louis Napoleon is trying again to sit between two stools, and will probably again come to the ground between the Spanish nation and Queen Isabella. - We are at present favored with the presence on French soil of two pretenders to the vacant throne. Don Carlos, just raised to that ques tionable dignity by the "solemn abdication of his right" efig contains _this -para " "oltaire, in his tale of li Candide," describes the surprise of his hero, who, on dining with six respectable-looking strangers, discovered that they were all ox-kings. But Candide'e_dethroned sovereigns were insignificant both in number and position compared to those who are wandering over Europe at the present moment. Of those mentioned by - Voltaire, one was the son of the Stuart Pretender; another, a Russian Prince set aside in the cradle; a third. the momentary King of Corsica, and so on. Bat even an imperfect list of the discarded or disinherited sovereigns of our day would contain names incomparably more notable. To say nothing of mere heirs to - royalty, such as the Comte de Chambord, the Comte de Paris, the Count de Montemolin, agd the fattier of the Em peror of Austria, we havd the two ex-Queens o ;sp il l '' , the ex-Pings of Holland,- of—Naples, o Greece, and till recently of Bavaria also, the ox King of Hanover, the banished Grand Duke of Tuscany, besides a host of minor dukes and electors; once regnant in Italy and Germany, quos ,iunc describero longum est. In fact, the whole Continent is filled with living warnings to un worthy royalty, and roaming memorials of the instability of human greatness." OUR WHOLE COUNTRY. The Lucky Coburg.. The Pall Mall Gazette says: "The good fortune of the "lucky Coburgs" Is not yet perhaps ex hausted. By marriages more prosperous than those of the Hapsburg princes, or by popular choice, they have come into possession of three European thrones, and have allied themselves closely with at least as many more. And now it is quite on the cards that the crown of Isabel the Second may fall to one of the offshoots of the little German principality. At least, the three candidates for the vacant place of the last Boar bon who are supposed to be most popular at Madrid are all of them Coburg°. Dom Luis of Portugal, Leopold IL of Belgium, and the Duke of Edinburgh are the favorites for the "Queen's Plato" at the Spanish Autumn Meeting; it re mains to be seen whether the Coburg stock will add another triumph to its record." The Rebellion in Turkey. The latest English journals express the opinion that the discovery of a plot to depose the Sultan of Turkey may lead to most important results. The participation of the presumptive heir may be made, it is said, a pretext for changing the order of succession, and the arrest of a kusaian subject may provoke a conflict between the Sublime Porte and the Cabinet of St. Petersburg. A special mall telegram from Madrid of the sth instant reports,that Admiral Farragut will soon sail for the United States. Programme of the Democracy—Talk of a Change of Candidates all Blown Over—The "Intelligencer” Is Brought to Its Knees Before Seymour—What the Baltimore “Sun” Thinks of the 6 fibllght Onpleasaillness” to Railway Passengers Through Baltimore—De fence of Rosvdyism—A School-hoase Named After thei‘Great Commoner,” (Correspondence of the PhilsiEvening Bulletin]. WASIIISInTOZir, Oct. 21, 1868.—1 f any of your readers imagine that the Democracy intends giv ing up the contest for. the next Presidency with out a desperate struggle, they will find them. selves wofully mistaken. Early to-day the news was telegraphed from New York here that Sey mour intends taking the stump in New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana, and it produced on Immense sensation in Democratic circles. All talk now about a change of candidates Is at an end. The National Itztclligencer to-day was silent as the grave upon the subject,and it is understood that its proprietors have been "whipped in" to giving the Seymour ticket a nominal support, under threats of excommunication from the party in the future. The Democrats are gathering their scattered forces together, and are determined to make the best fight they can on the 3d of Novem ber. The voters of both parties that will leave here for Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, and the neighboring States, to take part in the Presiden tial election, will be largely in excess of any former occasion. Every man having a 1. , 0te, and some who are not entitled to vote, will go, for both parties are straining every nerve to get every voter to the polls. The Democrats are working with the energy of despair. The Re. publicans are confident and hopeful, and will leave no honorable means untried to maintain the advantage they gained in the October elec tions. THE PASSAGE THROUGH BALTIMORE. The Baltimore Sue, of to-day, in a labored editorlal,apologines for the conduct of the rioters who attacked the train on Monday night week, and absolutely justifies the cowardly assault on Mr. Clary, of this city, who was dragged through the window of one of the CAM and beaten till he was almost insensible, on the ground that he made some insulting demon stration to the rioters. It has not one word of condemnation for the brutal ruffians who in vaded the privacy of the cars and compelled passengers to tell how they intended to vote, under threats of instant death. The Sun en deavors to make it appear that the published statement of the affair originated from parties interested in a new railroad contemplated between Baltimore and Washington. Tee ab surdity of this plea is apparent, when it is con sidered that the lives of passengers would be no more safe on the new road, if ever it is built, than on the existing line, if the constituted authorities of Baltimore take no more pains to ferret out and arrest rioters than they have done in the last few weeks, when passengers have been molested on several occasions by these ruffians. No one blames the officers and employes of the railroad companies, as they are powerless before a multi tude of infuriated men; but the traveling public feel deeply Interested in knowing that adequate arrangements will be made to prevent a repeti tion of the outrages while the trains may be passing through Baltimore for one or two days previous to the coming Presidential election. A TRIBUTE TO THE MEMORY OF THADDEUS STEVENS The eoldred people of Washington, who revere the memory of Thad. Stevens, have erected a neat school-house on Twenty-second street, between K and L, which they have named after the de cern ed statesman. It will be ready for occupancy on the Ist of December. It is of brick, three sto ries high, with large basement, something after the style of your Philadelphia school-houses. Nothing probably would have gratified the Great Commoner better than giving his name to a school-house, as he was the early and consistent friend of • ; ; ithe Mission of General Roseerans - Budget of Crimes-Independence Day-Death of a Baltimorean-A Chi -1110645 'Doctor Charged with Murder by Malpractice-Naval News- MA7ATLAN, Sept. 28, via SAN FRANCTScO, Oct. 8, 1868.—The mission of General Rosecrans to Mexico is the exciting topic of the day. Some assert be is authorized to purchase Northwestern Mexico; others that he comes to offer and en force a protectorate. Published letters state that General Canto, now a prisoner in Durango, charged with assas- Mating General Patoni, has publicly announced that the murder was committed by private orders from the supreme government. Anti-Liberalists believe this astounding revelation. News of Santa Anna being proclaimed Emperor of Mexico has been received here, and creates much excite ment. Reports from Durango assert that Patorl's ruilitacy adherents have pronounced against the general . government and in favor of the newly proclaimed chief. Lozada has occupied several military strongholds. He is strengthen ing his position daily. Government has not yet made any demonstrations against him, and public opinion believes the national authorities will not date attack him. The opposition press continues giving deplorable accounts of the moral, financial and political condition of the country. Assassinations and suicides form lead - Mg -features. - -The- notorious bandit Ramon Corona-- is reported - captured; Sandoval, - his chief, at the head of a band of robbers, is plundering as usual. A prominent citizen named Guerra, in the State of Jalisco, was lately assassinated by the military authorities, who had him under arrest. The fifty-eighth anniversary of Mexican indepen dence, commencing on the 15th and ending on the 28th, was celebrated in an extraordinary style. The 'whole of two weeks was devoted to orations, fireworks, fun and gambling. A Chi nese dodo', Tira Azu, has been imprisoned here for the murder of a Mexican citizen. Azu at tempted to cure a patient of rheumatism and killed him. A. J. Reid, a native of Baltimore, died in this city on the 11th inst. Ex American Vice Consul Winegar from Guaymas, departed to-day for San Francisco. The United States steamer Lackawanna and I the English man-of-war Chameleon are cruising about the Gulf of 'California. Both are making sharp movements to get the don's share of the specie shipments. The Approaiching lboz ;,; Campaign —'Discontent Owing t.:..l.hirt\Demeind for Troops--111.114ustertog. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 20, 1868.—The deflan Indian chieftain, Lbzada, of Tepic, threatens t o Earragut's Return. LETTER FROM WASHINGTON. /MEXICO. give the government of juhrez plenty of trouble. He is reported to havels,ol - 10 troops under arms, plenty of provisions, and' an impregnable posi tion. Advices from Colima, dated October 5. state that four divisions of, the Mexican army are to be ordered against Gen. Lozada. Much dis content exists in the State of Colima in cone quence of this order. The neighboring States of Sinaloa, Durango, Jalisco and Queretaro have received summons to tarnish all their spare men to reinforce the army. There were rumors at Colima of various fili bustering raids being on foot in several of, the ports of the United States, and that General Leo nardo Marquez, of imperialist fame, had landed at San Bias. Tepic, Lozada's headquarters,is on the road from that port to Guadalajara. Marquez is said to have a party of filibusters with him. The advices from Colima also state that the present is a most opportune moment for filibus tering, and express the regret that Secretary &weld will not encourage such expeditions. DIt3ASTERB. DISASTROJB FUME IN Destruction of an OH Refinery—Loss *1,30,000. —The Cleveland Leader of the 20th says : "One of the most destructive conflagrations that has visited our city for many months took place on Monday evening. Shortly after five o'clock a fire broke out in the treating-house con nected with the oil refining establishment of Alex antler, Schotleld.4 .Co. The origin of the fire is unknown, altliciugh in all probability It was caused by the sudden ignition of the gas which pervades the buildings In which the various pro ceases of refining are carried on, by a spark from one of the furnaces. As usual in such cases, the fire spread with amazing rapidity, the oil and other inflammable material falling a swift prey to the devouring flames. "The fire also communicated to a large ware house in which were stored over 600 barrels of refined oll,and so quickly did it spread through this that nothing from it was saved. The fiery Inundation soon reached a large building con taining two thousand empty barrels, and this, with all its contents, was soon swept away by the roaring flames. "The loss by this disastrous fire will be from 525,000 to $30,000, including buildings, oil and barrels, and may exceed that amount. We could not learn in regard to the insu rance, if any, but wo presume it was not largely insured." Accident on the ***inroad. [From the Newark Advertiser of Oct. 21.1 A collision is reported to have occurred on the Morris and Essex Railroad this morning near Stanhope, between a gravel train and the west ward bound express. Two persons, it Is said. are injured. Up to noon no trains bad arrived from Stanhope or places beyond. It was found impossible to gaip accurate information, as no one, except the Company's officials, were ac quainted with the circumstances_ A collision. occurred . yesterday morning at South Orange. An empty train of coal ears, by a misplaced switch, ran into a train of empty passenger ears which were instantly folded up in telescopic fashion. Several cars were damaged and partially demolished. Three persons, who were asleep in the baggage ear, narrowly escaped injury. THEATRES, Eto. •"CCBSED BE CANA&111.11 P'77l` 01,R1711 V. NASElC.—Horticultural Hall was filled with a splendid audience, last evening, in spite of the bad weather, to hear Mt. Locke's fa tuous lecture on "Cursed be Canaan." The Rev. Petroleum V. Nasby, P. M., has been working his way into, public view for the last eight years, but within the last two or three years he has gained a position among American humorists and satirists which has mace "Nasby" as familiar a name as that of "Jack Downing" was thirty years ago. The characters of the Corners, Pogram, Bigler, Pollock, Gavitt, Pennibacker and others are as much "household words," as are the most famil iar creations of Dickens or Thackeray. There was great curiosity to see the man who has struck this new mine of American literature and worked it so successfully in the grand cause of human liberty. Everywhere, the powerful in fluence of Nasby's letters upon the political ques tions of the day has come to be recognized, and. it MS the recognition of this influence, and a natural curiosity to see Petroleum V. Nasby in the flesh, that drew together one of our very best Philadelphia audiences last night. Mr. Locke, a sturdy, bright-eyed, pleasant faced man, apparently about thirty-five years of age, was introduced by Ex-Governor Pollock, who in a lew well-chosen sentences. explained that he was not the "Illinoy storekeeper." The "reverend" lecturer immediately plunged into his subject, reading from his manuscript with a clear, strong and agreeable voice, and with excellent emphasis and intonation. He discussed the slavery question from the Nasby point of view, but in correct English, and it was immediately evident that Le had put himself thoroughly en rapport with his audience, who constantly inter rupted him with bursts of applause and peals of uncontrollable laughter, which, as we a ll know, aro so rarely elicited from a Philadelphia. audi ence. The lecture abounds in the subtlest humor, the keenest satire and sarcasm, and the broadest ~-4- t rA-it-W4lB-IgeaßaM-640-80.0-41-0-4): • hension with which every telling point was seized upon and relished bS ,- his hearers. It is impossible to select specimens from the multitude of clever hits with which "Cursed be Canaan" is crammed. The lecture as a whole, is a very fine hit, and it is so much more than a mere piece of humor,-,there is so much profound philosophy and unanswerable argu ment under the quaint satire of Nasby's conceits, that an intelligent audience Is as much instructed as amused by it. Mr. Locke, although born in New York, Is, as we originally suspected, a full-blooded Massa chusetts man, his parents having removed from their ancestral home In Woburn, Mass., just be fore his birth. He is full of New England's in stinctive love of human liberty, and his remark able talents as a satirist have been nobly devoted to that cause. We are glad to know that there is a prospect of a repetition of the lecture in Philacelphla during the coming winter, when those who have yet to see and hear the immortal "Petroleum V. Nasby, P. M., Confederit X Roads, which is the State nv Kentucky," will have an opportunity of doing so. At the CHESTNUT, this evening,the Hanlon Brothers will give one of their great acrobatic performances. The Russian athlete Pfan, will appear in several mar velous 11013. AT THE WALNI3T. to-night,Mr. E. L. Davenport will appear as "Sir Giles ON erreneh - in .1 Se, Way to Puy Old Debts; after which Mack-eyed swam with Mr. Davenport as "Witlinin." AT THE Anon, this evening, Lotter will appear in The - - .i.ur Amnnit•AN, The Grand DucheNB will be given. POLITICAL. Counting Chickens Before Hatching. —The World this morning discourses as fol lows of the benefits of a victory not yet achieved: "By redeeming Philadelphia, as we have dope, and getting possession of its city government, we nullify a tome that was used against us and turn it into a corresponding tuiVantage. ' It is like capturing' the chief battery of the enemy and reversing its guns. By the knavery of the Republican city government and police force, we were cheated out of votes enough in Phila delphia to have saved us the State. We shall now have in that city a full Democratic vote and an honest count. We possess another advantage in the very elation of the Republicans over their success in the State elections. Their over-sanguine confidence will slacken their exertions. The cry which they have raised of 'a Democratic rout,' will simply throw their own troops into disorder. They have com mitted the fatal mistake of treating a mancenvre for a better position as if it were a retreat, and LJENELALAI D Morris and Essex F ,L. FETHER4ON. Publish ea PRICE THREE CENTS • - they are - destined to uay'a fatal/penalty. .The Refublicana will •find, after electifin, how inn& wiser it would rhavo been to keep by the adage, `not to halloo till you are out of the woods.' EACTIS AND —Louisa Pyne is to become Mrs. Sodden —Ban Antonio;Texas,ls to have a $l6O 000 . cathedral ' —A eon of Santa Anna is a robber chief in Mexico. . 43 40 - —An Austrian nut r, Henry Noo, haa made Bismarck the hero a novel —Fenian Centre ephens .is squandering hie circle and his bills by eaching school in Parts. —Flotow's new opera, the "Two. Composers," is not praised. —Quebec has a seminary old enough to cele brate its two hundredth anniversary. —Small-pox of a virulent type is prevalent in Montreal. —The prince royal of Belgium's dropsical legs are as big as an elephant's. , —The ex-Empress orMexico is idiotic, at WO fat to get out of bed. —lt is said that the real reason why MtipleSOn decided not to come to America was that Mai Kellogg declined her engagement. —Lord Lytton's translation of the odes or Horace is pronounced to be polished Without being poetical. It is now in the press.' ." —One of the French papers publishes an exact description of the present style of velocipede, taken from a paper ppblished ninety years ago -The Pope has excommunicated a' priest for havingper m formed the functions of a judge under Victor Fr , anuel. —Bismarck when young wished ,to marry a Swiss inn-keeper's daughter, but would not turn Catholic to oblige papa, and ' the match waa broken off. —Provincial theatres in France are said to be on their last legs, dying a lingering death from the combined effects or contributions to the poor, and the exorbitant demands of stars. —A New York paper announces that' the family of the late Nathaniel Hawthorne are in that city, and will soon take the steamer for. Ger many. —it is stated in Macmillan's Magazine that roast donkey is one of the most delicious of meats. It is used largely in Lyons eattaag(?3, which are esteemed the best in the world. —No new sovereigns were coined in Etudand in 1867 ; a circumstance which has not happened for years. No half crowns have been coined since 1851. —A Californian writes to the paper about s snake with a head as large as a mllk-pan and eyes like apples. He saw twenty feet of snake and didn't stay for the rest. —The pluck of an expected bridegroom failed him jr.st before the ceremony, in Richmond the other day, and he sent a note to his waiting bride to that effect. Her brothers then soused him In a muck-pond. —lt has been decided in Michigan that a brewer has no right to take the water of a stream for the manufacture of lager beer, and that a gen tleman cannot be permitted to draw water from the same stream to supply an artificial fish pond. —One of the eoldiers in the "Huguenots," when recently played in Dublin, accidentally prodded the prostrate "Raoul," who was Mon gini, in the face, and there was a scene of taint ing and Titiens rushed before the curtain calling for a doctor. —At a marriage ceremony recently performed at Pre-Saint-Gbrvals, France the young bride groom complained of drowsiness, and before the wedding breakfast was over he fell into a sound sleep, from which he was not awakened ping eight successive days and nights. —The leaf of the plantain, the kind having a red stalk,is said to be a certain cure for the "han kering" after tobacco. Should there be any of the few who "chaw" anxious to be cured, let them masticate a little plantain leaf a day or two and they will find relief. —A society numbering 1,200 members has been formed in Paris for the purpose of commencing a crusade against the use of tobacco. Each per son pledges himself not only to abstain frora smoking, but to use all his influence to discour age the habit among his friends and acquaint ances. —Walewski leives the domain of Marais d'Os (value £60,000), which was given to him, by the Emperor, three houses in Paris, a villa at St. Germain, the property of Bt. Amphion, near Geneva, and decorations the intrinsic value of which amounts to £B,OOO. —Tbe City of Nuremberg will soon possetis s. statue of the celebrated poet, Hans Sachs, who was also a bootmager. The boot and shoemakers of Cologne are organizing a lottery In which all the prizes will consist of boots and shoes, in order to raise funds to inaugurate this statue with greet eclat. —lt is some time since any mention has been made of the Zonave Jacob. This mesmeric has just purchased a fine estate. He has .been called by the King of Prussia to Berlin, to treat one of the members of the Royal Family, and it is stated that he has effected an entire cure. —A Mrs. Louisa Wafer, in applying for an ex tension of her license to keep a tavern in London, adduced proof to show that during the twenty lour years she has presided over that institution, :s• ot: .0. 1 oiti Is •I a men into the British navy. Wafer ought to stick, and we sincerely hope a way-fer her to do it may be found. —Louisa Muhlbach's daughter, a young actress in Berlin, had, a few weeks ago, the misfortune of being hissed by the audience, she having, in some way, _incurred, the displeasure of some critics. The poor girl burst Into tears, and burled her face in her hands, whereupon the audience gallantly relented, and applauded as much as it had hissed before. —At the Peace Congress held recently in Berne, Bakourin, the celebrated Russian agitator, moved the adoption of the following resolution: "Resolved, That the institution of marriage shall be abolished; that the children of all women shall be educated by society in general; that re ligion and property be abolished." At this Con gress the United States, Mexico. Italy And Spain were each represented by one man. —Baron James Rothschild has built a princely residence in the centre of a park, which ist bounded on the north by the Rue de la Bienfai- Bence; on the east by the Rue do Miromenli;uport the south by the Boulevard Haussmann. It con tains 20,000 square metres, which have cost 500 f. each, or a total of 10,000,0001. It is surrounded by en iron fence, and planted with trees and shrubs. This superb chateau, which is nearly finished, is in the style of Louis XIV. —A youngster r in"Peoria, RI., recently, in ex ploring his silifeff things, came across a pack age of letters duly i litid up and laid away , being a correspondence-wbieb-she was- carrying- orrwitat— a nice young man. He carried them down en the street, and, standing on the corner, gave them away singly to the passers by. The young lady didn't find it out until a mutual friend also a nice young man, brought her one that her? bro ther had thus given him. —The Paris Pays says that General CarlSchurz was a guerrilla chief during the American war, and commanded at the siege of Washington. Butler, it says, was execrated during the wax, both In the North and South, for ordering the execution of the wives and daughters of promi nent Southern Generals and political leaders: In regard to General Fremont the same paper makes the interesting assertion that the people wanted him for President _early in 1864, but that Lin e n's intrigues and tyranny thwarted their wishes, —Antnglish paper reports that an itinerant dissenting preacher in South London recently de livered the following extraordinary piece of ad vice as the best means of avoiding temptations:— " When you see a dog coming down the street, if you pick up a stone and pretend to throw cut and run—he'll Understand stone-ology; just the same, if you see the devil coming down, tha street, drop on your knees, and hell cut tgul run —he'll understand 'knee-oiogy.`"