GESOLPEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME XXII:=4O. 198. THE EVENING BULLETIN! BußLunpu:k Irma 13VEMS0. (Sundays excepted). for THE arm stri,Lersry suumiiva. 607 Cht(gaunt street, Philadelphia. " • EVENING BULLETIN ALBSOITIATION. • rnomurross. GIBBON PEACOCIK, ti,aBPEit ft r iP1084.241 4 W. L. BETIIEBBTON TtioN., J. u.LlAneu EWAN()hi WLi B. _ The ritaxacris la 116117134 CO 1111bgeribell MO OILY at 1131 • • • week. ossabis to the carriers. or 88 per ammo. AMBILICN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, Of L (korner Fourth and Walnut Ste. 1111 r This Institution has no superior in the United Stag& my27-tfli INSURE AGAINST ACCIDENT nines TRAVELERS' INSURANCE CO., OF HARIFOIIIIIO, CONS. Assets over - - • $L,000,000 Perrone leaving the city erpeelally will feel better satin• fled by being Insured. Ur HALM W. ALLEN. Agent and dttarney, FOR REST BULUDING. 117 South Fourth hitireeli. Philadelphia. seZ. tax th __ Ulf tDDING CARDS. INMATIONS FOR PAR. V Y tie s% &c. New styles. MASON CO.. soZtlt 407 Chestnu & t street. EDDING INVITATIONS ENGRAVED IN THE Newest end beet manner. WOW DREKA. Stir Renee and Euro - over 1e 33 ehdetnut street. tub '20.1.1 DI Ell. OAT.—On the evening of Sixth-Mks. 27th lust . Anne F. wife of I:barles Oat, u the Pith year f her age. loner 1 from the ;old, ace of her husband. on Third der. , re/fth Month lot. at 1 o'clock P M. The relatives and friends of ths fatoPy .re respectfully invited t4 at. tend the funeral , without further untie... •• fIOOD BLADE AND DOWN.ED BILLLb. NJ SI our BLK. CORDROISATIN FAUEGRO GRAIN. PURPLE AND GU.T EDGE. Lino w 1.3 AND BLUE ORO _GRAIN. MODE COLD PLAIN El g EYRr. & LANDELL. Fourth and Arch. BPECIAI.. 111(VrilUEb. ISee Sixth Page for Additional _Notices • Oar REV. WM. B. CULLISS WILL LECTURE ON OUR YOUNG REV," IN CONCERT HAUL On THURSDAY EVENING NEXT, at t o'clock. Tickets 26 cent.. To be bad at the Rooms of the Young NI cm's Christian Amociation, 1210 Uheatnut street. it' I*ICENTRAL CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH, 4- Elanttenth and Green atreeta.—R•v. Edward Han ~. Parlor, wilt preach at IU3 A. .51 and 734 r. so:ket of es ening duce rre—The Sermon on the tfount. The third of the seats on the Renordui Sayings of our Lord. it. EROIL NEW YONEL. NEW You n., Nov. 28.—A warrant was issued for the arrest of O'Brildwin, "the Dish giant," on Thursday. by Justice Dowling. It is said that Felix Larkin, his bondsman, tieing dead, his bail is worthless. The Justice stated yesterday that O'Baldwln had'lndireetly led Felix L title to his death, as the intimacy between the two had oc casioned the scenes of disorder and the bard drinking that had crazed the deceased. Early yesterday morning William - Arkansaw, keeper of a bag nio In tiretne street, having some difficulty with William Liall,who is barkeeper for a similar establishment just opposite, procured a shot-gun and shot his enemy in the arm, com pletely lacerating it. Arkansaw was arrested and committed. The Democratic Union Executive Committee at Masonic Hall last evening nominated Freder ick A. Conkling for Mayor, and Richard O'Gor man for Corporation Counsel, in place of John Kelly and Abraham R. Lawrence declined. The Constitutional Union t,onvention also nominated Conkling. Five wooden buildings on Yrkfite avenue, Brooklyn, were blown down on Thursday after noon by the high wind. Nobody was hart. The loss is $2,600. DRAMATIC AND MILISICAI. —At the Walnut Street Theatre this evening, the comedy, The Serious Family, will be performed by the company, after which baxter's Fire 7:onaves will give an exhibition drill. The per formance will conclude with the farce, The Spec- tre Bridegroom. On Monday Aire. D. P. Bowers in Lady Audley's Secret. —Mr. Barton Hill, the stage manager of the Arch Street Theatre, will have a benefit this evening in a comedy, The Lesson in Love, and in The Three Guardsmen. On Monday, Mm. Drew, n the old comedy, The Way to Keep Him —The Chestnut Street Theatre announces the drama Blow for Blow far the last time this even ing. On Monday a first-class circus company will appear, among whose members we may mention Mr. James Robinson the famous eques trian, and the Levantine Brothers, acrobats who are said to surpass the Bunions. —The American Theatre announces a misenlla neons entertainment for this evening. —A varied performance of unusual excellence will be given to-night at the Theatre Comique, Seventh street, below Arch. —Max Maretzek can congratulate himself upon a prospect of flattering enemas with his Italian and German Opera Troupe. The sale of tickets for the season beginning on Monday evening next, has been very large, and the house will very likely be crowded every night The initiatory opera will be 11 Trovalore; with a cast including Miss Agatha States, Mad. ()Olin!, Signori Brignolt, Or land! and Barn'. During this season Mad. La Grange will appear for the first time in Germs.; opera. —Miss Kellogg's second concert at Concert Hall last evening, was even more brilliantly suc cessful than that which was given on Wednesday night. The audience was larger, and the prima donna sang with the utmost sweetness and grace. Each selection upon the programme was encored, and the response came always in the shape of a pretty ballad. The fair singer was fairly over whelmed with flowers. Miss Alide Topp played magnificently and was also encored each time. Herr Kopta sustained his reputation as a skillful violinist, and the other artists acquitted them settee admirably. We have nothing-but words of praise for this entertainment, and our only re gret is that M. Strakesch is not able to prolong the season, and give us three or four additional . eon cer ts. We aro glad to understand o however, thatthere is a prospect of Miss Kellogg giving us one more grand concert at the Academy of Mule next _month, for the benefit of one of our popular in stitutions. ....Mr. Charles H. Jarvis will give his first clas 'Elul soiree at Natatorium Ball, Broad streak, below Walnut, this evening. He will bo asidered by Mr. Rudolph Hennig, the accomplish - 0 vio loncellist, and Mr. G. lluhlemann, the Violinist. The following programme has been offered: , Zonate—op. 45, B flat Major—Piano and Violoncello, Mendelesohu Violin Solo—Concert In A moll, No. 22..........Vi0ttl Piano Solo—Bailee G. Minor, op. 23. Chopin vtoioncello Solo—A . daglo... , Trio—tn D, in op. 70, (No. 1)I'lano, Violin and Violon cello Beethoven —A Now Havener ingeniously poured a lot of melted lead down his boot-leg tho other day. When ho took off his boot, the leg came off too. --The new kusponeion bridge at Niagara Falls it is c xpteted u ill be completed early in Douai Ger. It has a single span of 1,261 foot. . . , . - . I - I , • o , ‘ ‘ ' .'' 1 - :-.;.; ' la i ll i lli e, _ .. . , , . 7 , , • . , . • , . • , THE FINE £ftTl. SECOND NOTICE OM THE BEAUMONT GAI.A.ERT.-.-. We conclude our notice of the collection des. patched from New York by Mr. Beaumont, far sale in this city by Mr. B. Strat i Jr. - The pictures we aro about to pass under review at present constitute the moiety to be sold on' Wednesday night, the 2d proximo, and may be examined until the evening orsala at the Academy of Flue Arts (eastern galleries) The group in die southeast room contains so many works of excellence'that it Is impossible to describe them all. We wish, however, to point out a few of the most admlrable,—plctures which emerge , from the ordinary rank and give the tone 'to Mr. Beaumont's galleries. If we omit particular notice of such weltiknown 'names_ as Koekkoek, do Bylandt, de Beni, Leon y Escosura, it Is becanee'they are on the roll of public favor already, and at - est:ire to thrive in an auction by the simple means of their old reputation. The paintings we are going to notice are of the class which Frenchmen (who will pillage the most sa cred of nomenclatures for a ttgure of speech), would call the Elect. No. 89. Faure, of Paris. Garden same, period of Louis XV. This, without being a Titian by any means, is a picture that will grace a wall u a Ferree cup would a mantelpiece; it is a showy costuming Canvas. No. 102. Rosier, W. Paris. Constantinople at twilight. The sheeted Bosphorus, the domes and needle minarets of the seraglio. and a chaste sky filed with the oriental "afterglow." There may be ✓rioter pictures in the collection—pictures which for good reasons represent larger. heaps of money; but-we-think there-Ls-not one which can ee looked upon with a delight so nn alloyed. A celebrated artist,—and not a tabdscape man either— declared to ns hat he could spend hours of unmixed enjoy [Lent in contemplating this pure scene. The artistic qualities are a lesson to our landscape painters. The thinness and receding perspective of the water, the treat depth and luminousness of the skyrthe justice with which the many lights on the shore take their places as near or far, the atmospheric perspective of the slender minarets of which no two seem to be on the same plane ss they rise in silhouette against the heavens), and the_ loving finish extended with equal scruple to every part,are for the artist an undying charm; there is high art in the mere coloring of the flag, which is crumpled on the sky, like a silken poppy-petal. The "Constantinople" is a pure midsummer night's dream of the East. No. 103. Moritz Calisch, a painter with a. Span tab order, depicts an Andalusian beauty prepar ing for the masquerade. The point aimed at is a conflict between candlelight and moonlight on the face and dress of the figure. Nos. 100 and 107. Kruseman, a pupil of the eider Koekhoek, in good usteena at Brussels, elaborates a summer and a winter landscape. No. 108. There are qualities in this Andreas Achenbach which we do not know to be excelled by any example in America. The whole tone of me painting is determinedly lowered to give bril liancy to a certain cloud, charged with phos phoric, light, which burns steadily npon the eye as far off as it is possible to see the picture. A grayish white on the horizon does not conflict *tit this, while it gains &biasing effect from the e3ntrasting warmth suffused over the rest of the Picture. The waves are very fiat, unctuons, heavy, tenacious, and push forward towards the beach with an irresistible sense of motion. This picture represents the coast of Scheveningen, and is an Achenbach of very great distinction. No. 109. Erdman, "The New Neighbor's First Visit. - A glossy and elegant Dfisseidorf picture. quite Parisian in costume, while the story is told with a narrative power completely German. The new neighbor, a comely gentleman enough, is sitting, much embarrassed by the bright eyes of his entertainers, in a glittering salon of the last century. No. 110. A very good do Jonghe. A sleepy lady persuading tieredl she is reading. The tints are hero laid against each other in-broad masses, with the tact of a master. The texture of the drapery is absolutely good, of course. No. 111. J. y. Herring. One of this favorite painter's farm -yard scenes, fall of clever animal painting.- he artist here feels a shock—the pry's sage from continental to English art. The chalk cliffs at Dover have got into the sky, into the greens, into the very blazes on the noses of the animals. The latter, too, have evidently been studied in a room with a direct light coming Er( m a single window, while it is a diffused light that is given to the landscape painted In around them. Tho picture, nevertheless, in the English taste, is full of intelligence and spirit. No. 120. Nortlenberg. " Tne Unwelcome Suitor :" one of those clever little comedies in painting--one-act vaudevilles—which no school of painting has ever yet learned to set out so tell ingly as the Dusseldorf. Seven figures suffice to tell the old story—the gawky and dumbfoundered :over, the girl in hysterics protected by the pitying mother—the stormy old father, who has his own candidate in the person of the rough young fellow who menaces the reigning favorite with a baton. In No. 127 we come to a very interesting relic of a class of American art which is extinct with the landscapes of Cole and the portraiture of ,Elliott. W. S. Mount but the other day closed 'his peaceful bucolic life on his farm in Staten Island. His pleasant compositions—lithographs from which you find in the red houses of the East and in the cabins of the plains—belong to a school which doefi=not repeat itself. This easy figure of a boy, idling on the fence of a maize field and finding it most dolce far nieute, is a win ning example of the very real power possessed by this kindly and generous-hearted brother gone before. No. 129. Ono of Hcnriette Ronner's capital canine subjects. Three lap-tongued,dusty dogs aro pulling home the emptied market cart,—their per vading sense of having been much abused a little mitigated by the prospect of supper and real in the dog-stable. No. 180. Hoguet, "Coast of Normandy." Ho guet has studied out his peculiar combinations until he can handle them with the ease of a crea tor. Nature herself can hardly prepare a carpet of grass, a stretch of beach, or a breadth of sun on a chalk-cliff with more felicity than the brush or the pallette-knife when controlled by that cunning hand. Then the little figures—with what life and accidental perfection ho dote them In I All these qualities show at their best in the instance before us. No. 132. Andrews, ~"Blindman's Buff." A Lon doner attempting n-bit of Wattean—and by no means-falling-either. No. 183. Schlesinger of Berlin. A most de licious picture, representing a barge-load of har vesters floating home to a night of rest a n d pe a ce, uLder the evening light which basks on the red dened banks around them. :We have airddy compared this picture to the famous "Malaria," by Hebert, at Paris: we do not know that any thing we could further say would do' other than PHILADE4PHIA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1368. lower the praise. This is one of the beat pictures spared to us by lir. Iteauniont. No. 140. Baron. of Tads, ' "Reverie:" vary No. 141. Gnillemin, Paris, "Norman Interior:'' tine and excellent: No. 142. Mr. Beaumont's only Rlefstahl : it is small but admirable : the figures are of singular delicacy and perfection. The light seems to etairte, however, on this little mountain shrine in the Tyrol, With a partial favor. :Why is the plaster brighter than the shirts of the peasants?' No. 143. Leray, of Paris. Some lively ladles have made a "poisson d'Avril" of an elderly gal lant, who fruitlessly awaits them at the corner of a garden; they, looking over the wall, are in dulging in giggles of French esprit. No. 151.—Mr. Beaumont's great Becker. It is a group of noble Venetians leaning from the bal cony of a palazzo and apparently contemplating the Carnival scene in the canal below them. We need not praise this picture, which praises Itself. The famous little Becker exposed for our Sanitary Fair("Petition to the Doge"), may have been more exquisite, but it did not seize and conquer the eye - as this ono does. The man who can paint this central nobleman In a breadth of red drapery, or the blonde at the left, or the man in a twine behind, or the architecture, or the oriental rug, has little to learn In the art of the brush, even from Couture himself. No. 153.—Stephanoff,of London; an interesting picture recalling the age of Hayden and Fusel', and representing Isabella and George of Aspen, from Waverley. . . No. 1.&4. H. Scheeres, "The Guard Room:" A singular example of a young and half-obscure artist- of-the-Ilague-falling—unconscionsly into the manner of the great Meissonier, without the slightest rapprochement between the two: this group of guards in waltinewould be considered by anybody to be the work of a promising pupil of the famous Paris painter. No. 169. Ramick, of Econen, "Rachel in her Study." This artist improves with notable rapid ity, and will soon obtain big prices. No. 163. Dansaert„another &mien name,signed upon a fair interior. Title, "Conversazione." No. 164. Denoter, a Brussels artist living' in Paris. By his fruits we know him. A white china coffee-cup, admirably painted, surrounded with what we call still-life, and what the artist would call nature morte. No. 165. Fanvelet, -Farb. Lady and letter, very pretty. No. 170. Duvieux, of Paris, whose two Adriatic pictures we delighted to honor yesterday, has a beautiful little "Constantinople." But for the overpowering beauty of the work by Rosier on the same subject, opposite which it hangs, this little scene would be universally regarded as a gem. No. 171. De Block, of Brussels, famous for his portraits, has a genre subject, "The Bpinning WheeL" No. 177. Rembrandt Peale, of Philadelphia. Portrait of washing-ton. We are now beginning to [appreciate the portrait-men to whom Wash ing ton actually sat—no more of that sort are left, or can ever be supplied. No. 180. If this is not a Guido, this "Rem Homo," It is not so because itescapes some of the faults of his mature period. If It is, it shows, by its refinement and coloring, the patient modeling and Caravaggio force of his earlier and more studious years. We expect some artist will tuck this precious old master under his cloak at the Bale. The flame is also antique, and a singular affair. The paintings will be removed on the evenings of the sale to the store opposite, where ladies and gentlemen desirous of being present can be comfortably seated, and it has been deemed ad visable, considering the importance of the sale, to if EDO tickets of admission, which may be ob tained gratuitously either at the store or at the gallery. A "TALK"" WITH GENERAL GRANT. Grant's Policy—His Cabinet—What He Thinks of Lieverdy Johnson— Grant and the Fenians—The Horse Dexter—Letter from John Quill. (Vorreeporidence of the Ptuladelpbia Evening Bnlletln.t WAIIIIINGTON, Nov. 27, 1868.-1. came down here yesterday for the purpose of having an in terview with General Grant. Talks with great men are in order with newspaper correspondents now. General Grant was seated at his desk writing, when I entered his office. He held an nn-ignited "old soldier" in his mouth, and seemed to enjoy chewing the end with the left side of his massive jaws. " General," said I, " I have cope around to Ob.. btaln your viewsilybont pings, for . publication. First tell me c:do you feel about your elec tion?" • GENERAL G NT—" • • Mn. QUILL.—" I suppose you have shaped oat your policy, and all that sort of thing, you know. Weil, what are you going to do in regard to the outrages in the rebel States? Decisive work. I suppose ? Short and sharp's the word, hey P" EN ERA L GRANT— - MR. QuiLL.—"Well now, in regard to your cabinet. Got her all fixed up I reckon? By the way, who have you selected for your Secretary of Stale? Give Stanton a shy at the War office of course? If you would just mention the names I would bo too happy to publish them for you. My paper. is always obliging with those little matters. Take 'em down, shall I?" GEN. GRANT-"` Quires—" While I think of it, General, what line of action are you going to pursue in reference to the Alabama claims? (All old Johnson home I expect? Repudiate his action of course? I understand you are red hot against England; how about it?" Gx.N. GRANT.-"- Ma QUlLT."Excuse me, but did you epeak, 'General? I didn't catch —" 13E14 GRANT-'-"* • d , W * Mr. Quita.--"SPealring of England General, It is reported around that you are friendly to the Fenians. Some say yon are a Read Centre In the organization. ~Elave I your authority for denying that statement ?" , General GRANT-" * * * * * • * * * Mr. Qints.—" Well then, I suppose yoalotend to back 'em op—seize Canada,, whack into Eng 7,„ land—make things lively, 'eh ? Gen', Guton-7"-- Mn. Quite. —" General is it true that Mr. Bon ner {hat ve' horseouis Dexter? How much now, do you think.worth incasio, GENERAL GRANT—"11101M18, 'Just show this man down stairs." Mu. Qoiaa—"aood morning, General." Thus terminated this interesting anu important interview,-of which I send you a full report. The results are, perhaps, not as entirely sathfactory as they might , be, but I think - they will ~prove quite as Vlitilable to the eetintry as most of the reports of similar conversatlOus which have boon undo public. WIN qualAo OUR WHOLE COUNTRY. )Roller: The following additional intelligence with reference to the recent seizure of the principal French journals by the French government is taken from various , late foreign papers. The Paris Teraps,one of the prosecuted journals, says: "The Bandin subscription has given rise to fresh rigors against a part of the press. The venir National, the Traiuns, and the Discussion of Lyons have been. seized. We learn, moreover, that M. Cballemel-Lacoor,proprietor and director of the Revue Politkue, has been cited to appear before the me dinstruction. We expected to End In the Aloniteur this morning some explana tion of the cause of these new rigors, whim can not fail to create an immense amount - of excite ment among the public. Ent the Afeniteur is silent. It is, however ' very urgent and neces sary to, know what the Government proposes to do, and how far it means to go. Neither the 'government not any one else can prevent what has already When place. The fact cannot be al tered that Benign °lid for the le w,atl he thereby gave the best example to defenders of the present law, and that such examples merit the admiration and respect of all generon, , hearts. Such 'devotedness is the first title to the nobility of human nature, and the public mind has always regarded it as such. Ancient and modern annals have , consecrated their best pages to such examples. M. Duray, who has written the histbry of all peoples,ought to know that better than any one. Does the go vernment with to make a change? Does it de sire to create a special code of morals for the French people? We venture to say that that i:- impossible; we will even say that the attemp not probable; but it is for this very reason 12.0 an urgent explanation is necessary, and that the goyernment ought to inform the. pnelle why the papers which have been seized are incriminated and Brost co ted." The London Star says : "It is difficult to see how the authorities in France can extricate themselves with honor from the absurd and embarrassing position in which their attempt to prevent the papers from pub lishing the lista of subscriptions for a monument to Baudin has placed them. The disgust of the public has been excited, and the spirit of the journals thoroughly roused, by this unmeaning act of tyranny. Even the France condemns it, and the Pays alone has the effrontery to speak of it in terms of approval. The seizure of papers that have interested themselves in the affair has already been wholesale. In spite of this. the independent journals have all announced their determination of publishing the subscription lists; and the Temps has set the ex ample in its issue of Monday, by printing a list headed by the name of Dafaure, formerly a re presentative of the people, and minister of Presi. dent Lonistlapoleon Bonaparte. The Siicle and the Journal de Paris of last evening do the same thing; and other journals publish an opinion of counsel, declaring that the promoters of the sub scription are not guilty of any legal offence. The ditors of the Arenir National, the Reveil, the Tribune, and the Revue Politiqa.e are among those who have treen summoned before the Correc tional Tribunal of the Seine; so that, in one way or the other, nearly the whole of the Liberal press of the capital may be sail to have made a most effective protest against this last and most offe,n aive display of official arrogance." A Great Demonstration of the Opposi tion—lb.:. Bandin Movement. The Paris correspOndent of the New York Tri bune writes as followat: Among the , ;.ittempts made on the 3d of Dec., 1851, to sustain the Conetitution of the Republic. to.whieh Louis Napoleon had sworn fidelity, was an a ffort at resistance to his soldiery in the Fau bourg St. Antoine. A feeble barricade was built across one of the streets. • Of the persons—not more than 150 in all—who took part in its con struction, 15 were members of the Legislative Assembly. One of the 15 was named Baudin. When the troops came up he stood upon a car riage eiat formed a part of the barricade, and while exhorting them to respect the constitution and laws, was shot to death. This otwas the first barricade and the first bloodshed of the coup a' ital. On the 2d of November, this year, as in other years on All Souls Day, there was an immense throng in the great cemetery of triontmatre. A group gathered round the modest tomb of Bari din. Some laid on it wreaths of immortelles. A student asked Emile Girardin to speak to the briblic. Be declined. A young man did say a few words in rather passionate style. There was a cry or two of "Vive la Republic!" There was DO disturbance. The great mass of people that vieited the cemetery that day only learned of the "manifestation" as did the general public at the• eales that evening, or from a brief paragraph in some of the newspapers next day. Sensible men congratulated each other on the good sense shown by.the administration in not creating a disturbance out of the affair,' as they did last 3 ear, by,luterierence of, the police and numerous arrests. Qp•Slie 3d of November the A venir Nationale iiteposed a public subscription for a monument to Bandin, and announced that contributions would be received at its publishing office: the la veil, a more radical democratic paper, did the same, and, a few Bays later, was joined by the ; ibune, of which Eugene Pelletan, member of the Corps Legislatif, is controlling editor. None of these have a large circulation. The Tribune is a weekly journal. No other opposition papers proposed taking part in the subscription. On Friday last the rumor got about that the managers. of the newspapers above mentioned were to be prosecuted. Hardly credited at first, it was soon confirmed by the seizure of the A venir Nationale, of the Revell, and of the Tri bune. Their trial and that of one or two of the per sons who "demonstrated" at Baudin's tomb is going on before the tribunal at this dour of my writing, and will not be p?ovisionally ended in time for me to give its immediate Issue in this letter. They are prosecuted for violation of the Law of Public Safety—especially of article se cond,whlch runs LIMB—locos& geared:"Any person ho, with the intention of troubling public tran- quillity, or of provoking hatred and contempt to ward the Government of the Emperor, has prac ticed manceuvres, or entertained relations whether with parties abroqd or within the country, is sub ject to a penalty of not less than a month nor more than two years of imprisonment, and of a fine of from 100 to 2,000 franca" The Law of General Safety was rushed through the Legislature in February, 1858, under pres sure of the terrible scare caused by the Orsini attempt of the preceding month. It was pre ben tea as a temporary measure; was never (so far as known) applied but twice; was modified a few ~- e ars ago as to its fiercer features (the provision just quoted being one of its unrepealed measures), and bud got to be generally regarded, until this week, as a 'lead letter, rather than a living red letter law. It is attempted to be enforced now against three newspaper . edito?s, whose effete.° is .the proposing a subscription and the publishing of the list of subscribers for a monument in honor of M. Bandin. That M. Baudln was ti legally-chosen representative otlie people; tharthe Legislative Assembly of which he was -a member did hold a meeting and pass a decree law by neat/buena vote on the 24 of December, 1851,declaring "that Louis Napoleoh Bonaparte has forfeited the Pre . sidency of the Republic, and that, consequently, e executive power devolves lawfully upon the National Assembly+ that while unarmed and ex hortir,g armed, men to respect for the existing Ccristitution and unrepealed laws, he was by them slwt dead; and that this saeritice of his lite on the broken altar of the Republic was foreseen --voluntary —ti pairiotie - sulclde. These are nide nied historical facts; facto as undenled and as un deniable as that three Sears later to wit, in the Scar 1854, this oilier series of facts Mel: In July of that year died-one Mr. Frederick De ' george, chief editor of the Proores du Pas de C«- lain, a provincial neWspaper; subscription was started fora monument cOrnmemorative ..ef_lll4 , virtues; thelargest subscripliOn was anrinvuloue, but was known to be contributed by Napoleon W., Emperor of the lowuch, morg ipApv,c,t, EtraorE,azr AFLI'AIRS THE CONSPIRACY IN FBAS/CR. 'money then, _ but, to his credit, not grown un grateful in Piosperity, to the memory of editor a george, who printed in his boldly opposition Journal- the virulent attacks upon Louis Phil lipea government contributed "to it by the pris onerof Ham. His Majesty's direct subscription to Degeorge's tombstone WWI MOO francs. /Hs contribution to Bandin's monument cannot yet be accurately ea t imaged. Here are sortie elements for a calcula tor . for what it is to come to :.The five first dallies ot the AVente Aratioxale "totted up" 2,591 francs; at the tenth day they elbowed a sum of 11,660. But at the tenth day there Were, ' opened in Paris and the provinces 20 new newspaper subscribing offices. And in the Hats of subscribers you may read the names of Liberals of France of, all political sbadt a, ..and the names of moat enlightened men in all kinds. Calculating party poluteilua, ,rougbaut statesmen, prudent inocierados, indi viduals outside of political partisan lanes whose patriotic feeling as Frenchmen and selfzrespect as men is insulted by this unheard-of pretence on Ike part of Government to make the recognition of an historical event, of a noble devotedness, a enal offence=wbose intelligence is awaitened to erceive the alarming reach of, a power that un d. rtakes to authoritatively decide who shall and aboshall not have gravestones over their graves nave joined and are joining in the subscription. VVhilerroderate and most moderate Liberals .re now taking part in the movement, not at all 'or Bandin's sake, bat very mach for the sake of right, moderate Napoleonists are regretting, and so far as they consistently dam and can, depre ”ating the course that Government has taken in what has rapidly grown to be the serious politi cal Affairs Baudin. The thorough-going mil ,eals and Beds are delighted. Moderate Frenchmen, the philosophical, his • °rice' kind, and the "Intelligent, calm observer" Q.f* the foreign persuasion are pretty nearly greed that the administration, that is, the Gov rumen t, that is, et finitely and pereonally,in this :tistriried;Lotlif Napoleon, has committed a gross Dangle, in thus attempting, by what may be -iyled brute legal force, to arrest a movement in itself unimportant, and which, lett to itself could have died out. 11031 E. the Few French A mbassador—Hie Neception at the Vatican—Brigand nge—lanniore of the Re-estaelisti. teens of a Catholic Hierarchy la ecotiand—The Health of Hie Holi ness. • Roam, Nov. 7,1868.—The new French Ambits -.Lidos, Marquis do Banneville,has arrived in Rome and had interviews with Cardinals Antonelli and Berardi, and Foreign and Home Ministera,but it was expected he would not be received by his Holiness before Tuesday, the 10th instant. In consequence, however, of pressing despatches necessitating his immediate communication with be Pontifical government, his Excellency's cre dentials were presented to the Pope and he was received by Lis - Holiness on the 6th in priviite Audience. So sudden was the affair that / his Ex-. ,:cliency had to make use of the carriage of wthe L.barge d'Affaires M. Armand, his secretaries were summoned in great baste to attend him, mud the Liveries of hie servants were those em uloyed by his predecessor, Count de Sartigea. the Ambasssador's state reception at the Vati can will take place later. but meanwhile being recognized _in his official dignity he can com mence business with Cardinal Antonelli. Many speculations are afloat with re gard to the nature of the promised modes eleendi of which his Excellency is understood to ,n the bearer. The most extended view of the case is that in consequence of the urgent repro .entations of General Menabrea and the desire of that Minister to satisfy the susceptibilities of the Italian nation as much as possible, on the meet ng of Parliatnent,thefileptember convention will be re-established and the French troops will bo withdrawn from the Pontifical dominions, the Imperial Government only stipulating for the right of keeping a vessel of war stationed in the harbor of Ciyita Vecchia, with some hundreds of marines on board, constantly ready to disembark ,n ea - YrMA - 1 - 110y of the sovereign Pontiff should require their intervention. lam afraid that this is a Utopian dream, and that the modul vivendi a ill be reduced to mere modifications of the cus toms tariff Lastweek every one was talking of the vice rector of the Scotch College having been carried off by brigands. This week it is the robbery in Vrincess Witgeastein's house, and the plunder of her valuable jewelry and objects of art, besides ready money amounting to about 540,000, which ncenples the gossip mongers of Rome. The Princess had gone out for a drive, and all her eer vents were absent on leave last Sueday afternoon —All Saints' day,by the by—when this great coup was effected. It is still a mystery who the rob bers were, where they came from, how they got into the house, and still more how they got out, the door being found bolted inside when the Princess returned; FO that an entrance was only ffeeted for her by means of a crowbar, but it is suspected that the robbers were professiotiale who came to Rotne tempted by accounts of the Princess's great wealth in jewelry and the napro tected state of her house. Princess Witgenstein [(Ades habitually in Rome; and is favorably viewed in ecclesiastical circles; her disa star, therefore, has drawn forth the sympathy of high placed individuals, and several cardinals have paid her visits of condolence. The Ray. Mr. Campbell is none the worse for his sojourn with the brigands, who took leave of him at last with cm diallty and respect, come shaking hands with him and others kissing his band the usual salu tation offered here to a priest He confirms that the ransom demanded was 520,000, and lint only 52.000, as published by the Observatore Romano. The re-establishment of the Roman Catholic hierarchy in Scotland le much talked of' in eccle siastical circles, and the ' •formalities will, it is said, be arranged when Archbishop Manning emcee to Rome; but I am incredulous on the realization of this project, as I also consider pre mature the announcement that Dre. Manning and Ullathorne will be made cardinals in toe coneiatory to be held on the 21st of De cember. The Popo continues to alloy good health, and made a very brilliant appearance with his gala quipage on the morning'of the 4th, when he repaired in state to the Church of St. Charles Borromeo, it being the festival of that 'Milanese saint. CONFLAGRATION IN NT. LOUIS. A Brewery Destroyed. The St. Louis Bcpublicau cf the 25th says: At 11 o'clock lust eight a ftre_hroke out in the upper story of the' extensive brewery of Fritz & WuWright, on Cerre street, between Ninth and Tenth. The fire is suppoEed to have originated from the cureless handling of a candle by one of the bands. The dames sprhad with great rapidity, envel oping in a few minutes the whole of the large thrte-story building, and lighting, up the sky with a ruddy glare, while the space fur a long distance around was illuminated with the brilliancy of day. The firemen arrived In a short time with their engines and commenced work, but made'slow progress, as it was quite Impel:NMl° to quench so large a volume: of flumes fiat by such a store of combustible materials. The building was entirely destroyed. The followingis a frill list of the insurance : Underwriters' Agency $lO,OOO St. Louis Mutual 10,0110 Jetrersori Mutual Howe Mutuul Fraulolu Immune Company Fire at Flizabethport, New r,oss 950,000. A large tire occurred at Elizabethport, Now Jeffrey, about six o'clock yesterday Morning.. The:fire broke out hrtier carp - titer shop.. The night watchman, John Fox, In attempting to ex tinguish tts.A flames, was burned (eternally; and lg not expected to recover. The buildings destroyed, etunprisleg the carpenter and blacksmith shops, were of brick, and covered about two .hundred by one hendred feet. Part were' two_:stories - and - 'part one•story high,- A laree amount of ma chinery mut one passenger ear were destreyed. The entire loss is estimated at .S50;000, on,. which iberq ly4s. 1w glittragee. ' , . z. MERSEK-Polaistaz PRICE THREE OEN. EIFTW:.- .. :i .- .:EI)ITION: BY TELEGRAPH: LATEST CABLE NEWS Mintiter Johnaon Going .to Ilimdilgitant Great Preparation to Receive •Ma LATEST FROM WASHINGTON Jeff - Davis's 'Trial. No Whipping in Delaware To-Day By Atlantic Cable. ' LONDON, Nov. 27, Evening.—Conaole, 91%, for money and. account. Five•fwentiee, , dull at 74%. Stocks firmer and higher. Erle, 27. •=- nolo Central, 06. LIVERPOOL. Nov. 27, Eventnt.--Cotton etcladit Uplande to arrive, 105 d. The sales to-day were 12,00(1, bales. - Petroleum dull; Refined, le. 630. Turf:lett= tine, 78s. 6d. „ • LONDON, Nov. 27, Evening.—Calcutta Li08001:1, 59(6,595.- 6d, -Linseed - 01i, .E 27 10E - - R - uthked - Peo; - trolenm, le. 6d. Fine Rosin, 15s. Gd. Turpen tine, 295. ABIWERP, Nov. 27.—Petroletim firmer at 54 e55Xf. HAVRE, Nov. 27.—Cotton easier at 1371. SOUTHAMPTON, Nov. 27.—Arrived, steamship Weatpballa, from New York. ' • LONDON, Nov. 28.—Great preparations are being made at Birmingham for the reception of Reverdy Johnson, on Wednesday next. John Bright has promised to speak on the occasion. The dinner to Mr. Johnson which, was contem plated by the Workingmen's Society of thiacitT. has been abandoned. Disraeli has declined a peerage, but his wife bas been created Viscountess of Boaconfields. PARIS, Nov. 28.—The Patrio says the Corps Legialath* will meet on January Wk. Vomwe, Nov. 28.—An American vessel, with arms on.board, designed for the use of the Wel lachilms, passed up the Danube a day , or two since. IF The Jeff. Davis Case. (Special Despatch toithe Philadelphia Eyeflinialtilletitta WAsnuiwrox, Nov. 28.—. Government has de sided to enter a motion for a continual:l4'A In the Jeff. Davis case, for the reason that it Is held that Chief Justice Chase ought to preside, which he cannot do at this term. on account of the approaching term of the Supreme Court here. The question whether the Government ought to abandon proceedings by entering a nolle prosequi, has not yet been considered. Mr. Everts Is of opinion that the trial would have come off lad, March if impeachment had not intervened. Who Delaware Whippings. (Special Despatch to the Philade. Evening But Mimi WILMINGTON, Del., Nov. 28.—N0 person WU whipped at New Castle to-day. There was only one person under such a sentence. The Sheriff anticipated a reprieve, and therefore postponed the ereculion 41)f the sentence until the Governor could be . heard from. NEW Yonne, November 28.-- 7 jkofeesor John A. Nichols, of the College of the City of Now York. died to-day. BUFFALO, Nov. 23.—Christian Guiles was saw tenced this morning by Judge Barker of the Su— preme Court, tote hung on DecemberB, for the murder of Marcus Bzwerline. Peter Leggett and James Meatt, Ramblers were sentenced to the State prison for eight and tea years respectively, for arson, they having set fire to the rooms of the latter - to secure the insur ance. FACTS AND FANCIES. —"Wales" was twenty-seven-on the 9th inst. —The census gives Paris Just 700,824 cats. —Henry A. Bombastes Wise is writing his au tobiography. —London ate a million and a quarter rabbits (not the Welsh) last year. —Waterbury, Conn., has a clerk of a school district who can neither read nor write. —California has 7,600 Masons and 152 Masonic lodges. —Secretary, Seward, it is said, will make New York hie fiturelesidence. —The "Gentiles" of Salt Lake City on election day voted 88 for. Grant and 71 for . Seymour. —Hiram Powers returns to the. United States this winter, after an absence 0131 years. —Maryland wants Mr. Cresswell in the Cabinet. —Brigham Young frowns upon the use of opera-glasses in his theatre. —Maxforl was once a tavern scullion in Ands- —Gen. Prim is a native of Germany, and Ws original name was PlllB9. —The Suez Canal will be--regularly opened IM October, 1869. —Rev. Mr. Porter, of Buffalo, has been India crimlnately inveighing against all dances and all dramas. —Ex-President Pierce writes that ho has lot been out of his house for three weeks, but hope.s to be about very soon. —Father do Saint, the Indian missionary, is going to Europe, leaving the missionary btuaingsa to Gen. Sherman until next spring. —When the weather is, in nautical language, dirty, clearly the riuht thing for the sailor to do is to sweep the horizon.—Judy. —A citizen of Belfast Ireland, thirsting for fame, bas climbed the spire of a church there and` been photographed while standing on the ball. burglar at Bridgeport, Connecticut, stepped .; fn - it large rat-trap, yellerk and waacaughtrtnere-i;: -- by patting frielbot In It. —Bismarck is about to join the liberals of con federated Germany, at which there is groat re joiciug among those to whose ranks ho Is an ac cession. —Roes Bell, who is breaking the hearts of young New York, Is Madame Gamboge, wife of a Frenchman of that color who takes good care of her morale and salary.. . —At a fair in New York a pretty young lady went up and aektd Grant if ho would ghee her a - - kiss. .$35,000 "No, Miss," eaid the grim little Gerteral; "I won't." —Chemung county, Now York; was carried for Grant by one vote. 'rho- man-who cast it, me Elmira A civertiser'thluks, , was, .gen tleman laid up with a broktn leg, but wbo Insisted on being carried to the polls. He is declared the banner voter of Chemung. —lt 1,8 believed that the Paris Ba'ecle start report of the death of Liszt in order to give !tactic au opportunity. to compose a ygry good epitaph upon hina,,which might be translated: Hi re to oblivion deep lies austere Listz„ W hoes tututic, 814 to tyll, had. Itttl'CK 411) Austorllta ;.1! 4400: : 04:31ciCiii; Obituary. From Buffalo.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers