GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME XXII.—NO. 257. THE EVENING BULLETIN: PUBLISHED EVERY EVEN ISO, (Sundays exooptud), AT THE NEW BULLETIN EVIL.DING. 60T Obestnat Street, Philadelphia. BY THE EVENING BULLETIN ASSOCIATION. FBOPBIJSTOBB. OIBBON PEACOCK, CASPER SOUDEE, Jit, The Btnxrrut ii served to subscribers In the etty et IB eente per week. peyeblo to the carriers. or 88 per annum. *®“ FAME INSURANCE COMPANY, 4CO Chestnut Street, This Company, incorporated in 1856, and doing a Ftro flnanranco baeincea exclusively, to enable it to accept a targe amount of business constantly declined for want of •adequate capital, wtU, in accordance with a supplement to its charter* increase its mm stock mu $lOO,OOO, ns peesbsi abocst, To $200,000, nr SHARKS OF FIFTY DOLLARS E tCH, end for which Subscription Books ore now open at thla office. By order of the Board of Directors. OHABLEB BIOHABDSON, PRESIDENT. WILLIAM 11. BfIAVS, VICE PRESIDENT. WILLIAMS I. BLANCHARD, SECRETARY. AGENTS AND SOLICITORS FOR LIFE INSURANCE And aQpertfliu contemplating loiaranee, WILL DO WELL TO BEE MR. H. Gh WILSON, AT THE OFFICE OF THE Penn Mutual Life Insurance Co. 821 CHEBTHUT BTBEET. ja!6s tu tb tf Ipj VV EDDINU CAHDB. INVITATIONS FOR PAR '' tiM,ic. New styles. MASON A CO.. ,n26tlc 007 Chestnut street. WEDDING INVITATIONS ENGRAVED IN THE Neweet arid' beet manner, LOUIS DREKA, Bta* rion.T end Engraver, 1C33 Chestnut street feb 30,-tt MARBLED. LEFF.VRE—BLACKBURN.—Thursday' evcnlnß. Feb ruary A 18®, at the refill race o 1 the bride’s parenis. Cluuehvtbe, llarlord county, Md., by the Her. P. F. <*>nner, Hr. Edward C. Lefevre, of UaUlmsre. Md., to MLs Anna M. Blackburn, late of Philadelphia, Fa. . /DIED. AVERY.—On tbe*ih*infitant, George W. Avery, in the Atth jet. of bis age./ Lue notice of tb<*/ionrral will be pi veiL ♦ ULLCUEU—On the 6th ixutant. In Baltimore, altera lingerie* iUncas, WiMUm G. L cleber, ia hu Mtb year. LATXAtr-lQ thla city, oo tbe Pth instant* Urt, Mary J. Latta. wife p| the Her. W. W. Latta, and daughter of the late £ion. Robert Jeekina. of Windsor. Lancaster county. Interment at Windsor on Thursday, the Utb instant, at fi-o'nloefc t* M« _ ♦ „ PIAW.-UB February 7th. m Fannie D„ wife of W. Harry Plait, and daughter of Joceph D. and Cornelia M urphy* aged St yean. Puserat front tbe reefdrsce of her parents, on Wednes day. February 10th. 18C9, at 10 A. M. Interment at Wood lands n B’IOUT.—On tbe Bth instant Charles A. Stout, youngest son of Julia and the late Charles titout, in the 33d year of bisaga. Tbe relatives and friends of tho family, also members of Apollo Lodge, 2K L O, of O. P.. and Washington Lodge, No. 6. oi the order of Good Fellows, are respect’ fully invited to attend his funeral from the residence of his brother Inlaw. Wm. J. fnomaacn. No. It£B Coates street, on Wednesday next, at 3 o’clock. To proceed to Mount Peace. • ■VfAGNIFICENT BLACK DRESS SILKS. Hi satin faced ukograins. HEAVIEST CORDED SILKS. WIDOWS' SILKS, NEW UjT. BLACK SILKS WHOLESALE. EYRE & LANDEMa Fourth md Arch Streets. SFECIAI. NOTICES. SO-1O RAILROAD CONTRACTORS Proposals will be received at IMAUCff CHUNK, until February the 17th, 18®, for the GRADUATION and MABONRY of tho NESQUEHOMNO VALLEY RAIL EOAD, Including the approaches of fiESQUEHONING TUNNEL. Specifications and information as to the work in detail Day be obtained on application at the Engineer's Office, blanch Chunk. V J. B. BOOBHE&D, PiccMent. )al< tlelTrp my FILES OR HEMORRHOIDAL TUMORS, IN. tenul or external—blind, bleed tag and Itching— poetSvelj. perfectly and permanently cared.without pain danger, inetramente or catutlce. by W. A. MoCANDLESS. M. D., 1088 Spring Garden street Referencee to over one thousand of the beat citizen, of Philadelphia. Mre. Dr. MoCANDLESS gtvea her attention to all female patient.. ■fig* SCHUYLKILL NAVIGATION COMPANY - At the annual meeting of the Stockholder* and Xoanholden held THU DAi ( the following gentlemen were elected officers for the eonulng year: Pbksibkht. FRED«RIUK FRALEY. Manaoxks -Jrseph B. Townsend, John N. Hutchinson, George Brooke, (Charles W. Wharton, ITbomasT. Loa, (Charles Baber, of Pottaville Tmubcekb CHARLES W, BACON. Secrktaey. WILLIAM M. TILGHMAN. lt{ Bgy- A TRIP TO CALIFORNIA. A Lecture will DC delivered on the above subject by the REV. OEO. J. MINGINS.of New York, in tbo Spring Garden Presbyterian Church, Eleventh trcet, above Spring Garden, on . , bRIOdi EVENING. February I3th. 7lll bebeld at the Übrary Room on TUESD VY.the 16th inet., between the hoars of four and eight P M fcKM JOHNLaRONER, rea-Qt. Recording decretory. ASSEMBLY BUILDINGS—CHESTNUT AND TENTH STREETS. ON I HITRBDAY EVENING. FEBRUARY nth. THE YOUNG AND GIFTED LEOTURBSsT ~ ■ MISS PAULINE BREWSTER SMYTHE. WILL DELIVER HER THRILLING AND POPULAR LECTURE—"AN APPEAL TO W. MAN.” TICKETS 23 CTB. RESERVED SEATS. 60 OT3. Obtained at GOULD’S, 923 Chestnut; TRUMPLER’S. Door. DOORS OPEN AT 7 LECTURE AT 8 O’CLOCK. fe6 s tn at rps ■©% THIRD ANNIVERSARY OF THE “HOME FOR Little Wanderers,' > at the Academy of Music, on FRIDAY EVENING, February 13, 16©. Addresses by Ilre..WUlitts, Newton «nd others. Singing by tbo Little W nnderers, under the direction of J. E. Gould, open at half.past 6. Exercises commence at half- RA e . tri , 60 cents; to bo had at the door and at tbo Home, BS3 Bbippen street. fe66trps ■©“.INSTITUTION FOR THE BLIND, TWEN day at * *aco Exhibition every Wednes instant, the price of admission la advance Is necessary to avoid overcrowding the rooms K 5 S&* tS2J7£PS. hospital, nos, uis and 1530 •ski Dispensary Department.—Medi £e poor inenfc and * medicine furaiahed|®mtou*ly % —Tfae American announces novelties for thU Miscellaneous performance will be EUROPEAN AFFAIRS LETTER FROM PARIS. (Correspondence of tho Phtlada. Evening Bulletin.] Paris, Tuesday, Jan. lath, 1869 —Tne groat event of the French Legislative yoar took place yesterday, when the Emperor delivered the speech which ho facetiously calls the “elncero expression of the views which direct his conduct”' Con sidering that no one yet has ever been able to make out precisely what Napoleon meant on any one occasion on which be has opened his mouth, the above definition respecting the extreme “sin cerity" of his oracular utterances Is rather amusing. Perhaps, however, it may bo said with more truth than usual that the Emperor has never been clearer on one point of his policy than bo)wos yesterday. And that point Is, that the power he holds he intends to keep. In no former speech that he has delivered does his own personality stand forward more prominently. The great monarchical principle, L’Eiat, c'tst moi, is written In every line! of what he said, as plainly as though Louis XIV. were still reigning. It is “my” conduct which is the rule of the State. It Is on “my” firmness that the country relies for keeping order. It Is “i" who of my own free will " augmented the powers of the deliberate assemblies”; it is “I" who de clare (hat the “fundamental bises of tho Consti tution," which “1” originally laid down, shall “not only not he changed,” bnt “shall not even be disenssed." So fixed and immutable ia the imperial decree, that the great French nation shall not even be allowed to deliberate Whether Its present form of government ia exactly what suits it or not. And these are the conditions under which Napoleon colls himsalf the “respon sible chief of a free conntry,” and this is the "basis" on which he considers that an alliance between "liberty and authority" (the old stereotyped phrase) Is to be boilt. But the intelligence of the cone try has learnt by fatal experience—by Mexican expeditions abroad, and by loan upon loan at borne—that such “responsibility" Is a mockery, and that anything like real liberty must be l«3otfrp} claimed and won as a right—not conferred aud accepted as a favor. It is useless, however, to expatiate on such matters, which are os clear as day, notwithstanding the “sincerity” with which they arc and dressed In colors not their ownTMv the*oratorical dexterity of the Im perial style''* \J, . . It is strange at the moment at which i now writcAhat, the Emperor has not been more out*Mpcen on the matter of the Con iertnee. It wagjJiillr expected that he would have made this the cream of his speech, and indulged UPSnme self-congratulations upon the successful Issue of the deliberations which havo just teimlnaled. But he has chosen to be cither designedly reserved, or modestly reticent on this topic, and simply announces that the Con ference “approaches Its conclusion”, and that “all the Powers are agreed la principle”- It would have been more satisfactory had he told us plainly that the matter was at an end, and that those concerned had agreed how to act,as well as how to think about it. But, as you may have gathered from my previous let ters, I have always been of opinion that there has been far more fnss made about this trnmpery Tar co-Grtek affair than it was worth. From the mo ment It became apparent, as I think it did long ago, that not one of the greau r powers was either prepared or desirous to foment the quar rel, the altercation assumed the proportions of a sqanbble. And in those proportions it will doubtless remain—for the present —and until some one or other U ready to take it up again at a more convenient opportunity. What the Conference has really done now,.has ooen to admonish that trouble some little kingdom of Greece to be “quiet,” and not trouble the peace of Europe, just now with its pretensions. With this “admonition” the Greeks will sulkily profess to comply, for the time being, and the Turks will also profess to be satis fied; and so the parties will be left in statu quo as to real feelings, only morally bound to keep the peace. This is just the conclusion which I al ways anticipated for theConference.bat certainly nothing more final or definite. There was a grand wedding at Court the other day, the names of both parties being closely al lied with imperial traditions of a very marked character. The bridegroom was the Prince of Moskowa, the lineal representative of Marshal Ney; the bride was the widow of Count de La tedojere, son of that Colonel de Labedoyere who was the first to induce bis regiment to revolt and join Napoleon I. on his way from Elba. One of the earliest acts of Napoleon 111. was to draw the father from obscurity, and make him a Count; hut even imperial favor could not wipe out the slain upon military honor. But Napoleon is al ways staunch to his friends; and Madame Labe doj ere 1s now Lady of the Palaoe. and her mar riage was celebrated with great state in the chapel of the Tuileries, and she and her husband loaded with imperial presents. The Brussels papers give an account, which has been re-copied into all the French journals, of a Brand dinner, or rather banquet, given by Mr. landlord. United States Minister at that city, to twenty-four guests at the American Legation, in the Avenne de la Toison d'Or. The remarkable part of this banquet—which, with the “ memoir '> of it (to repeal Rothschild's well-known pun) will doubtless long remain with the munificent donor and those fortunate enough to partake of it with him— was the fact that it was composed entirely of American productions, and comprised the mo3t delicato and recherche specimens that could be procured of oysters, meats, game, poultry, forced trult and early vegetables, cheese, preserved meats, &c., all of which had been expressly sent from the United States for this unique occasion. Even the French wines which were introduced had been in a manner “nationalized." For they had been made to perform a voyage across the Atlantic, and had returned in company with their , “ feilow-citizan3, ’ American champagne and other products of trans-Atlantic vineyards. The gourmets of the little Belgian capital are notorious for good tasto and good cheer of their own. But I understand that on this occasion they were compelled to avow themselves fairly beaten in the superiority of the viands supplied to them from aoross the ocean. Mrs. Jefferson Davis, who recently arrived in this city with her husband, has been seriously tu. She Is attended by Dr. Christopher Smith, who however, I understand, gives hope oV her ultimate recovery. Prince Napoleon is 'better, and once more at the Palais jßoyal, where, it has beon remarked, one of his first acts was to recoivo to a long Interview, M. PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1869. Rangabd, tho Greek Minister, who has so both ered the Conference. As to the Emperor, ho seems never tired of impressing npon his sub jects the fact that he is Id tho highest state of health, and has not the least intention os yet of following the many other actors in the coup d'etat who have takon their departure. I saw him tho other day leave his carriage at the en trance of the Bois, snd with tho Empress on his arm, walk at a stout pace the whole of the way back to Paris, through tho dense crowds of Idlers which never fall to line tho sidewalk of the Ave nne de 1’ Impetairice at that hour of the day. THE EASTEBft QUESTION. Russian sympathy Cor Greece. The Bassians In St Petersburg are showing their sympathy for the Greeks by 1 sending large sums to the Hellene committees at Athens. On the 12th of January, at a ball given by one of the principal bankers of tbe town, two collections were made among the guests; one for the poor, and theotber for tbe Hellenes. The first pro duced 950 roubles, the second 8,680,and the latter sum was at once despatched to Athens,the police making no objection. Five young Greeks em ployed in merchants’ offices at Bt. Petersburg, having declared their intention of returning to their conntry to serve as volunteers in the Greek army,a subscription was opened to provide them with the necessary outfit, and 4,600 roubles were collected in a few days. Grecian Submission. A gentleman calling himself the head of the Provisional Government of Crete, but who is now in Paris, M. Constantin Voioudaki, has written a letter to the Siicle, In which he says:—“Many persons sympathizing with the sufferings of my conntry have asked me if we could, on condition cl obtaining reforms and concessions, again sub mit to the Saltan. In tbe name ot all my coun trymen, of whom I only express here the inflex ible determination, I reply: No, never; even rhculd Greece, constrained by diplomacy, abandon us, never shall we again fall under the yoke. Can wo ever forget the massacres of our children, wives, and old people, accomplished in cold blood by the Turkish troops under the orders of Mu6tapha Pasha and Omar Fasha? We might forgive these crimes; but on every road in Candla the bones of our fathers, sealtered about by the Ottomans, torn from the lomb alter one or two centuries of repose, do cot permit us to either forget or pardon. We shall all know how to fulfil our duty as we have hitherto done—namely, to be killed to the last man or obtain union with Greece, our country, from which no human force will ever be able to separate ns.” M. Yoleudaki adds that he Is on bis way to the United States to communicate thla resolution of his countrymen to the American people. ROME. The Roman police pretend to have discovered * deposit of arms and a secret press used for printing inflammatory proclamations. Prince Troubetske i, coming from Florence, was stopped by the police at the gates of Home, and aent uiider escort to the frontier. This proceeding la wholly unconnected with politics, and Is due to the intervention of the Cardinal-Vicar. The guardian of pnblic morals is also busy among I be choristers of the Vatican, and measures are being taken to put an end to notorious scandals. The police seem to have been precipitate in the affair of the Wurtembcrg sculptor Kopf, arrested on a charge of tampering with Pontifical soldiers. Through the intervention of Baron d’Arnim the sculptor had been released on parole, though he has bv no means established “is innocence. The case was much debated at ■he German club in the Fontana di Trevl, where one party acquits while tho other condemns the accused. The majority drove the minority out of the door, and, as these are Prussians, they threaten to complain to the King of Prussia of Baron d’Arnim, Count Tranttmansdorff, and the Minister of Bavaria, who side with the majority. A correspondent in Rome writes as follows: A great deal has been said here of an auto graph letter to the Pope from the Emperor Na poleon, explaining the omission of all reference to the Roman question in the Imperial speech on the opening of the Legislative Corps. An Italian journal, the Corner*della Marche has even pub ■ lshed the letter in full, though, being a complete lorgery, this publication can have no object but to excite the Italians against the Emperor. Nevertheless, I am lold that a letter from the Emperor has really been received by the Pope, bat that it -imply confirms the assurances of the MarquU Je Bonneville, adding only that the corps of oc cupation will furnish a guard for the (Ecumeni cal Council There are whispers that a guard will be required to preserve order within the as sembly, as well as without, and certainly the Pope is evincing uneasiness as to the unanimity of the numerous bishops on some of the ques tions for debate. I have already informed yon of the arrival of Cardinal Mathieu, Archbishop of and it appears that he has come to announce an intention on the part of some of the French bishops to bring the question of Galllcanifm before the Council. The Pope is so alarmed at this threatened interpellation that he has despatched a brief to several of the mal contents, giving them good advice, and trying to ’ring them to reason, which, in this case, means -iknee. The Holy Father has also spoken se verely of the movement in Prance for a monu ment to Voltaire. ■ The Osservatore Romano of this evening con »ins an article on the Pontifical army, which it -tales to be 16,834 strong: The authorities are cxptctlng from France several transports with mproved arms, and tho Labrador baa arrived at Uvita Vecchia with munitions for the corps of occupation. Horses are being purchased through all the Pontifical territory, and even in the annexed provinces, ana the troops are constantly exercised in the operation of defends lug Rome agauist a foreign army. This oas lately been done ai night, nndcr the eye of ijon. Kanzlerand his staff, and a day or two ago he Minister of War commanded in a sham fight at St. Paul alle Tre FoDtane. A commission of French officers appointed by Gen. Dumont has inspected the fortifications of Rome, which they pronounce very defeciive, and they recommend great alterations. Gen. Kanzler disagreed with the report, arid showed the officers that the works were a lalthful embodiment of the plans of the French General Prudhon, as sanctioned by the Minister of War in Paris. This induced the commission 10 reconsider its conclusions,which are now very tavorablo to the fortifications, bnt the incident tius not raised tho prestige of the French service with the Pontifical authorities. FBANCE. Tlio Burlingame mission in Paris— Of. tidal Heceptton at Use Tuileries. [Fr orn the Paris G.Ugnani, Jan. 23 i His Excellency Mr. Burlingame, the Chinese Ambassador, and his two colleagues, were oili dolly received yesierday, at two o’clock, by the Emperor. His Majesty was attended bv the Marquis de la Valette, Minister of Foreign Affairs, the officers on service and several dignitaries of the conrt. Mr. Burliogame delivered the follow ing address : Bike— On behalf of myself and my associates I havo the honor to preeeo t oar letter of credence to your Majesty from the Emperor of China, and in bis name to express good wishes for the health and happiness of your Majesty, the Empress, the Prince Imperial-and the great people over whom yon preside. The mission is a novel one. it is the first that has ever been sent by China to the nations of the West. It is the expression of a sincere desire on her.part to enter into the family of nations, to submit her questions, .as yon submit your ques tions, to the enlightened judgment of mankind, and to avail herself of the privileges, while she called upon to accept tho obligations of inter-- national layy. This desire was the outgrowth of OUR WHOLE COUNTRY. a better appreciation of the civilization of the ii rcB P* t^J P fr° m a considerate policy estab lished ana maintained by the representatives of the treaty Powers on coming Into more Immedi ate relations with the great men of tho empire at Pekin. That policy was the snbstltntion of fair diplomatic action for the caprice of Interest and the rnde energy oi iorce. Among the ministers at Pekin none contributed more to promote that policy than the enlight ened representative of yoar Majesty, M. Berthe ®.ns “ fwa great consolation to us all In inat distant land to know that our views were warmly supported by your Majesty's government; and may not China hope that the same sense of justice that appreciated and sustained those views y* will.attend them ..as they are art * Pore enduring forms? The Emperor was pleased to make a most gra cious reply. Mr. Burlingame then made a sign to Mr. Brown, bis secretary, and the latter ad vapeed, holding a perfumed case of yellow satin tied with ribbon of tho same color, and which had figures of the dragon with five claws, the Imperial arms of China, worked into the texture. From this receptacle the functionary proceeded to draw out the credentials of the embassy, a docu ment nearly 6 icet long. It was written on thick yellow paper, with a wide edging of emblematic dragons. The text was in double Chinese and the other Mantchon—the characters in both running from right to left. In the mid dle was the imperial seal, a square of about four nchee, signifying “the imperial jewel,"in ancient, that Is, Mantcbou lettering. This curious manu script of the Celestial Empire was handed over to the Marquis de la Valette. After the audience the ambassadors had the honor of being received by the Empress, sur rounded by tbe ladles of her household. Court carriages conveyed the Eastern envoys to and from the palace with all the ceremonies employed on such occasions. Funeral of tbe Prince Royal. The funeral ceremonies of the Prlnco Royal of Belgium took place at Lacken, near Brussels on the 25th of January. The body was entombed in tbe presence of the King and Queen. The mournful ceretgony so much affected the royal parents that there was great difficulty .In getting them away from the bier. The Church at Lasken, where the service took place, has been erected especially to pro vide a vault for the Interment of the Kings of Belgium. All traffic within a distance of two kilometres of the church was stopped du ringtheday. The decoration of the church was i-imple In the extreme. In the midst was a cata falque for the reception of the coffin, canopied with black drapery fringed with gold, and orna mented with black feathers. The aisles and the choir were hung with black. The two sides of the choir were adorned with back and gold hangings, and were set apart for the royal family and the high dignitaries of the state. After a portion of the fnneral office had been said by the priests, the coffin was raised on the shoulders of twelve officers belonging princi pally to tbe Civic Guard’ and to the army. Im mediately behind the coffin came the King and the Count of Flanders, both of whom appeared in the uniform of a lieutenant-general of the Belgian army, the insignia of the Order oi Leopold being covered with crape. It was difficult to see the King’s countenance, but his appearance—which was that of a man bowed down, with grief—and his fixed look, struck ■ deeply:lnto the heart of the immense crowd who thronged the streets through which the proces sion slowly wended its way. After the Agnut Dei, the coffin was carried to the vault, the king and his brother accompanying it as far aa the threshold, and the child was laid beside the re mains of his grandfather, Leopold L fBB SmnSBIP PEBEIBE DIS. Farther Particulars of the Accident ana VesUmooy ot the Passengers, The following extracts from the Courier au Havre of January 26 wifi tend to elucidate the disaster on board of the Pereire, the particulars °‘which have been so mvsteriofislv withheld: The steamer Perelre left Havre o'n the 15th and Brest on the 16th nit, tinder eommand of the able seaman, Captain Duchesne. She experi enced fearful weather, and on the 21st the wind calmed, bnt the sea was tremendously agitated. At about half-past two P. M. an extraordinary volume of water struck the forepart of the vessel, destroying the saloons, tho cabins, and ail the forward fixings, sweep ing off tho boats and causing the fall of one of the yards. This occurred at about 1,300 miles from Brest, and the vessel was fully four minutes in righting herself. Six persons were killed, three of whom were passengers. More than half of the fires were extinguished. If the sea had caught the vessel sideways, instead of forward, she must it evitably have gone down. The fist of killed Is os follows: Deisonr, sailor, and Jean Cahoguet, employe, were swept off bv the sea. Juan Jonan, saflor, skull fractured by the fall ing yard. Miss Flnkelbcrg, a passenger, had her neck broken. Mr. O’Callaghan, a priest, killed by the yard falling on his chest Mr. Fpulquler, passenger, died from concussion of the brain. Twenty of the passengers, officers and crew were injured, but are progressing favorably, with the exception of a misaioDary, who had one ep l crna * le< l> and gangrene is setting in the The city authorities have spared no efforts in alleviating the sufferings of the injured persons to the utmost in their power. EXTRACT OV TUB TESTIMONY GIVEN BY THE PAS- SfiSGERS. "“i thei undersigned, passengers on board of the French steamship Pereire during her voyage from Havre and Brest, bound for New York; having leit Brest on the 16th and returned to port under damage, desire hereby to testify to the noble and solid qualities of the vessel, and especially to the admirable sang fruid, the apti tude and the intrepidity of our brave Captain Duchesne, daring the fearinl trials we just ex perienced. We dare to affirm that If, by the infinite grace of onr Almighty Father, we are permitted once more to see those dear to us, we owe such favor, after God, to the quick decision, knowledge and ecnenmmate talent ol Captain Dnchesne, ad inliably seconded by his officers and erew, be cause tbelr activity and zeal caused the adopted measures to be crowned with success at tho moment of the catastrophe. Four days after leaving Brest, on the afternoon of Wednesday, January 21, a heavy gale gave wav to a tempest and afterwards to a terrible hurricane. The vessel being brought to at two o clock, was strnck, or rather was buried under the most huge wave that any of ns remember to have witnessed, although several of our party hove crossed the Atlantic many times during the last twenty years. The bulk of water, estimated at Irom 600 to 700 tons, broke on the bows, de stroying the saioen and carrying all before it, killing and wounding some of tho passengers and crow, end leaving the fore part of the vessel open and exposed, so that tho continuation of the voyage was rendered impossible in tho face of rough weather. Notwithstanding the inconvenienco arising from onr return to France, wo consider tho prompt action taken by the captain to have been the only means of saying the vessel and tho passengers. We wish to proyo that in our opinion tho crew gave convincing ovldenco of order; discipline and capacity during tho sad and terrible circumstances through which wo passed and that our confidence in the solidity and the nautical qualifications of the Perelre, the con summate ability and intrepid courage of her valiant commander, only increased on Booing them put to the test during ouch u etttastropho. > On board of tho Pereire, at sea, January 2-1, ‘ ' Here follow the signatures of tho possongers. BELCICM. ASTER. LEma FBon Washington. How Internal Rcvcnno Affair* are Conducted in New nrleana—A Collec tor and Deputy collector Suspended for Alleged Malfeasance in tlfflce- Geii. Frank Blair and tbe Colored Member on tbe Floor of tbe Mouse— Washington Firemen In Trouble— Tbe Last deceptions at tbe Wbtte Mouse During Johnson’s Term. TCorreepondcncoof tho Philo. Evening Bulletin.) Washington, Feb. 8, 1869.—Supervisor C. E. Creecy, for the District of Louisiana, is stirring up the revenue officers in his district, in a quar ter where iteeems the services of an active,honest acddetemiint scene he might have had more ease and natural*: ness without hnrting the personation, but after wards be was fully up to the requirements of a somewhat difficult character. Mr. Hernple, as tbe representative oi the avuncular relative} was eminently pleasing. It was not hia fault, but the author’s, that nobody could discover what ha was about half the time. "Mra. Wavorhata" is the heroine and injured innocent of the piece. On this occasion Bhe was dressed with exquisite taste, and found in Miss Price a representative who gave her every grace and at- ' traction to which she was legitimately entitled and tbe name of them is legion. “Annie Tem ple” (Mrs. Creese), one of the lovers In distress, was as interesting and pretty os yonng ladies who are distressed with thwarted affection should be. Bnt the two best personations were thoso of "Ezra Blead,” by Mr. Mackey, and “Mrs Bop pett,” by Mrs. Thayer. These two artists—en tirely unapproachable In their respective lines,— covered themselves with glory. Mrs. Thayer was the tabby of the Tamo Cats; a rusty, forlorn, second-hand, semi-decayed meddler, with her ear at every key-hole and tOßgne in every quar >cl. Nobody bnt Mrs. Thayer could have gtyon snch an amnsing representation of this kind of creature; the very stylo of femaio of which pro- ' fceeional auction-goers and fnnerat-attenders are tbe types. “Ezra Steed” is a sly, hypocrUlcal.di lapidated, shabby-genteel returned convict—a compound of Aminadnb Sleek and Robert Ma cairtT. Mr. dackey did more than justlco to the character; be took the bud of a suggestion and warmed it into a blossom with bis intelligence. These two Impersonations are worth all the others in Ute piece. The play is very elegantly mounted; the . scene in the first act, by Hawthorne, being’ no* ’ markable for beauty. The drawing-room lit the: third act is also very pretty. Tho performance concluded with Craigs capital burlcsquo of Barit' lileue. The same bill is announced for this evening. Rn>iOUEHANNA. —The Barney 'Williamses began their engage- ' inent at tho Walnut last night with a crowded ’ house, and with ua hearly a welcome as they could have wished. Tho pieces played are not , new, hut thev aro received with as much enthu siasm as If thev bad been given for the first time. Barney Williams is tho very beat actor in his line of parts In the profession. Ho Is tho only genuine .representa tive of the traditional Idea of a stage Irishman. Ho has that creamy, not impossible brogue, in which tho Irish Emigrant ought to have suogjila lament; he la a potent and muscular wfelder of tho Inevitable ehlllaleh; he la cratnmedfull of pa triotic alinsions to Ireland the Gem of the Ocean; be is down on traitors,; informers and tyrannical Brilons; ho is a vigprous dbudeen puffer, and. ho never fails to vindicate virtue, rescue tho imper rilled, and protect injured innocence. Huso compUshed wife Is even more versatile, and a* a matter of courßO far more’ charming. To-night. ’ they will exercise themselves In The Fairy Circle and The Cu stoma of the Country. —Tho Galton Comic Opera Oompany will sp pearat the Chestnut St. Theatre this evening in tho operotta A Marriage by Laatenw. F. L PRICE THREE CENTS. AaMSKnuaiw, “ TAME cats” AT THE ABCH. ’ON. Palilislier.