GIBSON PEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME XXIII.--NO. 51. rI'H,E; • EVENING BULLETIN. • JYREIDISIIED EVERY EVENING, (Sundays cxceptciU, AT THE NEW BULLETIN BUILDING, 607 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, BY TUE EVENING BULLETIN ASSOCIATION. • Montt crons, • • - GIBSON PEACOCK, CASPER SOUDER, F. L. FLTHERSTON THOS. J. WILLIAMSON, • • •FliiiNCIS WELLS: The BuLtatm; 1$ served to nulmeribers In the city at 18 Cents per week. payable to the carrier, or fiB Derautinni. VET ED DING CABDS, INVITATIONS V V for Parties, &c. New styles. MASON &CO • ttu2stt§ . 907 Chestnut street. LDDII U. INVITATIONS EN _griived in din newest and boat 'initiator: 'LOUIS tEKA, Stationer and Engraver, 1033 Chestnut street fe2o tf DIED. .10NES.—On , the Gth Instant, Richard T. Jones, aged nis relatives and friends are respectfnlly invited to at tend the funeral, from , the t,Plildelle , l of his fuller No. .141:1 Pill4ll street; on Fourth -day morning, the 9th in wt., at iro'clock. • E.111h1..AT1t101;;..--On Monday, 7th Mat, at Brook lyn; L. L. Jos/1111111e Win. Kirkpatrick. The relatives and friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend the , funeral sarvices. at St. Paul 'a tliiirrh. Third, below Walnut strret, on Thursday, 10th . inst.. at o'clock P. M. ' ss 1101.11.11tTS.—On Monday, inns 7th. in the 21.1 yisir of her age. Sallie, wife of George B. Roberts, acid daughter of niche rd.ll:llrinton. . • TA AIM LAWNS'AND 'LIGHT ORGAN -I)MS. DARK FRENCH LAWNS. 3 FINE FRENCH ORGANDIES. MAGNIFICENT GRENADINES.. IRON BAREGES, FIRST QUALITY. . • EYRE A LANDELL. SPECIAL NOTICES. 10. JNO. WANAMAKER HAS IN ST0111; - NEW THINGS TAILORING GOODS, AND A LARGE At 4 SORTMENT os FINE Itl -3IAJ)F. Poll Gents, Youth and Children. 815 and 820 Chestnut St. BETHANY MISSION SABBATH. U-)" School: TWENTY-SECOND ;nal SHIPPEN Sta. STRAWBERRY FEIITIVAL. TH UESDA Y and FRIDAY AFTLII.NOON and EVEN ING,Jmie 10 and D. It 1. detertninod to make t hi 6 Fe.,tiva I a grwttt Fueee, , , Obit Witt tw• well worth a riga. A tine hand of mthly will be in attendance. vfrket. , for tale at the following places: J. H. COY LE A; 4-'O. No. 310 MAHE ET Street. iIEORGE 11. DROWN. No. 405. FOURTH Strod. CHARLES E. MORRIS, Na.7lS WALNUT Siivei. JOHN NVANAMAKER. MS and CHESTNUT St. G J. E. OU , w LD, CHESTNUT Stpt. below' TENTH. ItINN'S Drug Store. MD r.klio and SPRUCE Streets. je; 3trf§ rriCE OF THE LEH IG H. COAL AND NAVIGATION coupANv, THEA- Z,LItY DEPARTMENT. . • l'utt.AttEbrittA June your , thk Om. ou the 15111 Itatalit on the Gold LOAD of this Company will he paid in coin at' their Whet on and a'ter that date. hold - 1 , of ten or morn yen pon. are requested to pre,ent them 1,, , t0re the 15th. awl 1-c-it , • then-for receipt- , Fiaya ble on theLA h. SOLOH4iN SHEPH D ER, JeS-6q, TreiniOr. GE).;EItAL MEETING OF' THE E 1/.1 - lothikie I oriffe' — AlT:Tl.M. DIST Eris( OPA -CHUReII will he held at the 4:BEEN sTBEET CHURCH (above Tenth). on Tr Es DA Y EVEN I N G. Bth inlet.. pit S oseloek. to muter on the ntivt ion of Lay Repre.entation. will he delivered by Bev. Iliehop reon, Rev. Altrrd Coot:man. Rev. T. T. Tauter. Sr.. bad _ . iUt. THE FOURTEENTH ANNE VEIL ILDIINN 'S. HOME, of Went Philadelphle. trill be hold at lllRTrlntrch of the Saviour. Thirtf-e•Fhth street, above Cheqnut, on TUESDAY El EN INJuno Sth, at o'clock. A dd, re,e, W il l be delivered 111,. PHILLIPS 111100 E S'atal Myr. 11E111:Wli .11111 NSON it tion taken up iu :41 of the Institution. It' kiTl; RY FESTIVAL IN the Sunday Schools of Zion P. E. )'larch, at Athletic Thirteenth 01rect ESDA EVENING,Inne National Itras,t Band, eonAbding of t trout - 'pieces. and iNaond Glee Club both ts NI be in idtall ida:o, and entertain Him audience during Cho Je7-21 In' .. 112 p . A bAsH SINGE]. X\•1:,1-11...s AN. IN- Kutt mentlu an lipiseoval Chord'. Is compotont to leatt hair. .14111 r ,,, 11. I. No 37 North ‘vo , r etreet. Philadul jo7-3frf‘" I.'srrY UF PFN'SSYLV Da. UNIVE • . (FACULTY OF ARTS.> 'DIE ANNUAL PCBI.IC EXAMINATIONS of the Junior. r7'llplivinort., and Freshman classes, at the close 01 the Coliege year. will beheld daily (except Sundays), from 10 o'clock, A. 31., to '2 o'clock, P. 31., front June 4th to .1 in n ' 22d.. - EXAMINATIONS FOR ADMISSION to the Collega will he held •.n June 2.11. beginning at 103.; o'clock. • THE COMMENCEMENT ',rill be mid j olt s. 2,(Th. . • I 'FRANCIS A, JACK SUN, Secretary. jr .. B. FRANK. :PALMER, LL. D., SUR= Bean Artist, but just In m commissioned by tho tiurgeon - General to supply the Palmer Inn and. Lez for nutilatt , ql Officers of the U. S. Army andvy. Tho Governmental ofticTB are to Si, located in Plillitdolvhia o New York and Boston, and, tiro all conducted_ ny Pr.. PALMER. . . my 27 78trp§ LVANIA RAILROAD 11,7 COMPANY, TREASURER'SDEPARTMENT ' PUILADHLPITIA, May /5,1669. NOTICE TO sTocrafoLDEns.—Thii buoks.aro now open for subscription and payment of the new stock of this COmpany . THOMAS T; FIRTH, naylB-30trP§ • • TreasnrM. Tux, STATE RIG FITS FO.ll. SA etate rights an valuable invention just patented. i. itiardeF.loted - for the cutting-and- eellipping ut •thlrdrberr. cabbage.' S:g:". are hereby otiorel tot It Pi an article of great value , to proprietors of hotels and : restutl y sit t, sod it Should be introduced Into every fam ily, State -rights for s,tle Model eau seen at [lto telegraph office, Cooper's point. N.. 1. niv2e-tl, MUNDY.3.:•IMPFINIAN. ' . . TWITS:TV-VOITRTIT. Fa; olt '.A. U Aiiiii ,, rsitry and Convert of the Broad Street Bap. /Ist Church Juvenile Missionary Society, cornor Lt emel and Brown stre,,ts, 'IISESDA Y 1.:‘ENING,.111111. The ex(rriseswilleonsist of the •' May gttreu," r.l,!.‘atttititl cantata, by a churns yf ?Al elillitrell; IOW). singing, reci tations and other interesting exereliws. .3fttale arranged for the 01:1 , 81011 by pror.Bland..r. it ti to 2t rut TURKISH BATHS, iiiii.O.MAIIitiST.REET, TWO SQUARES FROM TIIE CONTINENTAL. Ladies' ilepiitaplit_elrletly private. °pail d inept-pg. . - • ..._ , . 0. T 0 li . It 18'X S .AND OT HERS IN - Marriag e of Edwin Bootli—Cersnpny - Will' otiiiitTlTiiiisiit'tigffir - oi: - illiiiiiiii - Siiioliiiiir ' -- • ' reilliedied - Yinate - rdwr7 -, , . . . rohaeoo,w ill Mid my stoelc eumpleee with all the leading - ..., .:--- . - -,.... ' the , e .....- , • . , , brlm(l4. • A few of those Cabargas loft at less than east a. Mr. .11AINVID. Booth, lt 11 k now u riago impartation. nIeCARAIIEIt, Seventeenth and' Locus': dian, was married yesterday, at Long Branc h , ttreetN, ..___. . . ~, HOWARD 11,0SPIT4L, NOB. 1518 The ceremony was performed by the' bride's and ItS2O Lombard street, Dlitpansary Thmartment• grandfather, the Rev. S. I• 3 1 els, of Cctlifor -It Mimi treatment and meitteitia famished gratuitously • • • ' KC() ltle Pool. ula • - C' • SPECIAL NOTICES. BTRAWBERRY FESTIVALAT the "Claire'tot the Melndali." Loeustand Juniner idrenta, WEDNE.4I)AY EVENING: and THU/Oil/AY AFTENNOON and EVENING of thm week. • The tiehool admitted freii. • IV -- - 'DIVIDEND NOTICES. 7 • •• • - • OFFICE OF THE C RELIANE LIO7SUIIANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA, Au. 308 W ALNUT STREET. ..• Puttibm.rutii, Jane 7, 150. The :Board of Directors of the Reliance 'lnsurance Company of Philadelphia have thin dny declared a betni- Annual. Dividend of Four Per Cent. on their capital steek, payable to the stockholders or their legal repro . - eentatives,nn demand; clear of tuxes. jes4dtij IYM. CHUBB, Secretary: Cg, OFFICE OF :THE OIL 'BASIN FE: TItyLEU3I COMPANY, No. 14 Smith Fourth street—PittLA nri1.,141 IA • .Infie 7, 160.).-The Dlrectore Lace Ulla day declared a Quarterly Dividend of Four Per Cent., upon the Capital stee.k of the Company, payable to the stocklmblers 011 and after Ti! UHKDAY next, the loth imp • I icB Ist *I • IL. YANDElivEßitiTrens'r. • juv . 'NOTICE.—THDIRECTORS E OF the Camden and Atlantic Land Company have de clared a Dividend of Eight Per Cent., payable to the Stockholders on demand: • • J. 'LLOYD, -lel lrp • : Secretary. IYPLINN SYL VANIA RAILROAD COMPANY , TitEASURE DEPABTMENT. PHILADELPHIA, Pa.. May 3d, 1869. The Board of Directors have this deo declared a semi annual Dividend of Five Per Cent, on the Capital. Stock of the Company, clear of National and State taxes, paya ble in cash on and after May 30,1000. Blank powers of attorney for collecting dividends can Le had at the Mee of the Company, No. 238 South Third The Office will be opened at 8 A. M. and closed at 4 P M., from May 30th to JUDO Mb, for the payment of (HA dends, and lifter that date from 9 A. M. to 31'. M. THOMAS T. FIRTM, Treasurer. . , NOTE.—The third instalment on New Stock of MS is due and payable on or before June 15, my4-2turps LETTER FROM. ATLANTIC CITY. Corrospothlence of the Er mug Bulletin.] ATLANTIC CITY, June li , 180).—Mevirs. Edi- t%,/* The improvements that have been made, amVothers tbat are now going on, in this "City by the Sea," are many, and greatly tend to beautify the plaee. The Sea View Ifoso, erected last winter by the railroad company,LS situated on the beaeli,about two squares below the Surf House, and is an immense structure. it is nearly...iompleted, and when finished will compare favorably with any others of its kind in this country. There is a large and spacious dancing room connected with it, to be 11.4141 eXOI.I.SiVPIy by excursionists, as well .as wash roomsolining-hall, and all other neceskary rooms and falilitieS for the acconnnodation of zi large number of people. Th e r e have also been nmuerous cottages erected by enterprising gentlemen, both from your city and New lurk. The Exchange wallas been beautified by raising it another story and surinomiting it with a 31irniard roof.' 'the Sart lit); ise and United StateS Hotel have also mull:T.l4one ointsiderable' improvement/3,, and the proprietors of each have a large fore(' of w uglimen.,., engaged,. in getting, ready for the opening, which will takeplace on or aliont the Alth of - this month. The Mount Vernon Cottage has been repainted; re uiodelettand refurnished. Bchauliter's, time' has hot "wen hehindhand; that has also been eonsiderahiy improved and: renovated: Mr. Schantlier . has a splendid garden attached to -his irotel, in 'which are raised all the vege tables that._are IALSIIIII Cd by his boarders: '`Hr:` ha steawherries . in alnunlauee, as well as onions, turnips, beans, peasolte.,-of tho - finest: qunlity,'such as are seldom seen; 'eV en in 'your" we'll stacked markets; in fact, he has Made it a study to have a well stocked gardNit and devotes a great deal of his time to it: In the rear of the garden be has a large wine vault; a drill' of sand has been excavated, and lined with solid mason work; so as to keep it cold. In this davit. is stored some of the finest German willtS, of his own importation. Last winter he was in Europe, and bought these vines direct from the vineyards. On to,day.(Litualay) the first Sunday train was run to this place, consisting of six cars pretty well tilled. Colonel Munday, the effi cient agent of the Companv, was on board, '- and by his direction the train was run down to the New Excursion House, and the passengers given a tine view of the building. A depntati on of gentlemen alighted front the train and proceeded to the roof of the new house, when a handsome American flag was swung . to the breeze. Among those present, wire General Baxter, Captain John W. Ryan, Major Carstairs, Lieutenant Koehersperger, Major Bell, Major Serrins, Mr. Konionacher (the gentleman \OIO will have the management of the house). Mr. Whiteman, Mr. Canthn, at taehis of the road, and others. Speeches were made by General Baxter; Captain Ryan and others. Afterwards 7 -the party adjourned- to Congress ii all, - where they partook of a nice' collation. The train left Atlantic in the afternoon at and arrived in Camden: at 6.45 IMMM EverYbOdy was delighted with the. trip. Toward the close of the . month the company will commence the running of two express trains daily (through in two hours), leaving - Philadelphia; at 2 and 3 o'clock, P. M. These, together with their mail and passenger ' trains, will make six daily trains to and from this place. The residents along the line of the toad will be greatly benefited by these nu merous trains, and to David If. Munday, the i n fatiga e ;went, are they indebted, more than to any other man, for thilse superior ac commodations. ' Respectfully, Mco. TRAGEDY IN lIARIUSBUII.G. Suicide of a Wonian. The Harrisburg Pa(riot of yesterday contains 'the following: The eomn unity was startled on Saturday by the report, that a woman had committed': suicide while laboring under mental derange= ment. Prom the facts as related to US we are enabled - to glean the. following particulars of ths . horrible tragedy: Mary A. Sexton, the suieide, was the wife of Andrew Sexton, a steady and industribus employe at the Pennsyl vania coal wharf."' His business obliged him_ to ; Work - at night. : On Saturday' morning before retiring • he procured 'his razor Mal shaved hituself, and afters ward restored it to' its accustomed place, not forgetting to lock it up. About half-past twelve o'clock he was aroused by the cry of one of his SQllS—"Mother has cut her throat." He arose to Mal his wife in the hrgonies - of - a - horrible death.—Therewas an-in-- 'vision in her throat tour inches in length, while the blood was coursing over the floor. A boy about twelve years of age 'was the tirs't to discoVer the sad fate .of his mother. She had 'one up stairs for his cap, and was absent but a short time when he - heard a gurgling noise: - B e iminediately started tofiscertain the cause and - found his mother on her knees in the • act of cutting her throat With a yozor... With the:assistance of a brother he wrested the in strument of death front her, bat not until all hope of her recover: had tied.: Medical aid was called into requisition, but :before it in, rived she was a corpse. Thu razpr i With Which' slui ended her existence was the same one her husband used hi the . morning. Slid Managed in some way to open the drawer in -which ft, had been placed. / Mrs. Sexton was the mother of nine chil dren, and came to this city with her husband in January last. She had twice before been deranged—once at Wilmington, Del.; about PHILADELPHIA TUESDAY JUNE 8,:`1869. EUROPEAN AFFAIRS. LETTER *mom' End of the Electioni—The Victorious anti the Vanquished Candidates—How the Government meantio defeat. H. Tillers —.Failure or the Attempt... The Liberals Sweep Paris—Proof or the Invineiblel Hostility to- the GoVernment—A Great Step in favorer , Advanced Liberalism. [Correspondence of the Pbiloaelphln Evenink In .1 . . . Puts, TneSday„ May 25, 1 . 809. 7 -' The great eye ut, is over„ mad we knowi approximatively at least, what haS been the result of , the PMI'S elections. I said fibm tlid beginning that what was about to. he decided by these elec tions was, not whether the GoVernthent or the Opposition should 'preVail, but - Whether the, capital was about to make, a, forward move ment itf the sense of a More advanced democ' .racy. It was , front the first that the, Government had not a ehanee-a fact, indeed, which was confessed by its refraining from the attempt to put forward any avowedotlicial c'andfdates. It was obliged to content+ itself With accepting and stipporting the . Candidates who Were' leaSt ; , objectionable to it ? Thlitii it supported M. Devinck, although that indi, vidual was cornp i ellefi, in order to giVe himself ,a chance of s tecebis, to declare iu favor of a Municipal Council for Paris, elected by universal suffrage, in place of the Imperial Commission nomi , s mated by the EMperor, which at present • 'governs -the city, along with the Prefect. The Government has always shown itself most 'hostile to such a change: - and , afraid of the consequences of it. Nevertheless, it accepted M. Devinek,becauso he afforded the only hope, of defeating 31. Thiers, it would -have' been glad to get rid of at any. price- This election of the Second Division was the• cintniiis de batialle on which the Government has ap.; geared most openly in the capital. 'And what has been the result, so far as yet known? • M. Thiers has polled 1:3,000 and- M . : Devinek 10,000. So far the difference : - is nor enormints. - But `then' '” " conies - the fact whiff h proves hoW impossible it is for the G Overmnent to succeed in the capital, un less the Liberals persevere in opposing each other. The third. candidate, tin ultra-Democrat, poled 8,000 votes. tinder' these circumstances, by the French, electoral law, a second poll, called a ballotage; is reiLuired,, beeause none of the three candidates has SP cured an absolute majority of the votes -givez : At the second poll, a relative majority suffices, and if 31. d'Alton-Shee giVeS Way, - ought•to do, and probably will, it is evident that the liberals of all shaties,,,united,daif over the ground with a , majorityof '21,000 to 2- 10,0 W. The above election shows the strength of the ultras, when a man like d'Altou-Shee, who enjoys a very Andifterent..renotation, Can detach 8,000 liberals from,M. Thiers. But.' there are more striking examples to follew. In the First Electoral Division Carnot has been , defeated by Gambetta by a majority of 18,000 to 11,000. This is a distinct vote in favor of more advanced democracy; for Carnet is creellence a man of the Republic of 1848, and , his opponent has beaten hint simply by going further ahead and being more "thorough" in his declarations. The crushing defeat of Emile 011ivier in the Third Division, where his opponent, Bancel, has been elected by nearly double the number of votes, is a proof, again, Of\ the invincible hostility to the Government which exists in, Paris. 31. 011ivier's sole offence \is 'being sus pected to lean too much towards'lmperialism • and to be willing, as I lately said, to accept it wilds Owit terms. The Parisian electors will have none of it on any terms, and therefore throw out y compromising 011ivier, and choese instead uncompromising Bancel. Again, in the Fourth Division of Paris, the same inveterate hostildity is shown; and 31. - Deniere, the • fashionable -bronze- merchant, whom 1 mentioned as being run by the gov ernment at the last moment, has been igno miniously defeated by Ernest Picard by 27,000 votes to 6,000. So again, in the Eighth MI.- :441U, Jules Simon has an immense majority over M. Laeliand r whom the government favored - , and in the Ninth Division Eugene Pelletan polls 24,000 against 10,000 given to IfOliley, an official veterinary surgeon. To crown all, perhaps, I must mention that Rochefort, the editor of the Lanterne, has polled 9,000 votes even in the .Seventli DiyiSion, where Jules Favre himself has only polled 12,000. So large a degree of success; achieved in presence of one who may be called the "Man of the. people" ...par CJ:cel lence„ shows how well the-Parisian public has appreciated the insults and sarcasms heaped 1)y 31. Rechefort upon the Emperor, Empress, their dynasty, and all that , pelonged to them. In the Sixth Division, 31. Cochin, a pro fessed liberal, but supported by the clergy on account of his religious opinions, and therefore also "preferred" by the govern ment, has managed by his liberalism and his clerical and official patronage combined, to 'make a "tie" with 31. Ferry, amore advanced liberal; and the two together throw out 31. Gueroult, of the Opinion Notiontile, whose of fence again has been too much indulgence to wards the administration. When 1 have men tioned that in the Fifth Division, Raspail, - an advanced democrat, has polled as many votes as GiirmetcPit - gtis, another roan of - 1.844); - 71 -- have noticed, T think, the chief incidents of the Paris elections and the conclusions to which they lead. The' result for the moment is that 31. Gambetta, 31. Bancel, 31. Picard, _3IJ - ides Sinton.and_M—Pellatan_are_pleciefir_ and that 31. Carnet amid 31. 011ivier, of the old deputies,. are finally rejected. 01' the remain , ipg tiveorhosnelections.. take...place again in. a fortnight, 31. Thiers is probably safe; so is either Garnier-Pages or RaSpail, their oppo nent being no where; so is also. 31. Ferry against 31. Cochin, if 31. Gueroult; the late member, throws his 4,000-voter over to the former; and lastly, it is, more than probable that Jules Favre, if elected 0.96- - where, will yield his plaeo Paris to Roche-• fort,- of the'Lenterpe,beetutse the choice of the latter by the capital would be nearly the great- . est insult it could bestOw, upon the Emperor!, On tlie . whole, the politicrd color of the Paris, elections'' is of a more a vanee eta ism in 1809 than it was in . 1863.. But the change is not very gi nor so groat as 'c expected, con sidering the character of many of the.eleotoral: addresses. The socialist and communist candl clatcn, _however, have scarcely anywhere 01Ai, WHOLE COUNTRY. showed ifffrout. The triumph of the Libot.tk; party in Pal : i9 is, of .cOnse, c'etaPlete. The: not be filially declared. till Thursday.. The news from the provinees reaches its very slowly, and we know little as yet Of the real result of the election in the country. There . can be little doubt, however, that, with ex-, eeptions here and there, the vast majority of the rural districts will have gene for the-gov— ernment. The pressure; latterly, has been put on very stro»g, and the liberal .papers are' tilled, but in vain, with exposures of - corrupt' influence. • • • 'X''he'-: Irish tihurch ,Questlon--Conftlet . illetireen - the Lords ..inud . the :„coin. , wont;.:-Comments •Of ' the'' Press - and' Feeling- Feeli ' • • • :'' ' ,' : ',' ; . Lorrnow, dune 7, 1/469.The a n nounced pre determination of the majority - Of the House of :Lords'to reject the Irish Church billhas'eaused intense excitement ,aid threatens ;to lirecipi- : tate an eventually ineyitahle:conflict between: the Lords the COmitiers:'' Xt iifitinuired in some quarters that Alid announcement Was' only made to feel the public ptilseaiid to - aScer l ,', fain how far the House - Of Lords dare zo. 'lt is the, general impression, that thebill will be: thrown out on the second reading.., THE STARRARD. The Slemflerd (tory) odmiti that the peril of the proposed action is too obvious to lie ig• tiered 'even by the' leaSt thoughtful or con scientious of the hereditary legislators', but sayli - that the Lords have resolved; in etnn phance with the urgent demands -from tens and hundreds of thousands hi, every part of the country, to risk all in a contest vnth. the imperious Minister and an overhearing ma jdritY in the CommonS. Should they be crashed in the struggle,. not oily Will the ,Church and the constitution fall with thetn; but the liberties of England Will be sataifted to the : ascendancy of that democratic principle which.' is the mostdangerous foeto personal political 'freedom. It matters not whether those who :approved regret the decision to give battle. There is nothing left for them to do but take their places in the ranks and fight for all they hold deOrest, with the full pertaintythot every thing is at - stoke. Let the Whole Protestant - conservative power of the realm be exerted to give the House of Lords :such support by pub lie opinion as to restrain the struggle within: the Mints of the gonstitutioli and make the self- . Willed, overbearing Minister, Who at hearthast always been an enemy of the Lords,aiid likely is exasperated at unexpected defeat, feeL that there are limits which he -dare not trolls, - gress. Already his : organs haVe.' threatened that what has transpired deserves'; impeach- Int:W r ath' it is necessary that lie bel.made, to feel - that lie dare hot execute a threat Which would 'hot only be-dealt at the Lords but at the wealthy and resolute influential classes of Eng land and Ireland, which form an actual Major; ity in the English nation. - THE W.).It;',ING rosx. . , fThe .3//o7rhyj Post shows that the rejeption of the.bill n ill not-prevent its ultimate. passage;, re and- disere.ditS the idea that the Lo.wll • . ,• . rdsi . .. . , inSe a second reading. THE STAR. '.. ' The ;Star, in threatening language; Says that' the Irish Churehmust not Cumber the ground. after December, and-that the least said bathat subject will be proclaimed from the house tops. The House of Lords is not a more logical; de sirable 'or excusable institution than U16.41'1811 Church, and in the feYer heat 'that will follow the rejection of the bill a heat Will be generated stichaS ha.s•not been seen since the people ef - Birmingham threatened:tom:web on London in - the name of reform, and cries will be heard call- , ing for the d ownfall °fan obsoleteChamber,t hat no longer disguises its anachronism of exist ence by hereditary descent. The deference to popular will, which the late Duke of Welling ton once said Might never again to ; be with' , held, with pure - blindness, blizzards , the iris- - guided noblenien, who require to be further convinced of the opinion of the country, at large. -It is. not worth while to attempt a de monstration of that opinion. When the is sue comes their lordships -will probably wish they had been wise in nine. .1.1-1 E DAILY NEWS. . The News states thattht vote of the House of Lords can at the worst postpone for only a few months the fate of the Irish Church, and the indirect effect will render it graver to raise the question. 'The position that the House of Lords holds in the constitution and its rela tions with the constituencies of the House of CO - lumens - and - the . executive powers of - the Crown are self-adjuSting, and if a hitch occurs in the machinery it sets itself in order by its own action. The House of Lords stands outside of -the system, guided by good sense, - . and fails only to be brought into harmony with the rest of the constitution when the forcible obtrusion put upon ithrottumbworitsmienibers Is Sufli• toent to overbear the opinion of the original body. A biassed jury has to be packed to judge whether the second Chamber in doing its work on these conditiits eau be permanent on the part of the gove -nment. The Lords seem bent upon forcing üblie notice on the position of the Peers and threaten a revival of the pretensions,. long since abandoned by it, of the old baronial) lla i w titude of its natural days, k 1) when the Comi. ere only allowed the humble supplications f petitions _and did not in reality govern the country. THE TELEGRAPH. The Telegraph in a moderate, timid article coneludes that the yofte of the country has spoken unmistakably and finally, and it' forced to speak again its accents would be a'resolve no longer to utter a free indignation or to pre serve moderation, a mood which to•the la.st it would earnestly- maintain. THE TIMES. The T ilii tssays that on the eve of the wining crisis nothing since the throes which preceded the passage of the Reform bill call be com pared to the consequences which will attend • the threatened conduct of the Peers, and the' result of the s niggle is not at all doubtful. If the Lords succeeded at first they would be compelled to undergo a second tender of the measure already rejected. The first re sults of this action will touch all interests, and jeopard not only themselves and their _mivileges ,_but_alseL_lhe—peaec...ot_ tile_ groat towintand the maintenance of law and order throughout the country. Above all, they will .do their best to .provoke an outburst of pas sionate violence in an unhappy coimtry, the vast majority of whose inhabitants they pro .pose to outrage, by - a contemptuous - disregard _oftheir wishels..,_.AS_ta the inaj ority of the Pj.) - position; the !Tline, 'draws the conclusion that the IrieniberS have resolved to intrench them :selves it their - on : 7 n - opinions .and rely on their 'fancied - power; in disdain of the consequences-. to themselveg: The nation would •be rudely awakened froth the delusion; and it cannot be, doubtful which jparty will succeedinti colt test, the Peers themselves or the .nation. 'Tire„ only question will not be whether the poniet, which the Lords think they possess - shall not be pto*.red te' be non-existent, but Whether the: , power they can exercise will not he so irrepa, • ' rably broken as to - vanish out of existents), , • . - Outside of the comments of the - public mess, the people generally talk in a'. vary rev6hltion thystrain. The probability is that the loOrds, - will be alarmed into the passage of the bill; Mit the, mere fact of the announcement of theirlii elitiationte,nsetheir...poWertedefeittat.eVir, ]deritly , excites' general.;diSettsSidnjii4fersz to' the Continuation of hereditary legislation. - :t -7 Compliaiients froni Loaidon Piipers, • Tb . e rai(ilfoliVaxe4o ' "4(110o-.fro irtivi [By *lw Atiaiitic Cable.] ENGLAIVD. MR. GEORGE 119FRopy,.. many,,who ropill regret tmhear that, Mr. Pea bodY.`will leave _England,_probably for the last time, on Satnrday next - . 14 ha.q been forscmte little time past. in declining health, and, 'in yielding to a natural desire to return • to , his native ;dace, everyone will hope that tie will regain—his -strength, and that the symptoms which littyeA occasioned 'uneasiness will pass away. Mr..T.,(,, , abody, has recently given away additional snms of money for the benefit of varlotts charital)le institutions in Ainerica, and has declared Ins iiittntlon 'of fintint:dning free library for Georgetown, adjnining Wash.: ington. 'lle statue width. the nterehants of London resolved to erect to his memory we' believe, nearly finished." ' . DT. DOMINGO. _ ~.„ The ißetoOrted- turning Or tho- cligtoth.: , •dintollse int , Puerto 'Plato—Depsiirttiroef . Dominicans for the.: Cuban AU-mop...The Annexation :' Movement!' Rotuma ,7 .Or. ProfesVor , Gaibb:'. ' ' - • ~- . •By the arrival 'tit yew' York, yesterday; of the. schooner !Chad& Albert; 'in !gen days; direct from Puerto Plata; NireliaveSt Domingw zulViCeS. to the 27th tilt.; . ~, The report received frotn-,Ha.vana by cable : that a greattire had occurred*:Puero . l,nat;a, de/411.6Di* the, Custom-Homo and '': several oth e r ' biuldingS, whereby' Many ' merchants were ruined, is incorrect , A'fire did occur .at' Puerto Plata On the 26th of May t i but it was confined to -only one building, situated! near the .Custom.Hoose. The, building- -a Aare : -, storewas destreved, but heVond the Score , ins of its walls, the Custom ,House siistaine no damage. The sufterer; by the fire. are two foreign merchants-MeSsis: 'Hamburger and _ Meyer—theirlosSeS amounting' to S10;000; no portion of which was/covered by inshrance: Many Dothinicans had left for Cuba to join the insurgents in, that island, auto many- more were preparing to leave. . The most intense„. interest was felt in Santo !Domingo -in the reyolutionary nioveinent in Cuba, , and the hope was freely expressed on all sides thatthe Cubans Might meet with success. The desire for annexation with the United. States . Was growing , stronger every (htyi. and there was a general feeling of disarmointment among the people when they learn4that Con gress had adjourned without having taken tic cisive action 'On'the - question' Professor C-iibb; State Geolegisttadleft for New York, by way! of Havana; after' having made very extensive explorations inAlie cop per.regionS of the south of the' island., and ter thegolckyielding districts to the wesroX Santo Domingo City. • :His conclusionS as to r the auL riferous resources Of Santo Domingo hairnet beiM Made known; but' it ,Was believed they would be of . a very fayorablecharacter!, ..; • ' FROM NEW TORR. NF\\ Ycou JuM3 8.-4.thelnatt.er ofiXonl ing the steainship Qintker:Pily;tllstrie4Xitor ziey Pi erreyiont yesterdaY - snited tliat not resist the motion, but vi - onldleave ter' to:the discretion of the courti• only requir ing• that it be' a good bond and the papers be riled lie had received no directions l from the government or, the ljpaniSh officials relative to.: the matter but he had no doubt personally that the fOr sortie n ailil.e . ,Lxu•= pose. . The *art:took:the papers and. rescrvtill" deeision. • • "2- The - funeral Of Mrs:Nernoni late ~o tt Wal-: lack's Theatre, and long known to %play-goers Otitis. city, took place yesterday motmngfrom her residence, .Is . o. .I.lniversit7 place. The affair waS extremely, notice, re garding it had been given at' theatre; and the attendance Was confined almost eirtirely,to her iruniediate family, comprising • her: sister, MiS. - 31aeder;,..with her eon and craut;hter, her sister-in-law,,Mrs. - FiAler,. with hor daughter Clara and a few others. She=was interred in Greenwood Cemetery. The steamer Tybee was detained:. by Col lector yt: , Sterday on the cotripiamt of the Spanish Consul that she was intended.to carry Men and-arms to the Cubans. An in vestigation, however, proved. the contrary, and she was allowed to cleat. Mr. Justin McCarthy, editor of the London Murnivg titar, lectured at Cooper Institute I;cit venhig on "En - gland and the Alabinna." AMERICAN CIVILIZATION. .11pwtulted.litates._.011iceirN, Behave in v Alaska. ' . Mit Wasbinkton . correspondont of the Bos ton ..-ItivOltsersays: • • General .letThrson G. Davis is soon.to•be re lieved from the command of the ,troops in Alaska. One••of the Califorifia,,,newspapers some weeks ago copied two or three, articles that were widely - printed in the East, in which it charged and shown by speeitiCations that a good deal of lawlessness exists among the fipliiiprs up there; that outrages' have been perpetrated bythem upon a itumber of women; that some of the ottice.rs ate: greatly addicted to drunkenness and that others ,are openly living with abandoned women. -Otlicial re ports show also that the finlians and natives have been abused and maltreated in many ways, and in a word that there is ..deplorable lack of discipline among it portion of the troops. The President has mule inquiry into the matter and finds that the newspapers have by no means told the worst of the truth. An officer more efficient than . General Davis has proved in this field, will be Sent •to take hiS place. IMPORTANT 'DECISIONS. Staanipitm ClgarS Manufacturedin a Statb Penitentiary. Conunissioner Delano has written the . lowing letter to the Commissioner "Internal J ev enue at Lancaster; Pa.: OEFICE INTERNAL REVENUE, WARISANGTONi June 5, : 1 have received youg letter of the 23th ult., enetesing a sample Cl the ,tamps issued by the warden of the extern . Penitentiary Of PennsylYania; to ho affixed to boxes of figure made in said Penitentiary, in stead of United States internal revenue stumps, and 'Wilt og to tae informed under What authority the stampa are , issued, tout what course yon are to pursue should cigs thus clumped be found in your di ar strict.. reply,l nave to soy that this stamp or. semblance of all Internal rev- : nue cigar stamp to issued without thesliglitest r autherity, or warrant of law, If not in 41,10.5 . 1 violation of law. Section sixty -,nine • of. tint "act :. of July 20, . declares :that Ctinunisenorters of Intermit :Revenue shall cause to be prilpared suihiblo and special revenue stamps for LID payment of the . tax on tobacco and snuff, and section eight&-seyen requires him to cause like stamps to be -prep:ere& for the pity luent of the tax: on cigars. These stumps aro to be af tiled ltild cancelled before any tobacco snuff or cigars _canitgally.lieienes.L.tneetteLja:ouiractev.Y._er where they IWO made. Thu absence: of 00 - per :reveue stamps o n any box of cigars sold. or °tiered f n or oate . lit , made notice to all persons that the tax hail not been pant thereon, aid such cigars are tinctured to be forfeited. The proper revenue atamps arc those and only ! hose ant horizist by the sections of law 1 haVe quoted, mid prepared. aud issued under::the •otder of the Commissnalesof Internal 'Revenue., All others, are !diner false; It anti and 'counterfeit. 4)1. Meru --- Romblances-Of-tounips.-Issued -w Montt authority-of and not to be rocoa limed by any intermit riT emu , offi cer tie affording protection ere giving einTency to cigars removt:d from the uninufactory:-or -place where they.'! _are made, ._4"11A411 , V0 tot sale withont,the proper:dumps.. 'pit o Government of the a Red' States will not recognize the right of any body, corporate or politic, whether city, county or State,. to interpose in behalf of gouda !MOW Meturtst in prisons and penitentiaries under cover Of u , raise stlairP, Or the semblance of a Government revenue , - stamp, and, authorize the removals and sall3 •Of masts manufactured without Stalin's • and :without— the paytuent of , the tax which Congress has Imposed. You are,thewfom inatruitted to treat all 'cignru which May be Minor in your` district bearing'only such a stamp as you e!l,dose, or not having : affixed and cancelled a proper hinninal raven nostiummis I liableto forfeiture tinder section ntnety of the sat Of 20,-180,0; and!the ' person sUlalle . Or 'offering stamped IR liable to the ihicS alld penalty imposicd - hy see tlOß:o3lkty-nitto Of the act olJtijy 20, MS.' And further, You are tinthorW.eit and instrimaal to seize. , all cigars so •• . stamped whit* may be found in : yours 4fistriet, and. in statue : the proper prmasslings havo them tioationnao anti Nulil, ins ptut ty , . 1 : t o m , 1. . . • , . . Ilkas a Foreign Telegraph-COrnonny- the 'Right to .I:and • banes. :far tho linked t torn M (moral ltpS devi!lvittlutt telegrit Obit, ca& l (lira 1,0 mated 011 the Aim , of tie I.7uitt4 States; connecting'With O. fnteiglt tOtttilvy s wit holtt exvro t is tub EWEN E 14.:FETEXIISTQL raw*, PitICE THREE CEN" thorit y from CengrosS. ,Tittrperseeetsgrtiit....qcji be argues, is derived . frrini the•• constitutiono ptovlsWire that the judicial pCiwer of the titrted'Sttttes AMU/ . Mating to "all cases of csimiraity and., marine .nicisdiction*" from the provision, that ",Congress shall have power 'toi regulate commerce . with.fereign nutionsand amog ir g ,th several States.'t 'Tire right;'thcieroce, wt) :4 ut.l o.ll,'br grant given by a single State. Tbls. opinionwog el lied forth by a question fcem the"Newliccrk,.Nowler.,lnEatnit and London Telegraph Company," whet ler 5i.111 , „C9p1 , . pan} IVO 01 haven right to connect tire o.0:111 chttlM unit the shore of Maine, or with the line of tonio other ppm)/ doctored by one of 'the Statos. • 1, RA(ITS AM) RANVEM What the F.nglnes [From Hai Overland ItionibVj Some who remember to have road that?'lll4o' two locomotives:moved. up until their pSibtill rubbed togethermiabolVe of the frilimiljesidiAtt, of their respective oiviiers," did .utt't portray* " hear WHAT THE . Elte.R.N.Ei; What was it the-Engines said, Pilots touchingtheadsto head*. Facing on the single- track, a'w(irld , behind each back! Thisis what the -Engines said, and unread!. .;With a prefatory sereeely In a florid Western speech, Said the Engine from the West "I am from Sierra's ere. 44- • n• • And, if altitude's a test, • 'Why, I 'reckon, it's eonfessecl, That done my level best." . Said the Engine from,the East:, "They who work test, talk the least. , 'Spose you whistle down your brake V ll hat you've doe ittaio. great shakes* , Pretty fair 7 —but let , ourtneeting ne`a'clifFerent kind of greeting. Let th es e folks, Ivith eh aui pague Not their Engines, do the •puaing• , Likteh!' Where Atlantic Beats Shores of show'and shudder heats; 'Where the Italian anthill') skies the woods With dyes I have chased the flying sun, Seeing all 114 looked upon—, Illesswg all that hp has blest--- Ntirsinght thy - Iron breast . All his vivify in" heat, • ' , -• All Ids clouds about my eres,t; ' • Add beforeW flying fret, Every shadolV'tiinst retreat"' said the Western Engine, , And a long; low Whistle , I.lonie4low; really that's the oddekt Talk for une so i•ervthodest,---; You brag of your East! You do? - Why,•l bring the East to pow' All the Orient—all Cathay—:' Find through me the.shortest)wo. And the Alin you iftiSi ia Ink hethisphere: really—if one inuktlie rude ' sLerigth m friethl, hiniOtiide..""i &lid the Linion: "Dmetretleo, orL . ) Pll run over some Itirector.'": Said tlle,Central: "Pm Pactl4N . , ~, • Init when riled, I'm tinite,tetillio. , ...„ 144113-dity, sh:111 not, gnarl - el); lu 14,8h0W the;tefolkii How two Once ha,vi• met withouVeollision .71 . , That is what the Engine:4 said 17nreliorted anti •. Sj:oken thronghthelUttio, 11 r ith a WillStie :it, the elose. . --Spurgeon's nose is lief (nue - matter ..of, Lerplon newspaper connnent. . (Maims 'Thalleian library ail OXford 1.4 cramped for room and is to bo enlan 4 reil. --Two hundred girt 4 aw‘rwered atit:WertiseL; meat in Chicago palient by thar'ininiiivr who is to exhibit Forty Thieves. • • —The present Riunle Island soutte• contains but one- lawyerl-tieneral Van Zaugt,..of New-' —Mark Lemon is again?, impersnmiting stair in London, having made the of,thei' —George Francis Train, who is at.9art..Eran., - 4.-: eiseo, says that befOre he leave the Pacific Coast he will capture Vitneouver's3Aand. —,Verdi's Don Carlos has succeeded at .Flor, enee, with Destin as the prima donna'and Ti.- berini to take the tenor. part. —A , . . fire recently broke out in at *Wage pt. Vaark, France; destroying all t ' I .rf) houses ea. 4• cepting those-Of the Mayor and - "iii - iest: —Archdeacon CO.*, who .rec idly ;died in' • . England, had received from rev4pmek cit th'p Establikhed Churell during the sixty years Ifit:r had been • in orders not less than - .f.169,9(111i (S 800,000), besides oceasionalwindtalls. . • ~ ~ - --- - - - Annexation to Prnssia has ctuised tho;t:oc ation to -be increased by one in the El r:;4l,tit,:, DikdiY of :Hesse Alice 18(16.. • . - , .•., 311USEMENTS...' —At the Arch, last night, a new Play entitled Vack and While , idle prod tired for the Ifmt time. The is the joint work of Wilkie Collins and Vechter, ttst treks: gedian. NVejtidge that the noveli-.r bore-the .buttieurof the composition. It 11:10 his broad arrow-ntarlt upo,e} cidcut :tud dialogue. , Seine of the tineet dranttLtdttia: t ions have beep arranged by the acioroyhoseeprna t oral experience in this dire etiett gicea.butt a tlerAough th e pen at ago effect. But of 11.11(10111` that contributed --suggestions_rat 14 , rt1111t11. ,ar\t u:II itatelktorli. Tito play is just tibiont one. of Cho beVr, of its kind, that. WO have taut for a long - wleije.- Re sembling Bouricault'e Micron:iv close.ly aorpe. rue • epeeto that nlagiarient may ba ettej‘ectetl, it Wilk line time merit of originality in many of its Situations and rharan— ters. In portions of the plop especially, the remark:obi°. ingenuity ill' Nt. Collins is iiniy mnliffest. TOPre are multitude of singularly tattgled. threads xvl,lol. aro tut-lt raveled by the most naturalli wad yet tho most folicitotati. , means. The events are ao improbable 1114 to dot nearly; hurl possible; and yet. so thriltittr are the incideltts, so =PA , . end exciting their iprogyeeh, that the spectator, is,rtat,, cow-Hone of the violence 1107.10, to 'Arta, but ilecp aml . llll4'llbo inteteer in the eidist ion .:d? the' varleas niyeteriee. :Ilany, of the situations are •rreinctuletut their tow boat are the. colt‘valitl episat - ks in Ihe negro lint; tit... line th- ruined rapAion; the,:asto Mismges ip the slave. psulp-t. But ell of them , aro" good, apd their exe , linuee \VAS heigh tonal, by the really torpori, mannei• in :qrs. Drew, Witt the 11,414 ‘ 1St411(11),,. , o f i vy ce plad the drama itponk. nor stitge. Th.. pin t' .vas admirably perry anted, MAO.. Dirs. Mew played the heroine with her customary lLise Nary Thtlt,.altltintrlt stqu'otin!os to Itetrd, t id e n.,,grc tion with rant; ;kevit with pliliAV andi o.e 10 4 / 1 1 : , ; in OP closing portico., of thu seem ittthos . neAre hitt. llarten. 11111 tippe t ,: it tit lg.no, and Vl n it pletely s:ttisfactory peesonntti4'. .01 - the - capital, performance of "At kt il lolos. , t, /11 I to the tans de , Stlig',o`llll.ittr7tS, thiql1PrS(11111( ONVIIS ~ 8,410101 y perfect, - :qr.:Mackay is' vompletely an artist—m(4a sit; peiluilits;, ) - thi) any . tLl_lter member it a st.t.wkeouirtaris in thilvaity; l Ni• Jou:Pa pint id jthe villain lostnight with allergy: auk, power. Arr. Ilenrylo appearo.l as a colored, pprii#lv , -pgg, tufty p.zi•tgitsiutmoind succeeded in extracting ,a,grati,tis deal oVfun from en exaggotAfed and r . .4ther.lugukrlijilitif ; part.. Tim ploy will be repeated this - veiling', artit'4,lll . ' prol,ahly draw rest well considering the latemist:t the Thantre effilleque to.nitthit - 4t /Iftmiuttbuta . e tyttl ,Temiwite!.s Weadinir will toe gts.o4,. —The Chestnut Street TwOnt)t,-kbitittrind Qbest-. streett; will be open this evening for 'aside wtinwhili. to 'woe two or learn velocipede riAing.--Tharing the erent. big there Will bo n 00'4011 or so MIPS of elamplon ridera s • who will strive for various pkiiiies 3 and them will; Ins lentallerfnl-asecuetown upon tiwtighf - rope by War agile Jerxt , pli Jefferson cintt lanes to WAY Rh' rela. lVittkleut the Vittlntd. - , --Tlia.Amerienit 'theatre annaanvea a first-rake tali • cellaavaal elltVrtnillilll'llt illeillliinit the porformancea of ' tlw lte Lave family, or Ealtaett (10)..Duiett t PatotliAtt tiAst, oilwt• good tirtlsts. . ~; ',r