GffiSON PEACOCK. Editor. VOLUME XXIII.-NO. 76. EUROPEAN AFFAIRS. LETTER FBOSI PARIS. I Correspondence of tho PbUa. Evcntne Bulletin.l Paihk, Friday, June 25,1869.—1 f any further proof were necessary of the correctness of the view I took of .the late Incidents at Paris, and of their , entire insignificance in a political sense, it is to be found; in the fact that out of 1.033 persons arrested as “rioters,” 833 have been set at liberty, without any punishment ait all, and- against the remaining 20tt nothing • sufficiently, serious could be, proved to render ; them liable to senteuces of more than from one to six months imprisonment. The result, therefore, clearly shows that most of the accounts and telegrams first pub lished on the subject, were of the most exaggerated character,j and that the vast as semblages which undoubtedly congregatedon the BouleVard during one or two evenings p ere composed mainly of sight-seers and lookers-on, with a very small proportion of the refuse of the population, or as the Comtitu tiormel designated them at the time, a “hundred and fifty vagabonds.” Our imcutc never ex ceeded.the dimensions of the most ordinary street row j find if the Government attempts to give it any other character, It must he for its own purposes, and in order to divert the country from followihg up the far more formi dable manifestation against the personal authority of the Emperor which .was made at the elections. Not only'Paris, but all the great cities of France Ante protested, not by ententes, but by their votes, against the existing system of government. And this “protest” is really formidable, and when hacked by the votes of three and a half millions of elec tors in the country, and by the presence of , ninety or one hundred Opposition members in the Chamber, is felt to be Store than a ma jority with diminished confidence and a Gov ernment with. diminished prestige can well resist. The Emperor, in reality, does not know what to do; and though he may look very profound and bo very, sententious in his public utterances, he is quite unable to make up his mind : what course to pursue. Meanwhile, he has done just what might be expected from a man undcr.sucb cir cumstances arid so bewildered—he has taken advantage of the Paris riots, and has “pro tested" in ids turn,and declared thathe “won’t be bullied,” nor yield to “pressure.” The form he lias adopted to do this Is highly character istic of his predilection for crooked and round about ways. A youngprotege of the Court aud Ministry, M. de Maelcau, has addressed a let ter, supposed to be written propria mot a, tothe Emperor, hoping that his Majesty will stand fi ini, andjaeitber. change his principles nor his Miqisttjrs upon compulsion. And to ibis obliging gentleman, who has tints favored the Emperor with his advice, the latter has graciously replied that he is quite of tliesame opinion, and intends to abide by it. The whole. thing is one of those little farces in which the iniperiarpdliey delights. And ail the more so because the letter, in fact, binds the Emperor to nothing. For, although it says he will not yield to emeutes (which have iu reality never occurred), it does not say that lie will not yield to the will of the country, expressed as I have above intimated. And unless he can frighten the French people out of their new-born de sire to recover their lost liberties, it is evident that the Emperor must, in the long run, either part voluntarily with a considerable portion of bis power, or else lose all. And X. think we shall soon see, both by the tone of the new Chamber arid" the language of" Mi riist ers, that rhis is the conclusion to which we are tending. The laying of the Franco-American cable is being watched here with great interest; but the accounts of the details of such proceedings published by the French journals are. so bare and insufficient, that X mast refer you to the reports of English correspondents on the spot for what took place at Brest. A grand ban quet lias just been held in that city to celebrate tlie commencement of the enterprise, where toasts were drunk to the President of the United States, and to the union of France, England ami America. The Count de Flalianlt, Grand Chancellor otitbe Legion of Honor, is dead, or on the point of being so. He was lately French Am bassador at London, where he is well known, having lived there many years in exile, and having married an English peeress in her own right. The Count was eighty-four years of age, and if all that is said ol him be true, he mast have passed through many strange ad ventures in the course of his long life. I need scarcely say, I presume, of Whom he is the re puted father. But, however that may he, his connection with the Queen Hortenso is too well known a faet to he disputed or concealed. •Yet what a singular position it places twomen in, living almost in sight of one another on either side of the Seine: one in the Tuileries,. the other in the Hotel of the Legion of Honor, with the consciousness of the nearness of the tie which may unite them—and of the truth of which one of them, at least, is, probably, nware—and yet debarred from all recognition of the fact. The Emperor’s family relations have certainly been of a singulamlescription. INoingn could see him beside tlie Due de Horny and doubt the relationship which there also existed. Yet was it ever, I wonder, ac knowledged, or even alluded to, between them? And now, again, did the Emporor take leave of the Count de Flahault, and, if so, in what character? Truly, the family records of Bonapartism are not amongst the least of the “mysteres de Paris!” The Emperor and the Prince Imperial have been on a visit together to the camp at -Chalons (the Emperor never forgets to attend to the army), and are expected to. return to day. The Viceroy of Egypt, while in Paris, was lodged at the Palace of the Elysee, where ho was handsomely entertained at the Imperial expense. T happened to hear some details re specting only one single department of the Imperial hospitality, which are amusing, and just worth mentioning, perhaps, as ah exam ple of the scale- on which things are kept up in the royal and imperial, households of lEurppf?.. ■ . Besides lodging . his guests and providing them with everything , in the shape of car riages, horses, attendailts, the Emperor, more generous than other Parisian lodging housekeepers in that respect; furnishes7alHhe necessary table and other linen. • The super intendence of tills single department for tho supply of the Palaces of Compoignc, Fontaiuc hleau, St. Cloud, Biarritz, the Elysee, the Tuileries, the Trianon at Versailles, and others,is quite, an important “administration,” with a person of consequence at its head. Its creation sis an office dates from Louis XIII., and many of its possessions have acquired a sort of archaeological and historical Character and, valpe, as gjgttimens 0 f the l weaving art and the uses to which they have been put. I was shown table napkins which had had the honor of wiping :the ' mouth of the Grand Monarquo himself In ! ' textnre. and fineness they Were vastly inferior to tlie best damask of modem times, and only distinguished by having the well-known head and perriwig of his Majesty produced upon tliemi Tlie depart ment also preserves, as a. sort of relie, the “sheets in which Louis XVIII. died;” but I was unable to learn that any miracle had ever been worked by them in consequence of their contact with thfilast remains of the old gour met bdespr.il of the 18th century. There are also preserved vin the imperial presses the Holland sheets, "which the First Napoleon always used, and which, to make a bad pun, seem to be regarded literally as an imperial helr-“loom” of great value. Altogether, the linen department of the Second French -Empire, though mncli reduced in di mensions from some of Its predecessors, still contains no fewer than 30,000 articles, the sheets alone.being 5,000 iirnumber. A single imperial palace requires for use about 1,000 pair of sheets, 1;000 dozen of towels, 900 table cloths, &c. There are some of the latter large enough, in one piece, for a table of 200 guests'. Tlie annual washing-bill of the imperial linen establishment is about 120,000 to 150,000 francs. [By the Atlantic Cable. I ENGLAND. Tbc Newmnrket Races. Nkwmakkkt, July 7, 1809.—The sweep stakes of 100 sovereigns each for three year olds was a walk overby Lord Stamford's Brad gate. ■ ' ■■ '" The Midsummer stakes of fifty sovereigns each, for three year olds, -was won by Baron Kothscbild’sb. e. by Tim Whifier, out of Her mione. beating Prince Soltykofts Bodsworth second, and Mr. Prior's filly Misadventure, by Adventurer, third. The betting at tlie start was two to one against the "winner, twoto one against-Misadventure, and three to one against B'oilsworth. No others started. ; , ■ • Tlio Exeter stakes, of 10 sovereigns each, worewon.by Mr. Pryor’s filly, by King of Trumps, out of Basquine, beating Baron Roth schild's b. f. Malinina, by King Tom. second, and Mr. J. B. Morrisey’s Calypso, third. The betting was even on the -winner, and three to one against Mahonia and Calypso. Five ran. . (By the Atlantic Cable. J FRANCE. Rumors France, Spain and tlie I'nlted' States—Coiuttitutfonnl Re. forms In France—The Emperor and the ■ Legislature. , ■ London,- July 7,1809.—The rttmor prevalent here that Spam apjilied to 'France to urge upon the Government of the. United States to preserve a strict neutrality regarding, Cuba is entirely unfounded nm" simply a canard. Notwithstanding official denials, modifica tions in tlie present French Ministry are im minent. It is believed that M. Roulier, alter presenting a system of personal government, is almost certain to retire from the Cabinet in order to give place to a new combination rep resenting parliamentary government. This may be regarded as constitutional. revolution. Emile Ollivier is almost sure to become the chief of the new Ministry. The Emperor,it is said, is willing to abandon the arbitrary power .which he has wielded since tile coup d'etat, and to share the government of the country with the Legislative Body. The Senate will shortly assemble to carry out the organic changes re ferred to.- [By Mail.) Peace Conference at Paris. At the same time, says the Ternps, that the address of the Emperor to the army came to hand, tlie annual meeting of the International League for permanentpeace took place. There was a considerable riieetirig last year, but this year it was very small. Ladies were present in large numbers, and many ecclesiastics, among therii Abbe de Guerry,M. Isidor, grand Rabbi of Baris, and the grand Itabbi of Ge neva. M. Michael Chevalier presided. In the course of his address he said: “Small States cannot be suppressed without profoundlv dis turbing human morality. Tliey are remarkable for their virtues and civilization,and their main tenance must be demanded in the name of liberty: in America tlie large States respect the small; there is no question of natural boundaries. How far Europe could organize as has been done in America, he could not. say, but he was convinced that if Europe does not organize in a manner somewhat analo gous, it will be decimated by- intestine strifes, and devastated by the elements of egotism and pride, of which it is formed; and there will arrive a moment when it will be very , small compared with America. Kemaiti'French, English, Germans, Italians, Belgians and Swiss, but be Europeans,And patriotism will receive renewed force, arid the word''father land will bear its true sense.” ROME. The Pope on the Present Position—ln teresting and Important Speech. ~ Bomb, June 24, 1809.—The recurrences of the Pope's election and coronation have afforded his Holiness the opportunity of de livering what would be considered in a secular government an official discourse and a decla ration of policy. On Thursday last, the anni versary of his creation, Pius IX. replied in tho following terms to the complimentary felicita tions of the Sacred College; the Senate and other - civil and religious dignitaries, congre gated for that purpose in the Sdla dei Para luenti at the Vatican:—Having arrived at the conclusion of the 23d year of ray Ponti ficate, it is my duty, before all, to thank the Lord who has sustained my frailty in the midst of such numerous and cruel trialsi.lt is my duty to admire and bless the protection, full of wisdom, which He has granted to the Church. Doubtless He leaves her exposed to re doubtable tempests, hut He sustains her at the same time, and raises Up among Christians men animated by a holy courage' to defend her rights. Finally, I address my thanks to the Sacred College arid --to ) all those who, surround me, for Jhe noble part which they take in the struggle, and for the' vows which you (Cardinal Patrizi spoke in the name of his eminent brethron) have jlist expressed to me. , . . ■ -r.:. -. ■. The world is divided, as it were* into two societies; one numerous, powerful, restless and agitated; the other less numerous,!but-calm and faithful. • My very illustrious predecessor; St. Gregory tho Great, compared these two societies to those formerly collected,the first in the plains of Sennaar, wliere nien created the Tower of Pride,biit were confounded by God in tlieir language and dispersed; the second at the CoQiiaoulum, on tho day of Pentecost, where Pe ter andithe Apostles and thousands of the faith ful of divers nation? aU heard and understood ope and the same language. Thus to-day we see tlie revolution,' with sdcialisin in its smto, con demning and (Jellying religion, morality tuid God Himself; and, on the other side, the tthe faithful, who, calm aiid firm in their falth;whlt liaticutiy for good principle? to. rea\tiftet;ksir \ PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1869. salutary empire and for the designs of God to be accomplished. All, if sovereigns adopted these good principles bow much more easy it would be for them to govern their people! How much good could they do to their people and themselves! The future is inthe hands of God. AsHehns overthrown the first- revolutionists, the demons, so He will overthrow these. And we can and oughtto. desire that tlie proud who persecute the Church, may be humbled Ana confounded) ; Meanwhile-let us accomplish 1 faithfully our sacred, duties to God. Ego avtem es.crcrbcir, [ says the Psalmist, and let ns render Hiinae ; tiohs of .grace for having preserved .peace in this marvelously privileged morsel of land, whence we: can extend our looks find our prayers over, the whole Church, : Ah, how heavy are the evils which oppress this church. >Vhat ruins, what tears every where! Perhaps at-this moment, while lam speaking,; a kingdom is deprived of' its last bishop; he also thrown into prison or carried into exile. (At this allusion to the persecu-' tions iu Poland the Pope was painfully agi tated.) Certainly, God might permit that we. ourselves should have to encounter the same; fate as those bishops. The plant wliicb plunges its roots into the. soil on which we still find safety might be stricken like the mystic plant of the Prophet Daniel. - But the dangers which menace, us are kept off by di vine goodness, and that plant lias the word of the Lord. Ilrivoketheall powerful protection of God on the Sacred College, on 'the. pre lates, on this dear city and those who repre sent it (the Senate). I pray particularly for two sorts of persons—those who ate in tribu lation, that God may come to their aid; and those, still more unfortunate, who livelu sin, that God may grant them victorious grace. There are even in,Borne some aliandoneosoids who take tlie shadow for the liody, falsehood for truth, and, who, Hying from the path of justice, plunge into the forest full of roaring beasts. Woe to those who act thus. It is the sure loss of all good. May the Lord keep such a lot from you all, and may He, through the intercession of Mjtry, bless you, as I desird, with all the force of my heart.— Herald. The flßeamenleal Dosntn. . (From the Saturday Bcview.J 11 is said—we know not on whiat. authority —tliat one among the dogmas to be pro nounced a part of Catholic truth inf he coming Council at Koine is that of. the personal (bodily) Assumption of the Virgin. We can understand how purely theological dogmas are supposed to be developed from first principles in the consciousness of the Church, but we can. hardly understand how these mat ters of fact, can be attested except by special revelation. If this is to be affirmed, will the Church produce concurrent supernatural manifestations of the Virgin to- different holy men; communicating this incident of her per sonal history? Or how will it be evidenced? And wliatj nnless Heaven is a- specific local ity', would it mean? \ craA.. .. Proclamations of the New Captain-Gene ral, De Rod as, to the People, the Sol diers and the Hal tors. The following proclamations have been is sued hy Caballero De. Kodas, the Captain- General of Cuba: • , ■ - Inhabitants of the Island- of Cuba: For nine months the most terrible plague that can afilict humanity has been weighing upon this Island —tliat of civil war. From the Unfortunate hour that this unhappy period commenced you . have seen commerce languish, industry ridtied, and the most valuable properties dis appear before the breath of the wind of insur rection and the incendiary torch lighted by im pure sons of Cuba, or fanatics led astray by ir realinzable utopias, laboring in their folly and madness to annihilate their mother by all the means at their command, and have herdescend from the state of wealth and prosperity she was found enjoying, to become a deserted and uninhabited country, covered with ruins and ashes. You witness to-day, besides, a progress ing emigration that is rapidly decreasing the elements of wealth, and, worse than all. you see brothers decimated by the fratricidal bullet and the treacherous dagger, of the assassins. I shall not stop at this moment to notice the causes that may have conduced ns to.tlie actu al situation. Given the present state of affairs, my mission is to re-establish tranquillity and confidence, terminate the civil war at all costs, and afterwards study your necessities aiiA.whatever may be conducive to tlie good of the country; to propose to the government of the nation all the reforms that may lead this Gem of the Antilles to that condition of culture, wealth, illustra tion and happiness no doubt reserved for her by destiny. 1 realize all the difficulties that I have to contend with in assuming the thorny command that the executive power has honored mo with; but at tlie same time I in dulgo iu the hope that I shallbe assisted in my undertaking not only by- bur valorous and dis ciplined many, but by the armed volunteers, to whose decision and efforts the salvation of the island is in part due, and by all honorable and right-minded men. It is but natural that you should desire to know what will be my line of conduct. It is foreshadowed in three words: — Spain, Justice and Morality. Spain that will draw from her immense patriotism inexhaustible resources to maintain tlie integrity of her territory within and without the Peninsula; morality and strict economy in all tlie branches of the administration; justice for all—tlie same for man in opulence and tlie high functionary as lor the modest journeyman. With this simple programme, which I adopt witli an unshakable faith in its worth, and with a firm will, I hope to efface the vestiges and traces of extermination and destruction which the civil wav leaves behind it; to extin guish all animosities; to heal all wounds, and to dry all tears. I claim of you the amount of generosity wdrthy of your noble Spanish blood necessary to forget offences, and if we shall then arrive to the end I aim at, for yon be the glory and happiness of success, and for your civil Governor and Captain-General tlie satis faction of having towards its at tainment. " Caballero »k Kodas. Volunteers:—With your decisive and ener getic attitude you have lent eminent service to the cause of order, justice, and right. For this you deserve well of the country, and in all its extension arises an unanimous shout of praiso for those who, abandoning their habitual oc cupations, have converted themselves into soldiers, defensors of the national honor. You may well he proud of your conduct. Like wise, I am proud not only to find myself at your head to sustain the good cause, but also to-day have the privilege of tendering to’ you tlie thanks of the country, being oh this occasion the faithful interpreter of the sentiments of the government of the nation, and of your fellow- i citizens. Volunteers! Viva Espana! “Viva .Cuba! tboj handsomest and most beautiful of the Spanish provinces !—Your Captain-Gene ral, Caiiali.kko de Eodas. Soldiers and Marines —A number of Cubans, of unquiet and turbulent dispositions, have taken up arms, raising, aloft the flngrof rebellion against a common country, Assassi nation and incendiarism are the only deeds they can so far boast of, to their own disgrace and,the eloquent enlightenment of those citi T zehs who have remained faithful. Yon. know already what to expect fromthe Insurgonts. You responded to the shouts of sedition with demonstrations of y our erystatiizediloyalty ,and hastened to tho combat,; but, vain, desire! tho rebels would not arid! will not. cross swords with you, limiting themselves to tho exercise of acts of perfidy,' cruelty and treason. .Never theless, if you do not sustaincombats, beoauso your eneraies refase them, you still gain -no less glorv, proving yourselves as ever sober men, persevering, subordinate, and worthy sons of our beloved, Spain, To-day OUR WHOLE COUNTRY. that it becomes my (honor and privi lege to place myself, at your head lo termi nate the work of pacification' which, with so much ardor and good exit, you havo com menced, I entreat you that yori may ever con tinue to be the protectors of the goodj faitbf'ul friends or the vohlnteers.to-day your , brothers;, generous with . the vanquished, and just towards those who shall be taken arms, in hand. Tims laboring, the country must for ever remain indebted to you. Your country men and foreigners wili,admire your virtues, and you vrill leave an imperishable record of glory in the hands of your Captain-General. CaIIALLEKO UK KODAS. An American Citizen In'Captivity. Tlie following letter . from Donna Sertora; Rufina Miranda de Robion, shows the mal treatment to which her brother, a native of Florida, has been subjected, by tlie authorities in Cuba: Jacksonville, Florida, July 2d, 1869. Up Hear Sir: Mr. Thomas Mitandi, horn and baptized in San Augustine, Florida, about tlie year 1822, one year after the couritry was. ceded to the United States, and beyond doubt an American citizen,was lately arrested at Maxiel,which m ahout 35 miles to the west.of Havana,'and 300 or more from the theatre of war. H 0 possessed a farm near that town, has a wife anu children, and in no respect lias lmd anything to do with the war. The seizure of his person took place in ills own house; thence he was conducted to the prison at Gnnnaguay on the 9th of June, and, fettered, passed on to Havana on the 17th uit. He was placed in the iron cage of the prison, which is assigned ordi narily to great malefactors, and his family are now suffering for the necessaries of life. The American Consul has not yet made the neces sary reclamation in the ffiaftet. A Strange Story. Washington City, July 7.— Various letters are reported as having been lately received from Havana by parties at present residing in this country, the purport of which is, that different bodies ot volunteers have proposed to open a subscription for the purpose of rais ing the necessary funds to have I. Morales Lemus, President of the Cuban Junta, and, perhaps, one or more prominent parties as sassinated. It is further stated that the pro ject was warmly adopted and that a large sum has been already raised for the purpose. The additional statement is made rliat the persons selected To do tlie deed al e already in this country waiting opportunity. It need surprise no one tliat such a thing should be talked of, nay, resolved upon in Havana. Tlie volunteers have themselves as sassinated many wild had but very little to do, some wlio really bad no connection whatever, with the insurrectionary movement. A re spectable sum was raised to present arms to tbe bull-ligliter and duelist at New Orleans. These death-dealing instruments are to be used in 'assassination, or for a purpose akin td it, namely, dueling. Even Balmaseda has sent Lulls n sword, which is to he used in any way that may suit the fancy of ; the New Orleans cemetery keeper, provided, always, it shall lie plunged, no matter how, into the bowels of some one wlio is not infatuated with the idea of preserving-. Cuba for Spain. Notwith standing tlie ignorance of the masses of the volunteers, and tlieir everyday villainies, it hardly seems credible that these mad men would undertake such a project as -the one talked of; more especially is it a matter of greater question, the attempt of any person to carry it out. There is no law in tins country to screen such villains; and though rich meii have time arid again hired, for a few ounces, negroes and others to do such work as this in Cuba, and always escaped punishment, it is hardly to be believed that such an act us the one suggested will ever be attempted here.— Tribune. Mr. Nasby at Last Loses his Post-o!Hee« and to Add to Ids Humiliation an Abo lition Administration Appoints a Ne gro In bis Place-Trouble at the Cor ners. ■ __ Post Offis, CONFEDERIT X Koads (Wich is in.the Stait uv Kentucky), June 29,1869. — The tlie is cast. The guilloteen hez fallen—l am no—longer. Postmaster at, Oonfedrit X Roads, which is in the State of Kentucky. The place wichknowd me once will know me no more forever—the paper wich Deekin Pogi atn takes will be handed out by a nigger—a nigger will hev the openin uv letters addressed to parties resithn hereabouts containin remit tances —a nigger will hev the lifiin uv letters addrest to lottry- managers and extraetin the sweets therefrom—a nigger will be—but I can’t dwell upon the rtisgustin theme no longer. I hedbin iu Washington two weekk assi.stin the CaneaslieilS uv that city to put their foot upon the heads uv the cusstd niggers who ain’t content to accept tlie situaslien and remain ez they ailing liev bin, inferior beins. To say I hed succeeded, is a week expreshen. 1 or ganized a raid onto cm so ettectooally ez to drive no less than, thirty uv ern out of eui plovment, twenty-seven uv wich wuz com pelled to steel their bread, wich give us a splendid opportunity to show up the natcral oussidiiess of the Afrikin race—which we im proved. On my arrival at the Corners, T knew to wunst tliat suthin was wrong. 1 hed rid over from .Secesssiouville on Bascoiii’s mule, wich he lied sent over for me, and ez I rid up to his door, I knew suthin hed happened. The bot rtes behind tlie bar wuz draped in black ; tbe barrels wuz festooned gloomily (wick is our yoosiiiil method uv expressin grief at public calamities), and the premises generally wore a funeral aspeelt. Wat is it ?” gasped I. Bascom returned riot a word, blit waved his hand toward the Post Offis. Jtusliin thither, I bustid open the door, and reeled almost agin tlie Avail! At the geneFUtr delirrfii wux the grinnin face un a nigger! and sett)n in my chair wuz .Joe Bigler, with Pol lock beside liim, smokin pipes and laffin over suthinJn_a iioospaper. Bigler caught sight uv me, and dartin out, pulled me inside them hitherto sacred pre •■chicks. “Permit me," s’cl ho jestingly, “to inter (loose you to your successor, Mr. Ceezov. Lubby. “yiy successor! Wat (loos this mean?” “Show him, Ceezer." 1 And the nigger, every tooth in his head! shinin, handed me a eommishun, duly miule out and signed. I saw it all at a glance, in imitaslien-uv our Secretaiy Borio, 1 lied; left my hizuls in the hands of a (lepetty, wicb, is now the favorite method of dom public biz nis. It arrived the day after I left, aml.lsaker Gavitt, who Uistribited the mail, gave it to,the cuss. - ' , Pollock inade'oiit the bonds and went onto em himseli’, and in ten days the coramishen come all regler, whereupon .‘Bigler backs the nigger, and took forcible-possession, uv the office. While I was absent they hod a perces sioninhonor of tke ; joyful event, sed persesh consistin uv Pollock, Bigler and tho new Postmaster, /who' marched through the streets with tho stars and stripes, banners and sieh; Bigler remarkt that the perces siOn wuamUi large, but it wua talented, eminently respectable, and extremely versa teol.. - lie (Bigler) carried the flag and played tho fife, Pollock: carried a banner with an in scription-, onto,- it “sound the loud timbrel o’or Egypt's dark sea,” and.rdayed tho bass drum; While the nigger bore aloft a banner inscribed “where AfrtJys sunny fountains roll dowti the golden sands," with - his - commission pinned onto it, playin in addishen a pair of ausliont cymbals. • . • Bigler remarktfurthof’ that the porceshun -created a positive, sensashun at tho Corners, wich Lshood think it wood. “If wuzn’t,” sod this tvrmentin cuss, “very much like the grand [From tho Toledo Blade. 1 nasby. perceshun wich tooknlace when yoo received yoor, commission.. Then the whites nv the Corners wuz elated, for they spectld to git wat yoo owed cm in doo time, and the niggers wuz correspondingly deprrist. They slunk into bv ways and sideways; tliey didn’t hold up tlieir heads, and they dusted out ez fast ez they cood git. At tliis pereession there wuz a change. The niggers lined* the streets ez we passed, grinmn exultinly, and, tlie whites wuz deprest correspondinly. ItssiDgler that at the Corners the two races can’tfeel good botlnit the same time.” ' My arrival -bavin become; known, by the tim e I got back to Bancom’s, all my friends bed gathered-there. There wuznt a dry eve among em, and as I. thot of the joys once tastid, hut now forever fled, mine moistened likewise. There wuz a visible change in their manner toward me. Thc-y regarded me with solisitood, but I cood discern that tbe solisitood wus not so much for me ez for themselves, “Wat shel I do?” I askt. “Suthin must be devised, for I can’t starve.” “Pay me wat you owe me!” ejakelated Bas •COlll. “Pay me wat you owe me!” ejakelated Dekin Pogram, and the same remark wuz made by all uv em with wonderful yoonanimity. What ever differences uv opinytin there might he on other topics, on this they were all agreed. .“Gentlemen.'” I commenced, hacking tip into ri corner, “is- this generous? Is this the treatment I liev a right to expect? Is this—” I shood liev gone on at length, but jist at that xninnit Pollock, Joe Bigler and tbe new Postmaster c-ntered.' Boom wuz made for em and cheers offered em, buttiiev declined tosit. “I hev hizuis!” sedithis Postmaster, “disa greeable hiznik, but it’s mv offiskel dooty to perforin it.” ;• _At tlie word “offishel” oomin from his lips I groaned, wich was ekkoed hy those present. . “I liev in inyjliand,’’ continyood lie, “de bond "giben by niyjpredeeessor, onto which is de names uv Geo. VY. Bascom, Elkanah Po gram, Hugh McPelter and tieth Peunibacker, ez sureties. ] n dis Oder liand X hold a skedool ob de property belongin to de ’nartment wich was turned ober to liiin bv lus predecessor, consistin of table, chairs, boxes, locks, bags, et set try, wid sundry dollars wort of stamps, paper, twine, &e. None ob dis postoffis property', turned over to my predecessor by bisJpretlecessor,isto be foundin de offis,and tie objeek of dis visit is to notify yoo (lat unless immejit payment, be made uv the amount thereof, I am directed by de, ’partment, to bring soot to wunst. against the sed sureties.” Never before did 1 so appreciate A. John son and his Postmaster-General Bandall. Un der tlieir udministrashen watt Postmaster wuz ever pulled up.for steelin anythin? Eko misers. This wuz tlie feather that broke the camel’s hack. “Wat!” exclaimed Bascom, “shel I lose wat yoo owe me, arid then pav for what voo’ve stole?” - • ■“Shel I lose the money,” said Pogram, “which I lent yoo,arid in addishen pay a Abo-' lishen govemment for property yoo’vc. con fiscated?” “But the property is here,” I remarkt to Bascom, ‘ ‘you’ve, got it all. Why not return it' and save all this trouble?” “Wat wood I have: then, for tlie vvliisky yoo’ve cousOemed?” he ejaekelated vishnsly, “It’s all I’ve got from you, and I’ve bin koepin yoo for four years.” “Didn't that property- .pay., yoo fortholik ker?” 1 asked, nut Basoom wuz in nohiuiior for diggers, aiul he pitched into me, at wiclf pleasant pastime tliey all followed sriot. liut for Joe Bigler; they wood hev killed rite. Ez it Wuz,they blaokt both my eyes and rolledjme out onto the sidewalk, Bhutan the door, agin me. Ez I heard that door slum to, I felt that I wuz lost. No offis! uo inoney! and Bascom’s closed agin me!. Kin. there be a harder fate ? I passed the riite with a fanner three triiles out, who bein sick, hedn’t been.to.the Corners,and consekently he knowd nothinmv the changes. I heard tlie next day the result of the msk -shen. Bascom returned sioh.uv the property ez hedn’t been sold and. consoomed, which consisted uv the boxes. Tlie chairs lied been broken up in tbe frequent shindies wieh occur at his place, tbc locks licd.beou sold to farm ers, wlio yoozed cm on their smokehouses, the bags bed been sold for wheat; and so on. The stamjis, paper, twine and sieli figgered up three hundred and forty-six- dollars, wieh wuz three hundred more dollars than there wuz in the Corners. Bascom advanced the forty-six dollars, and the three hundred wuz borrowed uv a banker at Seeessiunville, who took mortgages on the farms uv the imprudent bondsmen for sekoo rity. Uv course 1 can't, go to back the Corners under eggsistiu circumstances. It would lie un comfortable for me to live there ez matters have tormiuated. _ 1- shel, make my way to Washington to see. ef 1 can’t git myself electid ez Manager uv a Labor Association, and so make a livin till there comes a change in the Administration. I would fasten myself to A. Johnson, but unforchinitly there ain’t enough in liim to tie.to. I vvotikhez soon think .uv' tv in myself to a car-wheel in, a storm at sea. Petroleum V. Nashv. (AV'ieh wuz Postmastev.) ALARMING INTELLIGENCE. Tlie Oyster Crop In Danger. The Few York Post contains the following: The inures is terrible and destructive indeed. It wrought the downfall.of the livman Empire, and it is now bent on the ruin of bin - American oyster beds. Tile mode of demolition in the two eases respectively was somewhat different. The mures was the source of the Tyrian purple, through which camoto.ltome that impmoasiren, Luxury, and avenged'# conquered world. The /aiiivy is a iiuivalvularshell-fish which fastens itself upon our-oystons, and having bored a hole through their outer covering, eats the .Shrewsbury or Saddle Iloek at its leisnre. An American Illue Point hits been fished up in English waters with a mure x at work upon the shell. The little pest accompanied a consignment ot Ulue Points sent over by Mr. Genio Scott to Mr. Francis,ofthe English Oyster Fisheries Commission, wllo reports upon the fact in the London ji'lehl. The fact is alarming in every point of view. Oysters multiply enormously, but so may muriees, and tho extinction of our bivalves, through tho agency of a univalve, is both dreadful and humiliating to contemplate. But another result of a yet more serious nature seems to menace ns. What if the mu rex de stroys tho English oysters, natives and all? Shall it possibly become a ixtsus belli? Anil shall the damage be put forward as an“o£&ot to tho Alabama claims? . AMDSEMSSTS. —The pantomime, Jlumyty Dumpty,noixheing Serformeii at the Arch Street Theatre, by the llhiler & Denier Pantomime Troupe, is draw ing crowded houses nightly. The present cool weather renders these performances enjoyable by preventing that discomfort which would otherwise result from the crowded condition of the house., ■ ' —On Friday ovoning next Miss Xeo Hudson, the well-known equestrian actress, will begin an engagement at the Theatre Oomiquo with Mtaeppa. She . will ho supported by a good company,-in which will be sevoral members of the Arch Street Company of last year. Newspaper Thieves.—Two juveniles, -mmed-William Jennings and John Ward, were arrested this morning, on Market street for stealing newspapers from doorways. Thoy will liavo a healing- at the Contra! Station this afternoon. F. L. FETHERST(B. PuWislieru PRICE THREE. OEtfm FACTS ASB FASCIJM, . —Swinburne is in failing health —Jacksboro, Texas, lissa Bemi-mont&lyidur nal called The Fka. ' f* , —A negro lias been ndtontted to tbo't>ar in Florida. —Lablache's daughter;. Madame IHngtr: lately died, in her fortieth year. —lt is proposed to turn the city of Memphis over into the bands of a receiver.- , —French operais the latest* novelty at -iSk . ceiOna, Spain. . ' ’ " • ' " —Miss Professor Mitchell fe-to x>bserv<£f)l» Solar eclipse next month at. litu’lipgton, Mt; Mr. Burlingame is to-remaitt a mOnth’- te Stockholm-. ' - , —The London ; ifwlcat World publishes, otters from Boston.containing reports of tlfe ate Peace Jubilee. ’ —Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, -whose “Gates*- A,iar” has achieved such populiWtyj is but l twenty-fife. ' ■■ _—A Chinese comic singer is announced in a 1 London theatre. He sings both in Chinese and English, andis named Cliee-Mah. - . —California is adapted to the popttsr.cnlture;, arid will soon furnish opium to the devotees of that narcotic. —A man who gav<* the name of Andrew Johnson and said, that his occupaitfibn -yras. “loafing,” has been arrestedin Kew Orleans for being found in a railroad car, under Suspi cious circumstances. y-Thero are a.GOO newspapers published iw this country; ot which five-sevenths are issued in the Kortliern States. Slew York has' the largest, and Florida the smallest numben- —Mr. and Mrs. Barney Williams have> just> been offered fifty thousand dollars in gold t* play for one season in Australia. They .were recently ottered twenty thousand dollara in gold to -visit California professionally. —Bulwer is now seldom seen in the House ot Lords. He is an old man, looks gone, as if Ills day was done. He has quit Writing, coma down lrom the clouds of romance, and walks the plain old earth, “gloomy and unhappy.’’ l —The bromide of ammonium is recoin-- meniled by Hr. Gibbs, of London,to those who’ .suiter from excess of fat. He says that, when taken in small doses for a length of time,it wiill 1 diminish the weight of the body with, greateev ' certainty than any other known article. —A tew days ago a fisherman residing on- - the Oceechee canal, some ten or twelve, niiloa from Savannah, Gn., sold liis wife to another fisherman, for tiO bunches of fish, valued at fid cents per hunch. 1 The wife was perfectly satisi - fied with the sale, and is now living with her»- purchaser. —Juarez Sent two thousand letters found ins « thenpartnients of the late Archduke .Maxi milian to. ft French ex-depnty, in order that tltey .might.he published at ,Brussels in and Spanish. Tlie book bas been printed, hut ... there is a delny about its circulation. —The late iiostni.-Lster at, .SUullsbVirg, Wiih’- eonsin, invited a mail to play cards with liimi - and feeling aggrieved at liis refusal, ob tained a pistol and shot liim twice, wounding" him Very severely. Tlie postmaster then es-- i eaped to Illinois, and liis victim lies in.a criti-: cal condition. . , —Oliver Bartliclet, of Montreal, for bis .services in-recruiting the; Papal .Zouayes in Canada, lias been made a member of tlio order of Piiis IX., entitling! him to file rank of Colbpel in the Papal army; and the'right of ! sword and epaulets. Heis the first American who lias received this distinction. ' —An artesian well lately sunk in. Algeria. 1 threw tip with the water an innumerable quan tity of small iish, about half an inch in length, resembling white bait, both in appearance and; taste. .As the saud extracted from this well is identical with that which forms the, bed of the File, it is concluded that, an underground communication uniat exist between it and that, river. —Two.maids were walking in the grove (They both were growing old,) The one to tell a talo of love, The other to be told. “He is not rich,” the elder said. - . “For handsome, nor high-born; The man whom I propose to wed Most other girls would scorn.” /‘AVhat is he, then? you make me fear;” The maiden’s tears fell fast; “He was the first to offer, dear, And lie may be the last!” A Western” paper relates this- story:-4- “Deaeon B„ of Ohio, a very pious man, was. noted for his long prayers, especially in his- . family. One Monday morning the deacon andL : ." his wife were alone, and, as was Ids Gustom„ after breakfast, a prayer was offered.' There .. being an unusual amount of work that day,. the deacon’s prayer was short, and seizing Ins... liat ami milk pail lie started for the barn. His wife being deaf did not notice his absence, butt* , supposed him to be still engaged, in prayer./. On liis return from milking, lie was surprised' to find her still kneeling. He stepped up,ta t her and, shouted ‘Amen,’ when slio iinmedi-; , ately arose and went about her work as if®'*/ nothing had happened.’ " —The ice factory at Few Orleans is lirgrentr; success. It consists of six retorts of a ohemi— cal freezing .mixture. From these six retortd six pipes descend to six huge chests, wluclii chests in turn radiate severally off into fours— compartments. In each compartment are .. long, thin tip eases, seven on one side and/ eight on the other. This making by all the’. rules of arithmetic a total of fifty-six’"cases- im.. a box, and there being four boxes to. a chesty* ? and six chests to a factory, it follows that,- at*; full blast, this Southern ice factory can turng out 1,344 cakes of ice eighteen inches long*,* . twelve broad, anil two thick, at the corople-4 • tion of each process. Tile ice is mneh/.colder* than that frozen naturally, and lastatonuoki - longer. The factory is a joint stock enterprise!, y anil the property is exceedingly lucrative.- ; y_. f i —A company of Chinese athletes astoaifiJliQp e * tlie people of San Francisco, recently, with' •' an exhibition of their agility. About: lfivoJf them appeared on the stage amid the ditto; wd. 1 clangor of gongs and kettle-drums. They first fought a sham battle with sword» ; cleavers, pole-axes, lances, and short knives,, Tho ■> tending was very rapid, and each tighten l was an expert. Still, one warrior stood' against ak $3 host. He disarmed his antagonists as That as they came; hurled them about. tile - stage*. stabbed tlieni,-hewed them with brood axes, I hacked them with swords, butted them witbL ,5 his head, lucked them in the breast with both, i« feet at once, anil yet found, time, tft execute fej hand-springs anil vaulting saniersaulfa amoßfl;.'® them as he fought. A#' lash; he '•yaa&gfg quished , all his fees, and. the- balf-nakjetl?y| rascals took to -flight. He- ptaxsiatd. Soma?/i rough tables, wero rangeeb along tho frontr Ofejg the stage to represent hedges, tracks, logs atndpMß hanks, which must obstruct pursuad, and pfijsP suer alike. The runners vaulted the tahleslWs turning lofty somersaults over each,’ am landing indifl'erently On, their feet,- bands heads or backs, as tho ease might be, ar»i thti too, on a hnrdstago, covered only withTtfsV strips of matting. Tho victorious fighterAi splendid acrobat, was always after tli|d Several times oue of his foes would turn,- afs face him, when he would bound high ta-lvi air, anil plunging down, plantbotli feet in, m breast or his adversary, with snob force -isl send him headlong across the ettnge. ThbAfJ says that if over a troUpo -of thesC stitray hg rvell-trained athletes were put to a falr/beSh* physical activity and . strength, they ‘ctjttl handle a regiment of the lazy, lank-lim]hß whisky-sodden ruffians and cowatdswirtkttffal a pastime of stoning, beating andilhfSEra about Chinamen in the puhlie ; city, / < -njvVfS, affßa