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VOLUME -XXIV.--=-NO-.-75.,, PILED ,EARTH CLOSETS ON -ANY • floor, in or out of doors, and PORTABLE EARTH COMMODES, for use in bed . -chambers and elsewhere. Are abielutely free from offence. Earth Monet Com- Einytolgezdealesroom at WK. G. RlloAlalo. 2i ; ateet. ay.. MARRJ.ED. • ELY—MOOSE.—On Tuesday. July sth, in Brooklyn, by the Rey. Dr. Storre,Voseph field Ely. of Now York, and Marie 8., daughter of Carlton R. Moore, of Phila delphia If A BYEY—POLR .—ln New York, on Saturday July , by the Bey. Mr. Ewing, at his residence, 31r. James Harvey to Miss Elner Polk. both of Philadelphia. DIED. CALDWELL.—On the Mb inst., are. Eliza Blasioy Caldwell, widow of the late Charles W. Caldwell,'Esg., of this city, in the Mtn year of her ago. The relatives and friends of the family are invited to attend her funeral, frahi the residence of her cousin. Jieniamin F. Buddy, Esq., 8. E. corner of Eighteenth and Vino sts., on Friday morning next. at 9 o'clock. IiERE,—On Tuesday, the sth inst., Joseph Kerr, The male friends and the members of the Washinitton Lodge, Igo. 59. A. Y. Al., are respectfully invitedlo at tend the funeral ,f from his Into residence. N 0.1411 Spruce on Friday morning, the Bth inst., ate o'clock, _ • ..* the evening Of the 4th inst., Paschall Morris. Jr. - Ills friends end these of- the•fauilly are invited to at tend his funeral, on Sixth-day. the Bth instant, without further notice. To meet in Delaware county on the ar rival at - filming 11111 - 41ation of the • 2,10 train from Thir ty-tirst and Chestnutstreets, Philadelphia.' Carriages -will be in wafting` on its arrival, and. also the - I.M train from West Chester. TA BElL—en the afternoon of the Ldh instant, Mary Ann .1., vire of William E. Taber, and daughter of the late Hobert Johnston..., The relatives and friends of the family are reapectfully invitedloattend theluneral, from :the reSidonte , ot tier hoshand; IMO jpring Darden street, Ma Friday' af. ternoon, Jul Bth; at 4 o'clock. ARCH • STREET. 400 ...ETRE•& LANDELL, , 4 -00 TAO. DEPARTMENT L, MEN'S WEAR. IWO. CANVAS DRILLS. PADDED DIMAS.• SCOTCH CHEVIOTS. CASSIMERE you ftUITS. ' CORDU siBOYS AND TOWELS. 41ENUINE MEDICINAL COD LIVER oiL.-30,111*43. BAKER & Co.. 719 Market lit,; --SPECIAL- NOTICE& JOHN WANAMAK.ER, CLOTHIER. E-4 _w 818 and 820 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. to.. OFFICE OF - THE - PACENIX IN SURANCE COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA. JULY 6.1370. Notice it hereby given, that in conformity with. the pro% Ishmael en Art of Aesenably,approved February 3, 1-70, the Board of birectors have this day directed a pay ment of Five Dollar* per aharo to be made to tile Stock holder*. out Mlle met& of the Company:: the came be ing a retutn of capital amounting to fifty per cent. on the par'valuebfthe stock, payable on and after MON DAY nog., the 11th inst., at Rooms 5 and 6 Penn Build ing, No. 430 Walnut street. . . This payment will be made only to the Stockholders in person. or to their Attorneys specially constituted for the purpose, and on presentation of the Certificates, su that the return of Capital may be marked thereon. , SAMUEL WILCOX.° fi73t A jyllm Sr f Secretary. uz• ROCCA PAVEMENT This new pavement for Sidewalks, Court-yards. Damp Cellars, Floors for Breweries. Malt Rouses, has Leen very successfully tested in New York, and. is now tieing laid on Orson street, west of Twenty:third. '; It is ndsome ._durable.rind_ch Property owners are respectfully requested to ex. omineir. N. Y. STONE WORKS, Office No f 738 Seventh avenue; je'.lB Im Ip 5 Philadelphia Office, .1 t 2 Library street. . _ Bon THE LEHIGH VALLEY RAIL ROAD COMPANY will, until August let next; pay off at par and =accrued •;interest any or their first raartgav bonds 'due presentation at their Office) II • bonds oet,, I • • • .• 1• • . t .Treasurer..„ J Je24 lanlP rt-_ - CEDAR CHESTS AND FUR.BOXES 10.3'' • ON HAND ANDMADE TO ORDER. M. TriALHEIMER, myS•tu th s3nkirpF,l 207 CALLOWIIILL STREET HOWARD HOSPITAL, NO& 1518 and MO Lombard street Olepeneary Departme nt. —Medical treatment ' nd medicine ferule aed Oritti/ItiVialY Co the pool' DIVIDEND NOTICES OFFICEMINE HILL- AND SORUYLKIIJI -9 RAVEN RAILROAD COM- PHILADELPHIA, 7 mo. tith, BOO.' The Board of 'Managers have declared a dividend of Three and a Half Per Cent. (equal to onellollar, and neventy-nvo conte;per share), clear of taxem,..paYaDle to the atoctOioldern -- Or their legal rupreeentativee lin or aifter the lath inst. jys-t uth a3tcji§' S ; ' Treasurer.:. fo. PHILADELPHIA ANT) READING BAUJROAD COMPANY—OFFICE' 22VSOUTIE ciFOURTII STREET. PHILADELPHIA, - June 29, 1870. DIVIDEND NOTICE. The transfer books of this Company , will be closed on the 7th of July next, and reopened on July .a). A Dividend of Niro Per'Cant. has been declared oti the preferred and common stock, clear of' National and state taxes, payable, in cash on and after the 22,1 of ,'July next, to the, holders thereof, as they: stand regis tered on thwbookS of the Company at the close of bust. ;zags on the 7th of July next. All payable at this office. All orders, for Dividends must be witnessed and Atfunped. . • , B. BRADVOILD, je29,lmrp . Treasurer. POLITICAL NOTICES 1870. RKERIFF, "WILLIAM R. LEEDS. .16 tl oel2r WANTS. WANTED—IN A' . GENTEEL PRIVATE : family, three el'. .four rooms; with .permanent heard, 'for a family of fear persons (no small children). To persona desirous of adding to their income, the yortunttlop in worthy otattention. References exchanged. address Home," BuLtyriN °Mead:7llollth lit Stroat. AYOUNG ;WOMAN A`WTII ation in a Private family, at Cape May or Atlantic, City, as chambermaid or eland's nurse. 'References R, OB to 'honesty and industrious habits : Address 1i,..11„ at this office. jy6 dtrp"., ANTED -BY A YOUNG . MAN, A Tv' situation as Bookkeeper or Clerk. Has' had tgeveral yearopractiCal experience. Befeceoces given. ! -Address 0. H.," this Mince. I le2-I.rp if§ LEGAL NOTICES. "EISTATE OF:. JULIANNA. POULSON, 11 doe'd.—Lettoro of Administration upon the above t i cstate having boon granted to the undereigne ', ~: a ll.: per. pone indebted to the said estate are requostet to. rnako -payment, and Mimi having claims against t e eainelo resent them without delay to BAbIUEL 0. 0 )OK, Ad. ‘winititrotcr o, t, a.. /24 2Joutli Front 4t. j 7t It 6t,§ Summer Suits for Gents and Youths in Ready-Made Dept French and - English Fabrics tor Summer Wear in Custom Dept. Bathing Robes for Gents, Ladies and Children. Furnishing Goods. rA POSHER. SLAVE AND HIS MASTER, 1870. TABOILILAYIE'S INKSTAND. In our Tuesday's, article on Laboulaye we omitted to explain a phrase therein occur ring, but whose meaning may need some fur ther amplification before it can become clear outside of France : the allusion was. to the noise made In the world by Laboulaye's Ink stand. It is a little &amain action, to'which the irteco - ncilables have given a ridiculous moral. Four years ago M. Laboulaye presented himself as candidate for Deputy in the De partment of Lower. Rhine; be failed, but his partisans, to console his defeat, presented him with a handsonie silver inkstand. The presentatlon_was made by_Jules Ferry, since Deputy, and M. Lafout, who is the com mercial editor of the Temps. It is Lafont who tells us every day, if Tallows are . "firm," tildliakftia" , 'ntlier' literary or political to consideration. /le seems to be a pleasant man, but is ocaasiOnally very' fantastic, as may be imagin9d from . his going down to see, M Laboulaye and demanding the restitution 'of the inkstand, since he voted, and counselled others to vote, yes on the plebiscitum, thus be coming one ofthe supports of tyranny." Of course M. Laboulaye refused ; it seems he was good enough not to put Lafont out at the door. But the ; brilliant editor of _the Tempes commercial article was not satisfied.. Hesum moned, it is said, Laboulaye by constable, to have the inkstand delivered up, under penalty of paying fifty francs for each day's delay. , lay e's acceptance of the 3liniStty of Public:ln struction is the greattrouble of the opposition. They forget that he has a son who has been for fifteen years attached to the Embassy. at Constantinople, and that the latter's W nomina tion al signed by gbunt Daru. TOE INDIAN TRAGEDY AT FORT DODGE A Philadelphian _One ..of the Itletl,4 A — letter f. vat Fort Dodge to the Boston 'TinteB says Three men named Andrew Tolliver, Joseph Cassidy and Reason Reagan, were killed by hostile Indians at Mulberry Creek, Kansas, about twelve mile§ southeast from Fort I/odge, on the ltitlf`ult. The )erpetrators are unknown, but are sup t Po_Cheyennes _or_Arrapalmes.. _The Wt. were wood , choppersiti the emnloy of a M r. 'W_right, =trader - -and =contiattetnt Fort Dodge. .Telliver waS formerly a soldier, ;aid served- one term of enlistment in' the 3d LT. S. Infantry: A Aletachtnent___brenght -in their bodies . to. Fort Dodge, where - their, re _mains .were interred ott_the'Llikh_ult,Tney were" warned by their employer that the In dians were on t he - war pattr,-andth-e-alterna ti ve given them to- seek the protection of, the Fort, if thdy dutited, but they elected to continue chopping wood, and, being well armed, expressed their ability todefend them= selves. A ranche *of sod adobes; , dirt roof supported by poles and ' , brash weed, having a single door of rough logs, was their borne. The earth' sods, being ' thoroughly dtiedovere asintiamnaablkas;wat. . . Employed with the three men killed was a Mr. Reagan, brother to one of the -parties, whose accidental absence from Abe ,rancho saved his life. He states 'that Cassidy was - surprised at nightfall, -spout' two 'hundred, y-rds from the hut; shot froth behind and scalped. Ile was found ,to, have sustained three wound - s—two by bul lets and one by an arrow. . ' • The other men inniaediatCli baiticaded their doer and awaited An - atsault. The Indians succeeded in tiring the adobe. building_ from. without, cleared the dirt from the roof, and shot then' from above. „It Is Obi kndwn whether the Indians sustained any loss. Neither was scalped nor mutilated, the ap proaCh of a detachment of soldiers probably deterring them. . When found the remains were partially; burned by the tire: One of , them had a rope about his neck, and had evidently been stran gled. Two slips of paper were also found bearing the inscriptions, " We won't be taken alive"! "My mother and sister live at No. 1212 Bedford street, Philadelphia." A Colored llan's Influence. Governor Alcorn, of 31issisippl, latelY ap pointed W. G. Henderson to a JudgesblP, lus attention having been called to Henderson by the following singular letter from a colored member of the Legislature: " - HOUSE OF IMPILESENTATIVES, Jackson, Miss.,March 2,6, 1.870.—T0 .Excetlency Gov vo ini.J. L. _4leorn GovEnNon. : I was a slave Of Colonel W. G. Henderson. Boys together its we were, he is the centre of the tenderest ii , sociations of my life. Arrived at manhood's , estate,' Iva; still intimately . eonnected with .him in the relation of his body-servant. Wben .he was wounded. at-Upp,ervillo, Va., on the iway to Gettysburg, be languished, in the val ley of Virginia, in the hands' of . .the Federal authorities, until it was my priVilege to take • him away, secretly, through the lines of his own people. Thu affectionate relation of our childhood having ripened into a fixed friend ship in our manhood, has been invigorated still further bkii, mutuality of service and de votion which Makes him dear to my soul. "My friend and loving master is a candi date for the offiee - of Circuit 'Judge of the, First District. He is a, man of unblemished honor, is a lawyer• of high standing at the bar, and, having stood out for you boldly during the canvas, is a good Republican, Now, Governor, I, hy the mysterious pro vidence of God, am a member of the Legisla ture. I want no office, no honor, save that of standing here in my place as a duty to my, race. But I believe my position gives me some claim upon the patronage you are about to dispose, and I now place, without reserva tion, all the credit of that claim to, the account of my earnest prayer that you appoint to the judgeship of the. First Distnctitheplaymate of my boyhood, the companion of my manhood, the generous friend of my whole life—my for pier master; Col. Henderson: • "Hoping that you will,; grant this first. and last prayer which ',as a inember of the House of Representatives, make to you as Governor of Mississippi, I have the honor to. be your Excellency's very humble servant, • • - I.,A4prtosto•HENtiratsoN.".': -- A NEW ItIISSIA211:- The First. Bootblack. - - A new sign of progress has manifested at St. Petersburg. A 'shoeblii'llk -from some.: where in Austria (probably from sympathetic Prague), has established hun.self on ,the Nev- sky Prospect, and is said to be doing a good business, though hitherto the very general use. of goloshes in Russia. has made such an occu pation almost a superfluous one. However, in a 'conntry of seventy million inhabitants there will doubtless be enough work for one shoe= black ; and. probably numbers of persons in St' Petersburg, finding they can have their boots Cleaned at short notice, will give up the wearing of goloshes which has been adopted asp safeguard against dust in summer and against mud in winter. The name of the en terprising shoeblack- who, alone and armed only:with a blacking: brush, has" taken upon. himself to invade Eustaia is Dzendzolovsky. He has ',enlisted a certain number of re '- cruits and intends, it is said, to' form a shoe black brigade. THUItSDAY, JULY 7, 1870. •" LOTHAIW"AND 46 BLACKWOOD." A Hearti "Pitch In" to the English atisitazine• [From the London Standard(Tory and high Church), June2l.l • That which is called' the "Second Edition" of Bladwood's Magazine for 'June contains-a "Note" by the writer of the scandalous article on '° Lothair," justifying his production and retorting upon, his critics. This note—which is obviously a mere trade advertisement, resorted to with a view of impessingitipork the public that BlaelrwoOd'alliagazine, by reason of - its brilliant review of Mr:Disraeli% book, has attained to the unwonted honor;of a second edition—is marked withal' the coarseness, flip pancy arid seurrility of •theoriginal article. In this new ,fight the bad taste, the :vulgarity, ingratitude and blasphemy - or this ill-favored production become doubly conspicuous. - The writer has not a single word to offer in ex tenuation of his offence, but to repeat, in a dull, maundering kind of way, some of . the_ epithets_with which-he:has been-chastised by the almost unanimous, press. of this country, and to reiterate that ," Lothair"--f is apt Ihich he bad described. The Personal extra literary venoinoosnesei , the allustionit to Mr: Disraell'abirth, rancor with which the man, no lets-than the author, was pursued, are but feebly jtistified the! " Note,". and it 'is unnecessary till ainitipHur selves with this part of the rerf3Wer's work. As to the political significance of:this wanton and outrageous attack on the leaden of the conservative party, it is no less and no greater than it, was before the explanation was given; Nothing in that book can be - said to have ren dered him unworthy of the confidence of the PaTtY..- WEtitever be its literary merits, it is a work which does not lower but rather heighten Mr,Disraeli!s. political reputation. —.Nor:As there any justification whatever, either literary or political, for the - foul blow Which has beelidealt at the authortbv those who only a short time abe, when Mr. Disraeli was at the•height of power, were impressed with a profound admiration of his character. The article in Black - wood's Magazine becomes still more, after its — explanation, - w - cotourcity _ cad brutal libel,uraeortlty of literature, and only to be accounted for by some low trade motive-or some personal malignity. RIVIIPER'ARD `BOBELSX IN . IttIfAFORD,. CONNECIVIVIIPire: ' ent Citizen Shot Dead in His Own Mons! by a Burglar. . , rr,Foito, CoNikr., July 6, 1870.-One of the mast terrible events that- thrill with horror the miunimities in which they OCCurtook place in this quiet village early this,morning. -.-nr , -Nathan-F.eunv.a.. prominent merchant, widely known and-respectetritilbisneighbor hood,-was. sbot - - - zdeadArilliisr - OwiElouse 7 liy burglars,' who subseqiieritlY - escaped. Mts. Fenn was awakened at about two o'clock by a noise ao-..of_sonie_person_itt_lhe bonsai ! and arousing her Jinsban.d" he inimediately `got up and procegdod to.the_dining,roomi-where-he was met "the= burglars,. for __from all ap pearances there - vras - morettian - one: - 'llwhad entered by a window ' bat had opened - nono - of thq outer:doors; and being, thus caught before they had tithe to escape, they turned 'upon Mr. Fenn and shot him down. He cried out, " I am shot,'l and almost instantlya expired. The robbers immediately escaped. MrS.Reiin claimed - the' rieighborhood ; the liens were rung, and the town- aroused, but up trace of the murderers Could' be foetid . _'".Mr. Fenn"was slat through the left arm, the hall - thew enter-i Mg his' hit side. just over, the ; hip bone, and glancing down Ward towa r d the' back bone. The - robbers - took - iwith them - MrjFenn.'s pants which they must have taken from his.. chamber; but his ~pocketbook was-."found under the bed; where he was ,accustomed to leave it. -.-_ -• . A few hours previous the house of, a neigh bor, a Mr. Wood, had been entered and a gold watch and eighty dollars in money taken. A certain style of jignare matches,. Well burned down andprobably 11Sea by the - robbers for .'found in both, indifiates that the robbery and murder were by the same hand. The most intense excitement prevail.% and ne stone will be left unturned to discover the per petrators. The town.of Milford has offered a reward of $l,OOO for their apprehension. Chief Marsh and Officer Arnold, of 'Bridge port, went ever to Milford ,on Wednesday morning to look at the case. , Fenn ..was. well known in Bridgeport, and his terrible death has created a pronquyi . sensation. A Coroner'S inquest and a post mortem extol:d ilation were made ori W ednesdayL afternoon THE POETS' CORNER. Incliensts.Grave in West!!dilater Abbe37.:- Its Surroundings. The London Illustrated News has the folio*. ing The venerable Abbey Church of St. Peter, at Westminster, has lately received the mortal body of another English worthy. There is a place here allotted by traditional.custom to the burial, or, at least, to the obituary record, of men whose literary . genius, has adofued this nation. The extremity of the south' transept has for ages past been called the "Poets' ;Corner." Here is the tomb .of ,Geoilry, Chau cer, "the Father of English Poetry," who was also a man of official business,. Clerk of the Works in the precincts of the King's pal ace at Westminster, including, the Abbey. He died in October, 1400, at his house, close by, which stood on the site of Henry Vll.'s chapel. The first English...printer, Caxton; whq set upline types•and wdrked his press in a chapel of the Abbey, caused a simple tablet, , with a couplet of Latin verse written by a' scholar of Milan, to .be placed above his friend ChauCer's grave. A century and a half later, in 1556, Mr. Nicholas Brigham, "in the name of the Muses," erected the well4cnown monument of grey marble, witlya full-length statue of Chaucer, copying the head, the costume, and the atti tude from Occleve's contemporary portrait. That was the beginning of Poets' Corner. Now, only last week, br order of Dean Stan ley, and threugh the, diligence of Chaucer's successor in office, Mr. Christopher Foster, Clerk of the Works in the Abbey, the grave of Charles Dickens was made here in the mid dle of the floor, within arew steps of old Chau cer's. . The elaborate monument of the Duke of Argyll. in t George .11.'s time—Jeattie Deaus's good Duke, in " The Heartgof Midlothian " rises opposite,with its four fine statues, repre senting the virtues and talents of that patri otic Scottish 'nobleman. The monuments of oldsmith and Gay, with their medallion por traits, and with he inscriptions composed in the former instance by Dr. Johnson, and in the latter case by Pope, are to the left. To the right is the graceful statue of Addison, upon cylindricarpedestal of white marble; but his actual place of interment is in another part of the A bbey. The monument of Handel, who lies buried under the pavement next Dickens, is placed high on the wall, above that of the Ladies Lechmere ; his figure, in an attitude of inspiration, stands in front of an organ, hold ing an opened .scroll of music. The bust of Thackeray is near Addison's statue. The best place for a bust of Dickens is on the other , side of the arch - or near the Lechmere monu ment, and between that and the monument of the Atkins family t which fills the next arch. It would be •a, suitable companion to the bust of Thackeray. The grave of. Dickens' is - adjacent to those of - Handel, Sheri dan, and Cumberland thb .dramatist, whose names occupy, With_those of Henderson, the. actor, David Garrick, Samuel Johnson, and General Sir A. Campbell, the eight flat tomb stones in front of the door leading to St. Faith's Chapel: These tombstones are ranged in four pairs. The graves of Dickens and Cumberland form one pair; and they lie immediately epee site the well-known cenotaph of Shakespeare, which stands against the wall,with the monu ments of Nicholas Rowe, James Thomson, Matthew Prior, Southey, and Thomas Camp bell; these confronting those of Adiftison, Mackenzie,--and Handel, and the bust of Thackeray. The monuments of Chaucer, Spenser, Ben Jenson. Abraham Cowley Dryden, Barton Booth the tragedian, and Thomasa Gray, are placed somewhat apart, in the corner by the western door through which the Abbey is en tered. from Old Palace-yard. This is, no douht, the ancient and original "Poets' Cor-, ner:" but that name has latterly bean ex tended, as we now see, to the whole breadth of the south transept.'Among ths ,other per sons liiterred in this part 'of the Abbey are Dr. Barrow and Dr. South, thw;eminent divines; Dr._ Husby, master :of .Westrninster 'School ; Queen Anne .Neville_, wife of _Richard Chiflinch, page to Charles II:; Macpherson, translator or inventor of 0,951aII; La4ySteele ,Wife — Of Sir pollard ; several Prebendaries, and the latk Dean Ireland. • SPAIN AISID-ISJEAVERV. Iwexete tpretshonlh ae r tei.-tienor Castetrepeeeh. • Senor Caftan. delliered his promised 'dis course in favor of the abolition 'of slavery froni •theist otiTatruaryi 1871. As usual, the first orator of the Chamber expressed himself with the nerve and energy which distingpsh him. His speech 'was filled with submti thoughts, and carried with it the elo quence of indisputable logic. He first' depleted, in all its luirrors,.slavery as it exists. At every sentence' the eid [ tire Chainber broke but in applause. He was [ listened;to attentively and earnestly for two [ hours. - Benor - Castelarbas studied - -the - qtiesw lion of slavery in all itsphases. _ He maintains_ ['that slavery is an attack-upon the - rights - of humanity. A man cannot, must not, be the property of_ another Man. The Coteenission and the Goirernment wish to have a gradual abolitiOn. He said : __‘f[This_svitemis lull _of dangers,lor-it - will - proVoke ineurreetiona. , We ought to imitate the French Convention , which abolished slavery, re-established by Napoleon 1., and again abolished by the Revolution of' 1848. Modem slavery 119 due __.to_ the slave_ trade. There is not - in the whole world a blacker criminal than the 'slave-dealer. The shark which follows his sbip,withits odors of human flesh, has moreheart, more conscience -.than he' has. He makes of his ship a horrible floating dungeon, crowded with men. If cruisers, pursue him be throws half his cargo overboard. In the Spring'of 1866, a slave cap tain; in order to escape abandoned taf:T --- desert - r -- Talittir 'eighty all_Of-whonidied of starvation,,i'--Are-yon-quite sure that no' one of thee Was not drivenr to d evpnring the hesh of one of his fellow-beings ? No society is possible in. which, women are sold like mares. 'The fate of a slave depends upon the merest caprice, -'the cast_of a die._ Cliiidren- ale separated their mothers, _The slave isborn with-the mark:-of- the iron upon, him ; he is cared for as a beastof burden,. and he works-under thewhip. He is perhaps: only happy when he is asleep, dreaming-that be is free. And for these_reasons we hear, et four hundred suicides of slayes in one year in Havana. Let us imitate pi t ilaxid; who spent million.s to "purchase' e " freedom of its slaves. •s On -no occasion can humanity be more grateful - to us for the - saeriticii:: - Lobt at-What '31037tW917 litaUe 7 in the- °lilted States'. Aitterioa"viekcieatikl. to be the terrestrial paradise'of . the regenerated _freeman,, and yot-slavery---exestethere; -- --The-- evil had become so great that it profaned the breast'of the great Republic. But Jefferson traced the line upon which the black wave of slavery would,break. The partisans of slavery became so powerful that they attempted to cross-this line, when the:navigator of the Ohio and Mississippi, the'rhil-splitter, of the West, mounted the capitol at 'Washington to burst the Chains of three millions of slaves: And, thotnothing might be wanting to his halo of he'died like Socrates, like Christ, like all teohienieni---at tlie foot of his great work, upon which humanity will always Shed tears of rejoicing, andjOod bestow His, benedietiOns."- A triple round of applause here prevented Senor Castelar from continuing. After ten minutes' intermission Senor Castelar exam ined the abolition of slavery in the - Republics of Central and Southern America, all of which, resorted to the initnediate and not the system of abolitioti. The orator labors to prove that niodern slavery is far more odious than that which existedunder - the Vomatia; • "There are priests in this Chamber-And lasi to them : GlOci, - who abased 'Himself to take the; -human form for our redemption; the hands, which carved a world from chaos. and whielt were pierced with nails; Hie lips - which gave the breath of life were frozen lit death; He who condensed this waters sufferedlwith thirst; He Who lighted up the sun was cold ; His agony could not move the hearts of tyrants; sublime Vork--this death for man. But this admirable work Is useless for men who vegetate on the earth in a state of slavery. Slaves, rise and live in the name of Christ, and you, their mas ters, stand back or tremble before the justice' of Heaven. Break the chains of theae slaves, gentlemen. The nineteenth century., will be the; noblest of all if it sees the mederaption of its slaves," The orator received the congratulations of the entire Chamber, and, the session was sus pended for twenty ininutes.—Cdr. N. Y Times. NOWS An Imposing Ceremony—The Pope in Favorite Dogma. A correspondeut writing from Rome on June 17, says: Yesterday the Pope carried the Holy Sacra inent round the Piazza, of St. Peter. The pro cession included the - Fathers of the Council, and was thus the most imposing that has been been in Rome by the present generation. The ceremony attracted an immense concourse of spectators, and the Infanta of Portugal, _the corps diplomatique, and a number of distin guished personages witnessed it from the bal cony of the cathedral. This morning the Holy Father entered the 25th year of his reign. On the 23d of August, 1871, if he survives to that date, his pontificate will have endured longer than St.,.P . eter's, and will falsify the famous prophecy, "Non videbis annos Petri." His Holiness has, visited the church - of San L orenzo fuori-le-inure, to inspect the frescoes of Fracassini, whom death snatched from the world at the early age of twenty-eight. The Pope, who possesses an artist's instinct, . pressed .a warm admiration of these noble works. From - the church the Holy Father; proceeded to the cemetery, to inaugurate the monument erected to' the memory .of the Pontifical sol diers who fell at Mentana. The memorial represents kt. Peter presenting a sword to a kneeling warrior, who bears a flag inscribed with the words, "Orbis Catholieus." Beneath is this v i ew) from, Maccabees :," - Accipe. sanc tum gladiton, minus a Deci in quo dejicies adversaries popult Wei • Israel." The Po nti fr was attended to the monument by a throng of cardinals'and bisho - ps; who joined in chanting the De..Proftnidis. The Pope distributed some silver medals among the officers , immediately around him . ;•and to Colonel Perrauz, who ad vanced to, hiss his foot, he gave , his snuff=box, having disposed of all the medals before ho was aware of t4o:coloners 'presence. The HO/ Father has granted a long inter view to Monsignor Dupanloup; who took ad vantage of the check given to infallibility to set before blin-the, perils which would attend the promulgation' Of the dogma. The ,Pope heard him caloily, but made no reply, except to declare - Ins faith, exclaiming thrice, ,4 We believe it! we believe it ! we believe it !" IHE HORRIBLE TRAGEDY IR PEKIN The Scene of the Massacre. • The Pek tang, as the ecclesiastical Missidn under French protection is termed, lies in the northwest corner of the city walls. The his tory of this spot of ground - has been perhaps as eventful as that of any foreign location in the Far East, The original site was granted to the French Jeguit missionaries who .first visited China, by the Emperor Katighi—the' Augustus of Chinese literature—and they suc cessfully held it for some years. At length a violent persecution against the Christiansbroke out, the Mission buildings were razed , to the ground, and the priests were proscribed and put to death. At the close of the war, in 1860, its restoration was made a 'special subject of treaty negotiation, and a handsome church (the tower of which was'restricted to a height of 60 feet, lest it should overlook the_imperial 'Womb dormitories, and schools, were erected G_o by the French _ver .ment._ln_l2,64_these were, however, destroyed by fire, a valuable "museum, founded and filled by the naturalist David, alone escaping the devouring element. Again did fresh buildings arise from the ashes et their predecessors, the members of the - Chinese Foreign Beard assisting the foreign ministers in laying the foundation• Stones. And now these, too, have shared the fate of their 'predecessors. The Russian Church was situated between the' United States and British Legations, and has long been a conspicuous object from the-walls of Pekin. Of unpretending architecture, the cross, with which it was . surmounted, was plainly visible above the low root of the sur rounding native building's. • The telegram does not inform us whether it was also destroyed, but the mention of several Russians being killed would lead to.the_ inferenee that. their -- Legation, - Within the precincts of which the church stands, had been also made a subject of attack: - • TILE BRITISH "114194IrEBABERIL" Lord Arthur Clinton's Life, Career and Death. [ From the London Telegraph, June 21.] Lord Arthur Clinton died at Christchurch, in Hampshire, on Saturday last. The son of an eminent nobleman, whose closing years• were embittered by an overwhelming domestic Sorrow, lie never, it is to be" fearecT enjoyed the benefit of that tender but vigilant control - which might have guarded him against in fluences VICIOUS in their immediate eitects, and as destructive of refinement as of self-respect. We are informed in the documents which we printed yesterday that-the sole reason why he escaped arrestwas his illness; that, so far from seeking to evade justice, he was anxious to - surrender that to this last" heynerSisted-in—a _solemn_deniaLot_. the , =serious-chargeAnade,, pleadingtidny to nothing more heinous -than indulgOnce in a very , Silly frolic: Meanwhile', annuntbutlook with sadness, not unhfixed with,pity, on the kit moliients of a foolizih whbse misguided career has inflicted a new stainth e -- ese o as e,- guished.._in__tha_last_generation-by:--one-who must be ranked among the most inteliigent,_ honest and sincere in the roll of English states . There are some, •hoverer, still living who are associated with the young prodigal by, name, and family—although themselves honor able and respected-who certainly deserve a word of Sympathy. While death seals• up the' sad and wasted career of Lord, Arthur Clinton; the painful nature of their position earns a, general tribute of regard:- If.LILIJRN OF• TILE DAMES EXPEDI Arrival of the United States Ship Guard ...All Well The United States ship Guard; of the: Da rien 11.x . ploring,-, gxpedition,, arrived ell the Lower Quarantine night before last, and at Ellis Island yesterday' afternoon. She will • come up to the Navy Yard this morning. The officers of the Guard are Lieutenant Commander Lull; Commanding Lieut. G. C. Schultze,!Executive Officer; Lt. R. D. Hitch cock,Navigator; Pasedd Ass't Paymaster, F. Bissell ; . Assistant Surgeon, Alfred Griffith ; Frederick Collins and Joseph G. Eaton, Masters ; John M. Hawley and Alfred Elliott, Ensigns,;..lfrevet Major. George Porter Hous ton,. Lieuteaants. M., C. .Goodrell and. S. K. Allen, of the 'United States Marine Corps; C. E: 'Neil, Acting Gunner; C. W. Simmons, Acting Boatswain-; .F. •M. Epley, Captain's Clerk, and Theodore Berry, Paym. titer's ter',s Clerk. The Coast Survey officers on board are: J. A.. , hi ef _o f.the __Coos t S urv_ey_p ar_ty_ ; ! 'T. Mosman, H. 0. Ogden and H. L. Marin ; din assistants, and L. Karcher, draughtsman; civilians E. W. Bo wditch and J. P. Carson, inlineralogists ; W. H. Clarke, chief• tele 4grapber, and Calvin McDowell, assistant tele ignipher ; . J. H. O'Sullivan, photographer, and 'assistant photographer. Officers crew are in such excellent health as to dbiciedit' the traditicinal deadly climate" of those parts of the isthmus where they have for months.been engaged in tolls more severe and . 'exposed] to greater hardships than can be Osilyfmagined. ' The extensive reconnoissances made by the Darien explorers on the Washington, the ,Caledonia and the Sassardi rivers (together with the bold and successful march to the Chugunague) and those qn the Mandinga and the Nicalagua rivers; flowing into the Gulf of San Blas, have eliminated a vast portion. of the Isthmus from the difficult' problem of an inter-oceanic canal. .To have, thus demon strated the impracticability of such a canal by any of these routes is a work of high scientific value and importance. Filither explorations during the next dry season may proVe more practically, successful on , other .routes.--N.,Y.: Yerald, • CUBA.. Spanish Opinions on Cuban Affairs. The Spanish journals continue to comment in severe terms of reproach on the, policy of De Bodes and the'volunteers in Cuba. El E. t' ,do U«talan, a journal published in Barcelona, lately commented on the fate of Goicouria, whom it painted as a lifetime enemy of Spain and a pirate, as a proof of its representations of the ferocious character of the warfare which is desolating the Island of, Cuba._ It adds: Let our readerstlx their thoughts upon this old man who is.fieein4 the island, and who of fors no resistance to his captors ; let them look at that council of war which condemns him to death by the garote ; at this man who makes no defence, and asks only that he may die ; then look upon that people, who rejoice at the sight of a captured political enemy ; at that society, which obliges an honorable man to put on vestments befitting. only criminals. And now let us compare this war-council, this defendant, this people, this society with the great equanimity, of soul manife.,sted by the victim, who (we are told) stepped upon the scaffold with a firm and nimble step. And then let us speak out frankly and say who loses by the comparison. El Sic/H.l)o' of Madrid-thus speaks of the pro.; ect for the'abolition of slavery; - • . We arb - not surprised at the precipitate ac tion of Moret, who is about to revolutionize the social question without the aid of repre sentatives from_ (tuba, who, if called, would assemble to witness the funeral of our domin ion in America. : Yes; the hour of Spain's dominion over what was left of the vast territories which she dis: covered, civilized and populated in the New World under her glorious and legitimate mon archs hassounded, :We know of.no remedy for, he Oaucer which is eating into the heart of Spain, nor how she,c,an escape from the death-, dealing bite ofthe asp she carries in her bo-' WAIL But wo will thus counsel, at any rate, our loyal brethren lu Cuba, and our advice, is PRICE THREE CENT ii. of $ Mein Chrisizianlike kind: It is' indispea sable that they should resign theMselves to the -bitter lot brought upon them by the I ,< glorious revolution of September:" FACTS AND FANCIED, —Grenadier hats will be the next Paris fask ion for ladies. , • —There are five American convicts in Gerl man penitentiaries. —The Queen of Denmark spends annually only one hundreddollars for new dresses. —Verdi's new opera will be performed in August, at Milan and Naples. —Marfori has been refused permission 14 take up his abode in Lisbon. , • —Whipping the - baby is considered out/iciest ground for divorce in St. Louis..._ —Queen Victoria pays liberal pensiong seventeen_old servants_ of—Prince -,Albert -in Germany. a - —The Baressa,which acted as a tratilpOrt talk the ship whic,h took Napoleon I. to St. Helena, is still afloat, in the port, of Itostach, many. • —Persons who prefer stale bread can hate their taste gratified by sen4ang to Pompeii,,, where they have, loaves which were baked over eighteen hundred years ago. - —An exchange notes, as the most " harrOW: ing" sight it ever saw, the spectacle of 'a gen tleman in a dress suit of black harrowing in.& field with a tall plug hat on. —The Queen of Belgium has got over the grief which the death of her only son caused to her, amid delights as much as ever in train ing her pet horses. l-Oberlin College, Ohio, is , to have a pre- - fessor of Christian apologetics added to the faculty, , whether to apologise - to for Chris tians is not stated. —Ex-Queen Isabella says she likes the climate of Paris • much better than that of Madrid, and she would not go ..back to the latter city even if the choice her.._.wereleft_s A`deVere case ,_,.- -A boy in a country sehool was reading the, following sentence : " The lighthouse is a land• - mark by day and a beacon by, night," and rendered it thus: " The. lighthouse As , a land lord by day and a deacon by night." —An Ohio` youth; sitting in church, znistoOk . the. gentle _touch of the plume the, jaunty hat of a young lady for aHy en his-neck,and with the energy of exasperation sent, pume, hat and chignon Hying - into a distant pew. —Count "yen Beust fainted away when he received the sad news•that j hia son Frederick, Nyho_p4rticipate4,.as an officer_ of-marines,-in the Asiatic expedition sent out by. the Aus tiiare:Gevernmenti-- rihad - diedatniziAtilw . —A. - young man from Louisville, Ky, hav ing a fortune of one' hundred' thonsand del.. Jars, and of a very prepossessing appearance * , advertises in the German journals ' for n_ Wealthy-and-good-looking-wite."--'--d' —The Paris papers ‘_edmiCalmost,_unani mously that the American newspaper &irreg.'. i pondentsin that:city - ,furnisir try far - rdlerezfri- 7 teresting and readable matter than , their Eng-f, lisp colleagues. —The Maseara(te, speaking of the intended! introduction' of the Prince's profile with • that) e the Emperor on thenew coinage, gongratu lates its readers on the prospect otliavingtwan napolbons for twenty sous. Princes§ Thyra, of Denmark, who is is now seventeeri.years old, and Whole naister: to the 'Princess of' Wales and the Grand' Duchess:hereditary _of:Massie; is - s - aid"td - ifeT much prettier than either of her sisters. ' —Neber, the Leipzig publisher; wild issued" the authorized edition of the Galician transla- , tion of Charles Dickens' works, says he paid the illustrious English author in the course of the last fifteen years upward of twenty, thou sand dollars. —The Austrian Government has appro priated shx: t rnillion florins for the great Es.lia- sition which will take place in Vienna, and ' private parties have signed fifteen hundred ; thousand florins in addition. —Near Troppau, Austria, is the Catholic village of Gilschwitz, inhabited mainly by rich farmers. The village has risen en masse and declared its intention of turning Protestant should its Archbishop persist in opposing its independent choice for parish priest. —Rear Admiral O. S. Casson has received, orders to command the European fleet, and will leave in the steamer of the 9th inst. for Southamptom—Lieutenant-Wim.T;—Buck-has been ordered to report to Admiral Glisson for duty on his staff. —At Aulnoye, in Belgium, a profitable use has been found for the, slag from the large iron works there established. It is cast into , slabs for pavement'and paving purpose,s gen erally, into garden-rollers and pints and pil lars, and in some of its forms is described as, artificial porphyry. —ln a Chicago divorce case now on trial, ' the husband alleges that Caroline had, on' several occasions, beaten him ispat in his face, thrown hot water on him, and. on one occasion kicked him down stairs. The court seems likely to grant the prayer - of the poor, ill -1 treated husband. —The Emperor Napoleon wears but One ring, containing a valuable amethyst, which:, General de Beauliarnois, after 'being im- ' prisoned during the Reign of Terror, sent to his wife Josephine. Queen Hortense wore this ring after Josephine's death, and Louis Napo leen has had -it on his hand ever since his. mother's death. —Dumas tlui younger, was accosted" :at an" opera; ball by ayoung Mask Whose meagreness of person was but too evident. While con versing, Dumas slipped his, visiting card with in the corAage of his interlocutor. " What do you mean by such a familiarity ?" cried the utisette. " _Pardon," said Dumas, smiling, ' " but lam in the habit of"ledying my card where Ido not tind the person." - —A lightning-rod man, in putting up one of • hiS rods between Indianapolis and Cincinnati, connected it with alVestern , Vnion telegraph, wire, "in order," he said, "to relieve the lightning-rod if it should become excessively charged with electricity." He succeeded 'in relieving the line of its despatches, Which ran ' into the ground, and caused a large and well selected amount of " cussing" at , both ends of the line. • —Mr. William T.Harding sends to the Phila delphia hardener's Monthly for July list of the Trees and Shrubs, indigenous and culti rated, growing within the limits of Fairmount Park, which were blooming the nitiaths of April and May. It is a listofauch as he has per- • sonally seen and examined while in tiovier. Of trees and shrubs,there are genera 156 and spettii3s 111. The number of beroaceous plants are: genera, 63;.species, 101. The plants,..trees and shrubs named are by no means a ,cotn pieta catalogue of all within the Park, but of such as were actually blooming syliela_poted.; but such as it outnumbers bY a very great • ' excess the botanical resources of any - __._.._ garden in-America Prince is a pen photograph of the young Prince of Asturias : A stupid, languld-looking boy, with a very long nose and small black • eyes. As a general thing, he is dressed in a costume that is most unbecoming to him. • He can read, but writes most clumsily and un orthographically. His favorite occupation is training a little Shetland pony, with whom he spends daily six or seven hours. He speaks Spanigh.very -slowly, and with the -- peonli; Castilinn_necent.L.—Erelleh.i..he_speaks_ ; • fluently; but better than most Spaniards Peltple who know him assert that, in " should ever Ascend the SPanis would be a meaner man than Ferdinand the tSOYeLIP, was. 1 ~