~~< Y -: w 1.~ . I;i=Elgt! PITTSBURG .MEMI ROMAIrft:0111 • ..VATELS - rAiriat:J; • The special taareispandent Of the Scottish PieSeWrites -that he petit to - h4r.Tatber Gikutzbii London, on Relitath last. - The • following ts.bis *pticni of the fdoneil orator : - • • At half past, two t e Padre entered, and We were 'Startled to ; fin 1. him, received with loud cheers. Ile Was ` in the double robe, of his orderal close frock, reaching to his' heels, on the , breast, of which was a large erehroideredcrOss, while a Medal was • suspended from his breast.: Over the frock he wore aloose gown, on the left shoulder of which was, another' cross. Ire 13 a swarthy Italian, aged atient fifty, with : hair as black tuCt,raven's - raing, and an eye like 'att eagle'll. But how shall deseribe.his sermon - or Oration? - -Efe:Sat down in •a, chair pi:meg_"toward I the one, side of - .the :platform, and commenced; calmly and de; liberately, to enunciate his sentences. Anon the fire began. to buin,'and he rose to' his feet, By and by „he paced.. the - platform rapidly. blood( was now careering through his veins; mid• as he poured his withering seen' on /11/111C;on its purgatory, • its eanningoits cruelty, itsclim, the im pressiveness of. his action; and, the fire of his denunciatiOn were' truly sublime'. Talk of grace, of grandeur, _of earnestness, of fervid eloquence! , The man who has only :nen the , comparative ,staidness of pulpit • oratory in' Scotland,i and much more in England, tan form no conception of the molten torrent which rushed from Gavazzi's lips, while his'. action was beautiful .and chaste.,heyond conception. When, ever acd,•inten;he reached a climax, and. every • eye wairivoted, and 'every ear was greedy of each word, the excitability of Isis and knee prevented them ;from listening in gni -etness, and they isoinplr - e4 'drowned his peroration amid their irrepressible bravos ' • and shouts; and as he likened •Protestant England, its free institutions and its Tell : gions liberty, to the Crystal Palace, which let in the light at every point, with Rome • bolting and barring its gates, the laughter and shouts of his excited audience showed hew thoroughly they appreciated the illus- 1 • tration, ,and adopted the sentiment.. On-' vazzi's oratory is.net merely the most won derful I ever listened to, but exceeds all that any imagination ever pictured. If Luther preached liko this man, no wonder thst he revolutionized Europe. • - TINE 91:t SNAIL TELEGILAPN: " Dr. , Gregory, in his late letters on arm mai magnetism„givcs the following account Hof the process of ttlegraphing by snails • It has been lately stated by M. Allis, on the - authority of M. Benoit, in Paris, and of another diimoverer--also, I believe, •m Frenchman, who is now in America— both of whom, dining . the last ten yeare, have been - employed .tn welking out- the discovery, which they had severally and -".independentlyMade, although they are now associated to *ort•rit out—that magnetic sympathy is remarkably developedin ,srfafir,„ that these animals, after having once been • ... in communication or in contact, continue ever after to sympathize, no matter at what distance they may . be, • And .it loss been proposed to found on this fact a mode of communication between the most distant pieces. M. Alltz . . describes, with care • and judgment, experiments made in his pres ence, in which, the time having, of course, . been fixed be:44411=4 v _werds : Veiled n Paris by M. Benoit, and also by M. Allis himself, were instantly read in Anierica, and a? instantly replied to by words spelled I • there and read in Paris. All this was dose by meaasief snails; and although the 1 full 'heals of t he apparatus employed, and • of all the ocesses - necessary to insure maces% have toot set been published, yet the account gi en goes so , far as to enable ' us to conceive principle' made: use of ft would appear that. every letter has a, snail belonging to it • at Paris, while iu America each letter , has also a snail, Byte-1 Pathetic with the mine letter in Paris; the two snails o each letter having ben at , some period and by some process brought into full sympathy, and then separated and marked, There is, of course, a stock of e. spare snails ter each letteri in Lase of Reel. dent; but itl is • found that these.animals fota year without food, should that be necessary. When a word 13 to bc ,• -spelled in POris, the snail belonging to : the lust letter brought by some galvanic -apparatus, not yet fully daerribed, into a •• ,tuts of z disturbance,with_which his fellow is America iiyinpati But this recinires , to . be ascertained ; which , is done 'by ap-;{ preaching, in America, to all the snails I suetasi*elyi a testing apparatus, not de scribed, which, however, includes a snail. On the , approach of this, the -snail,whasil • fellow in Pans has been acted on, exhibits some symptoms which are not exhibited by , any other, and the corresponding fetter is noted down!. This is done with each letter, and the , word is finally spelled. It will •-• certainly be very remarkable if a snail telegraph ihould come into action; which, in spite of the proverbial slowness of the animal concerned, should rival in_ rapidity the electric' telegraph, and surpass . it in security, inasmuch as there are. no wires to be cut by an enemy , besides being infinite ly less Costly, since no solid, tangible means of Icommunication are required, and all that is, needed islhe apparatus at either . end. of this line, and the properly•pripared Snails. ' - • (lAMBLYna erecunsausu THE EIIILE. A correspondent of the Bible Society Record relates the following : 'Many ~.cars ago, when Louisville was a petty village, consisting of a few houses and twcil, stores,. it was a great resort for gamblerf,and persons of dissipated habits. At this period, a Colonel C., a wealthy but a yery wjekcd man, carried on an extensive mercantile, business. On a certain occasion he sent confidential-clerk to the east to lay in I. ripply of goods, famishing Lim - With the requisite amount , of C:ltsb. An uneoreeted fall in prices left_ thd clerk 6300 in hand, after all ,his purchases were mode. I Ile did not wish to take .it; hick With him, and was somewhat at a loss 'lo know how to invest it. fie'w33 a reli g ious • young Iman, and it occurred to him that BildeN , :trere more wanhid , than anything else in Louisville, and he finally resolved to intr - k it in Bibles, and accordingly sent home ithrce hundred dollani' worth. •Col. C. thought the transaction rather =prom iSlll43-43 it was an article' never called for at his Istore. Cards he could sell in stun ; „ • dancei but not Bibles. At lengtb,.after eleeping; an idea strnek Lim. Gamblers would have cards at any price, and on any ternis t .T, Accordmltylie made his arrange. °lntl; b9-plit4itp s Bible to every .peck cam, charg,ong e 1.50 for .the former, and fifty eents for the latter, telling each appli : cant that he - could get no eras withcaivit Bible t In due time "the Bibles were 01 • disposed of; but, as iha pmblers wanted I only the _' , ard they usually presented , the, Bible to the first boy or girl they Met , With in the street. this way hundreds oil ;Bibles wore distributed 'in Louisville, anal many , houses were supplied Withithe word of God that , never contained one before—i . • This is the fi rst and onl y intitancer perha ps, in Which:gamblers were made the instin - inenta". of circulating the Bible. Great ' • . good, we were infarmedriesalted from this2 i l3 4g Ular Procel4ing;:'. • - • I •. . r.,:,..4.1pi5dahl Wlntde.:_olpbe. A Oed'gre#lk6alphabetsof iht - globe icotrunelics the mum of tYPVIIPP" , rod mmieritiesf,al.thi- On one Wad_ 4hi•Chinerie chara c ters) to whicVarriaddid Koranic and JainTimaii • c u r ii/rkta;aid4rr•th; „Aber hand from the ,sgricari hieryalyphbr, plots, Width "are* -':""iijrfollorrad trui,PtinA 0 ,iFterof which . moment - the . first known tFul or -wilting.- '-'All. the 'rest of- the phe*te take thefe-oiigin Wont the* and 'then block WA' , into etwoberleei timileso. 1 taw, which e m t r aced up to the chexeeterw -1 wok ,thioukhout the weld at the present day!z-Fram-theocilde4 specimen Of mating , the taittiebtag.',,Bible, we. arrive 'at. the. '51 ,,, ot woOd•OS Fhttinktvthertitte Wled i zy1054., : The most ancient :viiiiaa=acitqT:Terik. 'ffecO,Place; aza-lhoula us : to the "datereitcoats' of arme, ,, itli'it2 bi ee ht - l'a,trinmpbal gate, the,chts of ;which : have; keett:olleeted; with thb excep tion-et wvery:fewittirthe - Imperial Lthiary. . NU.ICAL. rag east zaraoftrownw DirMlVlrlt in the World is destruct drabigst Benutfyfor Non nod Bred/ QELEIikiin3D'AILABIAN Lnamsirr O. F‘A.BRat'g 'genuine Aratinn Lini -11 . meat Is a mast extraortheaty asedichletllm troth w ich is plated 1.7004 doubt tot the vast sales of the artleist and the top maw Mint daily levformed by U. obirli?vatioottr rtaStud an °Wt. troalltitter sad Me aklo o Its hen yakiatimln the world It