=MI N FORTY-SIXTH yEAFt, tw A fli• WM . / SIMCIALIIOIIta la betokened llpieNtl.n7gß‘f - 6 .4 *.t 4 0 "WWI Per Has. 4Pigle istmerks; Si =au Claw or ROO , ..kettneettest tenerdes. • . li n- Nick's & ii.—Bookeilners•ne -•• • t- ' • '' - ine.O.'-Nift.Pati. SATURDAY; AUGUST' , 13, 13, 181 A • TUE 2ilsritt9; JOURNAL Is Limed every Satarday Lw rotng, and tarnished to aubocribers at 40 75 per annum, In advance. or ti if not mid to advance. • suWcgmnolnifr-ixvArizmit,TmeDvAncra: 3 e into one addreat. .1-15 (braes to one Ogress. PO al 6 i 2 OS 00 I 25. . . To News Dealera 64 01) per 100 uh.optes:cash. • the .To 31Intsters and 'tichool Timelier' we will toriggli Int ELNA./. by =IL 111 OW Der annum.,la advance; other• wise at toll rates. • . • • , THE DAILY MI ES ' JOURNAL 'tx published every rrerlf..l ll , morning. ban: wasp's excepted. Th.mwS7—Ten centa per week, payable to the carrieror snot by whom It Is serVed. !MAlL—Paysttle tn advance,' One... Tar, CO; 111 1 months. St 74: three months. s d. ( "DAILY AND IiVEES_LT 3112CMEr ioentrALlß three annum, in advance;l4 ea for di months. . . • - • • SAMNA 6 RMASEY. Ribresbari. • THE WAR SITUATION IN .E'[T ROPE. • ;„" • A FTER the first burst of the war storm 3... Which provetiso disastrous , to the French forces einntnanded by minerals 340 .6 . -Mahon Frossard, there came .a lull, whichip as yet unbroken The French at my• ,•bas concentrated at Mete-and Nancy, and it iS believed that it has in its front the m a ss oe the Prussian army. It is. also . thought that a battle' with large forZes on each side will .sieedly be fought on the road to Paris betweeu Met.F. and.. Nancy. The late signal and terrible defeats of a petition of the French army have very naturally elicited great feeling in Paris.: The scenes=-in the (brps Legislatif on its reassembling this week were of the most turbulent description. JnAlignation at-the evident want of military capacity of the Emperor ; ragenftlie French "reve.:rses,linda detennination• to make some • one responsiblelinspired the atcions of the deputies of the • Left, or opposition, And the fiercest attacks were made first on the Em- . peror and then on the *inistry - A propos , tion was submitted , setting forth that "intis ' Much as the inearaCity of the Chief of State .has brought-Franee.into peril;" a ComMittee " of National 'Defence, to corisist• of 'fifteen. members, , shall be placed over /all existing - tithorities; summon all citizens, and assume 'supreme , Control or:public. affairs,. This - of course; roused Indignant denunciations from 'the friends of Napoleon in the Chambers, 'and the threatening response th t: men who - • made such Propositions should instantly - shot. Finally after a scene of al ost Unpie c . „ ctliented violence in which •0 ivierks life • - wa; threi.tened, the current of rage was for . thctitne diverted from the . Emperor to his ,-. Ministry., and steps were taken to eject there from oflie.F.; their offence being Simply too • great fidelity to the Interests of .their master.: . A neiv‘.-Ministry has been formed, which if it is to be relied upon,As even more deVoted to.the Emperhr than the one which has been displaced. Its existence. will ,depend v4ry much on the result of the impending batoe. should the - French armies be defeated, it too will have to go, and then will come "the - deluge.". The Nalioleon...dynyfwill, cense to exist, and it will bea qu es tion of Superior. leadership whether the Freittli Republicans or the Ilenrbons 9111111. draw up: terms) of t . , . i peace viltli the Prussian Government— ii peace . Which - . ,would make Prussia .J• the recognized military power' of..u 'roPe,_ • compel tine- . - payment ,of ' he .;" expenses Of . the wak by - France, and . ~c ' I to all probability deprive her ()flier (iermaw , .i- i . , ' • c provinces n the . East,: thus removing her still further from her coveted Rhenish &lon ',tier. . It Is against , :ithis possible humiliation that the French nation is nom; tia it W i ere -.- united, with no love „for Napoleon, nor de. _ sire' to see him personally successful. T fat • NaPoli:on understands thik feeling,ls sh wr Millie fact tbat he lia.4 resolved to remai i the front, and dial be says that lie will o ff . rettirii -to Paris dead or victorious. lit playing a desperate game. His last'stak' .. up. France -oh - :the defensive, : : • a V powerfir , enemy onher - : : :.soil, ,- ~ always been dangerous : to her _ - --- wlien-they were not Successful in the/lel . did not adopfmeasures to become so. . L , NN = l..ll'i4. his 'bead, and; Napoleon I. -cimipelled to abdicate under those cite . . • staiikes. The Thyd Napoleon now fully un , den , tands that dethronement and_ exile vill • . he. his lot, unless he succeeds in the coming -. . terrible:confilet of arms. France is con - uls-, ed with 'anger, irritated by defeat, hum Ibis . tedby . tlie presenee.of . the FrussianAirmy.mt ' lien sop . , and ripe for revolution if by the ilis- 7 ' becility of Napoleon the French -siOiers ' - should tje \ again defeated in the field. With -,., .. in awe the kit* earner of - .l,siapoleun III: . will he determined. ''At present his situation .. • : - I. - is extremely critical and perilotis.' , . TILE`IVAGE QUESTION. .. . , •1-1., - rflY" are wages • higher in the United • 11 1 fitates than in England: and on the . .continent? .. Rai any'laboring man taken the ' 'trouble to tiiink . of this (fue.stion?. If he, has \.- not, it is time that he Should. It is.because we protect 'American jabot; from, the low ' labor of,Europe, by iinposin4. a' tariff of • duties averaging I.3.per width!! the products of the low laboroof Europe;.l' . This is the rea son-Why labor commands higher prices here.- When tl e rate" of duties was as io!k as . 20 per Cent. tons 1810 to 1842, laborers received .in this -c( utilry, Only 50 and 60 cuts a day, and mee tattics only $1 per..day, r and some worked t low as SO and .00 - cents a day: Ire duce the e t dnties to 20 per. cent. again, a mere .s 7revenuarite, which the }free traders desire, and which '' workingmen's papers whose editors declare they cannot advocate a pto - -; tective' policy, are thus aiding to' bring about, , a id wages-must descend to the same Se de again., while breadstuifs;Which depend on the failure Of crops,not'a tariff of duties nearlyouble in.'value. Under free trade iii 1 4 in 1867 -and 1868, and in fact out Europe, .: lireadstulfs nearly in value owing to' the failure of hide wages didlitiot advance one cent, Mutely declinett,..haErigland. '....' dlOwing official statement of wages . ' he iron works in : the.. United States ild 1869, has been - Cl4leeted by,...11r . .. `Young, Chief of the Statistical. at Washington, in 0414arison wit T h. ges . paid in iron . estAtilishments .in ~„. , il in, 1667-8, from octal sAurces. ,It r.-- , retollected that wags are'higher in &than on the coatTlient of Europe: . ~ AGES - PAID IN THE t': , HTE,H ,S, HTATM. . 1969. ' .46 k' . 925 08 Peddler. •l'uddie . ' helpers ' l5 92 14 15 Shiugters ' , ' • 20 19 17 *I solngiegs' he pens .. : ............. . : ..... -:.:- 15 25 13 25 Puddle ;alp cullers _. ,24 56 •'. 26 17 . , 'fop end hottora rollers • - - 21 00 ' '2O 00 is urge rollers._ - -• 28 06- 30 00 r Merehat t mlll rollers "4s 29 41 10 ' r•eeplati rollers ' 13 08 • . SI 00 Third-rollers - - 18 88 17 00 Furlltteq men or heaters helpers 12 32 11 6 sheannan• • - .4. 17 66 - 16 82 citlelle 19 47 16 15. Itougials.. - - ' . ---• '' • 235 -. 3. 1 59 'Heaters ......... ,:_,-. ... .. __....- ....... —...-. 25 71 ' 24 23 Foreine 2215 23 92 . Masotti sta • - • ..1, , ....... ..._ 18 34 17,94 F.nglre .rs.., — l7 48 . 17 ''''' Carrion erst.•,: • . 15 80 144 ' 6 14 aek liths' • 16 06 16 55 Lahore :and unskilled workuten... 9 94• - • . 9 0 leoln- en., ... it ppre. UN:staid:Wye • ' '''' 1 , 1- 96 /2 4' .) 61 5 31 ..Pr,:a., r tun for— . r" - Idling • 1 Kling" it • . • 725 • it gi ' ' 1 Os ' tz reliant mill rolling vr2 . - st Ithenfin r011ing....._ -5 42 ' 1 92 16 iillowlive table shows' the general average t. wages paid to persons-employed to the iron e . and znactiine-stiqpg . ef-the ratted States r.. a compared with th'el'ica:ges of,, persons en aid samanacupations is England in4ht r-744-; Engl..int ! througl dlaibled crops, m llnt at).s( 1' f paid in in 1 , 567 Eiwitn, 14urcat the w• will ta: Ph riht * Me • P • w ee butt& in 1,03, grkled •ar.4 S . .- - 'ln bold at 4a ,r. Perrentagr 57.1 , 4,..t, ~,, r.sc-ur •a , the 61 ;0,060. . 15. - .. f.., ", 1 ..United Mares • •r Ragland • aulders $ll 04 • 86 00 ,tr t 75.50 . 11st4; best... 14 4.8 _ .850. . • 70.35 1-a4v t..... 11 03 • 700 :• . 70.4 1..r.10r .• ' S3l SCO GS.= Ile.B - ,7 "X ... 400 lll.OO ..akera 14 49 . 750 •10.20 ; 1 1wily 7.01 • '4 0) •" 7. WA) 050 ' 77.51 Iders-on 8.08 475 .; -• 76.60 re-----:.. 13 to 750 84.00 1 - pere.....4.-- f 7 81 406 • •. . :KW I. trilthg ....-... II 10 725` • • 91.48 /Pent ' .... 9 3 • 105.6130 • 96e ,105.613. 9... 1* 65 • ' eers ... —..... 10 31 - 550 ' II - :' • 117.45 ; !n . nYskers - ' pirpen‘ers.. 14 87 7 50 tants 10 21 ' 4 50 eni, carters, ..... .... ........ 51 ntices...--.,, 451 4. 4 0 1.4 ','--. g 7, : i , „ ,5 6 .t.....,...:... it 67 ' _ 800 1 - auc I , .lstanta.—.. - 615 . t • 1 ounders--; 13 46 7 so-- • 79.6 - ~4", /.8 17 - • 64) - .:132.61 ' - ...._ _ ! ........ - .....12 AO il 54 • . - mai oiranceof wages the United Slate* In or England fn 191646, per sent. - I, ! • • i • 19 . the reattlt of .free , trade': on the Ironn z. tcht Boller) Wye!. ' • • Flung -11.1 Fore Engi Patte and etc. 21.1 . • 13ra Fltte Turn Ave IR6II Su wai picks not, as yo the • of labor—and Where, s, workingman, up a. workingman's • paper that does 11 mfoses to'-advocate pteteetleik , to lean lobo and Ind witrjr, drop tkist ono woutd..a viper. Its virus is dotal to erlesn workingman. , ' Tfis: p of Prussia provinces, ow occupied by PlVEtlibill troops, is so. tent* to and hriririrable i ckp paper, that it cannot f Ili *nolo* coterittPerarYi 'gip Philadelpn a 21 : SART11 4.l.Faiciaii to add !silo In/tallyi. to his personal" reputation, and* ibe just di tlngt4on 44 future efficienepkf tis troops. Without referring further toile . causes 9f t e War that{ to say that GertAkitity . wawattack by Napoleon—thereby discrim inating bei een the pi.ople and the Govera- Meat, and lacing the Frussut" us: in a - ciefenilye posiiion,.a d without akiluding to the series of Fri:lash - 4 sictories, further than to add that eventsbay constrained hls . trc..pto to pass the ,_ frorkilhe states that his foties do not war tkOristcititens;and guarariteeis protection to the person and pmpetty of all. , He also an nounces th method by which values will'be• placed arill paid wheri his troops are .obliged "to take ix' ProPeoY. I ' .. This p re is eininentlY creditable to 44 a Prri4sts an i ng. 1 Whe th ier the one side or the oth r caused the. war , , the' Pnissians are wiuni g its battlei'and 1 prciving them under prl ciples ask humane as they arepoli tic. The . ple,lwho find that defeat does not divest heir personal rights even th e hands of t e-riOnauenlr; who are guara nteed in Wein t completely as. before, will never be led to tat hatred that would flo'w from a contrary tart*. Anil all Eure, watching me i this p cowmen ure, will cowmen its ,rare bu inanity. Ye may aPprehend a sinister mu _tire and Rector eonsideration•, arid these , may ; exist Bit the prussian King a&Vances toward th rn in!' lust, frank and hottrirabte 1 manner that has none,too many precedents; few in French wars. 11 i - I - 1 Fria- MI THE F : ENCEI IaiLTIC FLEET. —as'we have heard some woriderexpressed in regard to the whereabouts and: operations of this fleet, of wliich so much has been expected by the French Goverament, in consequence t i we tolght stut6 that the ves selsqf its stre gth, comp !sing It have advanced to - bontb..ird Kiel and i Stralsund. Kiel,isdn the province of Holstei , formerly field by Denmark, but acquired Iby Prussia in 'Vie Schleswig-Hot stem complications. IStraisund is in Pome rania. T.te former has railwjiy comnlttuica tion; ti latter none: Bot are fortified ilaces an important harbors. The Prussian fleet ure can the Western coast of Denmark; and ca.inot take part in the bombardment ..., intern 4.1 Tnt. French Ministei, by, Order of his goy; ernine t, formally asked tim 'United States last we.,lt to issue a proclamation of neu trality.; Those., in pUsitiooto know some thing-set the President's puilioses think be. Will soon i d° 80. 1. Roc AtorsT;'lB7o 13 SATURDAY,.. 1i SUNDAY. MONDAY......LS Itl T 17 WEDNESDAY .1d ID URSDA Y... FRIDA Y - - . . Bev. L. G.. Beck will .preach in the 11Aptist Chtireh to-morrow tpor,iting and evening at the usuat hours. . . . . . " . , i I The Evangelical f.'ainp "A eeting at Barnesville broke up on Thuraday morning, atter • actiump fishing much good work. I . . To-morrow.—Thirty-third Sunday of the year c and ninth aster Trinity. Day's length, 13 liours'and.sl minutes. John Quinn's trotter is now in training. at Point;Breeze, having already been 'eliberet.i . for 'beyond mi "it parses" during the coining Fall. • • _ Rev/ P. Stewart Banks, of the . Brainard Church, ! East9ll, - xill preach at the Fir.,t, Pres byterian Chttrch to-inurruw morning .and eve ning. : - • I .1. - LIII -ith has leis . . meeting of the Board of 31.anigers,of the Y. 15.1.,C:A.,A , .111 he held at the ro.,..ths ot the ASSUC tattoo, lti I.4 , eber's Buildleg, ;:tiououy :evening Aug. 15, j ut S o'clock. . - or • Mg. WAS the'ilew. Dr. Smiley, of the' 2d Pre9byteriai Chll'll4 of Yott.vifle, will preatiti tor thuliev. Mr. Lowery, at Port Carbuards—twe lanal and one.pedal—and twerity4eur speak; ig eto_Pa, pedal and manuallionpit* - , - Ott menday List as a team of Mr, Anthony' •Ireieb,,larmer; of Wayne Township, consisting oif a Wagon loaded with lime, drawn by three horeee I was pavan* over the , bride near the Five ?peke; leading from the Centro. Turnpike , Ito Creastina,•the 'bridge broke down, preelpi. tilting the driver, wagon .and two Of..tbe three horses into the river. The third Lamm strained "himself badly in his efforts to prevent hlinseif soh* 'down' also. The' man and; two horses wereinjured' and the wagon broken. This is HMI second time that- this bridge; 'hes broken' dOwn. • lilies not been, repaired yht., and 'per— sop's who. Want' toldrive that road must' go threugh the fiver. • ' iI ' • Caaries r. Albright Was hold in tt-100 hail by Eaquire, kiaeiseler, on Monday, for violently as-. sainting his wife the night previous. • - • Business is very brisk on the Reading Rail road and its branches, at present. i All the . veal ears "'Pre brinight into requisnion.i • ' TiNi'hird Regiment National piiarils , wee revie%. _..1 by Governor (leery at Reading yes terday. * .• - . . ku eutreport of the 'School Iloiu - d meeting we'gat'e Mr. Shearer credit for offering a reso, Whim which was offered by Mr.*Sneater. rt, ii•its only a difference of "one letter." • • FOREIGN NEws•BußdEr. COMPILED raox TIIB "117710PEA.4 . 311- i/k NEW }l:cur:nit PArtn his bOR started at Shanghai in.Chiva, and called ttio",:vci.r.. It is ciyirged with representing the ante -progressive PliftY• - • , I THE 180th Anniversary. of the • Battle of the Boytre was celebrated at DundeO,on July lo p with the usual manifestations' of loyalty and re, jOieing. ' „ . • , , ... •' 4 - • • . :I Vseeixx "Lraten.--Some experiments have been Oxide witi.:h bilow that this , Mittor may- be eipotied to a very low temperature ',without los ins any of its properties. .. •:; • , 3 • . Diawarnova EXPLOSION or FIRE, Pan? is reported from Llansamtet, between three and four nules from Swanied. Sineteeitminers were ttiken out dead, and live others had'sulfcred, se nous Winne*. • . . 1 WOMEN . STUDENTS.—Tho official gatetto of Sweden ematains'a Government notice to the ef fect that henceforward women in that kingdom be allowed to practice and to :study meai dine on the same footing as men. . . . -TnEINno-ErnorEaN TELEonarit.-A steam er, filled with telegraphic apparatus for the re pair of submarine cables, has left Kertsch to re kiir the submarine cable of the Indo,-European Telegraph Company, which has been broken In the Dik a'c Sen. - ' c • 1 i TuE Russian Governme t has just 'obtained fni . l2s roubles (38. each)manuscript of great yal ao, if authentic, name y, the first - copy of the I,z: u rea, drawn up by the. Caliph Om tr. he . ;, purchase was• effected .by 'the Governor of Tatter - bend in 'Central Asia. i ANclibir RF.314.11<5.--il nnialliell Of small Cin erary arias" manurial:tit calcined bones,:have been found In a field un the:ounsitirts of - Aubusson : this is the first positive proof discOvered of the Bowan oecupittion at Aubusson, arid it supports the tradition which attributes thelelmdatioa, of Die chateau to the first Caesar. s r. , 1 t h e - - : Dims St/4(1.E1' ON Tug WAR. I 4In u cuts() Or.a sermon on July 24, the Dean ;made a b ief reference to the itopendlng wur. `Ile" remarked that it Was impossibleto penetrate the des'gng 4 ofTrovidence In permitting so fearful a eat mi ,ty in Europe., i t might be part of an inevi ble ',trial of a perplexed world, of whya no knctwl 'edge'could at present be ined. • ' f i e 1. A el ovrt. STEAMYare .-The Dewdro , ati lions,' twin - screw, steam tier , has,lately n ;creating a "sensation." . no is a pretty ' lit tle ;-rraft. lier•lower, Mast serves ilk tunnel, ad [there is a tiny discharge pipe jut above ;the ,copper breast of it. She•steauni 1'13V:old( the, ;strange , sight of a Cult-rigged clutter moing ;swiftly and noiselessly along, without any th er apparent cause than tatat of actual annuat oil, i was rather surprising. I . - ; I. . , • -- - 1D 'pane - Ref , IN' Comswam.,-Rarvest olerai. !ona are now general in Cornwall, and alr 1 ady • a large breadth otbariey and oats has beencut. • ; The crops vary .considerably; but Mere le no ;'doubt that barley will turn mita fair • average ; =ay crops are-magnificent. Oats Tor the Most part • seem to be thin, but the .quality is r ery ,good. Wheat, many acres of which have een cut in the .western part Or the cOunty, wit not lie a. heavy crop, but the corn ;is remark 'My rine and heavy. -- g t ,`.. - : .1- i.; • :-- . ' -'NEW SILVER Mrsks.-In Ifolivia the e is mat frxeittnent in, leonfiequenee of -the di >v ery of rich silver mitres In the. Sierra del I. mon ,Vertla, fifteen miles from the sthall settlement of Calama, and seventy-five hides from!. the shore in the maritime prefecture at Conj.*, in. a short time 151:(mnaing licences had been tak en out at the prefecture, and there was a great rush from pohija. The BUM jpartiiti states that at Chicholi, - in the central proviOcea of India, a vein•of sister has been ;discovered' yielding on as.say 00 or 19pwt. 0 grs. of silt:ef to the tint cot CIE.EA7r ,Loss or LtrE ANO4O , Intor,(3lm.- About ,thieis inutittis'.ago,'Eromjthe similliSnan ;States on the western bordeis la China, ;there started a party of SOU Buddhist:priests. ¢'Lwir eatination was Rangoon. Their. object Was to see the - great Show Dagon,' and the wunOrful achievements of the British GoVernment.l The way, however, was-hug, and the traveler* were all __poor. -Many, moreover, were enfeebled, plater by age or sickneitS so that the band! row daily smaller, and . of the O who eine the forests of Upper Thirmah ISO alone march Dan goon. Many of these intend toSettle the ; the et t remainder to return to their , homes I the 'north. . . . - . . • ,1 ' - RAILWAYRAILWAY ion Iferit i r .-The report of 'ft r. Ja land-..Danvers on .indian Itallways for the year 1809; has just.been he'suckand awes &as o . hieli it is-thought go-far to prove that at l e zi, rail ,. way extension-whatever may be the with 1 other ' public works in :India--,should be very cautiously prosecuted. Altholfgh thero is no proper account kept, the startling fact ;comes-` oat that the business of the railways fel4 Off in the year in question-r urtrumw 3 ' - ef l Yr fr 4 4in the ' want•l of a.-proper acedunt, It is impossible to ' show how much of.this change for the' worse is _due to the falling eff of !old. lines-or to the en= trance of the Gocernmentepon new and luntin 'tithed works; but the enterprise will notl3o7free from very grave suspicions of its naps(' table netts till proper accounts are pnlillshed..„ s l VBEZDOX or Woltantr.....-4. corrindent writing • from -Ternstudo ' Po,l'iniyise- • n the "..tifricaft Thaws 6r' ]Marsh %is (inhibited letter from the editor' to Lord CLagendelo, rebtare to . freedom of_ worship in. Pomando, Po. - ..in- this letter `he Wales Mt patine worship lo pihhiliit-: ed in theleisnui, Wspeptiin thri•ftwin•nre#dribexi , N by the . Remit* Clitiftdi ; tisi4 on a-visit of a , Mhzionary from Victoria, the +fined late oiltangei 'ln Spa n occurred the GoVerscuiforbadeth!ft meet-. lOg_ofTrotestants for pinblie Wership t ii that, • under, sit:niter mltleCastsiptiol9-as - fir, : _ am of subtle worship being' dow - pOtrnitted o nibs- . shammies kad.kdoly-„Urt. Ed:veiled tor. P#lsando • po,• wherein, is sogiel te star, 011 . 1 h will I not be *Wised to hold any servicist. e are, that, runt thotr i gq: - foini - was v a t hkiek.the Mier , iCILILIM.:: isteftniedist Strt*istlntly. ininiblfe Irani - . 1 46* me. a!11 1, ,Z , ,- . . ..„ Mil _ -dame, drx4, • , _ ____ .._ ~ plow: , . 'bolsi; Fatherland let peace 'be thint", •:• . Brave bear', and true defend theith 'e.:!' ; ' • - up looked he to tha heaven's bine' I '; --: : NV here hero dead our nations view: lie swore, and proudly sought the strife-: ' 5 : - "The Rhine la Berman as my liki,r , , . • t Bear Fatherland fat perm be- thlist l i zu; • .... • - -,-: Brave laemlis.and true defend the ! 4 - •' ' . . . While yet onedrop of blood throbs , ,ls'arm.. • To wield he sword Ireilialtill one 11111114 . To hold the ride yet one hand, , I No foemail steps upon .thy strand. : C- Dear Fatherland let pewit be thine, 1 ••• Brave hearts and trim defend the Blaine I , t , NM = The oath' resounds, the billows run. Our cow, flutter in the sun; To lthibe, m Rhine, to the Liermnb,lihlne, will;We protect theerlver mine ! • , Dear r atueriand let peace be tulue, t• -- -'.'Brave hearts and-true defend Ow A BATTLE t. worth flgtiting:-Tho =battle - bf - . .. FRENCIT arms don't seem, alter an t i to' be an perioi: to lierwan !runs. ` , - ' . , . 1 'Wuenil • NAPOI,tO:I withdrawing his Infantry from,the seat of war.—Seodiug We print* to bis ninma , -‘"L'EurinE c'Ess , LA rAtx" said, the'Ein• - pcfror. -11 e 1 likely tc? 'find' it true ~that It, is ••C eppc." ' - - Wrsee it suggeisted that young Jerome Pat terson l3.)naparte /8 the "Coming mart" InPakis. This-suggestion must •be without good foundrel last accounts.. liapeleon Was coming to Paris Just as fits . tas he ••outtli with the Preach army at-his heels.. • Tule SacrieCO othuman life among tin . ) Pt 1214., clans in the lath battles can hardly be, compared with the frightful German mortality in this country; for. awhile in' Znrope pintathly not one in a huicdred bit the dust, here everylive German came to his bier! • ' ~ • • ... , Till: orVlCEtcg A,D ettEtya of the. Bremen grill llamourg mill ateatrishipa at floboken lend tor Europe Wednesday last, having been called' thither to join itlie:Prhisslan tiftvy. ,, They - ire -• . ejived a heart Y- faretivell 'froth. a large ero.iodi who escorted out a - Hoboken ;and urged them t -stand. firm in the good . old'aauSe of Fittlie nd. A large number of halide .rerriain• idle a e'gernianstraniship dodka; 4 / - ' -Y . -, • ' - - , , ,:l , TIM' Lt!vgr. are entitlotl;. "The song they sang on tinturday:" • • 'Twits on the Rhine the ariniesldY; -•- 1 ~ .: . - ToVranoe or not'{ lel. yea or nay r .- i •.: • • . They pondered long , and pon f leratexll; i At length old Bluecuer broke the spell; .. , Bring tteretioi map to me,: , , .. • • The road to France Is straight and' ttee: 'i - Where Is the foe?" "The roe ?; wbF hereV . -We'd beat him!Forward! Neverieui ; ' ' Swv, where dearer's 'I , " 'Paris? here!". • i - "We'll take It ! Forwiird! Newer - fear V' ! . •••• SO.tbrow the bridge across the Rhine; •. , . • Methinks the Frenchman's sparkling wit:tee - Will taste the hest vf here grows the viz:Lt.:l . . .. Tun . EVANoghiscilEn. KincilEx' BATH: (goy ertfing council of the Protestant • Church,) in. promulr,ating the pre/depletion, of ' King, W. 11- Liam, of Psussin, deereeingneduesdaY, thii2lth of July , us ahotemn day of, prayer' and ,Dlvini: service, adds the king's command, that• Sunday • in all ;public SerriCell the following nrayerahall =be •inserted .in the Liturgy : • "'Almighty! and merciful God! Lard of Hosts ! We beseech, Thee for Thy',' all-powerfnl . suiver for "iiir Gorman. Fatherland. Go to,War with the ‘German ar mies,. and bless WO r weapons that they - may show ourselves to be Christians, mien to our en emies. Let us soon make peace that Will se curely guarantee the Donor and independence of German - yi . Re the mining protection and de - (dice of our German Fatherland. ,'i o • .: . ' ." NatioNkt. • Lis ioX—Fnom. .. "Bnirearo'.TlLE SEas.,"—Tuo king of Prussia issued• the follow-: ing predation July 27, evening# ".IM the taws stun of the approaching straggle Air the honor and Independence of Germany I base received from the cominnues,"tho.curpthatiens and pd.. vats persons of all classia• of the _Fatherland. ,and froth all the circles of its children,. °fen, from beyond the: seas, so' large a number of manifestations of devotedness' that I fell -Com pencil to proclaim loudly that accord, and to ; add Inv thanks and assurance that I respond to that fidelity of my Gertnaft people by my titi, 'alterable .steadtastness.. Tho Love , fur the Nom 'mei-country, the , nasal's:thus uprising, of the German races and Of haprinees, Jias set aside ; awl reconciled all differences and di:facet:id. Germany, in ire united than 'Over, Will find in that fact as hi' its, right a guacnteo'Ciat the war will bring a durable peace, and that front • the Woody ; seed will spring' a blessed harvein for _ liberty and German union.., , . . Ills mancies,AitziouscEititsTor T i lt: FLIENCII - DECILVIATION Or WAIL.—The following - Is the 'Jest of the droller addressed by, the' "Federal Government to its diplomatic agents abroad, announcing that France declared -war toiPruil . . : I ~' •• • ' " BNnthx, July 19; 111;0, I: Tho Im perial Othiernisient,of France lots-sent to us, through its Charge icAtfairs; i the eueliesed d•anthent 'winch" contains the 'declaration of war. ••.,It is the first official document „ffuelsavS reeelimd.trom th . , French Governin , to the grave affair:w.hich has oecupi le for a fiirthight.: fn that documput** Government griebs the following;st war it in dies against us: Fi •'' rstlg; /0101; by,. the h.' I ii,,•• to pledge •hi nuseltsliat, tb ' ysin. 01 a Prussian' Prince , to the 'hive* eitSpaier. should nth take ptackf with hisconsepitecOttrn, tee alleged-nutificution" to Megabits*" ft " re. fesal by the. King to receive the if of . lx France and to continue negotlati , idol. •We summarily answer to nit.. e, ' ~__,' . "ions' that his.3lajiusty, the - King, ... , • 11, - ; ; ;•, respect fur the thilopendenisiaud. • -.' : ,•• ••i of the Spanish naduli, and for tbas , .. •. •• .of the resolutions of the princes of the licibensol lerilllouse, never thought' of putting „Prince Leopoid on that throne,,,' the demands toWlilch his ii",jessty' has' been Subjected to obtain as ' suranws fur therfuture were both nnjustitiabie , and arrogant. To have a sqpielon that ho en- ' 'ermined air afterthought of an intention:hostile. to France was but a gratritons ineentibM' - The alleged ' notifications to Life Cabinet's's:never . took place, and t - he "King- turret : refused • to.. treat with flu: French r Ainbassiidoi.— Oh the. contrary, - The -French: repreiseuta-.• hive _•ndeer expressed' the, wiSh toi enter • into official negotiation with the King's govern meet. It was personally;tonfluaitirtvatecon• viirialion with the King at .Eirts;:that he', spoked. about the question 'referred:to. `At borne-anti abroad the German "nation has ,reaegnized that' ; the efforts the French goiernment bad but,otte arm::--a huipiliation,Lwnich the nation .ixiiinot" bear. , It has recognised that wart which -Pros sia could never have thong of''s was imposed by- France..' The whew eivilizislwald will-admit' that the motives put forward by-I'mM%; donut exist, that they _are , nierelSr pretexts 'lnvented' for the occasion. The German Confednratien and"-the allied governments of •Southern 'Ger: many protest against anaggression whichnever was called for, and they laall repulse it with all, the means God has giventhem.- You will.leave a copy of the present despatch with •theMlnis ter of Foreign Affairs of the , government to which von are accredited. -I DIVEAkIkG Urf .., In Bin Lynda Bonaparte, an ,iinkniWn and not • particularly respectable refugee,. ',entered' Strasbourg in a quiet manner, took ..a . small room di ono of the hotels, and proclaimed him, self Einperbr of theEretich, and heir of the hero of Austerlitz. One regiment of the' garrison, through theinflnen6e of-their Colonel t raccepted him, and shouted when he pulled an eagle out of his pocket, and placed it on the standard.—' Then, he marched to the barracks and appealed to the other troops, but they ahut•the gittes and put him in the guitrd-house:e'.' _,.' ; • - Three years afterward, provided', With a tame eagle and a military uniform; the chartered a British steamboat, went to,'Boulogne, and pro claimed himself Emperor agaW. - But the eagle refined ,o fly, the soldiers refesed tp rise, an officer urged -tb join, tho, Conspiracy. tore off Louisl ilonaparte's epaulets and trampled them under foot,, and ~• the untbrtunitte • pre tender, dragged dripping lira : dishonored from the waves through , w bleb - be -Was trying le, tsicape, - was once more arrested and sent to Having now made himself ritileulons, it 'was essential that in his' neat attempt tipon the: crown ho should blot' out the niconection of his folly by making himself feared: : With the help , of three or-four, bad and' bold bah - tory adven. , curers he,tnurdered a tuoilsand yr sa.peaeable citizens 'shooting down some in the ,street and others through their windows,. bayenetting fu igitive-s *bo took refuge-in the shops, and shut ting 'up captives In the , prison yards. witerci Sol • diens went around and I:nudged them en the• head: as a butcher slays a bullock: There was 'nothing ridiculous about that ; io Louis Bona parte became theEmpertir Napoleon 111. I.Tpun this foundation of crime he built up the worst system of despotism which - Modern Einope has yet fourth endure. He crushed the Fiend' na- , lion with an, Iron hand:, and emulous of his ' uncle's military genius, he made himself an in ternational nuteance; the cowry of eleiel'imod government itiltswepe., For some inscrutable reason--perhaps as a -.punishment for sin—, Heaven has permitted him for - nearlk, twenty years to keep the world -in a thernalk ° At last the end 'seems near, 'rand the hnge 1 taxi ut fmuil la breaking up.- ~ I , ' . • Two Weeks agoho &tont B4itteti .machai i indB36 he se*out hir &nugget& ' Htls 'object an the 'earlier. adveutrire ,was .10.111artsh triumphant upon Parisi Hisubjed, lit the later,' was to ride in glory to, Berlin. In both climes he was Weil supplied • with prdclsinitlons, 'but.. rather itisuMciently provided with everything 'else and in both owe -history' will pave to re cord hi* Ignoininlows Whirs. King William has driven him out of the Palatinate gr easily as Colonel Talliandipr pin hint in the guard house ' at Strasbourg or Pnytediler dome hint-Into the • war at Ili oilognet The e atitindingepeachwiadah which he bewan lilseempaugri, usniTtillY ett• ranged theatrital elle*" the,,thuiel; the ructim the iithevlighta, and the talgeene, whetate they , llowbat,the dismal °rutin:mina °tan tplatitiane , tel speidaele. What lauegnatiott 'LI Strung eneegbil tel • - .Lmagine- the , petpllef:Dr i tiePul' lean 111. ever rein/Iola& the delnidge glory which belonged to ,it tare week* ago?— Tile e 3 fine. which -he declared; :lira'. been, 'crowned by the , fraudulent vote ': of the Mira May, is failing Diploma hail shortie et Birds: A victory in the field, if i . : come et ones; may Postpone the finial overthr:4 - ;; bin; furl leapole ,on there is websiger the ehaW of - asilli ' lliell. — No glory which Ow he 'trowel.* Vetch elanilar* will tkrelleetede lsfm.,tl . -Met will nayarre iiscissiels of - ;14lellulelt - Ida • .. , ne4 o4 sp a ik luieweolwee istAtide sl„ , 4elsic; 'their bastes bewelfuelit it ' al ;ul"tbs Praez-trao4: - -. ..„ orate elieheitedlekss , itook ber , , . :#ifillas.l l , l-61 liedilleitsiled, ; .,..i. L , C. ' l 4' -1 COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA. discover" thetibehairbeen submittipgtoa sham learvr A bo ates ealteet i r t r t l , l ) Or tr il u r ja tt i!bi n U o r ofodert -30 der fivr a . the 'lta ' l ate _ result o nl i the, I l ireeent tattleln,Paiii end e titretjWiedhatfreen the 1 Iliend*Olai 'dye thonafel Wit the*ri ~ , oflia:Semd of caber Is 'already; . . evertilleMidi. clod . 'lndeed for It.- 7 -Areyfr•riir,_ 1 _P - gle*: 1- i. • ' : --1.5.,r--4•Tr r- fortillaligrt!!!•E‘r, • - - EZEI isifiqur i t. , : .i THE..PAPOL SYLLAIIIIS.' •,- ~. c.' IITIM"4.O4OWing :4 the'Papal "EyllabUS of IX, ' 13104efn . e'rrert‘ipllbliSbed :OF PIUS IX. 14 'tifilleillber /geel:.‘l • • ••• ' THE SYM....kiles OP 1111: 'PRINCIPAL Li:nous or ° talln TIKE, WIRIC4 - 1 1j oc tE•STIOILATIZE DIN Tlt - coltilli CTION'S, =CYCLICAL, '!" SUM 01451&11'..setikeil.IC IsErrklis OF POPS. , • Fire Ht. _ I ...R!lallabeises, Xatertdre. cuid AtuolLie Raiiolui.lans, ' , I.; Tiler° existe lit, Blvlno,PoWer, Supreme Being, Wisdom and Providence distinct mom the;univinee. and God is none ett4r . than impure, and therefor.) Immutable. li, E lf (kid Ls produced in man and lh Me wortd, AndelLthlngs sire e105, - enti have very substance of WM. God- esthete:ore one the same thing with' atCrilljn th thende spirt the same thing with ty,wi liberty, true with false, good Ithevlljoatice with injustice. 2. All action of upoaMall and th e world ts ._ to be denied. ' - - I • ,- r' 3. Human reason. ithout , ' any regard to. God, Is G I ,the ao • e arbiter of t th and thhiehood, of good anti evil; it le Its own kalif to Itself. and sunken by fts , natural force to metre the welfare of men and of nations. . • • •• . A 1 . 3 4 - Al/ rile truths orl • religion are derived! from the native strength ofitaman reMoril whence feneen is the master rule byh which milt ban and ought to er.rive, at the knowledge of el i truths of eyery . kind. • a.l3lcTbei revelat e if Is imp s. and therefore subject to a colitin andindellniteprogetssoehlch. ' core . &ponds with th of btlinail reason, -- , IL Christian faith iglu uppettition to imman Tea-, IlOn, and divine revelation not only does nut, trne- ` 11 yact even injure" o perfection of mate " °:. 4 .Tlle PruPhecies a d miracles e mitered and nar t, mum in the eacrealliellpanres are the notions of, poets, and the utfiliiimof Christian faith the result of philosophies,/ utrestigstions. In she books of the. two Testament% there are conteined msehlial In ventions, and Jeant,iChrtat is Himself a mythical fiction. - • !I - • - ' IT; .IPoci,erafe ilationatirm. 8. As human reason placed on a, leVed with reli ' Sion, m theological . utters must be treated In the same manner es platkoophical oues. . 9. Ali the; tof the 'Christian reigion are without exespuon, t e object of natural' science or licao toryf reason ; tr•ing b rA n i tedso t l3b itabi, by te=st ghan Prthepi to arsivehat the true knowledge of even the Most abgttpse, se: provided inith dolmas .13epropoit'd as M t 1 matter for human reason. le. fAs the phi per Ls one :hi rig, and phi I osimby another, sot' is t right and duty of the philoeo pher to subudt hi to the authority. Which he omen have recOg" m o d% as true : -but philosophy neither can not oug htoth to eub to any authority; 11. The inmost' on ougiat•never animadvert upon pldloiophir be,. ought to 'tolerate the errors of philosophy, having to putioeophy the care of their eurrectien. li ~. , , • • 12. The decries of the Malatelie Bee and of the. Roman Congregation fetter the ~free progresa, of 13. The Pieth * od anti principles by which the Old scholastic doctors.tent* eMete theology, lire no Longer suitable to the detriatehto7 the age and the . Progress of Pell•nee. ", ' 4 ' •` • ! , ,11. Philosophy .rittat be treated of without: any secou'ut tieing takeout supernistural reVela t ion. - hi. ,8.-To the. • IVlonatistic , system belong" , In , 'great part, the er es of Anthony lituither, belong", vlemned in the lei rto the Cardinal Archbishop of Cologne. t I ,' • •• •' :I WE Ihdifierenfism, LoWedinarianispo - li. Every Win is free to embrace and profa.s the religion he shell believe true, guided by the light of , r r Men may tri any retigiciii hind the way of eter nal saletition,.. ad obtain eternal salvation., 417, We May *Menotti at least a well-founded hone for the eternei - ssarttem of al/ those who are in tto manner in, the inuft.lierch of Christ. IS. Protestantissne nothing • more than another form of the same t e Christian Itettgion, in which le is possible to be nally pleasing to tied as in the catholic Church. , ' ...e-rr. rr. soorarism, Ctuntatestras, Seeret Socletiesj Ribßeal Metopes, trcrico-Litters! Neckties. - • 'Pests ot this duiription are frcluctitly re buke•l. 1 - . Errer'i (12neeqlinfi the Church and Jeer lloyht•: 19. The, Church Os not a true and perfect, and en tirely, free society, tor doca`she enjoy peculiar and, • perpetual . rights nferrokupon her 1),) finer Divine Founder. but it a pertains , to the civil power to 1 define what are t the rights ' bb, the Church and the limits wits to wild she may exercise the same. ' Zi. The eoeleslas eal power ,nrust not t xei else Its ,rithoritY, without he permbeithn and assent of lice. civil Goeernment,P, . w 21. The . Church bps not the power -of defining dog: math:milk that the religion of the Catholic Church Is the only true rellgiOn.• ~ , • 9.2. The obtigatiete which hind Cathelie teachers and Ruche's, Reply ,only to those timing s which are poiposed fortui veliefaq ddatiess of the mit li by th e infallible Juiltment of the Church. • fl. " The Homers pontiffs Anil (Ecumenical COllll - have ekceed le the ninths of. their power; have usurped ,th rights Ad Plinee.; -and lance committed error* n delininr,L matters of lath and morals. ' 1 ' f tu 31. The'Chelt less not, the -power '. of , m availing 1.1 herself' of,forec. 0 , i 'MN direct or -indirect tepera' power. b i ' .. 2i. In addition to thoauthority litho eat In the L'pr , - (zonate, a further and temporal p•neer is granted to it by the eivitiautitorily, either expressly or bseitly, while power is on that nieount also rece'cobleity the civil authority Jr ',never ft pledgee. , - -- I-, • 26. The Church . I ds not the Innate anti ilegitiwate right of acquinltio total po•eowdon„ I If 7. The minister of the Church and the Roman Pontiff te ought. lb e a•otatety exelu•led from all I , charge and demi,' on over temporal affairs. 2S. illshops les4lloL In • er‘vtie , riled of prootutgat • ing lee Apostoll letters wlt ItoutTiraph7isslon of. the government. • ‘. V. Dispenualons granted by the Minim Pontiff must lei eopsidered null, unless they have been ask ed for Orel:Len the civil government. 1 1 , 30. The Immunity of the Church and of cc , cleelastield Persons .derives its origin Rum visit 31. F.celelastieiti Courts for the temporalcauses of I the clergy' ought by all means to he abolished, even Without the comturreace and against the.retext of 1 the Holy see., i IL The personal Immunity t•xoneriV i liig the clergy ' from military service may be abolasln.ql without violating either ruttural aught or amity. I Its aboai- , (lon is called for by ell it I regress. especially in a comMatilly constituted upon paw:wit% of liberal government. . , , ' . - 1 33. le does no npFertolo, s , x6itsively to reeler. 'slastleal jurisdiction, by any right proper and loherenh-to etiret.L this* t,aeolog of tueoltqleal sub- It. The teaching of Cuise Neil c mmare the Sover eign Pontiff to a tree' Sole, elm* net tug it the CM venal Church le a doctrine Which prevailed only in the 31Iddle Av el „ , . i 31. There woalt‘be no (11.,taele tO the sentence or a .general council pr the act of all the universal wee' plea, transferring the 'Pontifical Sovereignty t.om the Bishop and City of Rome to some other bishsp rie and .tonne other city. - , , :is. The definition of National Council dims not admit of any seteequent discussion, and the civil power con regard as settled an affair decided by such national cetincii., . . _ 37. National eharches can be established, with ‘dmern and, ulaitil. aepatsted from the authority of 'the itorn m a reallf: - ' - 34. Rout rift's have, hr their too sirtattan condact, contributed to the Militias of the Church into r...„7 lOW Western. 3'l. , , Erre obi Chit &dell,. considered in'itscjf a lid , •1 in t Relation to the Church. ' V. The Com onwealth, as the origin and source ' of all right*, eases rights which are not circum scribed by , any traits 40. TIM each% of the Catholici_liturch is oppoaed ; T it to thew thei g anti Interests of society. .. = 41. The civil power; even when exercised by an !a ndel soversign,lpossere es au incorrect and negative power ovr ai ndiefous affeirs. it iherefore possesees not only he right called that of exequstur, but that of the so • led appellatto ab Abuse. 42. In the case of oonliteelbg taw between the two, powers, the civet law,ought entirevall.• el. Thee/ell' 001Whalf a right to break and to de clare and render Milt . -the conventions (commonly , called concordetasyconcluded- with the Apostolic See relative tohe useof rights appergLintug to the li t eoclesissCleat 1 mnulty, without. the'esenseut of the Ilely See ande ven contrary to at•t protest. • 44. Thticivira uthority may. interfere in matters f i relating to reit onomondity, and spiritual govei n merit. ilence t has dintrol over the instiuctions for the gulden e of consciences. lamed conformably witti-their relation. by tile pastors Of the church.- Furiber.it po:ii i essett power tei decree,l In the matter of aduriulsterl g ahe Blythe• ?Ilea =tents, as to the dixpoilttia n essary for their reception. 45. The entire direction of public schools, in which Abe youth of Verbatim Mate* ore educated. except (to a certain t . tent) la the note of episcopal semi naries, may a il mast 'appertain to the civil power. and belong to t,,, so far that no other authority what-' soever shall recognized a% having any eight to an f interfere to ekeipleao nit' the schools, the ar rangement of tie: stutib-s , the taking of uegrees, or time choice!' appmvul of the temehent. 48. Much M q'. even in clerical seminaries, the . Method of stilly to be adopted is subject to the civil ato The . 47. be c sA theory of civil roelety requires that .popuLarsch s opal to the children , of all classes, anti gettbraliyi all pubic inetiottioni Intended fur , instrue:doui 'letters and pasibwophy`, atul lor eon ductingit he motion of the young, should be freed front ailecel last Seal authority, cewernment, add interference, d should be fluty subject to the elv- 1 iil and ipolitleal power, is conforldity with the $ will of theicrs- and the prevalent opinions of the em 48. Thl3 spa of Instructing 'youth, which eon rtl sista in ',separating it from the Cdthet•lc faith and ' fn.= UM pO. fr of the. Church and in teaching ex clusively. or, at least primaril • the knowledge of. h i s _natural' thin and the earth ly' ends of social life ' alone. may approved lay - e it MICH. ' ' 49, Ttecivi .power has the right to preven t min isters of religion and the faithful from communica ting freely mail mutually with eaeh other and the ItonianTPontitt ..6 ' - , I, Lit The sec im authority possesses, as Inherent in i Itself, the r t oepresenting Bishops, anti may re quire' of the i -.that. they take possession of their dioceses bele having received canonical inetitu tion and the postolic letters, , from the Holy See. 51. Arid ar, the secular government has the right tor de lng Bishops from their,pastoral func tions;*, and it i not boqnd to obey the Roman Pon- Orrin these tugs which relate to Episcopal t•cees anti they Institution of Bishops. - , , • 53. The Government baser itself the right to idler the agreproggibed bythe Ctituate - fer the religious prefer:dolt beth of men and, women; and it !nee enjoin opus ; all religlous ertablishments to admit. nu pen*, ntorike Solemn -vows without Its pen:Mit a The In the pretection of religious Petah- Itshments,_ li_semellteg their tight. and ilattes , ought t o be allahild - nay. mirror the civil i every-y meat ntay lend ite essistrioce -to skit Who e - tre to., quit the religions life they, have uhderial......, and• break their o we. The Governmentithay ..e. , sup prom retie ohlarccoUeglatoChorthes. ono pint eti ple'ben even those belonging to private t patronage d submit their goods dud . revenues to . the admitiblention and disposal of the civil power. 34. Kings and princes are not only exempt from theturtoliction of the Church. but are superior to the Church tu litigated questions of jurisdiction. ea The Church ought to be separated from the 1 . . Stave, and the State from tue March. 1 I'll. pverek - oneerahtiNraurul and Viridian Mrs, .' gs. menu hives do not stand In need of:the divine sanetiott, wither° is no necessity that human laws should eetafonnable to the laws of nature,. and receive their sanction item God. • ' 57. Knowlreigeef philesophical,thlugs and moraht and also el I taws, may and meet be Indepehtletat of divine and leslastleal Ruthority. 1 Mt. NO oth umom y Sondes are to he recognized than thaw` which resid in matter; and all moral teaching and motel ence ought t 6 be made - to consist in um aces u and oi 'riche* by every porn Die TaratiM, Ind in th eenjoyment 'of !demure. all. RePt , Ottatista In the material tact, and all ha. man' Mims are delusive and all human teas have She Mal otAtht. A INl , Aelhotity I. hothing else but the result of an niftiest sepaiority and material form. - . - 61. Anass bet, beingstkeessful,l Indicts no ite• jug t i tcnt sanctity or right. - nelpleor part-intervtmtlon, as It facetted Geed 40 ~ mkt and Adhered to. - Il orotial ea. It heel owable torelase obedience to legitimate , princes;y more, to rise in insurrection against' t 61. The v ; elation cif a solemn oath, even . every, lots , Wleitist digitioes action repugnant to the eter nal law, ass' blamable. but quite lawful, and Ihrtailly,al loss highad, praise when done for the love ' Viil. *mon CbseeerWing aitratidlft ZurriO.w • , sri.,itt bit td , any means tolerated to i main tain tha t 4 4 has rai s ed marriage to the dignity of 111111110ILSWA ' , „., seurament or Marriage tg, only. an adjunct atilatecateraeti and separable heet t • Ho sad the ma. rament i t catudge In the rinp. benediction • : fIZ 11, " Wed( natant the Mairinot U. is brit in, to;&own end he MAO cases (droner, properly so calhatibonstA=mottiteed by the dill authorities Alt ' myelin ti 4"1 7 ,10- Wor Of ta/Ing ftp to marriage. 11110**111 suidi a ewee, nod ta to manuire. ! 111 r tidy estatoetead in latter ages to r i gat e , t Itaiadhaeuta and then Orating ',She dell pew 7r_ _ ,.. 1 . 1h ! li : °Ts . b tli WM*" hem . j=le . • Ilantillnlatal of Tana, whieh Bro.: r to a s ~ ........t ... net three who Cony I inalip, r" 6 :,:r"`" dog rat am ildbed= he r ,• , , !ie Vderstair °atria; rt e T ' 1mmiar.......• , . 7.. - --, ,4• . q-.•.•• ,:••.4.,..: , ,4,••_ 1..... I • , a ~4 , ..,, ;,..;' 1 t • It-. ; .-, L I tj ..', e •.'-I ' t, i . r • ,'` "' " th il2e ite, blue , IS lnv~ j 1413 ZVt:lke. Ell Bist , ci k ricK. 1 4 t . . . ,_ . • , , :I. The form tuft Bolen:ridging marriage prescribed by the said Connell does not bind, under penalty nt nullity, In-lease Where the ciSII lair has appointed another form, and where It decrees that this WM , form shall e6etUste a valid marriage: • • Ti lE tessiV 111. is MOM whirdeclaredthat the vow chattriy .4forotteoliced at branatinif Iturglia_ nup • t, ss, a , . .._... : Ds. Alt. ereiy ei' II corialsct maT.tristia tis • consMie a true ; and It is tit that • ' alltrialte 'fen Ch bialWay* a + - saeratement, or t thstaintract Is nitip if the sacra ment exclud : ,t, :. 74.1tristonliti causes and ris i Zeitabi belong by Weis! ry, War, to civil jurtsdi n. s • ‘. N. Zio-TlMiliiiitite r embed may tend in direction --thaiellpon theabolltlotief the celibacy of Tirlests, and the preference due to the state of • marriage over that of Virginity; These have been vescribed the tlrgt lathe Encyclical "Qui pturtotr,o„ Nov. 9 I , SIO: '.the Frond in the Letterg A poetolier. i, " isfulttpi tees AIWA - June la., 4.51. , .. . ... • it .ErrorgXeutri - tlinu Or OW Potrer of the Sove . }rims: i • ibratdr; -. • • - . • .....7.i.:„.Tlie. children. of the Christian cud C at holic Chnmh are not agreed upon the compatibility of the. temporal with the spiritual power:. • , : 76. The abolit len of the temporal power , which the Apostolic See possesses would contribute in the greatest, degree fro the liberty and prosperity of the Church. N. fil.-43eside these 'errors expressly noted, many' !Miters are Implisdly rebukerl,by the , proposed and , asSerted;dOetrlee, Which ' all - Catholics;ire boats& ',- est pruner to hold, touching the temporal sorer , .:_. 4 ..,;, . of the ROnatt Pontiff. , ,3 . -. .. 1 4. . .. . r riore lin ning Referent:4? to Mlsfera Liberal.' inn. • • } • ' r . \ - .. 77. in. the - preSent day it is no longer expedient that the Catholic religion shall'-be he.d as u.e only Milgion of the State •to the exclusion of all other Modes of worship: •: ' • 7s. Whence it OM been wisely provided 'by law, In sotnettou citric, called Cathollc, that pardons com ing to residetherelnshall . enjoy the public exercise of theirlownworship. ... . that 79. Moreover it Is Odin, 0t civil hberty of every mode.of vronshipand the full .power given to all of overtlyll publicly' manifesting their oplort lons and their - deas of all 2 kinds whatsoeVer,cou dueembre eastl to corrupt{ the morals and minds of the people, add to the propagation of the pest of indiferentista. , . t NO. The Itotaan rontlff can and ought to teem/elle bin:melt tn, and agree with prograla, Ilberallam,,and modern civilization. • • . • I ..IFOTINGS. , -There is 4 painful that lOwd. girls. 'get drunk..,;i •' . . ;4--Yeter ,Cartright.' is still 'nble to .preach iic.- .. e, , a'sienolly.. . , , . ..,, -The needle gun Li n uw,euued death - sew.: , ing putchine: , : ~ ~ . / , .. . . I.lntflilo is:pleased 'at the prospeck of new Water works:: - ; •-. .• -I - : . .L—._. ST) t ro-gly l c'erine luta trade its mark_ upon je) pe'rsons'.. - . t .. —._...:- Citicairo trimianltits' got a divOrce NVI th °Out' knowingi,it.. 4- . ; .• . . • - ' —lllinois claims a Vesuvina_ . It is only a . coallrpit rxin tire. -. ' .• • . -,. .. . , '-:--l'im:prin t tersr strike at San Francisco hail 1 ; , ed a failare. . 4 - . , . . . , I - .",'elogise , is' a :lamella WAering phice-. 7 . COlegue-watfrifig. .. - • . . -('ire million bushels of wheat are eredittill to Eust l'etitieisee.. , . . , - 1 • ,• . 7 -. Nearly ,eyety• person drowned iu Paris's totititi to tee .111-Settle. - . . , , —lien Or - leant!: and Alleghany City are kwerruit .with burnittra. i t , --iACineinitati jokerjted dead Al lll9..a,frien,d.. "the prome-o i5f.,52000." - .. =X dramatic Eaglishinmi cut his then:Ain a railway cur and died; .. „. . . —They have twolinds of elinictu" in Ina +. ana—hog and chicken. " ,:- , .. ' - Y.- —.Vit'Engl , isli paper speaks'of the .alitrail*. ... 'leui.e as a "Outlet . pump." • - • 1, , —A. bottle •on wine, sealed and - good; has, 'Been fished: frost a gunboat sunk during the war. .. . Southern elient thinkithe begtitvay to keep your 'ovis counsel' h td bei liberal with your fees. I ' •-• ferry :an in Wisconsin .h 3 in jail ,for setting tire to a neW bridge. lie is it! btoateit monopolist. — . Terrapin 'Potter, the lookotitt ut . .itigitra, is partrktimiermitted and inust . s sort over , the yatlle. ~! • . , —Thrtli + }narriage; ', Paris and death snit' by it:Freaph writer bi be the Only 'great - soeial - ideas. ,A •••'. - . • , •. —Waterinelons are . ! a drug at 'avan and she haSjutt got rid of 5000 b .hipt thein to :Ce.w fork. ~ • , =l.lterstadt 6s painted the line 'aid 1 White. Atonntains, awl iris said • he la'. niest sueee4sltil effort. 1 • - ',• ' • i_. =Among th 6 Cheviot -Hills of ,Seoti • they bow4t• of sheep w I ioie, Wool .w ill me: eleveu - Jimin hall tile 94. ' • A - .Boston Sum] iy paia;r• has the Ifointeement : "(ie dollar, per-year ; ele Mill a.dollar anti ► ., liitlf." - . —A rattlesnake ,in Cambria secreted i in a meal barrel, and : took a ‘.bitd out Of first woml►n who came near it. —A street-paving.,ContraCtor in Sayan] IS named Cash. - He 'ought to make in I n ,s laborer' work cheap tor caah. ',.. .: - 7,'A young man In Georgia elope : cl ivi 11 a young Itali.. Her father and brother w lied fir them on their return and began: shoo tag. The, bride-groom replied, and he now If :416 . . ,- ,Cr ,titer-In-law. . ~ li ~ , . , . . 1 , ) 1 —At Trenton a machine is .being pn t i lp,to open and shut the .le "gatt. Of tltte' eiti-;- ware - and Raritan C al by steam ' -r o,vor. If successful a similar machine , Is to put t er up at every lock gate bn the canal: . ..,. 1.. - .- 7 ,kmanand yi:mg lady in Chicago q • relied, over the ownership of a small dog, each seizing a leg nearly enforced King omon's, celebrated 068101ln the Infant , when an officer; arrested both, -There are 70;664 horses, 1,521,421 c 22,057 four-legged mules, 5,052,0ai quadri; al sheep and 1,729413 hogs lir the .6'ta Ohi6 this year,- which shows an increase last year, of 813 horses, 28.849 cattle,' and 179 hogs; andia decrease of 2,963 mules '1,21.'0,012 sheep. - . . . ... • ° —.The poPulatien of Pittsburgh pro sliciw a by the census noir*, being. take pi"ri6airly be not much more than 80,000;1 • with the immediate suburto on the no south skies of the river it will probably nearly euraelip ni the *),(itri they are i habit of claiming: • - : science of war keeps pace wit the arts,of peace. 7 Wiat with the Chasseps and, needle'-gun and the-terribly .fival rexol tiona of the in itrailleuse, the work of killing bellig erents will become so facile and sure that soon the necessity will cease for any meajisorkill-, jag them at all: A new application of steam' to warlike purposes has just been tested by' a successful experiment at Edinburgh, Where, a road steamer and a limomotive for. travel on common roads; has been , Invented and put in, use. -By means of one , of these road-steamers, two gims of - 50 cwt. - were • moved at the rate of six miles an hotiri while Moving at that rate, wheeled in a spacer ,right yards. in breadth, and - was. - placed In no— ,sition with a rapidity. and preemie - 1i which could hardly have been attained . by. other moans: It is the fit rstitinie that heavy guns T('-\ , .Nu. 9 F,.ast liotweglan streets, • Pottsville. Abs. i. "Id. . i&jy LAND NOB BALE.--Thri'underinytord.:Eso: 4, - tors of th e estate of Elenry'Briser,liece.E,o3,,h.t , 'of Westfirearmlek Township, tick. sale Valuable Coal Land located in Ilranch - ship. It lles at thwinnottoh of the Mine ili :Lnd Tremont Railroad, which .feed passim through , t ,, • ' Port:niter inforniatlou appb- to fIENItY MERMAN, No. V& Ooaket. Jut)! kze,•ut,.l , MAZIEMEST Fait BJS,E. - " • - nut Colkcithg Billion land lathe Doom , Onapectiplng engine, sixty - horse lamer, t,er, ,, Altigt the itiachlnery cotin,ectcd wilts Ala) tier • • • One tadeteng engine, sixty horse, with 1111 t; , cldriory connected. with hoisting. -boilers tisidfor punning :and bolsi t ' eet khin/Aarlittlttell lerdtainoter, t 00111Weil014. - ' • • One some ptimp.7l-inch (Allison•Z: Nallatactozy article. • • = ~) The OMNI machinery Is in good 19111 be sold sealauutbly. Vegans el 49 and 90-Inch gauge; Sills, • Naha, of....4artotia slam Store flail:tree and Lt ug' Croaacut Hairs, !'firewood, &c. For further. information a inquire at the office, ;Neat Ma R, et the viancan Colliery. J6n tt - • JOHN , A' ES. Slip!. uno,' • • ft. 19 • ' OENIMALAIALEMAS With. JAVOB ItiEo EL W il l :46ol e Dr7Gabdaalio.333 Market tst., phti,.. adttras CO ! km Goads; tO•' intended 104 Ar' 1 2 8. iianacre at Jacob Riegel Jaa21,70-I4Y9i-15 II Drollls. L,pairmi , n El