The New York Herald Newspaper, January 7, 1867, Page 6

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8 / NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY,” JANUARY, 7,74867. vail i] . 2 of order that the very to Kiag William; but the population ‘ 5 ti ur. Ny Ly Ips of engalh nt See Oe ates raised 00 peroeptibie | general bo igh and Jow, are as antl-Prussian sneer. biiely the threat <i. -Kement, There is also another evnité, of which weel Muthary Governor, General Voigt-Rutz, ia an Yo | Sifciarin'London is the ebief, and which bas numeroas iy EE i kn Cor psareee, ; : speeeien.ct preven! jenbere, hi t : bers i, Rome at ‘ve prowaok Wine ta, But pos. | the fualionable world of Hanover were Invited; but not _ VIRGINIA. dma avowed ona BN MAT Pe NA soa not one tithe the induence of the one I have just | asingle esene socepted tho Ciege ¥ 1 be necet poken. cmosity between the | will be'brocght.on the tapis before the pring and te, -~ ~~" OU RICHMOND CORRESPONDENCE, ed Reception of the Italian Envoy ip nero rine 2 faaling of ie eae In a former | all the efforis sat Freee ee. > pore wit Ricexoxp, Jan. 9, 1807. ome Demy ¥ ne sonny oye pe Fas eine pen 9 ee le by the Pope. lettar I mentioned thes e Pick peokat bad ayoucted, | by Russe alone, of by Ruta, aad Prigia coogenaken 2 REVELATION : tho President” Gator fall into the new line, and adopt | Justice were referred to the chances of war, At a latcz ie J) eee aed to increase Tue Zonaves, | sill doubtful, bat tho cordial underwandie-<; VOM'7; | ninerto unknown tm relation to the of te "ag Boley heh wax alowed ‘by al tobe ofthe war—as a me, when the Sia o Sette shi aciahbsrlst ineeacetl [/ | ea suelr par, take overs, oppertanlty aoe eee fg en eT ran property of Mr, W. N, McVeigh, in 4 by Judge men whohad planged thesia‘: intorovplatioy, Mr.Carp. the ! Underapod, pes lately commen teeny" 2 wil He Legislature of 1662 and 1863, the body to which Gover. hich claim to Nightly of ine cats are made sennes of their wild debanches, and | orran nas ays EDM ag ns Sen Cane | Dered fom the Published 'nmqnts, that ater the con- toecho p peels bachaaeaee songa. Perfect impunity Tor | to represent = - ridiculed the aitempts of the Mmiteur | fication this propery was purchased by Oakes Ames, Victor Emannel’s Moderation and nor Perry—who had been repudiated in 1860 by @ vole of Jeas tha two bandred gat of sev we: as a member of th@ convent) elected by Uae: i ed $ hed by £ ciliatory Disposition of the P ‘itaires, WhO, a8 @ matier of course, are as wild as tool as having been completely cra teriide | 2°02 B. Alley “ina Samuel Hooper, of Maseuchusetts, vote veddn yeaber} rt : - men ean avis eee aBariehl rigger wan beeneht ie eek frome pert ne ty the sys Ginny Judge hihselt ; but having some grave six hundred votes ahead of the second nce castes on. ee eee contact with them, a «olish and the Candian insurrections it fully adopts. Th® | doubts as to..thi he title thus acquired one- | the ticket, In that lature, however, Mr, Caanpbel: ‘The much spoken of journay.of the Empress of {DY y former is reported ‘a3 the revolt of a handfal of dema- eftpernageltiacl. Mer! ‘voting population, ere’ | and Covernor Perry eotupled antagonistic positions. Mr. French is again on the ‘apis; but there is not tig ght GoRUGS against a-well intentioned anti beneficent. mon. | J24émedts obtained by attachments against sigh | could be any issue brought abow—and this alone Con-*| C, Waa one of the small minority who the ad-- The North German Reconsfaction | ex: foundation tor the statement the rewr.da.to the While the latter ie described as the rising of an | duriag tho war were parchased, tio property 90, again, grees can do-by which the peopleef Virginia could ex- | ministration of Mr. Davis, Governor was to @, effect that preparations for her rece; wr made | oppressed peo against a cruel and grinding tyranny, | and the above Parties, again begonsing the p’rchasers at prose thelr sont nts as to whether the old Union men | great extent the leader of the adminiatration party. Delegation in Sessi: i oe a et the vile it me, = which it ba ‘be a disgrace eit bea <A ‘a more fract I Natt of its, (tome In ths way, as Mr. ould govern the secessionists, there is BLY oabemrpp ng pains to make the eaericn wake the able stateemansh! ip of Pr Gortschakaff, which | Ames stated, a ¢ qudje titi. was gained’; but this transac- tor elect. It might have Rega supposed that 5 . Pope drove in state to the residence } durin, the Polish insurregtion preserved Europe from @ | tion having f, i Carolina in this election had soucht to lay aside a Union. a ‘Emperor of Bavaria, Ludwig 1, who abdk | serious crisis: anata as a6, Aen. broyght before Judge Thomas, at i map and elect one of secession “Bat thiss FRENCH-OPINION OF THE QUESTION | 40 Ja, favor of ‘ie son. As on a for. | “Pho intorchance of deqpatohes and mensaree im dhe sale Yeas declared illegal, and tho Con» ° % fa tat. from the. truth, es your’ readers will. per- ae Pomme | The whole line of bis way was as quiet as avy | are 2 u . Sen emery Seek mee om T iciplaeng. day in Rome; no domonstration whatever of pub- | that at the court festivals which y Hon titte, original Union mas, warat ond: : ## his presence abroad was made, ‘a droaking out of bosnitting: sbeent trom his homey} Smads BR esta ived for ‘ ee somnagg th ep td lap AE wi re eee te pn a w resent to accept it} when worthyeaf her confidence.as: though he drt drow: i i i The North German Constitution Under Dis- sign we ‘aaa reward for his constancy, his house oosupied by re ee Sidoa iteinee tamer ‘bay ive to Te’ of the Revolution. | CUssion—Delegates to the Cenferenrie_ Pian Conscriptios—Commantcation ¥ gan New | Judge Underwood, and all his valuable property conte. | Uef0re, this saosion sdjourne. jon. P i tical fortunes of Vir- | Chief Justioe of South Carolina, the Hon/B: F. Dunkin, or Fonjans, of the LS, angele sorte bgp ere er far tho |. York—The Unity Movement, &c. ™ | cated and sold. He immediately called upon the Judge | gisis, and telr oppouents. would be tare into chat | tee Now Eveland man, and he sad Mr. Campbell are D06- Towards the Papal oily eo Hausuns, Deo, 90, 1966, ‘and demanded copies of the papers upon which this ac- | Oblivion ¢heir pact course deserves. Never before was Le dy goa gpa delights te honor. Legislature Ended—A\ in or—The 1 oy my tast letter I referred to the dimeutties that such am opportunity affonted living maa to benefit his | ‘There is, indeed, this oppesite feating- in Bouth . 1986, Busso-German Alance and ‘Negotiations tion was based, and was 'toid toapply forthem at Nor. Joos an that now oven to the President, by ing up bas Carolina than in any. the Seuthera =tates, tt with St. Petersburg. seemed to lle in Tho way of s peaceatite ghd friondly so- { folk. Thie be did, but Underwood knowing that the | present ‘Tahiteas, Dec. 20, 1868. dntion of the various questions butween "the Prussian | tenure of the property ‘upon these was very ‘uncertain, On Satarday evening, the 15th wwat., the Conferences | “government and the newly annexed @tater. The pro- | proceeded at once to Norfolk, held the court, at which | Union men,” headed by Judge Und who com of the Plenipotentiaries assemb)et for discussing the con- | gress of events does not, I regret to say, remove anxicty. some forty officern of the late confederate government | all tola about four bi in the State—like the Judge, stitution of the Nofth German ‘Confederacy, were for- | Although Hesse Cassel lwns accepted, with zomothing like | were indicted for treason, and as this wasa chance not | men of small calibre, renegades and political adventar- merly opened in the Great Hat of the Ministry of State | thankfalness, the deltverance which Pruusia has.brought | to be lost, placed the name of McVeigh upon the list, his Siiia sever im OF, emenen at caeon ek a aaeaeae by Count Bismartk, asssisted by M. de Savigny. from the tyranny of the Electer, a large number of the | being the only civilian’s appearing thereon. This pre- | everybody else. These compose now @ revolutionary ‘The following‘are the names of the delegates who at- | Hanoverians hata the Prussians with a mortal hatred; | cluded the possibitity of McVeigh (now under the ban of sue i ae harmless trom thelr infertority ef ouc- tended on thts oocasion;—Baron Konnuita, Envoy Ex- | and Bismarck’a ‘policy, instead of endeavoring to allay | treason) taking any civil action for the recovery of bis | °°'® 47d Political insignificance. traordinaryyand Minister Plenipotentiary at Berlin for | feelings whith, however useless, are at least natural aye roe: =r until he can pre yes Lp 7 e mati remains in statu icVei pow S the Kingdom of Saxony: M. Hoffman, Envoy, &o., for | seems to bean in the direction of severity, and thecurses, | Years of age, with a large famity dependent — foes, the Gran@ Duchy of Hesse Darmstadt; M. de Wortsiorf, | not loud but deep, which are muttered on all sides, bode | and as the property now held by Ames, Alley, Minister of State for the Crand Dachy-of Saxe Weimar; | no good fot the future. ‘This state of things is on many | 8nd Underwood is the accumuiation of over forty years Ministar Rosslieg, for the Grand Dachy of Ollouburg; | accounts to be regretted; for mo impartial spectator opn | fy towve Loved thal thie autrage om tne part oF the venient Minigwrr Voitzon, for the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg | entertain’ doubt that Prussian occupation and influence, | and his colleagues from Marschusetts will meet with Schwerin; Baron Bulow, for the Grand Duchy ef Meck- | thengh exvoring somewhat of tyranny, will be highly | the censuro it 80 eminently deserves from the public. femburg Btrelitz; Minister Campa, for the Duchy of | Penetiotél to Hanover Teis unfortunate for this race here that much men as " : Bransmick; Minister Krosigk, forthe Duchy of Moinin- | ynu tate government es very Allott ey Sethe Pronto | Wardwell, Hunnioutt, and otters of that class, aboukd wen; Minister Baron Seibach, for the Duchy of Coburg | intense jealousy of Hamburg, and partty from constitu. | have gained such a controlling influence over them; the Gotha; Minister Larisch, forthe Duehy of Altenburg; | tlonal objections to progress, no facilities could be ob- | Inflammatory harangue of the latter on tho occasion of a a ? | ‘tained for rapf communication with the important the celebration of the emancipation proclamation on ‘Minister Sirients, for the Duchy of Anhalt; Frivy Coun- | town of Bremen or the south of Germany in general, | Tuesday, in the Capitol square, is calculated todivert have begun the work of rebuilding. On the main street cillor Keopp, for the Princtpality of Waldeck, Minister | Since the destruction of the bridge temporarily con- | the minds of these peopte from the channels to which it 8 Kayser, for the Principality of Schwarzburg son- {-Btructed by Napoleon for military purposes, the Ham. | suould be directed—the peaceable pursult of happiness, | of the city there are several buildings now in process of he £3 burgers have wished for direct communication with | by industry, thrift and economy, to the revolutionary | erection which give evidence-of the taste ag well as the derbansen flue “Schwarawurst Shirkenhausen” of the | Harburg, on the Hanoverian branch of the Kibe, by | teachings of a political clique, whose ouly aim 1s to per. “Roving Englishman”); Minister Bertrol, for the Princk | ‘bridges; but they have met with constant opposition. | Potuate animosity, and embitter alike the feelings of the | @Bterpriso of their owners. patity of Rodolstad; Minister Oberial, for the Princi- | This work will, however, soon be accomplished under freeamen and their former masters against each other. Governor Orr is still here. GovernomPerry left/here a ity of Su ‘Detmeta: Minist “Eauec for the Princi the auspices of Prussia; and the opening of a more direct | These two classos are mutually dependent one upon the | row days since, having visited Columbia simply upon pality of Lippe ; Minister’ Lauer, for the - | road to the routh by adino from Hambarg to Paris, via | other; all efforts to induce white labor here have sig- | Pate The, Legnali iemameiialenn pality of Lippe Scbaunburg ; Hermon and Harlon, for the | Bremen, will have a most beneficial effect on tho trade of | Dally failed; and will so continue; n labor 1s abso- . lately essential to the cultivation of Southern | of adjournment, and all matters of nts bel Principatities of Reuss; Senator Kirchenpauer, for tho | ‘te surrounding,country. Irepeat, therefore, that it 1s atapien, sud while, thie racget ly prvrho see adj rot pa act mt Rage 2) Hon are 4 | Very much to be regretted that the hearty cofoperation 7 free city of Hamburg; Senator ‘Curtius, for Lubeck, anit ora, in the development of auch a fine cuddery. should | dlary designs of such political adventurers and impostors |) ° 7 ie mon ir a Seeger by the people of North—particalarty those of New | Chrictrmas, and in time ‘for each member to be at his Senator Gildemefer, for Bremen, In all, twenty-one by auy want of common senso on one side | * Hunnicutt and Wardwell should be ciscountenaneed } homeop that day. * Even at this time, with.ao much de- Btates, or twenty-two, including Prassia, were repre< or guavity. onthe other, ; Engiand—who as soon itndraw the nS. ce Contrary to general expectation the Prussion govern- igiand—who as as they wi ad . sented, being eleven less'than under the old Germanic |’ mon have called out all those Hanoverians capable of | Sapport now derived from them, will compel (hese men fmanding public attention, and with many moet im- portant matters left unattended to, Christmas pursues its Confederation. After an opening speech by Count Bie. | military-service, born in the year 1843, thus extending who have reached their twenty-first year. Taare “setts the by for manifactare a ee power and social Jife retgne supreme over political, “I c: ET ess, ‘There is another party in the State to which I have not theaght it worth while to refer—that fe “the pon personal consid yrelded to prejudice as littie as, if not than, any. POLICE INTELLIGENCE. ‘Srausmvo AvFRay 1x BroaDwaY.—On Friday last James” ‘Murphy entered the apartments of Patrick Hughes, No. 206 Broadway, and while there became involved tp e~ quarrel with bim. While disputing, Murphy, as.aileged, drew « knife and stabbed Hughes in the back, infiteting- dangerous wound. On receiving the injury Hughes” exclaimed ‘I’m stabbed,” whereupon Murphy fled inte- the street and made his escape, leaving the bloody knife. behind co on Lagoa gp — sabsequc ntly , arrested by oflicer ‘econd and, ss Hughes Is confined to ais bed from ne stole oF his wound, hie wife yesterday appeared before Justicer Hogan and entered a complaint against the paring ing him with the commission of a felonous assau! ‘on her busband, The magistrate committed Murphy to- await the result of Hughes’ injuries. Crvsiry To ‘ANus—CaTs AND Doas.—A somewhad novel case of cruelty to animals came up before Justice: Hogan at the Tombs yesterday merning, Officer MoSally, of the Sixth precinct, arrested Jobn O'Sullivan, of 106" Bayard streot, charging that he set a. upon a cat, and that the cat ae marred and i iheaby the dog in viola- tion of an act to prevent cruelty toanimals,. Upon the-- officer's affidavit O'Sullivan wis required to give bail im the sum of $300 to answer the: complaint before the Court of Sessions. Disnonnsr Lap.—A lad named Joseph. Dorgtase, waa: arraigned before Justice LedWith yesterday, charged with the theft of furs and jewelry valued at $182; from-~ booths Neihery snped Naroatte, at No. 687 J itted ilk, and was committed ear ee Au.toxp Larceny Faow tus Person, —On Wednesday %t toast three-quarters of an hour. What transpired ‘during thie interview has not, as a matter of course, yet ‘bven made publie, \hough the mest important pointe of ‘Whe dicoussion and’tt nature, stormy or otherwise, will probably appear in the Unita Catlica within the next fow days, ‘Te must be gken as asign augating of good ~4!' om the Pope’s part that he received Victor Emanuel’s eooy himself, instead of following the wsual course, which on gach oocasions demands that a plenipotentiary “@estrous of treating with the Popo should first make mows the important part of his mission to Antonelli, end then, having satisfied the Minister Cardinal of the ehheet Of his mission and ite importence, is introduced to Me head of the Church. Romans, as a rule, are astonishe? that any audience at ‘ell was granted to Tonnello, and all persons are agreed in @aying that Vietor Enranuel’s very politic, perificatory “eddrees to the Chamber served ax the ‘open sesame” te the Pope’s chambers in the Vatican. The opinion | eortainly wears the appearance of plausibility, seeing ‘that it 19 well Known that a prior—some affirm two prior— atuempts to open communications with the Pope hati failed, andthat Tonnello, disgusted with hie reception fer, more justly, want of one}, had prepared for his te- tern voyage to Florence. Certain it t# that the Pope, ‘vindietive'as he has been of Jate, was cempletely moli- fled by tho very peaccabic untare pf. the King of frety’s ‘eAdress, and is far more ready to treat on the present @bject of Topvetio’s visit than he bas yet been. Not- ‘withstanding that some papers—the Presse, of Paice, and SOUTH CAROLINA. QUA COLUMBIA CORRESPONDENCE. Ths Progress of Rebuilding the Olty— Political Goasip—The Rejection ef the Constitutional Amendment—The United ‘States Senator ere Covowma, .:C., Dec. 20, 1868, I need not inform your readers ‘how much this once beautiful city has been blasted by the desolations of war. The citizens, aided to some-extent by Northern capital, ¢ of fmarck the Pruided laid before the: |. the, rule, which obtains in Prussia, of enrolling and will also the sooner furnish the mille of a Wazwne, of Florence, for Instance—try to belitde the Assernbly wad the sitting was then closed, having ‘only 5 ‘fast, . 3 the intention of th et needs, as as afterwards a profi Taméen ‘Roche, of No. 270 Bast Ninth streets, amd? mission witich bas brougtt Tonnello te Rome, there can, lastedahout half an hour, On Snnday the Pienlnoten. for less than the 1d rly dhe Adi pied nn Sd market. * Sear that like roapy similar bogies the members hare. Jotin Kane, of No, 105 Madison streot, met. in & liqnoe, be little doubt bat that the spiritual question en which | tiarien were introduced to the King by M. do Savigny, | tion of the general rule should. have been madein the | Thafature of this Ye teen ar gpa rye pam} not realized tho solemn position they ocoupy. ‘store iu Catharine street. James naively confecses he~ of courso.nept with a most. gracious lon. 1g-] gave of a country which had been accustomed only to the mands tho careful att 4s you will see, the constitutional amendment hes recept _ jotic minds ef our common country. Southern ‘wes somewhat under the influence of atthe time. the evening a grand dinner was given to them. to whieh | far easier syatem of conscription by lottery, as practiced j Patri eo und d their rly are kindly { been rejected, with but single vote in its favor. It is acer the wedge for others of more importance which loom up | the Prosidents-of the two houses of the Prussian Legis. | in France. Since the Inco 10, ie poration of Hanover, large He had with him $120 in bills of various dcromimations, the invil disposed towards them, havo teed them = i hain whi = rf ‘When ehce a ene eau lature wero ~~. invited umn at siee. 4 Sevieny yo ey fees Ee hare ponstits Hy eralgrating to, Wee ten vtsy pot x tube ay Aga in ber thay’ the ie ieaiie dine ee cass tee a near ike een — ea jon be matter, however trivial, the temper of the he of his health, The noxt sitting the Conference was | ing which awaited them, and as there seemed to be a i Pm page @ to pete fab ease io aa sei eed pat aw preteats Seen the | value of $15. Remeron ho: left the {quer store, of a ent _ agp held PN soy 7 Ave tRey was another yesterday, at rr ge ais few young en eye poy a — fey poh sna fs ae r reason’ bss j Nae evar meron i atereante Laat and Merde cig mh Cg , greater lengths, ‘and soften the ether party to that | | The Prussian ls for Ube conetttation of the new |. ship Hansa previous to her last dopartare from Bremen Sota tis eencoetek Tate ¢ of, the North, | that which now exista Que of the most intelligent bn eneternenery ey treo op Ean’ when he: degree which will atlow tho real question at lesuo | perty i socms, thet the tocislsiicepower into he ale hee Bry lagoon Mar cs dba dl corte Htees te yet nd an aversion on the | members told me that the clacse giving Congress the | lier guar mared bie late companion, Sabsequantiy her . fugitives, ‘vided Detween a. parliament elected by the poopie anda | ‘The system, as your readers are doubtless | Part of the negro to toil or conform to 2 legitimate Dieton the oid plot, Botnie eet Prince emioe repre- | aware, admfte of no excuses. all, whethér princes or | Course of life, which will be rulnows to the whele sentative and bas a vote according to the size and popu- ponte, must serve; but however beneficial this may | Southern country. jet, im cages like the recent cai it nets moat inju- TRE STATE DERT, as it 1s termed, will be presided over by a Foderal Chan. | riously on the business prospects of young men at the | & Portion of which is payable by the Rew State of West cellor, which post Count Bismarck intends to occupy im | most important era of their lives. [It should be ex- | Virginia, but in wi exact proportion is now a roprid ‘persona. The federal budget will be submitted | plained, that persons in easy circumstances can shorten | Matter of discussion between both governments, and ‘the parliament, which, however, is not allowed to | their time to one year by paying their own expenses, } S¢¢ms hard to be agreed upon. The Convention in | the bill proposing to admit the States upon sdopting refuse’ tho funds required for the tiaintenance of the | and receiving no pay) ene m prt of June, 1861, whic! ‘ho br the State of this amendment was lost at-the last session of Congress military and naval establishments; so that its control ‘A new line of steamers from Bremen to Now York, | Virginiain the ordinance providing for the formation of s' yi We has done more to prevent ite passage than anything the Ni ‘ae Tort the State of West Virginia, thus laid down the basis of jone mor Lapeer id over the public purse is reduced toa mere shadow. The } the North American Lloyds, will commence fortnightly else, Overlooking the fact that it was the President be dikourned and then settled which passea in Rome, like all forces ome to edge peacend| eonclusion to the Roman question is the onty one which — ee or Se rennin y asl @ remarked more than once, quiet, peece and calm- Rose ix the order of the day. ‘Nowhere coua more well Geporod citizens be found—well disposed to peace, mean, for they are'not a0 towards the existing state of things. But the fact tht, wher they have so much at gtake—when the great question which is to determine power to enforce the amendment by appropriate logisia- ‘tion influences him more in its rejection than anything else. As a matter ef course tho leas s¢rupulous politi- cians will oppose it because it cuts them off from office in the State ag well asin the government, The faot that met Bane ang od him with opirived vA his monoy valuanles’; but that i gal denied oh knowledge of the matior and stated he knew vothing the whereabeuts of the missing artictes, whereupon: pte fees bo gyno: yaar and ar yest it ie © a gold pencil case was [oui person which Roche identified. It is farther stated: tins” ther ‘watch has also’been recovered from the possessiomef’ a ' party in whose rrodbed had been sroactla gale) ao cused was comm: esterday, , im. defauit of $1,000, ‘baliene. iii ita tt, Attzcep Bonciany.—Some time during the night of” ~ their fnture weliare and advancement, or their degrada- } central authority, or, in other words, Progsia, bas tripe in March next. Several very fine verecls have | @djastment’with the old State, and lethe only ground Mon and rotrogression from liberty and modern ideas, ia. right to rte oat conclude treaties, appoint ihe f been purchased, and from the arrangements which have | Upon which the West Virginia government will consent | sione who pledged them their restoration, they say that | Friday leet the oeliar of No. 646 Water street, occupied Being discussed and brought to settiement, they are in- ambassadors and receive the diplomatic representa- | boen mado there is roason toybelieve that the very eupe- | * Pay any portion of the'debt:— they have once complied with terme end have a | by William H. Moffat as a bake house, was entered by Guced, throng love of order, to romain quiet, clearly | tives of foreign governments. rior Hamburg line will meet with a formidable compefi- | |, The new Sigte shall take upon itselt.e just proportion.of 4 P om dibinhs oh Sisthae aut the enitiet tha indi shows that purely revolutionary men—men with no love The federal army, the numerical strength of whith, | tion. the public de8t of the Commonwealth of Virginis prior to the nothing. The cup 18 a bitter one, and tt will not will hogy Tear window; ang. Dat that of dixorder—could havo no influence, or, at t This reminde me of the man who has done more than 3° ig nanin ten metre y charging y = ingly be drained unless they are tively assured that | two barrels of flour, of the value of $28, carried off . ’ ee e @ footing, is to be equal to one per cent of upon drinking it restoration to all their former rights rf our communication with America— Jeast, only a very temporary one, over them. Such men ion of thet ordinary expenses of the State gorern- pe om discovering the theft Moffat, in company with two are the on! it in rotard the sol of Pe ti ge othe weonvel tee wok Robert 3° Rom the Ithiest of hij and privileges will be attained. If this assurance were of the Thi h fol track e only ones who can apy way ro e@ solu. ru whom the e various ‘0! I. Slor , the wea! of our many ship- ‘i ‘of ‘debt a the Thirtecnt! ‘tno! lowed a flo tion of the Roman question. There is no want of evi. | States bave to take the oath of fidelity. Tho naval | owners, possessing a ficet of about fifty fine vessels, ide ceactenineh beens Goeannt et ea tiaeiak given, the amendment ‘understood, it | from ihe front door of Now 646 to roometa No: 666 dence to prove that these are not wigs | here-—that | service is to be supplied by the inhabitants of | trading between Hamburg and North America, Austra- | wealth from the counties included within the aald new State | Would be accepted, not because d but because it pied ty Patrick Gipnaud,,8r., Patrick Ginnaud, Jn, ooha with a certain cless they possess much influence; but | the seaboard, and the morcantile navy will carry | lia, &c. The sixtieth anniversary of bis wedding was | during the same period. would reader their condition more desirable than at Ginnaud. Upon"entering these apa:tmenta and the roigning*sentiment of order seems so well impressed | the federal fag—black, white and red—being | celebrated with enthusiasm a dey ortwoaco. As = ee nevnge som pe aN eae searching the officers found between eighty and one hnn- = THE CONFTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT. & compromise between ‘*- Prussian black and | the result‘of his long and active life, adorned as it has Now that the reassembling of the Legislature is so white, and the black red an: gold of (disjunited Ger- | been with munificent acts of benevolence, we may well | soon to take place, and as this will be one of the gravest many. The States not vet included in the Zoliveren are | say of hirmsthat he has gained “Love, honor and obe- | and most tmportant subjects to be brought before that would have supposed, when the P wigan! is that the ‘to join the rame, but Harmburg, Lubeck and Bremeu are | dience; troops of friends.” body, flaming and indignant editorials daily appear | Seat may never bo refilled by the party elected, to remain free ports, it having been proved to demansta- At a time when German unity is sogmuch spoken | a. st it in the papers here. One paper repudiates the | seeking an Sl reegicr’ of this I found that great dis- tion that the trade of those cities would be completely | about the following extract from a Laipsic periodical | io. . that the preeedent established by the admission of | Satisfaction existed with both the formerly elected Sena- ruined if it were subjected to the Prussian system of | (The Jartenlawhe) cannot fail to be interesting to those | the Tennessee Representatives will be cerried out in | tors—Governor Perry and Governor Manning—because duties. The citizens of the different States are to be no | of your readers who aympathise with that most,desir- | case it should be accepted here, It jes that no they had away from Washington, and it was longer considered as foreigners, but to bave the right of | able object. After speaking of the characteristic words | resentative would be admitted unless he could take thought had thus neglected the interests of the State. domicile in every part of the federal territory. These, | of varions countries,the writer adds:—The Germans | test oath, adose which fow could swallow, and thas ‘At was urged that their presence there would have been witb somo paragraphs of minor importance, ar the out- | have many such expressions, both useful and pernicious, | basis of representation provided in the amendmont Naes of the scheme proposed by Prussia, which certainly | Although gome are restric to narrow bonnds, others | would involve the taking of a new census, which cannot | importance of Representation at Washington, it may be falls far short of the dreams of the enthusiasts who | are more universal in thoir range; for in- | be done until 1870. So that in any case nearly four | staied that the convention of the State before the elec- tion of Senators and representatives, appointed a val rH almoft dred pounds of flour tied up in » shoot and hid away in a. chest. The Ginnauds were immediately ail three ar Tested, but they deuied all knowledge of the four, stating that they were asicep, until roused by their unceremo- nious visitors and were ignorant of how it got into their rooms. Yesterday they were arraigned before Justice Mansfield, to whom they teiierated this denial. They wore committed for examination. e @p the minds ot the Pope’s subjects that a coup de which it is expected Mazzini may attempt within the ‘wert month, can only result,in epiiiteg the blood.of a few, scoundrels, who, under the cuise of reform and lib- erty, are ready to subvert the very movemenis most tend!ng to those objecta. : The rumored insurrection at Viterbo and other places en the Jialian frontier bad no existence, as was sup- The report was probably spread in Rome through to the election for United States Senator than any one @ agency of some of Mazziui’s ymen to try the temper of the Roman people, to see how the nows would be accepted and what sympathy from them could be ‘expected if, the reality was to take place in the Rternal Civ, The saying in America s0 often quoted at election Umes, ‘As Pennsylvania goes so goes the Union,’ has tte counterpart pere in another, which aftirms that the majority goes with Viterbo. At-present that little town Sw an quiet and peaceable as can be. There is noemo- tion displayed: in its streets or cafés; nothteg hke rovo- Mution apparent anywhere. If, therefore, any reliance an be placed on the old proverb it will go towards Proving that no troubies of sanguinary nature need be AN’ INFIDEL POWWOW. ‘oral Inflaonce ef Theatres as Seon tn.” the Mirror of Infidelity—Hard Hits at the “Naked Truth” and the Bowery Peanue - Stow Shops, &c. : Yeaterday aiternoon at three o'clock the infidel and ‘ free thinking elementiof our population held another meeting atthe meeting room on the garret floor of No, $14 Broadway. The subject for discussion wa: “The imagined that the North German Confederacy woild be | stance Gehoreame Diener (your obedient servant), | years would elapse before Kopresontatives of any kind asort of pendant t8 the American Union, and that the | which is chiefly sed in the middle States, | could be admitied from Virginia, and concludes its article | agent to go to Washington, and this gentleman, chief difference would be that in lieu of au elective presi. j Saxony, Nassau, Hesse,-&c., indicates lame subser- | as follows:— Trescott, been kept there gto Orr dent it would have a hereditary one in the person of | viency and want of personalgdignity. Much more com- Adopt the dishonoring constitutional amend: then, months, the King of Prussia, What witl most burt their feelings | mon is the obnoxious idiomatic expression Jeh | andwe gain, ponsibiy, tho right 10 be ropresatall after ts the revival of the Diet, and 1 am curious to see how | fhue nicht mit (1 am not of the party). Wherever Ger- | 1470, by men ‘whose resence in Congress would be a libel on the govermanent organs, who for the lasi #tx months have | man children are at play one or two are sure to be found | the conduct and spirit of the South. “When the South makes exhausted the vocabulary of abuso against the old Diet, | who show their self-conceit in this way. As they grow | UP her See to sel hor reputation We think she will will justify the de facto re-establishment of that much: | to manhood they continue the same strain in other waya, | * ™0re substantial price, al State while visiting Washington professional business, It is that bis advice favors were not con@ued to hig clients, but were givén gratuitously to anticipated in Rome during the evonia which will end | decried and much-derided institution, and the wide diffusion of the feeling which such an ex- The Examiner, formerly Pollard’s paper, but now | other citizens who sought them. It was tly | Moral Influence of Theaires.” ‘The disputants num- mm the solntion of the question. Ttake this trouble to iin | Nevertheless, jn gpite of ali deficionces, the plan con. | pression indicates is-the chief cause of the impossibility | Rotorious as the organ of the Adams Express Company, | avowed that to this fact no less than to his rare per | hered four individuals of even lese than the average ross readers of the Hixaty with these ideas of thecom- | tains at least the germ of several useful reforms, and it } of arranging anything in Germany, andexplains the divi- | in an inflammatory article on tie letter of tho Hon. | sonal merits, J. B. Campbell owes his position of munity bere, prinetpally Because it som the sole object | will be open to ie parkament to improve ic hy the in- | sions which extst thronghout the country. Ich thue | Joseph Secar, reconliy published in the Baltimore Sim, | Senator elect for six years from the Ath of March next, dogree of intellectuatity possessed by citizens generally. ‘end arm of many other American papers, as it is of | sertion of such clauses as will remove some of the | nicht mit must beextirpated if German unity iseverto | detailing the views Legislature as ascertained by | as weil as of the unexpired term of Gévernor Being allowed ten minutes, and a broad platform om . seme in Frabce and England, to promutcate overy little | abuses that are left wntouched by the official pro- | de snything else than a name. Of the people of the | bim in relation to the amendment, saya:— who sent in bis letter of resignation upon the election. which to spread themselves, they successively made~ piece of tnielligence which may tend to feed the avid | gramme. United States he says:--""Their favorito expression js | , Let us hear from you. gentlemen. Has Mr. Segar elan | Mr. Campbell as his successor, i @erand for serious difficulties in Rome. With fow ex- as we do, “1 | dered you or not? We know that be bas spoken f ae their bows before the audience, and only consed their n Monday Count Bismarck made bis first appenrance | ‘Go abead.’"” The Américan doesn’t say, The seuator elect isa man of fine nee, tn the House of Deputies, and was received wih great | imagine, “think.” or sive my opiuion, pat 1 rica: | fo.Rvitcneniiment and public tik in Richmond. and’ ® | very amate intellect, and a debater of great eloquence, cordiality by the majority of the assembly, many of | late,” by which he in '& certain measure’ forces himsolf | Your consutiencios, your wives and daughters, tit mothers | Sarcasm and ingenuity. Ho occupies at present the first thom rising from their seats and rushing up to shake { to submit his arguments to a mathematical proof, In | that bore you, the brave men who shivered inthe trenches | Position at the Charleston bar; indeed it may be said that bo is there almost without a rival. He is about fifty-five years of age and boars in his countenance the evidence of his scotch ancestry, being a descendant of & famous Scotch terlan D.D, He is bim- self, however, a native of Oxford, Worcester county, argumentation after they had become invoived in the ‘most intricate of mental snarls, and had’completely tied themselves up in logical knots, ‘The first speaker, & email, man with « large brogue, declared that the performanos of a ballet was not im- pure, however nak Setiad ot to thee ee ceptions, the Paris jonrnals and those of Austria press forward evory argament hag Mood prove that the Roman question, or rather the Papal one, cannot be solved without bloodshed, and that the people, anxious for blood letting, are ready to prove their-execration of the Pope and bis rule by proclaiming a revolution and entering int» ite horrors, white fue trath is that nothing @f the sort is at all probable. T feel perfectiy confident hands with him and congratulate him on his returp. } the came spirit he adds to his remarks the words ‘that’s | about this fair city but two yeare since, are waiting to see if How different a scene from those that were enacted in | a fact,’ thus placing himself under the necessity of | You will dishonor yourselves tn seeking to dishonor them. former seasions, when he stood before the House, breath- | proving the veracity of his assertions. Ali three expres- a ing scorn and defiance, and raising a whirlwind of indig- { sions tudicate the fundamental character of this restless, | Politien! Parth Virginia—Strength of the nation with every word that fell from bis lips. active, uavisionary and decided nation. Union Element—Effect of the President's *harno revolution wih take placegand equally so that, | He came then to answer au interpretation by Deputy | Policy—Present Aspect of Affairs—The Uni Massachusetis, and was educated at Brown University, tment of the beauties of the human figure. ee a ikea ate hee nanan | taal bear ciara eats | MAPOLEOR AND PIO MOND. Party nthe Majerty-Caderoreaw'e Chane,” | gga gen ctn egg ep urge San | Rap ran 0 Me wo ive, Shing ne, law of election for the Germau parliament, as paased by nAbecbanadiinati ee Ricamonp, Va. Dec. 30, 1866. 1828, when about elghteen she could obtain a leading saltatorial ition. The~ degradation of actrosses was owt to anythi essentially immoral im the theatre, but from side insues on which they foll, nother gentleman, with slightly different bus brogue, followed. ie wer will bave been amicably settled, ior Berane ts moderation itself, and the Pope, Shough very rabid st times, whea irrounded by his savisers, eoome open to advice, and in reality willing to treat if to his own {mpulses. 4 years of age, aud was em- [gd Mee several — as a a on Edisto —— near lestov, while pursuing preparat Ww studies, ibese be subsequently completed in Charleaten, in the office.of the late Hugh Swinton Legaré, an ac- the National Assembly in 1849, by-disfranch'sing per- The anomalous political condition of Virginia at sons condemned for political offences, and othor restric. | FFench Opinion of the Situation Between wi bes at tions which wore not ia the original draft. Count Haly and the Pope. present time demands at tho hands of Congress their Biemarck replied, with considerable tact, that {From tho Paris Moniteur, Deo. 16.) most careful consideration, with a view to afford the Tt is just to kay that his influence over bis subjects is | the Praseian Legislature itself had made several | Two important f havo occonrred—the signature of | people here an opportunity to freely express their opin- | complished juriet and echolas, afterwards Attorney | equally heavy style fol He considered: fapiily cuminishing, and that tho love and reverenco | alterations in the law of 1849, and that it was | the convention for the partition of the Pontideal debt | ison at the polls on the subject of reconstruction. ‘This ited States, | the theaife a nefarious and thonght that young men were much enraptured: with its beauties, There was that in the dinlogue of the “naked trat®’’ ballet that should bring: the blush to any woman's cheek. The Bowery theatres encou: and pandered to the pickpock: the pimp and assassin, ani the Broadway mo: artist establishments attracted the same style of m nds, with the only difference that thoy were better droased. , The speaker aiso boldly announced for the benent ot the ublic that Louefellow’s and Sumuer’s names woudl Jive ‘or nos after Shakapeare had been forgotten, For this General aud of State of the hardly just, therefore, to deny the same privilege to | and the mission intrusted to Signor Touello—of a cha- Mr. Campbell treet zealously into the great nullid- the other States belonging to the new Confederacy; that | racter to strengthen the favorable dispositions of the | freo expression cannot be had while the dominant party | cation cont 1880 to 1824, taking an active part and giving his first. vote on Edisto Island, op tho Union side. It i# said that by his special offorts the ecale was turned by two or three votes oy, A favor of ne zo eS a joun Townses at presen’ e th Caroliaa Senate. In the” tntter part of 1831 or carly in 1609 he removed to Charleston, where he entered upon the profession of the law and has ever since resided, His geal, abilities and personal bearivg svon attracted the ‘with which be was formerly recerved in podlic has al- most complecely disappeared. I was amused a fow days since at reading in a number of European papers a 1m purporting to come from Rome, and announc- ing far and wide that the pope had been enthusiastically Pecelved by the populace on his way to the church in ‘Which he assisted at the service held in honor of the Annunciation of the Virgin, when the fact wns,that not @ single acclamation or inark of pleasure greeted him on the way; as a matter of course, all Catholics happea- fag to bein the stresis through whith his carriage for this very reason be had cautioned the House at the | court of Rome. It is known that by article four of the | are robels—rebellion ts honorable, and to be a Union time not to insist ou the amendments referrod to, but to | convention of the 16th September Italy had declared + jan ig a degradation. necept the law in its entirety; that if he were to remon- | Lerself ready to enter into an arranggment to take under = strate with the Mecklenburg government a rejoinder | her change 8 proportionate part,of th® debt of the former On the passage of the ordinance of secession in Vir- heey ¢ —_ Red ba ~~ to —_ a oe pe oot can pemoncgpnned was ee to | ginia there was a powerfdf and influential Union party aod the only effect woul to delay the elections, whic! nt an el a state of things as contrary to equity as they ail ‘Tundh te tke phase Myer possible, Di tap. tnteomers of the. Ponaitonl. treneary, In fact, | Bere. but they were soon overcome by terror.and pro- Against these arguments very little was to be said, as the | whily the Italian government received the revénues of | scription, except in the Tidewater, Piedmont and Valloy Prossan Legislature could pot in devency preteud that | the Romagna, the Marches and Umbra, the Roman gov- | sections of the State, in the northwost, where this same uncovered their heads and knelt to receive bis | its ree jons were obligatory 1 the rest of the Con- | ernment con! (0 pay the portion of the debt incumbent attention of the Union leader of that day, Drayton, | opinion he was sonndiy hissed. Notions; bul ae followed the cortage ta, mearriage | federacy; aad so. Loewe took nothing by hls motion, en Ye. was, requisite to Buta stop to Gihse of men, ander the leadership of Francis H. Piet’ | Cheves, tbe Hugeys, Fougro, Pringle, and Folassita, | , The next speaker contended that everything wan oven. k, as usuol, master of the fel. while guerding the dignity of the Holy | pont, rallied and framed what is known as the restored | whose confidence ip he held, expecially that | dono on the stage. Tho style of Romeo andJulicv’e and left Bian A still greater triumph awaited the Premior in the sit- _ uot asking him to abandon his former pro- | government of Virginia, which resulted in the division ting of Tuesday, when tt was proposed—and by a former | tests and reserves. member of the eutreme radical party—that oa the pria- no Hegotiation. entered into upon this eabject be- | of the Stace and the establishment of the government of cipal itoms of expenditures for 1867, including the | twetn France and Italy, who bave treated upon tho | Weet Virginia, with Piorpont as Governor. long dsputed —_ ertimates, on Fane Og cemaes tory = ye . Bona iy Immediately upon the break tof hostilities tho reed to, the whole next year's budget should be } convention for the partition of the between tho Setod en bloc; and although this motion was relected as | Court of Florence and the Holy 8o¢ was signed at Paris | Pebel linds were established along tho Potomac, extond- contrary to the rules of the House, the various estimates | upon the Tth inst, by M. Faagere and Signor Mancardi, | ing to the Alleghany mountains, which were only broken still femaining were passed with such alacrity that they | the two Freyoh and Iatian, plentpotentiariee the beats at intervals by short excursjons of some divisions of the were ali dispored of ia the same sitting. And thus for | upon which the partition has beon made is the total the deat time in five years the budget has been voted én | uraber of the population of the former States of the | Union army during the war. This left nearly tho wholo the form provided by the constitation, and without gow- | Chureh. The portion of the debt incambent upon Italy | State within these lines, precluding tho possibility of any ernmont’s aboling a jot of its Preveenee or Siving ups bu ee to oe — ¢ _~ Long b- | Union men holding intercourse with their friends in the single one of these pretenions which were declared in- | tic dobt Court of Rome, while not depariing from Commpadibie with to very rudiments of consticusontl | or sacrificing any of ite principles, will inva few daya be | @xtteme Northwest, and during this timo all tho Sn. Nberty, The confiict between King and Pariininent is | in a position—thanks to the persevering efurts of French | fluences and appliances of rebellion were brought to terminated—tt ig needless to add in Whose favor. Holicy—to reap the benefit of one. the roost advantageous | tear on these people, and what was not gained by excite Verily Bismatek js & wonderful man, and even bis | clauses of the convention of the 15th September to ai sect! animoeiti ke, rolotype on the Seine might take # fexon from him ; atthe eo time when the financial qneeon fa,thos ’g projudices, jonal an jen, ’ & itis a much lors erg feat to dissolve a Fefrestory being — Sastre ae. yap efotis. plivhed by imprisonment, lawlessness and tergor, Dar. Amembiy at the point of the bayonet, a8 was done on | tion relative jous difficulties is a! Te year rong. recon. the 2d of Pecaniter, 1651, than 44 transform ite vi sumed at Rome. It will be remembered that in Maren, {ig the teas eu ke, bap vhd alia be natare and tame down rempnnt radicals into loyal Jest year, She Kovereiga Por if actuated by the lof iet | suction party te, particularly the northern herents of te powers that fe Ory haptye) ‘hoy Ll ae = ee (onan conten Portion, which was not composed of members of. any health con!inues quite delcate, and the physicians graph ie ie manuel te) istinot faction. Many ef the origival socostionisia, as Toroonetrated strong! ainet Kis exciting Dimself go} to that. monarch the distressing condition in inuch, ineted of rondning himself to the Ave houte a | which the absence ot the Dishops left x considerable | Well as many of tho original Usion men, either belonged day prescribed as (he maximum of bis labora, numbor of dioceses in Italy. The King eagerly repled | to or sympathized with this party, whose ‘ng 4 motive was | Mr. Gampbell, becoming & member of the South Carolina According to the leat accounts from Hanover thers is | to this generous initintive, and a epecial agent—Signor | @ return to their allegiance in the Union; but from the | Logi@ature, took an active and leading part in opposi- ‘& regular stampede among the young men, who are flying | Verersi—was sent to Rome to troat seini-officially in | fact of the provalence of war almost daily in their very | tion to the ultra measuros and sentiments of that day, fn all direetions to eacape enlietmont in the Prussian | thi Ital of the religious questions pending between | nelgbborhood and arougd their homes, they were unable | and dnally struck the blow which carried Routh Carolina army. Besides the thirty conscripts who were arrested | the Foiy Se6 and the Itatiin government, This mission, | to form an organization, thoogh large in numbers and | for the Union by preparing and carrying through the the other day,at Hamburg, more than a hundred young | although not producing all the results thathad been | powerful in influence. Immediately upon the close of the | Celebrated Convention bill, which, by its provisions and Henoveriana are said to bs hiding in the city and its en- a fram it, develo the germs: of conciliation | war these men organized as a reconstruction party, the | machinery, brought the questions at issue directly home Virons, in wait for an opportunity of getting on board of prepared elements of agreement for the future. great majority being oepreal Union men, who, though | to the comprehension of the people, His porvices ia fome ship bound to England or America, At Bremer- King Victor Emanuel considered that the time was | within the rebel lines from compulsion doring the wi ‘this fea) sa Fed Sreppyen in the recent election haven, as the steamer Hansa was just about sailing for | come to renew the negoilation, and Signor Vegenzi being | were justly entitled to take such a lead, and for a whit which has con! q im the highest honors South Now York, she was overhanied by a detachment of Prus- | unable, on account of his health, (o repair to Rome, the | matters progromed favorably—a kind ‘of tacit under- | Oatolina can bostow, When the agitation of 1860 came tian soldiers, who searched the vessel and took out | Councillor of State, Signor Tonelio, has been despatched ae ene that they were to manage the affairs 2, ‘Mr. Campbell for the most part atood entirely aloof. eighty-nine passengers whose passports were not in | to thatcaptial. The return of the bishops to thoir dio. | of the © rhite the ees Recessionists were to re. deel to be a candidate for the Legisiae order, and who Were conssquent of being | ceses Is already an accomplished fact, and this important | main qalet and say nothing. Such was the posture of | ture or the Convention, “He apparently waited deserters. A few of them were rete next morning | result authorizes ua in hoping for agreement upon the | political affairs, and of such a ctass area majority ofthe | the opportunity for service in a cause in which and allowed to prosecute their voyage, but the greater | other pointe, The enccess of Signor io’s miseton | present Legisiature, wh by an understanding and | all bia heart and rympathies were enlisted, but afte atill In durance vile and will probably have to | would not fail to be profitable to the general relatios advice from Washington, in October, 1866, that Andrew | which he wieely predicted would be utterly ruined if the jon the hated blue uniform. Of the officers of the for- | between the Holy See aud the Court of Florence, aod tl Johnson was about to break with the republicans, a | South either began to make war or aliowed herself to be mer Hanoverian army only sefen have applied for | time would perhaps no longer be far distant when the | number of bitter rebels were algo slected, who, under | placed before the American people in an attitude whore admission into the Proesian. service ; the non.com- | Pontifical government would consent to establieh with | the new order of events, fiercely came forward, de. | she could plainly be charged with beginning the war, missioned officers appear to be moro tractabie, | Italy de favo relations which, both from an economical | manded and took their seats in the General ‘Ascomdly of | He predicted that it would bo the policy of the party 26 per cont (the government journais ray 75 por cent), | and material point of view, would be of a character to | December, 1965, coming into power to entice or tempt the South into of them heving sgreed fo transfor their allegiance from produce the most salulasy conseouanoas. About thie time a comnlate revolution in the asnect nf} making the war, He warmly onnosed the atuck on whole way from the Vatican'to the church im ques . and was never ifty yards distant from the Pope's vehicle, I mtished mayeelt of the aomplete inaccuracy, Bot to say falaehort of the telegram. One hears very much of these comilée. who are repated, apd justly Fo, to hold so much power and exervise ech influence over the Romans; afew poinis on their ) Jove-making was much too intense for his taste. Jnl.om went it wo heavy altogether. The uoxt and last speakor was evidently a condrmed infidel. According to bis impressions, the theatre of the Present day did not lead, but followed pubdlie opinion, @ managers pandered to the im- moral tastes of the public in order to hao reenbacks in their pockets, Ho thovght that @ church was on the decliné—im fact thot if was far below the theatre as an influence on the public mind. Any actor could draw am audience of ibree or four thousand persons, bat not a clergymen in tho city could do thie— they were all fail and they were now Playing engagements in their charebes to “a bercarly array of empty benches,” Tr the charch was ini» ect nally abeed of the theatre, why did it mot draw to it ae its rorvants minds Hke thor of Ristori and Dew)son, For lis part the speaker would prefer to'sce tl ihe» ont inthis eity ae by such expouxtere ae. wison, Kean and Ristori. The cepférdnd conéluded, at venal in Fuch mectinge, with a qvilection of stray penuire from the audica:e. AATUVAL “GF THE. STEAMER SUSQUEHANNA, The Vilted Staten stoamer Suequehanha, Cor mb tore + Jemes Alden, from Vera Cruz on Pecdmber 2, Tatapice on the Sth, Brazos Santiago on the 16th, New Orlcans or the 24th and Key Wost January 1, arrrived at th» port yesterday. The following ts a list of her officers Commodore—James Alden, Licitenan’s Oommanding—A. B, K. Bonham and wo ward B. Previa, Surgen—R. T. Maccom, Pay fer—A. J, Clark. Patt aeieewnt Surgen—D, W. Murtia, Firat Lieutenant Commanding United States Marines J. Bishop. ‘ D Acting Surgeon—Goo. A. Bright, deing Vasers—O, Cr Banker aud James B, Wood a, sean J ‘sow S nels, Acting Ensign—0, W. Farnho! Rnginvers=Oniet, Charlos H. Loring; First Assistant N. B. Lette; Second Assistants, W, i Deltert, Joon Kater; Acting Third Assistanta, J, G, Balle, Geo. Taylor Leo Bor teeth Paymoster's ClerkeeJames Collin, Commodore's Ulerk—Benry Lyon. of Mr. Poinsett, one of the wisesyof Southern st no Mr, Cainpbell was especially selected as one of th bers from Charleston to Union Convention which met in Columbia at a time of tho mtonsest excitement and when it was thought that it involved some personal peril. By reason ofehis zeal and pertonal courage he was selected by Mr. Pringle, the Coliector of the Port, and was appoisted a special inspector to nfest the oxi. gency expected on the arrival of the cargo of sugar im- ted by Genoral Hamilton to test the strength of the Jaws and the Ucion. He afterwards became the con. dential ageot and correspondent at Washington of the Union Committee of South Carolina, While there he was domesticated. a part of the time with General Jack. fon af the White House, and was in daily, almost hourly, conference with that remarkable man and with Living. stone, Louis MeLane, Cass, and other rulivg statesmen of that doy, among thera miel Webster, and he then was accom / renewed an acquaintance formed in bis boyhood with that great, and at shat moment mort popular man, This tance from that time was ripened into a filend- and correspondence which continued as long as Mr. stor lived, About the yoar 1837, Mr. Campbolt mar. sie Sogennon daughter of the Goveruor Boo. of South Carolina, who died come yoarssiace, Inay- i wo hters. Mr. Campbell hax not married arnin. PH Tae wo 1060 carne iaiton mn ization May prove of interes’; much I cennot give, t Nttle is known. Unilke other sopesvunteee of the people—for they do represent a large cinss of « Romans—they are not selocted from below; on the con: ‘trary, the chief mover, whoever that mray bo, selects bis assistants, who again selects others, who in their turn Select more. These last make known their positions to the people, an@ ftom their well kuown views obwin dhat influcnce which, being reilectad back towards the head of tho society, giver him a power which is only @xorcimed for the goud of the people through lis aswet- ante, In the manner of the Fenian Brotherhood, there ero divirions of clroiea, wh this difference, however, that mombers of the cymité, or soviely, are known to each other. It it supposed that the “head contre," or ‘or he may be called, resides in {ssuee orders through his assist. ants, whe, by means of a press kept at Terni, in italy, *qake known bis withes, to tha people. Last year fhe oomit/d desired that the carnival should be fticolariy brilliant .on account of ite being Pre inet opportunity the, Frenet troops would have of witnessing {t. Cironlars were accordingly secretly Gistriboted to the people by the lower members of the soointy, inviting them to join heartily in the gayeties of the season. They did s0, and it waeebrililant one, A week before the evacuation of Rome similar circulars ‘were again secretly persed round requ gz the Romans to keep calm and quiet dusing tho exciting times which might follow the evacuation, This wish also was duly On the s6cond disunion rgitation. Again on Saturday last the same means wore taken to eeeure the ‘8 subjects that nothing could ro much advance their for freedom asthe preservation of peace and. order; and that jt was supposed Tonnelio’s miszion to Rome would be followed by a mare important ene, in which the Pope would be strenuously urged to allow the people to pass an opinion on their desires for ‘the future by ® generat plebiscite, In which care it was Roped they would remain true to themeelves. and their qeuntry by rving calm and digoity during its opera- Won, shou it be allowed, That the lant hope’ ia not I'k@ly to be'reatized. it te meediqn? to remark, bot it evinced be derire of the poo,

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