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=— 7 EUROPE. BY THE CABLE TO SEPTEMBER 28, Wonflicting Reports from Italy, *., INapoleon Thanked by the Pope for : Garibaldi’s Arrest. lore Rumors of Fenian Move- ments, THE REVOLUTION. ‘Reported Sappressien of All the Riots—The Country Oficially Announced as Tranquil. Fionmnow, Sept, 27, ~ The recont riots by Garibeldian partisans in various “parts of the kingdom have been suppressed, and it is c announced to-day that the country is tranquil. ing Reports from Italy—Serlous Riots ;@t Modena, Milan, Ge: id Naples Re- ported—Garibaldi Going to Caprera. Loxpox, Sept. 28—Noon.' - Tho reports @rom Italy are very conflicting. The ‘latest despatches received to-day, make mention of seri- ous riots at Modona, Milan, Genoa and Naples. General Garibaldi was going to Caprera, THE POPE AND NAPOLEON. Wile Holiness Sends His Thanks to Napoleon for Garabaldi’s Arr Rou, Sept. 23—Noon, ‘His Holiness the Pope has sent a message to the Em- eror Napoleon, thanking him for the part he took in ‘he movements which led to the arrest of Garibaldi and ‘he suppressionjof the movement against Rome. THE FENIANS. Activity of the Manchester Police—Scores of Persous Arrested—The Prisoners Discharged for Want of Evidence. Mancuzster, England, Sept. 27—Evening. ‘The police of this city are very active in arresting per- @ons beiieved to have been implicated in the recent ‘BFenian riot, Scores have been apprehended since the tast weport. The prisoners are all discharged, however, as fast jas cxamined by the court, nothing being proven to war- want their detention; nor has anything as to the plans of the Fenian organization been elicited. (Anqther Fenian Cri Reported s Coast=Precaution® te Prev: os Lonvor, Sept. 28—Noon, ‘The Fenian rumors are still current. - It te announced this morning that another Fenian Cruiser has recently been seen hovering about the Irish coast, { The government is taking every possible precaution ‘$0 prevent any outbreak. the Out. PRUSSIA. Defensive Preparations—Kiel to be Fortified. Benuy, 28—Evening. , Kiel, aseaport town in the duchy of Holstein, situated on a fine bay of the Baltic, is to be immediately fortified ‘Dy King Wiliam and garrisoned with Prussian troops, TURKEY. Whe Outbreak in Bokara Against the Czar— Oficial Denial of Aid Being Given to the Leopronsanaree Pars, Sept. 28, 1867. ‘The goverament of Turkey has officially donied the published statement that its aid has been or will be lent ‘to Bokara in tbe struggle of the latter country against he dominion of the Czar of Russia, THE ENGLISH TURF. Last Day but One of the Newmarket Races— » Friday the Winner of the October Handi- cap and Athena Wioner of the Forlorn Pee Loxpox, Sept, 28, 1867. ‘Yesterday was the last day but one of the Newmarket f™mecting. The crowd was large and fashionable, the ~@reather delightfal, and the racing spirited. Tne first @ace was for the October handicap, and was won by Wriday. Trocadero came in second. ‘The second race for the Forlorn stakes was won easily ‘Dy Athena. JAPAN. ‘ Ml Treatment of Christians. Loxpox, Sept. 283—Evening. Late despatches received from Japan announce that @he Christians in various parts of the island aro de- @pised and maltreated by the natives. This is especially ‘@rue of the {nbabitants of Nagasaki and its vicinity. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. Tae. Loxvon Monet Manxet.—Lonxpoy, Sept. 283— (Noon.—Consels for money, 947-16. United States five- ‘bonds, 72 3-16, Lilinois Central Railway shares, 7. Railway shares, 4034. Atlantic Great Western @onsolidated bonds, 23. RKET.—LIVERPOOL, Liverroot. Corton Sept, 23— Fvening.—The cotton market, uader a more favorable ;trade report, closed firmer and with more doing. The Bales to-day have reached fully 12,000 bales, including ‘She asual proportion for speculation and export, Mid- dling uplands, 8X4. ; middiing Orleans, 9d. Livenroot Breabetcres Marxet,—Liverroot, Sept. *28—Evoning.—The market is quiet and settled. Lirvgrroot Provisions Market.—Livexroot, Sept. 23— Bvening.—The market is firm. Lard has advanced to Mine per cwh for American. Other are un- Lowvox Margers.—Loxnox Sept. 23—Noon.—No. 12 ‘Dutch standard 253.6d. Calcutta linseed 66,104. ; linseed cakes £10 Whale oil £40, Sperm oil £115, Linseed oii £39, Marine Intelligence. Quxunxstows, Sept. 28—Noon. The steamship Virginia, Captain Prowse, from New “York September 14th, has arrived here on the way to ~ BY STEAMSHIP TO SEPTEMBER 18. ‘The steamship America, Captain Ernst, of the Bremen Glee, which left Bremen on the 14th and Southampton @m the 17th, arrived at this port early yesterday morn-_ ‘tag. The America landed 206 passengers and a large <@argo of merchandise, She also brings our special cor- m@espondence and European files to the 17th inat., being @bree days later than heretofore received. ‘The steamsbip Hammonia, Captain Eblers, arrived at -@his port yesterday afternoon, from Bremen on the 14th and Southampton on the 18th inst. She brings s large emaumber of passengers and a valuable cargo. Sho also ‘“Drings our foreign files to the 18th, being one day later “then the mail brought by the America. ‘The news was unimportant. AGespatch from Berlin, dated 17th, reports the de- ofthe King of Prossia that night for Frankfort. ° Boreen Zeitung stated that his Majosty would visit “the Courts of Darmstadt and Stuttgard to inspect the ‘Hlessina and Wartemberg troops in bis capacity of Com- ‘mander-in-Chief of the North German Army. The royal Princes will visit the Queen at the Castle of Hohenzollern. A royal decres, published on the 17th, convoked the ‘Hanoverian Provincial Diet on September 21. A Geopatch from Berlin, dated the 17th, states that in e@hat day's sitting of the North German Parliament Dr. ‘Simeon was clocted President by one hundred and thirty- “awe out of one hundred and cighty-seven voices. The Dake of Ujest waa elected first, and Herr von Benning- s@em second Vico Prestdent—the former by ono hundred and jht votes out of one hundred and eighty- ‘nine, the latter by ninety-nine out of one hundred and eighty. Baron von Beust arrived at Riechenberg on the 17th, ‘end was recoived by the authorities of the town, Ip the apeech ho delivered he laid stress upon the necesty of @ reconciliation taking place between the sational partion in Bohemia, It was positively stared that the Baron would visit Dresden, Saxony, we next day on affairs, The Lauendyre Diet has resolved that @ special aagorp- hu - S45 NEW YORK HERALD, ‘SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1867.—TRIPLE SHEET. representing the duchy of Lauenburg should con- ety sprees the union of Lauenburg with Prugsia Should remain ® personal one, A proposition that the ac0Y of Lauenburg should become a private possession ot |4¢ King of Prussia was rejected. ‘The New Free .Press asserts that the Hungarian and ‘Austrian M! g nave both determined to make the Min, ‘Merial proposals for agreoment acceptance of the submitted to the Austro-. “264Fian Conference a Cabi- net question, The Sultan has conferred the o"#er of the Osmanie upon Baron Beust. MS During his journey to Reichenborg ay’ Dresden Baron Beust dolivered a speech at Briinn in sept,” £0 Addresses from the Vice Burgomaster and the Presid) of the Chamber of Commerce. After returning thaake far “© friendly reesption accorded to him the Barom pro ceeded:—This confidence is doubly valuable to me now that my course has became narrowed and more arduous, He who desires to ascend a steep path must pause at times for breath; but he does not ne- ocossarily loge sight of his aim because he does not select the most precipitous road to climb to the summit.” Baron Beust further said that he considered the negotiations for agreement with Hungary as being brought to asuocessful issue. He entertained no doubt of the maintenance of peace, adducing in proof the fact that negotiations wpon commercial relations with Prus- sia had been resumed, The speech was received with enthusiastic applause. Mustapba Fazyl Pasha has arrived here upon his way to Constantinople. The Sultan addressed an urgent invitation to him te visit Turkey, which was delivered by Prince Zagiel. The Queen of Denmark, the Princess Thyra, the King of the Greeks, with the Czarewiteh and Grand Duchess Moria, arrived at Welsbaded on the 18th from the Casile of Rampenheim. In reference to the reported impending visit of the Emperor Napoleon to Berlin, the Paris Etendard o Saturday evening, September 14, says:— Several journals announce ag certain that the Em- adding has gone to Biarrita to present the Em with an official invitation trom the Prussian sovereign. ‘This intelligence is inexact. The invitation from King William was received by the Emperor some time since, and Count von der Goltz has not required to renew it, but the probable period for the journey has not yet been xed. On the same subject the New Prussian Cross Gazette of the 16th remarks :— However agreeable an impression @ fresh meeting of the sovereigns of Prussia and Franco would create, neither the first corhmunications made in Paris nor more recent steps justify, to our knowledge, pposition that such a journey of the Emperor Napoleon to Prussia is expected. The King of Holland opened the States General in person, on the morning of tho 16th, with a speech from the throne, His Mayesty confirmed the international separation that had taken place between Lemburg and Gormany. Experience had proved that the Scheldt dues were not prejudicial to reciprocal friendly relations with Belgium, which had become moro and more durable. A good understanding existed with all other foreign Powers. ‘The King announced that several bills would be laid before the Chambers, among others a measure for the re- organization of the National Guard, and another for the reduction of the stamp duty upon newspapers, On the evening of the 14th it was announced in Madrid that the last of the small bands of insurgents in Catalo- nia bad disappeared and that general tranquillity pre- valled. ‘The difference between Italy and France relative to the Antibes Legion has been settled extra-diplomatically. ‘The Emperor Napoleon wrote to the King, and admitted that the legion, as held by his Minister of War, was in- fringing the convention of September, and that hence- forth only liberated French soldiers would be admitted in it, The King answered that, on his side, he would prevent Garibaldi from attempting a raid in the Papal States, * x ‘The Vienna Evening Post (official) donies emphatically the rumors that the Austrian government intends to con- fiscate the church property in order to mect the present financial requirements. Tho Presse announces that the ministerial proposals made to the Austro-Hungarian Conference are, that a capital represented by interest to the amount of 25,000,000f1. is to figure as aseparate item in the total amount of the public debt. This portion of the public debt is to be bortle by the ois-Leithan provinces only, as the capital has been employed for purposes connected exclusively with the non-Hungarian provinces. Of the interest om tho remaining State debt, amounting to 125,000,0008., Hungary is to bear thirty per cent. The Hungarian quota of the whole empire is also thirty per cent. Thus Hungary is to contribute 52,000,008. to 54,000,000. towards the payment of the public debt and the general expenditure, The same paper states that the deficit of the budget of the whole empire amounts to 48,000,0008., or, according to another version, to 50,000,000f1., or even 55,000,008, The same paper has the following:— An English newspaper attributes a very important mission to M. de Goltz. According to it the French gov- ernment bas expressed a desire to have the sense and execution of the treaty of Prague clearly defined in notes to be exchanged between the Cabinets of Paris and Berlin. It is for this that, according to the writer, M. de Goltz has goue to Biarritz to sound the Emperor. It is very possible that, in the present position of Prus- sian policy, ignoranoe or an imperfect knowledge of the intentions of france would be very embarrassing to the Berlin Cabit It is possible that the visit or M. de Goltz may have some analogy with that which M. de Bismarck made to the same sovereign in the same place in 1865, Finally, it is possible that certain indiscretions may bave ted Prussia to conceive misgivings to the manner tn which France proposes to interpret treaty of Prague; but it is hardly probable that the initiative in proposing an exchangegf notes on this subject should have been taken in Paris. ‘Tho writer thinks that it is not the interest of France, however much it,may be that of Prussia, to take a step which could be advantagaous only to tho latter Power. The unveiling of the statue of M. Billault, the cele- brated French etatesman, took place at Nantes on the 1h. The first specch was made by the Deputy Mayor. He was followed by M. Rouber, Minister of State, who was received with great applause, and who delivered an address, in which the career of the illustrious subject was in appropriate terms, A banquet at the theatre in the evening anda display of fireworks con- cluded the event. King Victor Emanuel opened the new Victor Emanuel Gallery at Milan, in person, on the 15th, A large crowd was present and his Majesty was cnthusiastically cheered, Mr. H. Labouchore, M, P., while recently travelling in Germany, got into a difficulty with a person named Luigi di Baroni Farina. The Baron, it would seem, was not fit society for ladies with whom Mr. Labouchere was acquainted, and the latter accordingly went and told his friends to beware of the foreign nobleman. Mr. Labouchere further informed Farina that he had no right to the title he was assuming; to which Farina replied, “My drother is ® baron, and I will give you @ good thrashing.” After this wo have a tableau in which Mr, Labouchere soizes the Baron, or the Bafon’s brother, by the throat, and ‘‘was about to give him tho punishment he deserved, when tho by- standers interposed and pulled him from me." This is the statement of Mr. Labouchere. On the other band, Farina, in a letter to the Zurope Nouvejic, asserts that be thrashed the Englishman to his ‘heart's content,” and for subsequently asserting that he was ‘supported by women” threatens to ‘‘flog him again.”’ A Paris paper aftnounces the marriage of a son of Mra, Trelawney, ‘better known under the name of the Countess de Beauregard, and especially as Mrs. Howard. The son, whose birth was long prior to the marriage of this lady, has married » rich Hungarian.’ The last Progsian troops of the Luxemburg garrison evacuated that placeon the 9th instant, and thus the stipulations of the London treaty have been fully carried out on the part of Prussm. On the same day & division of Luxemburg militia ontered the fortress as its future garrison. The Luxemburg World, of the 11th reports that oocarrence in the following manner :—‘*® the morning of the day before yesterday the last »tts!- ton of Prassian troops quitted ourtown. Bofo- march- ing to tho railway it drow up on the ilhelmsplats, where the colonel of the regiment er-@8nged the part- ing salatations with the fa rr ‘and proposed three cheers for tho inb-dltants, amid whom the sou bad passed ny pleasant days rhe irae in big “ply, ¢xprossed the same kind feelings for the Pasian garrison, From the Wilhelms- plata the batwtion marched to the government building, where j* fled off before Prince Henry. The Prince, droge in hie admiral’s uniform, and attended by the wmmander of the Laxemberg Chasecurs, his adjutant and several other officers, went down to the battalion in order to take leave of i, From the government buila- ing the battalion marched to the railway station, whither It was accompanied by many citizens and by the Luzom- burg officers."’ A Gospatch from Constantinople on the 1ith, reported (het the obolere et Toheraa bed greatly diminished ia Violeuce, the number of cases being reduced to ten daily. A letter from Biarritz, dated Wednesday, says!— The Empress and the Prince Imperial left the Villa aes yes'erday afternoon, accompanied by the Maré- rs Serrano, Admiral Julien de la Gravidre, Com- mandant Lamey, the Marquis de Caux. and others for Bayonne. Two court carriages and four with pestilions am vice in d?Arios, laced by the Minister of Marine at the d ae of their Kiajestion 4 the stay of the court at Biarritz. The same day had arrived from the building yard of M. Armand of Bordeaux for their Majestics inte barge, and from Rochefort, where it’was buil, a small steam cutter, thirty feet long. The Prince, some others of the tmperial' party embarked in the barge, and made a short trip out to sea. The Emprass and the Admiral remained on board the Chamois, At haif-past flye the party returned to Biarritz. The telegraphic comferonce of representives from the Freveh, Austrian, Turkish and Swiss governments has dmcrnNned to reduce by one-third the telegraphic charge,’ foF passing over their territories of messages be- tweem Knglatd and India, and betweea London and Aus- tia, provited that this reduction should be ratified by their ve governments. Sate The Of the King of the Greeks to the Grand Duchess Otga wilt take piace about the middle of mext month. The Emperor of Russia will uot return to St, Peters- burg before the 22d of October. The Borsen Zeitung of St, Petersburg, referring to an article which appeared inthe Revue des Deur Mondes, 09 the Panslavist Prepaganda, cays that the Russian gov- ernment has never taken any part in the Panslavist de- monstrations which have recently been made. The Grand Duke of Baden has just definitively nomi- nated the Prussian Major-General Leszainski Chief of the Staff of the Army of the Grand Duchy. The Prince and Princess Giovanolli, of Venice, are at Present in Paris, Tho Primcess is the niece of Mgr. Chigi, the Papal Nuncio, The Emperor and Empress of Russia recently sont the following telegram to Mgr, Philaréte, Bishop of Moscow, on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of his enter- ing the episcopacy :— In congratulating you, venerable prelate, on this re- markabie occasion, we call to miad, with a feeling of particular esteom, the course of the services which you have rendered to the orthodox Church and to our dear country. We pray the Almighty to give you strongthjand to prolong your precious days. ALEXANDER, The Duke dolla Roca, son of Queen Christina, the German journals state, is about to marry Mile. Gro- becker, a performer at Kari theatre, of Vienna, OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE. FRANCE. SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. Hoping for Peace, but Excited War—The Prussian Pacific Assurance—Napoteon’s At- titade and Difiiculty—Another Meeting at Biarritz—Prussian Military Education ia French—A “ Dead Friend’? of the Emperor. Panis, Sept. 13, 1867. There isa wonderful calm in the political situation, but it is only momentary, Nothing is changed essen- tially, The semi-official Journals affect to consider the King of Prussia’s speech as satisfactory, because they have orders to try to reassure the Bourse, Butitis plain that, although the King says little—leaving the talking to be done by his son-in-law and lieutenant, the Grand Duke of Baden—he is steadily going ahead. He does speak of taking a “decisive step”’—an expression im- plying more steps to be taken hereafter—and everybody knows that the object aimed at is the unification of Ger- many. If any hesitation about that ts felt at Berlin it is only in this point of view, that the Prussians want such & unification as would be a Prussification,? not one which would lead to the absorption of Prussia by Ger- many, The Grand Duke of Baden, howover, has no such misfivings, He as representing one of the Southern States is ready and eager to make all the ‘‘sacrifices’’ necessary to consolidate the union of the Getman nation, and he exhorts his Parliament ‘without delay” to vote all mea- sures necessary for putting the Baden army under the tried guidance of tho King of Prussia, Baden ts going to vote the pretty stiff contingent to begin with, for duch a Witte State, of thirty-one thousand mon as a peace establishment, and forty-four thousand in time of war, The Bourse here laid hold of the word “peace,” twice repeated in the King of Prussia’s speech, as an exeuse for s rise which after all has amounted to very littl. The rente is now only at 70, which, as the dividond is to gag the day after to-morrow, is equivalent to only The word peace. as used by the King of Prassia, sig- nifies nothing. Of course he means peace if Frauce will let him do as he likes in Germany. The question of peace or war di ‘now, as it has done for a long time, upon whether Louis Napoleon will have the pluck to back up his remonstrance against aggrandizement by action. On that poin' is uncertainty, and the projonged uncertainty under circumstances in which France is placed is almost as bad, commercially considered, as war, T have just learned that Count de Goltz, the Prussian Ambassador, bas been ordered by his government to wait upon the Emperor at Biarritz. The ground stated is that the French government has expressed a desire to have clear and decisive notes oxchanged between the two cabinets, not only on German affairs and the treaty of Prague, but on European questions generaily, This, if true, is serious, and may bring thi: to an issue, Every non-commissioned officer in the Prussian army has Intely beon furnished with, first, a French gram- mar; second, a French and Prassian pocket dictionary ; and third, a map of the cast and north of . in which are marked all the rivera, woods, hills, roads and railways. This at any rate shows that Prussia is pre- pared for a collision. Texpect that the Credit Mobilier will “bust up” very soon, The negotiations now going on for asmstance qn the Bank of France, if they lead to anything, which is doubtful, will only produce moderate advances on the express condition of a winding up and the dis- missal of the present directors, The Emperor's illegitimate go by the lato Miss Howard bas just married a rich Hungarian Indy, whose pame the papers do not mention. It will be remembered that Miss Howard, when an actress at a minor theatre in London, became Louis Napoleon’s mistress before 1548. When he became President of the republic be caused her to come to Paris and installed her in a mansion just opposite the side entrance to the Elysée, in the Avenuo Montaigne, where he saw her coustantly. She was very usefal to bim and by her influence with Jews in London ot him a considerable sum of money, which he wanted for many purposes, After he became Emperor be con- tinued to keop up relations with ber till he marriod Eugénie de Montijo, Then he rewarded Misa Howard by creating her Countess of Beauregard, and giving her, be- sides a great lump of money, a chateau and handsome estate called Beauregard, two miles from St. Cloud, Some time after and in order to get her,moro com- pletely off his bands, he got a toolish English gentieman of old family to marry her. She signed a granting him a large mortgage on the =e As might have been expected, such a to no happiness, They soon Jod a cat and dog life, and hor husband was very much away from her. In London he naturally found bimself cut by all bis old friends. One day he was openly re} with be- ing a woman’s man, and got into such a rage that he took the deed ont of bis pocket and tore it up to show his dis- {ntorestedness. He knew, however, that his wife was a bad life, her constitution being impaired, and under a mistaken of French law he supposed that be would have a life interest in the Beauregard property after her death. When she died he went over to France to take possession, bet found that the Countess’ son was before him. Be cou Bieas was be of Bis rane thes beget locks of outer door. removed to his native and bo- loved Venice, whieh is now free; but the translation has been postponed til] March 22, The price of admission to the Universal Exhibition park (not the building), after six iu the evening only, 1s reduced from one franc to fifty centimes for the rest of the season. Season tickets from now to October 31 may be had for twenty france, THE ABYSSINIA EXPEDITION. Another Freach View of the Prospect of Suc- cese=King Theodore Has Properly uo Army. ‘The Paris correspondent of the London Times, ander date of the 16th, writes as follows in reference to the Abyssinia expedition :— As® set off to the doleful nostications of Count orgsized aa jasuccessfal nia, and hae paturall: Bisson, who, it appears, opce Xpedition to Aby-eat Seek ents the impression of the titmentttoe | and dangors there to be encount we fod in tho Liberté an article far less unfavorable to We prospec of the coming “ver appears to have some have settied, between the Nubian »'!!®, the first ranges of the Abyssinian mountains aud the, ed Sea. Those tribes and the Mussulman Gallas, to the. Out of Abys- ainia, are the particular onemies of the Em,?°for Theo- ore, oF ‘Tedros, as it appears he is called 'y,” te Bl ‘Thus the English wil bare to contend only ie the Christian population of Abyssinia proper—that is to say, with the people of the high table fonds, As auxiliaries they may reckon on the Bont-Amr, all the Bichri tril the Bargara Hamran, all the Arabs of the province of Godaréf, the Chaghié around Mechref, the Galla Abyssi- nians—all old enemies of the Ambaras or Abyssianians treme presenti: os yh ds if creed saa 4 a iment o: of agglom- erations. He droamt of uniting under his sceptre all the Abyssinians—that {s to say, al! the Christian Amharas - name the Abyssinians cal! themselves by) of the ‘shopian rite, Not that he disdained the Mussulmans, oreven the mere heretics, as subjects, but bis ideas of proselytism have always been subordinate to his pro-slavery practices, aud the Abyssinian cbiv- alry largely contributed to people the East with young Gallas. It must be added that the Galla true believers, and jeularly the Chaghié and Bichéri, have coasts teased on the Abyssinian chivalry by making money out of the young subjects of eine, Ki of the Kings of Ethiopia. It is to be noted at pot the people of the high table lands aro, or even have ever been, very warm partisans of Tedros, who in reality is of mo family at all, althou, manufactured a fonenlony for bis own jons, and pretends to be in a direct line from David ‘and Solomor by the Queen of Sheba, thus upsetting all our ethnological notions. Io the little feudal confedera- Sonat ae bis empire is ge re a nobody cunning, courage and physical strength alone raised him above his fellows. 9 warriora of the Tigré, of the Takazzé, seeing in him a good leader, a dreaded chicf, with whom there was always probability of victory and certainty of plunder, followed him in preference to another. juropeans who pened to be with him or near him on the Egyptian fronvior gave him much advice and a fow arms, All these for- tunate circumstances combined enabled bim to beat his numerous rivate in detail. It must be added that in knightly fashion ke himself slew some of them with his own hand. '” The writer in the Liberté proceeds to deny that’ Theo- dore has ever had what coukt properly be called an army. He has bad:uader his ordors an extremely fluc- tuating force, consisting of the warriors whom the more 2 less favorable chances of a razzia assembled around im 2— “+A fow thousand filthy brawlers, armed for the most part with javelins and long, straight swords, with the Ethiopian dagger fixed to the arm—among them a few muskets, with or without fants. It is true that those European sovereigns who have taken Todros au séricux have presented him with superb arms, with all sorts of revolvers and needie-guns, But I will answer for it that with the exception of the arms of tho Negus Tedros him- self, repaired by European bands, there is not a revolver in all Abyssinia that would go off. The people have already broken them to see what there was inside.” THE AMNESTY PROCLAMATION. Opinion of the London Times on the Recent Amnesty Proclamation—Congress Overrid- ing the Two Other Departments of Govern- ment—The Last © ‘itational President Elected—Mr. Stanbery and Mr. Thaddeus Stevens. [From the London Times, Sept. 17.] Mr. Johnson's proclamation of amnesty to almost all the inhabitants of the Southern States who were impli- cated in the rebellion fails im ite object, like most of the measures he bas originated, The work of Congress has been too thoroughly done to admit of any evasion of its purpose on the part of the President. The Southern citi- zen is disfranchised by the federal logisiature, and it can afford him little comfort to be told that the President pardons him, If the confiscation scheme favored by some Of the leading radicals were to be brought forward Con- gress could easily find means of bringing within its opera- doserery: man who fancied himself exempt under the pro- visions of @ general amnesty. The bloodless revolution in the government which we are now witnessing has lasted long enough to prove that the logislature, when @ majority of the voters, can freely override of the national and ithout challenge, the a ances for confining i! within a ‘limited ‘The mem- bers of the conventions which met ta deliberate upon the constitution were not indifferent to the possible oc- currence of such vent; but they were obliged to confess their inability to invent any efficient ward against it, The President could oniy make himself in- fluential by becoming the convenient Re Sagano) ty of Congres. Half Lincola’s was to be traced to the quickness and dexterity with which he absorbed the opinions of the leaders of his party and abandoned his own prejudices. The present republican leaders were the true authors of the Emancipation prociamation and of the vij us blows which decided the fate of the South. Mr, Johnson been as pliant in accommodating himself to the demands of those who elected bim he might to-day have been as powerful, pooenree re acrpeay and Pegg iga me would = prevented him being as popular, as Mr, Lincoln himself— the last of the "Presidents @s Presidents we re intended to be made by the constitution, Its curious that even in this most hopeless stage of his career Mr. Johnson should hopel have found an abis lawyer willing to sacrifice his name and bes, remy by advi him to carry the war still farther into the ranks ot Songress. The Attorney Gen- accused even in America of adopt- ing opinions for the sake of interested considera- tions, and, without discussing the tendency of the policy pursued by Congresy, we may fair! it is for- tanate for the country that some of its chief legal authorities are not afraid to protest against the informal Saee of the essential wes on which the republic is ‘It has always been insisted, by every constitu- tional writer in America, that no duty could ever more solemnly upon the nation than the duty of pro- serving its written law intact, or of altering it only with the consent of three-fourths of the States, If the lawyers of high standing at the present day unite in casting dig- credit upon this principie a stable and fixed central gov- eroment would be indefiaitely postponed. The men who have made themselves famous at the bar, with but few exceptions, have opposed the assumption of ail the functions of government by Congress with an carnest- ness which we may suppose would have animated Kent and Story in the samo thankl task. They have all suffered in their own localities pery is the only one who has had to bear ii sp ofthe nation. * * * Mr. Thaddeus Stevens has re- cently made the sin, admission that if the federal constitution applies to the Southera States all the work of Congress in connection with reconstruction is mere usurpation, No one has yet pretooded that there is any power in the constitution by which portion of tne States once admitted into the Union can, by a vote in the legisiature, deprive the other States of their privi- leges under the national law, and set up instead an irro- sponsible military Lyon It is no wonder, then that lawyers ike Mr, Stanbery should persistently af- firm that the constitation has been violated, that the tribunals m the South are unlawful, and that the laws lacely will carry authority 20 long only as they are enforced at the point of the bayonet, THE POSITION OF THE SOUTH. The South Without Protection fer Property or Redress for Griovances—Their Position Under a Tyranny—Tho People at Bay. - {From the London Times, Sept. 17. Je position of the excluded States during this discus- jon will be memorabie in all fature bistory. They know Jaw ia any form, and no means for re- PRUSSIA. Discontent with the Reval Speech—Nothing Said About South Goermany—War Propns in France] Fortifications Erected and Cannon Mounted. The Berlin correspondent of the Londoa Morning Herald, ander date of Septembor 13, writes as follows:— The royal with which the Imperial Diet was opened on the met. has excited discontent, espe cially by ita silence a4 to the relations towards South Germany and by only designating the political state Vbings in @ general way as being satii » The son of the former errowms! the a condt- Lot L. Fey latter I . one a a Toogk of che Norms Cuipen Wit genize Which Ox” ei cing on an . ° NEWS BY THE CUBA CABLE. ° ~ CUBA. eee eee. ¢ entirely belonging to the only impolitic, bat out was no reason to the iteat state of Europe, because the Imperial Diet hag Soteing whatever to do with thia,+ In reference to the political situation of Europe, it was only possible to express a vs confidence that the’ work of for the accomplish. Cacia wusted end Mavic, peace, ment of which the Imperial Dict has been couvoked, Havana, Sept. 27, 1867. would be achieved ai . Bi . . Preasing this confidence Oe cid toe ese Ri The sugar market is murg active, on the basis of 8% @ would have done by the most elaborate discussion of | 8% reais per arrobe for Ne. 12 Potatoos 444. Oulon 6)4. Bacon 6%. Kxchange uMltored. the political s:ate of Europe; for that confidence is Arrived, steamer Cuba, from NW Orleans. Chartered, — brn a4 the a eoavicticn that the national movo- * molass y Seo mow Bo more to apprehend e97 | postin brig Eliza, to load “6 for New York ab $3 60 per hogshead. * ser us checks, since in the North German Confederacy it has [ound its regular wheel, and that the diplo- oan ayes are serine iy Sombie 2 the work; bac amaayar ’ Partly on the consciousness ssia Povsesses & defensive fored svhich permits ber.to look forward with PORTO RICO. Perfect tranquillity to any future event, Earthquake—Disastrous Frestset, Poxto Rico, Sept. 14 via Havana, Sept. 27, 1067. Meanwhile the comrast which has here been occasion- A shock of earthquake was felt at Rio Peidros om the ally preserved between the words and actions of the French government to assume an aspect more 7th. A freabot has occurred in the Pouce river, causing much damage and the loss of one tile. future would have beon not of taste; moreover, there and more singular, vellers who are fom France and have no reason for Tnlsrepresenting, tacts unanimously affirm that France is asming. This, Mdeod, is nothing new; but in the {ace of such proceedings it behoves not to remain inactive. ‘Tho distimen of cortaln-age calagories from the army, or their be! ference, The principal thing ls tbe fortdeation bors, © princi) ing @ fortification the soppizing of the fortresses with stores, the accumu- lation of provisions and the purchase of horses, and in. all these departments France is now forming most en one ‘The purchases of grain, above all of oats, in Italy, has long ago excited attention in that country and led to requisiti extending as far as the South of Germany. The term of delivery is short, and the principal condition of the contracts is a speedy delivery at Marseilles, whence the oats are forwarded by railway to Lyons, Froyburg, Nancy and the North. In Strasburg te @ quantities of flour have lately bocm introduced, The forti! ions of Belfort are still being assiduously strengthened, The detached forts block up the roads. The entrenched camp erected at that place commands the valleys of the Rhine, the Moselle and the Sadne. It is distant only twelve hours from the Rhine and four hours from the frontier of switzerland. ‘The French attach much importance to this position, because @ turning of the left wing is, in consequence of the Jarge number of lakes north of Belfort, possible only by ST. DOMINGO. t Phe Treaty with Heyti Ratified—Hetura of the Dowtnican Commissioner frem the Untied Staces. Sr. Dommao, Sept, 16, via Havana, Sept, 27, 1667. ‘Tho National Congress approved the treaty with Hayt# on the'Sd fost, Eugone Smith arrived here en the Gib with tho treaty negotiated with the Umited States. * Goneral Cabral arrived at the capita? en the 8th, aa@ the Hay tian Commissioners reached here en the ita, THE DOMIMON OF CANADA. of the Excemtive Conucii—Probe= bility of a Move i» Parliameut Vavoring the Admissi: ef the Hudsen Buy Terrt- tory to the Confederation. Penetrating deeply into the mountains, while a turnii of the right bo would have to ce ean per Orcawa, Ca, Sept. 28; 1867. - from Basle as a starting point, for instance, via All the mombers, oxsept Messrs, Campbell, Mitchell’ Delile, on the road to Montbeliard. The rail- way from Paris also passes close to Relfort, Ever the year 1860 great efforts have been made for strengthening this position. To the fort Dos Barras strategists attach a peculiar value, The Doubs Valley, between the Voghesi mountains and the Jura towards the Rhine, is closed by this group of for- tiflcations, The forts of Strasburg are not less assidu- ously perfected. Even laborers from Baden have been hired for the purpose, The Fourteenth battalion of Chasseurs was expected to arrive there from Chalons. It is eaid that the garrison is already armed with Chasse- pot guna, This is open to doubt; probably springfield ung are meant; they have transformed on the berta’ system. Somebody who passed through this, on bis way from Strasburg, affirmed that the ipbabit- ants of the tewn were themselves ed at those warlike preparations, On the ramparts it was easy to recognize the new cannon, There, too, are mysterious and Archibald, were present a the meeting of the Executive Council yosterday. The day of meoting for the Parliament cf Canada has been decided upon and referred to the Governor-General’ for his sanction. # { Hon. Mr, McDougall, in a epeoch at a concert last ni said he bad received a communicstion from a pol itl. cian in Newfoundland, stating that the Parliament aboet to assemble there would pass resolutions asking admis— sion into the Confederation. Algo that at the ecasion soon to be held at Ottawa resolutions would be passed, and sanctioned by the imperial government, admitting the Hudson Bay Territory. > THE SURIES OF THE STATE OF TEXAS. Order of General Mower in Regard to Drawe exerciges with @ new sort of cannon in ‘That ing Jurors, many French officers familiar with the German lan- . Naw Onieans, Sept. 28, 1967. guage are at present travelling in North for General Mower issued an order to-day modifyieg the purpose of paying strict attention to all military arrangements in Prussia, aod cussed as a well known fact. THE GERMAN ARMY. Military Strength and Immense War Power of Fatherland. (Berlin (Sept. 12) correspondence of the Cologne Gazette. } The military strength of the army of the Northern con- federation, including the Grand Duchy of Hesse, is im- posing in every respect, and does not,exist, like that of the late Germanic confederation, on paper only. Ac- cording to the arrangement of the contingents it will ing, eld troops, not including the siege artillery include, on a war footi Firt—Fi which may be formed and the reserve pontoon by ~) 11,950 officers, 497,573 petty officers and men, 152, military orders relative to the juries of the State of Texas, so a8 to render it practicable to obtain juries ta that State, The order roquires Jurors to be drawn from those registered and none others; and no other oath ia of reporting them, ts dis- PLAS cal Erol CONSERVATIVE MEETING IN RALEIGH. f Ramah, N, 0., Sept. 28, 1967, A conservative meocting. wag held here last sight Five or six speeches wore over 9 aaa bharmeay and enthusiasm were manifested, F iT The Champion Colors tt Connecting: horses, 1,284 wagons. River, * "Seond Tropa at ihe. dents, 44TF officers, 188,000 Sentscyra, Mean, Sept, 28, 10007 men, 22,955 horses and guns. A three-mile race on the of this food eine inary garrisons, 4,066 officers, 143,146 men, eftornes = ee ene ae river, ‘Pourth—Othor mili remaining inthe country, | boats, was won by the former ig 10: rz oticors, 6,100 men, 1200 horses. beara acho Sst ‘Thus at the first moment of the mobilization there will FIRES IN NEW Yi be placed on foot pie 834,433 rank and file, pl onl 178,014 horses, 1,504 guns, and the wagons above men- | reg rm Broapwar.—About eleven ‘To those forces may also be added :— last night 0 fire was the bat qud cap ifth—The remainder of the garrison in fortrosses:— 1,688 officers, 57,658 mon, 30,141 horses und about 160 guns, which makes a total of 22,653 officers, 802,141 men, 209,055 horses, 1,654 guns, and 12,873 wagons. ‘The peace offective is 270,000 rank and file, besides offi- cers; the duration of service is three years; the four years of the reserve include, a deduction of twenty per cent being made for non-effectives, 288,000 men, to No, 755 Broadway, owned by John L, Prime, The Of the store were destroy: which number must be added 315,000 men disposable of supposed to be about $6,000 the landwehr, which forms, with the permanent army | sured. The store had only of 300,000 men, in all 903,000. time when the fire was discovered. In addition to these forces are those of the three States | found burning ina stove at the of Southern y—Bavaria, Wurtemburg and Ba- | near which the fire originated, but den—which are united to Prussia by offensive and de- resent unknows, The adjoining fonsive treaties, They consist of about 102,000 men in | of Eighth street, is occupied by the ngs ee in the depots, and 226,564 in the garri- sons, those of the Northern confederation with ‘Hesse are only taken at 892,141 men, that makes a total to force of 1,101,241 besides 28,060 officers. cere oon oo THE PAN-ANGLICAN SYNOD. er Mowe ooo ea Tho London Times on the Council—Anglican England—The Synod Accom- (From the London Times, Sept. 17.] The Pan-Anglican Synod, as it ‘been rather idly termed, is certainly in one respect an interesting assem- bly. It itlustrates the remarkable manner in which the Lo | Church bas been recently copied in communities of English descent, The Bishop of Louisiana, in the ad- Fine w East Tarety-sixta, x twolve o'clock a fire broke out in the 12 East Thirty-sixth street, owned and ocoupted by ress we reported yesterday, observed that before the | Wakely. It is au to be the work of aa Geciarstion ot Independence thero was nota single Angli- | The damage to building and stock wil! be can bishop om the American continent. He has discov. | $1,000; insured. There wore eight horses in the ered indood that this omission was the chief cause of | Sl! of which were oxtricated from the burning the sacceas of the United Statos in their revolt from our | injured by the police and flremon, a ailegiance. If this be a tradition of American episcopacy it must be regarded, we fear, as another instance of Fiae mm Waer Twarrr-rirra Sreeet.—Aboat half- ten o’clock yesterday morning a fire broke out in the “‘unhistorical” character of theologians. It is to be this is mot an Pvcn gp the way | ‘welling apartments of Mary Tierney, No, 612 Weed in which history has been manufactured by | Twenty-fifth street, and before the religious writers, However, the fact remail that | guished her within a century there was not a single Anglican bishop beyond these realms, There aro now no less than forty- three bishops of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States, deriving their succession from our own bishops, and as many as forty-eight bishops in our colonies. . ‘ Bee rg bag! churchmen has had oye passion of years exporting bishops mother country. Some of these have taken root, Some have found tho climate ungenial, have either died out or are lingering through a hopeless stage of decline. What may be the result with these forty-eight bishops pert: rT 10d to the extent of $: was damaged to bpven tee B00 i the ge aoe e Company, e bui owned . Rafferty; about $100, and fp le f villas AcUelrersn! Bxnenttton, Parte, 1867 8 mo Pasi RIUMPUANT. 19078 awarded the FIRST GRAND GOLD MEDAL for Ai can pianos in all three styles exhibi! this medal distinetly classified first in order of mer! verdict of the international a 3 Warervoms, Nos. 109 and {11 Fourteentp streets: — Rot — iP — pag mee little roe — Bie pte copy jurch jngland, sent out from hom —l ety mum ne like an iron church, “to be put together om the spot." sévenscuity ‘Wanufacturer, 11% ‘frssau surges. ‘The result ts that this episcopate now outnambers our own, * * * What remains, then, to justify all thie Address Polini: & Son, apparatus of special services and private prayers issued | Manu rere nrg pd Goods. wan authority, and tho ambitious title of | Moved ‘imont article at lowest, prion wit! episcopal a Pan-Anglican Synod? Nothing, it seems, but a fow details of diocesan for which, after ail, arrangement done. Boul the assembly is not competent. Thore is, it is La fapesiialieeditlanncinaenaameatty mag jassan. Wi ued fue rei in, whcionin an ray another much spoken of by the * Anam filet pw nothing surp the Synod. It is the reunion of Chi fom and the | giisiiva Bey Rom Dockuleceior nese)” Semper ether eae furtherance of “intercommunion,” It ja hard to sce | “qual oany made. Salcervom 32 Fark row. UST tas cecretere’ roisin their ection for sen ‘ oan, Ree “ ir for eaci emit at other, but ft is not apparent how the pat ae: | wik'te ineantty Rises SP hay Pavan! Taine mestic a! can led as any sign of eral | expense. at WO) iJ 2... Chatham square, iain Petty aya rh ead at | Yi. bison, WoLdOar Nara PA bome out ing le any advance aunion "7 A i with other familie, ‘The truth is that here again the | Pure white wrappers. Leok twice at the wi would Synod has debarred itself from the only sutgect advance ts istendom was divided by differences of doctrine, and if it is to be again united it must be by again recovering a substantial unity of doctrine. This is the pomt to which all endeavors ‘are and must be directed. We cannot but foel some cu- role A-<Kaldenbera & Sen ‘finoatton, t to order, repair, boll, 40. 23 Wall and 6Jobke: s ‘. BLT Oey, Beste ri therefore, whether or no the bishops feel quite Bee fanetica with ition. The Synod will ‘meet with io — Boots, tts hands tied It is to promote the unit | 4 soe: Boon ‘without considering a awl jew Store and New promote reunion without ing Shoes, Gaiters and Slippers of every wxstetg, union, te ee ie ht deem madeent eat te nen eee cry penn oamtnones of jomailty 878 Broadway, opposite Metropolitan Hotel, < / effect on little children. Is such a spectacle edi ishment, corner avenue street. uth gat vfebeaty Tuesday, from 9 A. WEWS FROM FORTRESS MONROE, Fortunes Monnoa, Sept. 27, thor, | vEBRROBEY ri Sistet De alttth te pene s Botwoon the lst and 10th of nexth month the gunboa: | Moreen er Curch and pablie aang Agawan (double ender) and the rebel rams Toxas and Be ne eames ee a on ce, Gum Columbia will be sold at the Gosport Navy Yard, ie ot the Acaders Para; sont tree aS ‘The United States gunboat Marblehead arrived at the Scrofulous iy Meaes Deck Gosport Navy Yard yosterday and went into the dry N 1 lag strosh, dock to execute some repairs, preparatory to sailing tor Say ery A. Me ny Hany Son the Gulf squadron. CLOSE OF THE WISCON TATE FAIR. MILWAUKEE, Sept 28, 1967 and js pronoanced a for tho week were $11,000 about the samo as last year, INTERNAL REVENUE RETURNS IN MASSACHUSETTS, ‘Tho Sprin gfeld (Mass) Republican states that the as. fignments for tho Internal Revenas in the Tenth dis- trict in that State for August exceeded that for July by over $80,000, the amount boing $131,506 against $100,400, The manufacturers have generally made ed 28 Omen bn Now of Waser 38 Pini | sales of their goods, althongh pricos have not sensibly, beon enhanced, bat rather the contrery, on CALENDAR OF THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR MONDAY, Auaant, N.Y, 1967, The (ollowing is tho day onlondar ve the Sour it himeaase =