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4 EUROPE. Ps the Ninth Likely to Equal St. Peter in Pontifical Years. Papal Allocutions, Finance and Soldiers. . The Disastrous Fire in Bremen, its Origin and Progress. Speech of the King of Prussia to the North German Par- liament. Austrian Reply to the Bnglish Bank- ers on the Coupon Taz. British Reformers and Churchmen in Guildhall. The steamship City of Baltimore, Captain Leitch, whieh left Liverpool on the 24th and Queenstown on © the 26th of June, arrived at this port last night, bringing @ mail report, in detail of our cable de- &patches, dated to her day of sailing from Ireland. The youthful Queen Olga, of Greece, is in an “in- Yeresting” situation, and the Athens journals state that the Hellenic government is about to send @ su- perior oMcer to Western Europe to order for the hristening of the expected heir a baptismal font of aasive silver, at a cost of 800,000f., tobe defrayed by subscriptions entered into by the varlous com- tounes of the kingdom. . The Jewish Consistory of Brussels has bought for #15,000 france the hotel of Count Cornet, in the rue Gu Marais, in that city, to convert it into a new syna- ogue. The French journals announce the death, at Patis, ‘of the Marquis d’Orvauit, whose name has !ately been rominently before the world in consequence of the ‘attempt on his wife's life by her brother, whom the Geceased did not notice on account of his low The Minister of Finance of Italy has published a Gupplementary report in the budget, from which it (ppears that the total treasury deficit, as estimated ‘on the 20th January lest, must be reduced by Afty- ‘ne millions. : The Turquie, of Constantinople, of June 19, an- Mounces that General Hussein-Pacha had occupied the Plateau of Omolos, the last point of resistance in /4 telegram from Calcutta, India, of May 22, says:— {me Brhamo exploring party reached Pangsee, on the borders of the Shan States, en the 6th of April. The reply of the Panthay authorities regarding the Journey to Yunan is favorable. ROME. Plus the Nisth Twenty-two Years Pope— Likely to Equal St, Peter—The Allocations Reyal Neapolitan Marriage—Milltary Pro- grese—Italian Catholics in Trouble of Citizen Conscience—Pontifical Finance. Rog, June 16, 1968, On this day twenty-two years ago Pius IX. was elevated to the Pontifical tifrone, and although an &nctent prophesy puta a veto on the duration of any Pontiff's reign beyond the period during which St. Peter occupied the see of Rome, viz., twenty-five years, his present Holiness is cheerfully proceeding with arrangements for events which will carryfim to the verge if not further than that traditional limit. On the festival of St. Peter, the 20th of this month, his Holiness will announce to the assembled cardi- mals and prelates the departure from Rome of the couriers bearing to the bishops oY Catholic Chris- tendom his Pontifical summons to the general council of the Church, to be held in this city on the 8th of December, 1869, when matters of Of the greatest interest, both regarding doctrine and church government, will be treated of. We know from ecclesiastical history how many years ome of these ecumenical councils have lasted, so hat we must infer that the approaching one will be Mauch more expeditious in its proceedings, if the present Pope, whose time for presiding over it is @mited by the above mentioned tradition, intends Bo witness the clase of its decisions. g “On Monday nexta secret consistory will be held the Vatican. 2o new cardinals will be created on occasion, although there are several vacancies, at a namber of prelates will be appointed to epis- bopal eces, ¢ Pope will deliver an allocution, tn which “is Bo ‘egainst ‘Xpected he will protest forcibly the recently passed laws in Austria, abro- the Roman concordat, and sanctioned by the of his Apostolic Majesty. , The Principal events ofAast week were the celebra- Sion by his Holiness of the marriage between the ‘Wount of Caserta, y.angest brother of the King of Wapies, and bis cousin, the Princess Antoinette, Gaughter of the Count of Trapani, and the perform- ence of the annual gorgeous procession of Corpus Womint, tm whigh the Pope took part as usual. an unusual however, in this grand ecclesiasti- Bal show was that the customary route of tne loag of tinues the expect ity of farmers and wine growers this year will be totally reversed. On the summit of the Alban hills the storms have devastated the pre} just completed for the summer en- campment of the "es troops on the plains of Han- nibal, and the necessary reparations will oblige the soldiers to remain in town quarters for another fort- night. jew recruits for the Pope’s army continue to ve at Civita Vecchia by the weekly steamers ym Marseilies, but they are not always to satisfy the requirements of the Pontifical govern- which has, therefore, sent the Count of St. to Marsoilles to inspect the enrolling offices and verify that the volunteers are really actuated by devotional feelings ry the Holy See. The zouayes had an opportunity of distinguishing them- selves against some brigands on the morning of the 18th, in» wood on the slope of the Voiscian hills called the forest of Caserta. A shepherd had been induced to ect a8 spy, and through his medium six da, of wiiom one was the chief, were led into an ambuacade, expecting to find @ barrel of wine which they had requested the shepherd to procure forthem. A he | column of zovaves gend- arms, snugly posted behind (rees and rocks, opened fire on the brigands, killing the chief and two of his men, and wounding another, who, however, escape! ‘with the remaining two. The soldiers, of course, were | unhurt, although the brigands fired also, Amon, the zouaves was a noble Komap volunteer, son 0! Prince toni. IM The great question among Italian Catholics whether to take part or not as electors and deput in the constitational Parliament of the kingdom, been decided in the negative by the laconic of the sacred congregation of the Peuiten- wieria th Rome non expedire, and oy the express de- claration of the official journal of Kome that the situation was unchan; and the Pope remained Es incipies, wll tane and especially ‘ w jon | nch ica, Who are Cheumemed to wage War such 6 iament as the Emperor thinks allow- Able to his su! have re the supporters ‘of Papacy ie im It th being ‘‘unin- Soypgon’ and Cathotic Observer, of Milan, of the 9th inst., to this oharge by stating the duty of all mem- one 7% — Ry in things ie tage und France, oven as compared with the actual conditio: ada :_Purther tn into the disastrous fire | to Lord Stanley and to teave him of Ital. ¥ ereree . Br sentay dove. tan he warhoupe of Olas a nena oath i 2 ae ites Bers ike Bat eas BS tes | Frente tomes te rruiapaeice tarteows Sent to 93 rohyard, have J eee . ome Heme: The of these ts A tol from Prague of. 2 says:—The Em- tsugessaf isan of ong with the haters, echix opentions (aire, ont eal. tdteh Mumia ecttfed base: bs oni fical Commi ' Gi mm ‘Aa the Pontifo leyer & Kahi mber yards and twen morning. 4m immense Cae ‘all goyerameni. Ines Lovet fs the Ttal- ee, ee outa hews seen Bamwats: J, the nd ware ely decked ook ri the tion of Brened modiaton fas only served deatroyed If eatinated ‘at about 40,000 tigers A | an ;enthaniaste on ein render it more intrica'e, because the nt of & . ught in the Langenstrasse, but the Names tae fi june Portion pe Fhe: tntereat. of she oF al Pontifical 4 ‘eres extinguished. mi Che ¢ y the Italian government, in consideration of the ] I ah 2 ope m5 latter 1 tion of the for- Bach Bea tate A lt ate f rention, wi the w: ai of fhe French troops from the Pope's dominions, The nt fringed this in he opinion of ae conve » vernment, by reoce the Papal terri Aitter holds itssif absolved from {ta suare of oe ligations stipulated by that convon' that of the 18,000,000 francs in been agreed the Ttal han governmt of ; | of To German languaase, delivered the city, the Emperor Felten treet rod and the various co! 4 volegramt from Pesth of the 2st of Jane reports Xb oan ery received the of of Minarers, Gount f Andras t ape the deputy the afternoon his Rogawstl. B AUSTRIA, Imperi@i Reply to tho English Bankore—The Financtal Plan of the Government—Taxing the Coupons. ‘The following {s a tfansiation-of the despatoh sent by the Austrian government to-Qount Apponyi, the Austrian Ambassador in London, tn reference:to ithe: nally to: France, to, be, handed. evar ta address presented to iis Exceliendy'by a number of. | [i Ereay made an, eXcInsiOn. Wn oreo Of. Papal debt, only 7,000,000 franca ware Jast year, sate bankers and edie — eae and as no’ paymen’ been measures. now before the | taxing NG ar atthe ghd of Becaet, 1868, Taly will owe | coupons of the public debt, as announced in: our EN@LAND: Payments made on thie score have come | special correspondence frou Vienna published inthb | public xaucation—Legislation, for Ireland— hrough the French government, which has antici. | HexaLpa few dayseince-~ $j pated gold to send ‘and reim' Sistiecemmiensaen ‘Reform fer the “Reughs—-Ex-Governor by che Rellan ge oneenapent with rendtia ata due dis- | wongigur LE The .imper royal Ryre’s Case. ernment has approved the pre! In the House of Commons, June 24, in the course of Be rr om Motte usaine Ric tae Bikes aotaee. which your Excellency has A the 24ane- the disoussion on the withdrawal of the Elementary ment, being in want of money to meet the approach- | Witi’ (eg pein ty to Je | Education bill, Mr. Hubbard admitted that there was bitthator France withancther nticpecdintsaaeat | eect which the foanclal measures now under dis- | ® lack of education in England, and Mr. Jacob Bright hear the toate ate te that ist rly tn credits shiny teed so SED Of aes Oa hae ae ae ee poe mo ty Lad o' eter, tO Bay ea! . ion: we ve. the of lease: guy, the ex-Duké of Parma, who arrived here a week As your Excellency i aware, similar manifesta- PPh ‘and making labor more valuable. in strict f ito, will espouse Donna Maria‘Pia, | tions have reached us from other quarters, and you 4 Suter of ths ex-ting of Naples. ‘The bridegroom 1 | Will have derived from the despatches which Itinve | Mr. BLAKE moved the second reading of the Irish twenty-two years and the bride nine’ It | @ddroased to Prince Metternich arguments againstex- | sea Fisheries bill, The principal object of the bill erated apprehensions. Aware of the importance on it is to us to conciliate the good will and the confidence of the city of London—that barom- eter of the monetary fluctuations of the world—I deem it advisable to add a few general remarks to Special observations made 1m the despatches above alluded to, so as to enable you to defend the mea- sures detailed by a painfal but urgent necessity and to define exactly the point of view which the impe- rial and royal government has assumed towards the ereditors of the State. Called to office by the confidence placed in me by the Emperor-King, under circumstances, made still is said that the Duke of Parma has invited his uncle, the Count of Chambord, to be present at the nuptial ceremony, which will be honored by the celebration of the Pope in person. Some bon mots of his Holiness, apropos of the royal sposi, are in irculation here, which, although very amusing, are too satirical forme to repeat. After this third con- solidation of the Bourbonic bond of family union the three royal couples, the Count and Countess of Girgenti, the Count and Countess of Caserta and the vane and Duchess of Parma, will leave Komne to- ir. There has been much mention of a political mie- was to obtain a government loan for the encourage- ment of the fisheries. The Earl of Mayo, while ad- mitting that something should be done for the en- copragemiens of the eh Paci mich eae oe et here Was al rospect of deal wi e qui lon aatistactority this session. a The Irish Railways Act (amendment) bill passed through committee. . Parliament would, it was thought, be prorogued in about four weeks. Among the recommendations likely to be adopted 20, with the following speech from the throne, of | tially a constitutional try, re) the ma- | collect ny ing power thi points already reac jority ofthe Reichérath, the government formed can, cot and a great struggle ersues whic! bhp pels — “ ney errpegmnseg Bite Aueropers he. (oreckon with the accomplis: Bhall outbaw! Ine other ‘There are “tue most sw legram. Majesty sald:— fact of an indispensavie arrangement with Hungary, | voices of the multitude,” and, in addi to these, HONORED GENTLEMEN You have reached the end | a8 also with the passions and exigencies of a young | there are the sounds of every & session t in labors; and as the same | Parliament, sh + itself for it very reason | be conveniently broughs upon the 5 time fruitful in results, With a devoted | jealous of ves, It be et « * * The Guill of the clty of London was’ geal you ha’ in concert ith the Without injustice to the tel Tiotism of | yeaterdey the scene of preparation the great con- governments, cting and | assembliee which discuss in full 1 tn the par- | test of November. A meeting of citizens had been consolidating the organisation of confedera- that the Relchsrath, in entering | convened for two o'clock in the afternoon for the tion, Severai important reforms in common legis- of did nm iB - | purpose of enabling the city to express an opinion lation have been, some and others com that self-posseasion which experl- | on the jtablishment of the Irish pleted by you. Ftni which formed | ence gives, under similar circumstances, to the House | Church. Lord Mayor had called the m« in one of principal parte of your labors, have been ons when ted he au- | compliance with a requisition signed by a | nam. set by you in a satisfact manner. anks to | thorities ke Mr. Disraeli or Mr. Gladstone. It is | ber of persons of the greatest eminence in rae the determination by which you confided to the | no less true that our deputies have shown the high | and as soon as he had given notice of it both. of 1! tried Prussian tment, which manages the pub- | importance which they attach to the wise precepts | sides interested in the question of the day began Mc’ debt, the application of the loan ¥ the | which have fallen from the eloquent lips of | their preparations for carrying the m with previous session for increasing the stren, the | that member of the English Parilament. | them. e bw ‘was favorabie for their purpose. navy and completing the coast fortt ions, you | No one has more ably than himself de- | Saint Monday still 80 far observed @ crowd have secured the ateady of this branch of | nouncea the pernicious aystom of loans. | can be got © Ui] it for purpose at a very our defensive forces to witch th my constant solici. | No one Euro) America more | small outlay and little trouble. ‘e are told thas an tude and the sympathies of the nation are devoted. st the inevitable juences of that opinion eueee the meeting was packed on The understan with respect to the @! . | terrible custom of burde: future generations to It is certain that large numbers ment of ti has ia the eral | elude the necessit; contem| by | flocked into as early as ten or eleven Bi t woted by you, to gran & power of | excessive taxes, pay the of one’s debts | o'clock in m ; and when the Lord Mayor roviding in an adequate measui snk" without | by contracting new debts, ia it mot discount rose the thi were in @ wild state of clamor and Roving recourse to any inorease of | future while ruining the nt? Is it not deterto- | ex vain did the Lord ager one, to get the ordinary e: ture, for the advancement of | rating capital by desti that confidence which is | a hearing. In vain dia Sir John Lubbock attempt the mission of Confederation. The necessary ar- | the source of credit? the Reichsrath of | to address the meeting yport of a resolution rangements are established for render- | Vienna-has resolved to halt at the brink of that fatal | hostile to the Irish Church. In vain did Alderman ing an account, in & tutional form, of the | chasm, if it has wound up fta Anaucial belief ex- | Sir Rose come forward to urge the appropriation of the federal revenues. By the law | claiming:—We w! to fulfil our —— No one c be ot enenee restrictions in matters of mar- | ments b} labor; We wish fe, Delanes our hadens, y | heard beyond Se Teectee Gesk, and very few and of domicile, the liberty to founda house | de the regouroee of the smapire, bat wishous were the reporters ‘a family, of which @ long experience in Prussia | bay! new loans in time of peace, I ‘some time spent in over has demonstrated the adv: has been flatter myself that it may coant — saaapeeee of rey A Lora mayor w i and the institution of iom of enlightened financiers of ourepoch. Never- skirts and quitted ‘hall, and some of the qui- the foundation of which you laid last year, has been | theless this jotic resolve exacted sacrifices. | eter spirits followed his example; but the mass of completed. enactment, together with those | Rome was not built in @ day, and if the free Recsing mene. Rul elegant of 2 name of abollshing tm ment for debt and for closing the lations who the domains of the | riot and didnot stir. Noone the vacated chair, gambil tal bear that «moral imperor-King My to place shemmetres but this trifing circumstance netther added to. nor and omic interests part passu OR defend beutrality, the anarchy of the ling. The in the accomplishment federal mis. | still ran resolutely in the path of progress | members for the rep yaw on. platform went sion. By 8 series of conventions, which | sud of oivii it was le to consider | through the fc addressing some words to have received y the diminution in Sp snsansiot: Meheenieg oe. of a debt of three | the reporters, and at last the dispersed the tariff established in the session has | williards, the interest mn which absorbed one | without having in.any degree attained nominal been extended to f lettera. ‘The law on Dillet- | hundred and twenty- t millions ae a object of their together. - ing soldiers in time of peace assures @ more huhdred and twenty-cight millions, of wi ay it moving bovine been thus vin- distribution of this and without ig the | gary was only able to ®@ quota w! Aid| dicatea the truth may be about it. Weshall limits imposed by an to the | Rot cover one-third of jount, speak Ram go! because our wishes and efforts financial situation, an tademntty better We call to mind that greater of our | to disest the Irish Church have been neither to the claims of the concerned. the pen- | debt has con! since 1648, wo un nor ineffectual. Bat what is to be said of sions and ts in favor of the members of | the rate of of the a lonpe the | this meeting in the Guildhall? ee the late scnie Holstein army s debt has been | crises which have each Austria | itis a monument of the folly of i extinguished which you, in concert with thegovern- | dart last twenty years: have upon the | It is of course ay say that meet- ment, had recognized as legitimate. The new or- | im end yg oe we ing was No doubt ft was packed. There ganization of and measures the the of Bourse, it cannot be was a tiful supply of persons on both sides Bpeotive of the ofa. and cae, that. rest majority Of Cur creditors—those Who a of entiouanae the merite of the system, cable to all Germany, and us td ptr stock since 1846—have in- 4 at issue, and consistently disinclined to nearer, on to @ union with all oy owe ad Now, to arguments from any person who was natiom.: The ‘of instruction of the German: | every one knows the of ini al opposed to the conclusions they were employed to isa that the diMoulties in inverse proportion with the security of the support. Neither liberal nor has the better of herent to the carrying out of the measure and every man who entrusted his to us was oS ge ia The Lord soon be surmounted. On the question of taxation, Pomme pened 5 Tp ormine | Mayor assailed clamor directly he ap- untformiey of Guties-on the peiaetete acticien of cone Be sxpenet bis tal to Wha and not @ word he spoke was heard an cot totus car ase ee haw av the reporters, all be endeay- eral oe ee a we per cont in the consols, ored to aay was that, his own opinions mission of ‘and Labec the Cus ‘The Dutch, always renowned as fi; Se were well he Uy a, ak you, honored with my thaaks and those beforehand these risks chances. by dis- | it for Sir John the pe gee of the great interests for the cultivasion of which | thanks to this cal of thee John Lubbock. It is evident that can we have joined the States of South Germany. yo selves leave of you also with the ee FE covered, ee of your labors will prceper with =e in Ger- | w! an and M. Homnada, ‘Hessian Pie , gave the | Sxed con ratioual to French Opinten of the Speceh—Prussian Pelice | that ee ee Pep * Several of Paris 2 remark 4 briefly on the of "e sptcot'in the | period, ae but agree Tan te heey may is ment as of litle Importance, since, is sta- | the i think serum, from Darmnatant of June ti, wi a t, of 2, ay ory After stormy debates the Chamber has ftself in ‘the 3,000, Beas, Roatees OF 5, ue Ue Sapam ae ime war of 1868. An increase of the officers’ | jority of the Reichsrath—of s ooup Pa was — 6 Lag +7 gaa would policy vite flo is token from tho KY oy ng of much decked as She present ui The are much ocoupiea with | 4 uaa the result'Of a visit ‘St the house of | Majesty has deciared and manifested which it & writer in the little place of devel n ap- Tieceafline nt Viena, hes been suspected could outdo the other in clamor, has lately been Ifving at suspected | rassment be, nese with would have futile if tt pha i. Suthos OF cog state them and with which we make at ee — has published verses im honor of King George snd im A As Hoh = Minister Count Piaten, end he publicly sad calamities; for the holders of conservatives of his relations with He went lately to | witl not be long in discovering that ustings the a hear the frontier, The | the best counsellor, that the con th it of the lives, garned of Rie Mempence, weds to iis | grant to an assemnbiy freely elected yesterday, if jouse and mad t Fesul laced, because that assem): ere were hted, to dis¢over which way expectation, aa a great number of papers were seized | b Se tate aa Ore the vonsthueney ‘woul aed next November must by the select committee of the House of Commons sion to the Popa, entrusted by the Italii ern- | More ortitioal by the want of confidence in them- ‘Gran ment to Count Alexander re of Brescl 2, who is now nave UU se ee by pe) on the morrow of 8 Fane oh Of the omen of Olerks of the Town in Rome, but ihe truth is that the Count has anly | Sanguinary cibassropne, {found et the wery outset of | and of the Pegce; the continuance of grand repared for the spectacle of a moral, political and financial bankruptcy. The Em- peror-King alone gave us then the example of courage and energy which the historians of our ni pe will appreciate better than our contempo- raries. ‘The cure of the bleeding wound which his Apos- .tolic Majesty had undertaken depended the first instance upon a definitive arrangement with the popu- lations which claim ali ce to the crown of St, Stephen. To render full and complete justice to tne chivatrous nation to which, M. le Comte, feel come to superintend the reparation of the Churoh of San Carlo, which, b the national church of the Milanese in this city is being restored at the expense of the Italian government. ‘The Temporal Power—Political Amnesty. . A telegram from Rome, of June 20, contains the following items of news:—The Pope, on the anniver- sary of his election, delivered an address to the car- dinals. He said:—Rome must bea holy spot. The Juries for fiscal p' 3 by presentment neasions, to be formed of mi ‘ates and cesspayers elected by the ratepayers; and a division of grand jury rates between owners and occupiers. The London Ovi states that the estimated cost of the Irish Railway Commission will exceed the sum of £19,000, Archbishop Manning and the Bishop of London Aah dealing with Mee tiernret oon he mode of wi e unemplo, r and “roughs” of London. biked css sanctity itself of the ground we tread im upon ‘Teor ee roud to belong was the first wish of his Apostolic Ex-Governor Eyre was presented with an ad- pe ay he A oe rg Kisjesty—ahe first order wnich he delgned to give me | dress tn London, June 24, by w large ‘numer of fe and our acts. May it be sald of modern | Wen he called me to his Council. entlemen interested in the West India trade, Rome, “What she does not possess by arms she holds It has been readily admitted that I lost no time in | thanking him for the ener ong. ability he by rel ” y obeying: that a Las gt ane rebar agen fan as Vatiett bento the a Lerten nai * . | Ment of peace jome was the our | and sym) wi im on the ‘persecution neat gcoasion his Holiness bes accorded an am- | iavors, and the friends of Austria delgned to con- | has been mubjeoted to, Mr. Eyre replied by thanking no or forgery, having less than six months to gratulate me at the time upon the promptitude with | them for their appreciation of his conduct. sufter; those whose sentences shave further to run which the negotiations were conducted which ended The London says thatthe racing portion of will have one-third of the period deducted, provided in the coronation of the Emperor-Ki the Curragh of Ktidare wili be maint in @ con- tained in @ dition similar to that of Newmarket when the bill at it does not exceed three years. Polluical prisoners present before Parliament for its control and mau- are included in the act of clemency. he agement by the government becomes law. pees States Consul is sald to be recalled from Urgent oven af the Fa A rg vmcoveding at otc csr i 1 088 jus ns, have exacted deqper dutica than oiroumstangee al- | THC Church Question in Guildball—Disracls GERMANY. lowed. It waa necessary to decide vital questions Reform Tactica and Election Prospects, Groséciscepernaers and fontey them in such £3 be) r} a SS oe the (From the London Times, June 23,| The King of Prussia to the Northern Parila~ Prom! ae the Moore ‘re wit hh aca eee Wa pa pata ment, en Me arrangement into which we have en! Hungary is, moreover, the primi al tion tn which the The King of Prussia closed the session of the nora found itself on the Mag? Reichstag of Northern Germany on Saturday, June neat interests of the State and of its creditors iy Lae | the latter to increase the ry & tem loss to con- solidate at aten are rect | \e Gueiphic ay tations. Autograph letters from the latter to real vatme, 66 ine cone! person in question show that measures were taken to excite the press to combat as warmly as possible ‘ing elec the liberals were in the majority, agree with him, but our opinion was, inde; of the the perfidy and artifices of Prussia. Count also | themscives. Mr. Craw: and Mr. Alderman Lawreng® enuncl- invited the man of letters to. sup] His efforts by a Ly M. Le Comte, are the ideas which I request | ated the same comfortable sentiment, and, as we ma; poem glorifying the Guelphic because poesy you to develop in yout interviews with the states- | be certain, on the same ground. We are satiated could, 7 , contribute emcact ly to th men of the most free and richest nation in the world. | that the verdict of the electors in November will be ment of the Fees object, At the sam 1 do not doubt that they will appreciate the clear and ve, we 906 sent, by the King’s order, several considera’ sities of @ state of affairs which we did not create and | (0 be decided have been sewed Dy the mind and con- of money. H even hope that they wil Acquire thereby that con- ene of the aon ant ~ ho gg vomais dence in the future of regenerate ; that con- | constituencies + The Great Fire in Bremen. fidence which we loudly profess nad which we shall is between ce and lity on the one hand issue Justi and Injustice and privilege on the other—between the perpetuation of a system which offends against the plainest maxims of equity and its abolition—ve- tween the maintenance of the fruitful spring of dis- By the City of Baltimore, his port, we have the following mali telegram jis of the origin and Pa pe of the destructive fire in Bremen referred in our cable report of the 2e of June. A telegram know how to preserve by lessening as much as pos- sible the sacrifices we are compelled to claim. y present despatch had already been written on the eve of the discussion in the Chamber of De; fee of June 23, from Bremen, says:—A fire which | on the question of finance. The energetic content and sedition through past centuries and tho broke out here at ten o'clock yes forenoon | made by the Ministry to restrict the measure of the | tnamguration of an era of peace. was only subdued towards evening, alter having | tax upon the rente within the desired timits, as also From the London Post, June 24.) about eight hours. The contagration began | the important figure of the majority tt tts * @ * The ings of this peaating, without taking cotton samples. The Stephani church, | support, will serve to convince people of the | a chairman were wound up by Mr. Vernon Harcou ugh several times caught by the ames, Wasulti- | earnest endeavors of the government to alternate | who dealt so freely with all the arguments that hi saved. The warehouses belonging to the firms | the effect of certain urgent measures which it de- ‘ye been used that it ts almost to be believed itze, Boyes, Oetling & Son, conte ining cotton wpe} but which it has not the power to prevent. That he had heard them a8 weil reporters, and lergbie stocks of fipe tobaccos, were con- e creditors of the State will, [have no doubt, not | and who a it to PA, meeting. which sumed. Two large timber yards were also destroyed. | be long in admitting that the measure, which at the | side had the best of iJ by The sparks were carried to the furthest houses inthe | present moment has give rise to so many complaints, | an indulgence in free speech by various out subur'l The amount of dam is catimated at a | is the indispensable corollary of a work of reform |gsiders; and at last the meeting di +31 brutes Million and @ half thalers, and all the principal in- | and reconstruction of which they will be the fret to | produced no results whatever bo; e Gurance companies are involved jn tho loss, reap the bonofita. and Lay 9 ends. ng Ww motes was to tho last 6 bromgE Celograu of tho 900 June—aftera0on— Lroquest sou, M. Le Comte, to read thia despatok | degree ang very little Pho yes ’ NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 6, 1868,—TRIPLIE SHEET. reopens for the for the humiliation of it is Ugus it throws uj intolerance of jish- 10 feet stronaty upen any question 60 the expression of views to their own. would hear the other, 18 Of adverse: and it comes ublic meeting, if any ar- ticulate expression is to be expected from 4t, must be that paoked body to which Mr. Gogohen or.that it must at any rate be made in the by favorable to the views junciated by ‘before it will listen to t to see ho’ peat ee Ga Aaraait ans cul . ing as pe appt Gacaine’ Rachel aa Tully dominiited “tor trial yesterday by Mr. il ! iu i z S44 z 4G “Yea, Ido." yo And he was taken away. FRANCE. The Paris Dedats @f June 2 gives some details relative to the ei mental and of the baa gl Charlotte of Mexico, ly improved. Her deeply affected, and if hopes are still entertained of EN eae recovery no one can foresee the at which it may take place. The intellect suffers, and thas even not continuously. On the contrary the Empress fre- uentiy seems to have recovered ali her faculties. times she 8] plays, as in the best Always | melancholy, however, light revert the past calling back her reminiscences of Mexico and Italy, those about her at such times see that she is per- fectly conscious of her deplorable pistons, that she is not orant of any of the gloomy ini dents which carried her husband off from her, and that she clearly understands her great misfortune. We may say that tnjall other respects her health has become excellent since her return to Laeken, where she resid: the almost constant oi eevery hs vin i , her brother, and of Queen Marie. oh: a 4) cious and icent residence, surrounded by fine ertens. and where everything contributed to calm er Majesty’s grief, She lives there in the midst of the memorieg of her childhood and early youth, and every atep takes, every object she touches, re- minds her of her father and mother and of the care and tenderness which they bestowed upon her. The effect of these salut impressions is augmented by the incessant lons of the K: and Queen. The spectacle is an admirable and a touching one, of this royal family so united and subjected to such cruel trials. ‘The Empress Charlotte has recently given two that she is conscious of her misfor- late sent to Vienna to be upon his tomb, there to remain in perpetuity, a funereal crown in gold, first watering it with a tear of unaffected The fortune of the Empress Charlotte has often been spoken of. Everything has been settled by arrangements a King and the Count de Flandre on behalf of their snd the of Austria, heir and representative of his er Maximilian, In the name of the all stipulations in the mar- riage contract intageous to her have been re- nounced, and also every right which she claimed over the property of her husband. Her mar- riage portion alone remains, and perhaps a share in the inheritance of the King, her father, who died at Laeken on the 10th December, 1866. French Opinion ef the Burlingame Mission. n be Kept in penal servitude for | it was jounced exoeltent. When informed of the deceit the gueate were highly amused. Advices from Warsavg Poland, mention the occur- Sprraria af atay Sounos i seak Jar of ths Sag uy used of called the Praga. Fy At Katzveiler, Palatinate, two storka built their nest for a series of on the roof of the schoolhouse. On the ‘the 8c! destroyed every vestige of the nest and dep and have never since returned, An English paper publishes a curious list of the largest cepitatiets known to exist in the world. The first isan American manufacturer who has an in- come of ten millions; the second a Russian boyard; and the third ap hmao luamense only territories in the Indies, occupy the number eleven on the Nat, From recent experiments made in France it ts pores that hares can be reared with success as de- estic animals, like cata and dogs. Crosses betweem the rabbit and hare produce among themselves with almost the same fecundity as the female rabbit. The Journal de Paris states that Baron Von Varn- buler, the somber Minister, has declared since his return from Berlin that the pect state of things cannot continue, and that the North and South muss cultivate more intimate relations or risk an utter and complete breach. Being impossible to presume that the Baron contemplates the latter policy, his opinions must be considered as tending to the more friendly alternative. WATERING PLACES. q - ~ Tho Fourth at Saratoga Springe—Tho Coles- tials Expected. SaBaToaa, July 4, 1866. The ninety-second birthday anniversary of the traditiona! Uncle Sam, commonly known in the calendar as July 4, was commemorated here by small squads from the rural outskirts, who made themselves uncomfortable in their attempts to con- tain too much Congress water and too many sherry (?) cobblers, Aside from the amusement generously and gra- tultoualy afforded by these sunburnt agriculturists in crimpa and chignons, dress coats and canes, the day was quite as stupid as any other day at Sara- toga. The up-country people, from time imme, morial, have been permitted and are expected te take possession of Saratoga on the ‘glorious Fourth; and if each of the rural Emma Janes should encompass, as they often do, twenty glasses of Congress during the day, Johnson would not ob- ject, but would look all the more smiling of course. But Saratoga 1a to enjoy a real first class, ifve sense- tion. She needs it, yearns for tt, and will make the most of it beyond a doubt, THE ORLESTIAL AMBAS3ADORS, with their pensive and Mraute Burlingame, theiriong nats and longer cues, their petit fana and cocoa shoes, and their array of interpreters, are all coming to thia spa to potate its waters and astonish itane tives, Imagine Burlingame, with his cordon of @hf- namen, encircling Congress spring (say at sharp sx in the morning), and each pouring {nto his open, ce lestial countenance a@ glass of the cooling cathartio nectar! Why, the grand of ahoday and the dis- tinguished dukes, barons and counts will be abso- {he doroue Galesaie; for wnom elegant. sulses have the serene for whom been ed at the Clarendon Hotel, where the so- ished and Foom clerk, Mar. A. P: Pod, late of Canton, China, w: 10 agroeal Celestials, who, no doubt, wiil ve both surprised aud delighted to hear him spéak their native tongue de fluently as he does. Young ladies have generously volunteered to ie nore their ons and wear their hair in a1 during the sojourn of ‘the ambassadors, and old eu- aaa nt wo tong, as tho Celestials sail remain im ¥ 80 ‘a8 the Celest town, “4 already advertised ‘Chinese shoes,” and one that there are young ladies, who induige in who wiil induige ig celestiat slippers at the celestial ball to occur at the Clarendon, Watering Place Notes. The extreme severity of the weather during the past week or #0 has had the effect of hurrying « large number of people out of the city, and the hotel proprietors at the various watering places and sum- mer resorts are rapidly renting their rooms, and doubtless in the course of a few weeks the more popular of these establishments will be filied.to over- {Translated from the Independance Beige, June 17.) Tho Chinese Embasey has arrived at Washington and will be officially received to-morrow by Mr. Seward and the President at the White House. A fact much noticed by the diplomatic body is the ear- nestness of the Russian and British Ministers to ten- der their welcome greeting, they having made the trip expressly to New York, without waiting for the sen ae i Mob, oe Sl Prince Gortactiakof that he would eo receive @ most cordial reception in St. Petersburg, not only as a Fepresentative of the Chinese empire, but also as an Awerican citizen, It is impossible to-be more cour- teous. SERVIA. claimed, with tears in his eyes, my dear Rl dice pruend ou te Pica antaero the crime also appears to have been immense. According to the of Vienna the Sov of the oe ae being informed of murder, immediately left his on ceasiane and shut 2 fn Spe cone senethied by is mother, was tm safety bgt A an g says: the Envoy sent from Belgrade to the y Ties left Paris“ without him future ‘to the crown of tie » This statesman to Vienna, ‘where, , he is charged to consolidate an an- ween France and Austria a6 to the Mocemeriey f of view uring the still A ish journal mentions the carious snigide of settee ere pate “unee eerste os aa to ro enc eto heap and was burned to death. ex] the crime of ithe raging Arich farmer, sixty years old, living near Cal France, has lately taken unto his bosom a wife nineteen. hie first ——— @ grand- inter aged twenty, who can therefore rejoice in hav! ng @ Venerable gandame one year younger thas Asubmarine lamp has been Invented in France that burns under water without ny fed by air. it is ® common oil |} supplied by compressed oxygew from a reserv: atthe bottom. taint a recent experiment a diver kept one under water for twenty-five minutes, and the light was so powerful that he could distinctly see to ) td with a diamond on glass within # radius of six The chief trade in leeches 1s centred tn Paris, to which various countries contribute their quota. Italy was formerly the great source, but now large juantities are ahi from the mouths of the Danube. jeste furnishes to the extent of $600,000 per annum, and Australia gnds considerable Cay: to Lon- don aud Parig, and this latter quality is preferred by the medi ion. The Viceroy Egypt has lately gr: ‘@ concession for the annual collection of three m/ilions of leeches from the stagnant 18 it caused the périodical Inundations of the Nile, Those Me imeliacsly wanted are kept in reservoirs, covery, with a slimy mud, in the vicinity of Parts. French Academy of Inscriptions and Belles Let¥ors recently awarded the first prize to M. Leon Gayiver, for his work entitled ‘Les Epopées ran "studies on the origin and Lying | of al Mterature. And the second to M. Fran- cisque Miohel, for ‘ee work entitied ‘The Er prlack, the Commerce javigation at Bordeaux,” prino pally under the Bnglish administration. A Frenoh man having lately shot a young male fox it served at a dinner party disguise’) as 8 rabbit, and, although @ curious WAS BP’-icod, flowing. Our correspondent at Bath, L. I, weites that the season has fairly opened at this old and favorite watering place. The Bath Hotel, which has been completely refitted and wonderfully im- proved, is filling rapidly; nearly all the private villas are occupied, and a good time generally is confidently predicted. In addition to the improvements already effected it is to be noted that the much-needed dock is in progress. of con- struction and willin all probability be completed ta afew days, while, to facilitate communication aad £0 nA to tee pleneecees Hagan @ new and comme- dious steamer has been secured, which isto make hourly trips, a much pleasanter conveyance than the dummy railroad. A large number of summer travellers have selecte@® Long Branch asthe scene of their annuai rest and recreation, and the different houses of entertainment wing of Mansion House on the 3d instant:—D. W. Ball list arrivals st Newark, N. J,; Mra. Dr. McPhail a 4 ro J id fam! . Y.; OG. dod tamiy, Ontongor TU, Suit end ‘amnily. 6 Yi dA. Jeet Hi Ba Npagen 8 Beaty, reesei) dd ‘and wife, J ville, Ono; T Haina not aueene since Mansion House has been It requires @ pen charged with rose water te fully the pleasant and placid harbor of Keyport, N. J., the attentive commodore of the club saluted the many ladie® and gentiemen awaiting the signal, who re- sponded with oheers. At once he sent up lights that required the presence of owners and gueste om shore. The scene was one of exquisite loveil- ness. Afall moon sent such brightness upon the broad sheet of water that the display of artifloial light was deemed quite superfuows. Although late at night, the prominent residents of the town ha@ gathered in full throngs near. the dock, and gave the members that hearty welcome which the ‘trae blues” of Jersey always extend to guests of note. Then mirth was in order. Daricing made many merry, while others in exploring parties asked, for such edibles and drinkabies as the town pos sessed. All caught the inapfration of the time, “mil and honey" flowed, and the hour of night was thus = tn [than apg AW, ‘The in te a the ‘presence o Diany yachting members 13 and sister clubs gawe much & Tout cnsembte tO the Pet J that the thing partook of @ picture on pl ty inday sens, cheerfulness @ body of aneuspasned yeon en boats og different points to the . Where in the early dawn there stood aligned such excellent oltizens that it gave more eelat to the limited sojourn of the fleet. Dinner was at once prepared, afier which, amid the ex- quisite strains of the band on board the Alice, ancty were holster, though with much reluctance, a ail saitey speeding " towards § Island. the run there Was, in tho mat. diversion, # squall of yin and With then and anon lurid gleams of lig! tnlng, bat be.ppity, ‘80 far as was practicable to note, tl Qualities of the sailors made accident almost un*vorthy of reflection. It soon passed, and again Srudding under the influence of the freshent ‘oreeze the home of Commodore Kidd was reac where the now buagered mae at once avail themselves of dinner. ‘let mirth Bod discrest jo; were the watchwords the ir until late hight when, beneath the sliver LC of the lunar orb, night grew apace and the annual yachting exonrsiog of the Brookiya Club waa @ matter of We Daa,