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EUROPE. Spanish Politicians and Their Aims. (i Political Discussions im the Aus- trian Reichsrath. fa the case, as shown by tho long listof ab- | Which, with and without leave, In the upper | Sas it was no easy matter to keep the 114 to- of opin, at prosae lau for twenty-four hours, until, by s suspension R Of the three days’ rule, the second reading had taken these lions and. Rational Rxolusive of the princes of the blood the | refer Rouse ts composed of 209 members, while the on Of Se Renee mainder present is leas than seventy. The Sieve ante the mah house, comprising 432 members, shows a cor- g number of absentees. the receat bill of ex-King George's property 326 wore all that could be mustered, but since then hardly 270° could be registered, and on Friday last ‘Mere was noteven a quorum present. Such negil- gence on the part of the chosen representatives has } Mos been observed for many years, though, a5 a gen- ‘eral thing, the sessions have lasted much longer than E i z i i i amt He Ht ! SEVERE STORM IN BELGIUM. ‘The steamship Weser, Oaptain G. Wenke, of the North German Lloyds, arrived here yesterday, from Bremen February 13, via Southampton the 16th. i i i § il} i ke mats are not al rf ‘with social and } three months, and until now only two months and a oa oa Oe renee coets have again | oMicial tiquelte a8 they are with international law | nair aye clapséd, ‘The causes of this are mantfold tae chars hoes partons See ge ee than a hundred Depaties ‘are Ia town; vet no caw, | and tobe found not only in the disharmony existing ms ie entien tanmeinciorsen of ous vessels are repo to have been wrecked, and pg aah re PAE ey ne TO, between the three branches of the Legisiature, but lured in the pant and $, and in many instances attended with loss of life, The | drift of feeling. It ia’ reported bas’! principally in the looseness of party organization | sutu'as those of Lil Melkpeoet Bont TiN oe Oe oa among the representatives. Those of the latter who | of induatry suifer, Your Majesty ne ‘the coasts of Norfol ent OF ane ‘the in- ool ball from the new provinces evince so astonishing a | We appeal the more earnestly to solicttude for prevent an cando ‘and with suse The Greek Patriarch has addressed s pastoral to want of Itborality, as displayed in last week’s debate ero ha country, it Yo Une; ou nda WJ,resols | Another French vessel has recently arrived at Promenan’s “old fanart as da honored the “ait Creve, urging them to return to on the commercial organization and sdmtnistration | We serve ome consolation from the declaresion of, Your Cire Vereis ak eben 00,000 stand of small to-do with Brougham’s pilin: aes oe peaceful pursa of Schioswig-Holstein, that Count Bismarck’s late | S9remment (hal No lreaty ent oe aoe fogiatative body. yin hese maneied fas.b"in cleverness of ‘and sparkling wit of ‘The circulation of velocipedes in the streets of AUSTRIA. We desire more, aire; we iaplore you to ive notice of whe | for account of the Roman go dialogue, has always been fon the tint, 4 observation, “Prussian Iiberalism, compared with | We Of tha treaty with Hogiand andof = rotura to the | ‘The church of Vastletermana, near Nenagh, on the Lh " Mrocenos Ass beer ee that in other parts of Germany, is at loast Arty years | farts waiou oan testorevo our Souatty ls lost prospects. | porders of the Shannoa, Was catered recently by | ce™naalned’ wy the godd neuer a ston, however, be tolerated in the Oasctne before two in | The Constitutional System of West Austria— head,” was fully confirmed. some sacreligious ruffian, who tore up the Bibles, pel burlesque artists es Mr, Bro! and the afternoon, but not in the rides, How Regarded by the People—Action of the | (im, go id debate demonstrated the remarkatle BELGIUM. prayer books, &c., and made a fire with fn Hite Goren il gepe little My De desired uy micro between Switzeriand and the Zovereia wil | alcnarachs et SefOr® “S| rues roprosontatives voluntary ofring to sac severonnnrnne armen Zaoui, of Tun, carensaree, SP Zurope | gieesast tats if we, could Sh halos mae ere pasion th i ‘Berlin this month, and this time, it ia > Virwna, Feb. 7, 1869, | fice the freedom of their constituents; tor when the | pisastrous Hurricane Throughout the Coun- patching fh eters wee ce niaurs pple t Se infact, Li Mle ts 3 oF ae casts bat - 1856. me, Wi a hears, believed, with every prospect of success. Tho constitutional system of West Austria as at | liberals, headed by Dra, Waldeck and Virchow, en try. the stitches aa fast as they are made, crusted, must rise again, forbids that gratification, of theLatin Catholic Bishopric | Were it not that by even mild reproot we should lay The Administrator as bg oyen alle Keprodd, r of Lublin (tuasian Poland), being in fear of trans | SRemO tos Ob ctsaind “our ofa poor giv encet Bare, the ‘capital of Gaitcla. He invends going to | We would say that a moro usoless bevy of girlish ‘The trial of Prince Karageorgewloz was closed on Saturday, the 13th. During the proceedings he ré& peatedly protested his innocence. The case for the envored to secure to Schieswig-Holstein free com- | rhe journals from all parts of this country are muna! elections, without a property census of from | filled with details of the dainage done by a bes ne 3,000 to 5,000 thalers, and burgomaaters and council- gale during the night of the 12th. In Brussel the German constitutionalista offend the Poles their Trif constitution will thenceforth rest only upon a single | Men for a term of three to six years, instead of, 88 | others of the Institution for the Blind, were strip novices never before marched and couniermarched Fv ih macy rae | een Spun eo nae | Pond i ovr free rere | SSG nce Pe heel at | Heaas abana ous Soe” "| Slice aceite eRe Prince Miche! was subsequently gone into. rel with the Austrian Germans they will throw away | ©ven' f0R, Hqame, ay Were: OP; by the | in the Rue des Scours-Noirea the shaft of a brewery @ modest gentleman in private ite, ‘ona’ to ‘The Greek Ministry has revoked the measures | that advantage for the Polish cause in general which | deputies of that very province. One paragraph of tol o8 an, adjoining ged aoe ine THEATRICAL. PE ied PR Ey Poking taken by the late government for the establishment i praevia ot the pie mecpor Seovitieg comet tm | ay due; and ou the Houlovard du Mid & wail was oR Premier nd ign cjg fund certains of a national guard and for an extraordinary levy of be leveilea with the ground, The public promenades To the philosophic mind there is no study more | does not the intelligent and well bred portion troops. The troops have received orders to quit the | AUstria are quite as ready to spend their lives in towns containihg over 10900 inhabitants the election | gurtered greatly, not less than fifty-five well growa curiously interesting than the moral and intellectual {sof the au which’ forms a large major of Mr, inted to ai the late | “efence of the empire against Russian and Prussian | °f Officials must be appmved of by the King, in | trees having been broken olf i their rege ee anatomy of actors and managers, ‘The knife of Brougham’s appreciative bei ‘This habit military positions appo! them during isd eatdt ian ‘tae cual @malier towns by the distric government. If can- | torn up by he roots; five of the largest of dragging the fiddlers and hornbiowers up trom Cambre were also destroyed. At didates not acceptable to the government are chose! yy ‘ane accidents occurred from, veasels they may be refused, without any reasons ‘alloyed? being driven from their moo ,) and a tram and if upon a second trial they be-not accepted, it | trom Brussels was forced to stop een Contich crisis and return to their former quarters. The Journal of Sicily states that Gerlando Con- tino, son of a wealthy farmer of Tavara, and who oriticism sktlft and firmly applied causes contor- | their proper positions to awaken unthinking rh. tions and passes i to which the electric gro- | tr may be very effective in Ballarat, Pohick, Sige tesqueness of Galvani’s frog forms a faint parallel, | bro tmstidious totropolital ay. i ik has feeling there arises a new bond between the Ger- mans ana Poles of Austria. Bout although the politictans of both sides wish to | then behooves the government to esablish an ad Vi -Dieu in co! jmence of a large tree hav- torti if theatrical hu 3 to Mr. Brougham had been captured by brigands, has escaped from and Vieux-Dieu in conseq It isa queer distortion ot Q 5 80 start i ti .. | taterim administration. Here the liberals, been biown across the line, breaking down the ing and liberal an amount of money fc their hands. The band is being hotly pursued by the | Wve on good terms with each other they ar never. especially Deputy Ziegler, onse a Durgonaster him- teeth ine in lisfallc ‘The express 40 Osvend | dwarfed though it be, that every individ ick" | interest in Broagham’s theatre that Joa, turown armed force and the National Guard, and there are grounds for hope that the guilty parties will be shortly arrested. The Governor of Burgos, M. Massa Sanguinoti, had ordered the reopening of the cathedral, thinxing by’ that step to meet the wishes of the population. But afterwards learning that such & course was likely to produce a bad effect, as the murder of M. Guittierez de Castro was still too recent, he’has, after consult- , made a determined stand in favor of tre Sohies- three hours late in consequence of an acci- wig-Holsteiners, and the aforesaid Deputy renarked, Gent’ at Trochignnes, three of the posts on which “You wish to be free, but in your own nuwrow | tne electric wires are carried along the railway hav- fashion. You don’t want to be placed on an ewial ing been, torn up and cast on the engine and fore- footing with Prussians; you mean to hold on to you | most pe as they passed; the chimney of the antiquated rabbish, your burgomasters for lifetime | jocomotive was broken and assistance to be and old fogyism.” But it was all in vain, and the| gent for to Ghent. At Liége the streets were quite government bill passed with but fow amendmemi@: ) deserted after nine in the evening, as tiles and ohim- and supported by the Schleswig-Holstemers, : “zey pots were flying in all directions; the spire of a the shape, of a news s paragrand. ‘has } tm church of St. Loup was blown, down, and wae jared semi. “Catedral several yards of the roof were strip} the’ lar accounts are also received from almost all constitutional questions. The Germansof Austria, like the French and English, are in the main centralists. The Poles, like the representatives of the less fortunate nationalities of Europe, are wedded to theories of decentralization or provincial self-gov- ernment. Tois fundamental difference of political Principies is always threatening to Dring about a rupture between the Austrian Germans and the Aus- who stalks on the stage in rigid pomposity, and an- | momentaniy off uard, breathlessly nounces, with @ bland indifference to emphasis, and on the lst of Apa moves out to. ive plac fot “My lord, the carriage waits,” thinks within his pn He the ted Birgi feldt, who are burning bosom that somewhere in his uncouth and | douge’ in New York asa lasting Hedrromer ime ‘ag unappreciated frame slumbers the germ of the tog weeks Spat. wiil comprise @ rapid succession of coming actor of the age. The “stick” may be oi . short, thin, blind of eye, @ stutterer, lacking ieeelobeen toca te i Par etercn od A Bg voice, judgment, expression and feeling, but | The preparations for the “Tempest” have been made with colossal energy and princely liberality by Mr. he has read the story of the stage and finds it full of Tayleure. abroad and the’ indefs io ple Sg trian dad, Simi the government, revoked his decree. Poles, however prudently and moderately the | life of Count Bismarck, D: log q id Charleroi; at this last-mentioned | instances wherein the patient plodder in the paths r hans) eae Political leaders on both aides may act towards each | Hanover as the party ‘iselaed, mpon for f Fe ae Cur at ncune Wie tart Or and | grarthas in time plucked the ; Fonlatat a Perlenced stage manager, Davidge, st homo, and SPAIN. other, and in this case tact aud temper are con- | O0t » Jrinaimade the round of al the journa pdlstance of more, thal, ory, Ja ‘rance | the crowning follage of the histrionic laurel. ‘The | More to produce than anything ever done in America ir led immediate result, however, of this modest self- See ec pearinn ‘puaye ye SHIbaceeE nate sa appreciation and ambition—otherwise quite laud- | to ne precoated. ave beg se af Aiereek able—is to make these Aisériones the most unen- | Water, an ly Produced as lies in the scope of man and money to durable creatares on the face of the earth, if thetr | Sieck We aro enubled te uive the prominent char. quick sensitiveness is crossed by adverse criticism, bpd Ke eases bet er reaiers. ap ay now Pras them trom the hiltops ant the housetops | suotue shakey snaton aRUanA ae with the mellifquous echoes of suver horns tothe | Gautban, W. Davidge; “Ariel, Ou-iering Lucewer rere tenor that such dignity, such sweetness, such | dinand, Frank Mayo; Stephano, F. Chippendale; grace and fire never illuminated the stage since | Trinculo, Walter Lennox; Alouso, F, 0. Banga, the days of Betterton, Barton, Booth, Garrick, Theatrical Notes. Spranger, Barry, and these buskined mummerscom- | Mile. Sohike, the danseuse, is in town; also Her- Pplacently plume their tawdry feathers and looking on | Man, the prestidigitateur, from Brazil, en route tor the critic pretty mucn as the noble Honyhnhms | France. looked on the degraded Yahoos, exclaim, “This Couldock took a hasty run to New York to see gentle Yahoo actually tries to appreciate me.” On | Booth’s. the other hand, if the “sticks” genius is disparaged German opera thrives in the warm air of Augusta, by so much as a hint that his superior ever lived, or | Ga. that he fails to fully express his anthor’s conception, Hess’ “Field of the Cloth of Gold,” in the his rage and contempt know no bounds, The critic,| Chicago Opera House has successfully passed its 1g fool, has’s pique against him on account of asing- | third week. ing eens lavished her smiles on es Bre. Boott-Siddons fa making money in the team- “tick,” or has been bought by his unscrupulous Dl to the best house of the season at tho stantly evinced on both sides. We are slowly but surely drifting towards a serious dierence between the West Austrian government ‘and its supporters tn the Reichsratn, on the ono side, and the Galician deputies on the other, and I will Now proceed to explain the point 4 which the great political suit between them now arrived. hada oe constitutional reforms of 1867 were ret from the fact of its belng very suddenly wuipest prevailed. re can only come to the conclusion tuat it a] ” st PI ~ tm Ei, Sa as of an comape ( inition tae Grand Done. 1 secs frre EASTERN QUESTION. e . a D proval im Greece of the Peaceful that while riding in bis carriage a drunken confec- tioner shat! the windows of the vehicle with his ‘Energetic Intervention of Foreign ATHENS, Feb. 4, 1869. umbrella, and was proceeding to other acta of vio- Jence when he was promptly arrested by a ducal servant spenaae, from vhe carriage box. ae win! — rapa Looe 9 from aceon esi cold warm er hag caused here an extraordinar, degree of sickness, It Longe indeed, as if rey ‘The situation of the country has gradually been ei person. is seins sige Lebanese oan growing more and more serious. It appeared cer- ORs ck Clamaierais Chea to Temalar sepeee De that in consequence of the invitation adaressed ished by the city statistical bureau, which abdut @ fain 9 year age came ato operation under the able man- | tothe Greek government by vhe Conference and in agement of a gentieman formerly employed in the | the autograph letter of the Emperor Napoleon that yee ea ae aes iaeBelin foi | S@alteration would be made in the line of policy the principal German cities; also comparisons be- | hitherto pursued by Greece. she arrival of M. tween the rate of mortality here and elsewhere. | de Walewski with the protocol of the Conference and the letter of the Emperor of the French produced great perturbation in the minds of every one and dissentient opinions were multiplied ad infinitum. Under the pretext that they were already committed to a war policy, the ministry would not consent to give in their adhesion to the protocol , as they looked upon it as @ condemnation of thelr rival, Jinks, the leading man of the other company. | Cleveland Academy of Music. ‘The Coming Men—Oharacter of the Leading Politicians—Prebability of Montpensier’s Success, and His Liberal Payments to the Prese—Isabelia’s Intended Abdication Con- firmed—The Bargos Tragedy—Public Censure of American Hospitality. Maven, Feb. 7, 1869. Sefior Tornilla seems to have held his own, be- cause he has displayed ability, capacity and inte- grity. He believes in giving a hand, while the rest of the shallow pates are pitiable schemers for their own aggrandizement, eternally retracing their steps and curtalling the liberties they promised the people im September. They will go out of public view when the Cortes meets, The only man that has come up to public expectations and who enjoys an even increasing prestige is Don Nicolas Maria Rivero, who stands better to-lay than he aid when he was regarded as the civil Jeader of the revolution. He has done many foolish things. He is not agreat man, and is not capable of filling the high office some of his fellow citizens wish to call him to; yet he is immensely Popular and is determmed to rise high in politica) life. Many people regard him as the ablest man in Spain to-day. 1 think myself that he is the most prominent ; but if any one should ask me to show in what ft has displayed marked talent I could not do it, It is only an impression of mine that Rivero may reach the highest place if we are to have here any form of government approaching that of a@republic, His vast popularity and the general conviction that he is @ great man will as- suredly place him clear ahead of the gen- erals in the coming contest. Of Salustiano Olozaga, Ambassador to Paris, it is only necessary to say that in this revolution, as in every other, he has played faise to liberty, and the people know it. His supporters must be found among the lower grade of progresistas and in the ranks of the union liberais. None of the advanced liberals will longer trust him. He has been the marplot of the revolu- tion and has done more damage to the cause of liberty than the most confirmed reacttonist, because the people trusted him in the first fush of success, He ts not likely to do much more damage. thave notdrawn a very cheerful picture of the political leaders of Spain. I have only sketched their characters in Ught colors. Nine Spaniards out of ten would deepen the tints and produce ® still more gloomy picture. It is very dificult to say anything good of the polt- uelang here. They are ry very great rascals, devoid of integrity and honor, and 01 anxious to secure their own advancement. For this reason the ‘argest purse wins, Office and honors will induce any poiltical man in Spain to renwunce old convic- danger to the country. A few active partisans, with plenty of money, can carry the Cortes for most any jalician Diet sion—nawmely, that held in the autumn of 1863—made a Laird passing @ series of resolutions, which de- manded such an extension of the powers of the local and local executive government as would These tabies tell us that January of the present year was extremely unhealthy—more so than it has since 186é—and that number oi deaths was everywhere 1h German ct with the exception of Berlin, in excess of births. During the last week of Jani there died, of 100,000 inhabitants of Berlin, sixty. it; of Konigaburg, sixty; of Bresiau, sixty- six; of Dresden, seventy-one; of Cologne, seventy; ee oe » Sixty-two; act, Vienna, sixty-eight;’ owever, only fifty, . During the month of January mortality in the prin- | populace clamored for war and dem Bat in spite of all this the critic has his auty todo. |. 1c! “pl ~ re Rs Sap ee ora cipal German cities averaged 255 of each 100,009 | which were put down by the police, Othempersons | He is the sheepdog that protects the lamba of age ite — pantewibe Nm again, who equally had the honor of the theatre-goers from managerial wolves, and it ts pe eg and ho ephaaans drama at the Walnut at heart, but who nevertheless{calmly can’ weil known that the honest sheepdog cares nothing ip decisign of the Great Powers and the insignificance | for the wolf's bark, nor dreads his bite, tween spndolen cae Gietbe on Rent ms sngland, of the means at the command of Greece to c: ‘The value or force of criticism is rarely understood | have got as far as Springfield, Ill., where they war, were desirous that Greece should follo by an actor, snd need therefore, never be read by & houses. The company consists of “‘twenty- advice given by Europe. Meanwhile the King} re- | the wreat majority ‘ose players who suppose jew Orleans theatricals for record ors zp Sie aabceTeph: Lewes OF tire Renpenoe Bad food memory, a presentable Agureand afine sors.” | , Tue gymuustic engagements of tue lovely Seuyah and other councils of a similar nature, in addition natural advant enjoyed to an equal degree by on hg husband are the combined attrac- which the Emperor of Russia sent a telegrapht nearly every red Indian in the land. but as to carly yt ‘aval Engagements” at the Pittsburg message, in which he requested his majesty to yield. souls; varying, however, in the different cities. each 100,000 inhabitants of Ks there education or subsequent study at their art, it never | Opéra House. iter their heads that such a waste of effort lind Tom shook the soot off Pittsburg piano keys ‘The Russian ambassador at Constantinople at the a Say Kk. m rate same time tel: hed that if the delay granted to died 200, of Cologne 263, of Breslau of berlin 245, of at all contribute to their excellence. Very fow | 18t weel Greece by the Great Powers passed without an- Hamburg 2:4, of Bremen 233, of Dresden 228; show- ing © cag je deaths in Konigaburg only seven in jen. The Vienna rate in January was 237, that of Lon- don (6,198 deaths) only 198; so that London’s mor- tality when compared with the lowest in Germany, that of Dresden, was as six to seven. This indiyates a deficiency of sanitary ncasures and a ‘lack of investigation; indeed, the city statistician com- won of not being able to obtain proper returns rom the hospitals in order to be grouped and far- nished to the physicians. This reminds us of the un- 8 quated praise we recently Reard:feom the lips. of actresses or actors read or know the story of tie | _ The theatrical season at Jacksonville, Fia., closed arts they play or the pieces in which they ‘appear, | 00 the 19th with the “Honeymoon” to the tearful re- swer being despatched a Turkish Geet would leave ey are ides into “low” and “genteel” comedi- | Stet of the Jacksonvillians, Constantinople with several thousand troops to oc- s, “heavy” villains, “walking” gentiemen, lovers, | ./M@ Now Orleans Opera House is to be remodelled cupy the Pirious, ing” chambermaids and “old ladies.’ ‘These | $04 improved by an incorporated company, which Matters had arrived at this stage when the King, all played alike by the “stock,” except in famous has taken hold of the matter in earnest with the object of lessening his responsibility, sum- Which are marked out for his feeble mind by In france at one bigoted era of that ch: moned to hits side several political notables, to hear established stage “business” and tradition, country’s history players were under ban of the their opinions and lay before them the real situation told of acelebrated actor who was to play | Clurch of Kome and forbidden to give or be given in of affairs, But with the exception of one or two of that in his early apprenticeship he asked nig | Marriage. ‘hat will account for ue mixed condi- those persons summoned ali considered that the Tr, & rich, res! potentate, “How shall , | 00 of things matrimoniai in those 4: but what's protocol must be accepted. Meanwhile the ministry, | jook when I see my father’s ghost?” “Look, look 1 | She matter now? Won't the Parisian nts marry who held a diferest opinton on this point, resigned, whereupon the King summoned MM. Zatrius ai of terior, Dr. Keg whether the government fiself Would bring the Diet’s resolutions before the House of Deputies. To this Dr. Giskra replied that the gov- ernment were under no obiigatton to lay before the House of Deputies the resolutions of the Galician or any other Diet, and thas the resolutions were not of such @ kind that the goverument would voluntarily bring them forward under government patronage. ‘This answer was decisive on this point. The second move on the side of the Galician deputies was made by Dr. Ziemialkowski, who in argumentative speech showed that although the constitution allowed the Diets to depate on and draw Up resolutions on all subjects touching the interests Of the particular province, it had Fo ng no pre- cle means by which these resolutions coula be. taken into consideration by the Diet. In the course of his carefully-worded, passioniess speech, he said :-— ivy Counciilor Dr. Engel, of the Royal Bureau, who, when speaking of the Sanitary Board of Go- tham, took from the shelves one of their printed re- ports, and, opening it, said:—“I defy anybody te show me in Germany or elsewhere santtary statis- ics got up with equal care and lucidity as these of an American city.” Bismarck on the Confiscation of the Property of the Hanoverian King—Prussia’s Inten- tions Towards France. the acti di . this enthusiastic revivalist of, Shakspeare, ressea, or do the comedy belles object to the On the discussion in the Prussian Diet, February ae ok as if ere’s a rig.” peare, | yoker Certain it is that = husband oho French ac- 12, upon the bill confiscating the property of the | Deltyorg!, both of whom were Deputies and head ‘The beatatiful and gorgeously dressed Mrs. Hami}. | “ess 1s as rare as an honest politician, Flector of Hesse Cassel, Count Bismarck said: —_ Lets to ol a nag Cabinet. oe first once to play for Mra. Bellamy’s beneilt —___. " ” ve adil named gentiewan undertook to lorm & ministry, udience on ir next “are who — give ated —— oe protocol, cing: to the footughte with dousious THE WuGBUB AMONG THE PENNSYLVANIA POLITICIANS. the second having declined the task. aving con. s fascinati she said i The Wi = sulted with nis friends M, Zairtus yesterday presenved iemen aid ladisect supposs exten Trou Ane Great Unknowa—A Card the following list to tae King:— 1 didn’t play for Mrs. Bellamy. Well, from Alexander K. McClure, President and Minister of the Interior—M. she said a8 ’ow my audience on | T° 78 Eorror ov Tur PainapeLrutA TaLeGRAPA:— Zalrius. - my benefit nigtt were nothing but tripe people and | _ulle an undue Importance has been given to a Mint ter of Finance—M. made the ‘ouse|smell.” The quaint aud Pann ‘old | Yery briet and entirely cordial interview 1 had with Minister of War—M. chronicler goes \pn to say, “Yet this woman could | @eNeral Grant recently, and it has been exaggerated Minis! Marine to do injustice to all concerned. Some persons The Elector ot Hesse broke his engagements en- tered into in the treaty with us by his (rect appeal, in a published manifesto to the European Powers, to take the province of Hease from Prussia. The Elector of Hesse ts concerned in the deplorable agi- tation carried on by a certain press to disturb the peace of Europe. It is a criminal undertaking to eudeavor to incite to war two nations most earnestly desirous of remaining at peace, ana to do 80, mure- ‘etzalis. atl S 208. . Tringty ¥ A ss play Lady Grav@airs admirably.” ° m “Very prominent men 1u this House—men even who | over, through the dissemination of falsehood by Minister af Pidiic Worship and Bducation--M. te! Booth has boned down lls exuberance of pas. heraid it as the inning of @ rupture bet ae ous ware tee a aa pressed wishes of | are now sitting on the ministerial bench_—have wd. | means of the distribution of money. In the French | Aviertno, ston for the fatr Judlet, which we characterized in a | General Grant and the party, ‘Nota word was uf mitted that a province like Galicia, with five millions of inhabitants who belong to another natioaality than that of the inhabitants of the other provinces repre- sented here—a province with peculiar econoniical conditions—cannot be classed with other provinces, ‘and that it stands in need of other institutions which correspond to these peculiarities, and that this need can only be satistied by means of the extension of the power of provincial seli-government. But on these points I cannot now di * The motion of Dr. Ziemialkowski was that the Hotse request the Minister of Justice—M. Saravas, Minister of Foreign Affairs—Theodore Velyamiu. ‘The first six of these gentlemen are memopers of the Chamber of Deputies, and the last is a cousin of the former minister and not a deputy. The mtuistry thus formed were accepted by the Ey. Nevertheless, at half-past nine in the evening M. Zatrtus received a letver from the secretary of the King in which he informed him that his Majesty de- clined his services. General astonishment prevailed when thts was known, but this morning the cause of press, among a people extremely sensitive on points of honor, au opinion has purposely been spread abroad that Germany wishes to employ the strength a by unity towards @ war of attack upon ‘ran In tits must be songht the expla tion for the collection of false news wh has been circulated with shameless inventiveness in both countries, and which, sent everywhere by tele- grap, has had @ most pernicious eect. Thus public opinion in France and Germany is worked upon as if war was datiy lmmineat between the two coun- of the nation. Herein, Montpensier, with his im- mense wealth and powe otiiclal support, has the best chance in the contest for the throne, and if ail applying his funds with @ prodigality that to tell on the pubiic recent article ag a grave blot ona performance not | ‘ted by either of usin any other than the kindest good ‘at the best. Th but a1 ified impatience | Mnuer, aud thore was not the remotest intimation meanor, who wins' jes commendatio: call have given place to the lstening fervor of the en- | (fret from Hon. John M. Read, with w raptared jover, who is content to stand in modest brief con’ evidently impressed, and it attitude while Juliet raws the fire of the audience to | Pret gig Be the extent of her ‘ability, witch is yet crude, | Shadow of ofenee Rees (end. free ig @ very shrewd business operation of throne, goverament to communicate to it the resolutions of | tries. It is the interest of both natious that an end | this change was learned. but mot d ‘. Mr. Booth aa ca eialin a speculation for a ttiouc, -'~ ‘® | the Galician Diet, and that this motion be referred to | should be put as spesiily as possible to these lying | “Inacocpeing the task of forming s ministry a, | 2,2? play the pact ot Romeo” by no | Made, and as respectfully ‘The Carlists are said to be displaying renewed ac- | he constitutional committee to Da and intrigues by cutting off the means by witch they are | Zairius laid down these four conditions:— means demonstrates he is no actor, as would be = as to the Folitical poliay tivity. The name will probably be dro; now, as Minister Giskra hereupon rose and (not spoke) | fostered. The Prussian government has always | _ 1. Dissolution of the Chamber of Deputies should they pro- | interred by the weak, and ‘unskulfal de- | £4 ministration, and the qi of it i quite certain Queen isabella has finally ey pan yd “ the roy that conminar. fol Seale hk © seerens baw, hy ger hed by eaeevow Fy es yo Cy gy he jon, | fences which have been thrown up for him Pennsylvania bi etewbare, ‘was not come portan: motion, the governimen: mol 'ully conv! all Eu- htt f latration, |}, a vers. Garric! even proposed. earn fact ta precisely ast intone) you some tline since. Page i object bby da mega oA he — Sih ana tb requiven ‘hat the public. th ger "RA procamation ob te iaeaed to the peopie justifying the tie groat, Garrick, Ww m the cridcal world = oan politiclons or nis Cabinet. a . men inean “al lelding to invitatt mi pag iy I cary tater of the Canes. ie ts e declaration of ita views of the morits gna Cerrosne should entertain this belief. Liven in | "4, This accot adueaion to be accompanied bya resworiat | LoUnced the a reserving of the resolution antil the committee should have ‘The committee aforesaid have met and agreed that no obligation rests upon the ernment to communicate the resoiutions of the Galictan Diet to the House; nevertheless, and as @ compromise, tt requested that the government would, as a matter of favor or poli expediency, communicate the said resolutions to the cominittee (not the House), to the great Powers in which the fact that Greece had recelved ‘scant justice at their hands will be proved. » The King after some consideration concluded that he could not a these conditions. Thereupon he addressed himseif to M. Mg ncmrm a deputy for St. Maure, who was sald yo be devo! to his jesty. Some hours gfterwarda M. Valaoritis announced io the King that he found it impossible to form a can paragon telligent and le politic good only in the scenes With Friar Lawrence and the successful mintal in spothecary. | Barry, ‘nig ‘rival in the park was | Seoria" mate i unmale jorea by the the balcony scene power. I urged no man for cheered by the men in the first part of the grave- and had exp: yard; but his heroic were voted weak, 88 | gion but never assumed might have been expected from “Silver Tongued | much jess an humble indi Barry.” If Mr. Booth were the ideal, poetical Romeo, | gist upon any parvioular man Monlous ieatures abt seductivorpression, he woud | Advisers of the Presiden ious fe: ex) res ani jac bas a oF Hamlet, Governor Geary had written, the mtorest of national dignity it 1s to sto the sources whence newspapers Mare, cubaidine’ war to incite a brave and warlike nation like the ach to make war wy Germany. I have many times been re} by the press for not preserv- ing @ proper diplomatic caim in the face of such en- deavors., ‘Those who can restrain their anger at such baseness have national feelings differeatiy organized Don and extraordinary honors, emoluments and one ek Phe crown shall not hereafter pass to a fe- and in ore ot extinction of the present male Yune it Carlos or Enrique, or their male heirs. then, these bons arrange to imine. Cavinet. M. Bulgaris was again called to the affairs throne “of Sg en ied | Sd that the committee would then lay the resolu- | a In the tomate the excitement in the city was ~e4 nok cotiel i! ve charac- to Gen. Grant on the subject of his as filled. ‘They have the proper matifertoes | Hons before the House. | FRANCE imcreasing. ‘Chose who had the courage to yield to | ters most surely establish his claim to | that fact to General Grant, to wn ‘and Queen has taken very high and royal | _ Minister hereupon declared that though the 5 the protocol of the Conference were accused of trea- | he one of the unbroken Of great actora who | 2@, had not heard from Governor in her address to her subjects, Thi Would do nothing on compuision, yet - wane son, Throats wore used against them and pam. | have adomed the s ears foe! at ii fo, sevary Seneral the press has been very cautious in pubshing were, willing {0 accede to the request of tic | aawutacturers Petition to Napotcon Against a | Phlcts avpearea which came even to the Knowledge | Thomas Hetterton played ‘Ha detles and Rerusat Gaiti® orcomoeiaen these manifestocs, | Fossibly, they may "ebine out it | thatthe Sovernmment were Anxious to we mer ine | Renewal ef the Commercial Treaty with | Ui,the King Wodles of troops constantly patrolied beaux and orange girls at “ ¢ city” of Lon- | he would recommend @ particular’ ¢ does rte Umea of the two ranches of tne pretended owners | merita of the resolutions in uestion, England, ‘A band of brigands, numbering twenty-five to | Pons, Git, eutea ia the Ls of | Cabinet officer from Pe Pepys, who recorded the intrigues ‘of @ prime mints- ter Kd > flirtations of an PHILADELPULA, Feb, 27, unction, that Betterton recetved, Jet, instruction irom Da' y cause tronvie, although give themselves but little transpires in the Paviilion di thirty persons, have entered Turkey and attacked the Turkish post upon the frontier. Ten or tweive of the Turks were killed and the brigands then re- ‘The resolutions, therefore, will be communicated Py . 1 by the government to the comii and the com- WD ies demos of tes eonaigences con, Teak: mittee without comment, lay them before the | dents of Rouen are now signing a petition to the Km- House next week, soon after which event we may | peror against the renewal of the commercial treaty who had in More Complications—Moere Donials. i the other side of the Pyrenees. We shall turned into Greece. M. de Walewski returns to | turn listened to the august teachings of the divine From the Philadelphia Telegraph, Feb, vars, in the north, with plenty of | ¢xpect an interesting debate, If the German and | with England. They state that all who are engaged | France, via Italy, the day after to-morrow. Shakspeare. That Betterton well wonceived the vollowing close ‘upon the ‘despatch. from dereenoe railroads torn’ up, tel hn | Centralizing view ae’ crete atono- | in the cotton trade have been reduced to a depior- | . The King has just wuinmoned to the palace the | guptiy drawn character of the ” Prince | Geary denying that he has written any letter to in- ae mails stopped and private persons | mist view y (public opinion in | apie situation in consequence of the treaties con- | Minister of France, M. Baude, in order to acquaint | may ‘readily be but in fluence General Grant in the selection of his Cabinet, robbed, together with all the er pleasant ac- | Gaticia will compel the Galician ies to | cinded not only with England, but with Switzeriand, | him with the dumeuity he has experienced in form- | jeast, the “father of as all by Colonel McClure, we are authorized to of 8 war in 3) But [do | secede from tne But ‘sumMicient | Beiginm and the other states of Earope. The feel ing 4 winistry and to request @ further delay for the | advantage over Edwin Booth. state that neither Judge Williams nor Judge not Pain with ali terrible events we shali | fr to-day is the evil thereof, What le remarkable, | a: first cansed by the prolongation of these treat Greek reply to the declaration of the Conference. feet of a great master in the have written the letters uj them oF the have another Unless it be Monspensier. | bat mot the jess ominous, ts that hitherto not a sin- | was the fear that the manufacturers of Normandy After the Minister of France had had an interview | tiate, and heard with eager ear game authority. Both of them, and: dud; Read aa Sparn 1s indeed to be pi gle word of rancor has been utterea on ether side, | could not stand the lormidable competition of manu- | With the King all the ministers of the signers of | of matured wisdom and large well, were applied to several days by influential ‘From Burgos wel learn m, that four or five persona | Aud even the newspapers debate the question with | facturing countries which were better prepared and the prowco! waited upon him. | ‘ihe King having re- | ence which made his friend and counsekor the Nes- | friends of Governor Curtin to coment thomsetves in have been @ murder of the lave civil bated breath. The feeling seems to be general that | piaced tian they were. ‘To dissipate these fears the this broad difference of principle is evii enough, and Povernment promised protective tariffs, canals, that to embitter the difference by angry Words | rania means of communication end of trans would be inexcusabie. port and other advantages. ‘Trusting to these One immediate result of the raising of this ques | promises, the petitioners determined to prove that tion has been to point attention to the defect of the | the industry of Normandy had not degenerated, and presented to them the imposstbility of forming.» Mhinisiry in the short space of time accorded to him, Tequesied of them to grant him a fresh postpone- ent. The ministers replied that as they had the ‘oyul word that an affirmative answer to the Lo col should be returned there would be no difficulty tor of the managerial craft during hip brief and | this manner to his sup; At repeated interviews brilliant regency. Romeos, though, likb poet, are | they were wi to this action. Judge Read born, not made, and when born are jom fit f wo et eee ne and wrote a letter urgi: much else. We look forward with rable an- im General Grant the Pi cuer n of Curtin ticipation to Mr. Booth’s finer efforts in \the ney position. But both the other judges deciine Governor, whom is @ canon oj the cathedral. They have been todeath, it is said, and the on are to approve or disapprove of the it of the court martial in a few days. intervenes to postpone the vigorous range of hei manly, stiri to accede to the request from first to last, not deoin- decision, but it will soon be given and car. Cee in hot providing the means by which | t porsevere in the way of progress which they had | !n granting his Majesty an additional eight days. tions, upon which he will be gia to rest i fame in | ing it consiatent with porittona cathe bench. ried out. Public opinion generally demands the | {he Tesolutions of the Diets may from Trae Dreie | 80 long followed, and to face this formidable ordeal, —_——— the future, In conversation Judge wald emphatically ;— Pp punishment of the cuipri many | tie purely German rotor tcarath. rhe Dies of | They therefore renewed ® great portion of thelr | Suppression of the Cretan Insarrection— | — Had Mercutio longer lite in the play of Romeo | “uens thing as doing this never entered. luce my Tanepenm ett ean ta | seam tha or tse ary hig | Whi tag, a, pres, teeta | "Coangre end. Appatntenente vw the Prion | th un rn pet anal | cag” for life achinery, expend al a& word ‘ gentieman of Verona jave outshone ‘out i rare ren rr oem on The will probably order the culprits to | Point settied. For example, the resolutions of the | mae Cvery earrifice to enable them ws sustain ihe | Cabinet. comparison Romeo, whose sombre folly ain PERSONAL INTELLIGENCE, be a8 an example to future fanatics. itis a | Cover Austrian Diet in favor of inaive direct | strnggie. After an experience of nine years they | ‘The Turguie, offConstantinople, of the 14th, pub | sorrow makes him po very able or inte! a — Etat tte orto pena stn fe | tac, Ai bguee get im dting | TS samc’ moptage ot raya tnstienis | Sh Bes tne char" sercton tah | Seca Gy tyteeny memane omer | ti Marans gaa enkng Amv e t u eve a8 —*' bee a JO ie the | on ngy ae remedy thts blot. "Hence the committee has resolved DuAlver Of eentaeienane, Gnd © partial rementine wreased by virtue of tho negotintions callod forth ge Mg nna PI, i or yk, ond ag ety, wit, braver; ohtvairio devotion\to te | Feb. 11, 1869:— Philadel lita 1. Ee. Fevterman, fowor of Wis friend, men he cherishes as We (i, Henry Marxen, My, F. Nagel, Dr. and Mrs. Ful: as hisown, When he falls, alain by tie tr erous | ler, Mr. Orne, PE Ei Oush Mrs. Anna blade of flery Tybalt, there in awakened & feeling of | B. Hosk Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Bull Mra, Gor. regret which lies dormant when Romeo and his ‘true Shane in Garkell, Mr. Louis Belrose, Jr., Mr. love,” Juliet, sacrifice themselves to an Riol Gowan, Mr. Chas. K, Johnson. New York— and ‘alinost unnataral passion in the tomb of the aes Mrs. W. We Ginske, ap He Hes, Mr. ¥. y MoOguiey, Mr, and Mra. M. R. Knowlton, Mr. jpeare wo henry J. Weber, San Francisco—Mr. Kdward 8, ‘dal fabric—love—doed Romeo rise to the dignity Cotter, Mr. and Mrs. L. eee eng Ce and trove manhood as understood by man, not phil Mra. George f. Bowler, . rge Williamson, phers, so grandly as when his sword leaps ita | Westconeaver, Pa.—Dr. J, fb, Leonara. New Orleaus— seabbard vo avenge upon the “furious Tyoait’ | Miss N. Pi, le te I Oe Sage gmetad Peta at | GE “Espen ati ents Re im Go crusade of ve 5 ju Fejoice wuen in @ burst of “fire-eyed fury} he sends Murphy, Yau States Consah to Prepare @ bul for supplementing the provisions Of | winch is more ruinous than complete swoppage in bi sup} the constitution in the above respect, a he Turkish ultimatum. A refusal to adhere to decisions of the Conference would have been necossartly followed by a war, for which netther the army nor the navy are ready. Acquiescence on our part is therefore obit ry at this moment, but in Do way the future policy of Greece. The tolewing. modifications in the Ministry have taken place: 9 Department of Foreign Afuirs is to be united to the Grand Vizierate, The Sultan, out of respect to the memory of Fuad Pacha, has lias ree the nomination of his successor. Kiamtl Pacha ts ited President of the Council of Ktate, and Mitl Pacha ts nominated Governor of Bagdad. A Mini of the Interior has been created ‘and oon- fided to Mehmet Kuchdl, who at prescyt, noida the facturers still preserve their capital they owe it to GERMANY. purchases of raw material in exceptionally favor- PARA AAA A ARB AAS | able Gn ota i sea was Re Proceedings of the Diet—Liberniiom at a | /onser td AG speculation, On mo former occasion hi: the Discount—Bismarck’s Live Threatened—At- | thanuiacturers of Normandy, whose activity and tempt Against the Grand Duke of Wetmar— | pradence have been Known, had so many sto; ge Statistics, ‘The number of lea has tner anar? Detain, Poe. tee, | SOBA, tearaerePenceae, Seer yi, weauee ot To judge from the numerous empty seats on the | pecome so worthless Wat their creditors shrink from floors of both houses of the Diet it would seem that | having recourse 19 @ painful apd usciom extremity. some- these devi ause the drift tbe in or the ebolishment of, capttal when revolution began. The- reil- i runs so high that it is quite pe c] anything bat a public execution 7 unfortunate Burgos adairs. execution Pa) take place