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“NeW YORK HERALD: ruESDay, TONE 29 id08 PLR Sifter. 4 oman : , 2 pa Ra eS? pene — 4 sinisterial organs, iL by mment view of things just now, Thear; but more rT a THE GOUND, cite se cece piel ict, sinsng, "and BUROPE. te majortty ‘of Tne Commons, that tho dleuse: of ot anon, Teint oe vom ou enough of ATEEOBANAY EGY ASANO os on * } sim spans Stace Sacale rer at : tare, but must: may orinns to the wiih at re, reek urevioua. to the*aigotion Expecter Visit of Prince Alfred—Tho Recipro~ srt pind nes oer a Sottesl meen beeerantesstnemetst | Gastcetsstlan amet iceattae es vem | sty sent Soades 0f Conte siaver— - find, ap they urually do, made it rather wnatieaetive ENGLAND. nd leaves Nn ee tacds | aoa, dockatea ta so ea ide a ascorpt et weary |) The Leeder of the Late Reboilion—Krightial y HH Ri d Back on | 2 gentiemen wht like io ae ae a asa throw tile affalne that we care This is good proof that {he || Sprend ef Loprowy—Abuse of Seamon—Spéc- Lhe Trip to Fall River an : by thous having to risk any 0 boat The Coming Conflct—Boldness of the Lords nothing ladstone party; but they re begin ming to take 8 leading Interest in | ulations About the New Minixter from tho the Steamer Providence, , were Giways on the alert for the bowler | and Cowardice.of the Commens—The Ne- | Mi not, grities,, Way, then, send ‘off paper ‘of the brain, rather | United Statos, HonoLuiu, May 28, 1960, 3 sualy inclined. (ui j cossity of am Klective House ef Peers. @ vil to or: ans the Bat few passengers on the arrivat of the i Lonpon, aoe 1 ee gs rw h yi ss Py is ee SCENES AND INCIDENTS ON BOARD. | eer, Godse ee tee ee a ane Eisai the ata Hote at Lave will nave paved viak of his Royal Highness Prinoé Alfred to these tslands. The question which now Agitates those most interested is eato. whose guest he is to be, Itis thought that being a member of the royal family of Great Britain-he 1s properly a guest of his Majesty, and upon this. basis arrangements are being ‘of | made for his reception, Fears have been entertained by some that his Majesty might need relief from the cares of State’ about the ‘tinle the Princo was ex- ce | pected, and step on board’ his yacht for a trip tohis - | country residence on Molokal.’ ‘It’ will be remem- bered that this was his course ‘when the United popelar Wil, strongly | of s'moss dariag amémbers-soross the atiantio im | St2tes, steamship Vanderbilt was expected with do Bae vane Saturday ahd Sun- | acted upon. the motion for the second reading of the 4 Fr Ra ig ¥ few persons vcard ‘on the | Irish Churob, bill, and the decision will have been decks after ten v'clock, and everybody butthedemt- | made between that direct rejection of the measure How the Band Plays and’ What’ the itso NS Pa aa oe Gantadaaadiabenmanh ated mis conen Passengers Do, Oa arateresses om oot on-the |. dicnt of killing t by,amendments which finds favor. to ten 0% a The return from. Fali River was very crowded, and tbe timorous opponents, It is orchestra up 7 willed aay ihe me | the: eyes of Ate more ° om with @ “sacred concert, programme:— Wr a} unnecessary, therefore, to follow the English jour- esti nale in their calculations of the relative atrength of . the conciliation and anti-conciliation parties, and their, .predicuons as to whether the bill will .or will, not be suffered to -go into commitice. Indeed, it . seems to he of “Does that faclude stuffn’, boss Xt was Saturday afternoon, June 19, and the Sound steamer Providence was about to leave for Newport and Fall River. There was a crowd of grange women and newsboys and bootblacks and : froma visit to the five cent cigar vendera on the pier, who kept up an very little practical importance, ao faras the ultl- | expressed; but » 80, regardless of.{ midwinter, has yastly added to its renown, this | Queen Emma, on her return incian aa, aovng fo i et, rey ine he the Htbabed Ohoh i sand | Samant: ma a, aoe a Sata | ha eatin Rt ane Metacafe | aod ats and Baro the man in blue coat and brass buttons and gold concerned, whether the course urged by Lord Derby | go, tg: vors desteoua so ulateyoung | \f have no doubt that his Majesty oe taced hat, who stood at the carpeted gapgplank, ‘ute....... or that advocated by the Marquis of Salisbury shall Widen ‘butone mode of removing position to up Ly Bo ery & point to give the Prince rea aalean seme east pik phi ethecpesrersorey Mey Be fy “Koppite | Prevail, In the former event. the,minlsterial mes. | the OOP ene a ae Ctinereenonatlo 3p {develop maritime tastes in, France, ‘wach is too. | it barbie ihe poerettiraethersen their himself, did not hear this strange question about the | “New yore was reached in eafety on Monday morn- | sure rejected. by the Lords. on ita, second read- | tne people for their legislative action. ‘The House | muon given up, tothe Taad-iubvere, EA Se Stanger terete me “studin.” Besides, the small cannon at the bow of } tng, falling overboard, not even the Kighth | ing would in all probability be returned to them | of isnow-elther a mummery, without power, dare say this season will forth some ox; beloved Queeh. ‘They Jere see vl the boat nad just belched forth for the special benefit ward gentleman. who Watyai sesaloly and | perore next, December in exactly its. present form, oe ia & coe seamen ‘ot te cae Serie se S Jeeateeee nis. 3 to-try a taco. | Spite of the prostration he wor aad of the patengers a sudocating cload of smoke, ac- | Wanted the boat fo Alap Hi he Got Over! turongh the instrumentality of « prorogation and a | thority. "ir tie former, en the nation is ruled by | On the Hols de Boulogne, let us hope that some of | Substance fioely. Thave not heard of any pro, companied bys detonating report that-would have new session in August, and the battle would then the Legislature alone, and there 48 no, | our more enterprising yachtmen will ran over their | gramme having been-arranged disposition sar sen ene peas cove pigeon iota tare ae fought over agin wih a tlraly wa | Sue ape eOPUb uaa detec | Lath i teen agua at arte | te term of i ay, hon alt pain and band “‘abaft the ahaft,” just over Mr. Gold Lace’s backing down on the part of the on | extension of the si and tne $0.choose || ‘proudly and. defentis through {he fr tial . eT OEAE aed talarmavso 2 mane: head, was blowing like mad, as if to clear the smoke | Establishment of @ Lime of Steam Coasting | 115 second vial, If the bill should now pass its | thelr own represen 1m the the | under the eyes of both England and Franoe, and night, 1am told that some ry sway and drown the report of the gun at the same Colliere—Trial Trip ef One of the Vessel | 0004 reading and go into committee the result of people aro, os SE ny ee rene —_ women who reside here are already planning for the Mme. Basle of Operations of the Company. any vital amendment or alteration by the peors | iio cueke? OF 8 non-elective. trresponsible "body: ROME. honor of becoming his partner at the first atate tall. BEFORE THE START. PHILADELPHIA, June 19, 1869. ‘would lead to a disagreement on the part of the Com- ese evils, It woula a Fe- Somebody will be disappointed. Finally the band’s wind gave out, and a burly fel- low pushed his way through the crowd to the gang- plank and stood face to face with Mr. Gold Lace, He was a lively specimen of the Eighth ward rough, full of swagger and impudence and dressed to kill. He wore a white beaver, with the fur brushed the Wrong way around the top, a flashy plaid vest with huge black buttons, and white pants so tight and tong over his patent Jeathers that it was a miracle they didn’t burst at every move he made. His hanas were stuffed in a pair of kid gloves, the size of which (t would be hazardous even to guess at, and on his left arm dangled @ cadaverous-looking female in blue silk with jingling beads, whose head leaned so often on her companion’s sleeve that her complexion was fast rubbing off on the glossy black surface. As be approached the boatman he put his hat on one side of his head, with the brim half hiding his eyes, and extending two blue tickets asked, “Say, boss, does that Include stuflin’ ?” Mr. Gold Lace took the tickets and innocently tn- quired the meaning of “staMn’,” at which the cada- verous-looking female grinned very broadty, while her companion burst into a roar of laughter. “Why, fodder, in course; that’s what I means,” Gnally spluttered out the man with the white hat, when he was able to catch hisbreath. fodder being evidently better English for meals than “stuffin’? in the boatman’s mind, he comprehended and re- plied:— “Not much; that’s only passage to Newport and back.” “Wha—at I” exclaimed the Eighth warder, as he vege over the gangway, “‘yer don’t ‘means ter say at l’se got to pay exiry for a bunk, does yer?" “Yes, sir, if you can get one.” “Now, look ‘ere, my fren, is Jim Fisk aboard? and the fellow to take off lia kids by pulling the finger ends with his teeth. “Why, what's that your business?” “Pil tell yer why; I bought these ere tickets on the square, and ‘taint quite the ting to charge ex- try for bed and and if Jim Fisk’s here 1’ll take 1s out of his hide, twill.” Vith this sage remark the indignant rough strut- ted up stairs into the saloon, where he pe the ouse of sponsible to the people and with the power to hold The Ret of His Hoelinese—The Bestival The Reciprocity treaty hes again been a matter posides Horone the chasecter of the House, | of, St. Paillip NerimA Grand Sigkt—Lecep- | of discussion by planters'and Bins interested "heat by opening the whole fleld of the nobility to the people tion of the Pepe at Albano—The Return | passage. Hopes nave rtained that Sou: and allowing them to clioose the sbless sen vo to Castel Gandolfo—The Fete of the Ine | gross Would relent and grant this kingdom the boon Tho reform ls too patent to be denied, and it will be | florata. RRs OE a pind ally tad if aman of John Bright’s broad views, de- Rome, June 1, 1869, the or wi ‘The most san- Termined” Ghatnetse and’ Govotion 1 tie cease of Yesterday evening the Castle of St. Angelo fired a | Swine of cmennnnerient oe pc a Ns Tie be Ul his came Me Tee ioe oa Wits Lencaltery togisim | Salute of thirty guns to snnounce to the Romans the Youd, Moe Sia snd Mae. dongs of ttom return of the Sovereign Pontiff from Castel Gan- | Cond iy read, but only to” disappoint dolfo, wae te ned ueee. eH days, on- | tee" pense tt nse "reaches “us that the treaty FRANCE. joying a little country eo Succes- | bas been laid over until the next meeting of Cou- sve ceromonee of Wednesday and Thurday, tn | she, fore Muah teen buen as Tho Paris Racos—Magnificent Scoue—The | festivals of st. Philip Neri and the Corpus Domini. | Ynited states if the question had been settled dea- Grand Prix—The Winning Horse~The Em- | The procession of this latter solemnity took place | nitely. His Majesty’s Ministry will still hold out the peror and His Party—The Late Elections | with the usual almost Oriental splendor which cnar- ad ese 4 al bare wpihgphnnebbersene vetir ha Preparations for the Departure of the | acterizes it, all the ecclesiastical corporations of ton, ‘and will doubtless use it to good effect with Chinese Embassy~The French Yacht Club, | Rome, regular and secular, in thetr varied garbs and fea hg tes is the next election for representatives Paris, June 10, 1869 costumes, from the ascetic Capuchin to the scariet- Assembly. do ‘The great race of the year that I announced in my | robed Cardinal, preceding the Pontifrin slow and | ; psp ey ome = wie denen ae last to come off on the 6th instantis over. A French | solemn march around the ample colonnade of St. opinion im regard to the policy of annexation to the horse that even ite owner would not back was the | veter's, The group of the Pope carried aloft on the | United States, Shnte Cabieemnerar ae winner. ‘The weather was magnificent, rather hot | ¢atamo, a sort of litter ob which he sits, but appears | Fort ic ‘The objection to the ineasure, urged hy for Paris, elghty-two degrees Fahrenheit at | to be kneeling before the consecrated wafer, hose who oppose it, is that it would overtura the three o'clock in the afternocn, The drive | which he holds aloft, from the effect ye elas tmooadioaie ante ee to the race course in the Bols de Boulogne, | of arapery artistically folded rvund his | fears. slavery. or in fact any approuoh toit, is dis- through the Champs Elysées, the Avenue del’Im- | person, borne by eighteen sturdy porters in crimson | tasteful to Americans of the right stamp, and will Peratrico and the Bols, at this season of the year ta | cut velvetand surrounded by his Swiss guards and | Hever find @ lodgement on Melted States territory. indescribably oeautiful and one of the great attrac- | court prelates, is a most impressive sight, and owes been very busy since bis return in endeavoring to tions of the day. The grand stands, too, were | its origin to tne infirmities a3 well as the geniua of | conceal the fact eng Keng ae aaa ae crowded with the fashion of Paris. The imperial | Pope Alexander Vil, (Chigt, who found walking in. | tures In Common Mitt, the Nyse Of Slavery. ait tribune, in the centre, glittered with the presence | conventent, and therefore conceived this mode of that when informed that the Chancellor of the King- of royaity. Besides tne Emperor, who looked won- | carrying the Host while being carried himself. The | dom had become the purcbaser of the “Princeville” derfully well, and the Empress, who seemed very | game Pontiff enriched the Vatican with the grand nesses aemiaeemns wh ten ornare gay, there was the Queen of Holland, the Grand | colonnade around which the procession passes and | eg; he promptly and emphatically pronounced Duchess Marie of Russia, the Princess Matilde and | the noblestaircase known as the Scala Regia, down the sale of tae Sontrsbts, oe more Sorrectiy,, the their respective suites, all splendidly attired. Be- | which the Pope and the court proceed from the einen as ey do ro “ Pines Pl sos po len don a gor tween the races vast crowds gathered in front of | palace to join it. at auction, and it was evident that money could be the tribune, as near as was allowed, and contem: On Friday evening the Pope drove ont to Castel | made by the Lenin ad bro apis bene oe in ewe Plated with great curiosity this galaxy of | Gandolfo, the inhabitants of Albano, headed by the Nae adr mtage the earale,, together. with pee alpen royal stars. Their comments were endless and | jocal authorities, offering their obeisance as his | and Japanese coolies employed upon it, and silil amusing, “The Emperor grows no older,” | Foliness passed before the gates of that town. On | hold them under the contracts made with its former 4 igtency,”? said one. “The Empress is the best looking | the following afternoon the Pope drove through Te wdaae dae ceadeann soaemine’ by a dis- Some time since Mr, Walworth D. Crane, of the | mong » conference, and the eventual triumph of the Well known house of W. D. Crane & Co., conceived | 7 ower House. Thus, in any case, the fate of the Es- ® plan tosupply a reat public want, which is DOW | tayished Church in Ireland appears to be sealed, being carried into practical effect, whereby New | 414 tne only question of vital interest now is as to York, Boston, and, in fact, all points east of ;Phila- the effect which the threatened conflict on this ques- delphis, can be supplied with coal from the great | ton petween the Lords and Commons may have coal basins of Penneylvania at greatly cheaper rates, | hon other and more important institutions. with infinite more speed, certainty of delivery, 8t.| “in view of the almost universally acknowledged far leas Tisk and an entire absence of the delays, | r++ that tne opposition.of the Lords to tue principle Snnoyances and objections that are inseparably cou- | of qisestablishment and disendowment can only nected with the present tardy and inconvenient sys | temporarily delay, without ultimately defeating, the tem of transporting coal by schooners and other | >. 5 ,o9eq reform, it appears singular that the present Kinds of sailing vessels, Tho plan is to substitute | oonteg: should have been invited by those who alone substantial steam colliers for sailing vessels, | 475 in aanger of suffering from its effects; ana the and Mr. Crane’s project is just as superior to | denant tone adopted by Lord Derby, and his gallant the old system of transporting coal as steam | iientenant, Lord Cairns, can only be accounted for isto canvas for purposes of navigation. Mr. Crane on the supposition that they regard Mr. Gladstone's followed up his idea of establishing steam colliers | present bias the precursor ee Bente srt. between Philadelphia and Boston with writing a | ous encroa é prospects ofthe transportation of coal by seam, | ifthe Bat of pridencs (oro the Ast avancs of and he submitted the result of his labors toa num- | Church bill tl = my ab i Be Dee hs pepe aRa NER: RES Rm NDE Sil: a eet ae hurch which embraces in ie faith jects, and among others to Mr. John Tucker, of the } Privileges off Pare tt ear oe ms fait Reading Ratiroad, who recognized at once the im- | have been swept away, an Gallentoned tet pro- snqpse benetite shady wank Sqcrse 4); conl saliiig |S Huatsemnsesmmeen wit set: £0 xemameaaner nik companies, ratiroads leading to the coal regions, and, | Othe risk of interfering with the special privilezes of above ali, to coal consumers “own East,” by the $i panatal ny opin be Perey ies ae he ay ver ‘adpption of the proposed plan. Mr. Tucker gave the such shrewd statesmen ords Derby ant ~ matter his earpest attention, and the affair culml- | Srment beteer, than their associates and. foresee nated in the formation of the Pennsylvania, New | that ie tytn A Led Beis ed gat Be York and New England Steam Navigation Company, o aaa and the prospectus mentioned as written by Mr. | Prfved of their natural rights are cervatu to increase Crane was adopted without alteration as the princi- | in Broporen dee ta fp h eras = tapes on pal basis of the company’s actions. The present in- | Strength. a Aleations are that the most sanguine ideas | ing host and to Tak an engaxement in tue open fld of the projectors of the system of trans- | rather than to stand the danger of a siege within porting coal east by means of steam col- | their own walls. It ts a notable fact that up to the present time the liers will be more than realized. Two great | gash and daring are ‘confliged to the Lords, and they obstacles appeared in the pathof the projectors | seem rather to court the conflict which must decide ai the outset, and they were, first, the fear that ar- | their fate. This, probably, arises trom the feeling Tangements could not be perfected for loading the | that to yield now is to give up forever all but the goltlars i ,monmona, and, second, ofthe antec mere shadow of their o] a power, and that hereditary iA en! as Eastern railroads could hot be secured. , These aim. | legislation may as well be abo! com} tee mere bauble, like the mace carried before th short time afterward seated iF «qq | culties have entirely disappeared. The company are -at-Arms of the Commons. On the | ®Mong them,” remarked another, “That one, at | aipano, which, for the first time since the catas- | cussion of the “peculiar institution,” I note the fact Sau tin tag's soatriank| ESL wes ae Maa wate | camo tence vu, | stern rms god Conaion”exolaed | opus othe nro ammo eat | Sasi: Geena ant Ce ie A open arms the arrival of te first coal-laden steam | ther severarorgaus is significant of this apparentiy | ‘td, referring to tho Princess Matilde, who has | festive appearance in his honor. Pio Nono went to | Tis Nock of to go tmte s discussion of 11s grown very stout, like her brother, Prince Napoleon. | perform his evening orisons at the Jesuits’ church at | wrongs, in less than @ week became aware that The mass of gorgeous equipages and exquisite tollets | Galicro, a beautifully situated spot between Gensano | he was under the ban of @ part of his congregation. it 18 {dle to describe, yet 1t is one of the great fea | ana ariccia, returning at sunset over the magnifi- [arbmee —— Bi Bagien — ey Sosy ons tures of the races in the Bois, They are so near | cent viaduct separating the latter town from Albano, chusetts, in the “Hub” itself. hey who oppose the ‘and the entire co-operation of the Providence | unaccountable position of the hostile forces. The and payee Boston and Providence, Boston, tory Standard, which at first advocated the meee Lowell and Nashua, Boston and Maine, Boston, Hart- | of the Church bill by the Lords in obedience to tl ford and Erie, Boston and Albany, ee: popular will, after putting on record their protest The gentleman of the elegant manners was not the only one of the many passengers who had many questions to ask, nor was he the only * peculiar’ person aboard the steamer, for countrymen who lost their way in the saloons ‘tain erp, Hartford and New Haven, snd, in f ‘against its principle, now teems day after day with hour's hunt for thelr root, to wind up just where | Eastern ralironds have been’ sectired, and there is | Saunt ‘articles’ ahd, calle on. the ‘aristoceacy of | Paris that the roadsare kept well watered and the | or rather connecting the two. ‘This noble stracturé | oF “bonded labor” systein do not claim that they had: started, WreTe as thick as bed in a hive, TEE ae ee dace eran Nom Cer ag he use re | Guat can do no damage to either. was illuminated with Bengal lights, oes z ee eane are abused, instances being rare ‘New England ‘Transoortavio! om- en the steamer finally got under way, which she consummating the ends desired, not obly by ee % ‘area ag ge my eff yet, although rumors exist that Hogging is more The event of the day was the race between English | pavillion erected for him on the adjoining heights. | common than it used to be; but they claim that the and French horses for the Grand Prix. Some twelve drove from Castel | necessities of plauters and others have led to en- did about five o’clock, the brass band set to work On Sunday lines horses started. The distance, one mile and seven | Gandolfo round the lake of Albano, and eiong the | croachments which should be resisted, lest the bistory to and did its best to spotl the French operas and amuse the country folks who gathered about the brass instruments as though they had never seen » band before in ail their lives. The rush for state- rooms having come to an end by the time the boat 4 got well abreast of Blackwell's isiand, the gong for but all mant irers, the great steam marine \d State, it cries, interéata and all coal consumers in the Eastern fia td tte aitation of. the ‘Coinmnons, fea 4 tates. the Bright and the traitor Gladstone, and it palf.one season there are shipped from Baltimore, | warns its readers that when the House of Lords has lelphia, Elizabethport and other points | heen got rid of the assault of the radicals will be Roses one Of coal, of which 3,500,000 tons are | turned next against the throne. ‘Thus is its course of reasoning:— shady ues to and thence to Gensano, slave system of America should be furlongs. The time three minutes and twenty seconds. | and round the ually que lake of Nemi to the = cnn fair Pry It was generally supposed that the English horse | litte town of that name, to be present at the com- Kaona, who led the late rebellion on Hawaii, and id but the Euglish world nere | Memoration of the second contenary of the installa- | several of his followers have been sent to that island prea FY la ner Al for trial, At last accounts no deciston had been discovered the horse was not in good condition and | of the Franciscan ‘which is an object of great | arrived at. It is feared that Kaona will escape pun- they bet cautiously. For the brief period of the race | veneration to the peasantry for many es round, ishment, owing to the influence which he and his of the thousands present was remark- After this ceremony, at which, if I might say 80 | followers have upon @ majority of the natives from the science p without committing a bull, there’ were more specta- | whom a jury will be drawn. It isa singular fact able, when suddenly the cry arose of Gisneur, and | tors of an eee jbrerent than the ‘town | that the Hon. D. Kalakana, a petty chief and mom. cheer on cheer filled the air as the French horse few | of Nem! ja ~~, eon it Holt- | ber of the House of Nobles, 1s assisting in their de- — Ni ho has well constdered the sub, doubt that und and eastward of that, all of lobedy who come 0 subject can a which ts transported by comparatively few satling bd be ed [ad evan tense: of Lada, prod sely t be- vessels, and it appears evident that some relief must | cause, while the atter is still an active and eflictent power in be had. polaice, & fe low singe the former. exercised the preventive regard ‘uncertain! trend! it! whi eory still unquestional longs cont hee en come it may co Boman: gm 4 or jate years Mr. Bright has rather sone out of his way to pa- SUPPER ‘was sounded, and all the passengers—at least all who could scramble down stairs at once without break- ing their necks—dashed down the winding staircase leading to the supper room. Several bran new hats, and even some “loves of bonnets” (for women were DI 2 4 , a accompanied by rdinals and | fence, although not known as a lawyer. sirugge; but the ables mere soon weil surrounded, | t,coumeucement of the Season schooner trogita | Stns "oRisat winch fof aco ta ti’ adecdac fh | 07 the JUdgos stand and won the race. Drummer, | py Visited tho Duke” of Brascht “at | “'sproay ix atl sproniing on ess isiands. I i a and t it the English champion, was only a head behind and | hig feudal’ mansion and partook of @ collation pre- it ups ‘of the ‘victims on their way (o had a tall which doubtless lost him the victory. ‘The | pared there. It is reported that the Pope was the | the ressel whic’ conveys them: to the lover wets. owner of Glaneur, one of the oldest breeders im | more interested in this excursion because he intends ment on Molokal, there to remain until death claims France, as he mounted the tribune to receive the | to buy the Duke of Braschi’s castle and possessions | them. This scourge attacks old, middle aged and c ulations of the pty Bp overwhelmed | at Nemi, ag well as tis palace in Rome, to found a young of both sexes. In one group may be seen an wita bravos. To say nothing of the glory, he pockets | princely patrimony title for one of his nephew: aged woman, @ stalwart man in the prime of life, 141,000 irancs, over $28,000, gold as we say, des | who would thus be enregistered in the libro d’oro at | the girl in her teens, the schoolboy child of four the mmperial gift of a splendid silver vase richly em-'| the Capitol among the nobility of Rome, but we have years of age, all bearing the distinctive and bossed. Tis great race was established in 1863, and | seen so very little tendency to nepotism on the part | never to bo forgotten marks of leprosy. ‘Tho since then three English aud three French horses | of Pio Nono duting bts long reign that Ido not | ears of one are swollen; another's hands are de- have won, but this year the French are one ahead. | aitach much credit to this ramor. formed, the fingers being drawn into the paims of Cau’t we get up an American horse to run next year? About twelve o’clock the Pope was returning to | the hands and one or more joits gone from each Leonard Jerome was at the race, and has no doubt | Castel Gandolfo by the same shady groves and al.eys, | qnger, while another’s face 1s so swollen and dis- made up his mind, like Tommy Dodd, *‘to go inand | saiutea with of music and petards at the out- | jgured that his own friends find it hard to recognize wia,”’ if lie can only find @ horse likely to accomplish | skirts of Gensano and Ariccta, the villagers in their hie. Late reports from the Marquesas Islands give the feat, He isas much on the qué vive for a horse | sunday costumes kneeling as soon as the oe equip- | a fearful account of the ravages of this disease upon as was Richard IL. on Bosworth feld. age and the glancing urfiforms of bis became | the island of Tahuata. Out of a population of over It is time now to turn round and contemplate the | visible between the trees along the picturesque wind- | 1,000 but 200 survive at this time, and out of this Groat political race run here on Monday, vat which | ing road. After dinner, at which repast his Holiness | jumber but few are free of disease. What with Will not be witnessed again for six years. At the | entertained several distinguisned guests, he set out | jeprosy, oter diseases and rum the Polynesian race dast ti two weeks ago, several of the candidates | ggain through the towns of Albano and Ariccia for seems doomed to rapid extinction. mnade a faise start, as it were, and had to try it again, | Gensano to witness the festival of the inflorata, for | “The man John Brown, who was arrested for fring this time with bevter su as Jar as Thiers and | which the latter town ts celebrated, hut which had not | the ship King Philip, and who was couyicted of ths jules Favre are concerned. It seems droll enough | been performed for the last sixteen years. Its pecu- | gence on trial before the Supreme Court, is now that these consplcuous men should have been out | jiarity consists in the decoration of the pavement | free. His counsel demanded anew trial upon tho Voted only @ fortnight ago and now come in at the | of a long, sloping street, along which Holy | ground of certain irregularities, and it was granted, head of the poll, | ‘This looks as if the Parisians were | sacrament is carried in procession, with flowers | ana the secoud jury were unanimous in tue belict as tickle and illogical as the Athenians of old, or it | jn such varied designs and exact symmetry and har- | that he was innocent, may prove that their sober second thoughts induced | mony of color that, viewed from the windows and ‘The abuse of seamen on board of American mer- thei to abandon the de aes first sustained and | balconies on each’ side, the street seems to be chant ships is becoming of frequent occurrence. [ brought thei back to politicians of shining abilities | covered with the richest Tarkey ts instead of | before wrote of the abuse hea: upon the crew of and great prestige. ‘The truth of the matter 13 sim- | poppies, violets, broom#owers, biuevelis and “lilies | the King Philip by thelr officers, - This ship 1s an- tais—that in the interval the political che/s and | of the field,” not to mention @ hundred | chored iu our harbor, with a number of the ctew on journalists of Paris changed their tactics and decided | other sorts of blossoms ad: to afford tue | board not having worked out their advance pay. to throw over the ul or “reds,” taey had | yarious unts required. The ugns are traced | The officers seem to make ita study of ways and Kae chaperoned and elect Thiers and Jules | out first and then filled in with the several means to “work them up,” as It is Styicd. Lately, favre. They concitded these brilliant and expe- | tints out of baskets, each of which only contains one parties from the shore have noticed the second an- riencea orators would do more service to the opposl- | gort of flower. ‘The effect is magical, and the Pope’s | chor let go, aid the crew immediately pat to the tion in the new Asgembiy than such virulent ganters | gestures from the balcony of the Municipal Palace windlass to take itagain. Jack became tired of it at as Rochefort and Raspail. hey saw that public | seemed to indicate that he fully appreciatea the taste | jast, and one day removed the shackle pin, so that opinion was shocked at the elevation of two such | of the inhabitants of 10, Whatever he might | when the order was given to take the anchor the men to the jon of lawgivers, and that they bad | think of their loyalty, for their a of him Was | chaincame in, but the anchor was non est, Divers jose Who were unable to get “position, place and comfort” in time were compelied to prow! about, like hungry wolves, until their chance came about, Bat the supper tables aid not long remain full; not because the mere looking at the good things spread. out in dainty dishes were ali-sufficient to appease the appetite, but because everybody Was not aware of the price it costs to get a good supper aboard the Providence. There was & ume when a passenger went to supper and got all he wanted for one doliar; but there 1s @ new system now, and it worked on Saturday very much to the dismay of many an empty stomach, When each passenger sat down he was presented, first with a bill of fare, with the jaw-breaking names of the eatables, and the price of each; and secondly, with another bill, on which he had to write down everything he ordered, and put the price Opposite each article. The ys sum Votal of the prices of-course Was hisbil, In the sysiem itself there Was not so much to find fault ‘With as there was with the prices. For instance, a poy who feels like having a good meal takes it toto his head to start with fs, theo a litte ‘ter- ouse steak, accompanied by an omelete. This costs ‘im $1 95; and as potatoes are indispensable to the steak, he orders a plate, and aa tea and (say French rolis) are equally indispensable, he orders them, and on Feiting up finds his bili $250. Of course this kind of thing was not expected by many of the Lae who lad been used to the old way of doing Pusiness, and they were not slow in giving vent to their feelings. There is, however, a tea "i where @ meal is served at lower prices; but, some Way or other, by the time a man’s appetite is Batis- fed by what he gets there, his bill falis at no very great distance from the bills of the other room. IN THE SALOON, After the supper the brass band transformed itself into an orchestra, and did its melodious best to en- liven the passengers. The saloon was hung with banners and tlags of all descriptions, the tulismanic letters “J. F., Jr.,” and “J, G.,” inscribed in red on phia that ton and drop slowly to $3 and $3 2, and sometines | his uiterior gestgns. The House of Lords, on the con- to $2 60, but for a very limitea period, coal trary, he hates with a vulgar hate, on every occasion soaroe. _ The eavance commences efter July 2 and 18.) Tae suede kim tabs t does not present « formieasis Gastier meadily kept up a8 the shipping season draws to a | To hUfeveiiing atubition. te cannot conceal, trom hiniself Close. Mr. Crane proposes to make the freight OM | the fact that as debating boty it contains riper and more coal from Philadelphia to Boston, by means of steam | deliberate wisdom than the Colliers, of 500 tons register, at uniformiy cheaper | ever hope to boing; that in ite bosom are to bo found men raves ail the year round, without change or flucvua- | far more eloquent bimself. adi eloquence means tion, It may be mentioned that under the present | {hing more than volubility and fadiscriminatory passion —and system in inany cases the cost of transportation on | {hal the empty arguments oF ieee midneesee menas fat coal to Eastern ports amounts to over four-dttlis of | Powue c’Scect autience of hishiy cutirecen, fecklions its value or cost at the point of shipment. Again, ame: dispassionate men. It is this evident su- irom screw steamers carrying 500 tons of coal can perlority of the House of Lords in dialectical force and ora built and equipped mal ood taste, ine ower of vetoing raw 25d screw veobele van make four tiipe to a ncloen: | reckless: measures, ‘which irrltates tre more revo tionary jementa which compose the Commons; and this feeling er’s one, It ts calculated that the steamers can | Svnstant irrnation ukaannoyanes toads to, make ite viens make at least three and a third voyages per month, | gifii more unreasonable, immoderate and sweeping in their while @ coal schooner of the same tonnage takes | demands. Let the Crown veto any measure, and there can twenty-two days to make the round voyage to | be no doubt there would be an immediate proposal to abolish Boston from Philadelphia. Another advantage of | ‘t from the radical ranks. screw steamers consists in the fact that they are en- The tory organ neither underrates the popular abled, from their peculiar constraction, to transport | feeling against the Peers, nor evinces any disposi- cargoes of 500 or 600 tons into harbors which can | tion to bend before the storm. Thase- who only admit schooners carrying 160 to 170 tons. | evinc2d a disposition to temporize find no sympathy poe fan eet the Mee Aen a eng es in its columns. [t says:— ‘ost entirely superseded sailing vessels rea House of Lords is assailed just now by showers of Britain, and the day ts not far tant when coal- petteat coaee It stands in the ware of pea who are cs ng sailimg craft in this country will be a thing Sever Sepend 80 regard it with favorable feel ns. Every * Ee eee an ruraiah fe frecly used at thie moment tifoughout. the ‘The Pennsylvania, New York and New England | °*# 2 ne » Sagesent Ciroughot Steam Navigation. “Company have just compiston | {Ou wmereer the great quentln oft hour ie dicuegnd: their first collier, the Rattlesnake. She was | riages, the British mind is devoted to « consileration of the launched at Chester, from the yard of Reaney, Son & | Mouse of Lords, to @ rumination over the prophecies Co., on the Delaware river, tourteen miles below | of radicals who are declaring that the House of Lords Philadelphia, a few days since, and this afternoon ag enthusiasm which the vessel made a ota on the ed \g pore) ‘Was eminently successful in every particular. The Lords? In steamer left Pine street wharf at one o'clock, with a | )/MaLit ine use of the House Of tors? in. . large namber of prominent citizens of jelplia, | stit which are bowing before a tide ol ‘New York, Boston and other cities on board, and a | nion ese are the questions which are asked on all hands small cargo of edibles and bibibies. The vessel | by the party which lives on destruction. | Nothing which the steamed Lords coul f democratic opt- do at such a moment could be more unwise than Ni leon instead of the contrary. ved ny fi ting the eye . Th the river as far as Gloucester and "4 ions themselves. Who could fight f guly stre ‘Spo . | rather and totally depri any political de- | were employed, and, after some trouble and deiay, Xmerican tag iound one of two places, but ia one | Wen Putback up the stream, passing the river trout | \ug'wte duiralet hewn ick for ea order atiencue | They changed thelr gate and thoir men, which | monsteation of hdelty. "indeed, tiers had been | {RereeRDosey ANd, after some instance, instead of the stars and blue ground, there | Of the city in gallant style. ‘The lesnake was | pelieved in Itself ? It would be that the Lords should | shows how shrewd they are and that the Emperor | some disturbance on the preceding evening, caused | “ine tollowing extract from a local paper shows = f— looking steamboat. The passen; saluted by hundreds of steamboats, ferryboats, pro. adopt the haughtlest tone of self-assertion they could invent | bas formidable antagonists to contend with. by the over+zeal of some of the Pope’s partisans, who | the style of man the first officer is:— While the srenestra was playing, amused themselves | pellers and other steam cratt, which blew thelr whe, ihe’ heart isto eager tovaitylay. answer othat | Ou, ge eon en ety Tacmavers an the cove, | Sutived from Rome with a quantity of white and yel- | ” taeeg men recehtly discharged from the King Philip, had in various ways. Four young men, for instance, | ies justly, to which te | Rattlesnake replied | ‘iestion in whos interest do the Peers sit?-—it woud ve | Ment has secured thirty members und the opposi- | low fags, whtch they insisted on planting on each shipped in'tie Lorenzo, and went on board in estate of seemed to enjoy themselves to their hearts’ cont as she swiftly glided past them. After pro- | Sitterthat they should anewer fiercely “In our own?” than | OD ot WO or three instances the | sideof the Via Livia, the line of the Inflorata, an in- tion, alittie before she sailed. One of the three men at a game of cuchre, one of the sofas in the saloon | Ceeding @ moderate distance up the river, | condescend to plead mildiy with thelr assallanis aud beg for | Same have been elected for different | novation yresented by the young men of Gensano, | was directed by the mate to execute some order, whlch trom being used a3 @ card tabie. A big poster just over | the returned to Chestnut wharl, | toveration. and new : just ensue. Let us go ® | who removed them unceremonionaly, deciar ‘Bis state be fated of gota (rhereupon the mate knocked them warmer everybody against gambies, and ane | TaeTet® Petuaed with “ihe ‘superior “guaiies | Danie this told language, the words of tho min. | Bie, int Sinatra tne ee Masons ae AER on, te ete cE Tass nounced in flaming characters that “no card piay- | 1p, and satisfed with the superior qualities | istorial journals seem tame Indeed. It is true, they | Dumber of votes 000 a jon; of these the government Tas Obtained 8,800,000 und. the OPHOKLLON 2, 800,000. Icons considerable heavier majority than Grant se Colved in. the United States, the ditference im the vote. 000 Ma of yg yi 4 it blind peror, Onite the = taillion have elected candidates in favor of the “Taste gn Independent on quesdons of 600, —Nearly ing |s allowed in the saloons or cabins.” Provably the four young men could not read or the officers of the boat — not see a = five o'clock in the —- ‘© egregtous-looking youths, gotten u with all prereaeentes oh st Nea, conte and hate and pants, promenaded up and down the apartm: in the company of two women, whose painted [i Joud dress abundance of paste diamonds thi gliteered from every finger of their band: fae nee hy to be, touse @ mild term, “soil joves."’ Several of the stateroom doors were fuog wide open, ana in several of them the bottle and the glass were handed about without quences, aud the disgust odor of bad whiskey Of the new steam collier, It was found that the | insist that the U} House mast give way, but machinery of the steamer worked sdmirabiy, not- | ‘they treat thelr deftant opponents in a vers gingerly row Np rae la put tm motion for fastion and Protest averiand over aga agaist te ea that there any ire override the rs The Rattlesnake ts 160 feet in length, 28 feet 10% | or deprive them of any of thelr privileges. “Ho inches in breadth 11 feet draught. Shehasone engine | rust traitor in effect, if not in meaning,” says of twenty-eighth inch stroke, one Subular ape the Gladstone Telegraph, “who couid desire to pro- pressure of steam thirty-five pounds; diameter voke an irreconcilable conflict between the Peers screw nine feet.- Her screw can make 33 Tevo-s| and the Commons.” Even the Siar, which lutions per minute, and her sailing co: is nine " the knots per hour, The company are making arrange- istry, 18 disposed ments for the immediate construction & fleet Of | House, It admits that the Peers are slow and unwill- thirty vessels similar to the wan won tele te ing to apprehend new political truths; that they are 500 to 1,000 CD cal each, with iron a9 | exclusive and segregate, live and move and have auxilari in the most substantial manner, usion thn > tosveam at an average speed of from ven to eleven | welt being in the oa. Weis pad covoens knote an hour when laden with coal, which will be a aronoman as the rest of the wor! brother mate o' me," seemingly much delight Who would not set fire to a ship when by so doing one coulda part company with such a brute? Some curiosity is manifested to know whom we are to have as ter Resident. By the telegrams published in tue San Francisco papers it would seen as though some diiticulty was experienced in ny ® party suitale to ail concerned. A rumor prevailed here at one time that a colored gea- tleman would be sent, Some little curiosity is evinced as to his reception here if such shouid be the case. matter it 18 said that the United siatos naval neon ‘tas been fecalled, and’ no suc: cessor na the icy. The ven to the opposition may be rh 000,000 for Orieanist dy- nasty, 1, for # republic, and the fraction 163,000) for revolution, These figures exact, and the opposition admit them. ane NSoves mas Stoo 000 had ver ~4 e5 near! ‘gainat ernment ond only 4,000,000 for it, 18 18 @ do imlsropresentation Of facts, and shows of the i med. At the same time a Consul has been appointed for Lahaina, a port which entertains M about four @ year, at a salary of §3,000 a year. Of whom there were several on board, mean: will be responsibie for all coal’ put on the tates any deaire on the part of the Commons to jat the Times has become an organ enipe 8 7 fiitved about the saloon with the most told-fesed tae dangers of the sea alone excepted. fect to the, ® pe oe a te U tamily living in land. | Thds temo Good for the ieee pudence imaginable. Two of them had the ettrontery fo — and rho change 1h the exthbor ig Po ed ANOTHER SCAFFOLD ACCIDENT. ait in their stateroom and smoke cigars, whiting A KENTUCKY TaagcoY. sition of the Jiguse of 18 necessary to win for | Let it stick to facts, as HERALD siways Goes, the smoke out of the windows into the faces of the — it the Foapect of the House of Commons; | but chop logic a 4 ae One Man Instantly Killed and Another Fatality wer ae tney went Uy on deck. | It may be that Shooting Advay Bet hers-to-Law. ‘on the other , No change in its com: iounaal & doubt @ consideraule addition Injured, Saal caer geaccitance har | Aucaeage tees ack ans | ora y ener aoaapupe epee tn or regulations were not of the un of this sketch enforced. Many ol the ‘omeers appearea evening Jast. ail we can learn ih regura ® and it promises them that if hey known @ year in which the fatality among house women personally and always nodded to in @ friendly way as they passed, the colored Wwatolnnen,” they were as A inters has been 20 great as it has this year. Since the season opened, tore rt the injury or death of a irt of the the affair it seems Dud Dunbar was in the habit Walt pass tho 7 Chareh bill with a gut house painter, caused the falling the scaffold, the and shamefully abusing wife. | discussion on the Life Peerages in U wer Our informant states that o n the ev above men- | House wit be mild andeven complimentary. In the i the painted witches as could be. it was aitogetner | tioned he had whi d slo had returned to | meantime, however, the Lords have taker to be satisied, and I haye reaso: has been almost @ daily occurrence, The latest ac- Out of the question for the decent people to Wry ta | the house of her Masher y owhattan Shearer, a | the upportants whieh tie ite Pocreaes oauaem St | Sy know tat hes very well uaitied. At the ond oF cident of this kind occurred. this Totning, about ten avoid them, for they were certain to be encountered | worthy citizen of our any b Who, accompanied by | afford the Vommons to haul the Upper House over mes out of the ordeal of o'clock, at @ grate and mantel estab! gh td at almost every step, and there were many foolish | Mrs. Dunbarand her rot law, Mr. Geo, Tiptou, | the coals of debate, and will check its passage in oe a corner of Front and Harrigt strocts, ~4 on who were #0 lost | returned to Dunbar’s house the same evening. Dun- | their own body. Wm, H. Olarke and — Cl; ao mu named respectively r ‘ing the front side of the idin; to join these “lost eng eeT chad The windows of the fourth sory a u i bar at first refused to open the door, but, learnmng He who rnns may read in all this the inevitanie in thelr promenades decks | that it was his wife, opened the door, stating that | certainty of contiict between the Lo Com- th the saloons, to the diegust of ev he would ann tre (ui ianguage was’ too tad to mony ana of the final aborition of the Up yet" House y ‘and with experience his when the scaffolding Sane proves ,were eoencing Person who was compelled to witness, without | put in print) Mr. f informed him that he | as at present constitated. The Irish Chureh Dill has managed France much better. gave way, end pote MO per Torty feet. The acct: {0 prevent, the shame. On the return trip | wonld attend to that matter, when Dunbar drew a | does not personally affect the peers, and might be | 4 algo of Thiers, who considers hi masat below, & Gye could lesfn, sevens #0 have becn oa night from Fall River the boat was | revolver and was only prevented from shooting by passea rR without d: to themselves or rin eee Satiamomvery greta: ‘the Femult of ‘the grossest carelessness, ‘The scaifold and, although several married indies who his wile, wlio, rushed between them. After vorme | their eehen’ totam be followed by other and | Hg Tous Phitippe and after upsetting ev Was sustained by rope and palleys. |The end of the ar seem more which in ’ 1 informed Tipton that a woman. livin, ft & Iniie | they extend the political rights and Hberhtes of the |. tn! ih succession he was not # inember of, = MO a Be parses it around the plank on which the men It appears, had been so carelessly done br the men it slipped off, the plank shot from under them, and in an instant they were hurled to wea ment, killing one (Mr, William H. Clarke) in- sta , and inn the other (yay 80 seriously that tie is not expected to live. Clarke's neok was Ricret, aoe ho was impaled on a section of iron fence distant was the cause of all the joe and le mast abridge the special privileges of the fa- that if he would acco: him he would the | v. sone What, then, are the Lords to do? Must fact and burn ber hi in the ay, Both started ae admit the ion that they have no right or for the house, but when aoout halt way one an er to the will of the Commons, and so act open field through which they had to pass inwar | the part heir own executioper’? Or are wo suddenly drew his revolver, telling Ti that he | make a stand for their ancient privileges only w had him tn the he wanted him, latter in af | their own tnterests are assatied, and when it can be bal wi A ie that they suffered the rights & 5 ferent 4 te and wae mT es deeply 2 BAR least rive part of the Dy during G ion polling but 37,000 votes. of the spikes Fail River of ot swept away end only Se SEeeTa, Mt Bens Ser waoms rendriven tata the aah of ite thigh some pper rooms had to be tte out a struggle. rewained im the field all | evinced boldness when neitanness te t em to Knock ovor @ 1a Louis Philippe, 80 Steve AMDADEN Gators twer duripg the nigat follows 90 | night and wes removed the following morning. it'wan' very certain thot the postion taxon ay and himself 60 wopt. He take Pets ”