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4 NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1869.—TRIPLE SHEET. ; dustrial changes of your country, of which { claim | position would tmpty an undeserved susptoion of his to te a friend and admirer. religious , Ob MINISTER (rising @nd accompanying me to the | causes which him outer Lap suppose you will prolong your } ject which broughé him tour and 8} several days in Florence. If 1 can {napect at 4 ‘dot not any away 00 aanroeanle a from the above, is by no m™ and do away too unfav an jeans 80 Di impression of ua. kita would have us believe, but stood at what might then man of the school of 7 EUROPE. |Sektacs saccin cae to ib At 18 Not more than thirty-three or four, & very “gay”? vice of the house of Savoy; and when she province was annexed to France, in 1860, he, like many other Savoyards, concluded to follow fortunes of the same iilustrious family transformed into Italian royaity. For the rest Savoy was and ww always 8 LITERATURE. Reviews of New Books. Tu History AND PHILOsordy OF Maxutage; On, POLIGAMY AND MONOGAMY COMPARKD. By & Christian philanthropiat. Boston: James Campbell. A i Bg : i i poor country, and for no fault of is own; even its fublic Schools and National Seelnticn: igang. gs { ig oe ne fers v4 ramoneurs are bound to visit foreign chimneys for ‘And go the interview ended. The above us nearly | have been thought its height, and that long before False as its doctrines are and doubly pernicious as ; in Engl: politics and voted im favor of the Iruh Church dis- | the transaction of their duties, It does not seem, | ® Verbatim reproduction of our conversation, during | the word Panslavisma or the idea it stands for had | they would be if their influence was anything near Education in England. Ce ee eae ein the Dalles Bintan a00n & asd which I could hot bus help redecsing that iho Count | become part of the nation’s political conscious | 207 Ur Le author doaires, this book 1s deservi would be scouted for his bigotry; here he is merely a | ®° far, that the noble Count bas had any cause | Minister was making me a little speech, but toa | ness, men staked their lives on the issue @real deserving PORN type of not a small class ol ‘meh Who hold thegood | to regret is decision, since he ocoupies the first and | much larger than he ia accustomed to ad- | of the struggie—already then an old one— | of potice, as much because the subject is one thas old doctrine that “orthodoxy ia my doxy; hoverodexy dress in the Chamber of Deputies of the Palazzo | which is far from one even now, though thst issue | must, sooner or later, attain to considerable proms Mout ition in the new ViB., is auybody else's doxy.”” moss di posi kingdom, della Siguoria—aad ta effect he seemed to be quite | at present may be foreshadowed by aut at the most i ig i 2 EES d Seo , in which he st (aot, ear-sighted ‘Even the very | Bence in our final settlement of the Mormon quea- Pon Manaleea me Taian Politica, ROM n Sapecnrey err pein spa American ce- Wp sete ae death ‘a ‘Huss, which was brought about by treach- | tion, as because It is plausibly and ingeniously ar- Trade and the Pacific Railroad. OME. lebrity oven as the successor of Cavour. He is tue TURKEY. Bo yas mace 8 pollloes cher caaiie than 8 tele gued and at the same time delicately worded. Tae readiest debater in the Chamber of Deputies, and, “heretic” to the stake were, for once, not the Itatian | #uthor avows himself a polygamist, but whether he Ween “baw tesbeg Health of the Pope im the Heated Term= | oii jaca oe is not possessed of the prestige or | The Dimicuity with the Vicerey of Bgypt— Tennison, bat Fs Geri who erry eA oli is one in praciice as well as in theory be leaves as Charch Consolation from the United Statee— | Seicehammor sarcasm of Count Bismarck, he is | Amglo-ffronch Mediation and Heconciling | Snofurod the unforeanate man to iis fave by offer. | ONIY to conjecture. He is evidently a man of ability and 1s not without refinement, There is nothing in the book that can offend the most sensitive reader. Everything 18 written in @ apirit of earnestness aud with a delicacy of expression which show the writer to-be really conscientious in his defence of @ ° most abominabie theory of social life. This advocate of polygamy opens his argument by attempting to show that the Bible sanctions and authorizes a multiplicity of wives. He quotes King David and numerous others 10 sustain his assertion, and is really quite ingenious in his argument. We cannot forget, however, that the Bible can be quoted in defence of almost any crime in the catalogue, if we transiate its language literally. The crime of incest can be and really bas been justified by the criminal on the ground of Scriptural authorizauion. Monogamy, it is claimed, is a relic of ‘+? and Romanism.” In ancient Greece and Rome, where it obtatned, the social evil was ® recognized and frequently encouraged institution. Men married for the sake of propagating their species and for the sake of obtaining women to attend to their domestie affairs. There was livtie affection between hus- bauds and wives. The Asp of the were the lovers of the former; the latter Tiapettedrannsits, «SS ants og ous coun proatitu ceettn 80 great; there was, in fact, no neccssil for them. Men being authorized by law and custom w nave a plurality of wives were enabled to a outraging public sentiment by employing the arts the seducer or by visiting women Of ill-fame. Out autnor is evidently ignorant of the fact that in Ching and Turkey at the present day the social evil ia @ leature of society so glaring and ao audacious that itis one of the first to arrest the attention of the stranger. Certainly if monogamy encourages immo- rality polygamy does not re; it, And yet this power of repression is distinctly claimed for une Referring to the civilization of the phen day, ag it affects virtue, a very vivid picture is drawn of the extent and iniiuence of unmorality. Of course this lack of morality is held up as the fruit of monogamy. ‘The animai passions of men make poly- gamy @ necessity. Many mon are wo constl- tut that they cannot find happiness im lufe companionship with @ single Woman. Unabk to take @ second wife, on account of the laws Prejudices of the Christian world, such men are ime pelied, by uncontrollable desires, to the arts of seducer orto the haunts of vice. And yet this state of things undeniably exists women wi! wander from the paths of virtue and become the mistresses of men are held up to public scorn; their children are looked upon a8 outcasts, and they in moat cases finally end their career a4 public caterera to the passtons of men, selling their favors for 8 com- sideration and filling the world with loathsome dis eases and consequent misery to mankind. mono- gamy ts a system of by} ‘A le preac! dvctrine of resistance £0 the Neah it permite secret indulgence to an unlimited extent, “It ia a vell of gvstemiousness assumed to conceal a mass of hid- called upon tiou=A “Question” om the Danube=Small | ing and actually sending him the safe conduct, Armes from America, which was so shamefully disregarded, was the Ger- CONSTANTINOPLE, August 25, 186%. | (eit most outraged by Huss’ attachinent to his coun- ‘Thanks to tne interference of England and France | try and his people and his opposition to the imperial the question between the Porte and the Viceroy ap- mores Taaapess poes aloe ORs. few rage pears to be now in a fair way of being settied | Nistory plays strange tricks sometimes, when sUb- quietly—I was on the point of saying quietly and Roe ae a arenes ag pong pod erg 4 oom nee amicably—but I doubt that henceforward the rela ne! 0) fn Uona between the two are ever likely to be taken up ee aa eee nan ee The habit of cou. again with any sincere trust on the one side or sidering, any ipo eng Mey Goad of Neal honest change of purpose on the other. tions, u , indeed, car- ‘The French say “qué & Ou, dotra,” and however | Ie inquire whether any other exist at Ais is slight or imaginary Ismail Pacha’s taste of royalty | fostered as eid by the political passions, or at least may have been, he ts not likely to forget the sweet | Dias, which It 1s so dimcult in our ume for apy man Old nis taste, and the Porte is lesa Likely to give him the | WHolly to escape, thal & now sepoty oe startling credit of having entirely put away the thought of it. | effect than it a moon, ce Sere ae hg ted Forced to shake hands over the matter now, the | numerable turned on us only one o! q central government will keep watch and ward over | S¥ddealy 4 prevent to our view the other, until now the actions of the ambitious Khedive, who, feeling While preparations are actively carried on for the himself mistrusted, may make that very fact an ex- | Huss festival on one side and the great Contes on cuse for looking out and availing himself of another | ‘¢ other, an ocourrence—te nun case, os reported and better opportunity to carry out his designs. perfectly independens of ae two great events, be " 1 comes connected with them by coinciding ‘The Vioaroy's noocotery, Talaas, Packs. ansived: in point of time, and, as it nearly concerns the organ- here last Sunday with Sam Bey, bringing the Vice- | ization and abuses of the Catholic Church, tt cannot roy's answer to the letter addressed him by the | fail to produce @ more than usually lively sensation, Grand Vizier. On arriving he was immediately | rather favorable than otherwise, thougi in an indi- id odox cause, taken by All Pacha to the Sultan, to whom the | Sect," (0 the Slavonic, and. ortivden ae Apart from this it Khedive's answer was at once communicated, As | novelty in the annals of Catholic monasteries. It is yet nothing certain nas transpired regard this | this circumstance that lends the moat importance answer; but the general rumor 18 that it stoutly de- | to the fact; for if the Poles once begin to quarrel nies all the accusations Drought up against the Vice- | with their Cnurch, to lose faith in its ministers, and roy than whom his Majesty the Sultan has no more | that, too, at a moment when, among the Polish faithful aud loyai subject, It 1a said that Ismail | clergy in our Western provinces, signs begin to ap- Pacha’s excuse and explanation will be accepted, ar (as 1 wrote in @ preceding letter) of a decided but that the Sultan intends to anual the late privi- leaning towards recouciliation with the Eatablished leges and advantages granted to the Viceroyalty of | State and Church, and general attention is drawo Egypt. ‘This is not possibie, however, as it would be | towards the Catholic Church affairs by the prospect half measure hardly consistent with the accept- | of the approaching Council, which, it appears, Ww: ance of the Viceroy’s explanation. be more namerously ai than any for centu- While one question appears on the point of settle- | ries—the prestige of Catholicism in the eyes of the ment on the side of the Nile another has arisen on | Poles ts well nigh gone. Dissension and dissatisfac- the Danube. Prince Charles’ visit to the Emperor of Russia, at Livadia, bas given umbrage to the { without our moving one finger to win it, and Slavon- Porte, and it ig said that the Grand Vizier | dom, along with orthodoxy, may te them- will ‘write to the Moido-Wallachian Prince | selves on # great advance towards tri h in men’s to ask for explanations regarding the rea- | opinion, Let the Poles once lose their attachment to sons for the said visit, and for those he |} and faith in their clerical inerimercres and their belief (the Prince) proposes to pay to Vienna, Berlin and | in their iin, political schemes wii soon follow, Paria, Ifthe matter is to be serious or mot will de- | and then they will go the way that all the other Sia- pend on Prince Charics’ answer and the spirit in | vonicnatioss go, and which they alone refused to which he may take the very fact of being upon | tread until now—the way of identification with the to give explanations regarding visits which doubt- | remaining Slavonlu-intereste under Russian leuder- leas he thinks himself able to pay without asking | ship. the Porte’s Coke a bsg booed _ very serious is likely to ar! mt! matter, MISCELLANE! 9 Yew stuf noves may be exchanged, ending tn both FOREIGN ae US (TEMS, portion: Anding, oak once aa testa a £22 Warsaw is to be made a fens class fortress under lar and no tarther. charge of General Todleben. , back very soon, and without his having been able | ‘e charge of Ge still on a par with the latter for clear argument and piquant humor, His utterances always attract marked interest and attention in and out of the Par- lament, He entered the Sardinian army at an early age, in the Engineer Corps, and, thanks to nis ac- quirements and mathematical powers (he is noted a8 ove of the most distinguished tmethamaticians of Europe), he soon reached the highest grade in the corps, and as General of Engineers was the pride of the Sardinian army. He fortified Turin hastily i 1359, when the cavalry caine within an ace of taking Victor KEmanuel’s palace beiore the arrival of the red pautaioons. Subsequeutiy he was Minister of nile in 1861, ye sinoe Lethe yo a i 1807 he has occupied his present position, or which he seems to C88 i dedtde Uking and some of the most important and suttable SF ties, Hia enemies and rivals are legion, bat man- axes to keep them pretty well at bay and evinces the firmest disposition to hold on to power, whatever urey may do. His organ stated the other day that he would not withdraw merely to give piace to other persons, for al) the talk about ministerial crises and clamor for a change amounted oniy to an intense desire on the part of those persons to step into his slippers. He is a fa- vorite with the King, who leaves everything to his decision. In personal appearance he is of medium height, rather spare, but erect and well made phy- sique; fine, oval face, of rather dark complexion; weil drawn teatures, brownish eyes, of a serious but pleasing expression. His appearance might not be termed striking; but his deportment is eminently that of the dignified gentleman. Judging from his looks, tone and acts one would gay that he pos- sessed uncommon firmness, amounting almost to obstinacy, but little boidness of character. From the general tone of his remarks take it that he unagined himself a man of destiny, stars and mission, a8 much ag the next one, even be he a Corsican. He seemed to think the whole work and rejuvenation of Italy is a mere ‘‘quesiion of ume, not the work of a day,’ to quote his words. 1 found him seated at nis desk, with my note betore him; and, on my entering, he rose to receive me in the polite Italian method. I now proceed to give as accurately as possible, in the same words used, the chief topics of our conversation:— MINIsTER—You visit Italy after a long absence (eigut years), aud must ond a great change at turin, Milan, Genoa. Many changes in various re- spects have taken place since that date. With you, also, Many changes have occurred. I suppose your fortunes are being rebuilt. Do the ks work well? I do not suppose they can ever go beyond a certain degree of civilization. Do they possess equal rights with the whites? How does the crossing of the two races act? 1 imagine that the result is greater strength of race. Now that your Gigantic enterpriae—tne railroad to the Pacitic— 1s Constructed, ita benefits must be immense; yours is an immense country and an energetic people; 10 doubt bey little time to be occupied with af- Anglo-French Mediation Between | Dror ie tne oi reer eer che y Tiber—Tho Council. Turkey and Egypt. Te ee ack on The heat has returned as flercely aa before the Our special correspondence and mails from Europe | Tain. and consequently a languor overspreads sh pupply the following additional details of our cable | Eternal City and her inhabitants, with the excep’ telegram reports to the 4th of September:— of the Holy Father, who ts as active as ever and fre- ‘The young King of Greece has gratified his Jewisn | Wentiy affords his surprised subjects comes Tena pubjects in Corfu by belug present at their synagogue | °f Nis Pedestrian powers by alighting trom his cAr- during worship. The ark was opened as the King riage and taxing Jong walks in and about tue city. took his seat on a throne, and the rabbi cailed on | No Precise period ts yet fixed a his goung Leal Heaven to rain blessings on the heads of the King | Se country, und as the month of August may and his son. said to be over he will probably stick to the In the biological section of the British Aszocistion Vatican and continue his preparations for the the Darwin theory of the origin of the human species Council, with the exception of an occasional day or engaged a very large snare of attention previous to | *W9's excursion. The first of oe. ie is at the adjournment. Three different papers were read | U¢Xt Week, to Anagat, one of the chief towns ‘on the subject during one day. ‘They were entitlea:— Southern provinces of nis Holiness’ dominions, “Man vs. The Animals; being a counter theory to | Where Pio Nono has Coban CG ecngidalgpasd Mr. Darwin’s as to the origin of species,” by Arch- | ™#2Uiactory, the only one in Pere: creer deacon Freeman, iu which the author said that the | ' the saccharine matter employed, gt question raised by Darwin was already an inter- free from duty it cannot compete with the imported national one. In England great names ranged omnes sugar, - at parecer less, although the themselves on either side; in Krance De Quatre- ba ie ee bak A ok cen bai OA fagea, Langel and others disallow the theory; | | The Odservat soap a eahahagear catch while in Germany Fritz Miller and Fraeckel warmly | “!¢ entitled “Progress o jolie espouse it. But what is wanted is. conipact counter | Stes,” chiefly extracted from the Monde of Paris, theory, accounting for all the phenomena on which | 1 Which it is said that ‘‘the Catholics of the United Darwin's rests. * * The sum is the species, or States furnish to their fellow citizens of every creed great orders however, were created at once, as the | 9 manifest example of the vitality and fecunaity of Bible tells us, but with an aMfinity and uniformity of | ‘te Churcn, Nota week passes withous the journals which a very sufficient account can be given. And | Plating the blessing of a new church, of the iaying this view docs not exciude, but welcomes, the ob- | “f the first stone of a Catholic temple.” A long list served phenomena of ‘‘natural selection,” considered | Of ceremonies of this Kina follows, specifying the as accounting tor acertain degree of variation in | “different localities and dioceses, concluding with the the creatures. “The Dimcuities of Darwinism,” by | Dlessing of the bells of the Cathedral of St. Joseph, at Buffalo, by Bishops Ryan and McQuaide. With the Rev. F. 0. Morris, contained an enumeration of } such @ movement in the direction of ecclesiastical many facts which the author could not account for | architecture, some of the Pope’s marbles, discovered on the Darwinian hypothesis, but which Mr. Darwin | at the Eimporium, might prove acceptable offer- “ Ings just now to Catholic bishops in the United himeelf and others have fully considered. “Philo- Beaten Dut aithough I doubt not that his Holiness’ sophical Objections to Darwinism and Evolution,” nerosity a be Cseapoe fare bred mien - by the Rev. Dr. McCann, who said Professor Huxley jue time, 1 do not yet see any American recipient! acknowledged that, in the present creation at any | Tegisterce fe her aa the Pope has favored rate, no intermediate link bridges over the gap be- In Rome alone twenty-six chapels and churches tween man and vheapes. But, this being 60, evolu- ho being renner Ls es. ane it a les presented by the Pope. le Ol cl tionism must be false, even according to Mr. Darwin J Caney in the city are among the ‘number, such as himself. St. Peter's, St. Reds) Santa Maria in Trastevere, ‘The funeral of M. Salvator Patti was attenaed by. — pe hay eee ont es eee ¥ and St, Denis, of the French; omas, e Prince Poniatowski, Chevalier Nigra, M. Bagier and English, and St. Athanasius,’ of the Greeks. His Madame Rossii. The Marquise de Caux was de- } Holiness has also enriched many provincial churches Hence the writer is tained at Homburg by indisposition. in his own States and in Italy with similar fts, ag | fairs in other countrics, being so absorbed at home. to arrt ‘anything very definite the At the recent mine explosion at Plauen, in Sax- den corruption.’ Phevilistad tn Iretand. ‘The writer observes:— ‘Several journals have indulged m fanciful de. | | CORRESPONDENT—Nevertheless, we find time in | Roumelian railways. His last arrangement ls some in benaif of a greater freedom to marry, and agreater . agreement or other signed with the Angio- ‘The Italian government has despatched a special Austrian Bank and the Societe Generale at Paris, ad | commissioner to Amsterdam in orjer to report upor erenduin, and it tes javil cet Pome terms | the system of public education in Holiand, of the agreement will be accep! 6 Pol At the opening of the shooting season tn the Dutch ‘The Madawaska arrived here last week with the | province pe Lunburg partridges were so plentiful first delivery of the rifies bought in America for the “7 ‘sportsmen brought down 165 birds on one Turks. Sue had ou board 61,000 Kuflelda aad 4,000 | qin, PO - Springfeids. The public baths of Rosa de Faria at Vatencla, America to cast a glance abroad, and especially in New York the great datly newspapers occupy them- selves constantly in regard to your army and the state of your finances, which they set down as too heavy for you to bear conveniently. MINISTER—Undoubtedly these are the two great questions with us. But the ge is not a bit too large; it is absolutely necessary. In the first piace, purity of the marriage relation.” Such is the argument of this new advocate wpvey plurality of wives—briefly given, of course, but suniciestiy clear to éwable the reader to understaud from what point of view hé writes. Hus ati and at the same time weakest argument is his pica against monogamy, on the ground that some men's passions are averse to it, Because a man is @ The earliest restriction that was put on the growth | Scriptions of the insults encountered by General of tobacco in Ireland was in the year 1661, the frst | Kanzier, the Pope's War Minister, on his way yest aiter the Kestoration, the 12:n Car. Ii. ch, 34, | through Florence towards Baden, his native piace. ‘an act, by the way, passed by the English Parlia- | A’ the Genera! has not yet left Rome he cannot have ment while a Parliament was sitting in Ireland, | been insulted by the populace at Florence; nor is it By that act a penalty of forty silimgs was imp osed | likely that he will venture on that route when he for every rood of tobacco pianied in Ireland. The | avails himself of his leave of absence. Volunteers growth of the plant was accordingly, 80 to speak, | for the Pope's army continue to arrive weekly at ron: |, and it go remained for 117 Civita Vecchia from Marseilles, chiefly Dutchmen | ‘thas been largely and remains the instrument of Spain, recen' ve way and fell into the river, | debauchee and canuot control his pro} ues We His however, Lora North, then Frime. Minister of | ad Flemings for the corps of zouaves. Unification for tae whole country. Before entering RUSSIA. San’ full ot Batata, causing many to perish, espe: | are asked to sanction the gratification of his seneu- En hampered by the American War, sought ‘The proposition for repristinating the classical old | tt there are Neapolitans, Tuscans, &c. After sub- clally children. ality by legalizing his connection with ay mang to gain ‘the aifections of the Irish people, and re- | port of Ostia and restoring to activity the shores of | mitting to its frasernizing and disciplinizing Re, ea aa women as he will, We might as well be asked It is reported that the Emperor of Austria has en- Fregress| ef the Slaveulé Eamily—is Lond puedo Tocover the private esiates of the House of and Consequences to tho Empire—The Huss n, On condition that ex-Kiog Francis does Martyrdom Festival—Politics Towards the | not return to Rome. ologia: id Politician— A special ambassador has been despatched from sdeiefteerees is tere eae mg the Cdure of Rome to Vienna to confer personally De ay ete with the Emperor gf Austria on the subject of the Sr. PETERSBURG, July 2} approaching Councu. (anges 71, 3. &), 38. During @ recent conversation between General T have more than once told you that it is part of | Prim (et eta rca, the Lene one my plan, and the reason why tt 13 80, to keep you | bitterly of the dificulty experience nding & regularly informed, not only of Russian events, but eee Epeln, ane — vetted hoe bathe cat ofthe principal o¢currences im the great Slavonic ‘The present candidates for the Spanish throne family, of which we form such @ prominent part, aor He Rey cs fot onan Don ee ae and the leadership of which is thrust upon us by Ke OF 5 ce of Asturias, the Duke of Philip, Duke of C1 ‘ circumstances, without an effort on our part, and | Aas, Lrg tori aapiek oan wile sometimes to the considerable annoyance and em- | Prussia. barrassment of our statesmen, who would fain not A hegre UR Benne Fe jie Beh tet Den- incur more subjects of disagreement with Western | mark, Hayt y ane ugal Was on the lat st the uy of Fi Ps Europe than absolutely necessary, not being ot (ee ae a te erapt tatweon eat influences they become Italians, have a common love for their native land, and are stronger than ever. itis aschool in whick they learn to read and write, in which they become afterwards instruments of civilization for all Italy. With you common schools do this work. Here they are ning on all sides. It cannot be said that the sums, though vast, which are spent for the army, Lave been or are wasted; for they all are returned in direct benetits to the country. Besides we live next door neighbors to colossal Powers, armed to the teeth, and if we were not armed we could not hola our own ground. Then again brigandage and disorders do aud will exist, owing to the lact that the mtertor of the coun- try has never been adequately developed, large tracts of land are wasted, or are of no avail, because ‘hey are corporation flefs wwich the law has not touched, whereupon dwell those who eventually turn to mischief and tnto brigands and robbers. These evils could be extirpated by diaconian measures, but we do not wish to resort to them, preferring rather to adopt the more moderate and siower course of maintaining force to keep them under, while leaving their final removal to the tn- fluences of time. In regard to our finances, we can- pealed the act; but the restriction was again im- | the Tiber, which tor twenty-three centuries re- . We trust that the time is not far distant | Sounded to the maritime bustle of ancient Rome, ta when (hiaremnant of a barbarous code spall be | belug brought before the public with the united swept from the statute book, charms g? rag ge and oe et ore The practical part of tne prospectus informs us that A letter from Cairo, 11 Constantinople, reports that | Signor Filippo Costa has obtained the necessary Sir 8S, Baker's expedition, 1,700 strong, was to start | concession {rom his Holiness and has deposited for the White Nile and Soudan on the 1th of August. bere fi es Siatrer pespuaerties [bemnet ce . bank. Baker Pasha himself, accompanied by Lady Baker | 9 o99, 00, divided into 18,000 shares of 500 lire each, and his personal staff, was to follow in a few days. i be paid up in instalments tn five years, ey Cee lost of the b. and stores of ti aring Six per cent interest. beside the dividend, coe See ae a rrecchandise bad cirecan | 88itis paid up. ‘The port is'to be opened to mer- @ large quantity of merchandise had already | cantife vessels in a year, af before, if the works are ‘been sent on in advance of the troops. suiliciently advanced $0, fosure (shetr natety. ‘This privilege would aliow of a dividend of eighteen or The local agent of the Armentan Patriarch of | Drivmege woul alloy vi urn commencing atter an Jerusalem has received a telegram in Constantinople | outlay of 6,000,000, instead of tne whole 9,000,000 which reports that Mgr. Sahak and the vartaved = The Knew Lrpah hist pane 8 composed of . Princes Aldobrandini, C! , Campaguano, Colonna, (preacher) Dimitrios, who were sent on a mission of | poi'hrago, Odescalchi, Pallavicini; Dukes Massimo intercession to King Theodore three years ago and | and Finuo, Marquises Cavaletts and Patrizi, Count have since been detained by one of the Abyssinian | Falsacanpa, Baron Visconti, Dr. Aldega, advocate chiefs beyond Gondar, have been reieased aud have | Bacchettoni, engineers Bacchettonl, Filippo Cosi legaiize robbery, because certain men in this Curls tian community cannot resist a propensity for steat- ing, “The History and Philosophy of Marriage,” ag argued here, however, is but the natural iruit of New England materialism. it is due to a system of education persisted in for the past two centurtes—a system by which Christianity assumes @ repulsive aspect, or is so distorced that when the mind | becomes emancipated from its teachings it rushes t@ the extreme opposite aud claims as the religion of Christ the theory and practice of an infidelity that recognize as divine only that which gives present pleasure. MAN IN GENESIS AND IN GEOLOGY. By Josepa P, ‘Thompson, VD, D., LL. D. New York: Samuel B. Weils. ‘ver since geology has been upsetting accepted interpretations of the Bible men have been engaged in reconciling the apparent differences. If a careful consideration be given the subject it will be found that few or no actual facts in geology conflict with Holy Writ. There are, however, numerous—far oo F jd Gui, Chevalier Costa, Signors Castell arrived at the full comprehension that this, of all | rope and South America, based on a concession Fesched Cairo in safety. and Piacenting. - a mci Hot bat admit that our expenses are heavy, but thoy | Grier, ie the topic ou which dissensions cannot, in granted in 1864. numerous—theories and speculations, mingled with ‘t 18 to be on the canal system, 6,000 are also necess: ; ibog aa 100" wide. The ingress 100 rae eat eapsiet are increasing with the greater and’ improving de- | the long run, be avoided, Accordingly, this CRIME IN CINCINNATI. incontestabie facts, which not only conflict with all ENGLAND. the depth to vary from seven metres In sumumer to | Velopment of the interior of the country and general | letter will be devoted exclusively to an ac- we have lieretofore regarded as of Divine origin, but omeanaae eight in winter, rie eet en bates os of the Ee Kear ath Pane tee count of what ts gotng on tn some of our kindred Sete SEO Sas gs sR waloh ic accented sarees Sood fabyitaaly over- f the » the remain being land 60, 4 Uhristianity. fortunately, also, geo! The Pablic Schools and Edacation Question= | ree ne eee ne eee Lecueen ‘ana | cessive than with you. Public works have cost a | countries, as things are looking there just at | Sulcide and A arden Beata Anmaesination of a | turn Crneral rule—taac. is, great geologists have Agitation for Political Amnesty—A Noble- | Naples, and distance from Rome yweaty-nine kilo- | great deal; the Mount Cenis tunnel has cost 5,000,000 | present more than usually interesting. rman! dearisseammehe been anytiing elae but Christians, and many of ther mna’s Iden of Freedom of Conscieuce. metres, about half an hour by rail, The grant of | 1faucs per kilometre (I had mentioned my visiting The great festival in honor of the five hun- (From the Cmcinnati Enqutrer, Sept. 15.] real or alleged discoveries have been given to the gee ions the free administrauon of the port and railway 13 } it); it goes on to a speedy completion, notwithstand- 1 of John Huss’s martyrd ‘This week ‘one woe doth tread upon another's | world in forms that seem designed to destroy our LONDON, Sept. 4, 1869, for ninety-nine years from their opening to the pub- | ing the original ovjection of savans aud otner | dredth anniversary of Jo! yrdom and | heel, go fast they follow.” Atone o'clock on Mon- | faith in the Bible, ‘Thas such books as this difficuities. When it is opened one of our reat difficulties in a commercia! view will have isappeared; for hitherto the Alps hays been our ob- stacié a8 well a’ our protection. We have just in- augurated a large maritime arsenai and docks at Spezia. They were necessary for Italy, as foresaw Count Cavour, Lam sorry that you were not there to see the inauguration. Not long since | passed along the Riviera to Savona ({ told him i had been there and secn the shipbuilding, which apparentiy outstripped anything we had in tne metrepolis just @t present), and I counted 250 vesseis, large and mail, on the maritime docks in course of constrac- tion, You see this prosperity is due to the Genoese, energetic aud commercial folks by right of old tra- dition, We are getting along in a maritime point of view very well, (aen, and the interior development of the country will produce vast results; but these cannot be expected as though the work of a day; time ts required. Our manufactures and trade are gomg ahead, and, altaough the people of the soil here in Tuscany could afford to be @ litte more energetic and industrious, sttil the old silk trade 1s reviving, and the demands on the suk fabrics and manufactories of thia province are in excess of the supply. The siiks are of better make than those of France, even the silk wnies, tor more pure silk enters tnto the fabrics than elsewxere. Then again the same revival in various branches ts ing Of in the other provinces. in Naples and icily, where the people have had very few advan- tages owing to the past rule, there nave been great drawbacks to contend with, and trade 1s not ao for- ward, but even there an unwonted condition is being first wrought with the incoming of the present and new generation. In Lombardy and Piedmont, the people are far ahead in the path of progress; the cloths of thelr factories supply us ail with our clothes; they are sold to us for French goods, but they are really homespum and woven in those pro- vinces. CORRESPONDENT—Mr. Count, may 1 take the liberty, do you wear them? you wear them at present? MINISTER— Yea; See there (showing his pantaloons and vest, of a rough texture and grayish color, with the Serbian movement against the Porte (affect- | day afternoon Allen Hall fell dead upon the crowded sidewalk of Third street. At four o'clock Warren ing chief'y the Bosnian and Herzegovian branches of | Fonnedy took the fatal leap trat sent a thrill of hor- the Serbian nation) form the most prominent features | yor through vhe entire city. At eleven o’ciock the of the actual Slavonic political tableau, and around bed oy be bso es bis Med Cera Ie a a e, a fore gray dawn of Tuesd: them gravitate the lesser details, taking {rom them | Toriing came the fast spreading rumor of a gress their form and coloring. The Huss festival, which | crime in their midst awakened many of the denizens 1s o begin in a week, Will ake Diace in Constance, | Of Mult co the scene of the last named traged vi e scene ol last nam Tragedy more and the choice of a neutral place for the solemnity, | pari iat tree ene ports, while an Senate intended more especially to honor the tragic death | pation of the surroundings and an interview with of the great reformer, is the more judicious that it | the eldest daughter of the victim of the foul deed affords no possible food to national jealousy among | that had been done developed the following particu- lara:— the different Slavonic people who might have felt Jobn M. Kruetz, a respectable butcher, residing at agarieved at the martyr’s birthplace, Prague, appro- hs whe mon! ae a ae ee Sea or oe ee larket days, prepare forthe priating him exciusively by solemnizing his memory { fore three o cloc! m ‘3 Work, a3 he had to drive to the slaughter- within her walls, as ho is considered almost | house to outain meat before proceeding to his stand. 83 much & common denizen of Slavondom gene- | He cash his horse in na! Lerane of a hich abi named tnarine Lotz, who lives 01 bs alley, rally es the sainuly brothers Sie and Methodis. | tween Wade and Everett, just around the corner ‘With these, indeed, he nas moréthan one feature in | from nis residence. On Monday night there was a common, though this, a8 well as other important } quiet wedding in the neighborhood, which Kreutz circumstances concerning his life and doctrine, has | and hts iamily attended. been overlooked until very lately. It was he, in Yesterday morning he arose, as usual, at about fact, who gave the Tchechs their present orthography | three o’clock, and, packing away the suit worn the and literary language, for which purpose he selected bibsen Anges ‘the house in his pantaloons and the Praguian dialect out of the innumerabie area. un for the purpose of harnessing his horse, ul grammariess dialects into which the Tc! intending to return and finish dressing. A tew tongue was then divided. As to the religious inno- | minutes after he had gone out a pistol report was vations of which he is considered the o! tor, it | heard by Mrs. Kreutz, but the neighborh having was generally held, even among us Rossians, nor | been a desperate one for some weeks, Aghis, wholly unfoundedly, that he was merely the next | stabbings, &c., having been of almost nightly forerunner of the Keformation, for which statement | occurrence, she did not at once surmise the terrivie we have Luther’s own authority, who repeatedly | truth. A very few minutes of unaccustomed delay, pointed him out as his lecessor. Thus Huss | however, on the part of her hasband, in connection came down to posterity with the undoubted | with the evidentiy close proximity of tho shot, title of @ great Protestant reformer. Now in | sufficed to awaken her anxiety, and she ran to the and @ great deal | corner. She saw nothing at first but the horse, of falsehood also. He denied the supremacy | ready narnessed, and wagon standing by the open of the Pope, condemned the celibacy of the | door ofthe stable. To the latter ane went at once, clergy and advocated communion ander both spe- | and called. Receiving no answer her anxiety be- cles, sous les deux espices; in 80 lar he waa certainly | came fear, and she was hurrying back to cail the entitled to be styled by Luther bis predecessor. But | oldest daughter when she stumbled upon the form In this morning’s London papers the first notes of aap apt te roroec are poet = aa eal grld . who are allowed also to levy special anchorage an the trumpet calling to arms the party, or rather | ianaing duties. They may erect docks and hoid combination of parties, that will next session prove | toem in perpeta. They may organize steam trans- the rain of the Gladstone Ministry are to be heard. | ports under tne papal flag, and are exempted from AS usual, Ike every subject and every political ques | “Uty on all materials irom abroad required for the construction aud successive manutention of the tion at the present day, the sound comes from the works, West, The war cry has been hitherto the Irish |] | The ———— 3 pon eee port 1 amount to 4,496,922 lire, and for the railway (a per- Church, now we have come to the question of Irish | foot evel) Gatts to Rome, 3,073,650 lire; making a education, and a few words are necessary to explain | totai of 0,551, Or in round numbers, uine millions the position of parties as they now stand. Asa lib- | Of lire. eral, and as the head of the liberal party in Engiana, | ,,2he annual tonnage of sipping en erae ane Mr. Gladstone stands pleaged to his supporters to | and Finmicino averages 230,900, of which it 1s cal- permit in every way a system of purely secular edu- | Culated that at least two-thirds will be deviated to cation, But this is not acceptable to the Catholics of | Pstia ae soon, as even a, Kllomelrn of the port aliall Ireland, who are determined to have their portion of | of the port are calculated at 635,568 lire, and those the educational grants made over to support schools | Of the railway at 1,065,625 lire, making a total of which shall teach the children the faith of their fore- | }*7iyis Sauid give a dividend of about nineteen per fathers. Now without the Irish liberal (that is Catholic) | cent on the maximum estimates of nine millions of support, Gladstone could not stand for a single day; Lo mg hp Bi : ed ty the miut- in estimates of and aquarter miifiona. therefore he cannot afford to go contrary to their Nothing can be more alluring to capitalists than wishes. On the other band, he can still less afford | such resu!ts, especially as they are founded to throw away the support of the great Englisn lib. | Upon the present condition of commerce of eral party, and between the two he is fairly puzzled, | Rome and she, PONG Pro Cs en wit The conservacive party in England are in favor of turn out true. But upon the same scale, if ever the denominational system, and would glaaly give jet eee capital of Italy, or a the Irish Catholics the schools they want, provided | furvecn the Momnan and’ italian covets ted the latter would support them ip the contest,w hich | allow of ae ke customs barriers at the must and will come in a few months’ time, of secu- | frontiers of thelr respective States, the prospects of lar versus denominational education. And as Gasstenes erm eae ars Ox neither the English liberal nor the Irish Catnolic The preparations for the Council are continuing party will near of any compromise themselves the | actively in St. Peter's, Elther in consequence of chances are that between tie two the Gladstone | secret warnings received by the police or as mere Ministry will not last through next session of Par- | prudential precautions gendarmes are on guard lament, night and day around the Councti encldsure, and the On the two systems of educativ? it i# not my | most scrupulous care has been taken in the selection province to pronounce, but l think ¢nat the purely | of the workmen employed. In tact, everything w have become necessary, and the more the pity that they have, Dr. Thompson in this work has aimed to “adjust the facts of sclence to the Bible,” and to this end has written a very ciever and argu- mentative sertes of lectures on ‘Man in Genests and in Geology.” He has evidently given the subject much thought, and the conclusions at which he haw arrived are, of course, favorable to the reconcilement of science and religion. Beginning with “The Out- line of Creation in Genesis,” he follows his subject through its various paths until he reaches the ques- tion of “The Antiquity of Man,” in the fifth lecture. Tne two remaining lectures are only incidentaily connected with the je They comprise ‘the Sabbath Made for Man” and ‘Woman the Fam- ily,” tn the last of which we tind an argument against woman being invested with the right to vote. However, if taken collectively, these lectures are quite entertaining and instrocitve. They are hardly so conclusive a8 one could wish, but in some of theuy vhe extensive research of the author has enabled nim to set up am argument witch cannot be readily shaken, if even auy person could be found willing to attack it. SisyL Hunttnaton. A Novel. By Mrs. Jalia 0, R. Dorr. New York: G. W. Carleton, publisher. ‘This is @ domestic story, and will be read with some interest. It is written ina clear, simple style, and hag just enough of incident to save it trom mo- notony. None of the characters are original crea- tions, nor is the subject very new; but the book ts respectable. The story ts that of the clouds and sunshine of Sibyl Huntington’s life, ending, a8 alt these stories end, in a happy mi ath, the sister of Sibyl, ia very well drawn. he ia the tra- ditional sweet, gentle creature whose span of tte is cut short by accident, and often as she has ap) in novels the public never tires of reading of her. ‘The dialogues are here and there forced and iong drawn out, and some of the religions parts are rather tiresome. We will, however, end as we be- n, by saying that the book will be read with some interest. Ita chief merit 1s ite simplicity. It does secular systeut, which works so very weli iu all the | being done to avert the possibility of a conflagra- | coat also rough, but of dark compiexton. They did | if Luther acknowledged all of Huss’s doctrines, he } of her hi lying lifeless in the gutter by the | not aim at effect; there are no conspiracies Wwns aud villages of the United states, is sometow | tion, whether malicious or tortuitous, and that the | !00k very plain and homelike, though, altogether, it | added much of his own, went some | which | wagon. Her first impulse was to lift him. Failing | the happiness of the herome, and the narrative against the traditions and prejudices of the English | danger of such @ catastrophe happening through | Way be said that | found the Count in a very decent runs along calmly, with bard: ripple to disvure Huss never dreamt of going and generally chan to do this, she ehrieked “Murder! and ran home, the spirit of that same predecessor's doctrine, while ee the daughter at the door. Together, and he accepted it in the letter. Huss, then, though he | joined by the aroused neighbors, they returned to taught much that the Protestants accepted and en- | the corpse. larged upon. as by Do means @ Protestant in the When lights were brought it appeared that the ay Pre od conventional sense of the word; | entire right side of the be cd part of the head of the for all tht he has been accounted such through ceu- | murdered man (for murdered, and most foully, John turies, dung Which no doubt has been raised as to | Kruetz had been) was gone. Even the brain was his genuin testantism. Now, however, two let- | missing, and waa not found till daylight revealed it ters—no mcre—lately discovered in our Petersburg | scattered horribly upon the boarding of the opposite Imperial Public Library (one of the richest in | stables (some blotches of it fifteen feet nigh), in Mrs. jd, by ti bye) have considerably | Lotz’s stable yard, and on the ground around for changed tie whole ct of the question, | several yards. A small pocket pistol, empty, lay by Of these letters one is addressed by Huss to the | the body, and had been, apparently, the instrument Patriarch of Constantinople, the Primate of the East- | of death. The pockets of Kruetz had been turned ern Chureh. 1! mite his doctrine to the | inside out, and bis pocketbook, empty, was found a wisdom of the patriarch and expresses an earnest | few feet from where he lay, ‘wish to have the holy man’s opinion whether he finds When our reporter reached the scene the corpse ly its serenity. As people will read novels in which there is no constructive art displayed we can fairiy recommend this to them. Tur Writ1nGs OF De FOB AND THE ILLUSTRATED Works or HOGARTH. Among the cheap valuable publications of the dag which piace within reach of the most moderate means standard volumes like these perhaps there are none more acceptable to the million than the two Whose titles head this notice. They are im- ported from Edaburg and London by Swayne, of Fulton street, Brooklyn, and New York, woll printed and bound, and are sold at a mere trifle. De Foe's works are carefully selected from the most authentie people. In America there is far less pigotry in | atmospheric agency may be diminished the light. with us. Sometiow or other an English, Irish or | ning conductors on the great cupola are being tho- Scotch man can never tet his neighbor go to | roughly repaired. His Holiness ia occupied with heaven his own way. What woula you gay | the future ae comforts of his episcopal guests, in the States if a man of education and re- | and is visiting the palaces and monasteries in which Guement dismissed @ good and faithiul servant | apartments are beiug prepared for them. ata moment's notice wimply and solely because he Funeral services continue to be performed with happened by chance to find out that the wan was a | great pomp for the repose of Count Gabriel Mastai’s Catholic? Yet such an occurrence took place to my | soul, and it is justly observed by # Roman paper that certain knowledge less than tiree moatns ago. An | “if the brother of his Holiness did not enjoy during English nobleman, u man of great wealth, a liberal | life the temporal advantages which his exalted rela- in politics, and one Who passes for an enlightened | tionsiiip might have procured hita that re'ationsiup supporter of literature and arts, had need of a | will have insured him far more considerable spir- buuler. Aman Called op bin, said be was leaving | itual advantages after his death,” his present place because uis master was going saegtalinild abroad, and would be glad to take service wilh the Feri, Who Wanted a servant, The nobleman wade ITALY. suil, and neatiy, not gaudily dressed). e Turin, for instance, where you lived, and so long the captal. Well, when the latier was first removed there was some repining and gnashing of teeth on the part of the citizens; but DOW most of them are reconctled, and Turin has a stronger safer future than ever before when she was the ital; the citizens have sturdily and energeticaily gone to work to build up a trade, and now they have commercial prosperity in store for them. Tuey deserve great credit. CORRESPONDENT—Speaking of the capital, which, I need scarcely inform you, is the great italan ques- tion nowadays mooted outside of your borders, 18 Florence proud of its new honor as chief city of the Kiagdom’ INISTER—Well, the Florentines do not seem to see things in that light. You may recollect some ‘This pobieman bad a son, & little boy about seven - years of age, who took a’ great fancy to the new | What the Mi bucler, eing greg: | spoiled and petted vy Ruilroad=-Rome as the Capital, his parents, refused to walk oul or go anywhere Frorent except with the man, One day he came ru Wishing , tithes a ning to Wis father and show nim in great ishing (0 oltain for the readers of the HeraLp triumph What he called @ necklace, tat he had | ab account of the political and industrial situation of the Dutler’s pocket. The said necklace | tn this peninsul ° nile rosary, with w small crucifix attached iis peninsula, | concluded to seek that account every inquiry, found the inan knew his business bs én years buck everything was here at tue greatest | the same doctrine In accordance with the dogmas | was laid out in the neat parlor of the victim's | Sources and edited by John 8. Keltie. Chatmer’s ta- perfectly, haa lived 1a two or three families of the | pirerys ith Premier C degree of cheapness, over any other Darteor the } of the Eastern Orthodox Church, The second Ieiter late home. The deceased * was just forty-nine | teresting life of the fertile and eccentric, thi highest position, and bore an excelieut character, | TMterview wi remier Count Menabrea= | peninsula; now, that the capivai is here, they pay | (both are original autographs, observe) is the pa- | years of age (next Thursday being his birth. | Orillant, author is prefixed, and ts in itself an addi- He engaged the butler, Wuo for six or seven montus | What He Said to x Herald Correspondeat= | three and four times as much money for all their | triarch’s answer, in which he states that, after due | day), of a quiet, amiable disposition, and, it 1g | ton to the ltprary worth having. Hogaroh’s familiar gave him the highest satisfacuon im every way. | polities and Industry on the Poninanin= | 79%; and, of course, 1 does not suit them(ga ne | examination of the tenets submitted to him, his con- | beileved, without @ personal enemy in the world. pictores are reproduced in sixty-two excelient flias- Jatt pas leur afaire), wnd they resort to grumbling now and then. As regards Romejfor the capital, they do not speak so much about it ‘for some time past (word for word); but I suppose Kome will be the nominal capital after @ whole, just as Frankfort in Germany Was during the coni¢deration—something of the same sort. But this question of a capital {or Italy 18 also one for solution by time, CORKBSPONDENT—What haa become of the dis trations on wood, with the story of each, well told, in Jetterpress, making @ really handsome volume. ‘The merits of neither author nor artist require oritt- cism at this late day. What attracts attention is the cheapness of the publications, which are admirably got up, at a price within tlie reacn of every one, New Yor« Intusrravep, New York: D. Appleton & Co. acience fully allows him to declare them mm the most | He leaves a wile and five children —two sons, ten perfect conformity with those of the lioly Kastern | and twelve years of , and three daughters—to ‘Orthodox Church. mourn his dreadful end. It 1s gratifying to know Before addressing himself to the patriarch, Huss, | that they are not totaly dependent, Kructz having while elaborating the “heretical” docirine which } inherited the thrifty and frugal habits of his nation. cost hia his life, had sent his friend and pupil, | 1t will be a more gratifying thing, however, to hear Jerome of Prague, who appears to have | that the villain or villains that consummated this stood to his teacher somewnat in the same | bloody deed are tn the hands of the law. relation that Melancthon subsequently held to- At present writing nothing has been developed er Thinks of the Pacific from the highest source, viz., fr the fi ‘The greater part, if not the whole, of the conte: tot. ‘The Karl took’ it from the chlid, sent for the Ne jource, viz., from the first man | possessed princes, dukes, King of Naples, &c, ? a the Ri here to study some | leading to @ hope of thetr speed: hension or be B J spec butler and asked whether he wasaCatholtc. The | in the land, General Count Menabrea, Prime Minister | they really entertain Lopes of regaining whe thrones Thevlogical ants of controversy, ‘These Tunings, othe Snore, light over the, Narible atta. of this little book first appeared in Appleton's Jour. 1ALer BAK was. ‘The nobleman ask from which you ejected them? him way | of his Majesty V: 7 « he had never mentioned tuis before. The man said esty Victor Emanuel, Having occupied sa he had not done so because be did not think was | OMC@l position near the government in the & matter of any moment 10, wat faith or creed or | days of Cavour, J had not the aiightest dif. longed, @ Karl replied he was ver; ‘essed sorry to part with the man, but that he could pid tots Pen engin lla I SMP Keep a Catholic in his service, He wrote hima | arectly @ note to the Minister, carried it in person Eo ty ei “y-4 Nye advance, toid nim | to the Foreign Office, ‘was instantaneously ushered be kit w give him an ut Shataoter whenever he ras patied nan Oa. es Into his presence, and accorded by him a most cor- dismissed him. ‘the man was not allowed to sleep | “al, agreeable reception, The conversation that another night ia & house. And, what is more, | ensued was, I might say, of the free and easy order ve. no {anit Whatever to Nod with hime fe ia | the priuetpai points, gratided to have received thom aoe coy oye a AY e rie Understangs | 12 such a ready and frank manner in & land where perfect Ui ot ate Bil his other dut ‘Moreover, he meter f. 1-4 tardiness, old, rotten formalities and insincerity on with his fellow servants and Was a great favorite | the part of the rulers was not long since the order of with all the family, I would never have turned him | the day. a oa aa 1 tepid) ate Lathouc, and t) Count Menabres is of Savoyard origin, and about ‘You wil wo doubs imagine that tis sobleman | Aiy-dveyeuracCage, Be uss long Leen ia tue sere then, not to speak of other minor ones, which it | Our theory is that the assassing had studied would take too long to detail here, prove unto evi- | the hal of their prey. They knew, proba- dence that Huss was not, as is commonly believed, | bly, that he had oveen cotlecting moneys one of the originators of the great t Refor- } due him the previous day, and that he gen- mation, but that hia religious reform Was merelya | erally had twenty or thirty dollars on his return to the Kastern Orthodox Church. Another person in the morning, to pay for meat purchased to circumstance which has been generally overlooked sold again. His family do not know how much in the appreciation of this great man’s life is that } he had with him on Taesday morning, but ie that his career was at least as much political as religious. | he was never without some few dollars at least. ‘The very chi which his religious convictions un- | Knowing ali thia the murderer, or murderers per- derwent must have been to a great degree influenced | haps, watched their man from ambush tn the alley, by the political persecution which was levelled | sprung suddenly upon him, placed their weapon or ai his university in Prague, at him personally and | weapons to his temples, demanded his money, and those of his brother professors of the Tchech na bones the cogged Tesistancé to such a demand, in- tionality by the Catholic Germans in power. inctive to the Teuton, being made, fired. The struggle between the Tchech and the Ger- ‘The ghastly wound inflicted, indicating, as it does, fe weltaa in chufon matter tase wad originally, | not} rend gina th ewiotimra’ nead, favors, tha , | Mot pr he victim's head, favo and above all, a zealous Tchech patriot. The opposi- | theory, if, indeed, it does not countenance the more tion which his peonse suffered at the hands of the | frightful one that whoever fired the fatal shot came Germans and the encroachments of the power-loy. | stealthily upon Kruets, placed the muazic to ing, grasping, fanatical, Latinizing Roman clergy, if | head, and sent him beloce us God wituows even & (hey did nos cause bim entirely to secede, Whiok gun | second’s Waruing nal, The most prominent features of interest tn this city are faithfuily described and are handsomely illustrated. Attached 1s a map of the city, a4 alao @ ‘strangers’ guide.’ Magazi Notice, Journal of the Franklin Institute for September— In this journal we find as perhaps the chief ob- ject of interest a very full report by Professor Mor- ton of the operations of the photographic party taken out by him to jowa to make pictures of the Jate eclipse. This report is illustrated with a photo- graph from one of tho negatives taken during tne Votality and by several wood cuts, As far as we can Judge from the various apecimens which have been exhibited Proiessor Morton's party has been moat fortunate in obtaining fine resulta, This journat ‘aiso containa tho jal complement of screntific items and engineering and mech: articies, and does credit to ite editor and to the venerable society by Whiou it is maintained, MINISTER—NO, they do not. None except the ex- King of Naples, who siered up by the party of the reaction and has irer field to work in among the populations of the South than he would have in the North. The others, the ex-Dukes of Parma aud jodena and the ex-Grand Duxe of Tuscany, are liv- ing quietly somewhere in tiie Austrian Ucaninions and giving Us no trouble whatever, There were other questions to which I would have liked to have received answers, but as they had di- rect reference to several personages in very delicate povitions—in extremis, | might way—it occurred to me that it might not be delicate om my part to put them on the block, as his Excellency migot have some scruples in erty them. J allude to Pius 1X, Napoleon Ill. and Garibaldi, The Pope and Garibaidi gre the Minister's most violent enemies; Napoieon 111. ts his only surviving friend in @ high Place, Continuing the dialogue I,said:— OonRRSPONDENT—Mr, Count, allow me to Leer you for the cordiality SEeTs have receive me and talked upon the Baliucal aad Wa