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4 EUROPE, } LUs hop of Westminster nical Council. The Catholic Ar Defines the Le al Woolsey, | 1, Political and Social | uations in France. rmany---its Treasury Parliamentary Prospects. Finance and Bull 3, Nationa Cabinet Cri piting in Madrid. The Empress Eugenie's Farewell to Turkey a rrival of Other Royal Guests, ench Transatiantic Mart § a ny's steamship Lafayette, Captain Roussan, from TMayre on the Sih and Br@st the tn of November, arrived at this port yesterday forenoon, landing 145 passengers Lafayette brought also our special correspondence from the Continent of Europe tu de- tall of ony cable telesrams, of as late a date as that Vo hand {roi Great Britain by the Cunard steamship dtuseia. ‘The Germ eier, (rot ant, n mat! steamship Hammenta, Captain Hamburg, y of Havre, on the th 1 this port yesterday eventng. by w x ENGLAND. nd Rome=What the y and What shop of Tho Ecumenical SLeading” L eir OGyinion is Wor Westin ex toa Herald Correspondent beg es of 1780%—An Lintian Prelate on m oF Conscience in Ameria=se surch and st ny Freede tion of © LONDON, Nov. 4 186%. rence between the En- an press, However strongly and | er may “in opinioas or res it ls never tmper' ¢ideas upon others, or great crain t nilvocate © it never v to thraat to dictate to 18 and peoples with which it bas no concern. k hh uewspapers are the exact reverse of Ut) If an angel from heaven were to visit the earth, or if the ot mankind himself were to reappear on Mount Zton the great majority of the Ragish newsp Would at once offer either to one or the otler their advice and opinion upon things in g nnd wihiat they, the “smart young men” uy¢ aif of the London Times, the Zeeyraph or the Standard ia particuiar, t about them and va. The Lond. pawicularly a very great ovfender in that w day it had a lead the comtng of the Vatican, whk Jouncl @ been most oitenstive | to the Catholics of this land—a body which eludes in tis members ading mea in y 8 walks tu life, Th 3 not one that offered, 80 10 3) an opinion upon what the ¢ Might or wight not decide upon; it was simply—it the ish tongue has aby meaning—written in a spirit of inteotional affront towards Catholics, sn tng at what they hold to be most reverent, and laughing at all they consider most sacred. You must recollect that so long 9s your civil: war in America lasted this was exactly the tone pursued isyou and yours by th e presa of Eng- with very few exceptions. mes aud the Standard and the Pail Mall Ge 1 tuat they knew, much be! 2elte KNEW, Or sBUp- r what was for the | pos a oeeen 5 1) ta atvide ik NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBEK 13, 1869.—TRIPLE SHEET, of Amertca and the Catholio Church tn your country turned up, and his Lordship expressed him- self in the stronvest terms of admiration respecting the way the Catholics of that land were treated by the Protestants in general and by the government lu particular, ‘That, he sald, ts what T call true hberty. There 1# no favor shown to aay one creed more than another in the United states, and Touly wish that in every couatry in the world our Churels Was upon the saine foottag as it ts in the United States.” “What,! 8% id 1, joking, “your Lordship, a Roman @ country in which the State recog- om at all? which 1 mato a note of when I got ‘Me ever the Huly Father and tl f have tho po to do 80, t wilt put bi throughout tue world on tho g as it is in the United States. weea Charen and Siace in olden times was a necessity, but mour days ely Means interference of the State in Church ers, and inthe quarrel the Church always gets ne worstolit. Lt we ever hope to restore the love of Christin Europe and to subdue the terrible unbe- ef that exists everywhere We muat do our Ulinost tha 5! from tne Church throughout The Americans are a noble people, and t re the only nation that really understands what trae liberty means, You do not understand tt in Eugiand., You always work to keep unser what you do not believe. In the United Staves alone is conscience to be found.’ said 1, “what about Rome and the tempo- worof the Pope? Would you divorce Church ate in that country #”’ said; “there it ta different; the State ts the Church and the Church ig the State. ‘he lope cannot be the subject of any prince in these days, aud therefore le must be a price.” ta this conversation # think you will flad the solu. fon of muck that will be done, at least i one mat- ter, at the Council, rope. French Expositions of the Ecamenical Council aud its Efects=What the General Idea is in England—Phe Catholic Church and Modern Society=What tho Prelaies Will Not Do Maumer of Debate and Voting—The Pacific Nailrond Aiding the Transit of the Hicrarchs-Bishops from the Sandwich Jsiunds, Peay, and Other Distaut Sees. sDON, Nov, 6, 1869, When writing my letter dated the 4th inst, on the subject of the coming Ecumenical Council, which at present oceuptes so much attention on both sides of the Atlantic, there were two works, or rather an article anda book which | wanted to refer to, but could not lay my hand upon themin London. The first of these Is an article called “Le Christianism et la Societ by the Duke de Broglie, which ap- peared, if I remember myght, in February last, in the “2ove des Deux Montes.” The other is & work entitled, “Les Principes de 89 et la Dboetrines Catholique,” by a French priest cailed Godard, and published five or aix years ago. Since my last letter both of these have been sert me by a friend in Paris, and [ shail venture to tax the patience of your readers with an extract or two from these writings, as tending to prove that I have been endeavoring to show in my last commu- nications that there is at Rome a strong desire to e the doctrines of 1789 with the views of the urch, in other words, to make ¢ Church and liberal opmions agree, or, at least, not disagree in the »world, But before gotng further let me remark that bh in England, these political move- ments are so fixed and religion so uncertala the interest felt respecting the coming Council is if not entirely, with regurd to its bearing tglon. In France it 1s just the contrary, eligion is, so to say, fixed. A man—that 16 the vast majority of men—either believe all tho Catholic Church teaches, or they believe nothing at all, On the other hand, politics in that country are very—I ou to say extremely—unsettled, and tt follows that all, or neariy all, the interest felt respect. ing ecoming Connect at Rome is on the score of politics, Now, the two writings from which | shall ote have both been formally approved them, that tag of the written by the Duke do ances between the Catho- ty, Says that the former ily relations with the latter during eighiecen hundred years, aud in every Court “from utius to Charlemagas, from Charlemagne to Sharies V., from Charles V, to Louts XIV., from Louls XIV. to 1 “Why, then,’ he aaka, “why, then, should there be only one date, that of 1789, then that spiritof adaptation in Christianity hag 1, and why should there be one, and only one, tate Of society which 1s bound to divoree Christi- anity on ac ompatipility Of Lemperr And, he goes on to say, Tonn oaly find one ¢ to ugsign, namely, Ue abstract and aracter that society in France, by the islators since 1759, has always aifee the principles en whlch it iy instituted, proceeds to show how It ia the revoluti« of the great American repudilc than the 8 selves kn The whole of your | were in favor of stamping ut the rebellion; said that you were bloodthirsty line of conduct wi allow to be divided, the | 0 comparatively weak mutual weakness we Loadon 7717 and crag! and your rig have been to divide, or one stroug uatton into t ones, which would add to by Waging war upon ea tuutty offered, But question of the Beur that Auiericaus 6 f they auy London paper. i have within the last few days had a of wiih the Most Rev. D. Westminster, and Me Church of Eagland, tf ter acquainted with a 18 gi @ more intimate friend of Pins 1 ile is au ardent man, zealous ior the jain Wiich he Was a convert only wuen approaching m: die life, and even Lis enemics—for every man Who is at ali above his teliows must 1 enemies—allow | Dinu to be Most Sincere, Most (rutuful and most anx- Jous to teil and to way, on all occasions, not only the irath, but the whole truth. Well, I spoke to the Arcnotshop and asked his Reyerence’s opiuion a4 to What the Council Would dectde upon or What swb- epical Council? Simply this— tnot to believe one word upon read It, or W read it in tis abject ion whey onversation | ug ontn Kome or than is this pre- | by Rome than the frst. bot the republican opinions of modern secmy which the Catholte Church undermines, ana how & man may be ulterly opposed to the doetrl i the divine right of kings aad yet a faithiu ou wi follower of that Church, The second work to which I wish to draw your attention has been still more formally approved of As I said before, it was pub- Hished in 1803 hor being a friend—the Avbé M. Léon G ho, before allowing it to got went bimseif to Rome and formally sabmit- work for the approval of the Pope. He was Kept @ very long time in suspense, but at tast received the formal approbation of {ome respecting his book, which was officially deciared to contain nothing that was contrary to faith. \ work the Abbe Léon Godard write: that they’? (t incipies Of 1749) “do not contradict siou of the Catuolic, Apostolic and koman areh, to the judement of which we submit with- reserve; and We are convinced that they are in n t to opinion, with the jadgment ited doctors of ine Church and of And again:—"We will maintain the inscribed tm the constitution of our all the explanations which wo have given, aod which no one has a right to exclude, bee swe have satd, the epoch of ’59 is one of uble face—the ove good, the other evil; the one liberal in the legitimate sense of the word, the other revolutionar And, once more to quote (rom this sane author of our adversaries are rejection of '89, In order at us of a desire to set np again the , With all Its abuses, and to overset y Would take ito consideration, e ansured me thao neither he hor any pri Cathole Church could say for certain wi would be mou! made with secrecy, of tne Councli woud be embly had come to the ¢ unul then wih waust be inere insioue of 1 ture. Att of our interview be presented me with a copy of t pastoral etter he has i lergy aud to the nful of bis divcese, work—for it 18 a sulnewhnt vniek pampt —iquoted in | Tuy last lette manne Vint Work and the pecunu he gave me | which he more | iy, that | t eof the mi d that there could be lttle are called Ais in plain english Lie princte HCLCADS e revily and we tn my doutt but “oF 1782," W ples upon w how | Daglish ave y governed, whl be formally | rines of kiugdom goverument | the Catholic Courch, And vis } dead ine to of my subject that ia little uncder- | siood, aud of, u ly by those | who don't t body, but also by | very many that Uhureh, ip i3 thiss—tr we rew history of tive Catho- ue Church, or tf we compare ihe writings of the | acknowledged } divinies of that Caurcu, we shall ind cunt th of the Vatuoite body are those of deyeiopment— $, that practically, ex- cept im certain Standard artivies of futu, U lic Chuveh ls and extends ‘yl its crevd a ng & the wines and the ne of the period. Now, from the spirit Archbishop Manning ldvess to his ¢ yather that since te lof Jrent closed tings, BOO years ago, changed at have changed with it. tiook at the s iron & Cathodic point of view, and [or the uc Will Linagine iny sei! & Catholic, observing What I con- Sider to be erroneous in tie bost to amen When the Counell of Trent sat the main object of that asscmoly was to comvat te opinions of Vro- tesiantisin, Which were then new in Lurope, und to | deine more rigidiy the landimarks of certain Catholi doctrines, relating to t raments, to marriage aad to other matters connected wita the cr tae | “danger (rom Vrotestauuem' (rel Wrilig in a Catholic: point of view) has passed away, put other shows and quicksand’ upou which tie saicntul may be wrecked have come in sight. one of these | 1 to remember Liat i have assum: myself for this mow to be a Cati 4 education, which means tte veaching of children to write aud at read and cipher and gt a # fair kno i of histor fon. Ano’ a peaking as Pony src -\ \uud Is What T hav: ees by Which Mic > power im many wi comes from the Asourts is the asparat of Charel and Scale, ae at presoaut carried out in nearly @very Couutry iu tue world, aud wren which Tanai aliude on o iature CCousiou. Leto take the last first, About a year agoT happened to be tn Paris, and Met at the house of a@iricud in iat city a oman prelate who held high office at the Pape: Coury suing we only one Of tie company Who Could speak | Jiatian well, and the Bishop not une omer here $i Was asked by our to sit pext him al ner, aud during nearly the whole evening we remained iu more ot less conversation, Among topics the subjoct i tay not be | , What we do 1 who read ry it, but sti ab out i ti} not avai nave a benet iu actics We will bafic, and u inch of the ground which fending and a right to hold.” y from th —both, be tt remein- from writings which have been formally at Rome during the lastiew years— show neither the Eeumenieal Council, ven the Syllabus when interpreted by Rome iself, Will in avy Way attempt to inteviere with the const 10 inions which govern counirics hke AY supreme pow ‘Vert went is Most Indubitably di o much, then, sor th aa 1 Deheve, wid as | thi ersons Who look with dre h (nan agai xe n, for wiat the Cornell will not do, e ashort viance al what, 40 lar as Ww wat We read and icara Mm varie {i wil do, and with general connci! rte Charely Dany Wh brought HCl, SUil less to pro hat the ide Upon such questi w usual, as is the ca job Bul doeg Yot exactly approve o! he case with your great civii war—the press has been most wrong-headed, most ind most misieading on the subject. I know un—I have it trom an stalian prelate in bien sme, WOO Was not long ago ta Ragand— ting chamber of the Councis the fullest éfbn ou ail subjects Will not ouly be Nay, Move, DO DisiOp pr ow how hits comp: have individually yor on every question Will be by baile esull Will, as a matter of cour aud ia the nd hail under the dome 4 there will be no debates, merely the { men le 4 doing wy | upon in 5 | tueins ia \ 8 gre halt ther debe Will be no debuting {5 British to a turn? bishops tuat belong to the ) (orougbout the world, ali ol whom say urdered, by the Pope to at+ 4, aud of Which only some sixty-three got hold of the will be no tend the Cour have, on acco. Cor old age or infirmity, begged to be excused. ‘ine cr tired of as- | sorting that the pre. an domimions | Will outnumber the be able to ry Matiers the ou a len { figures in thia ve inated - | Tae Papal ‘mber 6 archbishops and 58 biahopss total, 6 Enwitsu, Irish and Kngisn palal arent #10, t D d States are 7 in num 55. So that the prelates dear mother tongne a this iotter I Wrillen Im Will AWoUnS to no jess than 125, or more than enouga to carry all pet tiey tm snoald decide to tarow tielr Weigut into ony scale oF ver ule nimber of the ( Q itisiian world ta | deducted 03 who have sent | Calculate there will sent, Among th Atholio bishopathrongh- from Wiese must be rds Oo! 909 prelates pre- prelates every people ven Paul @nd nation and race will have their representatives, There 18 uo tongue Liat will not be understood among them; no man Who could not find am them some one that could uadevatand whac Ke Jiget the other day, (or iustance, @ bishop, a Frengu on man, on his way to tho Council, who had aince the year 1832 been a missionary in the Sandwion Isiands. He came to Europe by way of San Francisco and thence across your wonderful Continent by the Paciio Katiway., It was the frat railway he had ever seen, Two days later 1 was introduced at the honse of a Catholio friend in Loudon to @ bishop that Rad just arrived from Pegu, in tae far East of Eastern india. He had labored for twenty-oue years among tie pagans, and Was DoW on his Way to oboy the call of tue Holy Father and join in the deliberations at, ome. My {rieud told me iat all this bishop's personal bag- gage was contained tn a hand bag, and thas his bre- | Viary was (he heaviest, as his gold cross was the ouly valuable article ke possessed, During the pass Wook, (00, thore have been in London tea bishops from tbe Unived States, One frou the Weat india isies, five from Mexico, two from Guatemala, two from Ecuador, three from New Grauada, two tron Venezcia, one from Bombay, two from ie Cape oF Good Hope, one from Ayza aud one from Calcutta ail on their way to Rome, Lmake menuon of tieso Incidents 43 bearing Witness to the universail! catholictty of the Council, and as giving testimony Against Lihat litte-rminded spirit shown by the kng- lish press, which invariably tries to decry witat it canuot updersiaud—what (to use a word coined, As i believe, by Charies Dickens) our “iusulariiy” pre- vents us from allowing Co be true, But 1 And { have already exceeded my Tuite with- ont couching on the subject as to what, tn all proba- bility, will de brought Oefore the Council as regards mutters of faith, First of these—in fact, tho only ono to which I shail allude—is the personal infaliibility of the Pope. But L must reserve tals Cor my next lebior TURKEY. Tho Empress Kugenie’s Fareweil—More Royal Visitors—ifow tio Princes are Recoivod and Hodged=The Sultau aud the Sxez Canal Fotes, CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct. 1859, The place left vacant by the departure of the Empress of Frauce js fast being filled up by other sovereigns and princes of the reign- ing families of Europe. Previous to her leav- ing Siamboul she decorated various of the Ottomaa funcuonaries who had the honor of attending upon her Majesty. To others she gave jawelled boxes and rings of value, and various presents in money to churches, hospitals, schools, &c., in the charge of Catholic fréves et sw@urs. To tho servants of tho Sultan’s palace she gave 40,000f, The Sultan, it ls said, did not give her presents of much value. He, however, presented her and hor ladies with alot of Cashmere shawls, embroidered laces, &c., and the fe caik which he had made for her use while m2 the Bosphorus. This cost some $12,000, We have here at the present time a Prussian and an Italian prince, and in the course of tho weok ex- pect the Emperor of Austria, wita a large suite of the most distinguished noblemen and ministers of his government, A Dutch prince is also soon to arrive and even the young King of Greeco 18 to call upon tho Sulian on his way to Egypt, and be present at the opening of the Suez Canal, The Prussian Prince, heir to the throne, and husband of the daughter of Queen Victoria, together with Prince Louis of Hesse, also a son-in-law of the Queen, are lodged in tho Palace of Beylerbey, recently vacated by the Empresa of France, They ave engaged in visiting the princ’- pal poiats of the capital and tts environs, All have with tem a goodly Dumber of officers and at- tendants, The more prominent members of the Prussian colony went out in steamers to meet the Crown Prince, and the usual formality of firiag sa- lutes and manning the yards of the men-ot-war at anchor in tie Bosphorus was gone turough with oa thelr arrival. Prince Asinodeus of Italy is lodged tn the palace of Wondukh, on the European side of the Buspho- Tus, near to the mouth of the Golden Hora. Lnis palace 13 the same that lodged the Prince aud Princesa of Wales during their visit, Where the pultan will put the King of Greece Is not yet stated, but it is supposed that he will have to put up with the imperial Kiosk of Guek Soo, or the “Heay- euly Waters,” In Asia. itis not yet decided whether or not the Sultan will also go to Egypt for the Canal of Suez, Isinau Pacha, Uke Viceroy, it 1s believed, las not invited him—at least in the mode in which be Myited other sovereigns and priaces—to visit In person. Prova- bly it was bis mtention to do go after having secured the promise of the oflers; but the “are up” came olf, and he seemed to deem it wise to keep out of harm’s Way and not come up here atsuco a mo- ment, This contvefemps as occurred at an unfor- tunate period, and must be a source of some embar- yassment to the Sultan’s guest. Some think it would be wise inthe Suitan to take ail of his royai guests with him on his own tnyiation, and proceed to Egypt mperson, ‘The Viceroy would thus be com- pelled to receive lim with tmpertal honors, and ne would then a'so subside Into @ secondary position as @ pacha, a governor general or one of the princes or the empire. The enenies of the Viceroy will dount lesa Oppose this; Lor there 1s no reason to suppose fora moment that Ismail Pacha would tarn the op. operand to good advantage and make peace with FRANCE. The Social and Govyeramgntal Sitnation— Radical Agitation and “ako Believe” Revolntion=Wint the Solid, Subsrantial Classes Really Want—Labor and Capital— The “Strikes,” Panis, Noy. 4, 1869, It is diMeult to wrile a letter from Paris without saylug something avout politics; but if the writer is at all conscientious he will drop the sensational style so much Jn vogue of late, and instead of pre- dictiug riots and revolations he will record pasaing and coming events, with the simple comment that any serious infractions of public order were never less likely than at the present moment, We aro to have another clection in Paris on the 2ist and 224 of this month, for four candidates to the Legislative Body, in the place of the four radicals who were elected in lust May, but who having been elected at the same time to seats in the same Legislature in the provinces resigoed their elections in Paris, in the expectation of getting four other candidates of the same political stripe added to the opposition tn the Chamber. It 13 a wouder the government does not reform tnis crying abuse of the electoral law which allows a candidate to present himself, if he chooses, to all the Constituencies of France at the same time, In 1348 Lamartine, then at the height of his popularity, was elected in something like forty-two different piaces, and as he could sit for but one of those forty- one new elections had to be gone through, The same thing on a smaller gcale took place tn May last, and the country ts therefore kept in a continual fever of political agitation by the new elections rendered necessary by this absurd and objectionable usage. No more striking tustunce of its tuconventence, to Say the least, need be given than the new elections that are to come off in Paris tn @ couple of weeks. erybody had enough of this sort of thing last spring, bat here we are called on to quad tho gaine nauseous draught over again, to the dis- gust of everybody but the revolutionary party, but who are always gid to parade themselves and thelr subversive doctriner before the community. Thero is certainly no reform more necessacy in Frauce than to assimilate these electoral laws to those of England and tue Vatted States; and when the goy- ernment s¢es that it ts only the ultra opposition that profits by tis glaring defect of the law, tt ts, [re peat, a marvel they do not set prompty about Its modification. It is rather hard to aay what will be the resnit of the new elections on the 2ist inst, There is a aecided re- | | | | rs | #o that we may | action going on in the minds of the upper and middie claases of Parts, Last spring the dominant sentiment | of all classes was to curtail the excessive power of the Fmperor, “Down with personal government’ was thea the popular cry, and this widespread feellog operated through France to such an extent ag to reduce the usual majority of the Emperor from soiue three millions toone, It was the significant manifestation that stared the Emperor into prompuy taking the country Into partnership with him, aa was shown last July by the modifecation of the constitution he then proposed, His sensible con- duct then, afd the proofs given siuce of lis desire to conform {0 (ue wishes of the country whenever unmistakably expressed have satisfied pees opinion not ony in Paria, but everywhere, Hence the re. action th the capital which J fires mentioned, But another cause vas contributed siderably to bring this abo’. Since last August: Napoleon haa given unbounded loerty to the press, and the offensive | excesses committed py the revolutionary organs | | havo aroused generat aversion, if not dread, A striking prot of this is exhibited by the severe cen- Jouriud des Pooats, perhaps the highest tone sure of the respec in Paris, but La Liv even Le } ayer bie press of Paria. Not only tho rie, Woe organ of Girardin, and ecle, the chie! 4 vepunlican paper, ali unite , In loudly denouncing the Vigience aad acurtlity of | the alta journals, Tis jg not only @ good | sign of the abatement of that flercé political spirit | go long characterisito of the rreuch press, but shows | that good sense and good taste are gaimng a settied ascendancy ta Franco, Tho vuigar attacks on the | Empreas bave stocked every onc. There is n0 Ae- | nying sho 18 & Vory popular personage, Though | } somewhat suspected of a partiality for tho clorgy her life has been 60 biameless and distinguished by so many touchlag acts of charity and munaticence that she has become dear to te heart of the peopie and respectable in the eyes of Lue decided encmn.es of the empire, To abuse and disparage her, therefore, wore equally npid and unseemly, Whatever a, I defects the French may have there is no dispallug thew proverbial galiautry, aud the graclites of first revolution to women, as the execution of Madame Roland and others, did more to disc G with (he masses than aavihing else. The revolu- Uonists of the present day seem just aa vulgar, not to say brutai, as thelr predecessors, but public opin.on fs stronger gow thin of jor and thelr license of pen and tongue meets with quicker and sterner reprobation, In the face, then, of the reaction I speak of , 16 t# uncertain witat will be the drift of the couing eee- tions, and what adds to the perplexity is the dissen- sion provailing among the ultras themselves. There Was a meeting Of these the other day wt thy Louse of Julos Favre, andhe took liigh ground agalost what is called the “imperative mandate,” or (he doctrine of passive obedience to covstitvents. This has oftey been debated im the United states, and it hag just been started here by some of the out-of door politicians and journalists of the radical section, Who aspire to dictate to their delegates tn the Legidiature. This, of course, wounds the vauily aad lessens tho tmportance of the more prominent mem. bers of the. opposition, such as Jules Favie, Brugst Picard, Jales simon, €e., and they utter their indig- nauon strongly; but others, fearing for thelr popu- lariuy, seek LO evade the issue. Hence adivision has broken out, and what effect vats will have on the 21st ot the month remaius to be seen, Buough of poli- ties tor to-day. ‘Tuo most prominent topic of the day fa the unt. yersal struggle (ab bas of late declared ttsal throughout France between capital and labor, We Dear 01 notuing, in wil quarters aud In eyery piace of industry, bul strikes, Afver revealing themselves iu all parte of Fraace, (hey have begua vtrulently to tufest the capital, and aré spreading every day with the celerity of an epidemic. At last they have thrown tuo great dry goods establishments into extreme coniusion, and lus has secured the attention and sympathies of the temale world of Paria, which natura@ly toads to complicate all adjustment, Oub of some 12,000 employes LF this department of trade ] 5.000 aro out on strtke, and this includes not ouly those belind tue counter, but the buyers, shopwalk- ors aud casuiers, A journal reimarks:—“di ts a strike of the priest’ in the temple of fashion, and what are the worshippers todo?’ There isa great iuconvenienee to customers, bub serious 1088 LO te heads of these houses, The public generally sympa- tuige with the strikers, for tiem demands are con- sidered just and reasonable. They ask for vary little therease of pay, but a diminution of the hours of labor, which now amount to fifteen oat of the twenty-tour, and iuciuding o portion of the Sunday, While there is a cry raised iu the United states for only eigut hours of labor, here are the siopmen of the taost remuneralive wade in Paris working steadily for dfteca hours every week day, and also a@ part of every Sunday. Jao England the work of this particular class ist ar less In ours; they have not ouly the entive Suuday to themselves, but ic is geting quite general to close tho ary ods stores ly Loudon on Saturday alter- noon, The English employés in this business are therefore much better vif than thea Parisian brethren, ‘the war in this especial line still cou- tinues, and the rebels are weil organized and weil supplied with means, They are proposing to open co-operative stores on their own account, and overs of assistance are freely tendered. There 1s no doubt their lady patrons ure zeaious im their ald, and toe proprietors of the great mayasins de Paris had bee ver iefect belore driving these poor feilows to extremity or they may get the worst of WW Just think of very low wages and fifteen hours of datly labor, with part of Sunday included! Now tiat public attention 18 called to their case a recorm of suc abuses and Nl treatment 13 certain to be etected. Why don’t the politicians here, wao make such @ ridiculous fass about poitucal liberties, which mean notuing im fact, lend a hand vo these overworked, underpald dradges of the shop? ‘Wiis would be # practical good, and philanturopic at tie game time; but these noisy gentry prefer yelping avout Hupracticabie tueortes Which benefit nobody, There was a time i #rance when events like these strikes would have called for goverument inte: ven- tion, but the surewd policy of Napoleon clearly is to let people of all classes settie thetr wade digerences alter Uieir own fashion $0 long as Uicy respect tue peuce. People may strike as niuch as they piease, 60 jong as they don’t strike each other, The Frenen peuple may not be aware of it—imideed, 1% is quite certain tat they are not—bul they are already giving a most vaiuable proof of being educated to carry on the disputes of all sorts that seem insepa- rable to our human lot without resoriing fo gun and bluageon as Lue tinal arbitrament. Tuey are being taught the habits of pacific arrangement aud solu- dons in private affairs that will sooner or later te: benefiviaily on their political passions, The nan facturiug Class, who are as teree protectionists ay our New England nabobs, are beginning lo move; but 1 will speax of tue a im iny next ieier, The Political Press aud the Legisiative Con. vorntionA “Little Game??-—Nupoleoa’s 5. pie TacticsFather Hysciathe’s Case--The Prince Tunperial—Telegraph Exteasion and Protits—The Spauish Question. Pats, Nov. 5, 1800. Qatte aa amusing incidyat has happened ia the political world here. All the journals of Paris have been hard at work fer the last two months trying to excite the pupiic mind as to the reassembling of the Legisiative Body. The date of its meeting is not xed by law, and it is called together at the pleasure of the government. According to usage itis genc- rally convoked in November—sometiies, but rarely, earlier, It was prorogued somewhat abraptly in July, as you may remember, and before the rampant orators of the leit, yclept the “Irreconcilables,”’ had time to ventilate their studied denunciations of the government. These ill-treated individuaia assem- bled at the timo in solemn conclave to deliberate over the outrage and concert measures for redress, but, a3 usual with French politicians, they quarrreiled among themselves, and instead of a united protest they setto work severally writing levers, telling thoge wo read them of the indigaation, &c., expe- rienced on this sad occasion. I am sorry to say these touching appeals to sympathy were all thrown away. Tuc next move of these restless genilemen was to get up a cry for the recall of the Legislative Body, and, as I have said, the organs of the opposi- tion of every shade have been hammering uacea- singly on the topic for nearly the Jast two months, After convincing all the World, as they supposed, of the supreme necessity of their being allowed to figure once more on the political stage, and after frightening the government nearly, as they thougt, no doubt, into @ concession to their demands, lo! the fiend Traupmann stalks forth on his fleld of blood, his hands red with the murder of hls seven unhappy victims, and all Paris and Vrance give themselves ap to a perfect frenzy of horror, Once more the tide turned against the politicians, aud their little game was forgotten amid the appaillog reall. Ges ol tue hour. So savage was one of these organs at this bioody intervention thatit actually came out with a broad lasinuation that the government must have bad ® laud in the contisvance of tie Paniia massacre to divert the public mind irom the politi- cal situation. Could any strouger tasiance be given of tho wild extravagauce, litle short of insanity, of French potitical jouraatism? But to coms to the amusing imecident 1 alluded to. After all these declawatory articles of the partisan papers, and alter all the inflaiamatory letters of the dery depu- ties, Who threatened if the Chamber was tot con- yoked by the 25th of October at farthest they would come to Paris and begia proceedings ‘all we samo, What happens’ On Monday Jast the Emperor issues the order for convocavion, but instead of the aforesaid date he names the 20th of November, which 33 lavereven than uanal, This quiet contempt for the beaggacia of the opposition verides my prediction tn a lave jeter that Napoleon Wold seize tie first occasion to give tiew a punch on the head ora grim poke in the nose—and now they have got ft ler Keratry and the reat who have declared they would take their places in tue Assembly ou tue goth of October must be as good as their Word and become ridiculous, or they must pub in @ nowappearance and make themselves cou- twemptible. Noung could be more adroit fan the simple means the kinperor has taken to inipale, amid the derisive laugliter of the public, a dozen or two of tus fanatical opponents. ‘Slese geatlemeu are playing tieir rove very badly, and evidently seem uncon | scious of two Very ttuporiant (ings. Firat, that the French people, save tie mere scum of Varis and the large towns, are it uo humor for disorder, lusir- rection, nd, least of all, revolution. Next, that Napoleon is Lota man to be trifled with, aud that 1 attempts to bully him or coer Nina wail result in the otter discomfiture of thoae who undertake it Boe signin, The Emperor is more (ian disposxed—he 13 decided, as I said months ago, to ie to every legitimate manifesta. tion of puulic oplnion, aud if ce Walls Une reign of the politicians he is perfectly ready to accord tt, I dare eay he las lid private conviction of what the result will be; still he is revived to iwterpose 20 obstaci 1am sure be would be delighted f men of com A sense would turn Up aad slow some capactt, ening the Freych people, who ave Inteiligy enough, a4 we all know, but very | ampetu dnd gotwewhat volatile, Jf Napolgou could find suis of those practical politicians that avouud in Baglénd aod the Sia.es be would be too happy to deposit France and its future tn their hands, and ve content to reat from his labors and recuperate his broken health, Are there avy such men tn this country? The next meeting of the | Legislature will show, and tt will be worth While Wo | Watch its proceedings closely. Tt will soon be seen if Chere are any imen tiere who are really intent on tue interes's of the country, or if all are given up to factions etforta to overthrow one torm of govern. en! 6 Substitute another (at will raise to pow 19 VEVTONR Father Ilyactnthe must be In a quandary, The heat of his order, who modestly sigua Limsell “Brother Dominiyud of Bt. Joseph,” has writtea @& reply to his recent letter, which explains to him in | very moderate and well Chosen laugaage the trregu. lacity aod impropriety of his rebeilnons conduct. upbratding the eloquent preacher tu a paternal tcommands him in @ very positive way to go his convent and assume once more His Casi+ of garinents of a Carmelite monk, or to proparo himself to “be read out of meeting,” as the Catholics express tt, “to bo excommunicated? with wil the pais and penaities thereunto attacied. This 39 the upshot of the matter, ‘ihe crisis is come, and the contumacious Hyaclnth® must choose between the fate ofan apostate or a penitent, If no hag auy of the staff of Luther tn him he will snap his hovers at the Holy Father and ali his satellites, and sot up ta business a4 a martyr, with i hoes On, Instead of @ barefooted Carmaitio, a8 bivuerto, it Ww aw yrotty quarrel as it stands and begins people. tt Father Hyacinthe ts cated It of Soueee, demand for no true Catholic will dare to go and eloquent resistance to mother Ch) a very avie man, and he may be able to organise a church of his own, No doubt he has refiec! care- fully over the wholo matter and is not likely to be frightened by the thunders of the Vatican, which in tue age we livoin have no very great terrors for Cathones or anybody else. We may Cla shorth the deci of the ex-Carmelite, and no doubt he wil turow iuto his deflance all the power and fervor of his strong Intellect aud splendid style, Itis @ very juteresting ep'sode and attracts all the more atten- Gon #a the famous Heumenical Council approaches, They say tae Prince Imperial waa very anxious to accompany his mother to tie Hast, as he greatly enjoyed the excitement aud glitter of lus late irip to Corsica, but hig resolute papa world nofghear of it, de was old that his holidays were ended, and wat be must slay at home and renew hia studies forthwith, He submitted quiculy like a good boy, but sued tears profusely at the departure of nia nat from wuom he has never been separated elore, Some tate statistics connected with the telegraph give ua an insight into the growth of commercial ature in Praace since the goverument became Lrmiy edtablisied in 1851. In that year the number of nies- sages amounted to some ¥,000 and odd, whereas 1 the last year they amounted to 500,000 and od. So mucn for the blessings of law and order. ‘dhe rates are to be reduced on November 60 @ half of tueuw resent scale, which will lead to a great increase of uusiness. ‘The Krench cable ts doing pretty well, and wii doubtless increase with the development of trade, vat tc will never yield such proflta as the Anglo-American cable; for the great butk of all our business is done with and through England, Av tie resent Moment the French cable has targed up a tulap; for they say both the English cubies have suspended operations, temporarily of course. ‘Talking of stutustica, it has just been published that there are $0,000 more Insane people in France than there were in 1453, This looks very oulinous for the future. If they go on increastug 1m this ratio is ty clear & rousing trade must spring up if straight acketa, ‘fhere {8 a !all in the Pantin murder case. All the researches of the police lave falied so far to dis. cover Whether the father, Jean Kinck, was murdered, and what ta that case las become of is body, The wretch Traupmann persisis m saying he was ony the accompice of*Jean Kinek, but leiiers are daily comlog to hygit that prove all Lis siaements wre fabricated to musiead and deceive, Mysiery sul havgs over this horribie aifair, but sooner or later it must be unraveled, ‘Vhe news from Spain shows that liberal institu. tions do not seem to agree Will them very well, for they are going ou worse titan ever before, Assasai- nation, piliage, the violation oj nuns in couveats are the last items brought tt by the mails, and these are all the handiwork of the republican party in their recent risings. The Cories, wader the eilect of such doings, have abolished itverty at one feil swoop, ‘Lue iast story is that Prim and Serrano have fallen out. This was to be expected sooner or later. Itmay be patched up, but oe or the other must give way. Prin lad got the army i his huuds, aud so i will vet oa hin, SPAIN. The Cobinet Crisis and National Fivance— Ryitish Interesty and Diplemary-A Greod Military Keview—Troops for CubaeA Bull Wight and Vast Assomblage=A Maimed Matador Bidy Farewell to the Arena. Mapntp, Nov, 4, 1869, The miniaterial crisis 1s safely over without the revolutionary “trinity having been broken, Ser- rano, Prim and Vopeto stiil hold together, thougiy bla Topete sadly wanted to break loose alter the siorm, und Prim has had the greatest possible trou- ble to Keep him at his post. Seiior Martos, the Vice President of the Cortes, is the new Secretary of State in lieu of Silvela, aud Figuerola reoceupies his foriner post of Minister of Finance in place of Sefor ardanaz, who had already prepared and read his exposiiion of the budget for 1870, asking for author- ity to close the Recount on the 31st December, and fixing the Ist of January as the commence- ment of the financial year, The recelpis amount to 2,624,000,000 reals, showiny an increase of 603,000,000. Ile proposes a retrenchment of 856,000,090, reduces by thirty per cent the salaries of the clergy and proposes a reduction of twenty per cent on all stocks, whcther home or foreign. He makes the same proposition respecting the Pension Fund and all other Treastiry expensea, strongly ad- vises the sal@ of all crown aud national property, aud finally proposes that the army shall be reducea to 70,000 men, It is said that Figuerola will with- draw the budget for the purpose of making some important alterations. Mr. Layard, the late Commissioner of Public Works and newly appointed Britich Minister to Spain, is daily expected at this capital. That Mr, Layard ig @ man of talents no one can deny; but 44 talent for & mission abroad is one which only the searching eye of Mr, Gladstone has been aple to dis- cover, although he has been Under Secretary for Foreign Amuirs, Bat Mr, Gladstone ts a strewd quan and longssiguted; and as the expert miner dis- covers the rich metal hidden in the earth, so perhaps Giadstone has fovnd out new and sterling talent in Mr. Layard, A good representative to Spain in ter present situanon is a matter of no small moment for British Interests. There are twany very delicate questions to be settied that have been for along time pending. Old Sir John Cramp- ton passed most of his time in stroliing about with his two dogs or painting in the picture gallery, fhe owners of the sloop San Pablo could never get him to take up their case with any energy, and ut length were ovliged to abandon their claim, It was only yesterday your correspondent was talking witha Mr. Marcella, @ British merchant and owner of a ves- sel seized by the Spaniards ou tie high seas several years ago. Marcella, tired of appealing in yain to the Briush Minister, started for Cadiz, and institu. ted a suit against the Spanish government im tie civil couri, where he won his cause, Tne govorn- meut appealed to the Supreme Court of Sevile fora revocation of the Cadiz verdict. There again Mar- cella defended his interests, got lis verdict, and tue Spaniards, by thelr own laws, had Oo up the vessel. Marceila, having established his claim beyond ail doubt, appealed to Sir Joln to recover damages, witch are natarally heavy; but Si John, always waddling. about with lis dogs or patniing, had ho time to attend tow hall ruined merchant's interests, and no holp could be got. Sir Jon 1s pow “laid on the sheif,” or yegetating In Ireland, Mi, French, the First Secretary or Chargé d’Afaires, took up the matter, and it remains to bo seca Low ee oy earres it through, We are suortly to ave a grand military review here of twenty-ona bavialions of infantry, tweuty squadrons Of cavuiry and sixty pieces of aruiliery, ‘rue reat object of the review i3 not Kaown. Sone days ago tv was supposed to be for the purpose of overawing the republicans; bat such cannot be, for all the repadlicans are pretty well convinced that their cause is a dead letter, at least tor some tire to come, Neither can t be on account of the Isabel Jauitly. Trather think 1t savers wore of the advent of a new monarch, Nuwbers of volunteer corps are being got ready to embark for Cuba. In tuis city alone there are 2,000 ready toalart, ‘Shey are to receive sixtecn reals a day on landing Im Cuba, and eight revls a day il Wattage, This isa large amount fora Spanisi soldier, aud muked one suspect very mai tue despatches published about the Cuban tasurrection berg crushed out, Cumo, te republican deputy, who was sentencea to death, bas been pardoned tie capital punisument. The other depOes who sougut refuge ta Gibreitar have been embarked for England by order of tue Biltish government, An Englishman has been neve offering fatmious | sums for some of the valuabie curivsiticé ta the Armory Museum. Yhe Spaniards, however, not only refuee to part with any, but haye set an exire | guard over them jest some employé muy be tempicd Ww do @ litte business on his own accoudt. Sunday afternoon a famous buli fight took place here jor tle beneft of the celebrated niatador Taio, who was gored and tossed some time ago Wien per- forming cue of tis daring (eats in tue ring. ‘Viis accident Cot tbe poor fellow the i098 of a jeg, and, a8 a waiter of conrse, prevents him frou loliowiue his proiesston, The Spaniards are, therefore, de- prived, of their favorite, and, 1 may say, best bull fygiter, which to thomt is a sad loss indeed, for though they can put up with a bad Hague Uieir bull Hehts uatst be decidedty good, A general may be Wounded or Killed im defending his conn: ty, and except @ mere notice of the fact in the papers he meets with but lithe aympathy unless froma few intimate friends, Bui Kil Lato, he i Indeed agran hombre with the but Oguting Spauiardsaad tad he beea @ priace greater alfeution Could not have been patd him. A thick Jayer df sand coverad the street Where be lived, and he was aguded by the first physicians and sur. geons of the Capital Dukes, marquises and counts were lis consiany visitors, and itis said that the ex-Queen dene more than one telegram wquiring after Taio, The payers published bulletins respect. Ing bis progress tat put in the siade those puo-+ lished by whe French avon the heaith of tho Bin beror, And Wile cals was going on that honvravie, brave, patriotic Admiral, Mendes Nuuez, was alowed to p.ne away aud die negiegied, and 14 now hoary quile iurgotten, Liilcult, tadeed, was it to get a ticket to enter the buliring on Sunday, notwithstanding itis built to accommodate 12,000 persons, but uw would have held doubse that amount, Tato was fo appear in te Pidg@a do fe, Prita’s wife md the se n, and the great mon vem 6, Were pre: i6Ys WAS Also a good repro sentation of tie diplomalic corys, for, though f elgners ran down bull fights, it is generally tie Mrst Hing they run to ace, Neituer do foreigners soruple 10 assist ab Concerts, bails aad operas on Sundays. So T presume we are all apt to fall back on. tie maxini of that oft qhoted old lady wiio saya, “When you go to Turkey do as the turkeys do." Graud, indeed, was the coup det that presenied liself to the spectator on entering hls box an easing Wb Header go Wat dewey Racked WYIH bevn dilied could ub hay He great Tho Regent's Sod marta at cma bull ters; souailores, bane fnine tind bloody art rary ceases tn search of some particular object; and in vain did they scrutinize the advancing group to discover their querido Tato, but he was Hot t be seen, 4 deep murmur of disappotntment arose froin the mass of heads, like the iow moaning of a coming tem. pest, but It wus destined to be @ tempest of ftoxt. cated deiignt, for at that critical moment a moye- mont was observed at the gateway under the Prose dent's box, aud an open carviage was seen slowiy entering. Every face was turned in that direction, every eye was sirained to its utmost til the torm of thelr beloved Tato came to view. Electric tire seemed to dash from their dark eyes and light their olive tinted countenances, while like tu erate peal after peal of vinas ring through the plaza ag Tuio’s Carriage was drawn siowly round the arena, Git did lovely bruneties wave thelr ker- chiefs and shake their Jans to attention, mad with delight caught his glance, paylag his rec with loving looks trom jet biack eyes, and smiles from parted coral ips that Apolio himseif might have envied and grown jealous of, Then from heay- ing bosoms came deep drawn sighs, that one so young, so amiable, 80 handsome, should be so wauncd, Again are borne on the breeze shouts like successive peais of thunder, Wreaths of Mowers und crowns of Jaurel are thrown into the triumphal car, which the miutiated victorious conqueror gaihers up and holds on high, The afternoon sun traveling in the far west Nights up that upturned face and dis- covers the conilicting emotions within his breast that so o:ten has courted and mec danger. That dace was now lit up wilh satisfaction, then overcast with sadness, like sunny spring and dismal winter, the brightness of day aud We darkness of night Aiteruately, = ‘The bull tighter gazed round on the scene of hin former triumphs, bade his last fareweil, aud will downecast heart was slowly borne away aiid the most deafening cheera, Neither time nor space will permit my giving a description of wae bull ight that followed; but before closing { cannot help comparing ‘Tato with the Roman gladiator of old, who, alter having do- spatched his enemy, waa paradoa bieeding and mu- Ulated in trinmph round the amphitheatre to r salve. las crowns of laurel and the ovations of tie people, GERMANY. Vue Weather nad the Chase in Prusyla=Cabi- net RuworsThe Hero of Varziu—His Vise iters@The Muhler Panacoa—Prayer Day Hanoverian Winale=-lsraelite E Ath one My, Chase on Promizm or Bonus Loans. BERLIN, Noy. 5, 1369. Yesterday, being St. Wuberi’s Day, was ushered in by violent rainstorms, gales of wind and, as reported from the Rhine, earthquakes—of which several occurred tn the preceding week. A’ aa admonition to wealth aud greatness that not every- thing is subservient to their'power we may mention that his Majesty King William, a3 well a3 the aged courtiers, was compelled to renounce the pleas ure anticipated -in opening the season with tho customary boar hunt, Notwithstanding the absence of these high persouages the chase was very nume- rously aitended by the princes and nigh nobility, and a3 many as two hundred guests sat down to @& sumptuous lunch) m the hunt. ing castle of the = magnticent anil ro- mantic grounds of Gronewali. Before tio “hulali’—the signal by winding the horn on the death of the first boar—had been sounded, Prince Frederick Charles had an opportunity of displaying Ing conrvage under somewhat critical circumstances, A huge boar, which he thought he had despatched, rose ayain and suddenly turaed upon nim white he was looking in another direction. Lucxfy, how- ever, he turned in the very nick of time and dis. charged his piece at him once more; the boar, though sertously wounded, had still strength enough left to make a desperate effort to reach tle Prince, when his servant coming to the rescue finished him with a thrust of lis spear. Since the Baron Vonderheydt has retired into pri- vate life rumors lave been 1uch strengthened that several of hts former colleagues, the Ministera of the luterior, Commerce and Educational Departments being especially mentioned, would speedily follow suit, In proportion to the credence attached to these reports the opinton gains ground that the hernut of Varzin will soon emerge trom his secla- sion and seize the helm of affairs with his wonted iron grasp. This 18, however, mere con- jecture, for there 1s nothing atall to show that ho has fallen out with his colleagues. Indeed, the oniy dissatisfaction expressed by him previous to his retirement, as reported to you at the time, was against te representatives. One thing ts certaia, which would be tho simplest explanation of his re- turning, and that is his complete restoration to heaith, which is now certifted py two credible witnesses, une of these, Prince Reuss, speaks of the beneficial effect of the Carlsbad waters upon the Count, whue the other, Mr. G, Bancroft, mentioned to the writer to-~lay that he bad just spent two days under the Count’s hospitable roof and occupied his time in riding With him all avout hia vast estates, which cover an area of 28,000 German or 19,000 American acres, being the finest property in Lower Pomerania, Mr, Bancroft’s impression ta that the Prenaier will not make his appearance here till Christmaa. ‘Tho long expected educational reform bill to be hatched by the obnoxious von Muhler, will be brought forward at the end of this week. Mean- while the Minister, in order to ward off as far as possible the ry increasing odium of his numer- ous antagonists, has pit upoa the expedient of ap- pomting a general prayer day on the Loth instant, Which is the anniversary of Luther's birthday, This is anoounced by him to ail the Evangelical clergy of Prussta in the following inuated styie;—"The great movements of the preseut in the religious life of peoples and individuals urge on serious decision: aod Le thus continues, ‘culuunating in pronouncing the observance of the 10tn as a panacea for Ecument- cal Council, forthe Moabit cloister, Proteataut unions, Kuaakism, Fourlerlsm, separation of Church and State, &c.” Public attention, however, leans in quite another direction; tt caunot be gained over by the unpopu- lar von Milnier and his crotchets; on the contrary, instead of trusting for rellel In prayer, it ls attracte: to more practical objects, such as Deputy Virchow's motion in favor of partial disarmament. ‘This is being"now very generally discussed here and in other States of the Confederation, more especially Saxony, where the liberals have dratted # similar bul and obtained ieave for its discussion In the pre- sont Chamber. Though it would be preposterous to expect any tangibic resuit at present, yet thia strong and universal delle of the public mind will, ike the drop of water on the roc, assuredly lave its efiect in the iuture, Aespecting the Hanoverian Logion under the wings of the Freach goveriment, and of Which we haye not heard for #0 joug @ time, private adyices from Paria now avnounee that agents trom tietzing are nego- tiauing for thelr #etiement in Algiers as colonists, with the view of inducing their jamilies and relations to joiu then, ‘ibis project, it is tnougat, connocts Wil the intention of ox-King George to abandon further resistance to lis lute and abdicate tue puan- tou crown ia oplima seria, As hinted In my jast, the Danish petition in the Miatter of a North Schioswig plobisciie bas not becw presented to the King in person, who reiused to ad. mit the delegates. Cousequently the petition, with the accompanying five volumes of signaiures, tas been handed over to the Minister of the Latertor, Touching the efforsg of the Ailiange Isragilte Cnt verselle for the rellef of Jewish distress in West Russia, A Memorial has been prepared by Dre Piuilppson, of Vonu, tha president of the committe Ajter thoroughly examtuing Into the causes of tue prevailing distress, he arrives at the conclusion that nothing bul emigration of a large proportion of the sule-padied men could give epeedy aud permanent relict, The diflculties Which euigratva las to sue mount ho stated ad follow a: te prohibition by the Ro aly, gives ® perknit to @ nk requtied, roper selaction of suitable parties, marth-=A proper selsctton of deatiuation, ite then proposes, first, to obteta from the Russian governmenc a reform of the jaw In question; second, to form committees 19 Russia to superiutend eml- gration, select proper Individuals, and adord (leur support and advise as to their settiement; third, to Appoint harbor committees abroad to take chargg of emigrants and forward them; fourth, to appo.nt numerous branch commitiees ior the collection of subscriptions and donatious to be banded over to tue Ceutral Committee, Tui raiseworthy under. taking is being pusned forwi with the mtinost Vigor, and judging from the practical Measures pro pounded, aud the earnest devotion of inany benev Jent pavvons, bo doubt can be entertatned as ty Its success. du the premium loan debate here Mr, 8. P, Chase was quoted aa baving refused such & joan tn Ios from Kuropean caplialists, romarking nt toe time, “that if would be prejudictal to the good diauners and morald of the American peopie.” jan law, which, in rare zante, Disasrers ON THR LAKES.—The jate storm which swept over the grea, lakes proved yory desiructive tosuipping and involved considerable loss of life. The reports ave fot ali tu, Many vessels ara still unaccoanted for, bat way Do sale, though disabled in some distant parts of the upper lakes, awatttay ance to get into port. A considgrable pumber els are known to be,along the Canada shore of rop, of Which no definite report has come in. on Lake Michigan over forty disasters are reported, of which seven were total jossea. On Lake Huron fifteen casaalvies are already reporied, with two reo On Lake Erie some twent; . waters cocurred, of which two were total ea. On Lake Ontario Uitrteen disasters are already reported, of which tho large proportion ot five were totai wrocks. On all the Jakes named more or leas lives “were lost, and in some cages the shipwrecks were Altended With great suffering to the satiors when they aid oa lose their wm Rover (Ne Keb Uiiyn ail AWE, NOV) Me