Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘gabject that the very bost place for him in the wide world is that which he can most easily reach—the United States, where he can own a farm by ocoupying it, or, if he prefers to sell his labor, can have abundant employ- ment at the maximum of wages. He may here also find free schools for his children, full protection in all his rights, and, after a short probation, an equal parti pation with all his-fellow citizens in poll power, But if Englishmen, Scotchmen and Trishmou are not told these facts by the British Emigration Board, thanks to cheap postage, they are protty fully informed of them from the multitudes of their friends and neighbors ‘who have already made the voyage across the Atlantic. They come to us by thousands (weekly, aud still for many years there will be oom enough and prosperity enough for all. Exre Anvy Jonnson.—The most interesting ‘and the most handsomely conducted local fight in ell our recent elections was that in Ten- mewseo for Congressman at Large between ‘Meynerd, republican; Cheatham, regular @emoorat, and ex-President Andy Johnson, Gndepondent deniocrat and expounder and Mefender of the constitution. The official vote jof the State for President is—for Greeley, 94,219; for Grant, 85,633; Greeley’s major- ity, 8,586. But while Maynard for Congress- ‘man at Large got all the Grant vote, the Gree- ley vote was divided between Cheatham and Johnson, so that Maynard beats Cheatham by 15,000 and Johnson by over 42,000, Thus Johnson, we regret to say, between the two Great partios, falls to the ground; but still, and before long, we expect to hear his clarion , Voice again in defence of the constitution. PERSONAL AND GENERAL. Minister Schenck is yet in Alfred Wiltz, the newly elected Mayor of New Orleans, is a democrat, a creole and only twenty. six years of age. A statue of Baron Von Stein is to be erected in Berlin, and the Emperor William has decided that 4b shall embellish the Démhofsplatz. Serjeant Sleigh will defend the “claimant” (Tichborne) in his coming trial for perjury, the time for which has not been definitively fixed, Dr. Huutington, one of the richest men in Bos- ton, once kept a country school in Kentucky, and experienced religion in a little church in Paris, Ky. Hon. William H. Howard, of Michigan, formerly member of Congress, has been appointed Land Commissioner of the North Pacific Railroad Com- | pany. A new motive toward the acquisition and reten- tion of health is supplied by the Burial Board of St. Pancras iu raising the price of graves. To avoid At. Pancras better become a pancratist. The O'Wonor Don, M. P., and his brother Mr. O’Conor, M. P., have returned from a visit to Niagara, aud are the guests of Mr. Ernest L. M Cracken, of 40 West Fifty-second street, Guerilla or Gorilla Moseby, of Virginia, is seeking contract to furnish headstones for the graves of Vnlon aeidiers buried in the sacred soil of the Old Dominion. The cheek of some men is surprising. Field Marshal Sir Willlam Gomm, the recently appointed Constable of the Tower, who attained his eighty-eighth year on the 10th inst., wiil be for- Tally instaticd into office early next month. He is & hale oid soldier, Wilhelmina Woltman has just been found guilt; at Stade, in Hanover, of having poisoned her first and second husbands, the father and mother of her gecond and the son and danghrer of her third. Arsenic was her weakness. The Chief Court of Appeals at Arnsberg has con. yicted 4 nanghty prince, His Serene Highness Frederick William of Wittgenstem-Hohenstcin, prother of the reigning Prince, and sentenced him to four weeks’ imprisonment for ill-treating a wo- man, Lady Avonmore (Mrs, Theresa Longworth Yel- verton) avrived at Malacca on the last day of Sep- tember. It 1s said this lady is at present engaged writing « journal of her travels in the East, and Chindrass and Mount Ophir, A number of the people of Schaffhausen, Switzer- 4and, are engaged in a crusade against extortion- ate vendera of the lacteal. ‘Theis is no milk and water enterprise, however. As they despise dilu- tion, they have organized an association of persons ‘who will not use “keow juse” at all until ths have subdued the sordid spirit that ts pervadin the breasts of the men of horrifying howls. MR. GREELEY’S ILLNESS, aS Phe Cruci Reports Concerning His Alleged Insanity—Nervous Depression the Cause of His Ill Health—A Reminis- eonce of the Bull Run Days. Vague rumors have been circulated for the past two weeks to the effect that Mr. Greeley had become insane. The loss of the election, the death of his ‘wife, and the taunts and abuse of partisan news. papers were credited as the cause of his aberration, The rumors became so general that a two-cent daily yesterday heartlessly intimated that Mr. Greeley was not only insane, but violent in his insanity, and that he had been confined in an asylum at White Plains in consequence, having first been refused admission to Bloomingdale on account of the strictures of the Zribune upon the management of that institution. These reports have produced Such solicitude on the part of Mr. Greeley's friends | that a reporter of the HERALD was yesterday sent to investigate the facts in regard te them. He called upou MR, ALVIN J. JOHNSON, who has vcen for ten years a close friend of Mr. Greeley, whose house Mr. Greeley has made his home during his stay in the city, and under whose roof Mra. Greeley was tended and cared for in her last illncss, Mr. Johnson had not seen the pub- lished statement relative to the alleged insanity, but he had been accosted by friends on the subject and knew that the report was abroad. “Mr. Greeley,” said he, ‘is undoubtedly suter- ing from PROSTRATION OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM, “Hits wie was ill tor three weeks In my honse, aud during the last two weeks of that time I know that Mr, Greeley had not a single night's rest. He was about her bedside continually, and caught sleep oniy in naps and nods, This in itself was enough to overthrow and disorganize his nervous system, and when the election came, with its over- whelming clisaster, the blow was severe enough to ‘vend him, though it is far from breaking him.” “Is he strong and active ¢” “Yes, He eats regularly, takes a walk or a ride every day and acts just asever, put he lacks the steadiness of nerve that he had, and HIS CONSTITUTION MAY BE SOMEWHAT INJURED by the coatinued strain.” “Then what can be the basis for this report of dnsanity ? “His iness and the fears of his physician, uo doubt.” “What does his physician fear’? “{don't belleve he fears anything now. The worst isover, Time and quiet have done their work, and the doctor thinks he is over the danger- ous perio. The fear of brain fever was enter- tained by the physician at ope time, but that fear is over now. A similar stroke befell him SUST AFTER BULL RUN. “You remomber the ‘On to Richmond’ cry, that the country chose to believe was the cause of the advance of our army before it was ready to ad- vance, When the Bull Run defeat occurred, the reaction that took place fell with a heavy weight upon the Tribune and produced a terrible depres- sion upon Mr, Greeley. The cry arose, day after day,-that he was responsible for the defeat and the comsoquent desta gf 40 many of our goldicrs, amd Ut | barometer and cleariug weather over the Lak NEW YORK “HERALD ‘wore upon him terribly. He was sick thon for two weeks, and his doctors feared that he might be AFFLICTED WITH BRAIN FEVER, but he came out of it with time aud care, and 40 be will out of this.’’ “And you say he is not confined to his bed?’ “No, not at all. He wi it my house until Thurs- day afternoon, and to @ casual observer appeared as hale and hearty as he ever was, but the nervous depression was visible to me and to hia friends, He went up the country on Thu. sday afternoon, I saw a gentleman yesterday who saw lim on Saturday and he says that Mr, Greeley was ACTIVE AND CHEERFUL, busy as usual and gradually recovering. I re- ceived @ letter from him to-da: aud there's nothing in it that would indicate any aberration of mind." “The published report this morning stated that he had been so violent at your house that three menu were required to hold him.” “There's not a word of trathin it, He waa un- usually quiet, aud that’s why [ mostly distrusted his health,” ‘ “Rumor also goes that he is confined or to be con- fined in an insane asylum at White Plains.” “Well, it’s a cruel report, and utterly false." “Well, I'll bid you good day, Mr, Johnson.” “Good day. Tam sorry that such rumors should gain currency, but as they have, I feel it is my duty to put a stop to them 0 far as it ts possible (or me to do go.” . With this explanation of Mr, Greeley’s iliness, itis to be hoped the cruel rumors will lose.their point, and that thetr prevalence has not already aggra- vated the iliness of the philosopher, While it haa been decidea by the country that he is not the choice for President, the country is wawilling to do without bis brain and heart, and, defeated and dejected as he is, he 1s yetdear to the whole people as a philosopher and philauthropist, MINISTER WASHBURNE IN CHICAGO. Cuicago, Il., Nov, 25, 1872, A complimentary banquet was given to-night at the Tremont House to the Hon, B, B. Washburne, United States Minister to France, by a number of his personal friends of this city, including many representative citizens, About one hundred guests were preseut. Among them were Governor Oglesby, Senator Logan, Mayor Medill, ex-Gover- nor Bross, General Horace Porter, and other dis- tinguished persons, In response to a toast Mr, Washburne made ® few remarks, in which the only political allusion was a denial of the report that he was a candidate for United States Sena tor and a ul declination of that honor, which, he said, was fairly wou by Goveruor Ogte! WEATHER REPORT. seapees War Devarrwenr, Orrick oF THE Cut GNAL OFFICER, WASHINGTON, D, Noy, 26—1 A, M. Synopsis for the Past Twenty-four Hours. In the Northwest the pressure has decreased, with southeasterly winds and partly cloudy weather, and southwesterly winds and partly cloudy weather on the Upper Lakes, extending to the Ohio Valley, with northeasterly winds on the Lower Lakes, aud thence over the Middle and Kastern States; south- westerly and northwesterly winds and rising At elsewhere, cloudy weather and occasional bight rains; in the Guifand South Atiantic States gentle, variable winds and partly cloudy weather, with ; occasional rain in the former, 1 | intends shortly paying a visit to the gold mines at | r Probavilities, For the Northwest and thenze southward through IHinols southeasterly to northeasterly winds, diminishing pressure and generally clear weather; on the Lakes and thence to the Ohio Val- ley and Tennessee nortuwesterly to northeast- erly winds, clearing and clear weather; in the Western Gulf northerly winds, cloudy weather, and light variable winds in the South Atlantic States; in the Middle States and New England light northwesterly winds, increased pressure, clear: ing and clear weather in (i afternoon, The Weather tn ‘This City Yesterday. ‘The following record will show the chaages in the temperature for the past twenty-four Qorrs in com- parison with the corresponding day of last year, as indicated hy the thermometer at Hudnut’s Phar- macy, HeRaLp Building :— 187i, 1872, 1871, 1872. 41 3:30 P. oL 4. °6 P.M. 50 43° 9 P.M. 46 7 WPM 45 we temperature yesterday. wees 45 Average temperature for corresponding date last year... EFFEOTS OF THE WALL STREET CORNER. F re of a Cincinnati Banking House. CINCINNATI, Ohio, Nov. 25, 1872, S. B. Keyes & Co., bankers, of this city, sus- pended to-day, in consequence of indirect losses in the corner in Northwestern common. Their cus+ tomers, having lost by this corner, were unable to pay their dues to the bank. The firm state that they have had no transactions in this stock on thelr own account. Their loss is about one hun- dred and forty thousand dollars. Whether they will be able to resame or not will depend upon what they may hereafter realize from customers, ‘The cashier of the Union Bank at Marietta tele- graphs to-day that the bank is all right and will re- sume business in a few days. ATTACK ON A RAILROAD OFFICIAL IN KANSAS, Sr. Louis, Mo., Nov. 25, 1872. A trustworthy gentleman who arrived here to- day reports that on Saturday night last from forty to fifty settlers on the Osage lands, in Kansas, vis- ited the town of Parsons, in that State, went to the Helmont House, compelled the clerk to show them the room of Mr. Parsons, Chief of the Land Department of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway, and forcibly took him out with the intention of doing him bodily harm, but he escaped trom them, leaped on a locomotive standing near by and was run through to Sedalia, Mo. The demonstration, it is said, grew out of an _ exasperated state of feeling among the Osage land settlers, Te. a iby a recent decision of the Secretary of thi Interior, that the lands upon which they live be- long to the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad Company, jot ti ARREST OF ALLEGED MURDERERS IN NEW ORLEANS, New ORLEANS, Nov. 25, 1872, Francisco Martinez and Dideo Baptiste were ar- rested to-day on a charge of murdering Antonio Carafa and attempting to swindle an insurance company, They introduced Carafa, who is re- cently from italy, as a nephew of Martinez, and insured his life for $10,000, and six weeks aiter- ward they drowned him in Lake Ponchartrain, pee tpoimebnnian THE BURNING OF THE STEAMER H, M, SHREVE, Sr. Lours, Nov. 25, 1872, The steamer H. M, Shreve, which burned at Ches- ter, Hl, was owned by Carter & Conn, of this city, and belonged to the Red River line, but was tem- porarily in the Memphis trade. She was valued at $22,500 and was insured for 000 in the Enter- prise, of Cincinnati; $2,500 each in the Peabody, tna, Citizens’, Franklin and Wheeling. She was hound from St. Louis to Memphis with 200 tons of freight, most of which was insured, but the offices are not ascertained, She stopped at Chester to coal, and when backing out to leave the fire was discovered in the carpenter's shop. A strong wind was blowing andin Lwenty minutes the steamer was burned to the water's edge and sunk. ‘The passengers and crew were saved, A MURDEROUS AFFRAY IN COLORADO, DENVER, Nov. 25, 1872, About six o'clock last evening Charley Hugties, son of a well-known speculator and contractor of this city, shot and mortally wounded Joun L. Hay- man, a young man employed in the abstract office of Daniel Witter. Both ties are young mea about twenty years ofage. It is reported that a woman was the cause of the difficulty, Hayman died about cleven o'clock last night. The Nes characterizes the shooting as murder and demands that the murderer be brought to justic Up to this morning he tad not been ar. rested, THE BOSTON MAYORALL, Boston, ‘Nov, 25, 187: ‘The liberal republicans hava hominated Joseph F. Paul as candidate for yor at the coming mu- nicipal election, Mis is The third caudidate (og tue olllge EC YP T.: Herald Special Report from London. a EB The Khedive’s Army Expeditionary Force Bound for Zanzibar. Si as Five Thousand Men Placed Unier Command of Purdy Bey. Sah Ss Co-operation with Livingstone or an Tudepend- eut Search for the Sources of the Nile, ee a ae Is the Undertaking Humanitarian, Ma- terialistic or for Operations in Abyssinia ? TELEGRAM TO THE NEW YORK HERALD. The following special report to. the Herarp has been received from our correspondent in the British capital :— Lonpon, Nov. 26, 1872. Tho military expedition of His Highness the Khedive of Egypt, numbering 5,000 men, un- der command of Purdy Bey, will go to Zan- zibar in army transport vessels. COMMISSION OF THE COMMANDER AND MANIFOLD INTENT OF HIS HIGHNESS, The cofimand is commissioned with the ostensible intention to co-operate with Liv- reeable to the English explorer, or othertvise, in case the offer is not ingstone, if that is accepted, to act independently for the dis- covery of the sources of the Nile under Egyp- tian colors. It is doubttul, however, whether it is really resolved by the Khedive that his commanding officer and men shall join Livingstone, meet Sir Samuel Baker or open a new line of route for the furtherance of His Highness’ operations ia or against Abyssiu ENGLAND. + i. Democratic Doings in Hyde Park and Danger of Diatarbance—Terrific Gales in the British Channel—Loss of Property and Life. TELEGRAM TD THE HEW YORK HERALD. Lonpon, Nov, 25, 1872. The Sunday meeting at Hyde Park was a failure. The constables recently dismissed from the police force, who were expected to be there, did not appear. Only 200 persons were present. Mr. Odger presided, und a remonstrance, ad- dressed to the Home Secretary, was adopted. An irruption of rufians brought the proceedings to a stop and compelied the breaking up of the meeting. SWEEY UF 4 GALE IN T@% CHANNEL AND FATALLY SERIOUS CONSEQUENCES, as Despatches from all points describe the gales in the English Channel on Saturday last as terrific. Many vessels were wrecked and the loss of life caused thereby is considerable. The weather to-day is very tempestuous, The telegraph lines have been prostrated in many places and much damage to the shipping on the coust is reported, A POETICAL CELEBRITY SERIOUSLY ILL. Eliza Cook, the English poetess, is very ill, and her recovery is regarded. as impo The Nevada and City of Brooklyn After the Gales on the British Coast, TELEGRAMS TO THE NEW YORK HERALO. Lonpon, Nov. 25, 1872. It ia reported that the steamship Nevada, which sailed from Liverpool November 6 for New York, but put back to Queenstown November 11 with machinery disabled, and after repairing sailed again on the 15th for her destination, has again returned to the latter port with her machinery damaged. The City of Brooklyn’s Passengers. QUEENSTOWN, Nov. 25, 1872, Several of the passengers of the steamship City of Brooklyn sailed for New York yesterday on the Cunard steamship Java. The remainder were transferred. to the City of. Antwerp, which left to-day. Riieiesans Boaming Revolutionists in Destructive Riot. TELEGRAM TO THE NEW YORK HERALO, MADRID, Nov. 25, 187 A band of insurgents, 200 strong, has appeared within a mile of Madrid, Another band of 100 has destroyed the telegraphs, railway station and bridge at Lanares, EXPLORATION OF THE DIAMOND FIELDS, SaLr Lake Crry, Novy, 25, 1872, The Salt Lake Herald wilt to-morrow publish a private letter stating that Carter, Wyoming, is the nearest railroad point to the diamond fields, Gen- eral McClellan and. party when enroute to Call- fornia stopped at Carter and spent ten days in ex- ploring the vicinity, and on their return East they made another diversion from Carter. Messrs. Ja- nin and Berry, witha large party of Californians, also left the railroad at this point. Several dia- monds were exhibited.which were found there by other parties, Another diamond expedition leaves this city to-morrow under the lead of Mr. Berry, It will probably leave the railroad at Green, River station, DISASTERS ON THE LAKES, COLLINGWOOD, Ont., Now, 25, 1872: The propeliet Mary Ward, from Sarnia for Col lingwood, witha cargo of salt, oil and acids, went ashore on a reef last night between Thornbury. and this place. The vessel is ina dangerous position. ‘The wind is high and a heavy sea is running. The propetier America reports two sehooners ashore on Timber Island, THBEE TRAPPERS AND HUNTERS MURDERED. OMAHA, Nov. 25, 1872 ‘Three hunters and trappers mumed Andrew Rashe, Herman Rashe and Hervaan Meyers were found dead at the old govery ment camp, about forty miles north of McPherson station, on the Loup Fork, two days ago. They had apparently been murdered by white nysn, party of soldiers have gone from North Vaatte to bring in their bodies, COMPROMISING REVENUE FRAUDS. Bostoy, Nov. 25, 1872. ‘The revenue (rad case against William l, Weid & Co, {3 said t7 nave been compromised by the fendanls paying into the United States Treasury $400,000, ‘The amount originally claimed by the gover”imen: was $1,400,000. The suit againat the same firm in New York has been coraptomiseil by Me paymeat of $120,000, FRANCE. Critical Condition of the Public Sitna- tion in the Republic. eee The Bourse Exeited, Rentes Lower and a Heavy Drain of Specie from the Bank. eoecerome The Party of the Right and the Presidency— Goneral Changarnier Spoken of as the Succes- sor of Thiers—Party Idea of a Dictator- ship—Provisional Argument Over Ccsstitutional Questions—English Report of a Gloomy Prospeot. TELEGRAMS TO THE NEW YORK HERALD. aa Paris, Noy, 26, 1872, ‘The flnanctai bulletin tssned in the city at the hour of one o'clock in the afternoon to-day reads as follows :— “The Bourse is excited ard fat. declined to 52f. 77¢."" BULLION IN HEAVY DRAIN FROM THE BANK, The specie in the Bank of France has decreased 509,000f, since the last report. Rentes have The Public Situation on the Question of the Presidency, Panis, Nov. It is announced in the news from Versailles to-day that the members of the party of the Right in the the National Assembly have selected General Chan- garnier as their candidate for President of the Republic, in te event of the resignation of M. ‘Thiers, “ The majority of the Right is disposed to accept Thiers’ resignation if tendered, and appoint Gen- eral Changarnier dictator, with the Duke ae Broglie and MM, Batbie and Desiarding in the Cabinet, PARLIAMENTARY RECLAMATION AGAINST TO THIERS' MESSAGE, A telegram dated at Versailics in the evening brings the followimg important report of the situation which then existed at the seat of the French Legisiature. The Assembly Committee on the Address in reply to the President's Message have completed their report, They propose the immedi nomination of a select Committee of Fifteen to draw up a bill pro- viding for the creation of a responsible Ministry, They declare a formal reply to the Presidential Message unnecessary, for the Thiers is the As A REPLY te son that “M, ‘sembiy’s delegate, The report suggests no solution of constitutional questions, The minority of the committee, favorable to the Presideyt, have resolved to prepare a counter-re- port, POLITICAL ANXIETY, The report of the majority, which makes the rupture between President Thiers and the Right compicte, causes much anxiety in political circles. Ze Soir advises the President in a second message, to retort Special English Statement of the Crisis and National Inferences as Result. to the LONDON, Nov. 25, 1872, Special despaicues from Paris to the London evening papers report that the French situation is gloomy, The majorityin the National Assembly, it is stated, has determined to adhere to the position it has taken, and a compromise of the differences between the Executive and Legislative depart- ments of the government probable, ” GERMANY. Imperial Tourists’ Destination Changed. TELEGRAM TO THE NEW YORK HERALD, BERLIN, Nov. 26, 1872. Their Highnesses the Prince and Princess Im- perial will not make their intended tour of Switzer- land. The health of the Princess is delicate, and her physicians have advised her to go to Carisruhe. The Imperial Attitude Towards the Prussian Parliament. Lonvon, Nov, 25, 1872, A special despatch from Berlin to the London Times says forty landed proprietors will probably be elevated to the peerage to qualify them for seats in the Upper House of the Landtag. GREECE. Great Powers’ Concern for Adjustment of a Loc Difficulty. : . TELEGRAM TO THE NEW YORK HERALO. Lonpon, Nov. 25, 1872, Italy and France have asked Austria, Russia and Great Britain to join them in an effort to adjust the diMeulty with regard to the Laurium mines, near Athens, DEMISE OF A GOOD POLICEMAN, BaLtimore, Md., Nov, 25, 1872. Francis J. Fullam, for many years connected with the Police Department of South Baltimore, died at his residence on. Friday nigut, aged thirty- nine, His beat included the docks and wharves skirting Federal Hill, aud his recerd in the Police Department shows that. he had rescued sixty-two men and children from drowning, and many of them 4 plunging tato the water at the risk oj his owa life. REPORTED BURNING OF A STEAMER, Cano, Il, Nov, 25, 1872, The steamer Wolff reports that the steamer H. M. Shreve was burned at Chester on Saturday night while coaling. No lives were lost. No further par- theulars hay en received. UNDERWRITERS OF PEORIA. Porta, Ill., Nov. 25, 1872. The Peoria Board of Underwriters at a meeting to-lay agree’ to co-operate with other corpora-4 tiens in maintaining a healthy advance in rates, ; bat protested strongly and decidedly agaist any reduction ta the compensation of agents, TRIOL OF AN ALLEGED MURDERER. Provipence, R. 1, Nov, 25, 1872, James Galea is on trial here for tae murder of David O'Hare. MURDER IN BROOKLYN. Margaret Bradley was conveyed.to the Brooklyn | City Hospital late last night in a dying conditign, she having been found lying ina poal of Iyiood under the stoop of the tenement hoase 48 Front street, She states that she had been, visiting the family of Hugh Barr, at the place <tesignated, and while there was beaten. ‘The polite arrest his wife, Rosa, and another woman Barkley. An old potaiy masner, covered with blood, Was found tndex a bed, and the floors and collings were bespat tered with the same red gore. ‘The woman's body waa covered with bruises and there were five teveibie wounds on her head and face. One severed the left ear entirely and pene. trated two Iychea into the head. Mrs, Barkley says the WCands were inflicted by Barr, ar’, ed Alice lockedap in (he Secoad prectuct station hOWiey co CC(Ot##é#é4....sewge eee is regarded as im- | The three were UNer the influence of Hquor, and are ngw “10KSDAY, NOVEMBER. 26, 1872.—TRIP LE. Sh SET. Italtan Opera—miss -<eoKs 0 Linda, Tha charming, metodious ,WOrk Of Dontsettt, which is nowadays #o acidom gir.” 08 OU¢ boards, Was brought out inst evening for tt” “rst time tn many years, Miss Ketlogg appearing .'" te title rote. The rest of the cayt was as follom'?—Pie- rotto, Senorita Sanz; Caria, Signor Viazant; a,1t0- nio, Signor Moridmi; Marchese, Signor Roncom, Prefetto, Siguor Reina. ‘The performance wasin many degrees smoother a# an enaembie than the majority of tts predecessors. In such music Misa Kellogg seems to be entirely at home and appears to the best advantage. Her first aria, “O Luce dt Quest Anima,” the joyous outburst of # young heart, was given with an effect that bronght a really enthusiastic encore, and she was culicd be- fore the curtain at the end of the mad scene by an expression of more real warmth tian what an artist generally finds in an Academy audience, There were some notable excellences it» other parts of the opera, especially in the duct with Pierotto, ‘Ah! Bel Distin,” and im the duct at the beginning of the second act with the Marquis penorita Sanz had a favorable opportanity of dis- playing the sympathetic qualities of her contralto voice, and she availed herseil of the occasion. ‘The tenor gave more satisfaction than usual, and sang his first romance commendably, Moriam was also in good voice, but in the scene where Antonio de- nounces his daughter he overacted it to such an extent that he nullified the effect of the situation, It is a pity that this opera, so intimately associated with the Dames of Persiant, Jonny Lind, Laborde, La Grange, Gazzaniga, Patti and Di Mureka should not be heard here more frequently. It is written in Donizetti's happiest vein, and ‘sparkles Irom be- annie to end with delightful melodies, The story iS an interesting one, too, corresponding with one of Miss Maggie Mitchell’s favorite chara %. On Wednesday evening Madame Pauline Lucca wilt sing the rote of Leonora in “Lia Favorita’ fer the last time. Her interpretation of the last seene in this opera is one to be remembered for a lifetime. The New “Folly” at Hoase. The production of “Round the Clock” at the Grand Opera House last night was a suc so far 4s the number of the audience was concerned, and the reception acvorded to the piece Was such as to insure it a triumph also, in the ordinary meaning of success, The word ‘folly’? describes the cha racter of the piece better than the method adopted by some people tn painting a play which has no recognized place in the drama; which is to speak of it as not a comedy, nor a farce, nor a drama, nor ® tragedy, put a combination of all, with the requisites of none, and then coldly to damn it by observing that it is in four acts and in prose, ‘This method would give little idea of what “Round the Clock" really is, while the single word “folly” is a fall description of its intent and purpose. ‘The aim of the piece is not so much to iusttate the dangers and temptations of metropolitan !tfe as to siow what ia the thing that we are apt to call “life” in this city. In this way it becomes a picture of the “institu tions” of which good people hear, but which they never see, pthing of the kind has been attempted since the production of “Tom and Je halt a | ry ago, which old playgoers will remember as ve of all the noted places in London when George IV, was Regent and the leader in every | frivolity, At that time New York was not yet city in the sense in which London and Paris are cities; and as the town rushed to see the town. | in London, so New York went to see the wonders | Of which we had only heard. “Round the Clock” does for this city what the dramatized version of Pierce Fgan's novels did tor London, and the town | seems once more determined upon seeing the town, ‘The French play upon which this piece is founded | is little more than a fourfdation for the incid and adventures with which it abounds, We ready indicated the thread of the story, which is nothing more than a test in twelve hours of who shall have a fortune, which can only be obtained by an unmarried person who was never engaged © Grand Opera and never in love, male relatives betug pre. ferred to femaies, The play open with the gathering of the relatives, most of whom are disgusted with the contents of the will, and the property is about to adjudged to Ernesta Hardcastle (Miss Emma Howson) when Joey Litly- burn (Miss Ella Deitz), the unsophisticated heir, 7 + ee ee ITALY, Royalist Arrests of Political Radicale an@ Charges of Treason Against the Crowa. TELEGRAMS TO THE MEW YORK HE@ALO, LoNnan, Nov. %, 1872, A despaict from Rome to the £cho saza Ave persons who were prominently connected with ghe movement to bold @ radical meciiag Ww’ that city yesterday have peen arrested and will be tried om the charge of high treason, No dixtturbance followed {his action of the goverae mewt autocities, and the ctly rentatas quiet, Kieg Bomba in a New aad Dangerous Appenrenee, Rome, Nov, %, (872, A case Gied wilh “Orsint bombs,” destined for Rome, bas been yeized Py the police at toe raitwag station in Leghora. His Majesty the King im tue Holy City va ot Citizen Rigt man, Now 26—" Mt, \ Pinmanwel fae arrives? His Majesty King Victor in the’ ctty. PARLIAMENTARY DEFENCK OV POVULAR PEL ILEOR. Al the sitting of the Chamber of Depetica to-dayt Signor Nicotera moved @ resoluyom ccosuring the government for the needicss and oifensive diaplayt of military force in the capital during. the pase three days. Minister Lanza and others spoke in justitication: of the measures taken by the authorities to pre- serve order, and the debate was adjournes, Signor Nicotera subsequently withdrew hia mo~ tion, fearing it would uufavorahly affect the parties recently arrested, At the same sitting Deputies Niccti and Corratth atiacked the foreign poticy of the government, A Cause for Anxiety in the’ Chambere: of the Vatican, roan, Ney, 25, (872, Monsignor de Merode, private chaaiain of ther Pope, is agitiu reported to be ill, OBITUARY, Walter avimitte, Walter S. Grimth, the Second Viee * Presideut of the Chamber of Commerce, died at his residence in Brooklyn, at an early in the sixty-fourth y ness. Mr. Grimith in former years was promineut as a forwarding merchant and one of the incorpo- rators of the New York Warehousing Comp first incorporated company of the chery e: lished in this city, and at the time of his death was: the see presiding omiccr of the Chamber o€ Commerce, anid as such he wae ever active in pro- moting the influen ind usefulness of that insti tion, F 3 also President of the Heme Tale In- su of which he was the originator, iy morning, e, after a brief it~ and to | compa kind piety, whose whole life was devoted to the moraland religiows elevation of his tellow men, TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY SHOOTING STARS. 1872. whicts nw Hay Conn, Noy. Land flity shoottng stars, ments of Biela’s comet, ton, of Yule Andromedaa. 3 evening. CIRCULATING CANADIAN DEBENTURES, Tononro, Ont., Nov, Rogis coupons of the City of Toronto a hearing the signature of S, E. Vitz Henry, ¢ lain, Rave been sent kere for collection from the United States, where, ib is understood, @ consider- able amonnt of the spurions debentures has beem disposed of. ‘The Chamberlain of Toronto is A. Ie McCord, who has held the onice since the incor poration of t : A NEW RAILROAD IN NEW EAMPSHIRE. Two hunde were proba secu hore last night by Professor N College. ‘They radiated from Gain Possibly mac them inay be seen y appears and claims the money. The fortunes and | adventures of these two young people form the | Staple of the piece, and while they are seeing the | town many strange places and strange persons 3 exhibited, Broadway and Twenty-third street, | Donovan's alley, in the Vive Points, Murderers’ | Row and Harry Hill's, Lion Park, behind the see at Niblo's, and one or two other places of lo interest or repute, ail enter into the pli One of the most startling situations ts the scene at the Lion Park Gardens, in the | first act, but, asa whole, this act falls far be some of the other pictures in the piece. The acting , in this act, a8 18 apt to be the case on first nights, | was not sufficiently tone: ot a New York audience. The play: used fo | Frenen burlesque, gave its extravagances, excel- lent in themselves, too much the character of opéra hougfe acting, and consequently suce only in caricaturing a caricature. I other p: of the performance the same objection was notit | able, and marred it both asan artistic representa | tion and as a local picture. Yet it was apparent from the great execilence of the scene | which shows the ‘Black Crook” from the Cros street side of Niblo’s that the whole may y be rounded and perfected so as to become excellent | throughont. The scene is novel in ides and unique | in execution. It gives a much clearer notion of how a piece is managed than the scene in “Agnes,"? where something of the same kind js attempted, and satisfies the desire which is felt in Sardou’s lay to see the audience of which the spectator hears 40 much in the dressing room of the premiere danseuse. The scene is so well painted that the illusion is perfect and, like a young lady looking at and admiring hersell ina giass, the one audience rejoices in the sight of the other, which it is half inclined to accept as the one which paid for orchestra stalls and parlor chairs. | Of the acting little necd be said, Mr. John Brougham as Killgobbin failed to do himself jus- | tice, aud Mrs. John Wood as Juliana Tartar can do better than in last night's performance. Both these artists will improve as the piece mellows and the others learn to appreciate more fully the | capabilities of their parts, which, in one or two | characters at least, were exactly fitted to the act- | ors, instead of the actors fitting themselves to the | parts, This is notably the case with Miss Kila — Diets, who has only to be herself to play ' Joey Lillyburn well. The same re- | mark applies in some degree to Mr. | Ketchum as Lawyer Gaddigett, a part whicn | he makes too exuberant even for a subject for the Bar Association. New York lawyers are wonderful enough, but Mr, Ketchum's Gaddigott is a ilttte too wonderful, But we cannot go into details of | the acting on a first night, especially as the acting, | ag Well as the piece, must mellow before it can be fitly and intelligently criticised. It is only neces- sary to add that the lovers rush into each other's arms, and so make way for the grand finale, im | which we are presented with a view of tae | interior. of the Academy of Music during the Liederkrang Carnival, to which the characters of | the drama, made happy by the manner of its con- clusion, have gone to finish the night in merri- ment. Here we have a brilliant apotheoris and transformation scene, during which the pre- | siding genius, Folly, exhibits to Prince Carnival a | succession of pictures, illustrating the vagaries of Fashion since the first efforts. of Mother | Eve. at personal adornments, in these | tableanz vivants we have /the various | ages or Notable fashionable feras typitied, The first by “Eve in the garden,” second by the | “Women of the wilderness,” Judity, and Cleopatra; | | third, by the living portraits of Madame. Clovis, | Marguerette the Provengal, a belle of the Middle Ages, Isabella of Bavaria andj Queen Kiizabeth; fourth, by Madame de Pompadorir, Qneen Anne, | Hannah Lightfoot, Chariette Cy rday, one ot our | randmothers, a Grecian Bend and a Girl ef the Period. The scene and act closing with wild | Majiltons figure prominently, ‘and ali the ballet and | choras participate, Musical and Theatrical Notes. A correspondent suggests thatthe Mendelssohn eoncerts in. this city. The theatres will all give matipees on Thanks- giving Day, and an operatic concert will be given at the Academy of Music in the evening. Mr. W.L, Florence announces twa performances at the Brooklyn Academy for that day, and the. Brookiyn theatre will give meJdanecs, Thus there will be no lack of amusemey’, on the day of annual | thankfulness, } ‘The sale of tickets for Mic, Stanley's lectures be- | } gins at Steinway Hall tuys, morning. | plack of “Aladdin” ef the Olympic on Friday e | ing, notwithstanditys the present piece continues & success, | | “WIATOR," Od OPERATIC CORRESPONDENT. We understand thar a misapprehension exists at the Acadetyy of Music ag to the persons who have | heen writing to the HeraLp under the nom de plume ‘of “Viator,” and that one of the gentlemen To“Ainently connected with the opera has anifered Trach annoyance in consequence, We beg to in form all cancerned that the “Viator” of Sunday November 24, i# not the same as the “Viator” ol Sunday, November 17. ‘This nom de ptume was put to the last communication by a mistake 1m printing department down to meet the tastes | 4 revelry, in whiclkthe Lauri favaily and the famous | Quintet Club of Boston be induced to give a tew | The burlesque of “Kesnitworth" is to take the | Wwe, Dover, Noy. 26, 187%. Ground was broken to-day for the Vortsmoutt and Dover Railroad, John P, Haie raising the firat The Mayor and Aldermanic Committee of ismouth and many in were present, MAILS FOR EUROPE. so ‘The steaiuship Wyoming will leave this port om | Weduesday for Queenstown and Liverpool, ‘The mails for Kurope will close at the Post OMce aif-past leven o'clock A, New Yor« HeraLp—Kaltion: for Kurope— will be ready at batt-past uine o'clock in the morte | ing. copies, in wrappers for mailing, six cents, j Died. Lis,—On Sunday, November 24, 14s, aged 10 months, elatives and friends are respectfully invited to attend the funeral, trom his parenis’ residence, Noy § Franklin street, on Tuesday, November 26, UreELL.—On Sunday, November 24, at the resi- dence of his brother, in Washington, D. C., Tuomas KE. URELL, aged 32 years, a native of Nenagh, Tipe perary, Ireland. Funeral will take place from his late residence, Brooklyn, on Wednesdag, CHARLES 642 Fourth. avenue, | November 27, at two o'clock. (For Other Deaths See Ninth Page.) A.—Herring’s Patent CHAMPION SAFES 251 and 252 Broadway, corner of Murray street. A.— For a First Class Hat at Popular prices call on DOUGAN, 102 Nassau street, corner of Ann. A.—Herald Branch Office, Brooklyn, corner of Fulton avenue and Boerum street, ‘Open trom 8 A. M. 0 8:2, jay trom 3 to 8 P.M, on An Indisputabic Fact.<The Most Ele= gant Hat store in the United States Ie KNOX'S, undur the ‘ith Avenue Hotek His downtown establishment, 255 Broadway, ix universally popular. At elther gende: can buy Hats for themselves or finc mere fincy Pues for theée lady friends ty decided advantage. Vatroniae KNOX, A.—Do not Madly Risk Con: bo or LJ when a tew drops ofJEALIS HONEY OF HORBHOUND AND TAR will ine hs, cobls, oaterrl Auenza, and every oth eading to that awf malady, CRITPENTO: Sixth avenue. . Sold No. 7 Si All driggists, Pike's Toothache Drops cyte éa>.onc. mitt~ ute. mong Horse: CALCTUM COMPO A.—Dropsy TODO BROMIDE the seeonda hotses, It re roe the syste jh e poison. thas mo b p absor' et disease, which resu glanders, d Prepared only by TLUDEN d& COry, 176 Willi of suport Hactirpr, L Lory Pri du Bandera, WW: box 4) Batchelor's Hair Dy'te.—Jd4. the Best ta h id; the onty true and pertoctdye; hariuless, Atal drugeias, Coughs.—A Medicinal /Preparation in, the form ofa loge nge is the most Aonvensent. BROWNS BRONCHIAL TROCHES alley wirigation Whicd inducew iu niti« or , instantan coughing, gi itis, Rearsevess, inthe enza, constimpt atie comsaluints. ‘otel, qi Kurogesa y-fiest oud Teeaty aeconed str ae vals stagle Rooms for permanent, | Glenham plan, {ve | A feredesirable s and transiont gue | Half Horse | magism, Swell ov muscle gilment upon | TAUR LINIME | agieient and modern times. G nis shortd consult BROWN & ALLEN, 18 dsan ofice, Who live Truk eu ge. ly: | twenty-s | | Ring-Worm, en years’ p Siult-Rheam, Cure bye R sy amuliieuured Wy, GAS w York. RTA Royal Havana tpttery.—Prises Cashed, ters tilied, imiormat nish Bank Bills, Tegghe st ratoaspaiah amukersy 16 Wa ste shies ct | Royal Havana Lovery.— information furnished RL ORTEGA, + bux hsfi Post oftices, ye jave Money and Health. | The hot weather ofsimmer tg a sore tuinl ta ihe wivos and mothers wha Rave « fmaily to sew for aut wo sewing | machingto dai vith. There is no exetise, however, fue any lanily, Row over poo remaining tons wiihout & sew Tag warning, When the ALEOCLD WILSON. for aats | socheal sedGon A oasy lors. Let it te clearly unt. devstoodt thy, { LON ix in every respect a fest cla Wi Any hot ia the g1 every. one ‘ireniare and 9 Wall street; bi Pat being mate bya com ies 6 Hestoom at at y s company want agents MU © o7 Weis a 3 | Wedding and Bal Cards; 1 toag Earle stytos Orders of DANCE aways Kiaiabuialed tl