The New York Herald Newspaper, September 30, 1874, Page 4

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4 EUROPE AND ASIA, se The Emperor William's Blunder Touching the Democracy. Religion and Republicanism | in France. ITALY’S Serrano Would Prefer Dollars to Moral Support. A Breakfast to the Russian | Empress. TURKEY, PERSIA, CHINA AND JAPAN PARIS, Sept. 14, 1874. In a review of afairs on the Continent of Enrope {t ts patural in these days to turn first to Germany, that all-dreaded Power, which is yet so weak for aggressive purposes. Prussophobia ts an epidemic, ana you are met by a superior smile tf you assert that there is no danger. Yet any one taking the trouble to reflect will perceive that Germany would scarcely dare to attack even Holland or Denmark without overwhelming necessity, much less pro- yoke @ contest with Austria or Russia. France, | she knows, is only biding her ume, and the faint- est probability of success her to make a rush at the lost prov- SICILIAN VESPERS. would encourage | NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 30, 1874.-TRIPLE SHEET. I may here caution Americans against the SALTED CUCUMBERS which figure in the list. 1 shall never forget the first time they were handed to me ata Russian dinner. A shudder passed through my whole | frame at their very odor, The taste 1s indeseriba- | ble in human speech. died protesting againat the dogma of infallibility, | ¢> prevent any recurrences of those old Papal he who had been the historian of the monks of the | wars, which were one of the scandals of the tem- | West and had labored to trace back to their | poral power. Unfortunately one foresees also efforts the greatness of the Anglo-Saxon race. endless diplomatic complications with Mussulman Were the contests of parties in France simply 4 | potentates and revivals of the Eastern question case of | as the result of a Christian colony on the site of old Carthage, for Catholic missionaries would lose no there could be no doubt of the result, but patrio™ | rie in organizing a formidable Propaganda for | | tsm and faith, zeal and learning, eloquence and | poetry, are found on both sides. Uae thing Is cer- tain—namely, that the discussion on frst princi- MICHAEL VS, SATAN, TURKEY | the conversion of the neighboring States. Still | Is abont to issue $30,000,000 worth of shares in the | Algiers has remained in French hands without | Ottoman Bank, probably tn connection with some leading to a general war in spite of the zeal of the | piece of financtal legerdemain by which the Sul- 1 sball | ples, that {8, on what moral laws a ye | Catholte clergy and in spite of English jealousy. | tan’s Ministers are borrowing at twelve per cent be governed, has been carried Aes progresa | 5° that the scheme may wot be wholly imprac- | to payom adebt at ten per cent. A much more nearly a century without Sey liek Lathan ONsOnR ticable, Jerusalem would, of course, seem serious affair is the obstinacy with which Abdul- being made; for no preache | THE NATURAL HOME OF THE POPES, ‘Aziz adheres to his resolution of changing the suc- Knox has appeared who could drive his own ? cesston, For 500 years the eldest male of tne rough-hewn thoughts tnto the minds of the people. | house of Othman has succeeded to the vacant { | but Russia would never tolerate a Latin patriarch Proudnom and Lacoraaite have been equally un- | at Jerusalem, nor could civitized Europe tolerate the bear garden into which the animosity of the | throne upon a demise of the sovereign. ‘rhe ensable majority remains | Bs successful. santo poser? cela piled in, | different sects would soon convert the Holy City,*| present heir apparent is Murad Eendt, lee eal lite. Tit tt ts won even | EY€0 Now, at the Tomb of the Redeemer, only a | the Sultan's brother, born in 1840. The ee “. strong body of Mohammedan soldiery can prevent | prince in whose favor he is to be set | glasning advocates and amiable young princes who have passed creditable examinations wijl god the task of government grow more difficult | every day. All Frenchmen who think, from phi- logophers to hotel waiters, are to be ranged, for | practical purposes, into two camps of mortal enemies, The best the Christians from cutting each other's throats | aside ts the Sultan's eldest son, a lad of seventeen, ‘every Easter Day. Strange trony of fate! ‘he | It is quite possible that, were the Sultan to die Sepulchre of Christ, the possession of which was | now, the rival claimants would each be supported | denied to the valor and piety of Cur ae Lion and | by different ambassadors. Sir Henry Elliot has | St, Louis, 18 now open to all, yet the kingsand | been instructed to oppose the contemplated | commonwealths o! Christendom fear to take it | change. I suspect that Murad Efendt's breakfast APOLOGY FOR THE SEPTENNATE from the reverent protection of an infidel toe, | Will disagree with him one of these mornings. Is to be found in this fact, that France has not yet | feeitng that they themselves would not guard it so « THE SHAH OF PayALA. . | made up her mind, and that thereiore the best |g: de parmined to Oktry One Ieenbetls plans without | thing that statesmen who may happen to be in | SPAIN | the aid of Reuter. He is quite right, for althe | power can do is to keep the peace till the nationat | ‘8 NO better, and must, therefore, be worse than | wants is a good engin er (with full powers) | verdict can be ascertained to have been given | S¥¢ Was & month ago, because there has been more | to turn Persia into an Asiatic Holland, | under no aisturbing induences, In 1871 the) bloodshed and more expenditure in excess of in- | With a good railway, running ‘rom west | country, exhausted and sick at heart of republic | Come. ‘The recognition of the government of | t0 cast, Persia would sun necome sue. | apd empire, | Madrid by all the States of Europe except Russia | highway between Europe and India, As to the | was ready to return to the old in 1872-3 the accident of a very | may give Marshal Serrauo a great deal of moral | expense. there is no reason to suppose that Baron pela ge ey who was governing extremely | support; but even Lord Granville, who never | Reuter intended to benefit the Shan abu own well, calling himself a republican, made thous- | gave the allies of England any other kind of sup- | cost, Money can only be had for money’s worth, | ands—who wished chiefly for a quiet ltfe—call port, and who ought, therejore, to be a good judge | and the fewer middlemen employed the less cash themseives also repubiican, In 1374 the disgust | of its value, sald he should like to know what will be lost in transition from investors in New | inspired by the intrigues of the Assembly 1s turns | moral support was he himself being sceptical as | York to the treasury at Teheran. Reuter as ing the same men in the direction of that imperial. | ‘0 the existence of such a commodity. The recog- | Grand Vizier and Grand Banker of the kingdom ism which does not trouble itself about parliamen- | nition has evidently irritated Don Carlos, tor i¢ | together would have been the hugest and most | | tary divisions. has driven him into print and a very dull | swollen middieman the world ever saw, with little | England is somnolent, as usual, The Premier 1s manifesto. Other visible effect it has produced | to apprehenc trom king or shareholder, devoting the recess to the pleasing occupation of | 2OBe The non-intervention policy torced on Great | As a preliminary step toward the proposed | VISITING TITLED WIDOWS Britain by the Manchester school after the Rus- I works, Nazir-Agha, the Persian Minister in Paris, | | for the benefit of his country. Of other Ministers, | sian war is beginning to produce very wide effects. has oeen recailed, to be consulted on questions of Tue nattons of the Continent affect to rail at Eng- | railway fluance. Naztr-Agha 1s probably wonder- Presidency of Prince Jerome Napoleon to be cons sidered an imperialist? or tf he goes regularly to church is he to be branded as a clerical? One must admit that @ religious republican is a rare individuality in France, yet there are men, such as M. de Pressensé, who hold liberal opinions a¢ not incompatible with an earnest beliet in Uhria- tianity. Again, st 1s very hard to distinguish the log- ical line Which separates respectable republican like M, Louis Blane from their Communis' mirers. Moreover, none of the political parties ta France are corporate bodies, with a continuous organization and test of membership. Herein lies their difference to churches, to wnich a man can leave money with a tolerable certainty that i¢ will be employed for weil defined uses, It strange, too, that M, de la Barre should not have foreseen that In the event of the very possible re- storation of monarchy under Napoleon IV. or even Louis Philippe IL, the term republican would. be dealt with by the law as ove denoling treason to the existing government, How would our Sue preme Court deal with @ legacy of the year 1864, under the terms of which the trustees ola certain fund were to be “citizens of the Confederate States?” MINISTER WASHBURNR has formally invited France to be represented at the Philadelphia exhiottion, and has of course re+ ceived a favorable reply. One may foresee many speeches in the year 1876 in which the name of La- fuyette Will pot unfrequently occur, and in which dipiomatists will not blush to talx of the sister repuolics, supposing the preseut constitution of France lasts as long. Perhaps it would be unfair to consider the adver- tisement of a clilropodist ia Paris to the etect that he nad operated successfully on several “crowned feet” as worthy of notice, yet a straw ‘The Prince ot Wales in | may show which way the wind blows, and aw idea muat be deeply rooted tndeed tn @ Paristan’s mind France. when it makes him lose lis, sease of the ridicu- } lous, air, F, B, Wilkie, of a THE CHICAGO TIMES, Pants, Sept. 10, 1874. with Mr, William F. Rk, Round and Mr. Bampridge, Orleanists are already grumbling because six | Salleg oa she Gee Pk) Abies bee lo on | Wednesday and begge he aliowed to accome weeks have elapsed since they helped to deleat | pany some ol the reporters of that journal on two. the Casimir Périer proposition in the Assembly, | or three expeditions, to see how they collected and nothing, as they affirm, bas yet been done for | information, One would think the most interest- them, To turn M, Magne out of the Cabinet is | ing part of the process was the dressing, not to nothing while Bonapartists continue to hold the say cooking, of the news to suit French tastes, if facts cannot be made amusing, 0 muco the worse, vast majority of Wrefectures and Mayoraities. ‘The fact ts Marshal MacMahon insists on having @ Probably, or the sacts. voice in the government, and, not being an Or- THE HOLIDAY SEASON, leanist himself, will not allow the whole machinery of the administration to be put out of gear to PARIs, Sept, 14, 1874, please a party which is becoming more discredited The fact of the Prince Imperial having won @ every day. 1tmay well be doubted whether the | prize for horsemanship at Woolwich has led to @ Count of Paris takes much interest in the intrigues | curious discussion among French journalists, of his adherents. He is a quiet, studious man, | which is not without its interest for trausatlantio FRANCE. Dissatisfaction of the Minis- terial Party. The President Determined to Govern. FRENCHMEN ON FREE LOVE Discovery of the Remains of Leonardo da Vinci. SOCIAL AND POLITICAL NEWS. — ooo inces. Now, even a third-rate ally Would divert Mr. Ward Hunt, if he has not reconstructed the 100,000 of the enemy from the principal theatre of | British Navy, has at least gone to sea, and gazetted | war, and the Moitkes and Werders well Know that | the tact that he alone on the Admiral’s ship | inTorelgn'quaxrela, but they) are) sll:;tending to in the last campaign they had fuil use forevery | could eat breaklast after a stormy night, I1l- | *t0Pt the same principle themselves. Itis not a soldier who crossed the Frenc: frontier. Moreover, | natured journalists—who are never gatistiea— | P¢Sutiful principle, and will hardly pay even ina the Germans are in one sense a peaceful people. | nave tne tlippancr to style the Minister for Naval | Commercial sense in the long run. The state of They may be tenacious of their rightsand more | affairs “a ponderous person,” and to write Spain hes forsome months past, beens disgrace to the world at Jarge. Private than their rights, but they hate perpetual soldier- | under nis portrait “the fat of the land,’ Ing—three years with the colors, five in one re- | put Engiiaimen don’t dislike fat people, and Mr, | Will be spread far and wide by the dual serve and four in another—as the constant stream | Ward Hunt has the great merit of being a fair | 224 inevitable bankruptcy of what ts po- of emigration to America shows. The last war | fighter, Nobody thinks much of the Duke of Rich- tentially one of the wealthiest countries budget was carried through Parliament only acter | mond, but thea His Grace thinks a great deal of | 1 Europe. Statesmen and peoples have @ Ministerial crisis, and it 18 said that | himself. “I appeal to Your Lordships whether I BISMARCK'S REAL DIFFICULTY | am a fool,” he once piteously exclaimed in the Up_ is not the Pope, but che liberal party. Herein, | per House, in answerto a pert remark which left , sibility or the addition of a few millions to one year’s budget as to allow a kingdom within the land for ber steady abstinence from taking part ing atthe present moment whether that is the true reason fora summons into the presence of his gracious sovereign, London ‘ound he had been recalled to receive 500 blows on toe soles of the feet Persian Ministers have shown a Singular disinclipation to return misery | bome on ledve of absence. | itis, of course, ridicuious to magnify the Formosan dimcuity into a quarrel between China and the | no right to be so selfishly afraid of a little respon- | United States; yet America cannot remain an im. passive spectator oi disturbances which may seriously affect her trade. with wealth and the opportunity of lvisure—thus realizing the golden le as imaged by Bacon— and his history of THE AMERICAN WAR, to which he feels he cannot de justice in less than Ever since a colleague in able occupation, With respect@o nected with politics, has just befallen the Prince— THE WAR BETWEEN CHINA AND JAPAN, no less than the discovery of the remains of Leonardo da Vinet at the Castle of Ambpoise, the property of His Royal Highness, and which was undergoing repairs. Some workmen found a tombstone, under a heap of earth, with the name of the painter engraved on it and soon alter came The Chinese govern- nine octavo volumes, gives tum ample and agree- | A rare piece of good fortune, wholly uncon- | readers, as illustrating the Old World idea o1 what | aruler should be, A republican sheet opened the | ball by sneering at proficiency in equestrian exer | cises. The Franzais demurs to this view of the | qugstion, and congratulates the country on having | for the moment a President who can ride. This is, | of course, @ covert aliusion to M. Thiers, who ‘jeared Bismarck much less than a high trotting horse, The Charivari indignantly retorts that PRESIDENT LINCOLN ' could not ride, aud yet somehow managed to govern pretty well. It adds, in thoroughly Frenct phrase, tnat “the coup a'état rode,” which 19 @ way of reminding people that on the afternoon of the 2d of December, 1851, Louis Napoleon, havicg some affirm, lies the secret o! the attack on the Catholic Church. Empire, to govern at least under constitutional iorms, and, only three years aiter the war, liberals were already manifesting symptoms of impatience at the maintenance of an overgrown military or- ganization in times of peace. A new cry was wanted which would rally the great majority of the nation to the government. As in England, Disraeli is even now attempting to raise the alarm that the Protestant religion is in danger. So Bismarck’s cue was to imagine Jesuitical conspiracies against the integrity of the State. This was quite enough for the liberals; let the Kaiser, they cried, have as many soldiers as he likes, let him even gag the press still more, as jong as he putsdown the common enemy. Into the guilt or innocence of the German Bishops it is Meediess to enter; not asingle definite charge of treason has been brought home to one of them; but, on the other hand, it is tolerably clear that the Vatican never looked with much favor on the movement for German unity, still less on toe erection ofa great central Protestant power at the expense of Catholic Austria and Catholic France, Still the policy of the Court of Berlin (‘or the Emperor William is equaily responsible for it with bis Minister) is more than doubtful in the interests of the house of Hohenzollern, Tue Church of Rome had accepted the German Empire in 1871, and only asked to be leftalone. Was it worth while to purchase the temporary support of & practically irreconcilable party by alienating that hierarchy which has, in modern times, always proved the firm supporter of the thrones of kings? Granted that Catholicism can be put down with a high hand, what remains but that the crown and the aristocracy will be ieit alone FACE 0 FACE WITH DEMOCRACY, which will respect the divine right of royalty quite as little as the divine right of the Pope. The electoral statistics compiled by order of Prince Bismarck, and recently published, disclose Some significant facts. At the last elections up- wards of five millions of voters went to tne polls. About a million and @ half callea themselves Catholics and an equal number national liverals, The remaining two millions are accounted for under the heacings of progressists, conservatives, “German” or “liberal” imperialist, democrats and social democrats, Poles, particularists, “Frenca and Danes” and independents. The majority of tnese would probably vote with the national liberals on questions of military It is necessary, under the new | pale of European civilization to be turned intoa ment has just bought an ironclad from Denmark, vast Gehenna o1 fire and slaughter. If Lord Derby | and evidently means business. The Mikado ts were anything better than an earl witha large equally resolute, and is only too glad to | 1ortune who has gratified Enghsn taste by talking have an opportunity of employing the political platitudes for a quarter of acentury, he | military class in a foreign war. When to worry John Bull in every conceivable fashion, would nave bad the courage to suggest a com- | the power of the Daimios was overthrown | | to tell him when he shall eat and drink, work or bined action of the great Powers long ago, There | fA few years ago and the old jeudal system broken plsy—the Factory and Licensing acts very nearly | are of course difficulties in the way of sucha! up, the armed retainers of the nobles were dis- | amount to this—and then much enduring John scheme, just as there are always twenty good banded and have ever since given trouble, as men | Bull will send him to the House or Lords and trust | reasons lor not doing one’s obvious duty. But | deprived of the meansof living will give trouble, | he nas heard the last of him. To that august | Ministers of State exist for the purpose ol dealing The prospect of u campaign in China, unfettered | Senate will shortly be elevated with aificult questions, otherwise | py anv restrictions of the Geneva Convention, | MR, PERRY WATLINGTON, PRESIDENT LINCOLN'’S STATEMENT must be eminently agreeable to Japanese, as it | presumably for not having written “Sartor Resar- | would be perfectly correct and a dozen postmen | would possibly be to our own soldiers, tus” or “Locksley Hall,!” or invented the electric | would form a Cavinet fully competent to admiuis- If the war is soon over the Ceiestials and their telegraph, or elaborated a theory of the origin of | ter the affairsof a nation, The English Foreign | antagonists may be left to settle it between them- | species, Aneminently “sale” man is Mr. Perry Minister couid with very good grace have taken | selves; but if it suouid last long and once Watlington, and the British fancy just now that | the initiative, forno one is now afraid of ambi- more plunge China into the anarchy of | tious designs on the part of England, excepting, | twelve years ago, it would be well tor America to | they like saie men. Indeed, the famous Englisn | perhaps, Russia, which appears to be anxious to | take steps in cenc:Tt with England and Russia for constitution threatens to develop speedily into | | government by bores, Even men of genius cheer- | make itself conspicuous at the present moment, | establishing a joint protectorate of the country, ‘The reiusal of Prince Gortscnakof to recognize fully acquiesce in tue system which excludes them | 16 may even be doubted whether from high offices of honor and trust. And itis | Marshal Serrano’s authority can bardiy be dic- | A PARTITION OF CHINA well that they do, as Thackeray found out when | tated by any other motive thay pique at the West- _ will not sooner or later be an absolute necessity he was @ candidate for the representation of Ox- | ¢™ Powers having led the way. Such, at least, is | in the interests of civilization. A great heathen | the only interpretation that has yet been tord City against Mr. (now Lord) Cardwell, He 4 empire of 400,000,000 inhabitants, adopting the wrote in a few Gays to Dickens, saying, “Pray, found tor the Russian Chancelloz’s separate | present German military system, could keep up a | action. It is come here and teil them who | am. Nopody knows worth remembering that | standing army of 4,000,000 in proportion to its me, and I think about hail a dozen know you.” Russia was the last to recognize Louis Napoleon’s | population—merely on the peace footing. Arm Perhaps Italy would be all the better for a few | UsUrpation, wud that Nicholas had serious scruples | this force with breech-loaders and Krupp guns, statesmen of the stolid English type, whom no fine | about the style of Napoleon 111, as no Napoleon | oficer it with Europeans and put the finances into spun theories would prevent from dealing with | HU. had ever been recognized. Long, too, alter | such order as may enable you to feed it; and you the brigunds just as tue Sepoys were dealt with in | Pugland and France had acknowledged the king- | have opportunities which Napoleon never dreamed India. | dom of italy, Russia witaheid her approval from | of, Imagine a Warren Hastings, or, bevter still, a Sicily, the new Monarchy. Tne Czars wish, perhaps, to | Dapleix, with imagimative designs, constituting THE IRELAND OF ITALY, occupy the position of temporat Popes and consti- | himself prime minister of the country, and wield- is at present in a feariul condition. Brigands and | tute themselves the ing, in the name of the faindant Emperor, we policemen are in open confederation, and the poor | GUARDIANS OF LEGITIMIST INSTITUTIONS enormous material resources of China at his pleas- Pope is, of course, said to be at the bottom of it throughout the globe. ure. He might march trom Pekin to Berlin if he ail. The best proof tuat he has nothing to do | Meanwhile, to the satisfaction of every free man | only arranged his transport service properly. | with the excesses of the banditti is furnished by | and every thinker who can see the value of the ne Rn the circumstance that these gentiemen hastened | rights of small States, the Brussels Conierence has no mistake as to the opinion of the Duke of St, — Albans on his brother peer. Secretary Cross is contemptuously voted an old woman, netther bet- | ter nor worse than Secretary Bruce or Secretary | Walpole. He will be permitted for yet a few years JOHN KELLY AND TANINIANY. to enlist under Garibaidi when he landed ended im smoke. All the delegates, indeed, | se Le at Marsala in 1860, Francis IL then have signed @ protocol, suave those of | K . Kelly’s Reply to Appear on Th represented law; Victor Emmanuel represents it | Eugiand and Turkey; but it 1s believed ae ‘adage 8 ~~ ere | day—What is Proposed To Be Done About the Tammany Ticket for Mayor. The long-promised statement of Mr. John Kelly will be given to the press for publication on Wednesday night, in order that it may appear in the morning papers of Thursday. made onthe very best authoriry and there is no doubt of its fulfilment. Tue statement ts described by those who have seen it during the progress of its preparation as remarkable sor the explicitness | of its narrative, the absence o! all personal allu now. Robbers are naturaily opposed to the one as | to be of so harmless a nature that the Cabinets of they were tothe other. This is the extent of their | London and Constantinople will not offer any ob- political sympathies, Of course some adherents of | stacies to the adoption of the propositions em- the old dynasty who may have received assistance | bodied in its contents. from the Vatican are extremely poor, and may | Two or three great ladies at the Court of St. have taken to questionable courses, including | Petersburg divide their time between scandal ana what they donbtiess tried to believe was only | such efforts a3 may be made over a tea table for guerilla warfare against alawiul enemy, but which | the conversion of Asia to the orthodox faith. Rus- Jawyers and soldiers are compelled to regard as | sian generals are accordingly instructed to Chris- uanize the natives of Khiva and Turkestan, which | day ne may have perused the congratulations of | | This promise is | to the Bishop and other ofticiais for distribution ' | upon a stone coffin containing the ponesina wonderful state of preservation. Leonardo da Vinci was known to have died at Amboise and to have been buried there, but the site of his grave had, strange to say, been forgotten. Ladies not generally supposed to take over much tnterest in locked up every one who was dangerous, rode on a white horse through the streets of Paris, accom- | panied by a briiliant military staff. Probably thia assumption of royal state and dignity was now | without its effect on the shopkeepers of Paris. | Law and order tad always been associated in their antiquarian research once dwelt in this famous , minds witha man in splendid uniform, mounted domain, and had far other requests to make of | ona white horse. On the other hand, M. Julea Louts X11. than that he would not forget where Favre and M. Gambetta may have regretted om lay the dust of a man who had been dead a | the 4th of September that they had no epaulettes hundred years, and could not even trust themselves on cab horses. THE PRESIDENT’S PROGRESS | They would nave produced no tmpression whatever is becoming more of a success as it draws toward | on thelr countrymen by walking through Paris ‘a its conciusion, No more ll-timed speeches cun theirforensic gowns and pirettas, with umbrellag mar the festivities, for all addresses intended to in their hands. ‘They would even have excited be delivered to him must henceforth be previously the derision of the wultitude. Europe has hardly submitted for his approval. ‘This is the fashion | yet masiered of royaity in England, where it was once neariy ‘THE PHILOSOPHY OF CLOTHES, leading to acomical result. The Prince of Waics in spite of ail Mr, Carlyle’s teaching, nur are we 80 was visiting Chester and enduriog a harangue very far irom savagery when we still honor the from the Mayor, when that worthy, who was siaughtering trade above all others. Even 19 short-sighted and thought it undignified to stoop America a general has a long start in the race for in order to see the paper he heid in hishand, honors over men eminent only lor peaceiul forgot the thread of his discourse. ‘There was triumphs. {n this respect the great nations of an awkward pause, and the Prince, who knew antiquity were our superiors. Neither Romans the next sentence quite well, deciared toairiend | hor Athenians associated the dignity of rank with afterward that he was just on the point of | military costume. Even Cesar would appear at @ prompting the Mayor, but happily restrained him- | State ceremonial not 1p armor, but in self, | the stately robe of white, bordered with crimson, ‘Av St. Nazaire Marshat MacMahon was respect- Which marked a member of the Sepate. To hang fully greeted by a transparency o! the folowing @ Sword at one’s side Jor ornament in time of design :— peace was justly regarded as absurd and barba- Qrrrereserecerererecereccss stress terserecreserece coreg, | TOUS, Thucydides notices the disuse ofthe custom LONG LIVE THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC. 3 among his leilow citizens as Marking an era ia Derrecerececerccersscccssservserersserccteseeress tate} | ‘ Hie embarked 1 no long time for Nantes, sooner, | ‘!ViliZation. indeed, than had been anticipated by the corre. | spondent of the Rappel, who arrived on the quay guticipated it by one day, in compliment, perhaps, just in time to see the Marsha! steam out of the | tg the Prince of servia, Who accompanied him to harbor, accompanied by the boat which had been arty, The Count of Paris is doing the honors of chartered for the press. He tried to overtake 1t | Chantilly tor iis uncle, who js just now at the in a light crait, which was tossed on tie waves, headquarters of his army corps. The Duke of Au- maie busies himsell very mauch about his com- and seemed about to capsize every moment. Next yand, which is about the best thing be can 410, lor the Duke won a Victory over the Prus- sians the Freuch would let hun be King or any- thing else he pleased, Lis Royal Highness is popu- larly Supposed to be a goud soldier, on the strength o! nis having delivered a clever speech tn the As- sembly on the subject of mulitary organization and having displayed constderable skill In cross- eXumining Bazatne on his trial A general, to achieve anytaing, must, of course, have read and written much; but it does not, therefore, follow that a smart pamphieteer will make a great captain. ‘Trochu’s reputation was built on books, and great THE SHOOTING SEASON began here yesterday, though Marshal MacMahon the conservative journals on his having escaped a bath, which they concluded must be the most ter- rible of all disasters to a republican. In radical Nantes the Marshal was agreeably surprised to fina his reception extremely cordial, and, tokeep up the favorablz impression he had made, he gave $500 _ among the hospitals and other charitable institu- tions, He also went through the trying cere- | was the failof it. Asto the Duke of Aumale’s mony of | Algerian campaign, he was simply crowned with the laurels of the old omcers who accom- REVIEWING TWO HUNDRED MAYORS, expenditure, the Emperor's civil list or the priv- ileges of Parliament. The Catholics will give no help to @ persecuting government, and on whom can Frederic William V. then rely when the mem- and the gentlemanly part of the business was | ory of Gravelotte aud Sedan shall Lave begun to scarcely visible tothe naked eye. The Duke of fade and the burghers of Frankiort and Hambure Cumberland saw that the only way to secure last- begin to hold once more the language of their ing peace for the country was simply to extirpate | for church rates. fathers in 1348” The present Sovereign of Ger- | these nobie savages, and though he got the nick- many may love to hear himself compared tothe name oi the “Butcher,” it was he who really pre something much worse. Many of the Highland supporters Of the Stuarts were little better than GENTLEMEN ROBBERS, ago NINE TARTARS WERE CAUGAT Dmperor Frederic IL, but he might uave remem, vexced many a butchery and turned Northern | oned. The Gospel being thus associated witn tax- | that Mr, dered, in the interests of is jamiy, t Scotland into a new Switzerland. What Sicily ation and criminal prosecutions cannot fail to be the Honenstaufen monarch had notuing lke wants 1s a viceroy who ts not afraid tohanga lew loved, This proselytizing zeal of Russia will modern radicalism, much less socialism, brigands first and try them afterwards—in other prove a serious bar to her advance in Southern to deal with, Tuose who have conversed words, todeal vigoronsly with all persons foand | Asia, and may leave the English in perfect security in India for and as to their tenure come. Mohammedans awith GetMan professors over a quiet pipe assert with weapons alter dark. It 1s also indispen- that French Communism isa mere cracker com- sable that trial by jury should be suspended § to pared with the mine of osive thought which in the island, there being precisely the they do alter @ fashion of their own, Some time and baptized, The first intimation they received | of their new privileges as Christians wasademond | ment on the nomination of Mr. W. H. Wic The result was @ speedy re- | ham lapse of the nine Tartars into Islamism. an offence | General for which they have just been tried and impris | gs to the some time Hindoos are there allowed the practice of their own reli- sions and provocative language. It ts be- | lieved by Mr. Kelly’s iriends that it will be a full and complete answer to all the charges of fraud made by Mayor Have- meyer. The rumor that Tammany has made any “slate” for the November election 1s said to be without foundation, and the report of a settle- is equally groundiess. ‘The Tammany Committee will meet on Thursday evening next. That meeting will virtualivy decide Mayoralty, ‘here seems to be no doubt elly will receive the unanimous nomina- tion. Unless recent events have led Mr. Kelly to think that 11s character requires a vindication by the people, he will not accept that nomination. In | tue event of his refusal, he will be asked to name the canuldate for the ticket, It is anderstood that Mr. Kelly desires the election either of Mr. Augus- tus Schell or Mr. Wiliam Batier Duacan. Mr. Schell and Mr. Duncan are, Mr. Kelly says, men who would honor the Mayoraity, and thatit wouid be creditable to Tammany uf one of these gentlemen were to the aeeply pondering Teutonic mind is construct- | same diffleuity in obtaining convictions for high: | gions without let or hindrance from the receive a unanimous indorsement, A candidate | ing. Nor is there muct way rovbery as tuere is in Ireland in the caseof government, which even bullies Christian pe the ce ad tag Clee ot OPE IN TH t aurecis trape Tammany, and the three gentle e claims HOPE IN £8 agrarian outrages. missionaries for the slightest display of overzeal. are preferred by their itiends are Alderman Meanwhile Colonel Angus Croll, Chairman of the Giona Sulphur Company, has written a letter to Lord Derby, in behalf of the Engiish residents in Sicily, urging the Foreign Secretary to address a | Wish Lo destroy it altogether. Vigorous remonstrance to the [tallan government One would have thought the spectacle of France on the subject. Colonel Croll hints that the | undergoing tue agony of twelve revolutions in Roman Cabinet would eel their hands strength. | Krasnoé-S¢lo. eighty years would have taught neighboring na- ened by being able to point to external pressure tions the Value of compromise and the danger of asa justification for decisive measures. This is riding eveu praisewortay hopbies to death, But probably true, and reveals the lamentable weak- even France herself is no wiser {or ali this sadex- ness of the present rulers of [Italy when P: Bismarck’s tables, umber 23,908 and the social demo- erate { et words, out of every filteen who wish to reform society there are fourteen who after a glance the der LOCTALS f with the Empire which styles itself Holy.’ perience. No better illustration of the unman- they require foreign help to carry on the in- vate means of their own, must starve or steal. A ageabie ternal administration of the country. Never- full general’s income is said by @ recent authority MPER OF FRENCH POLITICIANS theless, Victor Emmauuel ts popular with his to bea little over $500a year, wile @ sub-lieu- | gan, subjects, and spectators of his royal progresses allege that he is nowhere more welcome than at Rome, Indeed the only complaint of the Romans is that they see too little of their King. He, on his part, is supposed to absent himself from the capital for two very different reasons, a dishke of ceremontous lite, aua # certain touchiness of character of which outsiders are notaware, He knows quite well that he is head of the Old House of Savoy ag well a4 King ol the revolution, and the conditions of residence at Rome are hurtful to hia could be given than the controversy which has just been raging over the deathbed of Frederic Morin, This eminent publicist hela the opimon Which seems su natural to the descendants of the Puritans, that aman may be @ sincere libera) and a sincere Christian at the same time. When he jelt that bis end was approaching he asked fora priest, to whom he confessed, and from whose hands he received the last sacraments. Tocque- ville, not only a liberal, but an ardent admirer of American inatitutions, had done likewise; yet the tenanv’s pay is something like $20. consequence ts that EVERYBODY THIEVES | ent which heaven has given him. of fare:— republican journals in Paris affect to believe that pride. The city contains a rival sovereign, whose | aapeuegne rT Mawanias $ tna "Charles Boaker, two British aliors wich M. Morin was unconscious on the day of | State is greater than his own, and who receives 3 Creme a Champignons. 3 Lee for iy 14 mange at ad anaes , Powe: ao is 3 Consomme Borsak. emper Simpson, ‘ his death, and that bis friends sent | Ambassadors trom Powers which ouly send Minis 3 | PETITS PATHS. ; month, it being agreed also that they should for the priest, M. Gambetta and some other | ters to himself, When once 3 B Cote aot rant feceive $25 advance wages. ‘The captain distingnisted menof bis party who followed the THE PEAR OF FRENCH INTERVENTION 13 CC TE 3 | however required ea OI $20. yeti finitely pe ‘ Ko erie che fused 10 pay, ey lac e 5 coffin remained ostentationsly outside the churcn | shall bave definitely passed away it is unlikely : Starlets bla chekeds, at vin da Biin. going of Pr tae ship. McDonald stated to tie into Which \t was borne for the solemn juneral | that the Itailans will tolerate a rival autuority to 3 Selle de chevreuil en venaison. Ineecting that ve hau since shipped on a vessel mass. S80, on a former occasion, & famous repub- | the national government on the banks of the Tiber. | 3 Jeti alera an bound for Roy per aay ee “ rou ae " 3 Jennes poulardes 4 out p “y100¢ lican had just been laid in nis last resting place Malta has most frequently been talked of as the | 3 Douvies cous de Bryancaux 3 | shipping Mite ntetement elicited ine applause of Péro la Chaise, aud orations were being uelivered | inture residence of the Popes; but, considering | ¥ shpeneinns tase et cotnouiebeasies 2 the iiceting. ‘The asiveration having taken upon in bonor of the decease Among the speakers the extraordinary power and prestige which must ty ‘ ‘i ™ iN pore iz Maes Pod siete ci muaatere appeals 4 os hs "3 fit. Peter, it sperges en branches, sau pay blackmal He was one Whose presence moved the wrath ot the | always attach to the successors 0! St. Peter, it may H aise. | tne pavilc jor the requisite aid. pystanders. “What right has that man,” ¢x- | well be considered whether It is not even now | ¥ Truffos du Perivord a Vestouffade H Toe wollowing resulations were passed with claimed a Jean-visaged fanatic, “to be among us? | possible to fad & domain where the Pope, the uu- | Chand, Pain dabrieots a la portugaise, y Acclamation :— ee sbi Nes ‘ t r 4 s | § Froid —Arbouse 380. ore: 4 for obtaining a vessel, known He was married 19 4 churca!” On the other | doubted spiritual sovereign Of 200,000,000 Chris. | row —Arbouse a la ru : jaltereas the bonuepald for obtaining n veasel known | hand republicans urge, with some show of | Uans, need own allegiance to noearthly prince. | {Fruits frais, boubons. motes, fromages et celeris. } | and brutaiity whieh otten occurs on shipbo: here . , oki et the 3 ore, troth, that the Church wii oot pave them | Territory in the ae i Paps ais aka aie H 5 re 4 VINA 3 | ve clved, That the President of this, association be 1 thros t 1 See of St, Augusth afta | 8 NS. | ested to draw up & ino , 10 he unless they: are ready to throw over their | say, Hippo, the old See eT ae i the | {Madlere, retour des Indes; Xeres; Amontitiado ; 3 | Commerce of This system, and’ stiggesting the rom convictions whenever they clash with tne sup- | seaboard, might easily be purchased irom the | y tenn Yqueu, 1ei7;, Figehler; itudesheumer: Coll. | whel practical observation hag shown to be effect, . , 1c Power! 8 16 Vilthey ; Lattive, grand cra, Lt, porter (thal a copy of tls memorial be presented to cur rep On viotoMerosia of religion. UN cannot but | Dey of Tunis by the Catholic Powers. The position | ¥ 27), lo04: uilwey; Laite, graad crn, Uk; possar y | und shes w copy of tested fo iho foredgn contuis pag u rt " DESSERT. 1; Colorodo; Constance, 1836, Liqueurs diverses, &c. penees recanere serene remember that even Montalembert fatied atthe | of the new metropolis of Christendom would jast to reconcile loyalty to the Charch with the | be almost as central as the old, while ita geo- jreedom of thought for which be had suifered. Ue | graphical separation from Earove would be likely F. Re The native princes and the native priesthouds are shrewd enough to perceive that the rule of Russia would be avery different thing, and would support England with all their strength in the event of war | The grand manmuyres have just been held at | Alter the march-past beiore the | Emperor, His Majesty presented each of the sol- | diers—40,000 in number—with a rouble (seventy- | five cents), a gilt which would jnot be unwelcome | to some of the officers, who, if they have not pri- The logical | with more or less ingenuity, according to the tal- It would be in- | teresting to know who paid for @ breaklast whlch | axsociation was held yesterday afternoon at the was given after the review by the oficers of the Prcobrajensky regiment to the Empress. It cost, | the gathering Was to hear the report of the sea- including the decorations, $6,00. Here is the bily QOOPPOLE LO PELD ELL OL IETE EID IDDE TATE LEDELEIELITE LEED. AAR Ra RRR Re APEO DELO PELE DELETED Richard Flavnigan, Mr. James hayes and ex-Ju tice Shandley. Four candtdates ior Alderimen-at- Large are also among the nominatic It is at | resent intended to place on the ticket the need- | number of names for Assistant Aldermen; as | several leading lawyers have advisea tuat (ne le; | islation whict: abolished the oilice of Assistant Al- | dermen {8 wnconstitut | REPUBLICAN SfATE COMMITTEE. Yesterday morning the Republican Central State Committee met at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, in one of the parlors. The members present were George | H. Sharpe, chairman; George Bliss, Jacob M. Pat- | terson, John F. Smythe, 8. P, Remimington, David Acker, J. M. Rnspp, Henry M. Glidden, E. D. Mor- james D. Warren, W. H. Robinson, 8, B, French, David Wiiliams and Hugh Gardner, The committee sitaply organized as a body and then | adjourned, no other business being dune. POOR JACK AND ‘THE LAND SHARKS, | Aspecial meeting of the Seamen’s Protective Botanic Hall, NO. 65 East Broadway. The object of me | pay “blood mone; | dent of the ass and read the amdavit made by Thomas McDonnell ‘of the bark Billy Simpson, who retused to or. Wuliam F, Thoms, Presi- tion, was called to the’ chair, A collection was taken up and Beveral members foe SprONeey after which the meeting was ad journed, | panied him. So the famous Condé, whose honors who made a brave appearance in white ties, black trousers and tri-colored sashes, 1t seems almost irreverent tous to number Mayors by the gross, but as there are 36,000 of these exalted functioa- | aries in France a convenient method of reckoning would appear to be indispensabie. On the whole the President appears to have rallied Brittany to the Septennate; people, prob- ably, regarding a conservative Duke, who 1s also a distinguisied soldier, as the next best thing to a King. Berryer’s often-quoted sentence ts possibly true, that you may dethrone princes but cannot change them into subjects. Yet its converse can scarcely be admitted, as the examples of Crom- welland Napoleon show, and even the victor of Ma genta (as well as his wife) claims and is accorded royalhonors. That the Duke of Aumale could be hedged in with more divinity if he were tn MacMahon’s place 1s doubtiul, even though he should be called Stadtholier instead of Presient, as his friends vainly dream, MRS, VICTORIA WOODHULL is in Paris, where her opinions are not ilxely to | Already she has | sufler from lack of ventilation, had to face a reporter from the Figaro, who wiil not let her story lose in the telling. oi iree love, with which Mrs, Woodhull’s nawe is here idenrined, understand is Why Marriage and free love should be incompatible, which is, perhaps, one of the reasons why there has never been an agitation in this country, as in England, “to bring the biess: ings of divorce home to the poor man’s hearth.’? One French woman, wnabie to compretend the ne- cessity of the latter institution, declared that tt was the sacrament of adultery, A CURIOUS WILL has lately been disputed betore the French tri- bunals, The late M. de la Barre left the reversion of bis property to be employed, as a benevolent fund jor giving dowries to poor and virtuous girls in the three towns of Morlaix, Guingamp and Lan- nion, To such a bequest there could be no objec. tion, Itis acommon jorm of charitable te; in France, where @ portiouless girl has less chance than in any other country, What renders the va- lidity of the Will doubtful is the choice of trustees These are to be the republican members of the Council General of five, in exclusion of legitimists, Orleanists and tin- The French | public 18 being indoctrinated into the mysteries | What the Gallic mina cannot | Finisiére, to the number of the Duke inherits, reaped the glory of Rocroi at | Uwenty-two, though be had contributed no more than the gallantry o! a young officer to the result. | Such triumphs must not be confounded with the real exploits of youthiul gemius, with the battle of | Rivoli or the delence of Arcot, | THE PRINCE OF WALE: | has promised the Duke de la Roc ucauld Bisac- cia to visit him at tus Chateau of Ecimont. [t 19 suid the Duke can offer capital sport to ms royal The Prince will be an object of Interest to Frenchmen, for he is the first of English yentie~ men (by birth), and English gentiemen stilt set the fashion in France. It is noteworthy | that the __victo! of Reichshofen — and sedan have never inspired @ Prussomania in the breasts of the vanquished, Angio- mania, On the other hand, was also ram. pant after the Seven Years’ War, and again at the close of that struggle which was ter- minated hy the march of a British army into Paris. English horses, lush coats, English carriages, English manners and even English whiskers alt became the rage, and have, more or less, matn- tuned their ascendancy. But ho Parisian coach builder Would think o! christening a new vehicle an Augusta, and no eating house keeper would seek to recommend a new method of dressing beef- steaks vy calling them a la Prussienne. Some Engitsh institutions of a very undesirable character have been imported into Frauce, as the curiously bybrid language of the Jockey Club denotes, | THE “BOOK-MAKERS," however, have just been deait a serious blow by the decision of a tribunal which has pronounced betting oil! egal. M. Oller and a number of his associates, Who maintained a large establiah- ment of this Kind, Were sentenced to tines varyin; from $100 to $1,000, The books, papers and alt other matertals belonging to the trac were con= fiseated. Paris will be none the less the capital of pleasure for the suppression of these harpies. | Americans with limited purses (a race of beings | regarded by Frenchmen as purely mytiical), who; inay be thinking 01 @ Visit to Paris, will be glad to hear that @ new line of TRAMWAYS will be opened to-morrow. ‘The cars will run fropy, the Arc de ‘Triomphe to Surennes—that 14, trom, | one end of Paris to the other. They will be very coulortabie and roomy, lighted ana warmed with gas in winter, While in summer, Instead of stuity cushions, the seats will be of wicker aad the wits dows will be covered with “persiennes,” or lite blinds, instead of glass. Outside passengers Will Le protected by an awning from the rays o: the sun, Nothing in this world is perfect, and so one ts compelied to observe that the exigencies ol a Wem day ta July ate pardly met by Wie pretty litte blinds, and ladies with silk dresses or gettiemen with glossy hats wilt do well to be coutent with the protection afforded by 4 stout umobrei! Che Urénoque still rematus at Civita Vece itis now stated that Marshal SEESAW GOVERNMENT are equally opposed to recailing the frigate or al- lowing 16 Uo Stop at 1S present moonugs. Tt 1s hard to gee what good it can do the perimlist nd ih especial exclusion of clericals | ye Italians most assured!y do not wish to detam and Communists, Fulling members of the | at Rome. Ror ts is Holiness Itkely to wish to council General willing ertake leave it. e Itallan troops bad hardy entered Ming to undertake the | tic ety when the British gi nent placed & trust it 13 to be offered to municipal | ma at at his ¢ yhich the ope | councillors of the same opinions. only the paretass o! girls who may benedt by thts fund, but the giris themselves are principles of which the testator ex vious The will wants the one essential of clear eas, Legitimisin and Orleanizin will be terms hard | the Count of Cham | Isaropnblican WYO should vote for the | | ¥ define atter \ bord. the death of Not. to digavow'the | of es has dis- | ‘The Court has not yet pronounced its dectsion, , ¢ | and the dificulty of the case is sufficiently ob- | Yirce a H presence of this Freneh ship irfitate the ftalians, whose | sympathies » naturally on the side their old allies oof =The = ‘Teherpaya and Sollerino, and whom it is sheer madness to | drive into the siins of Prussia. 1% is @ painful fact | that the President has irankly confessed to an ig- noble fear of ofeuding the Fanboarg St. Germain, ‘The hero of a hundred fights, to whom all parties submissive homage, 13 unhappy it lwo or | kes refase Ns invitations to diuner. For > | their miserable support he is content 10 barter ho cordial amity of neighboring nations and the hearty Support of we republicans, Who alone Wistt weil to his title, This is not the stam of witch Proyiden tia) meg are made,

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