New York Times, The (Newspaper) - June 16, 1860, New York, New York t 2727 SATURDAY JUNE 16 1860 TWO OF THE JAPANESE tor Arrival MOB ESCORT of the Reception and Ball Ambassadors are expected in They wUl be welcomed u that great and by by ow i amd for their reception are on the and panorama o their escort t their landtag at the Battery to their head Hotel will probably form the moat novel and Imposing ever THX will leave Philadelphia hy the United Nival Commission Philadelphia Common Council at 10 o'clock taking tbe Camden and Amboy are expected to reach South abont o'clock There they will be by the Committee of toe New-York Com- and others the Committee Arrangements and on board the been for the which will leave the Battery for South at the time tHe from Several excursion are the on the trip for the of who are anxious to get an the Japanese toon the embarked on board the she will L far City the route between the 14 and Jeney which presents some of the H to he found In country A will be on the boat during the to City under superintendence of i ef UM Hotel Several t will be ao to accommodate the l without crowding and the food will be i tke Japanese i will probably arrive at the Battery Pier J at about 2 o'clock P.M she steams up the will be find from Governors t Battery and from several in the In the harbor will all display r at by the I ol Common Council On landing at t DM Embassy will be received by the military of i City comprising the entire Pint Division L State Militia and numbering of The following the lUt of regiments which tfi to the Embassy together with the i and the number of men to Light Infantry CoL Infantry of the Line Col tot CoL Waller W It S Brooke 491 I rj CoLB ik Col CoL Infantry Col Marshal Lefferts Infantry CoL George Lyon ttm Col Van Buren 875 447 300 CoL Le Bile Col Hemer 300 it Infantry new Regiment Two National Grays new Regiment Brovet CoL route of the procession will be from the up Broadway to through Grand to fke Bowery up the Bowery to and down Broadway to Metropolitan Hotel At the military will fire a salute op- the statue of and will pass In re- view before GOT Extensive by and all along decorate their and Japanese may probably be seen floating tram every window The Metropolitan Hotel example early yesterday morning aad at- great attention throughout the day by the 300 nags half Japanese and half American from the fronting on way Tho of have a notice to merchants throughout the City re- to cloee their at 2 P M in order enable their to the reception So have been able to learn thla request will be with in fact It hardly need to tore bewn made for the merchants of the City thug have been to grant their this privilege on mach Important found by In ether to be ab necessary to the comfort of Tne are to be very fond of the music of the outside and to gratify their taste In this respect he Messrs have engaged ten of the tost in the to for them at neh t ley may A magnificent graad Has been placed In the of the chief Ambassadors or their while eating their w another provided for the of tl e bead of the All have been provided for the cooks attached to the to furnish their ters with eae delicacies THIB The on of the an have made or a grand concert and serenade to be given In ho tot ef the Embassy The entire front of the hotel ei Broadway and Prince street will be wl i colored Venetian and over the malo will blaze forta In large gat word welcome Band to the die of 100 Instruments is to music A grand reception and bail In honor o the h u been arranged for Ibe of the Inst Ini nations have been extended to the President and Cabinet the foreign Ambassadors ant Co suls the Mayors of the principal American Canadian IB of Stales officers of tne Army and Nai y Judges civilians dec BY TBI HAY Oft The official i Embassy by the Mayor and the Cltr in the GOT room o I tbe City Hall on Monday next The whole Interior of the recently been scrubbed up r aud and now pre a clean s ad wholesome appearance Tne room extensive Improvements being newly frescoed richly carpeted snd new and elegant bronze chandeliers pe from tbe celling POINTS Or AT A Already evri y point from which a view of tbe si ed mav be obtained been proprietors and having bid no difficulty In le windows for the occasion at from to The are the Influx of whom Into the City will be unprecedented TB t POLICE The subjoin d order the of the I OP THB i Ne 413 You June I Ventral Order No To No On day the Inst the Japanese Embassy to be received by tie corporate authorities of this City upon which occasion you will order tbe whole ol yeur command on duty In full uniform belts and at 101 A M You will 11 ie too of your Precinct if the procession pa through It with three sections of Policemen to preserve order and prevent frem crossing t or Impeding progress Captains art requited to be on duty with their re- coma ands wherever they be stationed and subject Lbe of the special aids selected upon that oeci islon Tbe special lids are Cart of the First Pre- cinct of the force detailed from Pier no I N R to Cipl Hortr is of the Sixteenth Precinct having command of the force detailed around Union Park Capl of tbe Eighth having command of the force detailed in front of the Metro- Hotel Toe streets through the procession will be posted at o'clock precisely Yon will hold one section In reserve In the house te anv exigency that may arise WH 1 ALLM will be recognized as Aid for tne day by the Superintendent JOHN A KENNEDY Superintendent CAK Inspector THE JAPANESE IN Preparations for of tbe Peculiar Hospitality of the the the Chess OB arrival at the Metropolitan the Embassy will the main entrance up tbe grand stairway Ant floor from the windows of will the military procession it down The chief will be with seats on am Bain entrance beneath a formed by the intermingled folds of tbe American and Japanese flags they can review the M they pass TM on the route the procession have M be thoroughly cleaned aad one nave been detailed to accompany fli so that the most perfect order may be THI OF THI of the Metropolitan Hotel who been with tho aury of showing the Ir of the City to the g their toy hare have made their the accommodation and comfort of their most magnificent elaborate and The whole of the second 74 rooms been set apart valy for the Embassy and has been up tasteful and elegant style Over tbe door I roem a banner inscribed with tbe name ot le States of the Confederacy with a and also an appropriate Japanese J welcome On each door also posted an the Japanese aad having m tne centre the national t of round red balL Along the MO feet on Broadway feet oa are suspended pictures representing Japanese scenery overhead in tasteful festoons are Ike united of Japan and The leading to first second floors aOe ornamented with bronze of warriors in armor bearing the flag of America and Japan The tier ping of the four 1 south ofthe main entrance of the i of high arson the north end Each of tt rf attached of Those of the chief The bed spread Is of rich China aad was manufactured in C The large n on he corner of the second floor in to be the of the four The next In rank will dine in room NO i ant war fronting on the garden to the theatre room been entirely refitted aad for the occasion and may be called the Japanese room The ceilings have all been newly net coed and are adorned with pictures representing exclusive Japanese scenes On one panel a anese priest on another a physician on a third an of high rank on a fourth Japanese ladies tu dressed In their natural costume In of toe ceiling the coat of arms tne Emperor of Japan and on each ef tbe of the pannei the coat of arms aw of the four Ambassadors Between In Japanes signifying Union Victory rooa was made for the j UOU adorned with Jap can statues Measures have beta taken to secure for the and they desire It No wtU any part of the ol Qe flov devoted to their me I special rale will be strictly Frei n Oar Own Friday June li 1640 A thi t the and the vigilant of tbe Japanese comparatively this morning But the hotel rundown wl h the horde of applicants for audience having the avo wed design of presenting trifles lo the distinguished but really to get a good view of them or procure a puff in the newspapers Of all tbe Ja been the confirmed victim of an ei tended reputation Since tbe reporters began to him be haa been completely overrun with i The women bother him to death to write cards shake and pat their babies Tbe i ien wheedle him into rean galleries and stores with the deep design 01 profiting by hi growing notoriety The poor boy hat finally been ot to stand on his dignity to brusl psst those wbi would stop him snub the ugly women and refuse to because he a per son In very go ad English It is not the custom of th country came very lot Ing the dig of favorite girl He had polite y show n It to a person near him unfeelingly held It up for the gaze of the crowd ant allowed It to Be snatched rudely by a boor who stooc by It with the greatest difficulty that the uie was red by the owner who thus fai to have ted more attention than the themselves of the that rounded HT was summ irily dispersed by Lieut a few d aye since by the jocular announcement that one of the Japanese had just recovered from the pox was abou to that way It needed no to set ure a wide berth for that Jap The Prince have evinced far more interest in the r visit to the Mint than In any other employment nee arrival In this country Their endurance of t ie long and tedious process of their coin iurr even Capt and the other officers of the Naval Commission They even de- to go to the hotel for dinner during the assay but took their rice and fish on the Tbe entire bearing of the Impressed those present with their intelligence and high breeding Every operation was explained to them with the most minuteness and received their undivided tentlon The artist made faithful sketches of such used in the of assaying could be represented by pencil Tbe assay was conducted under the of Pol by Prof C Boots JACOS R E Duors and Hi R and at its Col made tbe Ambassadors a parting ad- present ng them with the of tbe United Slates describ d in my letter of the 12th and wishing them a safe ai d pleasant return home The Embassy returned thel thanks and expressed satisfaction with the resul of the Assay Tne censor stated that be a ol just exchange ol currency would be eslal between and the United Slates During the day the censor tested some of out standard and found that they compared with the Japanese ten grains to 1.7 or grains to 17 Tbe ese have a1 de system of weights and own I This g wearied with the prospect of more to and I must confess somewhat from a Japanese SB I strolled up to the rooms of the Philadelphia Chess Club Announcing myself as asti auger from York I was ly received a id proposed to spend a hour among the di votees ol Calm But even here the re had extended for I found that a dele was mi expected to afford the Club M opportunity to view the Japanese The of the dropped In one by one by four of fairest to undergo that horridly for the sake of a sight of thb were not kept long waiting soon rived which has el squares instead of four it ke our own wa i improvised from a sheet of white divided Into the requisite number of squares aid of a UM ol the a description of their powers furnished fix m the Athenaeum and by an extensive use of the rs could co mm the proper and power of each piece ivas de- termined tWo ofthe Japanese were prevailed upon to play The game as most of our chess will hat R learned from the recent description la the Tina in much more intricate than our chest more and eight mote Thi of certain may be In- creased or during tthe fame n which have been remove i may be on the board and there are other pe make tie game one of rsey and much mi game of chess Wild many peculiarities of chess however ho Is identical Despite the intricacy the Japanese played with considerable rapidity and our native with the celerity of their moves They also evinced much Interest and great intelligence in learning game of cheis Tbe entire was one of the most quiet and orderly that the Japanese have yet made aud tne la their credit be It far from rudely forward to scrutinize the stringers drew back and the gime a dis- tance Tols In strange contrast the conduct of hand reds and thousands of well dressed females who obstruct the balls of the hotel and parade Incessantly for purpose of tbe Japanese During the visit the were understood to Intimate that in Japan tbe to impart tbe knowledge of te people who are extensively familiar with It The generally appear to have become unjustly Indignant the New-York re for telling tho mala truth about the manner la which Japanese have been bare They will probably discover when the York that the nf lane numbers of the lace aie more illustrative of human nature than o Tbe elty here tbe Intrusion on the Japanese quite much any of toe Tbe Government appropriation for the entertain meet Japanese appears to hold out welL Ou of the there yet remains Tne coil o the journey across the Isthmus chartering of steun host to go down tbe Polemic and o 000 have altogether amounted to but Tne following are tbe amounts thus far appropriated to er the nation's Congress New-York 30000 Baltimore 10.000 Can anybody blame for trying to make something out of tbe In the way of business with these to with T O JR Special Dispatch to the New-York Friday June 15 The torchlight procession to-night was a splendid affair It included thirty-nine com pastes and twenty-two There were fonr thousand men In tbe procession which was two miles long Every man carried a torch or let off woiks Tbe streets were crowded The front of the Continental Hotel presented a dense mass of people The gorgeous display of pyrotechnics the thousands of torches and colored lamps the screaming whistles the deafening plaudits of the multitude created a which was moat exciting Tne viewed the whole from tbe front of the balcony of the hotel and were highly delighted All the Japanese were vastly pleased but narrowly escaped be lug burnt by the The four in rank in the Embassy for Mayor to return thanks for their Philadelphia Mutual complimentary addresses followed after which Councilman aad presented tbe Ambassadors with Committee and which were graciously received Gen was formally pre- sented to the Ambassadors who thanked him for tbe imposing military display and expressed great tbe arrangements made for their entertainment Mayor presented KAMI with a diver talver and a map of Philadelphia handsomely engraved Preparations Tor the Great Eastern I SHI IB TO BE 40 Selection of a proper location for mooring the Great after arrival at this port has been a subject of some difficulty on account of her Im- mense length her heavy draft of water and the of having her at all of tide Tbe first suggestion to have her and moored and stern In the North River opposite the Battery open to grave objections on account of the large number of and steamers which are constantly passing and the liability of col- lisions and accidents The difficulty and increased expense of boarding her while at anchor was another objection which the public at least would be likely to make the ground of serious complaint It was determined to have her placed alongside of the dock and near the pier North River was selected for that purpose The wharf Is nearly feet long so that she will have piety of room lying with stern in tbe dock and be passing To give the required depth It has been feund necessary to dredge out a portion ol the slip which tbe monster ship will occupy A gate across the bead of tbe will enable the managers to control multitude which will flock on board by tickets of admission There are various conjectures to the time she will occupy in coming across the majority of nautical men being disposed to give her full ten days for the trip Large will go to Stalen Island on Monday and Tuesday In anticipation of her val and to obtain a full-length view of the great as she passes through the Narrows As soon she U In the offing steamers will also start meet her which ne doubt will ry crowds of passengers to Sandy Hook or the Should sbe arrive off the bar at a low stage of the tide sbe will be obliged to wait lor high water which will give Indent time for parties to sjo down and escort her up The lic expectation Is on and tout the excitement attending the arrival of the Gnat a time eclipse the Japanese Embassy nother Jersey Robbery and ably Murder On Wednesday morning a black canvas ing big was found on the Falerson dock which hsd the articles it contained and the bag Itself being stained with blood The supposition was that It had been stolen from the railroad can and that tbe blood was from a cut on the hand of the thief made in the baste to get at the From found in the bag it judged to belong to a Mr W S who It would seem was transacting for or with Messrs Newark morning the fully identified as Mr Bonn's by Mr MARTIN one ofthe firm In Newark above mentioned Mr Bonn Is a married man about of age with a family residing in a small village in County N Y where he had in operation a small Souring mill He left his home on Monday morning last o go to Newark since which time nothing has been beard of him He had In his possession be- tween and to pay a note In ark and one at the American Exchange Bank York which due yesterday it Is supposed that le arrived in Jersey City on Tuesday to take the II o'clock train for and It Is now thought that be met with violence near the depot He has been retarded as a man of exemplary habile sud the worst apprehensions felt by bis in respect to appearance and the finding of his under such circumstances Trie money which Mr BOHR had In bis possession on tie Sussex County Bank of Newton Mayor VAN Voigt yesterday morning directed ner to Institute a careful search in the tbe bag was found Tbe mai Is five feet five Inches high somewhat stout Is welt known on the Erie Railroad on which he has frequently travelled for the purpose of selling flour r Acknowledgment We have received the following sums in aid of the poor family whose case was stated by a cor- respondent In the of yesterday F 45 42 00 T L R 1 100 S OOlD C 100 otal PERSONAL the great German scholar who visited England on purpose to Inspect Perkins Folio brought out a section of an important work mrf Worts to consist of sketches and translations The present Installment comprises the plays of Joha Ford with specimens of Decker and Rowley Wisconsin Editore will hold their annual Convention at Bay on the of the Milwaukee Fret Democrat la deliver Iks address P Hill been appointed State of and Measures by Gov Sprague of Rhode Island He succeeds Prof Alexis Caswell who has resigned Norfolk the arrival in that city of Mr having In charge two way negroes who lately made a flying visit to this dry Rev Dr bsi been of the Roger Williams Moniment Association THE EUROPEAN NEWS ARRIVAL OF TBE MilLS Details of tke Intelligence from The Chinese Rejection of the British Ultimatum OUR FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE The Niagara reached her wharf at ton yesterday morning o'clock and her were forwarded to City by the morning train We received our correspondence exchanges at 5 M The telegraphic dispatch from Hall which we published yesterday morning gave so complete a statement of the by this which Is lo tbe 2d of June three days later than bad been previously very little remains to be added Our however and the from our foreign files contain of considerable Interest will be found below AFFAIRS IN FRANCE The Sicilian IB Bald ud about U In ef a New Projected Canal the ef From Our Own Correspondent PABIS Thursday Mav The tenacity of the Neapolitan Government in denying the successes ofthe In Sicily BUT all belief While GARIBALDI Is carrying the ramparts of Palermo a U dispatched from that he ever landed at Marsala Now that he Is in Palermo the Government sends out word that the Insurgents are disbanded and In flight Bu what Is still more incredible the Neapolitan Le gallon at Paris here at the centre where the truth Is sure to be known serves the echo of these weaknesses of the Neapolitan ment The Legitimist which the momen GARIBALDI landed at Marsala uttered the cry Civ Is utterly refuse all othe sources of Information than the Neapolitan Legation Every evening the editors dressed In black coat am repair to the saloons of the Legation and there derive the Inspiration for their morning edl Weare tempted to believe that the Legation simply them little from the Historia Sacra or from tbe of Ovid or some other antiquity which they head News from and palm off on their credulous a true history of passing in Sicily It was this Legation that solemnly declared after tbe battle of that the Insurgent army and It from source that was derived the that an agent of the Neapolitan Government had declared officially In tbe Exchange that GARIBALDI had cut throat after which the agent said to have advanced the price of the for that day to And thla fixing of tbe of the to have been done with air Take that or let It alone If you tell at 110 you will be shot We will have no doubting of our word that has committed suicide But now that tbe empire of the young King Bomb a Is really threatened with that tbe Sing sees himself In danger of losing his thought of a new plan for revenging himself on his rebellious He the city of armo the and the unarmed zens It was not thus that the ancient drew themselves from the coming storm The great for example threw himself upon a funeral pile caused to be by a slave and threw himself out of a window The modem FRANCIS will hardly resort to any such ultra remedy for his wounded pride He alter ego the famous Gen to burn and destroy rebellious subjects and he then goes td work packing for a voyage to Alter which be Cabinet together and his Cabinet refuses to obey and resigns We expect soon to see within tbe walls of general of uncrowned worthless remnant of decayed The cry gone abroad there Is another looming up in the The hommes of speak are beginning to lounge around the tailor's shop of the Russian Legation lo be present at the sortie of the famous coat which is to renew the scene of 1654 The protestations of the Russian and journals do not quiet the public fear the alarmists absolutely refuse to be comforted But as the sick man Is now dead It Is to be hoped that the Russian Bear will modify manners a little In the presence of tbe cadaver and at least substitute a black for the claret frock The popularity of has so much Increased during the late events In Italy that bis name has be- come as much a at Paris as In Italy even His biography and exploits in all forms Imaginable are selling by the hundred thousand In France and k Is questionable whether the poor do not buy mote of these productions than the upper or middle classes But while millions of the people throughout Europe are cheered and overjoyed at his there are others higher ID the social scale who tremble each new step in the forward march Is announced and still and burn with envy and jealousy But not is BALDI a man born to success out he represents agreat principle which can be no more crushed out than himself For some time psst we have been looking for a de- monstration from the of some on political affairs but thus far the expectation has not been realized There for hlin a to do or to perform at regular something dramatic something that partakes of the f d'etat in order lo maintain at its proper tion tbe position he occupies before his own people and before Europe This morning he declares to tne world through the in order to allay the ex- about any ambitious projects toward the hat he only on the contrary desires peace and that be hopes all fears In regard to his may At the same time we are assured that he j s preparing for publication a new and Improved tion of his work on Artillery well aj a Life of ita In this latter work he endeavor to fortify his n petition as a democratic sovereign proving that CM BAR was the same and bat out of such position there can coine nothing but good A has arisen between Mr the American Minister and the French Government in regard to the Interpretation of one of the provisions of the commercial treaty between France and the United the disposition of the erty of shipwrecked vessels The CSM came up on some eighty thousand francs worth of property re- covered from the wreck of the American ship Luna ately lost on the coast near Havre Thli property the French authorities as the custom placed iu the benevolent fund at Cherbourg but the American Consul at that place claimed it officially or the underwriters of ship without having con- ferred with them on the subject The maintains that according to Ute treaty Consul has no right to tike tbe Initiative in tbe er be can only make demand after the ofthe property have given him the proper rhe question here possesses a certain of Importance and has tot yet decided I have question ef the ton has come np between an can i citizen and tbe Frineh Government in neh a form that Mr felt himself I upon to make a strong to on the subject In this protest It Is said Mr PAVI a has proposed to the French Cabinet the of In order to put an end to these repei ted and in view of their Minister could not men brilliantly Inaugurate Ms official duties than in the negotiation of such a treaty It well known that the tule laid down by the late Mr MARCT was that all who bad left heir native countries before they were old gh to have been notified to draw In the tion and became American citizens would be tecU d by American Government if for business they should ever on a to the country that gave them birth If ho waver they had after having been notified to draw In the or between the moment of drawing an un- lucky aumber and pissing under the flag l then amenable to the military of the country r returned and could not be protected by tbe American Government notwithstanding he fact of their lawful citizenship in the United I take it the basin upon which the American Gov emu iint is willing to treat In fact they could de- man 1 nothing more for under the late Mr Min: stry an American naturalized citizen who had escaped from France after having been notified to drai r In the conscription and then returned in security with an American passport In hit pod el was permitted to pass under tbe flic and is BOH serving out his time If be not bought a sub- suti te Moreover he was for con- turn icy In running away after having been notified and condemned to a month's and penalty which he i offered ease fore establishes a precedent B it the French Government has never admitted mui h They contend to the other Continental Goi that a man military duty to the cou that gave him birth and no sba himself from U at any time during Ms minority Tbi difference then between tbe two Is t tat while France claims every man who not yet done military duty or at least drawn in the conscription tbe United States the right of for every man who leaves before the at which be is of age to do military before the period at which he U notified to draw conscription all the contestation which have come up In Con- States and they are more frequent ia than In any and in which the Government has taken a dec I led stand in the claimant on the principal above laid doi n the individual has In every caae been re- leafed tut alien j i by is to say the e on he was demanded never la a tie admitted but be been cip i In ate 1 on some pretext which evaded the principle of the demand Thus in France It U the custom when sue h a case comes before the de Revision Military Boards for the examination of ant to gratt his release on the ground of Ill-health or Inability therefore time that a decision should be an of ved at France which the pretension at tbe head of European civilization ought to be the first to admit great principle long claimed by the American Government tkai man right expatriation It would not bei yie in and grant the claim Go es the precedent there will no longer beany op- poi Ition to It on the part of Prussia and the other Continental States may be that one-half the official business of American Legation at to these Na hsi obi ion Ibe If France notwithstanding fact that military Institution U the basis of her and the life and essence of the Empire should d on point in order to show her advancement eminent If trance takes the the American I for exemption from military duty while at not a week passes that an application not majde for protection against enrollment in lonal Guard er the regular army A few days a gentleman forty-two years and who lived In tbe City of York forty was ed to seek the protection of the Legation here Inst a threatened enrollment ID Ibe Guard These show tbe absolute necessity of wh Up to the present time the Legations have bei n obliged to draw their from the cb exists for Insisting upon a treaty regulation and of changing and thus whole question remains in complete a state of it did fifty years ago Only the number of contestations Increased from one a year to dre Is new colonization and canalization scheme has been concocted here for the Isthmus of Darien wh cb maintained as possible a secret This scb me there reason to believe Is a political lool Ing to nothing less than the colonization of the by Frenchmen under the title of workmen and the securing of French Influence over the transit rou e The scheme Itself detailed In their totally Impracticable that everyone mu t perceive at a glance the talent of the con- coc eis all been spent on the programme and not on be system of canalization Tbe pill la glided at mu possible The programme which I tend yov only circulated in private and certainly ncv er Intended for American eyes The President of the M Rim who Is a Breton and a man of gre t Intelligence and energy of character has gone out to America I am Informed under the sun ed name of the better to avoid ing attention to hit scheme until he shall have curi d the favor of President A A private Fare well took place at the Restaurant last month to drink lo the success of the plan embraces the carrying out of s of sturdy Breton boys workmen but who are In fact lo become In cate of need and sole iers The canal possesses all the beauty off ranch elaboration and French redundancy of dec s Ii Is worth M much perhaps more attention thai that accorded to scheme of M for his one will draw profit from experience of that and nay Indeed piove more formidable Seme of your Italian correspondents mentioned asl Winler the names of a bevy of young American adl IB who studying music under tbe celebrated at Florence and predicted for some il tl sni a brilliant career as singers Among the sm csr I recollect those of Mirs Bo- ixai Miss FIELD MUs Miss PAT or three of these ladles however are not ati ig their musical talent for the public ear and of ME number Miss whom 1 have just ad the pleasure of bearing at a private mu ica c who Is scarcely yet a man in age and of very much more than her hare of personal certainly a prodigy in music Have we at last discovered an American a donna and declare the firm live and 1 think It would be difficult to assert the after She especially In U e quality of her voice Let your musical critics fix tl e name of lady and the prediction in their men and after another study abroad they will perhaps have in opportunity of bearing In vate in New-York marvelous vole i It Is only to be regretted that the is not to peai in public MALAKOFf ITALY Siao ef In The and lbo The Pepe aad From Oar Own W 0 ie ol the best evidences of the of t lings here the fact have such a man as Florence the abuses of U ie Romith Chun n temporal power of tne Poj of such as would thU and fearless man of or Dublin or cities In half listened to br crowds of ani and applauded It would stem bis Holiness had U his own household some of not only of rale but ot riole As I approached the palace of the on the ef first visit to the c tie meetings arc and heard the out Pro Itil the his clear voice of GAVAHI ringing out Ty tie open believe that rl was in an Italian city Every could be heaid distinctly outside M la ware lend and One o the te the vast Palace lithe place the are held large to the number of those who wick to hear A great many young men are audience and all apparently ot the more part of tbe population At fim the Government ly thought U prudent to allow to declaim such a public manner but Home self so In her mode of attacking Ita was to be spared Any one who heard fluent and Intense eloquence even when and Impeded by the difficulties of language can Imagine what an effective power It must when clothed in the glowing phrases of his native Italian tongne In the official here published a discharging from their functions three hi Ibe Faculty of Theology In the University of The offence proved against them that they using the Influence of their position to promote re- action and encourage a party whose U to restore to power and put again Into tion a system of government which the population by their votes have again and again emphatically con- Tbe journals here applaud the decision of the and use the occasion to read an- other Isston of reproof and warning to similar against the public opinion which prevails We are told at the same time that a ber of arrests have been made at a small town Pisa aad Volterra of charted with attempts to promote political disorder There are of mischief constantly active aad there is tbe obliged to exercise a greater degree of severity than U would otherwise wish The authority at Turin hat not yet let Cardinal Coast Archbishop of return to the care of Tui can flock In fact the do not to stray the fold or to be In danger of being de- by wolves now that the shepherd away Perhaps the Innocents are beginning to there are In Ike field who have clotted In the wool Good aad good here are beginning to ask Wny can get along just well without these T Some go ao far to chat all who have rebelled against tbe authority of the Stale and favor the canse of Papal despotism in op- position to public welfare and order be pnt into same boat and tent off to The City ef Turin the capital ol tbe Kingdom not only existed but been bleated for ten without a Bishop and thla with the addition of tion and curse of tbe Pope It probable that Bo- logna now that Cardinal Pant late Bishop dead will be able to get along for gome time without unless one can be found with more of an Italian heart Twenty sand dollars a year will be saved be- a freedom secured which should not be parted with at any price In spite of late Bishop's handsome annual income It Is said he left debts to a considerable amount Cardinal PULA of the one matt likely to be of Et- ta tho Pontifical office Bologna already con- no less than eight Popes and can to be content to lose the opportunity to obtain honor ol that kind When Cardinal Paxu waa pal at Vienna be succeeded In the Concordat with the Austrian Government which completely gave over to the power aad the Influence of Rome the whole of tbe ef that empire On recall it that would succeed in the of cretary of State and consequently director of the policy of Papal To Che to It said need ence with to get PULA packed to Bologna there to nourish such as circum- stances might justify of some day coming to the office There teems to be no opportunity for any of Ike ecclesiastics who are taking part on the side of In the present struggle to enjoy the fame of honor w they would appear to covet and even be Itching but which they really do not want and would not be with If they did They will only be told very emphatically and If need be with some pretty palpable at their long that they will have to conduct good like the rest It is a matter extremely uncertain at the moment whether Gen will still endeavor to out the enterprise which he has undertaken cr bis command His pious meet with but little sympathy In Italy among those who have a ticle of patriotic a due appreciation even from the Papacy Itself and abroad they ter than pity ridicule and contempt The connected with reorganizing tbe of which the army originally composed were sufficiently great but the mixed materials of which the add a new It U said that not thah thirteen different dialects are spoke a by this polyglot Some of the to whom the General pram words upon their ignorance of their have taken offence and some of be soldiers they have found near the Tuscan herder have thought it worth while to desert The General menaced by the power of the Italian on tbe North and revolution raging on the tan side of the Papal dominions it Is certain that has as much he can ly attend to In new command standing Government of Its powers and much to the vexation ofthe has limited and very defined authority The old man is dying between Aneona and Perugia and Perugia and if he were but a piece of cork -A I th a feather attached A to wn cal led dl and nearer the can boundary been made a centre for the ering of troops instead of Perugia to be reserved as the chief seat of Nearly everything that Rome to spare In the way of pushed in his mounted tad artillery All the post between the town of and Rome except enough for the conveyance of the mall have been taken by the Government The regular of the On tbe tame account suspended Soldiers are conveyed by rail to and thence on foot to Viler bo One rumor that Gen has promised the Pope to deliver up to him the ef the City of Bologna on St day to give new to which In month of and usually kept with much ceremony Now that Roman are ao near the of a free State temptation for native to the means of will be easy 1 am told In a from that no lets than 300 mads a day the of this month THE REVOLUTION ailon of Garibaldi's The In- From tke Time l I Fur borne days we have been obliged to look upon tbe of the ful The confident dispatches claiming victory after victory which wen by the Neapolitan together with the absence of any news from himself gave ground lor Happily these feara are id by tke In- which we are able to publish ta BALDI entered Palermo on the Tat capital of Sicily in In spite of every deficiency the levies commanded by tbe heroic drove the from their Henceforth has all the moral and material derived from the of the chief place In the land Timely of men and will be the fruits of victory meral will be the discouragement of the army and perhaps a large desertion to ranks of the Tbe whole Interior of the country together with mort Important city have now been from Royal authority From one end to the other Island has been cleared of the Royal troops It Is BOW evident that the at Calata Flml a