16 JUNE 1860, Page 9

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Lord Clyde is to succeed the late Lord Strafford in the Colonelcy of the Coldstream Guards. Two other colonelcies now vacant are to be filled by Major-General Mounsell and Major-General Monins.

The British Association for the Advancement of Science will meet at Oxford on the 27th of June, under the presidency of Lord Wrottesley. A very large attendance of members is anticipated.

Subscriptions for Garibaldi flow in. Glasgow has sent 7001. to Mr. Ashurst in the Old Jewry. Lord Kinnaird has subscribed. An Irish- woman, shocked at the conduct of her countrymen engaged to fight for the Pope, sends 101. Money is also contributed direct to Italyy, from the Athenreum Club among other places. The fact that Gatibaldi seized a large sum in Palermo, should not prevent Englislnien from subscribing,

Mr. Fairbairn has collected 4501. for Garibaldi in the Manchester dis- trict, and has sent the money direct to Sicily.

Prayers for the safe accouchement of the Princess Frederick William were offered up in the churches of Berlin on Sunday.

Prince Alfred has been well received at Madeira, and played at cricket with the club there. The Euryalus, with the Prince on beaW, was caene- rife on the 27th of May, and sailed on the 30th for Bahia. The prince as- cended the Peak, notwithstanding the snow.

tic The Prince Regent of Prussia has been recentl n the Russian fron- tier with his son. When the train by which they versed the new section

of the railway from Konigsberg reached Eyd ' the Prince Regent walked to the boundary line between Prussia and Russia, and transmitted a telegram to the Emperor of Russia, in which a hearty greeting was ex- pressed, and the hope added that the two countries might become closer united by the early completion of the line on the Russian territory.

Prince Milosch, of Servia, who was lately dangerously ill, has so far re- covered as to be able to go to Alexinatz, to take the waters. The princess, his daughter in-law, is about to visit Ostend.

Major Leopold von Orlich, a distinguished Prussian officer and man of letters, was interred on Friday week in the Brompton Cemetery. The last rites were performed by the Reverend J. Hamilton, uncle by marriage to the deceased; and among the relatives and friends who stood around the grime were Prince Frederic of Schleswig-Holstein, M. de la Rive (Minister Plenipotentiary of the Swiss Republic), the Marquis of Sligo, Major-General Lord West, Lord Galway, Colonel Sir Alfred Hereford, Admiral Hamilton, Admiral Gambier, Admiral George Gambier, Mr. Grant-Duff, M.P., Mr. Monckton Milnes, M.P., and the Reverend F. Gambier, The Queen has permitted the Koh-i-noor diamond, which has been recut since the Exhibition of 1851, to be exhibited at the South Kensington Museum, in aid of the fund for building the Female School of Art. A large collection of ancient and modern jewellery will also be lent on that occasion, by the kind permission of the council of the Fine Arts Club.

The directors of the Crystal Palace have received official intimation that the Emperor Napoleon has given permission to the band of the Guides to accompany the Orpheonistes of France to England on the occasion of the great musical festival which is to be held at the Crystal Palace the week after next.

The Floral Hall is good for many things. The very beautiful show of flowers to which the visitors of the Royal Italian Opera were introduced after the performance of " Dinorah," on Tuesday night, and which at an earlier hour of the same evening had been visited by the Queen, the King of the Belgians, and the whole Court, was opened for public exhibition on Wednesday, and has continued throughout the week. As a fashionable promenade it has proved very successful.

The Meteorological Society of France has just made an appeal to all learned societies, professors of the natural sciences, and persons who take an interest in meteorology, requesting them to communicate to the secretary of the Society at Paris a full account of any atmospherical phenomenon that may be observed. and especially to state the exact moment of its occur- rence.

At a banquet given at Palermo on the occasion of the armistice, Garibaldi, according to the Courrier de Paris, proposed as a toast :—" The Indepen- dence of Hungary," and, turning to his adjutant-general, Colonel 1 urr, said :- -" Friend, you were my guest at Como, and Varese. and you are now my guest here ; but in January next I will return your visit—et Pesth !"

A new journal of Palermo, L' Unita Italia, comes out with the follewing motto at the head of its 'programme :—" One country—Italy. One king— Victor Emmanuel. One hero—Garibaldi."

Captains Acton and Caracciolo, of the two Neapolitan frigates which failed to prevent Garibaldi's landing at Marsala, have been tried by court- martial at Naples and acquitted. .home ;..

The Opinione states that the new customs Isee amou,LSayoy side are already organized. The first French line is at he would !acorn' at St. Jean de Mauricune. The Sardinian line is to be estaliss at A Nuremberg paper states that the French Government has recently sent to its representatives at the German courts a new circular confirming the pacific intentions lately expressed in the Moniker, and repudiating in the most positive manner all idea of territorial extension on the part of France.

It is asserted that some curious revelations will shortly be made with respect to the system adopted of reassurance. They arise out of a policy effected with a company on the life of an eccentric character, whose habits are alleged to have been irregular. It seems that the policy effected was for the sum of 16,000/., the office taking the life, and reassuring about 16,000/. Now the amount of the policy is claimed some of the offices have agreed to pay, while others as strenuously refuse. Although an extra rate was charged at the time of the insurance, circumstances have since been brought to light which, if stated in the original proposal, would, it is averred, never have been accepted. The office issuing the policy being left to its remedy with those refusing to pay, the case will, it is expected, be brought forward in the courts of law.—Daily Heirs.

At an early hour on Wednesday morning, the Ariadne, 26, and Flying Fish, 6, weighed anchor, and left St. Margaret's Hope, in order to proceed to Spithead, for the purpose of undergoing alterations preparatory to con- veying the Prince of Wales next month to Canada.

The story of the Duke of Brabant and the " pipes " has been officially contradicted. The facts were these—" During the dejeuner which the Sultan gave to the Duke of Brabant at the Kiosk of Sweet Waters of Asia, his Imperial Majesty asked his Royal Highness to accept the pipes which he was using at the Emirghian Palace, as a souvenir of his Majesty. This the Prince was pleased to do, and thus the present of these pipes was made and accepted personally, and in the same manner as testimonies of friendship and courtesy are exchanged between sovereign and high person- ages at all Courts."

A story comes from Ruatan, via New Orleans, stating that when the 'people heard of the ratification of the treaty transferring them to Hon- duras, they held an indignation meeting, declared themselves independent, and were about to frame a constitution. Is not this a case for the applica- tion of the policy which supports nationalities in distress ?

Religious riots ought to be rare where religious equality is the law of the land : yet in New South Wales we have recently had one, because the people themselves arc not as liberal as the laws they live under. The Reverend Mr. M'Intjre, a rather hot-headed Presbyterian Minister, gave offence to the Catholics of Maitland, at a Rublie political meeting, by styling their religion "baptized heathenism." the Catholic Dean retorted on him in a rather exciting sermon, delivered to his flock. Mr. M'Intyre, nothing loath for a wrangle, advertised a lecture in his church in reply. The irri- tated Catholics resolved that his lecture should not be delivered. They sur- rounded the church on the evening in question, mobbed the lecturer and his family on their arrival, severely injuring one of them, smashed the church windows, broke up the fences, and, having succeeded in thus pre- venting the meeting, retired, paying as they went a few passing compli- ments to the windows of some of the most conspicuous of the reverend gentleman's followers. This outrage, of course, moved all the Protestant zeal of the township. A monster meeting was held to claim a large body of rights of freedom of speech. The Government sent down

police, with the Inspector-General at their head; some hundreds of special

constables were sworn in ; and the lecture was re-advertised for delivery The Catholic Archbishop went down in person to aid in tranquillizing the feelings of the excited Catholics, and issued a pastoral, entreating them to bear insult meekly. And so the lecture was at length delivered inpeace. The ringleaders iu the riot have been committed to take their trial.—.Letter from Slielnt g.

The number of deaths last week, 969, fell below that of the preceding week, 1079, and was less than the calculated average by 110.

The Marquis de Vilette, who died last year, bequeathed a large property to the Bishop of Moulins. -The will is disputed by the next of kin, on the ground that the gift was clothed with a secret trust not allowed by French law, the trust being moreover—but this in a legal point of view is unim- portant—in favour of the Count de Chambord. The case will be heard next week at Clermont ; M. Berryer is counsel for the bishop, and M. Mane for the family.

The Pope's Irishry are astonishing the natives. The Wanderer of Vienna publishes a letter from Ancona, dated the 6th, which says :—" The Irish yesterday had a fight among themselves, and wounded some of the gendarmes who interfered to separate them. The delegate has hitherto treated the Irish like princes, and their pretensions are, in consequence, un- bounded. Every soldier insists on having his own room, table, &c. It is to be feared that, after all, the Pontifical Government will be under the necessity of requesting the Irish to go home again."

On the 31st of May, the chaplain of the Irish battalion and one of its offi- cers were robbed on the road between Loretto and lliacerata. The sum taken from them was 1800 scudi, and it is even said that the robbers stripped them to the skin.