A telegraphic message from Marseilles adds to the statement that
Mazza, the Director of the Neapolitan Police, has been dismissed, the fact that "the Minister of War has resigned," and that "no apology has been made for the insult to the French fiag' —the not returning the sa- lute of a French man-of-war.
A revolutionary address has appeared with the signature of " tliuseppe Mazzini" • but we remember that Mazzini'e name has quite recently been forged, and that the style of the forged papers was not less like his than that of the mischievous composition before us. It calls upon the "Young Neapolitans" to " rise ! awake ! be great !"—assuring them that, considering the State of Europe, "hesitation is inconceivable, and apathy a heinous crime against God " ; sneering at a "Monarch in the North of Italy who opens to the foreigner a market for men for the Crimea"; and closing with this promise- " To the banner which, from the summit of your own Vesuvius, shall dis- play in flame the words 'God and the People,' a similar banner, I swear It to you, shall respond from the Alps."