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e servant had admitted that the child was not baptized. Ridiculous as the pretence was, it had so much effect in Home that no threats or persuasion have thus far been able to obtain the surrender of the stolen child. Sir Culling Eardley stated that the object of detaining the child now is not, as had been maintained, to sustain the discipline of the Church, but to conceal the fact that the Pope had been deceived. The Emperor of the French had recently stated, through his Secretary, M. Mocquard, to the President of the Universal Israelitish Alliance at Paris, that he had no objection whatever to the presentation to King Victor Emanuel of a memorial in favor of the liberation of Mortara. He hoped the Emperor would do nothing to oppose the accomplishment of this object, but would adhere to the course he pursued when, as President of the Republic, he ordered the liberation of Dr. Achilli. It is a grand idea to carry this matter directly to the King of Italy. It will present
enjoy a luxury have your hair brushed by machinery at --'s model establishment. Hair cutting and brushing by patent machinery, 3d.; shampooing, ditto, 3d. The ne plus ultra of luxury is to be shampooed by --'s new shampooing apparatus. M. Mocquard has addressed the following letter to the Independence, of Brussels: Vichy, July 30.--The Independence of the 23d, which I have not seen until this day, states that M. Mocquard has assumed the title of Baron. I have never taken any such M. Mocquard has assumed the title of Baron. I have never taken any such title, and I request you to rectify this error of your Paris correspondent. Accept, &c., Mocquard. A committee for the erection of a statue of Beranger, in Paris, has been formed, consisting of writers and journalists of all kinds, among whom are Havin, Guerrilla, Leonce Dupont, Dalloz, Fournier, Castille, Second, Lachamhaudic, Sardou, &c. Baron Taylor is the President, with E. Legouve as Vice-President. The Star (London) says: "Mr. Dickens is at his country house; Mr. Wilkie
pology. A blockade-running case has been on trial in the Court of Exchequer, in which the judge pointed out that all parties in the matter wore foreigners, and denounced such violation of the rights of asylum. A large open-air meeting of the operatives of Manchester adopted resolutions strongly opposing the recognition of the slaveholding Confederacy. Parliament meets on the first of February. The continental news is meagre. Napoleon was much grieved at the death of Mocquard. Marshal Valliant attended the funeral, and made an oration, expressing the great regret of the Emperor. Senor N. Lorente has resigned the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Senor Benarides is his successor. The Italian capital will be transferred next May. The breach between the Papal Government and the Prussian Minister at Rome is widening. The Times, 16th, (city article) says the reduction in the bank rate to six per cent. is a step entirely in harmony with the st
e copy a portion of it: The extraordinary turn-out of distinguished men at the funeral of M. Mocquard, the private secretary of the Emperor, was a source of astonishment to those who did not knowdited writings of the deceased; but what would not the reading public give for the memoirs of M. Mocquard? Of these we hear nothing, and it would evidently be impossible, as long as the present Emperor lives, to publish any such memoirs, even if the deceased had left any. M. Mocquard's rage, in a literary way, was the drama; and certain pieces which he prepared for the stage, in collaboration wth evening of the representation of one of his best pieces (the Fortune Teller), she occupied M. Mocquard's box, and that he cried the whole evening at his own piece. Another of his toquades was to mplished American lady, formerly of Washington. Among the unpublished literary works left by M. Mocquard, there is said to be a translation of Tacitus.--The deceased, who had long been a widower, le
d Latin inscription, recording the death of the late Prince, while the roof of the portico has been decorated with Venetian mosaies, representing a blue sky, with golden stars and other ornaments. The interior of the mausoleum contains the tomb of the Prince, the remains, it is understood, being interred at present in a temporary sarcophagus till the building is finished, when they will probably be placed in the massive granite sarcophagus lately received from Scotland. The death of M. Mocquard, Louis Napoleon's private secretary, is a great blow to the Emperor of France. He understood the Napoleonic policy perfectly, and many of the pamphlets upon public questions, which have been attributed to the Emperor, were written by Mocquard Napoleon gratefully appreciated his valuable services, and admitted him to the fullest and closed confidence. A Yankee, not long since, was arrested by the Italian authorities, on the Neapolitan borders, on the suspicion of being a brigand, and