Show duties of united states marshals the opinion of the supreme court of the united states in in the wisconsin fu gutive slave case has at length been published thou though gh w we e have hitherto given riven the substance of ill that at V part a t of it re reg ard ird ing the powers of the federal courts and the duties of the federal officers in cases arising under the I 1 federal ederae laws we subjoin tor the better information of the public a paragraph from the official opy of the he opinion 11 Althou although ih it is the duty of the marshal 11 at or other person holdin holding him to snake make known by a proper return lithe the authority under which he detains him it it is at the same bame time imperatively his duty to obey the process of the united sta states t es to hold the prisoner in in custody us under it and to refuse obedience io 10 the ike mandate or process cess vf of any other government orro adf an and consequent I 1 y it is is his duty not to take the pr prisoner ioner nor suffer him to be taken before a state judge or court upon a habeas corpus issued under state authority no state stale judge or court after they arf are judicially informed that the party parly is imprisoned under the authority of the united states has any right to interfere with him or to require him to be brought before theta them and if the authority of a state in in the form of judicial process or otherwise should attempt to control the marshal or other authorized agent of the united states in any rF respect in in the custody of his prisoner it would be his duty to resist it and call to his aid any force that may be ne cesary to maintain the authority of the law against illegal interference no judicial process p icess whatever f form or it it may assume can have any an lawful authority outside of the limits of the jur jurisdiction is i of the court or judge b by y whom horn i it t is is issued and an attempt to force it it be yond ond these bo boundaries un daries is nothing less than lawless violence how THE AMERICANS ARE AKE SPOILING THE CARNIVAL AT ROME mr bigelow of the new york evening ev ening post writing from rome ays but of late and this year in in particular rome has become so thronged thron ged with str strangers aDgers from england and america and their equipages equi pages in in the carnival occupied so large a proportion of the corso corao that as a near as I 1 can learn the festival has undergone some changes which have rendered it not only less in te resting in itself but what is is more to be deplored less characteristic of the institutions of civilization in in N which aich it had its origin origin formerly confectionery and flowers used to be thrown from one carriage to another but for the most part in in a complimentary spirit and deriving piquancy from the fact that the parties were unknown to each other and in in this way w a were w ere holding ing an allowable intercourse which on any other day would w be regarded as too familiar but the anglo saxon race do not seem to have the faculty of enjoying ng this kind of sport legitimately legitimate they take lake advantage of the privileged character of the day to annoy those they meet and make them ridiculous they throw confetti with violence if they see a black hat in in the street or anything that will be discolored by their artillery they will take the utmost pains to soil it as much as possible I 1 have ha e even seen them go so far as to bend forward and deliberately throw a whole handful of confetti violently in in the face of ladies casually crossing the he street and taking no part whatever in in the sports of the occasion I 1 such ill breeding is is rarely I 1 dont know but that I 1 may say never traceable to the italian it is s a feature which the forestieri forest wn have introduced here I 1 am told and w which aich will soon efface the last trace of one of the oldest and most interest in roman institutions extant |