The New York Herald Newspaper, June 16, 1860, Page 6

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JAMES GORDON BENNETT, EDITOR 4ND PROPRIETOR. OPTION NM. W. CORNER OF NASSAU AND FULTON STS. ess * Money cond, by mal wil, boat the Y BD too conte . 81 per anman very Baur al canis anna to r ; the We ony Continent both to énclude j the O wm the th cod BMA of aseh momsh of oh oxnts WERE FAMILY WEEALD on Wednesday, at fowr conte per "Yorontany cORRRSPONDENCE serfotetng tpvortent inatd hr.” sa! Sen Fosmas Oven Fossa’ ARsOULskiY MaQUESTED co aus Ais Lavras AmB ‘gus 0 taken of anonymous correepondence. Wi pawn efedad tomo sione teal Coanssronverts 198 Paox- Wedtame EXV 20... 0000 seer scored een BOs 167 AMUSEMEST2 THIS BVENING. NIBLO’S GARDEN, —Baacry Beast— Ormaario Vinee be ares, ae WALLACK’S THEATRE, ‘Broadway. —Ovee.axe Rocrs. « Lavza SRANE’s pe. Power, Bowery.— ion Finee—Invisis BaRBNUMS AMERICAN MUSE! ‘Broadway.— Cortace—Oup Hentert trie Oskioat TaBatRe, 624 Broadway.—Jevar MINGTRELS, Mechanics’ Brosway:— Goavasteee—tosss, Dances, be BIBLO'® BALOON, Broedwey —Gxo. Cunterr's Mm- ld bones, Dawoxs, Buniesquas, 40.—Jaranusn TEMPLE CF MAGIC, 441 Broadway —Paormsson Jacons. NsTIONAL CONTEAT SALOON, National Theatre — Govos, Daves, Bunissouxs. 40. PALACE GaRDE, Fourteonth street —Vooa ann Ix- @rnumentas Concent CORNER OF TalATFENTH STREET AND FOURTH AVENUE. —Cairorris Menacanis, Bo. W4 BROADWAY —Carivourtas Gow Mime Ex- aurrior TRIPLE SHEET. New York, Saturday, June 16. 1860, the News. The proceedings of Congress yesterday are in- teresting. In the BSepate, majority and minority reports from the Harper's Ferry Investigating Committee were presented. Although containing but little that is new, yet we give abstracts of these documents in our report of the proceed- ings. The committee recommended the dis- Charge of Thaddeus Hyatt, the contumacious witness, and resolution in accordance with the Suggestion was adopted. The Lighthouse Appro- Priation bill was passed. A remonstrance from Mesere. Hunter, Bigler, Cameron and Seward, and finally postponed by a vote of 25 to 23, which dis- poses of the subject for the present session. In the Honse another—the third—Conference Committee on the Homestead bill was appointed. ‘The Lill authorizing the issue of Jand warrants in cases where the or gival have been lost or destroy- d was pessed. The Pacific Telegraph bill was taken up end discussed. A motion to Isy the bill on the table was negatived—70 against 120, and the House refused to concur in the Senate's amendment the Senate bill providing for the return of the Captured Africans, and coneurred in the Senate's amendments to the Lighthouse Appropriation bill. The Civil Appropriation bill was then taken up and discussed. Reports relative tothe New York public store contract were presented, and laid over till December next. ‘The Pacific Telegraph bill has passed both houses of Congress. ‘The overland mail, with Gan Francisco dates to the 25th ult, bas arrived with interesting news from Japan. The accounts agree that in the attack upon Prince Gotairo that personage was wounded, bat not killed. A despatch from St. Johns, N. F., states that a @teamer from Europe had arrived off Cape Race, and that it was understood the news boat had been Gespatched to intercept her. The Niagara's mails, which arrived last evening from Boston, put us in possession of European files to the 2d inst. The most important part of the news has already been published. We hay NEW YORK HERALD. | habit of receiving money from liquor dealers | Sgeinet whom processes Lave been issued, and iv H steed of executing the proceeses they have been | io maby instances returned. The Sheriff hee | ordered ail money received from liquor deslers ic this wey to be refanded, and threatened to dismis+ li eob+beriffs whe shall hereafter receive any from them. | Jn the General Sessions yesterday Stephea HA. Chapip, elias Chase, was eont to the Btate prison for five years, haviog pleaded guilty to perjary. ‘He was confronted by two ladies who claimed to have been married to him, and his counsel pro- duced affidavits of Wilson G, Hunt, Daniel F. Tie- mann, aod other well known citizens, who testified to his respectubility. A full account of the deve- | lopements made in court in reference to his pre- vious ‘history will be found elsewhere. Amelia { Morell, a notorious shoplifter, was also sentenced | to imprisonment in the same institution for five | years. The Vote of Censure on the President, The course of the House of Representatives in passing a vote of censure on the President is one which must awaken the attention of every right thinking man to the dangerous end destructive vortex into which the biack repub- jican party is endeavoring to carry the coun- try. It in not necessary for us to enter upon an elaborate discuseion of the question, whether, not the Houre alone, but even Congress itself, hes the constitutional right to pass a vote of censure on a coequal branch of the govern- ment. The constitution provides for impeach- ment of the President, Vice President and civil officers of the United States; and directs the mode in which that shall be conducted; but it is the theory of our political system that the executive, legislative and judiciary powers of the government are co-ordinate, and nowhere do we find ground for the theory that any one of them poseestes eupervision over the conduct of the others. In their equality; such an idea, if it could exist, would lead to the most prejudi- cia] consequences. If the House can censure the President, the President can censure the House, or the Senate, or the jadicisry, or either can censure any or all of the others. Suppose this practice were to creep inte the customary action of these several bodies, what contusion, what petty wrangling, what coustant mutual denigration and degradation of all the branches of the government should we not witness under the stimulus of the bane- ful spirit of party. The claim that it fs one of the prerogatives of the House, in defence of which precedents of the British Hoase of Commons are cited, is ptterly fallacious. There is no identity w UNO Uumsevws we ek ne -”- one existe by virtue of certain defined powers, formally celegated by the people of the United _ | States. The other is a body that has grown up in the once absolutist political system of Ea- gland, where it bas, from time to time, and availing iteelf of favorable circumstances, ueurped powers formerly exercised by the crown. These usurpations it hes made in the name of the people, and every one was a bold, startling, and sometimes revolutionary innova- tion, which by repetition was converted into precedent, and thence has come to be held as a part of the anwritten constitution of that realm. But bere we have no crown from which powers can-be despotied in bebalf of the people. It is the people that possess all rights, ® portion of which, for the necessary pur- poses of government, they have vested in the several branches of the government. Whea avy one of these branches assumes powers with which it has not been formally invested, it despoile the people, and takes a step towards the estabtishment of a tyranny. If the House can create power by establishing precedents, [jis oan Gon matieeng until it wields all the powers of the State. To-morrow it may cea- sure the Senate or the Supreme Court. Cen- sure implies the power of reproof, reprimand, and this implies eubordination, which does not exist among Co-ordinates. But in the preeent instance there is some- additional information, however—later than any- | thing equally grave with the usurpation of thing farnished by the telegraph from Halifax. A | power, snd which should cause every right despatch from Naples, dated June 1, says that an | minded citizen armistice had been agreed upon between Garibaldi pause before lending his ap- proval to the which has been pursued and the royal troops, which wasto terminate on | 1~ the House of Representatives in passing Banday, the 3d inst. Tne populace at Naples were ssha-vete ot aumannegetiis Resthtent It is Greatly excited, and shouts of “Garibaldi,” “Victor Emanvel,” and “Sicily,” were raised on the streets. We publish full particulars of the presentation of the belts to Heenan aod Sayers at the Alhambra aerumed that corruption has crept into the ad- mioistration of government. An accidental and fuctious party majority in the House, insti- Gardens, London, on the evening of the 30th uit, | @*ted by partisan motives, seizes upon this as- We also give an important article from the Lon- Gon News upon the Eastern question, and one fromthe London Times relative to the Chinese @ifficulty. The letters of our correspondeats sup- ply the details of the general news. By the arrival of the brig Los Amigos at this Port we have files of Kingston, Jamaica, papers to the @ist ult. There had been, within six weeks, four attempts to rebel against the authorities of the prison, one of which had to be subdued by the military, the police being inefficient. The Hon. William Girod, ex-editor of the Colonial Standard and Police Magistrate of Kingston, who had been pentenced to three years’ hard labor in the peni- tentiery for forgery, had been pardoned by Gover- nor Darling, on condition of bis expatriating him- elf from the island for life. Mr. Girod is a native Of the island, and hes ten children, one of whom is Sn officer in the British army. The rainy season sumption, and appoints a committee of investi- gation into the conduct of the President. Men #bo beve for years been steeped in cor- reption, under the edministrations of the feeble Fillmore and poor Pierce, and who are avimated by pereonal motives, because they were driven by the President from their epoils, are brought forward to testify in secret against the first magistrate of the country. On this exparte testimony the House proceeds to pare judgment, not on one of its own mem. bers, not on one of the subordinate officers of any other branch of the government, but on one of its co-ordinate branches, and the repre- sentative bead of the republic. Setting aside the fact that the House of Rep- resentatives is only a component part of the Lad set in, ‘The last reported sales of sugar were | legislative body, which is coequal with the ® 168. per hundred poands. ‘The bark Mayflower, Capt. Dantze, arrived at this y from Barbadoes, with advices to | pao ey The market was overstocked with all kinds of American prodace. The health of the Island was very good, but there had been but litte rain, The barnt district presents quive ® had ap- pearance to one accustomed to view it in its for- mer state, and owing to the tardiness of the Com- missioners but litue improvement is being made. ‘Ths British sloop Ses Flower, of Granada, had been peiged at Martinique for violation of the French oomimercial regulations, and compelled to pay a fine. The supercargo complained bitterly of the Rreatment received at the hands of the Frenchmen ‘Who boarded the vessel. They were eight fa num- ber, two of them being gendarmes, and one a cus- | Som house officer. The supercargo states that they wore very drotk, and rushed on the sloop'’s deck like madmen or pirates, bearing pistols and threat- ‘ning to shoot the people of the sloop. They did Rot, however, carry out their threats. The suger crop of Barbadves will exceed last year's by 1,000 fo 2,000 hogsheads, while the sugar itself is of Weperior quality. A despatch from Boston states that the brig East rn Btate, at that port from Porto Praya, report, that the United States ship Portemouth on the 7th bit captared the brig Falmouth, of New York, aup- posed to be a slaver. ‘The Excise Commissioners held tneir twenty, Pighth meeting yesterday forenoon. A large batch Of applications for licenses were received, of which fourteen were granted for thirty dollars each. President, the act in iteelf is one of grave im- port. Criminals are punished by statute with | penalties that partake largely of » physical | character; bat to the maa of honor and {ategri- ty, public censure is punishment of the severest kind, Ite imposition is # judicial act, and the aggrieved party hes iio resource for redress | but in the unuttered and unutterable judg- ment of the people. If it is imposed lightly, | without due consideration, or from base and | Wiworthy motives, it reacts upon the body that impores it, and diminishes its public considera- | tion and moral power. And bere is where we take exception at the recent act of the House Of Representatives. (fhe motives which in- duced it are too evidently base in their charac ter, and the act itself is too manifestly parti- sap, to injure the President; but it debases the | House iteelf, degrades the government of which | it is « part, depreciates the standard of our po- litical morality, and adulterates the moral in- finence of our country. History or Tue ALBANY Reorxcr,—We pub- High eleewhere an elaborate and generally cor- reet history of the political clique known as the Albany Regency. The secret history of all political organizations is always 60 carefully covered up that it is very dificult to arrive at ite exact details. We have, however, as we | think, eucceeded pretty well with the Regen- | © matter isa most im) just NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, JUNE 1860.~TRIPLE SHEET. 16, tells ve that al) these companies, after aequir- | ing power, and that Mayor Wood Is again ing etrepgth through eupport by the prose, in his giory @ngering sround emong the de- unite together to piliege tbe public and bully . partments, Mr, Wood's two most potent the government. But we desire all interests enemies have been removed from his path t bave « fair chence, and if sey means canbe by accldent—firet, Mr. Sickles, and now Mr. Geviged to prevent thelr combining, and thus Fowler, These were unquestionably the ablest give the country « prospeot of fature compe- and moet dangerons rivals of Mayor Wood, tition in the conveyance of cur immense and There is no man in the democratic party in this growing tranglethmus commerce, let it by all | city now who can cope with him in energy and means be carried out. H engacity; and in thie etate of affairs it is not un- likely that the existing quarrels between sec- tions and cliques of the party may be settled, old cores healed, aad, out of the dire necessity ? ° ‘ of @gombination of hitherto discordant ele- importance which itdoesnot merit. There is no ments, harfony b¢ restored and the hatchet real inteasion on the pari of the former Power | 4. 404 it opl i " me to place herself #0 soon again in aatagoniam Perhaps Mayor Wood hai Aoog2oded fn mak with England on this quesiion. The Em- peror aieanaes mast be ‘eebhe that he is | 128 arrangements with the Board of Aldermen, no nearer the accomplishment of the pet pro- | With the view of no reorganizing the different jects of Russia in the East than his father was, ; Gepurtments that the beads of éach will co- ‘and be is not one of those mea who areready | OPérate with himself in the management of the to rap great rieks for the attainment of rsmote | Pty. , objects. The present equabbie—for we can give | But these are merely political movements, It no more eerious designation—if not originally | They have nothing to do with the municipal instigated by France, has assumed the little im- | gOvernment, and affect only the designs and poriance that it poseewes from her advice aud | Objects of the politicians, Hence we care no- countenance. Itis convenient for Louis Na- ; thing abont them ; we have no personal predi- poleon just now to create a diversion which | lections or eympathy with any individusls in may distract the aliention of peopie from the { the matter of removal from office ; and if, with formidable proportions of the game which is | tbe sid of ti construction which the courts being played out in the south of Europe. put upon the charter, Mayor Wood orany other There has been no event within the memory | man will give us an efficient and honest city of the present generation which bas been less government—such # one ss we have not accurately measured id its consequences than | before, but have been always contending for— ¢he tnrurrection in Sicily. The circumstances | We care not how many political assassinations that led tothe campsign in Lombardy could | #r¢ committed. It would not trouble us in the all be referred to diplomatic necessities. In | least if every officer under the Corporation was the present instance n0 such excuse can be al- | turned out, decapitated, squelched. leged in defence of Garibaldi’s expedition. cre of St. Bartholomew at Baltimore nox’ woek, They killed off Wise, Hunter and seve rel other candidates before the Charleston Convention met. They betrayed Dougiss at Charleston, and intend to finish bim off a! Bal- timore, where they will cheat Dickinson #5 well as the others, The Regency will not be ratiefied until hey have completely ruined the democratic party, and succeeded in electing Old Abe Lincoln President of ‘the United States, the object for which they ere most ef feotively laboring. meeenctentetnmennililis Tax Scanter Lerrer Again—Wren's Re- PLY T0 GREELEY.—We give place to-day for the reply of Thurlow Weed to the very re matkable Greeley letter, which, with the inci- dental oriticisms of the journals, independent find otherwiee, forms one of the most ‘curious end instructive chapters of current poiitics! history. Weed treate Greeley like the child who was supposed to be always crying for Sherman's lozenges. Greeley, according to ‘Weed, was not, however, the only one o' Mas ter Seward’s good little boys who worked early and late o: their tasks, and thes, when the cake was tobe divided, were sent away hengry in a corner, white smooth, elees, boot licking, term-serving little chaps like Ray- mond gobbled down all the plumbs, and put their Gogers to their noses in a distresingly snnoying and insulting way at the same time. Weed, poor little thing, was in the same boat with the lachrymose Horace. So he pats the Tribune philosopher on the back and says, “Don’t weep, sonny; save your money; cheer up, andetand by; there are a lot of us just as badly off as you are. Be a good boy; wait for your turn, and after a limited period, say forty years, you shall have a ride on the donkey, and good big piece of bread and butter, with molasses all over it.” For our own part, we had no idea, pre- viously, that Greeley was so mercenary, and Weed eo self-sacrificing and magnanimous; but we have to live and learn in this world. We are quite satisfied now that Weed is a pure, disinterested patriot, and we suppose the Che- valier Webb and Raymond will desire to be counted in the same ring. Weed’s peroration, regretting the appearance of the Greeley letter, because “it destroys ideals of disinterested- ness and generosity, which relieved political life from so much that is seifish, sordid and rapacious,” is good. Put that along with the free wool developements absut Weed, and the contrast is charmingly dramatic. As to the merits of the geceral question, the affair between Greeley, on one side, with Sau eet packed vip Wel, MRF bs ne the Chevalier Webb, on the other, is highly important. It is the first chapter in the history yet to be written of the circumstances atten- dant upon the emancipation of the press from the control of the politicians Thirty years ago the party leadere managed the press almost entirely. ‘They bought an editor for so much money (Greeley’s price wasa thousand dol- lars per annum); the editor was purchased io the same manner asa fat negro to work on a plantation; the treatment of the former was worse than that of the latter. When the negro can’t work any more he is provided for. When the politicians had got their money’s worth | out of the editor they coolly sent bim about | hie business. In those days the verted the conntry, and the people followed } uutil not & trace of the labors of the Con- | report is very satisfactory in one respect: it their blind guides with touching fidelity. But gress of Vienna remains to attest the folly and | establishes conclusive evidence of shameful we bave changed all that, The independent | of the men who eres: | prees, freed from the contre] of vulgar politi | them. It 1s impossible that the continental clans, has ecattered Uberal’ ideas among the | #overeigns should not be sensible of the dan. | public confidence in the administration of af- people, who are now their own govériiors. The | gers that threaten them, end ap-| fairs generally st Washington, if the affair is march of intelligence hagbéen headed by the | preciste the necessity of their mak- | allowed to end here. independent press, and the politicians must | ing en immediate and decided stand sgainst either go along with it or be pverslenghed. them. Prussia we know to be fully aware of There are certain excellen} reasons why the | the critical character of the times, from the | metropolitan press should hdd the command- | declarations of ber stateemen and the military ing porition it has attained. The statesman who | preparations which she is making. If Austria represents any remote distrijt comes froma | end the secondary German States do not fol- constituency who hold exaggefated or fanatical | low her example, they will be caugbt by the opinions upon the great politcal questions of | storm that is silently gathering over their the day. He represents tha@e crade theories | beads. The next few months will develope, to acertain extent. When he goes to Wash-| on the part of France, some of the more im- ington he invariably falls inyith some special | portant features of that mysterious policy clique, and between the pre engendered | which, commencing with professions of dis- by the peculiar opinions of his locality and | interestedness, fe slowly but steadils <tvane- the chicanery and humbug @ the ing towards the eocompisenment of the ob- politicians, he is quite in thefark as to the real | jects which it bas all along hed in view. It is merits of the matters upoe hich he is called | for these reasons that we attach to the present to vote. If, however, he rads carefally the events in Sicily a character more serious than metropolitan journals, and a considera- | that of a mere effort to change dynasties. ble portion of his time in New York, where | They ere pregnant with consequences which every poeeible shade and fariety of opision | Will involte Earope in another prolonged and is freely spread before tt public, he wil | sanguinary contest, like that which resulted in find his ideas materially evarged. To do his | the treaties of 1815. part of the work well, th/ editor should be like ourselves, entirely dependent of any} Tux Crrv Caampentam Decrsrov—Trovpies parties or cliques, and shild treat all sides ac- | Aono Tux Orrice Houprns—The decision of cording to their merits. freeley sees this now the Supreme Court, confirming the removal of for the first time. His) influence with the Mr. Stout from the City Chamberlsinship, is a Tribune, and personally ij his own party, has very important one, and may effect a complete been sufficient to break Own Mr. Seward, a@d | revolution in the construction of the charter he has emancipated from the worst and | relative to the removal of corporate officials meanest despotism in thi world—that of a po- It would appear from t@Bdecision, which would litical clique. We shok off the shackles of probably be sustained ijpéhe Court of Appeals, party journalism a quater of a centary ago, | if Mr. Stout had conoldfted to take it there, and have proved thats really good journal that the Mayor has the power, with the consent can afford to snap its gers at the politicians of the Board of Aldermen, to remove for cause musty abstractions, any head of @ department, with two excep: ketty platforms. The tions—the Comptroller and Corporation Coun- Webbs of the day will sel, who are elective officers—and that the dis- ® light by which cretion of the Mayor and Aldermen ie to decide what is conse and what is not; and it seems very in the fatare. The in- by the voice of the probable that this power will be still farther Tae Troupirs or THz Lexorran DesPots.— Fiforts are being made to impart to the fresh dif- fioulty raised by Ruzaiz sriih Torker a deaceo of grounds of philantbrophy and humanity; but | Yorx Derarcarions—The prees generally viewing it in reference to international iaw, itis | throughout the country are commenting upon as pure a case of filibusierism as any that has | the statement of the Postmaster General upon If Sardinia did not exactly encourage, she did | One Of the mast extraordinary public doou- not seek to prevent, her people embarking in | memts ever given to the country. Itis a self thie expedition, and, considering that ehe is to | Convicting report; and yet Mr. Holt, who hasa ae much & violation of her international obliga- tions ag more active sympathy. Should Gari- baldi micceed in hisinvasion of Naples, as he evidence convicting himself of the most re- markable negligence in the conduct of the declared annexed to Sardinia, the cext ques- | given before the Covode Committee, intended tion will be, to what is thie precedent going to to prove ever so much against the jead? May it not be applied with equal reason | #04 Cabinet, ies nothing compared with the nationalities ? These are the considerations which impart | Ws ® regular system to the revolution at present being worked out from quarter to quarter for five years or FICC Ww evr cmve we weugervue mupyss [OE eee ene Reet een tem ow tance. In the uncertainty which prevails in | S0me of the officials at Washington, and ought it would be madness for the German sovereigns to euffer these daring infringements of what | Puls the blame, though very gently, on some der to be carried to any greater lengths. we think, will be likely to heap more censure can clearly trace, if they will, from the mo- upon them than the Postmaster General, and ment when Louis Napoleon asmmed the reins | © expect their removal. of power in France, of ideas and of a new policy, alike fatal to the | States Marshal of the district was derelict interest of the old dynasties. In Italy it has | bie duty in not securing the arrest of Mr. Fow- King of Naples some of their fairest and most valauble possessions. Unless an effort be made | remove an officer who neglects his duty? These to check Ite progress it will go on with its are matters with which the press and the peo- qurtTs.—To-day the Japanese arrive in our city. Let their reception be such as we our- selves, as well as those well bred strangers, can look back upon with gratification. As regards will, we know, be all that can be desired. There i, however, something more necessary to our hospitalities s flayor +*~* agrocable imp-~-erva upon their minde. ‘aa Baltimore end Philadelphia they have been overgrown villages knew how to give them. That is to say, they were dined, wined, caressed and insulted in turn. Rowdyism in theee places Luckily the same element in New York, though but too frequently uncontrollable, is upon the rest of the community without im- parting a certain varnish to the disturbers of public order. We are, therefore, in bopes that nothing will occur to-day that will give us cause to blush for the character of our city. Let our governing classes so comport them- they are passing through files of the politest and best bred gentlemen in the world. Tux News From Curva axp Jarax.—The last Japanese Regent and the settlement of the China question, it ie now believed is far from the truth. In proof of this, a telegraphic derpatch was received yesterday from St. people, is as the “s rod before which even | exercived. For some time there has beena the Senate must good desl of difficulty existing between the me Mayor and Mr. Delavan, the City Inspector, a mt oA. Traxsrt Rovrr on AGATS.—The polit | most efficient officer, but paca recently the pos hag ys 2 bad ek ee ee mombers prcb-csrerare bo nam | chant a aioe Oe er proved successful, as he was yet alive. It Captain Smith, the Street Commissioner, who is decidedly the most faithful man we have ever bed in that office. Soon after the inangu- ginning tobe agitate again with the transitronte times have cansed the #0 far as the pub! and the interests | ration of the present city government ia Janu- of the public are ; for the old com- | ary last, Capt. Smith expressed a desire for an era aedk tak padinns Sane batanta have reactfd their milleniam, and laid | interview with Mayor Wood, for the purpose of | ment mayo bo — down in peace like the lion and the | coming to some understanding with reference of the Chinese Emperor to accede to the ulti- lamb. to the affairs of the Street Department, and matum propored, and it is by no means proba- his that, having pursued this peremptory course, be would, within #6 short « time, with- ont some demonstration on the part of Eng- jand, take the back track, and offer to quietly settle the whole affair, ¢ Some Coricepounenve passed between theron the subject. The Mayor, however, we believe, declined the interview, and said that he would consult the Comptroller, The correspondence was subsequently renewed, and ended in a per- sonal interview, which did not prove very satisfactory to either party. Some of the Street Commissioner's mbordinates have been called up, and some informal evidence elicited as to cause for the removal of the head of the and thus matters stand. It may be that all these difonlties will end In a thorough reorganization of the municipal Court bas present lobby effort is to ined in the Naval Ap- jcarry out a contract for a the Pacific, made by the government with)the Chiriqui Improvement Company. In © movement all the other transit route int eee the germ of a future competitor, or # nw participant in their pro- | ta, and of courst they wish to heed off the | youngster before he gets strong enough to im- | pose conditions for peace. Wedo not care anything either way for the private interests that may be advanced or diminished by the re- The object of defeat the clause creaned accommodations and more the lower part of the city and the Central Park, commenc- the evening. two or three minutes from the go | work of redistribution and reorganization, | ple ere both busy. The Postmaster General’s | cuny, formalities and attention to their wants, these | Si % be so full thet, ms constitutes a prominent feature of their social | we new constitution, are the following:—The New condition, and, therefore, could not be kept in | tax levy of 1856; the bill to authorize the city of Nei subjection, even on an occasion of this kind, | York to ralseSi70,000 om the isque of bonds for not apt to lose its manners before strangers: | country bank notes; to prevent encresenments apea Metropolitan refinement bas not lef: its stamp | York Harbor and correct the Harbor ‘ng to-morrow, the 1fth inst., at nine o’olock A, M., and <ilitiilhg IAA ARRIVAL OF THE OVER. MARL. Important from Japan—Prince Gotatre not Dead—Partioulars = of the Attempeed bs bert erat, ng | #epgers and California dates of the 26th ult., arrived here 0! half-pens ten last evening. % , ‘The usual package and summary of owe are recetved, but the San Francisco Pepets lowing meager intelligance:— >. Charles Street and atx, other gentiomen 6 Compaxy, with @ capital stock of $350,000, par. | Pose of building a telegraph Une from San Freansives te Fort Yuma, vis San Jose, Gilroy and Los Angel; and @ One hundred gung were fired ia Aubtra om repebher the intelligence of the momination of Boll & Everest, iad & Gren! dogree of enthusionm was manifested, THE LATEST FROM JAPAN. | The following notice te posted in the San Francighe Qus- "tol Honse :— | a Suan, Meee of his recovery. : a ‘The following is from a private letter:— Peat aon is ree mae i Gotairo is Morally, of course, it can be defended, on the Tux PostuasTeR GENERAL axD THE New Arrival of a Steamer off Cape Race. Sr. Joums, N. F., Juno 16, 1600. ‘The lines enst 0! Calais closed with out giving as 8 word heen attempted on this ide of the Atlantic. | the defalcation of Mr. Fowler. It is certaialy | of we expected news.—Reronran, The Great Eastern. Bosrom, Jane 28, 1868. J. HL. Yates, Secretory of the Great Eastern Steamship ebare largely in the resnits, her paesiveness is | Great deal of ability, but mo moral sense, does | Compapy, was passenger by the Niagare. He lenyes. int. — t not seem to know that it absolutely furnishes mediately for New York. News from Bextce. New Onizans, Jone 15, 1980. has done in Sicily, and the entire kingdom be | Poet Office Department. All the testimony | tne schooner Siar has arrived here with Vers Orut dates of the 8th inet. President ‘There is trouble in the Juarez cabinet. The Minister if the Treasury bas resigned, and it is believed that & the ‘Mexican treaty ts mot ratified by the Senate of the United to Venetis, Hungary and ail the other oppressed | Tevelations and admissions of the Postmaster | states that the constitutional governmant will brouk ap. General, himself one of the Cabinet. Here | The United States sloop-of-war Saratoga sailed for Philé- of defalcation going on | delphis on the $4 inst , and the Brookiya ts on her oomres more, | @0wn the cosst with Minister MeLane oa board. head of the Post Office Department. Mr. Holt | ™T!ve¢, bringing the Californie mails of the 20¢h ult, Boger wes firm at 8 0 103 reals for yellow. Steck Havens and Matansas of all kinds 350,000 boxes, they consider the principles of European or- | Of the auditors end assistants; but the public, | againet 406,000 inst year. Terrible Termade im Kansas, Luavarwonmn, Jane 15, 1860, | Tytens oo, Ketan, wes wiles WG atecsiate Wants) the march of a new order | Again, Mr. Holt insiauates that the United | 40. the 6h inet.,at 3.4. M. in | At Onsewottomie ane the visiaity, houses wore unrooted | and much damage done. ‘The bonse of Abrabam Holliday, two miles from Ossa- torn from Francis Joseph, the Pope and the | ler. If that be eo then why not dismiss him? | wotamie, was blown to aad Mra, Have not the administration the courage to | killed. oi Pee! ‘At Indianapolis several buildings were destroyed. = _ At Banto, D. W. O, Baker and two children wore killed. Rumors were prevalent of further disnsters in the vi- Capture of @ Siaver. Boson, Jane 15, 1860. incompetency in the management of the De-| ‘the brig Kestern State, Capt. Kelly, trom Porto Pray pertment. But itis very likely to diminish | Msy 11, reports thet the United States sloop-of-war Ports: mouth coptered, May 7, the brig Falmouth, of New York, suppened to bea alaver. ’ Barrons, June 15, 1068. Ove Japanese Visrrers—Hovrs Urow Err- | _ Tree trains, crowded, from the West, arrives 10-day: ‘Three more on the Baltimore aad Ohio res “°° expected, on the way with s thousand delege-*, &0.,to the Con- ‘Veotion, from Litnols, Indie=-, Ub10, Cincinmati—the dete- getious with a bead of music. Intelligence from Wester: rosds report all eastward trains crowded. Waeshingten is many coming are unable to fiad will be ample accommodations who come. t-estt | ‘The Police Department have given notice, in anticipa: \Ve an | tion of the political gatberiag here next week, that the or- inance prokibiting the Gring of cannon, guns, &s., ie the city, will be strictly enforced. pirate: Seacans ar carr PR treated to the best that the population of those | Bilis Sigmed by the Geveaner after the Adjournment of the Legtolature. Atnawr, Jane 16, 1868, ~ Among the bills which have received the Governor’¢ sigpatures after tbe adjournment of the Legislature, sieag Dine’ Market; the Sapply bill of 1857; the act to egainst unsafe bulicings in New York; to amend benbing laws and prevent the improper lanes, to extend F¥ib avenue, Brooslyn; to cerableh grade of Fiatbash aveune; to appoint Record ia Kings county; alse tue priacipal acts (© public sehools, under which the dapartmest now acts. A Negro Shet tm Canada. 4 ‘Wain, © W., Jane 15, < Yesterday morning Coastables Bender ond telves before these delicately organized Asia: | proceeded to the township of Humberstone, to tics as to impress them with the conviction that | negro named Banks, for an ssseait with intent to kil. Banks, of the approsch of tho constables, come from te bouse with a gun and fired at them Several shota were exchapged between the parties, reeuiting in the killeg of Beaks. Another negro, who assisted Banks was betly wounded. One of the constables was shot tn the baad news brought from the East by the overland | The matter te now being investigated. expres, relative to the assassination of the | aa, mew vork State Mditerial ana Type. graphical Association. Burraso, June 15, 1860. ‘This body ts now holding ite anpval Convention here; Loais the IMerary exercises at St. James’ Hall last evening were of an interesting charactor. Toe address wae delivered apnouncing the arrival of the California over | yy we, samuel Williams, of Uues. land mail at Springfield, with Sea Fram | wr. Samuel Williams, of the Ulin Herald, was elected cieco dates of the 25th ult, and that, | President of the Association for the enguing your. The ‘© pleasure trip on the river this foreaben. Death of Hom, John Galbraith. Kam, Pa., Jane 15, 1966. ‘Wind southeast, light; weether cloudy; thermometer 51 Cape Race fegsy- Serioms Accidents. Scrawron, Pa , Jane 15, 1869 One of the bollers of Btrong, Robertson & Oo."s tannery, et Dennings, exploded last night, seriously tajaring (we ‘and considerably damagiog the building. Mr. 1. R. Culler, condoctor, fell from hie train wt pilot rotied him under, breaking that be will not survive. ote. . Mare sous PT ATT ADaLTRIA, a. : trants State 6's, 97; : Marr Gaal, 65%; 100g Inland

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