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n ’ o NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 1663. eremes $$ eb tee epareeeenastesennervanstnn/sibihiiahiinnignenseporvdtanneiiibalitmniencionateiictsdiiten tliitehinerlitiadeitig eit a NEW YORK HER ALD complished by anengine of British manufacture. merit is both affirmatively and negatively TB Manttest Destiny of America. and Le! Heperted Bed Naval Prepara- | Union successes, the scourity for it waa se good gates spend tos * The parade was a great auscess, and was witness proven. We hape that the Demosratic Conven- i. aveneliit Weta tesa A a Seeerete Duty of the Muvy Depart | ever, as the votton plodged was sufoly stored JAMES GORDON BENNETT. | ed by a large crowd of dolighted spectators. * | tion will adopt it unanimously. If, how- yetoms of governme: H i way in the interior, and could not be at. The only State in which the election will be { over, thore should tura out to be an | ‘N° Ovuntricn aro entirely diferent, yet there ag “ silprene ab 3 Pil ctclosipst 00 < held ans; ta view of doe : ; sanarely on the isaue of & continaance of the WSF | obstinate copperhead faction in the Cougention, | v° Vly “Hating Points of similarity betwoea | PN tiihireidloemy Nips Vad pay shortly before published pa pe - | for the restoration of the Union or an immediate me POF the United Statea aud Rusia, Both nations | the three tarreted rams which have been | {+ that we bad shortly before publial We MR OF FULTON AMD NASSAU BTS. | sop ; ;, | Sed by Ben Wood or by the railroad managers | . c built in England 2 : the fact that Mr. De Bow, the rebel loae Prac aura se NUTRI | recognition of the bogus Southora confederacy ia of the Alba he duty of the demo- | are comparatively yowng. Civilization practi- | built in Kngland for the use of the rebels, TERMS cash iD sdvanoe money soat vy mali will be | Ohio. The sentiments of the two candidates for ny Regency, y ‘a. | Cnlly began in this country with the settlement | 48d whose destination is said to be the harbor | *S°Mt, bad ordered all the government #itherlak of the sender. None but bank bills current in | Governor are clearly understood, and the distin. | Creoy will be ptaim It mast give up all sfflis- | i, Vicginin in 1607, in New York in 1614, and | of New York, and then the blockading flocts, | °9tton that was in dimger of falling inte Now York taken, guished exile’ will never be heard of after the |"tiow with such men rather than, give up its in Now Bngland in 1620, Rassia was an em- | bas aroused the Navy Department, and we are | 9! bands te be burned. Mr. McRee's asser- THR DALY BERALD, Tamas conte or copy. The Vilage ar ta onaon, Juckion county, ate. (raaMort: Under the uldence of Tammany | pire of barbarians until the advent of that | glad to learn that Mr. Welles, immediately on scenes gti Mar, ceeds pap ud ‘THE WEEKLY HERALD, every Saturday, at Fiveceat | hams, ma; ap ne - sep ag ieaye-f-! - + Ad comecevative:. party m4 Mi wonderful genius, Peter the Great, in 1682. | eading that letter, despatched Mr. For, tite As- 99 e contradiction of fucta. Of, ve cea: “Aanelaaeaenen ane sas wee considered the base of Gene- | State, im the event of « coppmrhead split, @ | 101. those epochs the progress of America | sistant Seorvtary of the Navy, to this city, where, bundred thousand bales pledged as security for a Sea SRT: The town was founded by easily as the conservativeswf Kentucky defeated and Russia may be dated. The ene a republic, | for several days past, he haw been urgiag upon the loan, one bundred thousand have just fallea and Uhasteaens Race te ae vf ae me domoceata: "A comparon bef i40 other & despotism, it is not a fittle singular the contractors buildiag the new iron-clads the into the hands of the Union troops at Natches. in 1052._ Five. pills’ dlatant’ la Coon Injand, cha | ¢Teme te, Terese Of the eloations ie Mew York F that these two nations should’ now be drmly | necousity of pushing forward the work on these | OFPAlth of the guarantne has, therefore, ulrondy site of Coon Town, an ancient Cherokee rendex- | *24 Connecticut last fall demonstrates that the | woitea by aympathy against nearlywll the rest Vesela as rapidly a6 possible, Workaen ars | 80° the way of all Confederate delusions, and vous. Stevenson is located at the base of a apur copperlwada are perfectly powerlews, and that of the world, end that they should be no leas | therefore to be employed on them at night as the'rest will soom fotlow. When the news Asy larger naniber. addressed to narses of subscribers, | of the Cumberland Mountains, two and a half | the conservative democracy only is popwler | g.9)y united in’ their omunifost destiny in the , Well sw by dag, and every nesvo is to be 4 FO cach Av extra copy will be vent to every club of | miles from the Tennesace river, and contains » | With the poopte: We have no fear of such ®| rinse, strained to get them ready. a4 4oom as possilido, the loan will be knooked out of it, Mr. McRae’ tea. Tweaty copies, {0 one address, one year, $95, and | Population of three hundred. split, however. The copperheads have 00 / Haroteon’s prophecy tat Karope would t As wo oaid at the time of publishing the letter | M#UPANCEs to the contrary notwithstanding. ay larger number at sams price. An extra copy will be General Francis P, Blair, Jr., member of Con- | strength in this State outside of a‘wardyor two be either Cowsack or republican ia fifty | Teferred to, thore ia « pressing ih ogre ae = seat to clubs of twenty, Thea raicemale the Wamcxr | Btesseloct in the St. Louis district, im his late | in thie city, and wtion tho Convention assembles “ make the most strom aa shears nia moore onceesent wenty. one years, may be verified before 1870; but this ‘ous efforts to: prepare for | yeKonorn.—The great Powers of Europe seem? prophecy may be improved upom in the | this blow that is said to be’ impending over | tp be‘ less anxious aBout the Polish question. he Kuxoveam Enmox, every Wednoaday, at Five conts | | sire to see the re-establishment o ” | decision of the majority, and expire gracefully | ii54¢ of recent events. It is now ovident | us im the advent of theso Angtb-rebet engines i ; Pr coy: QE per annum to aay part of Great Britain, | os g radical totally Biairnow | under cover of amother great: conservative | inst te world will bo divided botweon the | of war. ya ee eee ee eee © 0 bo any part of the Continent, both to include | Tho large bridge cross the Cumbertand river, | ViCt#rY- : Coasicke and tho republicans within the mext | Had the Navy Department taken the advice of Postage y near Nashville, Tennessee, replacing the augpen- | me Alfeged Arming ef Half @ misition | half century. Russia: is to the Eastern conti- | the Hurst long ago they woutd‘not now have Tee Caroma Eoimos, on the 34, 18th and 284 of | sion bridge destroyed by the rebele, ‘was’ opened, ef Negroes ty Jom. Davie, nont what tho United Stated.ia: to: the Woatorn | been troubled with aust! uriéaay consciences, ech month, ut Box conte per copy, or 3 per anny. for public trayel on the 26th inet, Jtis weubstan- | By tolographic intelligence frown Fortyors | continent—the leavew: which leavenct: the | D4 to-day we ehould beve beon in'a better Amranruourears,to a Umited number, will be taserted | ia! structuro, and wee bailt under the direction of |iMénroe, it’ has been stated tliat rebel | whole lump. Great wares are imminent upon | condition to medt the coming danger. We fowme Werair Husatp, apd in the European and Califor. bardipaht acaene pe journals’ roveived at Morehead City, N. @.,| both continents, and when these wars are: con- | Se0in ask, in the mame of this cotmmunity, te = stn rene pore ot Guat | ors Dui tr nariag | etl ap ote ete a be ay | ee ene at ese be VOUINTARY CORRESPONDENCE, containing Import{ 24th inst, eighty of them had been killed. No | COvemers of the Confederate States, has come { rearranged. Russia and America will have the | fore it is too late. Our interests which aro at sat nels, solicited from any quartor of tho world: i°| prisoners hed’boen taken, and it was stated! tikes | 60 thewonclusion to ralsc'an army of five hun- | samecnemiesto fight, aad we do: not. doudt } Sake are of vital importance, and it is-time: ‘wed, wilh be liberally paid for. gge Our Foamon Cor.’ | none would be. é dred thousand negro” volunteers, by giving | tliat they wilt achieve-the same sucecas. Ouse | that something should be,done to put ourselves: | doubt, that the Poles will have to succumb to RSMONDENTS ANB PARNOULAMLY BRQUEED TO MRL aum-.| The delegates. from Richmond county: to: the | each manshis freedom and fifty acres of land af } rebellion has se completely developed the Hos- | im readiness to meet any demonstration: thooe | ie immense power of their adversary. shee ane Packaces eam on. Republican State Convention, which will, meet at | the end gf the war. We have been receiving | tility of England, France and Spuin towards | Anglo-rebels may choose to make, Aronot|! 1 is evident that at all risks the Emperor of MO WOTICE tatrn of anonymous correspondence. We | Syracuse on Wednesday, are Monroe B. Diynat, | files of Richmond papers ail slong, and have | this republio that a war with these threc Powers | the millions worth of government stores and!! Bessie will prosecute bis policy towards Po- dutibiesiatn'tbisnit tiatnaicaacs Abm. C. Simonson and John Waters. now befoxo us dates later than the Morehead’ | at the conclusion of our clvi! war sooms torbe| SPPlies to be saved from the: devastating | tod This determination is so apperent as to = ‘The gold productions of California are ‘nearly, | City news, and yet we have scen nothing of it. } inevitable. The revolution in Poland, foment- || hands of these pirates, or does the:venerabio: game the other Powers to adopt a less strin- Vetume XXVIII ........ if not quite, equal in amount to what they were | Wo regard| it, thorefore, as unreliable, indepea-| ed and encouraged by France and Kog!and, bas | Seeretary wish to sacrifice all these, that im» gent tone towards him; fm fact it =—- five or six years ago, although the shipments-to | gontty of ite intrinsic improbhbllity. } given Russia the same causes of complaint | Dgeility may be more patent to the world? Piss caused them to sbandow: the stead ‘Auueuiteee vara uvaaina. this city have fallen off fully three-quarters. Tlie In the fird : place, the Confederate magnates; |' against those nations. The invasion of Mexico | The duty of the hour demands of: us to: atate- they had taken in the moetter, and . by euch a step, would destroy thelr own insti-} by France, the seizure of St: Domingo by | these plain facts, and we have not boor ae- |indmeed them te try once more the effloscy of tution and eu crender the very thing they say |' Spain, the approval of these proceedings by Hag: | usted bye more local interest, but look to-| diptomatio notes. A few weeks back they wore EDITOR AND PKOPRIETOR Postage five cents per copy for three months. Spprobend that there is no dénger of immediate war between the great Muropean ‘Powers, Raseia, cesing Napoloon hasspered by his Mexi- can sctionic, lias a0 doubt: assumed a bolder front than ehe would have déne under differ- ent circumstances, and there is now but little srereceeeree NG. BAL following figures, giving the amount of specio shipped by the steamer of the 23d July, from San Francisco, will show ite destination:— MIBLO'S GARDEN. Broadway—Riowztiev. LEAUACK’S THEATRE, Brostway-=tacs ro es | ‘To Now York. Half 9 million of | tand, and the assistance rendered by Engfand | the great good of the general government: |! joud in their assertions that cannor would be —-—t Pe el negroes fit fot * military service would include | and France to the Southern rebels, are the oounts-| Oripple New York, and you paralyze thogoverm |! weir next arguments; but now they are once WINTKE GARDEN, Brosdway.—Lavy Avpixr's Snccet || overy able-be diod black man of the military | of our indictment: against these treacherous | ™eut of the North. No better proof can be |! mose trying diplemnoy. eon - - $1,210,228 | age im the com fedoracy. Who would be left to | amd hypooritical neutrals. Russia charges that brought to bear than to point to the thousands i Napoleon wilkere long have mattere ef more ber of surplus rebel prisoners+|; perform the agi ‘icultural and other labor of the | the Polish rebellion was incited’ by France-and’| °f soldiers who are now doing duty ia and’ ‘moment than Poland to attend to. We are are now in the hands of our government :— country? Ther 1 as to the fifty acres of land | armed by England, and that it would have-been | @bout this oity. breaking the rebellion £6 pl ple ef per mem, that. would amount to twenty- ieces, andiaball soom suppressed long ago: but for: the ald'of these:| Our contractors of iron-clads owe their coum | he enabled to commence operations against the five: milfions «of sores, or say ten or fif-| two Powers. We do not compare the Southern | tty ® duty by pushing forward their: werk, | French in Mexico, When we go to war with on |'teen miltions «of sores, -supposing that balf | rebellion with that of Poland. Suol: a: compa- | While the whole country awaits with anxiety |‘i¥ance the people of that empire, who were $o5-| the negroes wi ‘re either killed in battle, | rison would do our rebels too much honor: But:|'tosee what else Mr. Welles. intends: to doin ‘AN along averse to the Mexican expedition, ‘ior had died fe om disease, or deserted to | it is clear that the European: governments have | this threatening aspect of affairs. If they:ex-| wilt, be the more exasperated againet their {7.|'the- Union flag. Now, the Southern confede- | committed the unpardonable offence of support- | Peot the British government to utop these three: rater, and the result will be the ruin of himself Ss rz,|taey hae not am ai cre of public land. All the | ing both rebellions by material aid and diplo- | #8-dovils from coming out of their ports they | ang:iie dynasty. Just as the Russian-campaign Sle nat Legislatare of I iIleloct a Senn,| load i contaims is owned by: private indi- | matic entlorsement, and that this- offence will | may be mistaken. Noone has any confidence | waethe total ruin of the great Napoleon, ee tor of the United States Pte ¢ cot @ Bena’! viduala. So that’ it would be impossible for | be punished by the great natlons:thas outraged | im that grasping, ambitious Power. Are.not | withthe Mexican invasion be the overthrow of » in place of Hon. James]. abel Prosiden t to make good his stiputa- | and insulted. the Alabama, Florida and Georgia vessels built ‘the: prosent Eniperor. ition with the slaw 2, unless he purchased tho | Russia owes much of her advencement {a the-| °@ British soll, fitted out, manned, and | o_o ‘land; end! we Kooy v that he haa ng money for | arts of peace and the appliances-of war tothe | malnly owned, by Englishmen? Then why |, Commo Evanrs.—It is © characterintio of any: suet purpese. In such « state of ruin are | United@tates. We, in our fura, are indebted | should we trust to British interference in. pre- | Americans that they. must be continually ex- his-finanoes, aecord ing to Mr. Toombs, that he | to Russia for hor cordial recognition of our en- | Venting these vessels leaving their ports, and | cited and amused. The warm weather is now asnnob pay the fq 7 white troops: left in tho | torprise and hor warm sympathy in-our national | deliberately and without let or hindrance | neasty ower, and the fashionable dissipations of ‘Confederate asmy, muah lees arm; clothe and | troubles. When tho jealous: English rofused to | rossing the Atlantic and creating all the | the- watering places ere almost at'an end. feedihalf a million of blaci:s. allow tho Russian commissioners te make copies} bavoe their thievish hearts dedire?. No, Eng- | During the deligtitful months of September and Again, if Jeff. Davis puts; arms into the hands | of of various improvements in naval ar- | land would rejoice. Has she not sold within a | Ootober there is no place more plensant than .of five hundred thouseed negroes, drills them | chitecture, the Americans not only offered | fow days three of her regular vessels-of-war to | thevoity; and.all the belles and beaux who ‘into-seldiers sad gives thera their’ freedom, it | plans and specifications, but also sent modets.| the minions of Jeff. Davis? And it will not be | have been enjoying the eummer soletice a the is. voy evident that befores they laid down their | to the Russian tyovernment., The railroads, | long before wo shall have them roaming over | watering places are how on their wag home- arms-they would demand |the freedom of the | telegraphs and many of the manufactories of | the ocean, burning, sinking and destroying our | ward) They will find no lack of amusement s whole black race in the r ebel States; and it | Russia are the result of her patromage of Ame- | vessels. here.. Most of the theatres begin their fall destruction of Fort Sumter was fully ascertained. | The Union: State Convention is announced-to.|! could not be: refused to: them. The Confed- | rican talent. The earthworks with which Todle- | Nor are these tha limite of the preparations | season ténight, and Now York has.not had ‘The capture of Fort Wagner was to be loft to the | meet at Syracuse-on-the 2d of September next: |i crate authosities are very willing to use the | ben made his magnificent defence: of Sebasto- | made by the rebels and their English sympa-| so mang public entertainments at one time land forces, while the navy would attend to the | The Democratio State Convention will be-beld|' labor of the negroes in th eir fortifications and | pol were suggested by the works erected'by | thizers. During the past week's half dozen of | in.meay ayear. All sorts of politioal conven- other defences of the harbor. at Albany on September 9. The candhtstes.|'in the drudgery of the can ip; but we have yet | our Revolutionary generals. Our iron-ctad:| vessels, seme of them already armed, and others | tions.ané gatherings are announced.to imterest We publish in another column the commaunica- |-60 be nominated by these’ conventions are-|'to.teacn that there is any | disposition to enrol | vessels and our new system of harbor defences | only wanting their guns, fighting officers and | politicians, and an infinity of fairs, agricultural tion of Gen, Beauregard to Gen. Gillmore, protest: for the offices of Secretary of State; State-| them in military organt vations. We think | will soon be adopted by our Northern: ally, | crews, have succeeded in eluding the vigilance | shows and horse exhibitions are in preparation ing against the bombardment of the city, which Comptroller, State Treasurer, Attorney Gens- | they will never venture, upon, so dangerous | Every valuable improvement and invention de- |.0f our blockaders, and are now rapidly fitting | to eccupy the time and attention of the country ag ‘ ; ral, State Eagineer and Surveyor, Canal-Com?| am experiment, except onta very. small scale. | vised by our genius is reported to Russia py | owt in. the harbor of Wilmington, and in due | folks, We give a long list of these coming he atyles “inexcusable barbarity.” He complains | - ssaioner, Inspector of State Prisons and Jodge-|' There is. another consii leration which shows | her agents and is turned to her advantage. | time will make a terrible raid on the blockade | events in another column; and certainly ae that he had only four hours’ notice to remove the | of the Couet of Appeals. We do novsuppese-| the absurdity of this all eged: soheme of the | While we are steadily pushing our way to the | fleet off that place, and then come up the coast | unprejudiced person can read-it through with- “sleeping old men, women and children,” while | that any particular attention will be-paidrto. | yebel President. He Ghd.s it extremely: hard west, Russia is also advancing eastward. Our | to Philadelphis, New York, and perhaps to | out being extremely doubtful whether this he claims that three or four days’ notice, at least, | tho personal claime of the nominees. Thecan- | to procure: arms enough; for the fighting white | Pacific telegraph across an almost uninhabited | Bostom. country is really at war, or without admiring should have been given. He threatens fearful re- | vass will be con@eoted and the election decided | men of the confederacy., Where would he ob- | desert is paralleled by the Russian line across | Now is your time, Mr. Welles, to trim your | thegreatness of a.nation which oan sustain a talintion, should Gen. Gillmore continue to fire on | upon national rather than personal or lanal | tain helf @ million of’ muskets for blacks? | Siberia. The progress of the two countries | sails to the approaching gale; the weather | wromendous civil war 00 oadily andvwith eo little the city. issues. The Rash of the ores ‘will | Lastly, how beve rt Phan lesa! the | thus continues with almost equal steps. Nor Lester A The tebels bead rephrase ici apparent disturbance of its; internal policy. C be chiefly portant as a tost: of the | South like the idea nubile + own number | are the internal resources of Russia and Ame- | 24pping and unprotected, now that your iron- ” Beaege ov ycrigaggen the Cheteten gipeee et Senay wg rat Bory comparative strength of the radicat ana | of biacks being put ons level-with themin the | ric dissimilar. Wo are eolf-custaining, and.so is | clads.are at Charleston. For once deceive the | How ro Ger Ricu.—S¢)me one hundred and the shelling did little damage, many as the conagrvative parties in this State. We-pro- | ficld, and at the end of tho-war being. placed | Russia. We are one of the great granaries of | World, and do something which wilk do your- | fifty: brokers in Wall streot, who two years falling in vacant lote and in the burnt part oF be | Hoge, therefore, to glance briefly at: the: plat- | on a footing of political and social equality | the world, and Russia is the other. We can | self and the country credit. You know time | ago wore worth nothing, or less than nothing, city. ‘The alarm which caused the ringing of the | forms of the two conventions, instead: of in- | with them? They certainly-would notetaad it; | easlly place a million of soldiers ia the field, | and tide wait for no man, not even.a Secretary | axe. now worth cach, frem» $250,000 te bella and the calling out of the firemen originated | quiging in idle speculations imregard to the | they would soon either lay. down their arms or | and Rossia is the only other tiation which can | of the Navy ; 0 be up and be doing. $2,600,000, all from the/ expansion of the cur- in the burning of some straw and cotton packing.| probable candidates for the nominations. turn them against Jeff. Davie-and his Oabinet. accomplish anything like this’stupendous feat. —<——— reacy and the movem ents of stocks. They arhich was set on fire by ® shell, but speedily ex- | The party which now calls itself Union i an | ‘The whole story seems to us to»be beyond | Forced to encounter these twin giants, the Eu-| Tum Great Canapiax Scanz—The good | have boen resorting dvcring the summer to all: tinguished. ° old acquaintance witha new title. It is the | the bounds of credibility: But if there should | ropean Powers will have but a slight chance of | people of Canada sre most umnecessatily | sorts of extravagance in dress and in other: From the information received from prisoners | ®bolition republican faction, which was do- | be any truth in it, them wo have only to | success. Such a contest, although hope- | frightened at ® bugbear of their own croa- | respects, at the water! ng pizces and in various. vsterday belonging ‘to White's gueril- | ated last year, when it ran. Wadsworth for | say that the old proverb, “whem the gods | less, seems to be now impending. Our | tions The North has no desire, to pay atten- | forms, realizing the «ld proverb," put a beg- captured yesterday belonging of | FOVernor, and which has been Knows at va- | would destroy they fist make mad,” has re- | Momroe dgetrine, so far from being abrogated, | tion-at thie moment to Canada. The rebellion | gar on horseback,” &c. Some of them ere las, there can be no doubt that the rebel chief | 1. times ag the federal, tho whig, the Know | coived a new and a most oxtraordipary veri-| as Buropeans assert, is-only tranagressed by | is to-be thoroughly suppressed before we can | building mansions uip teway some villes in the- Mosby is dead. He sunk under the wounds re- | Nothing and the republican party. ‘Theso aboli- | foation. If the rebel President and hie Cabinet | France and Spain, and will’ soon be reasserted | take other matters in hand, and when wo shalt | country, and some, we boliovs, are bullding cently inflicted on him by our troops in the akir- | tion politicians have the bad habit of changing | aad the Governors of the Confederate States.| with practical examples. Napoleon might as | heave subdued the traitorous element which has | castles in the air, ' while others are said to be mish near Dranesville. We give asketch of his | their name after every defeat, as Satan varies | age driven to such.mensures it:%s plain that'| well attempt to destray the Ten Command- | 80 troubled our peace we shallnot even then .| building pleasure 7 ;achts.te. make the tour of life in svother column. He was a bold and daring | his disguises whenever his temptations fail. | they feel that all ie. lost, that they have noth- | ments by tolling a lie or picking a pookot as | beready to take into consideration the affairs | Europe. Let tham go-abead. Théy hare young officer, whose loss will, no doubt, be se- The term Union could scarcely be more grossly ing to hope for, andithat they are only playing | to. abrogate the. Monroe doctrine by in of Canada. Before that we must attend to the.| just one year frem date, or at the utmost: verely felt by the enemy. misapplied than when it is ussmmed by sucha fac- | the desperate pert of ruined gamblers, who, | Mexio. Behind the Ton Commandments ‘x di- | fidibustering echomes ef tha- Emperor of the | eighteen months, !.omake mere money to sup- , ‘ tion, They are the disunion, not the Union, party. | having squandered all theiz money and credit, | vinity, and bebind the Monroe doctrine are the-| Fremotend drive him fromsthis continent. We | port their new style. At the end of that time, ‘The other news from the Army of the Potomac ‘The only Uni hiob i pers so grand a.foree of veterans | when the financia/i machine breaks down, bursts ‘ ston alaiaeiibinns y Union which they will accept is «| piay away their personal jeweiry, their family |, American people. . are not amassing a. for : " Seine EB pulateh then 80. caeiing ; Union on equal terms with negroes. Tho | pictures and memontos and all their household } If Russia equally: resents and punishos the | in New York for the purpase of invading Oana. | up or runs off !the’ track, let all on the.tralm It relatos to the execution of seven deserters, with | 1 reegt plank in their platform is “no union gods, while the tide. of fortune has set in | interference of Europe in tho affaixs of Poland,.) da, but more likely to seisa upemand hold Vera | attached to it Vook out for a’ terrible smash, all the melancholy pomp and ceremony which | with glayeholders.” They are the disciplos. of steadily against thom, and there is not the| ehe may be mistress of the Old World, as we | Crus, the gate of Mexivo. | which is bound /to come assure as fate. attend such exhibitions. Our special correspond: | Garrison, Greeley and Wendel] Phillips. They slightest prospect of ita turning in their favor. | shall be of the New; and then, perhaps,ina | The person who bad it from another person, + ae enta are minute in their detailed accounts of the | are the men who have involved us in thia terri- ee hundred years. hence, these two immense | thatsome person had hoasd « person assert that aan Ot Ra tay 1088. terrible acenes. ble civil war and thoir proceedings Sines the Tux Corton’ Movauswr.—We perceive that | Powers may meet upon the Pacific Ocean, and, | another person had listened at the keyhole aad | rye Governor has besa informed ty the Provost Mas A despatch from Stevenson, Alsbama, yorter- | War began have aided, excited and encouraged | jgrgo deposits of sotton belonging to the Con- | differing upon some quéstion of the possession | overheard our Secretazy-of State, Mr. Seward, | shat Gener goes peed (0 towne for day informs us of the fact that the army of Geno- | the rebels quite as much ae the assistance af- | federato goverameat have bobn seized by our | of Australia or New Zealand, may enter apon.| prophesy that'we shoald invade Canada with ca csnocsinrqedininenan® tee ao esata se elcsinn crossed the Teunessee river «t four forded by the sham neutrals of Englaad. Just | forces near Natches, Mississippi. The quantity 4 that Titanic contest which wilh forever decide ; one-buadred thowanditroops, must have been H General bas also decided not to allow credit fer votun- points, the Second Kentucky cavalry cayiuring at present they are endeavoring to adapt their | giready secured is ewtimated to amount to.one | the destinies of all mankind. a | asleep and dreamed all this, as we aro certain. bere pretties rn thirty-five pickets of the enemy. Genorai Rey- reed sinteeTane co ste BRW BOWERY THEATER. Bowory.—C1axcos— BOWRRY THRATRE, . —Gaoer TRO Breous Be1vecnvon--Baxprr Hose. Sere BABKUM'S AMERICAN Primesoinbiat Cutune, W ell hours A Wire—Onur 1a NT'S MINSTRELS, Mechanics’ Hall, 472 Broad. way. Mortan Bonas, Dancxs, BuRLEsquas, £c.—Wao Osa Fino Us Now. WOOD'S MIN:TREL BALL 616 Broadway.—Brmort. Foner, Danses, da. Thx Guest. e ni AMBRICAN THRATRE. No. td Bros¢way.—Bareers, Pasrowmns, Boncasosee, £0.—Stastzx amp Ohasnen, IRVING HALL, Irving place —Taz Srenzorticox. Cotton was in'limited request on Saturday, middlinge: closing heavily at 64c..@ 65e. A moderate business was reported in breadatuffs; flour and wheat were a shade cheaper; corn was steady, and oats were firmer: Pro- visions were quiet and tending downward. The only. iba ake active articlo in the grocery line was sugar, which wis: = —==== = firm, Whiskey was quiet but steady. Hay, hides, tal. THE SITUATION. low and tobagco were in fair request. Wool was more: t There ia no later intelligence from Charleston | freely purchased. Freighte were quiet, without change. thai that bronght by the steamer Bermuda from | © ™mament in rates, Thore were no remertwble--eltere- tions in other commeditios. Port Royal on Wednesday morning. At that time Fort Wagner had not been taken; but the utter NEW TORK MUSEUM OF AN. e ORK MUSEUM OF ANATOMY, S18 Broadway.— Bus, from 9 A. dF Important Political Movemonts in ‘hts. State. ist—bas given ap the orasular vein since his | ing bes not been commenced oredit wil! bo- given for re- erate sent i regiments ie the fei, and for velumeere enlisted 1» companies which may have been mised in gach districts ana mastered into the servies of the United States Detwoor the 11th. day of June, 1863, and the day for electioncering purposes ; but the records | {hero are now fully two million bales of cotton terday the’ det of the execution of a nolds captured a large force at Shel! Mound, and | of the past three years conclusively show that belonging to the rebels im the Mivsissippi val- esa To-day ps te the recital of further | {08* ninety days prophecy, the which so took a camp on Falling Waters, \ciong the cap: | their programme for the future is to annihilate ley, which it is thought our government will oom | executions, not lees than seven deserters hav- ) lamentably failed: No; we have no. in tared are the guerilla Mayr. aut the rebel Ten- | the white men of the South ; to reduce the 80 | permit to come to market, under such reguls- ing suffered the extreme penalty of the law. | tentien of invading Canada, and we nesvee Congressman, Cannon. Littie or no re- | ceded States to.» Territorial condition ; to peo- | tions as Generals Grant and Banks may presoribe | phe administration, aware that a number of baa | advise the good people of thos provinces | preceding that fixed: for the draft to take pings. Men ple the South with freed negrees, and then | Nearly all this cotton will probably reach | to wait until we are ready to admis them. We | moreiy culteted will net be credited; thay mast be mes sistance was made. The rebels are reported te Nearly P y characters have made it s mattet of business to. cores tate Ouab Crgunnnd company, be in farce at Rome and Cleveland, and along the | % forme plebald, mulatto, amalgamated re- | tho Eastern markets by the Misaisstppi river aad | soli themselves ax substitutes and then desort, | f*/Perfectly aware that all their seare amounts ’ ia State Railroad. General Burnside is in public, in which they can retain power by | the Ilinois, New York and Pennsylvania rail- | are determined to put.a stop to these violations | to this much: the. desire for annexation; but ‘Tas Paax Yurrnnpae.—the Park wee yestooday visited Georgia negro votes and by the timely use of their new- | ronds, to save time and expense. There are ; of the jaw, and hence deseriors will be punished | % Yet we are- not ready for them, and they | ., 4 targe, coneoume of people, im consequence of the the region of Kingston, and will attack that place | (1104 right of arbitrary arrests, This plat- New Ork i : wnat keep quiet and get up no more preposter- | g..cnoss of the weatime and bracing mature of the atmos angi ight o| y Pi! no facilities at New Orleans for negotiating eummarily, according to tha utmost geverity of phere. The heavy rain of Saturday hes agnin damaged before long. . | form was presented to the people of this State | pills, even provided--whioh there are not—that military regulations. Thirty thousand troops ‘ from Mexi 4 y In 1865 wo shalk be ready to.listen to.the pe- | the now roads at the north end of the Park: but st Use Havana papers bring us late news from Mexico | just year, and General Wadeworth stood vessels could be procured there to carry it | witnessed the executions above mentioned, The va bong that od fame time it freshened up the vegetation, the gregs aad and the Central American republics. The French | squarely upon it. The people indignantly re- | The heavy insurance against the rebel priva- ceremonies were most improssive and of acha- } titions of the Canadians. - ores “i hides balig teach, tm need ot seth Redigunente had occupied the town of Minstitinn, on the Isth- | pudiated the whole concern then, and we have | teers, and the difficulties attending the loading | gacter to deter those who witnessed them frou j aball boners oo — ss mus of Tehuantepeo, and had sent an expedition | no doubt that they will repeat the rey vdiation | of yeasels at New Orleans, will decrease the | any attempt at imitating the wrong 80 severeiy | driven Napoleon <p or age " ag “4 against Tampico. Juarez was reported ox be- | at the coming election. amount of cotton that will go to that port. At] punisied. | collected that bill = “ me the Corman Siceptely to manregs. the onsane anneal fn. ‘ a The Democratic Convention aad ite candi- | ¢,9 present high prices, cotton buyers in the Og PN PI I | damages against England, including VO | inal of the Amarican Protestant Asseciauen; Wednes. Ing about to take refuge'in Texas. The Mex! | a1 will bo of a precisely opposite charactor. | wrectestnpi valley. will prefer sending most of | DSSPATCHIES ruow New Onixaxt via ram Mas- | doliars and Ofty gents Rvebuok fne—a full | {yoy therers's excursion, under the patronage of Po. oan paper La Estafette recognises the danger Of ® | woe Fiatiorm will be that of the New Yous rms foun tale to New York. 4 arsgrprt.—For the last two years we have reeoly- | equivalent for the suarling an@ barking of | ier Movney: Tharsday, 8, ‘s church anmual plo- war with the United States, and thinks the best | pienary; that of the Kentucky sotservatives col SiG ed our correspondence from New Orleans bythe | wTearem” and his like in the British Parlia- | nie; and on —— eeu op oC Stamford, way of avoiding it isto hurry up and dispose of | that of General Tuttle, of lowag that of Bion | ‘Tax Lacyow ov TH Inon-Ctan Vesser, rom | regular steamers, © much slower process than | mont, When all these things shall have. come | Coscsctiout. anaes, ereyplles ye) Jorma’ Wooo. Fu rea —The following festivals. are announced for tig weei:—Today, the festival ia aid of o ‘will hold their festival im the wood, & speeinl train of the remains of the Joarist army. Bradbury, of Maine; that upon which we forced | me [rattan Navy.—The new and splendid | before the eae ‘2 pias breed wes ‘Twane- to pass, and not till then, shall wo have time to cars having been engngpd on the New; Haves fine for the MISCRLLANEOUS NEWB. * Governor Seymour last November. Its planks | frigate Re di Luigi di Portogallo was launched | mitted by the aid o telegraph and rail- | gamit the Canadians into our glorious Unioa, | \iegcse of bringing them to town, ‘The firemen had a brilliant torch light parade | ave few but strong. It embraces rrcon.t! | hy Mr. W. H. Webb on Satirday. Toe core. | road. Now our correspondent is trying with | which shall then have been reconstricted and ‘Tam Sancmnscw Buanvssa.—Foin festivals of the New on Satarday night, in honor of the return of Man- | tional loyalty to the Union: the up | ony was & very brilliant one, many of our | success & Rew route. He starts his letters up | increased in power and influence. Be patient, York Sangerband having been failures, owing te the hattan Steam Engine No. 8 from the recent grand | pregsion of the rebellion by arms. the eup- potablee being present. Tt is a mattor of pride | the river an the steamboats which, bound for Cynadians; your turn will come all in good woather, tbe ‘will give their friends an enteriai trial of yorerlmnyeo British steam engines 96 the on of ‘the w a 0 , " he North that, while pene St. Louis, tguch on their way at Cairo. Our | time, Pray annoy us no more by Your scares. | ment on Suvday ext, at Jones’ Wood, to mnie up /* Crystal Palace in London. It will be recollected | pocie inl the dl rove R s the tut nd flict tha wortd ever | letters ‘wre thence sent to New York. vot San their disappeintrzcnt. ai i that the Manhattan failed to achieve a victory, in snoneaunllly 4nd ws aphitra at, Fina vilnested, their resources are yet so great that | the experiment is a snocessiul one is proved ‘Tar CoNPRDRRATR i—Waere is tar Se mn asaen Sulaeil cab ss edlinibelens consequence of an accident to her machinery, | "" ss Bonbooss sill veseole of war can be built and equipped by wa | by the fact that we reoolved yerterday advices conrrrt—The London papers lately published of the weather, which prevented tis Liedurlerans (it rendering her incapable of standing the exhaust- x ore al Pee Rept ene: ‘ol furnished to foreiga goveruments, A | from New Orleans to the 20th Auguat, whereas |» communiortion (rom a Mr. McRae,'s Confede- | a: trom olihor being held oa Friday or Sajordny ovonins ing pressure required. After eing repaired she eo i ‘ a aa the im upabilities of | tho ocean ateame:'s "ews was to the 1éth—a | rate agent, assuring the subscribers to the | inst, it has been postyoned until some ovanma then were threw 8 nr harem ehitacveee Vutwa sands aaa ie é hardly bo furpiaheg | Guteronce in favor of the ngw plan of five dare. ' rebel loan st, noswithstanding (he recent to ve asnouseed by sdvertement one pundsed " ai on J he at ” utterances to the new name they have assumed | hundred thousand bales. We suppose that ‘Tue Exnocrion ov Dasaereus.—We published: | that Mr. Soward-*a modest and quict diplomat | rar nas taken plaen, dub in districts wheee the@rew: - reaches London, what little of vitality is left im’ .