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NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER Ys, 1863—TRIPLE “SHEET. pe ll which they would have been impracticable for artillery, and wo may apparently count upon @ similar season this year. But the administra tion pursues its little schemes, and the Army of W D. deny the arguments in favor of the Monroe doctrine YORK HERAL '* | in toto, while Le Temps supports the position of erostees abhzed the United States and asserts that the Monroe JAMES GORDON BENNBTT. doctrine is only “non-intervention localized” in ‘The Greatest Dit! Ty Despotism im the | tured by Admiral Farragut a number of eteam- | can only find out, I will send a barrel of this _ _ Worla. ers were algo taken. These wore appraised and | Wonderful whiskey to every general in the The leading journals of England and France turned over to Gen. Butler, but have not yet been | army.” take very different views of the state of affairs paid for. Were isa very nice sum of money due france and Mexico. ese theranbevenge” America. in this country. The English papers regard U5 | by the War Department to the Western Gulf the Potomac és toft at rest. Rosecrans goes we ister : ‘ The latest advices from Euro} to show sty Ay Beg Thome oe OPPS H.W. CORNER OF FULTON AND NASSAU GTS. Ping trey pray eer en how at herd ee De ar Seen es squadron’ that the officers and men cannot | the improbability of the prea cll by Prince forward in Georgia, and Gilmors Sy with staves the Queen ‘and: Cabiest ctiGesounpaated te a” y foar us accordingly, | obtain. We know where the delay is in thi | yoxiratian of the Imperial thone of Mexico, | his battorics in Charleston harbor, and they are by advising the Canadians to display a little | ace and who has the money, and desire some | shu ' left to do what is to be done. spirit and prepare to defend themselves, | information as to why it has not been pald over ‘TERME cash tn advance. eney seat by malt will be ituati : t ““reli- situation in Mexico. It was considered that ‘‘rel Let the administration wake up from this ticlans in Europe aver that this is a ‘ithe risk of the gender. Nove but bavk bills current 10 gious bigotry and fears for Cuba" would cause ss result of the growing power of Austria, who Now York taken. Queen Isabella to assent to his monarchical projects England positively will not help them. The | anq gistribiited. There is no law with these seems now about to obtain the lead in the Ger- | lethargy into which it has fallen, Now is the TEE DAILY HERALD Tunas coats , or copy. in the republic, French papers, on the contrary, do not expres { captures; it is all plain sailing. Consequently | manic confederation, Prussia having jeopard- | time when vigorous measures will be repaid. THE WEEKLY AERALD, every Saturday, at Fivacomt | ‘The Mexican scheme was still stoutly opposed | ®2Y surprise at our “ military despotism,” such | there should be no delay whatever. ized that position by her recent course towards | With great results. Let General Halleck drop percopy. Annual subsoription prive:— by some of the Cabinet Ministers in France on the | #4 it is, and make no comments upon it. This} no case of the steamer Memphis is one that Poland. Should Austria aucceed in her ambi- | ®t once the’management of General Rosecrans’ ground that “a military occupation would drain the treasury nearly.” The Emperor still adhered to his programme notwithstanding, and it was thought in Paris that Forey would soon make a grand coup d'etat in Mexico, according to orders from the Tuileries, MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. — = Atthe meeting of the Chamber of Commerce AMUSEMENTS THIS EVEN. yesterday, a communication was received from MIBLO’'S GARDEN. eecghaa apieanen: Commander T. A. Craven, ofthe navy, urging the “atupemen de necessity of having our harbor put in a proper de- WINTER GARDEN, Broaiway.—Lapy Avpcer's Secret | fonsiye condition, The paper was referred to the KEW BOWERE THEATAB, Bowery.—Vincix:vs— | Committee on Harbor Defence. Messrs, R. 8. Brac PRiep—WaLtack. a Taylor, E. E. Morgan and C. H. Marshall were BOWERY THEATRE. Seenieceuiixes Boucn—Mo- | elected to serve as Pilot Commissioners for two TUKK Goose Koruna. ay years from the 1st inst. UM'S AMERICAN, MUSEUM, Broadway —Tae The Board,of Aldermen yesterday, upon recom: ours BucxuitDa. “Afteruoom and Beene’ “°° “* | mendation of the Mayor, extended to the captain foie Bill ch delay 93 ae RT Eig ne and officers of the Russian frigate now in our way cittuortas Sones Daxees, uucisates, se—Biace | Harbor the hospitalities of the city. A report di- Buicapy. jak recting that all railroad tracks, laid down without koons MINSTRI BALL Glé Broadway.—Etmioriax | permission of the Common Council, be taken up, COG VERE. Se TEE Tee was adopted. The resolution authorizing the An- pAMBRICAN, THEATER. No. 444 Broadway.—Bartera, | thracite GasCompany to lay down pipes in the differonce ia significant, and its causes are | rrnishes sufficient proof of how much delay Meus, denlece, she would become. 0 most fer easily perceptible. there is in the final settlement of prize cases. | midable ead lncerats rival to France; and, The English bave enjoyed a tolerable share | This vessel was captured in July, 1862, four- | as che deems the chances promising, she with- of liberty for several scores of years, and have | toon months since, by the United Statesateamer | draws from a too close alliance with Napoleon ho practical experience of what a military des-| Magnolia, She was out of Charleston, with 9! the Third. ‘The result of the non-acceptance of potism really means. Before our civil war the | futi caugo. There was no appeal in the case. | pfaximilian would of course leave it in the United States was the only nation which ri- | Sno was at once taken by the government, and power of Napoleon to name a French prince as valled England in this, as in — other | has been for at least ayear an active cruiser. | the occupant of the throne to be reared on this reapect. Consequently the English journals. | Hor cargo was atored. It consisted of eleven continent; but here France would surely meet with that admirable taste and excellent feel: | hundred and ninety-eight bales of upland and | with the opposition of both Spain and England, ing so characteristic of a true Briton, take | thee hundred andaforty bales of Sea Island | which Powers could not brook such an exten- the earliest opportunity to exult over | cotton, together with five hundred barrels of sion of the influence of the monarch whom what they are pleased to term our downfall. | rosin, and was not sold until the 16th instant. they already dread so much. The Conscription, (Confiscation and Indemnity | 1+ has been appraised four times, a commission | 1 will sorely puzzle the Emperor of the acts, and the three thousand arbitrary arrests | being paid cach time, and the probabilities are | French if Prince Maximilian does refuse the made at the North, are the arguments employed | that months will elapse before the proceeds of | Mexican throne. He understands that he must by the English to sustain their statement that | this sale are ready for distribution. We should interest other Powers in the Mexican expedi- Weare “the greatest military despotism in the | tik to know the reason for the delay in this, tion, as, in case of a struggle with this country, world,” and these acts are continually and in-} ono of the plainest, if not the plainest, cases | he would need the support of some of his pow- sultingly flung in our faces with all the power that have come before our courts since the | erful neighbors; but the example of Austria which the writers for the English press can | oo moncement of hostilities. would, we predict, prove contagions, and he muster: ’ If' we are really suffering under such would find it @ difficult matter to obtain a suita- army and give his attention to the equipment and drill of the conscripts. Send every availa- ble man to General Meade, and let him be a0- tive also. Strike now, while the Georgians in Bragg’s army and in the rebel army at Chactes- ton are as bad as the Tennesseeans were six months ago; while Gillmore’s guns eche through the whole confederacy, and while an “anxiety” is felt even in Charleston as to the whereabouts of the hero of Stone river. Strike now everywhere, and we may have the end of the war when we wish. Volume XXVIII . The Herald and Its Foreign Policy. The readers of this journal will recotlect with what an exact prescience of events we in the spring and summer of 1861 denounced the treacherous and unprincipled course upos which England and France, but more particu- Jacly England, were then preparing to enter in our regard. They will also remember the charge brought against us by the Engliel &0.—Srectai or Witcuixy. : . ; P Ys Habeas Corpus Procia- j Is of ‘ing forth th oma ss alts city was adopted, notwithstanding the veto of | an iron rule of cannons and bayonets, one | The President's Pl journals of our putting fo ese warnings NEW YORK THEATRE, 485 Broadway.—Coxscnirt. the Mayor. An ordinance permitting junk dealers | would suppose that the English would sympa-| ™&tfon and the Act of Congress on the plevcoandidate:”' Spain’ ‘would ‘offer’ one,’ with solely with the view of stirring up the elements Subject. pleasure; bat Napoleon will not allow her to For the information of our readers, we re-| get a finger in that cake. The other Powers, publish to-day the act of Congress under which | although seemingly anxious to urge the Empe- the President of the United States has issued | ror of the French onward in his Mexican scheme, his proclamation suspending the writ of habeas | take good care to keep aloof from it. They corpus, in certain cases, throughout the length | foresee the arrival of the moment when it will be and breadth of the land. beth dangerous and uncomfortable to be oceupy- In the first article of the federal constitution, | ing Mexico, in direct antagonism to this govern- which relates to the powers granted and the} ment. The French people have always been powers denied to Congress, it is ordained that | averse to the course pursued by the Emperor “The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus | in the matter, and, spite of illuminations and rier clasuean ales pec tny A shall not be suspended, unless when, in cases of | captured banners, they growl and grumble at cal system, Jeff. Davis first set us the rebellion or invasion, the public safety may re- | an expedition which has cost France so many pak’, example)” cel “SAL CER aac quire it.” We have a rebellion; and, in view | lives and so much treasure, and, which must bring committed such heartrending outrages, Jeff. of the “public safety,” Congress having au-| upon her a war with the American people. Davis linac thar ac oasdadl snyiting waukave thorized the President, in his discretion, to | The traditions of the French are all in our fa- hitherto done in that line of business. While | %U8Pend the writ, he has at length issued his | vor, and Napoleon finds it a hard matter to this does not, of course, extenunte our wicked- | Proclamation "in pursuance of the law. He | make them swallow the Mexican pill. He ness, if we have been guilty, it should at any has the law and the constitution on his side, promises to gild it; but as yet he has been rate induce the English press to divide their and yet among our copperhead cotemporaries | unable to accomplish this, and in its present abuse more equally and impartially. there is a general outcry of “unconstitutionall- | state it is unpalatable to his subjects, beeause With the French the case assumes alto-| ‘Y” "Alsed against the lnw and its execution, | they appreciate its inimical tendency towards gether another phase, They live under a mili- against Congress and the President. For example: | this country. tary despotism th ves, and do not seem to | Wille one of our copperhead journals of this} Prince Napoleon, the Emperor's cousin, has think it avery dis ‘ble and intolerable city declares the law unconstitutional, in this, | visited us, and has obtained from actual obser- sort of government, mn r, if they secretly enter- that Congress delegates its power to the execu- | vation an idea of our resources. He dreads tain any opinions opposed to a “military tive department of the government, another of | any difficulty that may arise out of the present despotism,” they do not publish them in the the organs of the fighting peace faction says:— | policy of the Emperor, and in the columns papers and waste words in abusing either their | We hope that Governor Seymour will make |-of his journal—L'Opinion Nationale—the own administration or that of this country. null the President’s proclamation, and relieve | Prince dwells forcibly upon the danger of Perhaps, too, they recognize, as we do, many the anxiety of the people by a counter pro- | a conflict between the great American repub- striking points of resemblance between Presi- ae. si ie hes Oe oa biigpeon but | lic and the French peel pi al sident Lincoln and the Emperor Napoleon. why stop at this half way tenmure! Why not | vises Napoleon to withdraw from Mexico, ‘The Emperor is “the nephew of his uncle,” and | well call upon the Goveraor. in behalf of | He has a personal interest in this matter, as, 20 is President Lincoln. Napoleon heen) to bo | Peace: to inaugarate civil war and anarchy in | should it result in the ruin of the Napo- very fond of practical'fokes, ashe sivindd the streets of New York aa to issue thie “coun- | leonic dynasty, he, @ prominent member of at Steasbour nora terterbraeareet ter proclamation?” In this way the silly cep- | the imperial family, would, most likely, share bo Saptnns iradod Wi Ril abe es scibbiees aun perhends, with their professions of devotion to | its fate. The advice given by the Prince is no atrained eagle. Lincoln's love of the same | ‘constitution, excite only the disgust and | doubt appreciated by the majority of the people kind of fun is too well mown to require | Compt of every man who is nota knave or belbeoei aanrydeivynr teenie hee * ool. ‘e to follow the suggestions of his cousin; but pene. ee Pas tyfensr ge iat: The President is acting under the authori'y | the non-acceptance of Maximilian would render Napdleon. is.. a. shrewd) ‘sly, cunniag of a Jaw of Congress, which, according to the | such a conrse almost impossible, as France ian, ' and’ PeaetdaitTYaooty hee Bidae jecolabegg is a part of “ the supreme law of | will not abandon Mexico withont some chance seni. characteristics... Napoleon: fa: ‘a -\enill> the land,” «anything in the constitution or the | of saving her prestige. Could she place a tary despot, and, if all that the English pa- laws of ‘tiny State to the contraty notwith- | foreign prince on the new throne she might pers assert be true, Lincoln is a military despot Ser oduct fen, SUE HOT ReTMOnt, Bane in a very short time gracefully glide out of the also. The consideration of this similarity may the, Binle constniven,:and ds 8 A Bom York, | affair; but if she fs forced to appoint a French have superinduced the silence of the French pale Sadene mrcape for this aforesaid * coun: } prince to the new position she must remain on ter proclamation,” and if he were to issue it, | this continent until driven from it by the troops to use bells on their carts was also adopted. Af- bit ter transacting some unimportant business the i - j Conionrins axb Lacionss, Hose, MIE eae | Board adjourned until Monday next. picid Sa ty In the Board of Councilmen last evening, Mr. u x SE, = ebooturr ad OFeee Howse Brooklyn.—Etutor1ax | Gross offered a preamble and resolution directing 5. gers Bes the Street Commissioner to present a report of 4 < 1 IN rr_—(| the amount of damage done to the several parks T R I P L E S H E E T « | by the United States troops, for the purpose of es ——— + Boia ——-«——- | having proper steps taken to have such amount New York, Friday, Sept. 18, 1863. repaid to the Corporation of New York by the ——————— —-——---—-—- ——— f Beneral government. After a short debate the = .| resolution was adapted. The Board concurred y Ksinieaans SITUATION. with the Aldermen in the adoption of a resolution The special despatches from our correspond- tendering the hospitalities of the city to Captain ents with the cavalry forces of the Army of the | Boutakoff and officers, of the Russian man-of-war Potomac are very interesting, inasmuch as they { Oslimba, now lying inthis port. A resolution of ive the full details of the recent «cavalry fight | COBCUrrence was adopted giving the junk dealers e 5 e oe f ‘Bee permission to use bells or strings of bells on their with the rebels near to, at and beyond Culpepper carts, as heretofore. A large number of papers Court House. The Union forces were under the | which had been previously acted on were finally chief command of General Pleasanton, with Gene- | disposed of, and the Board, after a protracted ses- tals Buford, Kilpatrick and Gregg as division | Sion of nearly fourhours, adjourned until Monday evening next at four o'clock. i In the Court of General Sessions yesterday, be- again been brought to the test with a grand re- | fore Hon. John H. McCunn, City Judge, William sult. The rebels were under the command of Gen. | Warren, a shoemaker, who had pleaded guilty of Stuart, and the rebel accounts of the fight, which | 9” attempt at burglary in the third degree, was sentenced to the State Prison for two years. James Start was allowed to put in a plea of guilty of burglary in the third degree, and was sentenced to accounts as having beencaptured from them. The | the State Prison for four years. Several juvenile rebels took refuge in the houses of Culpepper | offenders were sent to the House of Refuge. The trial of Bridget Heffern, indicted for arson, which had been postponed since Friday last, was then concluded. The jury, after an absence of thirty the place to drive them out, and thereby causing | minutes, rendered a verdict of guilty of an attempt the death of several non-combatants, On,Wed- { at arson, and recommended the prisoner to the aesday the rebels drove back part of our forces at | Mercy of the Court. Bridget was remanded for sentence, and the Court adjourned until this morn- neg ing at eleven o'clock. & Michigan cavalry regiment, and being assisted Gen. Boyle has issued an order authorizing the by artillery, speedily redrove the rebels back | impressment of slaves along the line of the Louis- ville and Nashville Railroad, for the purpose of cutting wood forthe use of the road. The com- pany are to pay for the service; but if the negroes were also shelled without serious effect. A gene- | run away nothing is said about remunerating calengagement is expected shortly. The rebel | their owners for the loss. guerillas are still operating successfully on the | John H. McHenry, the copperhead candidate for Congress in the Second district of Kentucky, Es has given notice that he will contest George H. along the railroads. Yeaman's right to the seat, on the ground that his It is reported at Washington that three di- | election was carried by fraud, intimidation, visions of General Lee's army have been ordered { threats, violence and the application of test oaths. The vote was, for Yeatman, 8,311; McHenry, thize with us instead of reviling us. But Eng- lish sympathy, as we have abundantly proven, goes hand in hand with English interests, and these have inclined, thus far, to the cause of the South. It is in fact very singular that, while the London papers have so much to say against the “military despotism” at the North, they have absolutely no epithets left in their vocabulary to appropriately stigmatize the “military despotism” under which the South of strife. Nor will it be forgotten that some of our own journals, either blind to the signe of the times or interested in remaining se, joined in this hue and cry against us. By one of them, indeed. the defence of France was carried to such extreme partisanship as to sug- gest a very general suspicion that it was the paid organ of the Emperor, whose movements in regard to Mexico it defended to the very last. What a misfortune it has been for the cous- try that our warnings passed unheeded. A timely show of firmness would have saved us from the dangerous complieations to which we are now exposed, and spared us the losses inflict. ed on our commerce by Anglo-rebel privateets. Had we boldly come to an issue with England on the Trent question, and refused to recede from the position that we had assumed, the pro- babilities are that she would have been still our very good friend, and that the South would have derived but little assistance from her. Nor would France, with the example that she would have had before her of our readiness to face any odds in defence of our just rights and dignity, have ventured on the mean and underhand policy she has since pursued towards us, So true it is that weakness invites aggression, and that a bold front will often supply the place of actual strength. We have never been able to understand the reasoning which influenced the majority of our contemporaries to counsel and the government to decide upon the surrender of the rebel com- missioners. It was a step that could be justi- fied neither by legal necessity nor policy, end it was of most unfortunate influence; for it tended to create the impression that we did not feel sure of our ability to suppress the rebel- lion, and consequently to resist foreign en- croachments. The result, as we predicted at the time, has been to establish a state of things {infinitely worse for us than declared hostility on the part of the two governments which are seeking our destruction. Had war followed e refusal to dgliver up the rebel commissioners, it could not have damaged us more than have the countenance and underhand assistance which England and France have given the IRVING WALL. Irving place —Tue Stereorticon. commanders. The gallantry of our troops has we also publish to-day, acknowledge the losa of the three pieces of artillery mentioned inthe Union during the contest, and fired from the windows and street corners, necessitating the shelling of Raccoon ford; but General Kilpatrick, dismounting beyond the Rapidan, capturing seventeen prison- era. The heafquarters of the Union generals outskirts of the various Union camp lines and to Dalton, Georgia, to reinforce Generals Joe . ‘ ’ 8,087. . press upon the point in question; for an attack ca South. We have been, in fact, paying all the Johnston and Bragg, with the intention of crush- A letter from Gen. Burnside’s army says there | ugon the “military despotism” of Mr. Lingoln Hg yt ee pre: Pacey ich pss atts of the United States, cost of actual hostilities with he toon with: ing out the armies of Rosecrans and Burnside. | are no copperheads in East Tennessee, The peo- | would certainly be constrned into an Teck M,sieun: BV aah td CO ek Dame RE eeu ee None can doubt that ere long the rebellion out enjoying any of its advantages; for our nominal relations of amity with her have pre- vented us from retaliating on her commerce f and every other sensible and loyal man, a law | will have been crushed. On all sides the suc- yore oe" rob coy pee ved of Congress must be obeyed until repealed or | cesses of the loyal troops are increasing and the Pon. y - y mo re i who are much mote observant ‘and philosophi- suspended, or until declared void by the com- | position of the rebels becoming more and more The rebels are said to have asserted that they | ple are, heart and soul, on one side or the other. The steamboats Imperial, Hiawatha, Jesse K. can now throw a force of two hundred thousand : "| Bell and Post Boy were destroyed by fire at St. men against the Union forces, and appear per- |) ouis on the 13th inst. Loss $200,000. petent tribunal, the Supreme Court. The Pre- the injuries she has inflicted on ours, : a ‘ q . Loss $200,000, » Enclish. « < » the S . precarious. When we shall have conquered a fectly confident of their final success. It appears that Gen. Morgan, the king of the pel REM Oates haere sident’s suspension of the habeas corpus, in pur- | peace there will still be occupation for our | But We repeat, there would have been Contradictory stories have been received rela- | rebel guerillas, and his thieving band, stole two = mpor. | Suance of the law, can be reversed inno other | glorious legions. They will be precipitated | 2° ‘estion of war with her if our blind. That fact is that our “military despot- P ‘ A ism,” if we have any, is but a thing of the mo- way. There is an end of all lawif Tom, Dick upon the invaders of this continent, whom they ment, assumed for certain purposes, and easily allen 6, REDE SED. EXECENS Oot Ma paints Hine Fi a rama as bc nad caper changed when those purposes are fulfilled. It ere is and must be infinitely greater than is true that the republic of Rome ended in a The expediency of this suspension of the | of European nations. Having driven the French The | thousand and seventy-three horses in Indiana, which have been disposed of as follows:— Sold for $78,345.00... 0.008 Alabama, that Thomas’ corps had met with are- | Sent to Lonisville,. Retained for the army government had remained firm on the issue raised by the Trent affair. It is the cha- racteristic of John Bull to bully only when he thinks he can do so safely. A determined atti- tude upon that occasion would have saved us @ tive to our armies operating in Georgia, Nashville papers have a report from Stevenson, verse near Lafayette, while the rebel despatches = 4 s s P . writ of habeas corpus is another question. | from Mexico, the temptation t ture from Atlanta, Georgia, state that Gen. Wheeler's | Total... military despotism, and that the republic of | m,, prosident, no doubt, has found this suspen- | hold Ci i a Il th ja es 4 ie ds an world of trouble. History will do us individu. rebel forces had been defeated on Friday and} M the 12h inst. twelve steamboats were ad- | France hada similar finale. But the Romans | ; Soe eee tare, Cant cts PEMD | sity the Justice of attesting that 1t wil CHONG? : vertised in St. Louis for the Lower Mississippi, six sion to be not only expedient, but necessary, to | he great—all the more as by so doing we | lly the justice of attesting that it was Saturday last th acie,' The series ¢ je aoa v PPi, and the French belong to the Latin race, while i 8 y ing 1 f t nstran ¢ part Saturday last near the same place. The stories | yor up at Louisville for below, four at Cincin- we are ,Anglo-Saxon;.snd. races alter ciroum= raise, under the draft, the soldiers needed to | should be repaying the ill will and enmity of | 2° jack of earnest remo: ce upon our p doubtless relate to the same fight, in which our | nati, four at Memphis, and two at Evansville, Ind. | 1 og ag ay ‘ aj. | Teinforce our armies in the field. The act of | Spain, who has on all occasions made a display | ‘Hat the country was not spared an act of hu- troops, though victorious, lost about three hundred | — Tho business transacted on the Stock Excbange yester. | © ano greatly as circumstances al- miliation which bas served to aggravate instead ter cases. This country is now passing | Const Was Passed in anticipation of this ne- | of her desire that the Union might perish. Nor day limited in amount, and the course of prices ir- i a jay was limited i 0 airbag" tha “sidan fidtcetéal’”‘exkperietiodd.c’an cessity. It is but one of that schedule of ex- | would we stop here; for in the North we would of lessen our difficulties. regular. The market opened weak and lower, rallied at men taken prisoners. Skirmishing is of daily oc- ey . if After more than two years’ experience of the bn Shite oebiat ; " ‘ treme measures whereby the administration is | , dri the lish and currence in this vicinity. midday, and closed dull! and weak ogais. Gold was up | England did during her civil wars. We ave to drive away Eng! and annex . ¢ “¥ veste “ 5 sentiment We have received files of the Richmond papers | ' 123.at ono time, and down to 182, and 182% at the | are hurrying through this period of our history practically invested with the powers of an abso- | Canada, so that the good people of those pro- | Policy of endurance, what is now ti close, Exchange was 1451; a 2{. Money was easy at six lute despotism. These measures were passed | vinces might be bay and It is | °f the country in regard to the two Powers that to the 16th inst., and the news selected therefrom | 1°". a itil faster, however. , Tt took England about} soca the plea of “a vigorous prosecution of the | essinse ech ok aaa * | have taken such shameful advantage of ust will be found of special as well as general inter ‘The demand for cotton was active, and prices were | ® century to settle upon a stable form of gov- war,” and as war measures; but had the war perpatigtiahehits bate ics “ Mase From the highest to the lowest, from Semator est. Free speech and a free press is entirely pro- | baoxant yesterday. There was tucreased animation in | erament, and about fifty years more to under- H poty | Sumner down to the veriest copper all stand and organize the government which she | 2°@ vigorously prosecuted in 1861 and in | and his dynasty when we shall have daiven him finally adopted. We started with the right 1862 oor have been no necessity for ignominiously from this continent. All the government; the South has been trying to upset a. ea sma my t or the suspension of | world shall see then that our prophecies are it, and we are now re-establishing it. This task ¢ habeas corpus in 1863. The rebellion would | well founded. We have over and over again will not take usa century. We work with rail- | &¥¢ been extinguished twelve months ago. warned the Emperor of the French that Mexico roads, telegraphs, iron-clads, unparalleled But the Sat aa schemes, intrigues and | will be his Moscow. He should take our advice, armies, and guns which throw shells five or six | Proceedings ot the abolition faction in Con- | and leave this continent before he is forced to ? gress, in the Cabinet and in the country, ar- | go go. miles. A few months more will end our labors, B i : pa = rerio: rested a “vigorous prosecution of the war,” ___ metoens iad smitepary: Céspotienn” Will. We embarrassed the well considered plans and | Te Necessrry or Active Orerations.— Sai kareena ghia cas oe bh? hr combinations of our best generals, brought | “Word was brought to the Danish King— Jonathan will once m oa rahe ws ae “ defeats and disasters upon our finest armies, | Hurry!’ Nota very royal despatch that; not John Bull as the freest, bappiest a 2 ctronsest | 224 doubts and divisions among the people of | especially remarkable for elexance or delicacy. individual in the family of nati nees* | the loyal States. Before the misfortunes thus | But the case was urgent, and the word was the aaa a ee entailed upon General McClellan’s army on | very one that was wanted. It is also the word Prue Mowry anv Irs Distrivtion—Wuy Is Ir | the Richmond peninsula, volunteer enlist- | that is wanted now. It is the word above all De1ayen? -The numerous complaints respect- | ments were so bounteous that they were sus- | words for this present time, and we wish that ing the distribution of prize money due to the | pended. The supply exceeded the demand. | every despatch sent to Washington for the next officers and, seamen of our navy, and arising | Senator Wilson said we had soldiers eneugh; | month might begin and end with it. “Hurry, from the capture and condemnation of vessels | and there were enough, had they been properly | hurry, hurry,” should be the burden of every engaged in running the blockade, are made | managed by the War Department, to put down | collocation of words that goes to the President's with good and sufficient cause. There are | the rebellion. ears. Spectres should whisper the same bur- some cases of vessels captured, and with their | The corruptions, blunders and conflicting | den to the Ancient Mariner in his dreams, and cargoes condemned and sold, that have been | counsels and purposes of the adminig- | these words should be written on all the walls unsettled for two years past, and there is no | tration have resulted in this Conscrip- | that the other official Belshazzare raise their telling when they will be disposed of, or where | tion law and this suspension of the writ | eyes to after dinner. the trouble is that prevents a final settlement. | of habeas corpus. They are both obnoxious | Every day of this golden September is worth We see no reason for this delay. The course of | measures to the American people, and at the | ten thousand mento the country, and every law is slow; but everything must have an end, | proper time the administration and the party | day of October will be worth twice that. The prize cases among the rest; and it appears | which it represents will realize this fact. But, | neglect of this fact, the loss of these Precious singular that blockade runners, captured two | as for this copperhead cry of the unconstita- | days, is « criminal and cruel waste of’ the years since, should not haveYbeen adjudicated | tionality of the President's proclamation in the | country’s wealth both in blood and treasure, and finally disposed of ere this, premises, it reminds us of a White House inci- | But here we are with more than half of Septem. It would be well if a complete list of all | dentin reference to General Grant. After the | ber gone, and we have hardly the indication of captures were published by the Navy Depart- | failure of his first experimental explorations | active moyements in the best of our armies. Our ment. Let it be full, comprising everything from | around Vicksburg, a committee of abolition | latest advices from the Army of the Potomac the commencement of hostilities, and let it state | war managers waited upon the President and | show it to bea bare two honra’ march from also, if the case is not settled, in whose hands | demanded the General’s removal, on the false | where it was on the Ist of August. Yet the it is, and the reason for the delay. Something | charge that he was a whiskey drinker, and | present is the season eminently fM¥orable for of this kind would be very usefal and satisfy | little better thana common drunkard. “Aht” | active movements. In these nights men sleep those interested, besides giving the public in- | exclaimed Honest Old Abe, “you surprise me, | well in camp, and arise full of vigor. In these formation of the immense amount of work per- | gentlemen. But can you tell me where he gets | days they march well, too, and fight well. Now the market for flour and-wheat, which were firmer. Corn was less inquired for, and was a shade lower. Oats were bopefully looking forward to the recognition of | in iair demand and steady. Provisions were in good re quest: megs pork, prime lard and choice Western butter werea trifle dearer. Sugars and tallow were active and ert that the Emperor of the French will not enter advancing. Teas. apices, tobacco, wool, fish, hay, hops, into an European war lest it should interfere with | linsecd and spirtis turpentine were saleable and tending upward. Whiskey was firm, with a fair business roport ed. Linseed oj! was again higher. The freight market federacy.”’ was less active and rates loss buoyant. The rebel news from Charleston is important, as it shows that the citizens are leaving that place hibited in North Carolina. The rebels are still have come round to the opinion of the Heratp. And the strength of this feel- ing on the part of our people and government is evidenced by the bit ter resentment expressed against them by all classes, and in the formidable naval and defensive preparations which are being pushed forward to meet a contingency no longer deemed remote. Ia six weeks from this our harbors will be ina condition to resist the largest vessels-of-war that England and France can send to operate against them, and wo shall have ready for service by the same time a fleet of monster iron-clads with which nothing that has yet been built can cope. Then comesa term to the policy of endurance which has tried the temper of the nation so severely, and which has entailed sacrifices that might have been avoided by « firmer and bolder course, their independence by European nations, and as- his designs ‘‘with respect to Mexico and the con- Tue Resets axp THE CominG Evections.—We notice that the rebel journals are congratulating en masse, taking with them everything ‘of value. themselves upon some benefits they expect to One of the English Blakeley guns, said to carry a gain from the suceess of the conservatives in shot of over five hundred pounds in weight, and | the coming State elections. This is an ex- placed in position at Charleston, has been bursted | tremely mistaken idea. The rebels gained while in the act of firing. The rebels console | nothing from the conservative victories last themselves with the idea that our “big gun” has | year, and they can gain nothing now or in fu- ture. On the contrary, they have suffered their bitterest and most decisive defeats during the time which has elapsed since the Central States EUROPEAN NEWs. gave their splendid conservative majorities. ‘The mails of the Arabia, which reached this | So it will be thissyear, which will doubtless see city from Boston, yesterday evening, brought our | the end of the rebellion. European files, dated in London and Paris tothe | At the outset of this campaign we felt certain Sth inatant. The papers contain some highly | that the conservative democracy would carry intoresting details of our telegraphic report from | the State by at least fifty thousand majority. Halifax, published in the Hxnaxp last Tuesday. \"But the factious course of Governor Seymour Thia compilation, which is given this morning, | «nq the Regency at Albany, and of Ben Wood with a letter from our special correspondent in and his followers here, has caused us to enter- London, presents the American, the Mexican, the tain some doubts in regard to this nesult. ‘The parade oe a ee Tribune and other radical papers keep stirring ‘A very apirited analysis of the new French pam. | Ben Wood up and drawing him farther and phlet, by M. Chevalier, on the Mexico-American | farther out of his depth every day, and all the question, appears in the Hanaup to-day. M. Che: | silly, foolish and nonsensical things be says are valier maintains that Franee should hasten to | eagerly quoted by the radical journals as the recognize the rebel confederacy from Mexico, and | gpinione of the democracy. If this nice little thus, by being the first to do so, gain the friendly game be not stopped before long the people alliance and trade of the bewnation, tn this be will begin to believe that the News is really thiaks the Fmperor would have the support of all | i democratic organ; and if this un- @he minor commercial nations of Rarope at least. founded opinion once becomes prevalent the Bie recommends a large emigration of Frenchmen fo Mexico, the elevation and sustainment of the democratic ticket bas not a ghost of a chance met aasimilar fate, and assert that Beauregard does not want any more monster cannon in his de- partment. Tae Times anv THE News.—That niggerhead organ, the Times, and that copperhead organ, the News, both have articles attacking the con- servative platform. This shows that they are both in the same boat, and is the highest praise the conservative platform could receive. If it suits neither the copperheads nor the nigger- heads, it will be sure to suit the conservative people of this State. First Reanmos x tum Seawowt 1 Senor Don Ange! Motia, the distingaished trage. noticed last weok, bas announced bis intention to is Course of classical readings (rom the Castilian poets on Monday evening next, at Dod. woith’s Hall, in thie Clty. The programa is a most auirackys ove, combiolng & I#erary with @ musical catertainment of the cholcost kind. ‘The distinguish blind violinist, F. Mollenhaner, and bis precocious boy of yoars of age; (he accorapiished musical @rsator of Bt, Ann's church, Me. Ricardo Gonvales, Mr. 3.4. f. JIr., musica! director of the new Rrooklyn Park a and other celebrities will ald the talented gtr 3 pot Americans—orpecially those who ere pi: call bra] (hte Jatin race on the American continent, and the | The people of this State are conservative, and he elace the war be ” “We cannot, Mr. President. But | the roads are good. Last year, from this time | picu ant harmonious language of Cuatieenagins , ly that party whigh they formed by tho navy sino ean. his whiskey? , Mr. . Bui x Grw ostabliabment of the new empire. they will support on! : , he o. ranaph ony M = - : Pdi Paci (rhage Lersad La Raat i i be ol Nie we peatiment, {qaatiesqgiate When Biow Geloane was gun: ' why do Tou devi to nowt” “Dowwuys. if * (Gr ovo month, Wee IW, gg wn Og, Me ext ena Be