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| 6 orrr® 8. © CORNER OF PCLTO AND Nassar OTS. a Ce ee Oe eeeter None but bank ble curreet lo lk om TRE DAT RRARD tenes ces por oUF TR WEEKLY BIEL. every Seeurday ot Five cene ee ee ee died . enneass 5 WOOO. ... ccnecerereee ns ennweninen teteeenee J - ee > Seems REO TEE Be. O78 akt ek ENTS THIF EVENING Wr 9O OARDEN Brosewey —D KO THRATRR, Braptway.—Ronneae FTE GARDEN Brmtway -Orwerce SFY ROW ERE THEATER Bowery —Gaie Beant r ~ “) 0 tm, POW RAY THRATOR Mowery —Mummomr—Jice oxo coe Peamenetn amr Mame MORROW Reon war — THe . nae ame Bqwass be ot er nom aod —. WINSTA LS Mockente Mall 62 Broad Fuoran Nomes Dances Boeresgras a —Mo « POON 6 MINNTREL BALL M6 Rroetwa —Srmores pone, Dam ee Goer AMBRICAD THEAT OR Be 668 Broatwar —Bucore Paprommes Benin 6 Mem lat eren oe were captured by the enemyin the early part of 3 s : the battle of Chettanoogs, were recaptured be- j ence. His two ideas are peace and Colorado REN NOUR TRATES, G8 Brondway —<onrnanen” fury the battle was over | gold. His correspondence is, as we can assert RK WESRUM OF ANATOMY. 119 Breageay The Board of Supervisors met yesterday. A ! from long and crue} experience, a terrible bore. i abe Lecees trom va MUM E, & communieation from Use Comptrotior, asking that | After Inspector Boole has abated all the other eneneate Aenteay oe ween, be , #04 be appropriated for additional election | nuisances which afflict this city, we shall request Lrow—bisc mayors As a—KeTeKoKd Vor < %ees, Wee referred to the Conunittee on An- . him to suppress the Chevalier Jewett. During T a, | + . = HOOLETS OFRRA HOUSE, Brostiys—trmense UH Te A resolution by Superviaor Tweed, | the recent absence of this erratic diplomatist in TRIPLE SHEET. TO THE PUBLIC. All advertisements, in order to save time an! secure proper classification, should be sent to the office before nine o'clock in the evening. ADVERTISEMENTS FOR THE COUNTRY Advertisements for the Waekty linear must be band | ed in bofore ten o'clock every Wednesday evening le clr “lation among the enterprising mechanics, farmers, ‘morchants, manufacturers and gentiomon throughout the country is increasing very rapidly. advertisements sorted in tho Warxry Manat will thus be seen by a large portion of the active and energetic people of the United states, THE SITUATION. Charleston harbor dates to the 26th inst. have been received by the arrival of the Arago at, this port. The reception of the news of Gen. Gillmore's promotion caused a great amount of enthusiasm | to be exhibited by the troops of the Department of the South. The siege is progressing favorably and when the attack again begins a satisfactory result may be confidently looked for. | The Richmond Examiner reports that another ‘HERALD. | ‘NEW YORK HEKALD, WEDNESDAY. ! town on the 20th instant, was announced as having arrived at Halifax yesterday afternoon; but eur agent at that port telegraphed to us, at cight ovclock in the evening, that the report was false. By the steamer Creole, which arrived at this port yesterday, we have advices some days later from Havana and St. Domingo. The details are, however, of little importance. Our corrospon- stents’ letters will be found elsewhere Onr despatches from San Francisco announce _ the wreck of the Russian war steamer Novich ow Point Keys, at the north entrance of the harbor, uring a fog, on Friday Inst. ‘The officers and crew She was from Hakodadi, Japan. The wrecked Russian officera report that Japan- accounts reached Hakodadi on the 30th of cust that the British fleet, which had been de- ed to Kagosinia to demand the surrender of the morderers of Mr, Richardson, encountered @ heavy fire from the masked batteries of the Ja- | Panes, which riddied the greater portion of the j feet, and caused the balance to retire from the | contest ‘The fleet of foreign naval veasels in our harbor wae rel foreed yesterday by the arrival of three Fngtieh and one French steam ships of war. Dogleh vessels are the Nolo, line-of battle ship, from Halifax. mmortalite, frigate, from Bermuda, Noble. despatch beat, from Halifax, The French vessel is the ‘saerriere, frigate, from Halifax. The French steam frigate Bellone was reported below last night. Colonel Loomis, of the celebrated “ Loomis Bat- has received a despatch from Chattanooga w#eting thet the fve guns of his battery, which tery,” The | General Meade will be strong enough to detail, in conjunction with General Keyes, & jul columa up the peninsula, while the main army is engrossiag the atteatioa of Lee from the north. Under this plan the militia forces indicated may be in Washington, ready for service, | within three weeka; and in ten days thereafter | fifty thousand men may be put ashore at Har: | rison’s Landing, on the James river, supported by 4 flotilla of gunboats, or at West Point, on the York river. And suppose they are checked within five milea of Richmond by the rebel for tifications, with even a aingle battery of half dozen of Gillmore’s Parrott guns Jeff. Davis may be shelled into a capitulation or a hasty retreat from any one of the numerous available points within five miles of the town. Gillmore’s long range Parrott guns will very materially simplify the work of reducing both Richmond and Mobile. | that the hints thrown out from Richmond in re- ference to Lee’s situation will not be neglected at Washington. We have no doubt that at this juncture, considering the inevitable collapse of the rebel financial paper money system, with the fall of Richmond the war would be ended; and we are sure that by the plan of ope- rations suggested Richmond could yet be cap- ' tured before the meeting of Congress | American Amateur Diplomatiats in Fa- rope. ' Colorado Jewett may be accurately defined | 48a man of two ideas and muob correspond- We trust, at all events, | SEPTEMBER 3), 1863.—TRIPLE SHSETS beea in prison with bim, and o friendship | with our peaceful inventions, our reaping and | formed within deageros is as permaneet as mowing machines, our gutta percha all sorts of | the stone walls which were alleot but not wm- | things, our telegraphs, our yachts—barring the | feeling witmenss of ihe tender and bely Gypay—our clipper ships, our boatloads of alliance. In one of the cells of the fortress of Core and flour when they were starving, and Ham the initials N ond W., carved with an | Mumberless other matters wherein we ex- old nail and enclosed with a felt tml | cited the surprise of Europe; but whoa tation of a wreath of lanrel, may doubt-| the war broke out they laughed at our less be seen to this day These facts | troops, joked about our volunteers, quizzed may seem trivial; but everything ls of im. | our “bloodless butties,” and haw-hawed bois- portance at a crisis like this A war with | terously at our iron-clads, our Monitors, which France is impending, and those lnithes may | they pronouoced not seaworthy and unfit for avert it. Can any one believe that Napoleon | anght save harbor de ence. would recognize the rebels, or pert in bie They laugh no more. Our iron-clads have Mexican scheme, if the Chevalier Wikotf exked | achiewed wonders, which make them tremble him net to do it? Would Palmerston be acon | instead; and then as to our cannon, they now federate with Jeff. Davis if the Chevalier Wiket! begia to respect oor warlike inventions, and | were in London’ It is evident, then, that the | betray by their fear that these huge engines sooner the President sends off the Chevalier the | of destraction have more effect as peaceful better; and we are glad to learn that there has arguments than all the diplomatic circulars ‘ = = Wasainaron, Sept. 20, 1863. VISIT OF THE SONS OF TEMPKKANCE TO THE WHITH HOUSE—SPRECH OF THM FRESWWENT ON TOTAL ABSTINENCE. The twenty-first anniversary of the organization of the Sons of Temperance waa gelebrated ere to-day. The Procession, on reaching the White House, was invited tw enter the Kast Room, which was nearly filled by the ladies aad gentiomen participating in the ceremonies. President Livcoin, on evtering was enthusiastionlly ae Plauded, and in the course of his response to the addresa presented to him, awid when ho was a young man, long ago before the Sons of Lemperance, a an organization, had an existence, he, in an bomble way, made temperance #pgeches, ond he thought be might say, to thisday, he had never by bis example, beliod what be then said Aa to the suggestions for the purpose of the advance ment of the cause of temperance in the army, ho conid not now respond to them. ‘To prevent intemperance in tbe army, is even a great part of the riles and artictes of war, It ts a part of the taw of the land, and was £0, he presumed, long ago, to dismiss officers already been some prelimisary telegraphing | ever written. Five hundred pound shells are upon the subject Tho Chevalier Wikeff wilt j weighty arguments; and when the good people redeem the follies of the Chevaliers Jewett and over the way bear about those cannon which Weed, and restore the lost prestige of American | are to throw a ball nine miles we shall find amateur diplomacy in Burope them all in favor of « speedy reconstruction of oo ht hd TE EE the Union. They will reason that if we go on Jacobins and Loyal Leaguers. this way much longer we shall make some The philosophers who sit at the feet of | invention, some'terribie discovery of a weapon, Greeley have added another erotchet to | which will destroy a whole nation at a blow, the many thonsands already wriggling | and they will be anxious to see a change come and rioting in their poor muddled | over the spirit of our dream. braina. They have filed papers claiming a We have but to continue our onward course patent right in the manufacture of the | now, but to strike a few more blows at the next President of the United States, and all | rebels, and peace must ensue. Europe has who are not io full Jacobinical communion | peen taught to respect us, if only from the with their concern are solemnly warned “nei- | evidences of our power and inventive genius, ther to meddle nor to make” with their mo- | and each defeat which the South shall suffer in nopoly, except on the following conditions: | the future will render her cwute all the more to divide the city into twelve election districts, | Europe he sent us so many letters that our was d. The bulance of the business which | waste paper basket was constantly filled to ame up Was o besiege 00,009 | OV¢!Howing. Now, however, the Chevalier has . P m4 sikiealine sito. | Peturned to this continent and issojourning upon the total $894,800. | tbe Canadian side of Niagara Fails, and bis rday, the will of | letters are longer and more numerons and ourned, the parties ; not le45 trashy than ever. This fact convinces * for a compromise. | us that the high rate of transatlantic postage children ef the late Dr. Stewart, | prevented the Chevalier from exercising his full t of guardianship is contested be- | powers upon us during hia European tour. We na - ° > re a4 bape eure ard | hope, therefore, that he will soon go back to and 0 decision reserved we procee@P8® | Europo again, aud that the next Congress wi t George B. Collyer, administrator of Tho- | 4. fowl double the rate of poatage aio priv mas Collyer's estate, involving the question of the |. eof the Daniel Drew and other steamboats, | aplatios The Chevalier Jowett's Laat letter was accom. There were traf exer gether to $1,200. a the Surre: was then preceeded with. Quite a scene ocenrred 4 ‘ 4 ta Court betweon Gen, Sandford and the witness panied by an immense “national appeal to the Collyer, and t urrogate waa obliged to inter- | Emperor Napoleon, the Ruropean governmonts, to enforce order The market for beef cattic was completely flooded, the receipts for the week exceeding thoae President A. Lincoln, Governors of the North- ern States, Representative Vallandigham, with a national prayer and a questioning of the puri- | Any outsiders having loose political capital to invest are not only at liberty to aink it, but are warmly invited 60 to do, in the “consolidat- | ed Tribune Chase-Butier Presidential two and a quarter per cents,” with interest payable in rebel currency, at the end of the Christian era. Such amall dealers, also, ag desire to go their little piles in such “fancy stocks” aa Cash Olay, of Kentucky, or Jim Lane, of Kan- | sas, may proceed in their ventures without ap- prehension. The philosophers who sit at the feet of Greeley will not put forth against such speculators any of the awful powers with which they claim to be endowed. But let no circle or set of politicians embark in any Presideutial forecastings which have not first received the approval of the great Ja- cobin organ, under pain of being held and treat- | ed as ‘‘idlers, babblers and self-seekers of low degree.”’ To mention the name of “Honest Abe” as even a possible, not to say probable, can- didate for re-election, will be hereafter mis- prision of treason; or to hint that McClelian, } Grant, Rosecrans, Meade, Gillmore, Thomas or | of any previous one on record, and reaching 7,061 head. Of conrse the market was not buoyant; yet prime cattle brought full prices, or 100. to Ile. Poor cattle were ic. a Ye. lower. ‘The range was from 6¢. to lic.-general well ng prices &. to 10c..and the average price about %c. Nearly all sold; bot the market at the close wasa very hard one. Cows were in re- eat, and firm of #50 to $65. Veals were steady at ¢. to Te. % Sheep and !ambs were very plenty, and about 25c, lower, Salos were at $3 « $6, chiefly at 8 50a 65 25. Swine were a shade easier, Corn fed sold at 4c. to 5%e., and till fed at 4440. a 6%c. The receipts were: 7,251 beef cattle, 106 cows, 6M weals, 14,152 sheep and ty of motives of Socretary Seward.” This transcendental document the Chevalier marked | ; “for publication.” We mark it for oblivion | Let the Chevalier Jewett take it to the j | Tribune or the trunkmakers. Poor Groe- | ley employed the Colorado philosopher j and sent him to Europe. Why, then, } | should we be tormented with his rubbish? | Greeley is the proper person to receive such | reports, and to read them and die. The private | | note which is enclosed with this appeal is of far | more interest to ua and the public. It restores | our equanimity to read that the Chevalier | canter on the Presidential course next year, | penalties of Jacobinical wrath. The Tritny ; dency has been taken under the fostering lambs, and 20,244 swine. assault has been made upon Charleston—this ‘The stock marke! was better yesterday, and thers was time from Battery Gregg. The rebels assert that | . csneraily better fooling all round. The advance of the even if the Union forces take or compe! the evacu- | day was lai), percent. Gold rose to 144', cloring at ation of all the fortifications of Charleston harbor, | 2%: Exchange advanced ¥o 107} 9198, Money was | “4 very eaay—call loans 6 per cent “that is not taking the city by any means.” [mg | Coon was moderately active and was higher again portant news from Charleston is looked for by the | yesterday. There was more doing in breadstus, «hich . ” pened at advanced prices, but closed heavily The pro- | rebels as likely te arrive “at sny moment. ~ | vision trade was also brisker; pork and lard were firmer. | the 22d inst. the rebels opened fre from Sullivan's | whisgey was depressed and asbade lower. A fair busi. | Jstand upon the Union works, and continued firing | ness was reported in groceries, metals, oils, bay, leather, | ait night and during the next day. General (Gill- | "lt S04 tallow at buoyant prices, Sitaew wen th gud ' here lest he should be confined in Fort Lafay- Jewett confesses that he is afraid to come back ette on bread and water, and without pen, ink or paper. If he is certain that this fate awaits him, we cordially invite him to return and sut- fer. At present the Chevalier is with Vallan- digham. “I leave to-night,” saya he, ‘‘to visit Vallandigham. [ design to keep him from sleeping.” Jewett, like Macbeth, can easily murder sleep. “Then,” adds this philosopher, “for Europe, and form the gold companies and | demand avd very firm. Hemp, hides, sb, fruit, seeds , Tesume mediation efforts.” This is a very mild more is said to have unmasked his guns at Bat- ang whalebone were moderately sought after. Ateuc.' way of stating that his former efforts have dismal- tories Gregg and Wagner as if ready to commence + the bombardment, and his men are atill busily em- ployed with teams and wagons in improving the works on Morris Island. ‘The arrival of the steamer Clinton at this port bringa dates from New Orleans to the 20th inst. Another female bread riot is reported to have taken place in Mobile on September 4, on which occasion the Seventeenth Alabama troops were ordered out to put down the disturbance, but re- fused to do their duty. The Mobile cadets were driven from the field, or rather, streets by the in- furiated women. The rioters openly declared that | “if some means were not rapidly devised to re- lieve their suffering or to atop the war they would * The suffering in Mobile is said to burn the cit; be very great. have alao been received by the Clinton. The rebel General Kirby Smith is reported to | be at Arkadelphia, with twenty-five thousand troops. Great dissatisfaction is said to exist with Kirby Smith, and General Cobell, of Texas, is talked of as afar better man. A powder mill, with one hundred thousand kegs of power, ex- ploded at Arkadelphia on the 16th inst. The loss is regarded fatal by the rebels. The border counties of Missouri still continue to be very disturbed. It is reported that General Curtis is to have command of Kansas, which is to be made into @ separate department, and General Pope is spoken of as having been assigned to the Department of the Missouri. From Southern sources we learn that the rebel General Hood is not dead; but has had his right leg amputated. A sketch of that officer is repub- lished to-day in the Heratp, from the Richmond Eraminer, The Southern accounts from the vici- nity of Chattanooga plainly show that the recent rebel victory was barren in result. tion 25,000 tons Scranton coal were sold, priew ranging | Jy failed. Colorado Jewett, great as he is at letter The details of General Herron's | operations in the vicinity of the Atchafalaya, La., | | from $5 06 a $7.06, Wool was in (air demand. The freight market was more active, The week's exports of | domestic produce reacbed $3,298,000 ' | Important Rebel! ‘we from Kichmond-— The Fatlare of Bragg ana the Danger of Lee. The news which we publish this morning | from the rebellious States furnishes a gloomy picture of the situation and prospects of Jeff. | | Davis. Disappointed sorely in regard to Chat- | tanooga, the late dismal rejoicings at Rich- | mond over the fruitless defeat of Rosecrans are | turned Into a more dismal apprehension as to | the safety of the army of Lee. His army was | depleted to enable Bragg to crush Rosecrans, | and then to wheel eaxtward, aad, with the com- | | bined forees of Bragg and Lee, to crush our Army of the Potomac, march into Washington, England and France The programme was magnificent; bat, failing at Chattanoogs, the danger to Lee is beginning | to be realized. The Richmond Erominer says | that, “while events linger in Tennessee, the | situati in Northern Virginia has become critical general attack on the lines of the Rapidan, aod railroad (Gordonsville) and the river, and indi- | cates a determination te fight.” In connection with this intelligence there are no more threat- enings that “the Yankees will be driven into the the Potomac, or behind the fortifications of Washington, broken, routed and in belpless confusion;” but, on the contra- ry, the position of Lee is declared to be “critical.” ‘This ie our own impression, and we believe, De Morny with historical references to Utrecht | pean steamers have brought us files ef Eng- and dictate a peace through the intervention of © that “the enemy is preparing for a | is massing his forces at Culpepper;” that “he § is also reconnoitering and encroaching on the - | writing, has made a fizzle of his amateur diplo- i matic mission; and poor Greeley, his master, ought te discharge him forthwith. Banks might prove very available nags for a | will subject the offender to—we know not what | claims the exclusive privilege of writing ar- ticles upon this subject, and, while going ding | dong for Chase or Butler every second day, | its intermediate days are occupied by hypo- | critically deprecating any discussion of names | for the next National Gonvention to act upon In a word, the whole affair of the next Presi- manipulation of the philosophers who sit at | Greeley’s teet, and on the evening of “Tuesday, November 8, 1864,” but not any sooner, will their decision on this momentous question be made known. Itis true that “on the Fourth day of next July” they are willing to permit the people “in their patriotic festivities to indi- { cate their preference respectively”—the word | “respectively” being, no doubt, intended to | limit the discussion as to whether Chase or Butler shall be Mr. Lincoln’s successor. “But, | until the Fourth of July next,” all President making, except by the Tribune, is to be “‘acru- pulously left to those who would increase our internal distractions and inflame our party cen- tentions, in order to give aid and comfort to the Confederate traitors.” | This programme is not a bad one, and is But, if the proverb that misery loves com- pany be true, the Chevalier Jewett bas a com- | panion in no less a personage than Mr. Thurlow | Weed. The article which we published yester- i day shows that Mr. Weed bas made himself the laughing stock of the world. Jewett has done ; no more and no less. Seward sent Weed and Greeley sent Jewett, and neither of these politi- | cal enemies can exult over the failure of the ' other's qpecial ambassador. It would be living in a glass house and throwing stones. It would be the pot calling the kettle black. If the Chevalier Jewett has this slight advantage ' that be ‘gold, the Chevalier Weed can certainly fall back upon his lucrative contracts. The fact ia that Thurlow Weed never under- stood anytbing beyond the dirty little poli- ties of this State, while Colorado Jewett never understood anything at all. That «nch men should be sent abroad upon amateur diplomatic missions is extremely singular. Why Seward should despatch Weed, and why | Greeley should despatch Jewett, are questions which must take rank in history with the fu- mous inquiry in regard to the person who struck William Patterson. Jewett has fidgetted and | worried aod mancuvered himself through Eu- rope, aod written letters to Queen Victoria and | | | ; other i Louis Napeleon, and the monarchs of the | Place de Greve in retaliation for the threat of | | Kuropean royalty that the French frontier | : should be invaded. H Old World; but be bas not saccesded either ia securing peace or organizing « single Colorado mining company. Weed dined and wined with half the nobility of England, aud hob-nob- bed with the Prince Napoleon. and bothered can fall back upon his Colorado | atrictly in the line of historical precedent. It | ' was at the festival held im the Champs de Mai | that the original Jacobins of the first French | | Revolution caused the picture symbolizing the | * truths of the Christian religion to be publicly | burned-—this picture being used as a screen | ! behind which, and to be revealed by its destruc- | tion, stood the crowned statue ef the Goddess | of Reason. It.was at this festival that atheism | was enthroned as the religion of the Jacobins; | , and it was in the midst of the “patriotic festivi-_ ' ties” of Chis occasion that the worst subsequent ‘ horrors of the Revolution bad their origin. With the Jacobins pf all ages, seasons of “patriotic festivity” have been popular, as fur- nishing good opportunities for violent political excitements; and in the Tribune's suggestion that our next President should be elected by turbulent and lawless acclamation, upon the festival of the “Glorious Fourth,” we see but | the beginning of the end. History is forever reproducing itself; and the Jacobins of to-day and of our country, as they gloat over the wholesale retaliatory system of massacre and | devastation which Jim Lane has inaugurated on the Kansas border, are but weak imitations, after all, of that riper and bolder Jacobinical villany which planned and executed the Noyades of Lyons and the slaughters of the | Tae Exeuise axp Tar FRevcn ON THE | Rawrace.—For some time past the Euro- | too, that Lee's difficulty is Meade’s opporta- | and Dunkirk; but be only succeeded in being } lish end French journals, all containing arti- nity. There are yet two months before him of | bumbugged by Moeqnard and in diplomatizing | cles which go to prove how much our good campaigning weather in Virginia—Octo. | out of the Emperor's message paragraph | friends across the water are worried by the os November—and the fine Virginia | which never was in it. Is this diplomacy! Are | events and incidents of our campaigns. The | ; autumpal weather sometimes laste til! the mid: | these diplomatists? Seward and Greeley ought The Court of Appeals at Albany has decided | gje of December. Here, surely, is margin enough | to be asbemed of such agents chat the legal tender notes issued by the govern- | for the march of the Potomac army to Riche ©The only real diplomatist in this country is } while the range of Gillmore’s Swamp Angel | ‘cont are constitutional, and by its decision con-,} mond over ell impediments. Still confronted , the Chevalier Wikof. President Lincola is | drives them into dismal lamentations over the ‘ims that made in the Seventh Judicial district, while {t overrules one made in this district. This sttles a serious question, that has heretofore | by Rosecrans, Bragg has been too seriously | erippled to reinforce Lee to any great extent; for Atlanta is as Important to Davis as Richmond. | But suppore that the army remaining with Lee aused some unpleasant doubts to be felt by many | poople. MISCELLANEOUS NEWS. ‘The ateamship City of Washington, from Liver- poo! on the 16th, via Queenstown on the 17th /4 taut, arrived at this port last evening. Our extracts embrace « French defence of the | cocking of the privateer Florida at Brest; the London Times’ worning to the Canadians to either prepare for their own defence or make ready to Join the American Union; the latest newspaper. reports concerning the invasion of Mexico; a statement to the effect that Cardinal Antonelli would soon visit the Mexican empire, with a notice of the leading eventa of the dramatic world abroad. Phe Cunard steamship Europa, from Queens. ig still too nearly in numbers equal to the army of Meade to justify an immediate advance, this difficulty may be speedily remedied. Leta | call be made upon New York, Pennsylvania and other convevient States for a body of thirty or forty thourand militia for sixty days’ active | service, sad lot these troops be placed is the | forts around Washington, and slong the roads, to defend the communications ia the rear of General Meade, and let the twenty, thirty or forty thousand veteran troops of Heintveiman, now in the Wasbington forts, be joined to the Army of the Potomac, and it will be enough to move onward, without serious inter ruption, to the very gates of Ricumond; for strong | fully aware of this fact, and bas bea one eye upon the Chevalier for some time past. Now that Seward's and Greeley's envoys have failed, President Lincoln is going to set hie fa- vorite to werk. The Chevalier bas that true diplomatic facalty of being « friend of every. body. whieh neither Jewett nor Weed possesses. He te a friend of Mr. Lincoln and of Mrs. Lin colon. Mr. Seward respects and esteems him highly. Mr. Stauton loves bim like a) brother. Mr. Chase has been heard to say that he would trast bim with watold gold, if be had it. Mr. Welles regards bim as the most wide. awake man in the country, next to the Seere. tary of the Navy. It may be truly and diplo- watically remarked of the Chevalier Wikoff that nose know him but to love him, sone name bim but te praise. Palmerston fears, but slulves bk «Tle Eowersr Napoleons ' achievements of our Monitors and [rousides H | they are forced to admit as being most singular, | failures of their hitherto boasted ordnance. i | They have spent millions upon the construction | | of buge iron-plated men-of-war, and now they are | aghast at the result of the battle between the | hopeless. The nations of Europe will not take sides against our rams, our Monitors and our swamp angels. Russta anp tue Unrrep Stares.—National re- lationsbips and alliances, when they are auch as to be of any real value, are not made; they grow; and, like other natural developments, they grow in the most unexpected manner and in the least anticipated places. It has not yet passed out of the popular remembrance bow much the people of the United States disgusted a certain portion of the European people a few years ago, at the time of the Crimean war. We sympathize i with Russia, Tradition held up its hands in horror and moaned melancholy sen- tences about a brotherbood in civilization, iden- tity of race, and such notions, Could it be possible that we, the descendants of Anglo-Sax- on, the iuheritors of the New World, bearing the banner of buman freedom “in the foremost files of time,” could lean towards the Northern despot, against Great Brita‘n, our so-called mo- ther, and France, our some time ally? Well, possible or not, we did it. We closed our ears to all that contemptible cant about the friend- ship of France and the kindliness ef Britain, ‘and held those two bullies at their true value. In Russia we saw a@ progressive nation in its early development, and one with many points of similarity to ourselves; and, as the great fight went on of two to one, we gave our sympathies bravely and honestly to the one. So it was then. Now we are in @ war more bitter by far than any whose battle fields were ever whitened by Crimean snows. Every steamer brings us new developments of the brotherhood we find in Great Britain, and of the friendship that France has for us. And now also we find that there exists in Russia the same active sympathy for us, as against for drunkenuess He was not sure that consistently with the public service, more can be done than has beem dono. All, therefore, that be coutd promira, was to have a copy of tho address submitted to the principal depart ments, and have it considered whether dt coutaina any sugzestions which will improve the cause ef temperance and repress drunkenness |} the army avy better (han it ia already done. He thought the reasonable men of the world had long since agreed that intemperance was one of the greate-t, if not tho very greatest, of alt the evils amongst maukind, That was not a matter of dispute All mon agreed that intemperance was & great curse, but differed about the cure. The suggestion that it existed to a great oxtent in the army wes true. But whether it was a cause of dofeat he koew not, but he did know that there was a good deal of it on the othor side. Therefore, they had po right to beat us on that ground. (Laughter ) The remark: of the President were listened to with great interest avd repeatedly interrupted by applause. WELCOME TO THY MISSOURI AND KANSAS DELKGATRS. ‘Tuere waa atarve and enthusiastic meeting this even- ing at the Union L xgue -oom in this city, to receive ané welcome the Kansos and Missouri delegations who are here to urge the removal of General <choficld and the ap. pointment of General Butler to the command of the De- partment of the Missouri, Speeches were made by Judge Hart and Colonel Morse, of Missouri, and Senntor Lane, of Kansas, atrongly denouncing General Schofield and Gow- ernor Gamble for the course pursued by them in that district, ag being iu the interest of slavery and aeoking to perpetuite that institution ix the State © Missouri, and declaring that at least two-thirds of the legal votera of the siate were in favor of the immodiate ‘ab lition of slavery in that State and throughout the Union. Senator Lane also denounced violently tho at tempt to establish a monarchy in Mexico, and onnounced himself in favor of the enfbrcement of the Monroe doc- trine and of war with any Power that souz7bt to establish: a monarchical government upon this continent. The Missouri Delegation have completed their address to President Lincoln, and will present it tomorrow by Appointment. After laving the White House, the com- mittee having charge of the arraugements will walt upon the Secretary of War. GENERAL HITCHCOCK'S BROCHURE. A brochur’ of General Hitcheock’s, commeating upon the order of the Secretary of War dissolving the court martial of which Genoral Hitcheack was Present, is pro- ducing considerabic excitement in military circles. Only about a dozen copies were printed for the 150 of partioutar friends Ut ia said to he one of the most rcrtaing and ear- castic articles ever written, Itsbs lately flays tho reore. tary ative. Mech wtonishmont is expressed at the fact that, notwithstanding this publication, the third tendered: Fostenation of General Hitebeock has not been accented; ‘but he is still retained on duty at tho War Departmont as ‘military @iviser o! the Seoretary. REPORTED RYMOVAL OF GENERAL SCHENCK, It ia ptated that General Schenck has been removed fyom the command of the Middle Department, com rising the city of Paitimore aud part of Mary!end. Jt is sald that General Tyler i# to take the command of the depart- mont. ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE ARREST OF DRARRTERS, Prevost Marshal General Fry has perfected his arrange- mente for the arrest of deserters, Having @ large avm- ber of deputies io addition to the pravost marshila in alt the Congreasions! districts, the chances of escape are much diminished, The reward for the ar:est of a deserter those harpies, that we felt for the peyple of | te {vereased to $30, It is determined to treat such parties Russia those few years ago. rican admirals fraternize in New York city, and Lisovski calis Farragut “an old Salaman- Bussian and Ame- | with the utmost rigor, in order, if poasiblo, to prevent the practice of desertion. ARREST OF MR. LAMB, CHARGED WITH SMUGGLING. Mr J. M. Lams, who haa peretofore hat the monopoly | der.” Day before yesterday the band of the | of the newspaper business in the Army of the Potomaa, North Carolina played “God Save the Czar,” |"fas been arreated and committed to the Old Capitol, on and the Russian cross, in cold, chaste beauty, ornamented the front of the Metropolitan Hotel. Then a citizen of the republic feasted the Russian Admiral and bis officers. In @ few days the municipal government of this city will entertain the same gentiemen in an official banquet, and a movement is in progress on the part of several citizens to give a grand ball in their honor. Away down East, in the hub of the universe, movements of the same character are on foot. Thus we express our- selves towards the subjécts of that awful poten- tate that our grandfathers used to call the “Czar of Muscovy.” Evidently there already exists a very practical alliance in sentiment | between the peoples of Russia and of the } United States—an alliance now in vigorotis growth. It depends entirely upon England and France whether this al ence between the two peoples, shall become a formal one between the two governments, INTERESTING FROM ARKANSAS. Moveme of the Rebels—Explost: s Powder Mill—General Blunt Prepar- ing for a Campaign in Texas, &c. St. Locrs, Sept. 29, 1865. A despatch from Leavenworth says — Five days’ later advices (rom Westeru Arkaoaas say the rebeis Coffee and Huater are encamped on Cowskin Prairie with one thousand men. Kirby Smith ts at Ark adelphis with the main body of the rebel army, which if said to sumber twenty-five thousand meu, General Cobell, with Texas troops and Arkansas conscripts, bas | Joined him. ‘A powder mill at Arkadelphia, containing upwards of one hundred thousand kegs of powder, exploded onthe | bama, oue of the river boats 16th. The loss ts regarded as fatal by the rebels. Great dissatisfaction exists with Kirby Smith. Gen. | qurea Cobell is regarded as the best man ia the State. noe, now in exist- | the charge of sunnggling quinine through the lines of the army to the rebels. « Tbe drag was concealed in packages: of bewspapers «dressed to him, and it is supposed that he has been in the habit of smuggling it through to Richmond, whore it is worth ome hundred and Mity dot- lars per ounce. TRANSPORTATION OF SUTLENS’ SUPPLIES. The project of serding out a train over the Orange ang Alexandria Ratirord weekly for the tran-mivsion of aut. lors’ supplies has been #bandoned for the present. It is understood that General Meade was in favor of the measure, but thit for rexsons connected with the preseut position and movemets of the army be could not gram the request made for suck accommxtatton at this timo. TK CASE OF CAPTAIN FOKD. The case of Captain Ford is atil! on-trial before General Slongtts court martial, the ex»mination of witnesses for the defence having been comme cod this morning. ARMTVAL OF CONRCKIPTS FKOM NEW YORK. ‘Tho wramer John Brooks arrive! a Mexavdria today | from New York, with wine iondred conscripts, in enorge { of Manr Scott, of the Sixty first New York. ‘These con cortpis are to fl! up the Fifty-sceond and Seventy aint New York regiments ‘The trip was made to thirty aix hours ‘fhe conser!) 's behaved very well, and gave vat little trouble om the passage, being coupored of a better clasa of men tha have been received from aome sect! ne or the cooniry. THR PROPOSED ARMY mt VRSTIMONI AL PLLAN For aome days an address ha been widely ciren'ated through the army soliciting a ten cent sul ton for & memorial of esteem to be presented t Major General McCielian, The portios who subscribed had their money returned to them yesterday, and were informed vhat the desiga bad been abandoned, DESTRUCTION OF ONE BLOCKADE KONNER AND Car- TURK OF ANOTHER. | Commodore Bell, commanting the Western Gulf Block. ading§ Squadron, reports that, un the 12th inet., the | steamer Fox, captared by the revels in April last, wae | cuased imto Missirsipy! Sound and burned. At the same time sooth’r bieckade rupuer, called tho Ale fran Mobile, was chesed into Chandeleur Isiande and cap Of this captere the Commodore says— On abore they have been deluded into the belief tuat the TO GeNEKAL General Bluat ts at Fort Scott, organizing new Kansag | veges captured is the privateer steamer Alabacss, aod regiments, which he expects to lead into Texas in a few | she may be 6 publicly announced days. ‘THS REBEL STRAMAR PHANTOM DESTROYED. Negroes are arriving here im large oumbers to Join | The United states steamer Connecticut, Captain Almy Kansas colored regiments. IMPORTANT FROM MISSOURI. reports that on the 284 inst. she drove on shore and de the rebel steamer Phantom, loaded with arms, ac, intending to run the Dlockade at Wilmington, he was built in England, and is supposed to bave been tm Governor Gamble Arming Heterned tended for» privateer. The Coopectic ut chased her about, Rebel Seldiers—Union Men amd Women | four bours, and finding thet she was about being capturee Driven Out of the State=Terrorism | ber officers fan ber ashore, took to their boats and Prevailing, éc., &e. Leavenworth, Sept. 29, 1863 Governor Gamble having authorized Colonel of Liberty, Mo., to arm mea in Platte and Clinton counties, be has armed mostly returned rebel soldiers and men under now driving Union men out of Missouri. Over one eacaped. TRE COURT OF CLamMa, Moss, The United States Court of Claims will commence at October term next Mondsy Ta jurisdiction was enlarged by an act of the late Congress, A very lange number af Donde, pew claims have bees fled, including tty Ficyd accep heey! ropa tances of Russell, Majors & Oo. to the exteat of $20,000. dred families crossed the river today. Many of the Judges Black, Curtis, Cushing avd Broadhead, of Bt. cai, | little Weehawken and the buge iron-clad At- | wives of our Union soldiers have been compelled t0 leave, Janta, which the rebels fondly imagined would | and four or five Union men have been murdered by ' ewallow wp the little Monitor as a great bull- | Mose’ mea, | dog would a little black and tan terrier, But | 4 goapatch from Leavenworth says — it wax quite the reverse, and the monster was! ,uthentic Advices have been received at Leavenworth, knocked to pieces by the “cheesebox” im leas | from Washington, tothe efvck thet asses will bo made time than it takes to relate the exploit. ‘Then | s seperate hn dere ran quads wont Pane that throwing of three hundred pound shells, panini sovenet Coton men were killed. A perfect enate filled with Greek fire, five miles into the rebel | ‘of terrorism exists there, city, was a source of wonder and dismay; and | 4 despatch from Springfold says it was stated and be- vw the English are bewailing the moneys spent | tered among the army men there that Major General upon their iron-clads, their fortifications and © ; ment of Missourl. their guns, all of which were presumed to be 90 | "7; vernor Yates leaves to-night for Ohio, whore he wilt superior. ' to the Unioa men. We were wont to astonish General Pope is now in St. Louis “cousins” - Sr. Lovis, Sept. 29, 1863, military. are counsel in the case, which will be argued af & yore tion of law. Many claims come from Lowmmes, V ire’. nia and other States for losses and deprecstias by (be General MeClellam Seresaded at Puita- | pope would benssigned to the command of the Depart. Movements of Admiral Farragut.