The New York Herald Newspaper, November 6, 1865, Page 4

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, * ego Hor vores HERALD............0 ei ad , _ houses of the Legislature, The officers to be voted for ~~ OFFIOR WN. W. CORNER OF FULTON AND NASSAU STS. | Goternor SX Velume XXX. —————— AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING, BROADWAY THEATRE, Broadway,—Sax, BAN FRANCISCO MINSTREL frre Hotel. —Ermiorian OUNG AYRICA ON THK FLYING ‘TONY PASTOR'S OPERA HOUSE. 201 Bowery.—Sing- ae, Dancino, Buatxsques, &c.—OLD Dame Grisas. COOPER INSTITUTE, Astor man’s Evenuvas or Mystery axp ' MONTPELLIER’S OPERA HOUSE, 87 and 89 Bowe: enter. Sinaurc, Dancivc, Pantominxs, &¢,—' Visions, Secon Sigur, { HOOLEY'S OPERA HOUSE, Brooklyn,—E: . ‘1 E, Brooklyn.—Ermiorian Muy: URLESQUES AND PANTOMINES, YORK MUSEUM OF ANATOMY, NEW YO! SEUM OF ANATOMY, 618 Broadway.= A M. wre. | BROADWAY ATHENZUM, Broadway.—Gramp Serge u- Tiavaions—Pavonama oF Noutuxan axp Souruzay mora, \_ SRREOSCOPTICON Grand and Crosby atreels, Now York, Monday, November 6, 1865. Saules of the New York Daily Newspapers. OFFICIAL. ' Receipts of ' Year Ending _._,Wame of Paper. May 1, 1865. Heavy. - + $1,095,000 $1,095,000 ‘Times, Tribune, World and Sun combined., 871,229 NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC, Our city subscribers will confer a favor by reporting any of our city carriers who overcharge for the HeRaup. Country subscribers to the New Youx Hxnatp are re- quested to remit their subscriptions, whenever practi- cable, by Post Office Orders, It is the safest mode of transmitting money by mail. | Advertisements should be sent to the office before nine o'clock in the evening. THE NEWS. THE ELECTION TO-MORROW. ‘The election throughout this State will be held tos tiorrow, when the qualified voters are to choose various State, judicial and local oMcors and members of both ‘on the State ticket are Sccro‘ary of. State, Comptroller, Attorney General, Catal Commissioner, State Treasurer, Btate Engineer, Inspector of State Prisons, two Judges of the Court of Appeals and a Clerk of the same court, « Besides all the officers to be chosen, the electors are to decide by their ballots whether the State loan of thirty tmillions of dollars contracted to pay bounties to voluntecr soldiers shall be made a debt payable in twelve years, with interest, or whether, by the levying of a special tax, the whole of it shall be discharged next year. Every man entitled to a vote, and who wishes to ox- ercise his right to-morrow at the polls, should not fail to-day to visit the place in his district whero the board of Pegistry meets, if he has not done so already, to bo sure ‘that his uame is on the poll list. The various registry Places throughout the Metropolitan Police District will open again to-day, and this is the last chance forall joters, a8 by tho law of the last Legislature the old sys- of swearing in votes on election day is abolished. the closing of the registry places on Saturaay eighty- it thousand nine hundred and seventy-four names had yen put on the lists in the entire city during the four days that they bad been open, and no doubt this will be a very busy day with ‘hem, as the number still Jacks over twenty-five thousand of reaching the vote polled by this elty at the Presidential election in 1864, which was one hundred and ten thousand threo hundred and ninety-five, On the second, third and eighth pages of to-day’s Hrraxp will be found a comple'e l'st of the regis- try and polling places, besides a large collection of other {nformation of importance to voters, in both the forms. @f pows and advertisements. MISCELLANEOUS. ‘The steamships City of Cork, Captain Bridgeman, from Queens:own on the 2ist, and the Germania, Cap- tain Eblors, from Hamburg on the 224 of October, ar- . #ived in'this port yesterday. Their news has been anti- ” “eipated by, that of the steamship Java, from Queenstown ‘on the 22d, published in Saturday’s Heaatp. The Ger- mania brought usno newspaper files, as she came as an. extra voasel, direct from Hamburg. ‘The steamship Marathon, Captaim Inglis, from Liver- pool via Boston; tho Columbia, Captain Barton, from « Havana on the ult. ; the Evening Star, Captain Wim- © “pony, from New Orleans on the 28th; tho Key Wost, _ Captain Hawthorn, from Key Wast on the 20th; the ‘Atako, Captain Crowell, and the Weybosselt, Capmin Patidty, ffom Savannah on the Bist ult, and Ist inst. re- apectively, and the Emily B. Souder, Captain Lockwood, 585 Broadway, opposite wares, Dancing, &c.— Place.—PRoresson yf c, SCHOOL OF ART—Corner of two years of the rebellion, as It was stated wore adopted declaring of the Legislature to | place on Saturday:inst.’ area renee tc cong ‘The Clipper cotton factory, at Woodbury, three miles served , and requesting Provisional from Baltimore, was totally destroyed by eo ars Se canton upaiaieh its Pa fire yesterday morning. The loss is estimated at noxrly | into the Union by virtue of adopting the con militia, A resolution asking the President to pardon the | one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, on which the | stitution originally, or were {admitted in the rébel Commander Tatnall and restore to him his property | insurance is between fifty and sixty thousand dollars, regular way, as Territories, Having thus been ra etnceny er, ayy of trammh, Gn, ane COMETOHE Sate Southern Mepeotentan legally partion to the confederate, ot 9 af . . tives. toined elect representatives lie nla reer determination of the radicals to prevent | houses of Congress, and exercised that right. pico at fecant very interesting conversa. | the admission of the representatives from the | ‘This right they have mot lost, untess they have tion on the present conditiod of the Southern country | States recently in rebellion into Congress is | geyered their connection with the Union. The with a planter of much intelligsnce, and who has syne daily becoming more and more epparent. | insurrection being suppressed, they haye the elled extensively since peti: Ps danny pape a tne | They are showing their teeth whenever and | game right to elect their members to Congress Bower) parapet Sout Carolina. The | Wherever they dare face public opinion, and | now as they had prior to'the rebellion, No lew Smtipise agg that of poverty and destitution, a | are dodging around in search of plausible | of Congress is necessary, unless they have deficiency of crops of every sort, and a widespread pros- | reasons to justify them in adopting such a revo- | Jegally seceded. If their secession ordinances tration of agricultaral operations, producing ¢reat des- | iotignary course. Appeals for humanity, future | were legal, then all the sacrifice of life and ex- Pondency among the white inhabitants. On many of party success, and various other schemes are | penditure of money to prove that they had no the plantations the improvements, as well the dwellings to asa cover to, or justification of, right to sece do has been in vain. Every mem- ouses, houses and costl: hinery | Tesorted : nee ae oe rosinc nn neces: | their intention to override the constitution.| per of Congress who votes forthe rejection -of sary for working sarried off, daring the progressof the war, | One of their last dodges is the manipulation of | the Southern Representatives or Senators, who and tho planters, besides finding themselves Borah the Clerk of the last House of Representatives. | apply for admission with a certificate signed by by this state of aflatr, meet with infale ‘route ina or | The radicals, it is asserted, have eaptured him | the Governor of their respective States show- thet ns A a weal ony are not yet ableto | by making him their candidate for Clerk of | ing that they have been legally elected undér pret outa the next Hose. Hehas no doubt been shown |\ the laws of that State, declares by‘his vote that. ‘An exhibit made up atthe Post Offae Departmentshows | ¢hat he cannot be elected if the Southerm repre- | the State is out of the Union. It will be id that the whole number of post routes #0 far.postored iD | sentatives are’ permitted to vote’during the | declatation that secession was legaf, and that the Southern States is two hundved and forty-one, em- | ea nizetion of the House, and therefore sets | the Confederate government and all its acts ‘less than by the contract in existence'st the outbreak of | shall and: who stall not be” this form, them o' a the rebellion tor tie peak amount of varvice. Congress. We shiall soon see how much} was right; tliat the States have thé:power to Important news in regard to the war be¢ween ee iruth there’ is in these’ statements and know | withdraw from: the Union, and thus been and the allies was brought by the bark Katharine Maude, | 1400, ne belongs. If the reports be of | estabHshed the fiat that the property pce Si a eco oe kirk ia ncaa he has gone over to the revolw | Southornsi ths can'be seized and sold tdiited in ang, Ww! 5" me had bees captured by the allics aftey'a stulWemnly maim | tionary Jacobia Rstogean fone, vue need - their rebellion, Oudter tine Woolston the-confis- st ot beaut” | PREGA ie taken ae opponion of |e eet teams al al te ert atel into the army f " e grourid.. epee he 11 cholera on bose®'the steamship | the radical faction to the President’s restora- follows, tien, that Congress must phate pie Ra Atalanta, af the Lower Quarantine, are-reported' by the | tion policy, is totally untenable: The mildest | prosident Johnson’s reorganization policy, and physician in charge; but the disease te’ still confined to | term that can be’used in’ refe: rence to these | admit the glen stele atdabsn a the steerage, none of the cabin passengers having yet rep’ lec pursuance schemes fs, that they are revolutionary. thereof, or’ accept the alternative—approve secession and establish’ it asa right. Which been attacked. There is, however, no eamse for alarm, - or as there hag not’yet been the slightest sigu of cholora in | The federal constitution is.so explicit upon the city; but the Health Commissioners, ag also many | the formation of Cougress and whoshall com- [) wit that body do? pose it that it seems: impossible to place but Privato individuals, are taking necessary prexcautionary ‘ SS eet one construction upen-it. Even: the law of | _ Nesue Auurrioy—Tat Desme ror Porrricar measeres. It would be well if these matters’ were more generaty attended to by the people, aud taevoity put: in 3 Howors.—In the present canvass i such @ condition of cleanliness as might: completely | COMEFess, which the radicalsare-citing as au- cat aaah eplendla instanbolal Hg o ee avert the futuro vimtation-of the scourge. ‘The.Governor | thority to exclude the representatives. from the B' of New Jrsey'has issued @ proelamatios caltigyg” on the | Southern States, directly upsets their theory. | With which political honors are sought, of the municipalities and individuals to look aftoretueirsaai- | It declares that the Clerk shall ‘place upon the | °Vidity with which our citizens rush forward at ee _| roll “the names of all persons;.and of such to serve the public in such perilous places as* aici: ra sca nt the: terrible rava ges -comamitted! persons only, whose credentials show that they the Assembly Chamber and' the court rooms.” pping onthe Mlorida coast by the recent This eagerness almost is that with which severe gale aro givenin our Key Wost dei :patchers.. The:| Were regularly elected in accordance with the me ae dees steamship Newbern, which arrived at Key West on-the-| laws of their States respectively, or the Iaws of | *20ther class of’ the people volumteered when 26th ult., picked up at sen omthe 26th fuurmen found!| the United States.” Certainly no: one can for | the country only tequired their services on the floating on a raft, who- provedito: be the auty: survivors: |’ 9 moment elaim that a person elected centrar; battle fields and in forts and on men-of-war— of thirteen botonging ‘t9 the ship: Mersoy, «wf Liverpoo] i i laden With-ahoomty which frandered "4 nea these | t0 the Iaws of bis State shall. be admitted to | Places which we ell know are: perfectly safe. men wote in a miserable condition, having len for four | Congress. Those who will apply-for ‘seats as | 9 the purely city part of the State, election days exposed to the winds an@ waves, witboat any:food.: | representatives from the Southern States will | there are twenty-six places to fill, and seventy- The Prussian Dark Merger, from New Ori cua for-Liv- | not claim admission upon any:such pretexts. eight men anxious to fill them—an average of erpool, was fallen in with: onthe 27th n)t, in-@ com-| hey will come with their certificates signed three for each place. How thé hearts of the pletely disabled condition;. bythe Newbetn, and towed. y Re met eae the Mckee ae chad ae certified to by the proper State officials, people must thrill at this noble:and patriotic the Florida const the berky John Wesley | showing that they have been regularly elected, | SPectaclel This spectacle is more: remarkable and J.-M, Howard). eridoa, numorows ovi- | and the Clerk has no more power,.even by the | 1 the case of our would-be Assemblymen than dences of adjitional wrecks. The steamship | law of Congress, togo behind those-certificates | 12 sny other-case. We are entitled to seven-' heretofore: reported: ashore fe miles south y from Virginia than he has from New York—from | @" representatives there, and‘ fifty-one men South Carolina than from Massachusetts, Ifhe | *T¢ ©ger to represent us. Nay, they are Catharine Whiting, from: this: port / on the 19th ult. for Galveston. It is tuonght that: Her | passengers and crew | ¢at-rejeet them from one State he-ean from all, | Working day and-night and spending money were saved. The: ship Carobine £ Nesmith wont achore | Where is the law giving him. the power to | !vishly to secure the privilege. The pay of about forty miles west of Key West on the 2ist wl Sho | gay that Governor Fenton’s .certification of | ‘te position is, for one hundred days, three had a valuable cargo of. cottom: '/ ft is thought that tho dollara a day. . It is impossible: to get good of Carysfort Reef, Fla.,.ia sappew! »d to have been the that section of the country. The tide of enter- and emigration from the North and from Earope only waits a full restoration of peace and: political privileges to flow with a steady and donstantly increasing volume. It has set in + from the North, and it will soon swell by add\'tions, both from here and the Old World, when political demagogues and sec- tlonal fanatics cease to obstruct the progress of that ricta portion of the United States. The tende acy of population, when there are no serious «#auses to hinder, is always from colder to wanner regions within the temperate zone. This has been so throughout the history the bhuma@ race, and arises from natural causes well \wderstood. Not only is the cli mate of the’ Youthern latitudes more genial, and! more attri\ctive and enjoyable, but the soil is: more’ pr°vlific, and there is a greater variety of produc tions. Who, then, would not change the sterile' rocks of New Eagland or the cold‘climate'of ¢he North for the rich and sunny South, as soon’ 98 peace and harmony shall be restored? The ins titution of slavery and the sectional ‘conflicts it c1 spt which ory dt eo dency to make people of the same race allen ech Olney are thinge-of*the past. The cause is removed, and the effect w'ill soon cease to exist. ‘The very war which’ bas produced this the: people of the two sections more friendly than they ever’ were. They have | learned to respect the bravery and high quali- ties of each other. Each fomg%t for a political object; not from antipathy of race; one for separate existence, in order to preserve, as they believed, their domestic institution of slavery; the other for union and to avoid. present and future disintegration. The former, with their institution, have succumbed, and the latter have triamphed in the grandest and most deci- sive wars The defeated accept the arbitrament, and, the cause for which the war’ was made , being removed, they desire to forget the past, and to identify themselves with the grand des- tiny of this reunited country. This-is: evident from their‘declarations and conduct, as well \8 from a common sense view a f tlietr interests. For these reasons the Southerm people are in- viting and wilt welcome’-Northe.tn inmmigration and enterprise. Both wee that their interests sre identicaly and, from necess ity, interested motives, and identity of institutions and race, they will work: together’ hereafter’ in develop- ing:the immense naturat:resources: of that sec- tiow ofa common country. The idea of making another St.. Domingo or Janvaica. of the magnificent terril'ory of the South—of giving, the negro. possestiion of and conixol over that. fairest:portion of the Amori- can continent, as- our’Jacobin republicans would, is the most insane: and impessible one that ‘ever entered?into the mind of (man. The negro, however, will ‘become: # useful element, though a subordinate one;im this gre at. work of development - and’ progress.. His ‘labor will persons on board of her were ras| cued. The bark Wal- tham, from New Orieans for Bostos |, was also among tho vessels wrecked on \the Hlorida:¢| oast. Other craft will be found noticed in..another colar nn as among the suf- ferers. The officers of the-steanzsitip Wi sybosset, from this port for Savannah, when off Cape-Hit teras, on the 27th alt., saw a vessel on ite, on Meardio f which, soon after she was discovered, there ocsurre’ an explosion, by which she was, blown ..up; and: com >tely destroyed. It was thought that she was a smail river steamer, and that those on board of hor.were tad en off by a vessel which was seen lying alongside-previa us to the explosion. ‘ne November term of;the: ( ‘ourt of General Sessions commences this morning. J idge Russel will preside; and Assistant District Attorum , Bedford will conduct the prosecution. Thecalendar ® very heavy, and several homicide casea.will, be-dispa sed of tho most important of which are theindictmeuts agaist Wm. O’Koefo and. James J. Oram. It ‘6 probal sle thas the trial of Jenkins, the dilegod Wail street deta ulter, will take place toward the close of the term, ‘There was a mysterious @ xplosion. yesterday in front.of the Wyoming Hotel, No. 933 Greenwich street, by which twenty-two persens wereininrcdand several of the sur- rounding buildings ceriously damaged. The affair is still a matter of mystory, amd is to-undergo a thorough inves hotel, is the heaviest loser, The explosion was caused by amunknown compound, placo@ in a box, the.same being left with the hotel. praprictce by a German named Theo, Leers. The boxy beivg: discovored on fire, it was damage fully described in another portion of cur, paper. A.ldittonal particulars of the effects of tho severe earth, quake shocks experienced im San Francisco on the 6th turbahoes of the earth, tho. Art five occurriug during the tigation. Mr. William Stoddard, the proprictor of the |‘ Union, The North held that they had no right removed to the sidewalk, when it exploded, coing thei! once raised armies to quellittie rebellion. This and 91h of last month, and: heretofore at diffsrent times, | SOVernments were in. the- liands of the insur noticed in our columns, are farnished by one of our cap. | Fectionists, These weve all set one side by the respondents ii that city. There were six Mistinct ut’ /~President, nd Provisional Governors ap- | arrived here yes- | afternoon and night of tho 8th, ata little before one, anid at four, seven and ten.o’clock, and the sixth at hall-past ten in the forenoon. of tive 9th. “Tho water front of tho city, comprising tha, main business strects, which are to a considerable extent located on made ground, saffered the most, nearly all the bnildinge here being to same es: tent shattered, sad some of them thro#n down and com- vention have memorialized President Johnson for the | pletely ruincd. The back and higher, part of the town, pardon of Joff. Davis. The potition of the Mississipp!- where all the best private reaidences are situated, suffered ‘Sk, Which is of considerable length and expressed in | only in the erach,ing of plastering and walla, breaking of nee from, Charleston on the 24 inst., alo > Louisiana elects State officers and members of Con- grem to-day. Alabama slocts a Governor, members of the Log sla- ture and othor State officers to-day. Both the Mississippi Logislature and tho Georgia Con- {of those States coultelect officials for them- the election of members is correct, ahd that Governor Humphreys’, of Mississippi, is a fraud? To attempt to carry any:such decision into practice would be a direct violation, not only of law, but of the constitution. Nor has either house of Congress any authority to make any such decree. They have, it is true, the right to go behind the certificate and examine into the election in case of contestants ; buteven then the person holding the certificate is con- sidered prima facie a member, and acts as such, until his contestant proves that. he is not enti- tled to it. The question Involved in: the admission or rejection of the Southern representatives in Congress is above and beyond all this. It is a question that strikes at fundamental law, and, yin fact, the very point which our government , contended for during four years of fierce war. }The Southern States claimed that they had the fright to secede trom the confederation of States jat pleasure, passed their.ordinances of seces- esion, and declared themselves ont of the tosecede and set up for. themselves, but that their efforts in that direetion were simply an insurrection against the government, and at has been accomplished.. On the suppression of the rebellion it wes: found that the State pointed to adminisicr the laws, until the people + selves, in pursuance of, the laws which existed, ’ prior to the attempt-to, rebel. This the South. ern people have been dwing. They have elected members to their Legistatures in several ef the | | States, avd those bodies, as the constitution of the Unived States. explicitly empowers them to do, have provided, by law for the election of be made. availible, and be rewarded, throughout tbe whole’ South where the race is now scattered:. But in the course ed, to pay two-dollars a day to represent usin | % ‘ime, as the States become setiled the Assembly. . There can of course be no More with, white; poopie, be will, ° Sad; his other motive than the honor, and thus it is home:en- the -rioe--and gotten lands. ot | the Atlantic coast of South Carolina and Georgia, idore ane ord migndsan enon roi Meg sors on the shores of tho-Gulf of Mexico, and over the déep alluvial: lands: of the Lo wer Miksis- doubt that: ali danger to this city from the | sippi... These regionsiare adapted! to kis con- cholera may be averted by a rigid enforcement | stitution.>.He cam thrive: in all th.e vigor of of the few hygienic laws that wili preserve the | manheod and luxuriate under a ‘tropical sun cleanliness of our streets and ofthe tenement | in canebrakes and ‘rice: swamp?:, where the houses. Our only danger is irom filth. The | white man cannet». This must be the ulti- cholera in Western Europe is lése virulent and | mate home; of. the-mass: of the negro race. tenacious thie year than ever before; and if it | Thoze: Southern: States: that bor’ ier the North, really visits us it will, perhaps, be even less se- | the uplands, hillyandimountain ‘country of the vere than, im 1854, when there were two thon- | Carolinas, Georgia, Alabama, M ississipp!, Ten- sand deaths. But we may prevent even that | nessee, Arkansas.and' Texas, wi Il be settled by loss if weewitl. Let our people remember that | a numerous working white popt ilation. more than half the population of this great city Within the area,of the: Soutly arn States nearly live in tenement houses and in cellars. Five | ait the produetions: neeessar y for tle subsist- hundred thousand live in tenement houses and | ence of man,,orthat enter in to commerce, are one hundtedand forty-three thousand in cellars..| found. The-beet: flour coms:s from the wheat It is this latter class that the, cholera will seize | golds of. Virginia andi ether fparts..of the South. upon first. Let our philanthropists better the | yt is the best and greatest tebacco growing condition: ef these people, and our authorities | region in:the world The Guif Stream and a keep theit cellars and alleys clean. Prevent } suitable soil: make it thr, only. country where the accumelation there in the winter’s cold of.| the .long: staple- cotton tan be grown. Corn filth that the summer’s sua-will fod ready, ant} wit} grow lnenrisntly wnd yield abundantly, the emanations from which,will furnish a good | with little! labor, ang. im many places by medinmfor the spread of, the @isease. Do this | scratcing the earth. The. sugar cane rises and we need not fear the,.cholers. rand swells, to an enoy mons site, full of juice, ‘Tue Rrowrrariox ov: Vorgns.—To-day, af- | ftomethe teoming soll} of louisiana; and where: ford the voters. the lest ebanco to recbter | 18 there ang tice found like that of South Caro-- board in Albany for less than five dollars a day. Here; then, are fifty-one patriots ready to spend money ir election schemes}. and, if eléct- | their names before election; and all who want, lina. and Georgia? Look, too, at the grazing to,have a voice in: the cheice of the officets.to | ls, thafine stock, and:the-weol of the South. be-elected must be-om band betimes., There | HOW. valuable, tos, are. the forests of oak, of e already registered eighty-four thousand pine and other timbor which our shipbuild- voters, This registration has been made in } CT Sppxeciate so much. The mountains four days, giviag an average of twenty-one | *T@ fill of the finest iron, coal, copper, | thousand ® day. The last day will, hardly be-| ®4 gold. Fruits of, every desoristion. grow abundantly. Nowhore, perhaps, di tho: peach, allegiance, and though many of those engaged in the The Ree. Morgan L. Dix preached a sormon on yoster- edie feturned to their homes, the peoplo still miss | day, ia Trinity Chapel, in whih,he stated that thore was 4m thetr midst and long for the presence of Davis, with- imectf to them by his “purity and integrity of ebar- | tion in Philadelphia, He also furnished some interesting ‘act -davotion to principle, fortitude when suforing | facts In regard to tho work of the convention, ‘and generosity when successful,’’ that his name has be- The corner stone of a Roman Catholic orphan asylum come with them. “a household word.” They maintain | to be erected in Brooklyn was laid yesterday wtth imppe- ‘that it wae no lawless spirit that plunged them into re- | ing ceremony, Bishop Loughlin, of that city, presiding. volt, that he was merely their representative in the re- | The Trich benevoloat and charitable societies turned out in toition, ‘and that as they have been forgiven he thould | great force on the occasion, and it was computed that be. bo also, and be allowed to return to assist thom at their | tween thirty thousand and forty thousand people were ‘‘presont toil and labor in Toorgantzing tho social struc. | present. The site is on the corner of Wyckoif street and ture.” Inconclusion they ngsort that the gulf between | Albany avenue, in tho Rastern District, f : the North and the South has not yet boon bridged, and | Tho festival of 8t Charles Borromeo was oo! brated nt ‘that it cannot be until Jef is unconditionally pardoned. the Sydney e Roman Catholic church, Brooklyo, last The Georgians include with Jef. in their petition Alex. | evening, by a grand ninsical performance, subsequent to ‘ander H. Stephens and a number of other rebel leaders | which Archbishop McCloakey delivered a most intervat- famed and all other rebels now imprisoned. ing and eloquent address, embracing @ sketch of the no- The political issues in Mississippi are described by our ble character of the saint in whose honor the ceremonies Jaekexon correspondence as rapidly becoming more dis- | were performed. A vast throng was assombled on the favors iting to the freed. | occasion. elias ra venta; ocean, ta of testifying in It was supposed that the Rev, Henry Ward Beecher, the courts, while the other wishes to allow them no | who early in the week had a lengthy interview with greater privileges, excepting their freedom, than those | President Johnson, would make his conversation the they had while in a state of slavery. The former Plopic of discourse last evening, in Plymouth church, party, a is well known, ranks as one of its chief | Brooklyn. A large concourse was therefore assembled ; fenders Provisional Goverhor Sharkey, spd has a | but they were doomed to disappointment in this respect. Majority im both houses of the Legislature ; but | Hie theme was the power of invisible and divine truths, among the poople of the State at large the other party The funeral of Lieutenant Colonel Jolin G. Reynolds, {# said W bo numerically tho stronger, Mr. Alcorn, | of the Marine corps, took place yesterday afternoon, who bas been elected a8 Governor Sharkoy’s colleague in ] from his late residence in Flushing ayenue, Brooklyn, Talted States Sonate, recently made ap address to aad Wae agfgbded with the <—~“‘ie members of the Logitlature, in which he took ground | the rank of the deceased the estimation iq which he — number of naval officers and ot! maintained that the action of the late State convention not awopt away slavery, but all the olf Iaws made } in the Sec Wib borereentah sen rovirietion ofthe gololea pedple of music, a ditt Corps and eight platoons of marines, ‘undor it, The rebel. ex-Governd? Clark, lately released | The remains were interred in Greenwood Cemetery. from confinement by President Johnson, also made a & perfect unity between the Southern and Northern | ‘out whom they are inconsolable, as he has so endeared | branches of the Episeopal Church at the recent conven- [ mn ceremonies befitting {in favor Of admitting negro testimony in the courts, and | was held by those with whom he was associated. A of distinction were ang the hearse was escorted by a band | gembl Aman named John H. Maren, who was recently ar. speoch t6 the Legistatufe ob the 27th ult. The members rosted in this city on the charge of attompting to pass a pednod a bill allowing bit salary as Governor for the last | eounterfelt ten dollar Treasury note, wae recognized a somewhat tod during its read- | glass, kc. In tae southwestern part of the city the oscil | Reprosentatives to Congress and elected ing with berating cscmaanoatl of approval, | lations were so great that extensive. flesures were made } their-Senators. All this is legal and:constitu- | ‘he least, as this is a duty that a lopge number and was adopted unanimously in both houses, | inthe earth. The cmd bhp hase hiv gfalg taped tional. Now the Senators and Representatives | of persons would be apt to defer tijl the latost Tt says that, though tho civil war be nt bcd severity at various places throug! 8 thus elected wilt apply to Congress, with cer- | practicable :qoment. We may expect, thore- terminated, though the State has resumé fornia. fore, tificates signed by their respective Governors | | and attested by the Secretary of, State, in their | respective States; and where is the power of Congress to reject them? Where is the provi- | sion in the constitution giviag them any auch | | power or jurisdiction? It.is not to be found | cither in the constitution, law, or precedents. | If the Southern States are in the Union, if they had no right to secede, then an attempt on the part of Congress to reject the Representatives | duly elected is revolutionary. It is an insur- | rection, a rebellion against the constitution, | | and the President will have full authority to | exercise all the powers vested in him in times of | | | insurrection and rebellion to put an end to | their revolutionary work. But it is said that Congress has not passed | any law authorizing an election for Repre sentatives in these States, and therefore the | elections are not legal. Here they are again upon untenable ground. The federal constitu- tion especially provides that the Legislature of each State shall prescribe the times, places and manner of holding elections for Senators and Representatives. When the constitution mast first formed every State which adopted it sent {te fepresentatives to Congress, and they were admitted under that provision, The fact of adopting the constitution entitled them to a fepresentation. The first Congress that as- under the constitution was composed of members ‘from those Colonies or States which hed approved that instrument, and were elected in accordance with | will be added to the taxes of this city next | year, making our city taxes about five per | bounty debt ticket is much more important melon, grape, peat-and: pineapply: thriye bet- ter or with as little traable. In thesar South that (he.registration will run up to ninety | "¥ have even the orange and baagoa. The late Governor Hammond, of 9 out, Carolina, and other gentlemen of that Sfate and Georgia, who a few years. ago began to turn their at Ml a tl tention to the culture of thy, grape, succeeded Tux Stwre Bounry Tax ayp THE Exxctiox | in making very fine wine. In fact, the produc- To-mornow.—The Board of Supervisors, follow. | tions af the Sonthare so varied and valuable ing the example of Comptroller Robinson, ad- | that we cannot enumerate them all within vise our citizens to vote “for the act to create | the limits of this article, # Staie debt to pay bounties” at the election Here, then, to this rich and prolific country, tommorrow. The cogent reason for thie advice nearly balf 98 large as Surope, will emigra- js that if the act be adopted we shall have | tion fyom the North and the Old World find twelve years to pay the bounty debt; but if it | jig way. The field is most inviting, and no is not adopted nearly eleven millions of dollars longer obstructed by slavery or a hostile and jevlous population. Indeed, the Southern people are saying to the. millions of the North and Europe, come ami develop our country. lts riches, genial ond healthful climate, bright skies and natural beauty will make it the promised land of a teeming population, Such is the Sonth, and such are its prospects the declarations of Ben Wood and his satellites in | «8 soon as the States are fully restored to har the Mozart, Citizens’, Weed and Tribune cliques, | monious wetion with the other: States in the the Tammany democrats assert that they have | Union, To deley this will be dighly injurious, not been bought up, and that they intend to | not only to the South, but (4 the Norilns well, stand by their candidates like honorable men. | and to the best interests of the whole country: We therefore suspend judgment until the day | It might even change the destiny of this fairest after the election, when the returns ‘will show | half of the American continent should the in- whether the new ring has been sucessful in | sane Jacobins of Congress be able to carry out ite bargains, and whether Fernando Wood is to | their negro policy after the manner of St. Do- be the Tammany candidate for Mayor.’ If | mingo or Jamaica, 1 that we wan} is im- Tammany chooses to elest her. nominees she, | mediate restoratioh, according to the wise can do 80. She has the votes, if she docs not | policy of President Johnson, and the coun. or a hundred. thousand, which will be pretty full, coming, as it does, just before an election that is of no.great interest. cent. It seems to us, therefore, that the State | than either of the political tickets, and that it ought (o be voted unanimously. Tux New Rive Rervputep.—In spite of all sell them out. Hor future existence depends | try will start. on a new career of unexqmpled, ite provisions, Whenever qav Territory was | cqgirely ugon der oresent Biell.¢ and honor. prosperite,, . ae. : Sie vincent exercised by the different commissiane which have taken the matter in hand to prevent the entrance of this minister of Azrael into our city. ‘No communication has yet been received from the delegation sen ~to Washington regarding the establish- ment of a quaranting at Sandy Hook. The panic caused by the reckless and seusational accounts of the Atalanta case that appeared in goyne of the journals of thie city is’ gradually subssaing, as ¢he real state of the case was made known by the’ Hznaty. Still the warning given by the Atalanta has called forth tie serioas attention of our citizens to rectify in every possible maaner what might be likely to bring this fearful destroyer among us. Evem in the Sixth and Teeth ward tenement, or charnel houses, as they might be’more appropriately named, the’ wretched denizens are nitking am effort to purify, iw some manner, the upas atmosphere’tn ‘which they drag out a miserable existence, and to remove some of the filth in which they grovel. £xperienee has shown that habits of persottal cleanliness, equanimity of'mind and moderate diet ase the best proventives that individuals oan take against the cholera, Tliw rest lies'with the city authorities. \ ‘That the disease is by no moafiy contagious If these simple precautions are attended to- fe sufficiently exem~ plified in the case of the-Atalanta, where the ¢abin pas- ors ar as yet intact. “ve have revetved' a communicaticm from Dr. Walser, dated-from: steamer Atalanta, November 4, stating that several ew cases have broken out sizes: Bai last roport, but one of whicty nas proved fatel. Ii: states that the disease is still-confined tothe steerage passengers, and ‘that not e’case hap’ occurred either among the frat or sedoiid’eabin passonyers or crew of the ship: : ‘The following are the names of the new cases and the dates at which they were attacked :-— aa years (died November &, ee Wm. Busan Mayer, aged teers Navenber S-fhopur be ago'T6 year. Heinrich Schaudt ag at year! November 4-~Gottleib Sauder, agod 34 yoars, Dietrich Lentenbacher; agéd 23, years, Hen, aged 29 yours. Catharina Burchair, aged 20 years: Our neighbors across the’ Hudson: are awaking to & sense of the danger, as is’ shown’ bythe'fa!lowing mes- sage of Governor Parker:—* a State or New Jersey, Percurivt DerarMant, } TrestoN, Obt. 27, 1865. To rit Mayor or Treston, N. Jy2— , Tho’Aeting Surgeon General hex addresseda'communt- cation‘to the Secretary of State of ther U: Sta recontmending him to” eall the attention of: dvernors the respective States tothe ravages of the “Asi:tic cholera * on the Eastern continent, with a‘view to hero establishment of regulations to jmevent, if pc\psible, introduction of that disease’ intty this ‘That communication, tegether with a despatch of: the United States Minister at Sonate, ime bees forwarded to me by the Sectetary of iting: serious attention to a Rotedeereiaene and: I 1 subject is one of vast itmportance, and: I recom- mend that measures be taMem to’prevent, te. pret the introduction of the choler#inéo yourstity. To» do tig Yesgls perfommingduaraian a the nog of perma vessels pei quarantine, and property tieek, such vessels from infectedidistricta; that if a boardiof health does not alfeady exist, organized ; that all existing cause of dieaseberomoved, and gel ther indigent ae unre] prompt covabeal treat ment ' These, or suehother measarts ait with tend "to: prevent. the spread of'the cholera among .ua I-trusti will be baie ea ceca JOEL PARKER. The vigorous-measures now befing taken will, it is hoped, spare us: pext summer from thie dreadvisitant, As for the present season; ‘there ij3 little fear, if these measures are properly carried dué, t].at we shalt-ascaun- ter the disease. ‘ Tho Steamship Elursge.. A PROTEST FROM THM P4 SSENORRS New Yorx Hee Nona, 13m } The undersignady paceengors on tle steamehip-Euroye, from Havre to New York, focling . mggrieved ab thotr de- tention at Quarantine; without arise, respectfally pre- sent the following statement:— | The ship loft a. perfectty healthy poston ‘the 20th of ~ October last, with two hundred and ninety-mine passen- gers, and including: the officers id crew, numbering more than four hundred souls, all: in good heakh. The voyage has beea.one of unusually ‘rough weather, with a succession of gsles and storms fer ten :succesaive days, shipping heavy seas, eausing all. the port holes te be closed during the: passage, rendering the ship wet, the ventilation bad, and the air of the staterooms.aad cabins consequently close: and foul, prodmcing very goneral sea sickness among the passengers; that. notwithotand- ing all these untoward circum/itances, coupleds with the great anxiety and even terror attendant upon: the vio- lent gates the, ship encountwred, there. -has.not been from the time the ship left port to the present: mom: the first symptom of cholera, diagthoss orof any. ot! disease whatever on board. With tha- oomee | much sea sickness, there haé boom better general |! during the w ‘than thi Eve, amor rtiflying lo. the perteoe. FC, cer ‘ ‘ of the port: of are, ‘has bee tod: Health Officer of and,by himto.tho - Health of the city of yee = every possible assurance present “Doard, ‘and a elear bill of at rep Yet the Fy’ is bsgee. 4 i 7s tO great anx our Toke trot from delay and to Maa dante AJ out of. disease among: 90 greak & seioen closely confined. We submit that ttygse.- with the further fact thaw sixteen -da) since the sailing of the Sig Foy Pes ime ade } that upuatly assigned for 1 eve of, any con- tagious or epidemic diseage—makep yn of the ship .wholly unnecessary and nunjyatifiable: ?The Java was-not so detained. one be TE Eagiaaea . of athe &: 5 * bas M., Handy; J few York; Edy WN. Sheldon, oo ‘M. Hoopor, Philadelphia; “A. MeCotium, ;, Mined Pavy, Paris; G. Fagnam, ‘ork 5 i haick, New xo Chariee H. Sharp, New: Lin oan of Caphem, ris; Emile Seignoy Bordeaux ) at 4 Jonn'R. Haxton, ‘ork; 5. edy, New Ore loans; J. 0. Maunar,. N. ¥.,.A Da Girt, Now Orleans; A. Boucle 7 ath New York; Captain J, 8. We Yook;, Adainw: Jn, New ‘ork; Mahton D, ye ee 5 B. Roth, inne; E. H, de La Grange Ww Ontenns; Froneis in, Hayre;..C, G Beaten. Inland; Haul Alden, New York; 6s 1, arig—nod many ou Good Advice. TO TH RDITOR OF TH HERA! 4. As the all absorbing topic.of comversation among every class of our citizens haa reference to the prevention or cure of the sgourge just brougha to ow: / stiores, and as anything calgulated to ailay the, populam ¢ excitement rels- tive theroto has a tendsney to. diminishy the. probabilities of its spread, allow uy thaaugh te, medidm of the omniprescat Hynato to suggest a fewp - practical rules cal- culated prep ery fo the chéw sees of an attack, which, if observed, opens bea: Bartels are once fooweney! thar. te nb coratngy Is nae OF n0 of again, regulating, thom while th epidemia is prevail. ing. ‘Second—Weer flannel. next to tho. person,’ especially about the abdomen. Trird—Keop the feet dry, an@ploep. with saMiciont covering to prevent claillincss/in tae morning. Poort—Aewle an excess fof weil in both eating and dainking. ‘Fifth—Fot and drmk moge for gthe of su a ing the demands of nature heat tor ie pyuacnion et the appetite, using any food to which you have become aecustomed. Sizth—If the stomath on*howels become famucees regulate them by diet, and -edt in the horizontal position, together with some simple, 9 caleulated to im: prove rathor than deprese the tone of the stomach. By the observance of diese sippy rules Lam certain that thousavds of casey of cholera may be vented, which, is more than canbe anid of Yny course & medica? tion oe pres-sibed ‘withir Europe or thia conntry. Piense publish pro Done publina. JOHAN BS Cuy Iutelligence. Tas St. Jonn Dryssren.r. and Mra C. E. Saul- | pangh, of Rome, New York, who were among the scalded from the steamer St. John, are at prosent stop. ping at the residence of Mr, Henry Saalpaugh, No. 140 Kast Twenty-siyth street. Both oft tiv ited persons are doing wel, and have before th Rathy By of epeedy overy. Surctow AY DrowNrve,—Abotr'y woven o'clock last even. ing ha uNknowa man, jumped from one of the Whitehall ferry boats a8 ale wes enter¢hg the slip, amd drown. ed. the body waa not cn Diag sa : Wan Acomant.—Coronege Wildey yesterday held an in- quest at St. Vincent's Aospital on the body of Michaot Flaherty, a native of Ireland, aged twonty.two years, who was run over on,'the Ist inst, by an Eighth avenue car, receiving a fracgure of the leg. Decensed resided at No. 116 Maul rry/street, where he leaves a wifo and family. Unayows Drowsen May.—An inquest was yontorday held, by Coroner W , At the foot of Whitehall street, on the of af unknown man who was fond float! in the heat that place, Deconsed was About fort; years of age, five fret six inches in height, aad lad on @ Mack suit of gothing,

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