The New York Herald Newspaper, January 20, 1866, Page 4

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NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1866. prived of ofos by the appointment of Messrs. Purser, | the strong, inflexible and fearless Jackson stand | brother, the assassin, and we can easily ao- | Their measurés are fo Infimidate, © and Woodruff, the feeble and vacillating poor Pierce and Bu- | count for the throngs that attend this theatre. | bully, to browbeat, and when brought to ‘The case of John 0. Wilde ae es obanan. The master of poor Piorce’s adminis- | The ovation to Edwin Booth reminds us of | direct issue they invariably dodge it. MamatE ane tenant, wes coneetey tration was Jeff. Davis, his Secretary of War. | the ovation to Orsini, which took place in this SPE He Te tte ax arcuate | He was the ovil genius, the Jack-o'-Lantern | city soon after the news ofhis execution reached | ""*"Me™%, Sommers nel tue Meare Sat of a lease from a former tenant, and asked to recover | that led poor Pierce into that criminal and dis- | us. Orsini attempted to assassinate Napoleon, | The bill striking out the word “white” damages for an ejectment before the peapadorone pot te ne ap aionyhagemm and was executed for his crime; and his ad- | from the election laws of the District of Colum- had expired. Two cases wore tried—ono pro- | promise, which brought about in Kansas mirers here contrived a magnificent midnight in effect, conferring ht of vary sad he nie Snes eeenewn on ae overture to the Inte Southern rebellion. The | funeral in his honor. There was a dinner, and por bespmnngr | the negroes in age on srr Scaced = SaAESA Serta slatalit tr 9858 Se anq | Marplots and managers of Buchanan’s admin- | there were speeches, and then the vast proces | without distinction, limit or qualification, has in the'latter for $600. istration wore those treasonable conspirators in | sion moved to solemn music and the glare of | passed the House of Representatives by a two- A case was decided in the Supreme Court, Circuit, yes- | his Cabinet—Cobb, Thompson and Floyd— | torches. The streets were jammed with peo- | thirds vote. This bill may be designed merely to terday in which Emma A. Crane brought s suit agsinst | traitors who, in lsboring to bankrupt the | ple anxious to witness the imposing display; frighten the President from the position which predegepen richie scape national treasury and to supply the disaffocted | but how many of them had the slightest sym- | he has taken upon the reconstruction question, of her deceased father’s estate claimed by her, for which | S°utherm States with arms and munitions of | pathy with Orsini and bls plot? Of the same | and the fuct that Mr. Raymond, of New York» her brother over ten years ago gave here note in suit | War, were among the most efficient organizers | class was the immense funeral of Bill Poole, | has moved a reconsideration gives some slight and a mortgage, which he declined to pay, on the ground | and contributors to the late rebellion, under | the pugilist, who was killed in s barroom fight plausibility to the idea. If such be the design of of usury, The case was decided im favor of the fair | the nose and with the consent of Buchanan. | with another rowdy. Thousands of persons | the radicals it will prove a failure. Tho Presi- Plaintiff fer the above amount. He could not dismiss these conspirators, and | followed him to his grave, inspired more | dent is aot to be frightened and cocrocd. On pea po eager sate man. | 0m his timidity and his fear of the conse-| by morbid curiosity than by any respect | tho other band, if the bill is to be soriously 1 sentenced John Goodman, whi icted of man- cides io hie pao ane the death of | quences of acting boldly and bravely he soon | for him or regret for his fate. The sudi- | pressed to its final passage by the Senate, in our NEW YORK HERALD. enenngapeanennannante JAMES GORDON BENNETT, EDITOR AND PROPRIBTOR, per pound on the transactions of the wook, owing to the advance in the rate of discount by the Bank of England. Breadatuff ruled very dull, Provisions were easier, MISCELLANEOUS, — ‘Tho President has relieved Mr. Marvin of the position of Provisional Governor of Florida, and recognised Mr. Walker, the eleot of the people, as the Governor of that State, Mr. Marvin has been chosen a United States Sena- tor by the Florida Legislature, and, as will be seen by our reports of Congressional proceedings, his credentials ‘wore yesterday presented in the Senate. Texas is now the only State which has a Provisional Governor. Governor Bumphroys, of Mississipp!, issued on the 6th inst., in accordance with the requirements of an act of the Legislature of that State passed in 1861, a pro- clamation declaring that “the blockade of the ports of the’ Confederate States has been’ removed,” and that therefore all persons to whom advances on cotton were made by the ‘State while the blockade continued are re- quired to deliver the number of bales on which the said advances were received by them. The message of Governor Worth was received in the North Carolina Legislature yesterday, He recommends the confirmation of proceedings under provisional rule in i OFFICH N. W. CORNER OF FULTON AND NASSAU STS. ———————————— Wolwme KEXI.......0-cccesssseeeeeeens oes 90 AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING. WAY THEATRE, Broadway.—So.on Sauraia, pat iuce 1 0'Clock. : | Lucy RUSHTON'S NEW YORK THEATRE, Nos 723 wit Yao "broadway.—Tum Lape ov Lyons. ' WOOD'S THEA’ Broad opposite the St. Nicholas ‘HowlTas Batioon Wupeira* TONY PASTOR'S OPERA HOUSE, 201 Bowery. NG, DANCING, BURLESQUES, ontus Jalouse Wire. Bistinee at 3h 0°C10ck. GEORGE CHRISTY'S MIN3TRELS.—Tas Op Scaoon fas tee mecha tal Waku beee Sittings at Two o'Clock, ‘BAN FRANCISOO MINSTRELS, 035 , opposite | the State, the repeal of all laws in confict with perfect | Daniel cDonald, to imprisonment in the State Prison | ceased to be the mastor and became the scr-| ences at manager Stuart's establishment | view of the constitution its adoption will be Motropolian Motel -Braiortan Sauna lita, os = pacha tothe sateen eneeremeny 904 St war puOR | for two youre, Edward Noland, a notorious burglar, was | vant of the bolder spirits of his Cabinet. We | are moved by the same impulse, and | perfectly legel under the recent constitutional of a judicious militia system. He thinks sent to Sing Sing for twenty years. guess that it was only by permission of Cobb, | we acquit them, as we acquit Mr. Booth, | amendment. ‘That amendment places the ! necessity of continuing the Freedimen’s Burean after the restoration of the State-courts, from which he says the negroes can get full justice. DespatcheS’have been received in Washington from Genera! Sheridan, at Now Orleans, in which he disavows all knowledge of the filibustering expedition by which the town of Bagdad was captired from the Mexican im- porialista, “He says bis officers have received strict or- ders from him to preserve neutrality on the Rio Grande, and he does not believe the reports implicating United States soldiers in the raid on that town. An interesting history of late events and a picture of the present condition of affairs in Eastern Mexico, and especially along the Rio Grande border, are given in our Brownsville and Tampico correspondence. At Tampico, CONGRESS. ‘which is in possession of the imperialists, the French In tho Senate yesterday bills were presented and re- | authorities exercise a vigilant supervision over the forred to tho Military Committee restricting the expenses | Custom House receipts, A few late small imperial of collecting soldiers? claims by p ibing penalties for successes in that vicinity aro reported. Our Browns- ville correspondent furnishes eopies in full of tho charges over a certain amount by agents and attorneys, correspondence, alluded to in last Saturday’s ‘and providing relief forthe officers of certain colored | Hunatp, which lately passed between General Weitzel, regiments, A petition from the colored people of the | commanding Tale eee ee ae emtent lejia, the imperial commander at District of Columbia for the passage of the House Negro | 4.4 american General R. Clay Crawford, of the Buffrage bill was presented by Mr. Sumner. Mr. Doo- | yexican Tepublican army, in relation to certain repub- Little presented the credentials as Senator from Florida Mean prisoners condemned at Matamoros to be shot, of ex-Provisional Governor Marvin, spoke in mostcom- | in aceordance with Maximilian’s decree for the plimentary terms of Mr. Marvin’s character and claims | execution of all those found in arms against his for admission, and read extracts from his valedictory | forces, General Weitzel, in the name of his gov- address on retiring from the Governorsbip. Mr. | emment, protested against this barbarity, and Mejia Sumner replied, expressing great respect for Yr. | responded that it was a matter in which the Ame- Marvin, but contending that he had failed to do | ricans had -no right to interfere, and that the his whole duty as Governor, and road letters descriptive | execution of the decree must be proceeded with. Of the condition of affairs in Florida to show that the | ‘To another letter of General Weitzel’s, in- which, in ac- People of that State are still disloyal and not justly en- | cordance with General Sheridan’s instructions, he in- titled to claim the admittance of their representatives forms Mejia that in future correspondence with our to Congress, The credentials were then laid on the | oficers he must not style the Mexican republicans ban- table. The bill giving the appointment of pension agents dita, the imperia) General again repels what he considers to the President was considered fora short time, and foreign dictation, and replies that all future commu- ‘was then laid over, and the bill enlarging the powers of | nications of similar purport will remain unanswered. the Freedmen’s Bureau was taken up. After » spoech | 1; is rumored that Mejia is to be superseded in opposition to it by Mr. Hendricks, democrat, of Indi- at Matamoros. The preparations of Generals Esco- BRYANTS' MINSTRELS, Mechanios’ Hall, 472 Broad- DAN Barant's New Soup Srzesa—Negeo Comat. a Bonuesauas, ac.—Lavenvouoansin. Ww YORK MUSEUM OF ANATOMY, 618 Broadway, OneTrolOa Me O10 if 0 re The trial of Francisco Gene Salvador, alias Pellicer, , Thompson and Floyd thatthe President argued | of any intention to glorify assassination. Rich-| froeg in the position of foreign charged with being lice, of Gonzales (already ; : Regrees . . Sonritend in: the touted of Jone, Gaeta. loro in the in his message for # protective tariff against | ardson, the’ celebrated strolling managet of | immigrants, so far as the right of suffrage eet ant th Gir oma teetik es ke ee See emer nocuizes se (ie Baht tS Nah Sever. yn sis ithe od abetpemeos der last, wag commenced yesterday in the Kings -Andrew Johnson was brought, up.in the po- | would draw the people unless it were full of | charge of . aubject of EO ie ek eee litical school and near the feet of ‘Androw | murders snd ghosts. Our Bowery managers wigoh coated privilege of voting upon qualified were found, The Disirict Attorney opened the |-Jack#on. With’ more genial and geneTous | have always been of this opinion, ‘The writers | ¢-Ciags of people who cannot possess It except cage for the people, after which the court adjourned j nature, Johnson possesses in @ high degree the | of sensation novels trade upon this poplar | 9¢ the option of Congress. In the same way until tem o'clock on next Monday forenoon. resolute will and unflinching tenacity of pur- | craving for something sanguinary. Manager | the recent constitutional authorizes The examination of witnesses in regard to the murder | poge of Jackson. He also possesses a longer, | Stuart, however, bas vasily improved upon this | Congress to pass laws securing to a > treed ne- of Robert Mitchel, mate of the schooner John Boynton, ini ti litical trainin, ‘was continued yesterday before the Coroner's jury in | mot@ Varied and instructive pol ining | old idea. He does not depend for his attrac- | groes the benefits of freedom, and if Congress the Court House, Brooklyn, Coroner Lynch is in pos- than that of Jackson, and broader and more | tions upon the mingled horrors and poetry of | gees fit to pass a negro suffrage law, embracing session of an important clue which it is confidently | comprehensive views of political questions as | Hamlet alone, but he engages the brother of a | all the States, as well as the District of Colam- expected will lead to a specdy settlement of all doubts | a practical statesman. He has all the advan- | criminal, and thus surpasses all rivals, We | pia, we believe that no legal objection oan be ee a pies mmitted towards nine | 803 Of all the teachings of all the great | learn that manager Barniim is doing an excce- | raised which the Supreme Court will not over- o'clock yesterday pa in William atrest, near | Vents that have marked our political history | sively bad business, and we recommend him to | rule, The question of negro suffrage is, there- Beekman, Whilo Samuel Torry, a youth of sixteen, | fom Jackson’s day down to the present time. | imitate manager Stuart's shrewd oxample. | fore, not one of legality, but of expediency. employed as messenger in the Farmers’ and Citizens’ | He has the examples of Jackson and Lincoln | Let him ascertain if one of the other assassins | Ag such the President and the country will, National Bank of Williamsburg, was passing by, in pos- | to guide him on the one hand, and the ex- | of President Lincoln—Surratt, Aizerott, Payne, | doubtless consider it. op session of @ satchel containing eleven thousand dollars amples of poor Pierce and Buchanan to warn Spangler, Mudd, or any of them—has not a Whether a two-thirds vote for the House bill can be relied upon in the Senate is a disputed point. Should that vote be cast {t will, BROOKLYN ATHENSZUM.—Camraaty’s Mrnernecs, DERBY, GALLERIES, @95 .—PmILADELETA = ae Finst Prisk Bln ‘OF AMERICAN ALNTEN final 2 New York, Saturday, January 20, 1866. re haar e papa all pat poe ee him on the other, and especially in reference | sister who will conssnt to appear as the Feejee snatched the satchel from the bearer, knocking him | to the Cabinet, Abraham Lincoln was the | Mermaid, or a brother who is willing to be down, according to his own statement, and, leaping back | most amiable and forgiving of men; but, for | hired to play the Woolly Horse. The same into the vehicle, m which was seated an accomplice, | all that, he tolerated no would-be dictator in | causes that crowd manager Stuari’s establish sabhog ee er eatin pd eet base Age his Cabinet. Chief Justice Chase will bear us | ment will then crowd his, and he can get up @ one thousand dollars was offered for the arrest of the | OUt upon this point. similar ovation. But Barnum will have to Tobbers, Strenuous efforts are now being made to cap- It becomes, therefore, the policy and the | make hasie and bid high, or some of the other ture the criminals and recover the stolen funds. duty of President Johnson to shape his Cabinet | associated managers, who are equally in want Tho auction sale of tho Hunter galery at No. 645 | to his own well considered and fixed purposes | of an attraction, will succeed in obtaining the Brondway was closed last night. A large crowd wes | on aii the great questions of the day. As in | atart of him, and he will be forever undone. present, and there wag marked improvement in the pra of Jackson and Lincoln, the great Ben Wavn’s Ormrons.—Ben Wade admires bidding. One painting by Watteau went as high as one body of th 1 with him. In pee e le are thousand two hundred dollara, and the receipts for the peop! Me. Sehuniels acklen cneeoe fp Aa as ithas gone. He thinks that Mr. Johnson’s evening's sales were twenty thousand dollars, The en- | his Cabinet a unit he may be opposed by the tire recelpts amount to thirty-one thousand dollars, and present Congress, but he will be sustained by the ey of paintings “sold was two hundred and | 14, noxt Bet him therefore prepare for that | Views on the subject are better than those of seventy-three. Mr. Lincoln were; indeed, that they are “a ‘The Inman line steamship Clty of Baltimore, Captain | Which appears inevitable—the carrying of this weouign, wil salle noes today, frm pier 44 Neath | question of Gouthern reooasiruction from the Great improvement” on the views of the Presi- | souts the oonntry will await this exposition river, for Quoonstown and Liverpool. The Hamburg | present Congress to the people. E -with the greatest interest. The Prosident may Beh will algo sail at yer Mey! : . : Hamburg. ‘Tue American steamship Arego wilt sail te- . é Havre. “Thomails for the above steamers will elese at | sively upon the recemt ovation to the brother | the Fost OMovret half-pastten 4 OL © Of Witkes Hooth at one of the'theatres of this ‘Tos fine steamship Btar of the Union, Captain Blanchard, olty, and are at a loss $0 comprehend its ‘Of the Cromwell line, will sail ab three P. M, to-day for and ita The zi ‘Now Orleans direct, from plier No.9 North river, The ‘ioral. ovation was, | mails will close at half-past ouo P. i. very curious affair. The theatre was crowded, Tho steamer Plymouth Rock, of the New York ani | and among the audience sat Mr. George Ban- Groton Line, which was sunk off Greenwich, Connecti- croft, who is soon to deliver the eulogy upon aera ene morning of the 16th inst, was succesfully | the mardered President, by the invitation of course, be yseless for tho President to veto the bill, since the same vote oan it over pis veto at any time. In that c bly return the bill with throwing the whole req gress, and leaving tl! their action to their can. Butif the bill eh without a two-thirds vote W President will veto it. In his will state his position in regard to negro auf frage, and as he understands the whole subject very thoroughly, having been born and edu- cated among the non-slaveholding whites of the A Matemont of affairs in Mexico, prepared by the im: . for oi in exclusively for carrying the produce of the owners | ruje, is given in connection with our Mexican corre- to market. Bills were introduced and referred pro- | spondence. It represents that the republican military government of the republic. @o not pre- tend to define his exact views upon the sub- jeot ; but still we veniare the prediction that Widing for the readjusiment once e quarter by the | forces have neatly dissppeared, and that the remnants | "s#*4 Yesterday about noon by the Cotumbiam Const More than he has insisted on the great guarantees I have Postmaster General ef the salaries of Wrecking Company, aad to this olty. she wi | Congress. More than this, the theatre has been ‘ ‘his veto will ~~ postmnaners | of armed opposition to imperialism which all exist have | Pore Sod aeay la tan y dey dook and repaired almost equally crowded every night since Mr. | *lreedy alluded to, ‘He has pA ag the Hono bill 'by he Benner astead tats a no } this great arch of freedom right. has fare to Gharles ¥. Anderson for preparing plans and | (het order and civilization established | _ The stock market was atroug yerterday, and prices ad- | Booth’s reappearance, although there effected drawings for tho Gabital asuanaton, and for the further | surcaguect se soupisy mete the hartee ore et ee Taner ng per cont. Governments were heavy, Gold | impnayement in his acting io justify thia remark | lala the foundation deep upon the road amen lly BB = - [ote The Drovention of mnggiing, Calls ware mie on the Se ‘Seater rotbatai : able of patronage. Provious to tho | sd right He has demanded that before the | Oo" ate ae Tadloals Fotary of the Treasury for-s statement apportion- iosieia Diseficetions—The Jacksonian equal. demanded peng meee esce eevee ment to the various Siates of the amovat of national ddeacs hancen lt Seciaaha ah bidigth Nanaia Remedy. aasagaination he was regarded as s very re- ee cee — and the people will have to decide between bank, note cirouiation guthorized, and on the Seoretary | ance by the steatiahip Hoary Chaunoey, which arrived | For several weeks past reports of Cabinet spectable dotormoas of tae vest OF the nsiive et ae with) shemn, We heliove quanen eigeuned Gafig tan seadaion Silt alr satdbove? Ate y. from Aspinwall ou the 19th inst. she | disaffections and impending Cabinet changes | American school; but although he oftey| 0S #0 at the President, end ‘sch Thstaeenke the ott Wo sre Fost Te Waye aad Mesa Geemes | Sts ttn, Ma, Ta deh tndrl thea | have formed one of fhe lading topes of wows: | SPPe4re tn tl cy he made no much sensation Fano See a fat felled to pos the | claimed by the radicals as ardent muppocters Wore directed to report on the propriety of ex-| ticuisrs of the suicide of ad Paper correspondents at Washington, The was greeted with no ovations, But just in ; Of & negro suffrage law, unconditional and ompting written instruments from stamp duty..| manding the Spunish blockading squadron om tne chi, | f0t8 appear to'be established that the Seore- | t@mick of time, after he had exhausted his | YOu leave it whore it ie it will go to ruin.” universal, are just as myihioal ae those thoge $ho Naval Appropriation bill was under con- | jean coast, alroady alladed to in the Hxmats of the 15th | tary of War, in active sympathy with Thaddeus | **diences here by » very long'engagement, his Men of ordinary intelligence would suppose cende of piretiiien: ‘sedan : Serntion forme ime im _Commilioo of | and 18h nat, The Admiral shot himeeé witha pol, | Stovens and tho radicals, bas tn some things | PTOUer eeraminated the President, and Edwin | this to be s vory good reason why the arcli| Cave. wy nuohuon solaiens whe, soponting f Sdanigh te Sn abuaear eran ss belek oneal P, in Valparaiso bay, on the 29th of | heen presuming too fur upon the amiable na- | 200th clutched the dramatic disdem at single | *bould not be left as it fs, and why Congress te tape dh Weds AA hoe Of one hundred and five thousand dollars to purchase cane Orenahtal & Mew Ware ture of General Grant andthe generosity of | Pound. So far as Mr. Booth is concerned his | Should oi 2 sam ae spd deny cipation proclamation was issued, but whe keystone 5 throw the President, and that one or two other mem- | "°munerative notoriety is quite accidental. bers of the Cabinet have also manifested a lit- | Like Farmer Acorn, in Toodles, he had a tle too much of radicalism to be consistent | PFother, and this brother's crime made him , with the purposes of harmony in the councils | {M0 Manager Stuart is the person who is satisfied hoteal every point and part of the administration. But it also appears that, of the President’s plan except that he Secretary Stanton having been brought to | *hrewdness with which he took advantage of | 40¢8 not require the South, as « condition of re- terms, the question of arcconstraction of the | Wilkes Booth’s celebrity to get up the Kawin | Construction, to give the suffrage to the negroes. Cabinet lies over, subject to contingencies, | Booth ovation, and who must be congratulated What right has the President to require that of With the return of Mr. Seward from his South | “Pom the pecuniary results, His theatro, which | thé South? He requires of the South the things Sea expedition the subject may come up for | bud been the least successful ia the olty, is now that the constitution enables him to require, some definite action, unless from the soft and | th most prosperous of those establishments | ®4 if he goes further he transcends his power. balmy wintry winds of the Gulf of Mexico he | Which do not advortise in the New Yorx | This thing that Wade disputes over fs in the shall return 60 renewed in lealth and strongth | Hi*matn In fact, manager Stuart need not ad- | Province of Congress, and Wade simply rejects fs to foel satisfied that he can safely boar the | Yertise ia any paper at present, for the ovation | *he President's pottey because the President burdens of the Sta Department for some timo | 18 still continucd, The spirit ot Wilkes Booth | %##Rot amianied the h5Wers that belong to the longer. At all events, {i seems that certain | # quite edyertivement enough, National Legislature, Wade even answered his disturbances in the Cabinet, which threatened | The raral philosophers may wonder at the | O72 Arguments before he sat down, Later in an immediate collapse, have been reduced to » | Stange phase which the assassination tragedy | ‘is speoch he eays:—'If there evar was a quee- sort of armistice, The offending parties are on | ‘hat so ebocked the country ima at length as- {| 40m im Congress that is peculiarly our own it their good behavior, and with this understand- | med; but we have long since ceased to be | 1# tls. We are the only men who ought ins ing the President is disposed to be lenient and | **prised at any freak of human nature. Ham. | *¢¢ government to decisre yron Mberal. os... let shows how imperial Cesar, dead and turned State outside of the government, or 4 acd of suow in winter as long aa the skies are fair But the game to which those disaffected | to clay, may stops hole to keep the wind | ‘rfeited its position, shall be admitted to it} °°‘ thermometer keeps below a certain sia” subordinates of his are commiited is that of an | away; and It is not more singular that the | Th¢ President made of the South all the re- | “=<: SY "hen thet mantle le touched by the “irrepressible conflict.” It is the radical game | popular feeling in regard to the martyred Preal- | ("itementa that the constitution permitted, | neaergrroed (lalla? Pap aa cling over for the Presidential succession, the first pur- | dent should be utilized dy a keen manager to | *%4 Wade praises him for it; he stopped just | boasted of a garment os inp bie Getattishment, pose of which is to rule or ruin the adminlstra- | give éclaf to the performances of the brother of | Y24re the powers of Congress began, as they | Every crossing beeame a “Stonzh of Despond," in;which tion.* Against such Cabinet disaffections the | the President's assassin. In the circumstances | *@ defined by Wade, and Wade finds fault with | @™2utlve urchins, with mnd-coated faces and inde- only safo and efficient teeatment is the Jack- | whicbattonded Mr. Booth’s reappearance there | his stopping. The President has not the con- | MTOssie isckets watod, broom in hand, constituting soniun remedy. In the first Cabinet of Gene- | was everything to gratify the morbid taste | *titational power to put on the keystone, and | tractors, and voces 2 re Spans anon ne ral Jackson, when he bad hardly become warm | of the populace. Edwin Booth ts very ike | Congress, with whom that power lice, will not | for a pans. At ihe comer at checnart mice in his arm chalr of the White House, there ap- | bis brother Wilkes in physique, although his | Put iton, but abandons the arch. It is for] *4 Broadway, in pariteular, was an accumu- peared. division in his Cabinet, in reference to | moralrieaite are widely different. The theatre’ | CODgtes to settle the suffrage question; to | ‘stom of melted snow which tested the water the succession, in which majority of the | at which he performs is that at which Wilkes | ™Ke ite law on the subject and send it to the | Proof Power, of boule to & considerable extent, members, under the manipulations of Vice Pre- | Booth made his last appearance as an actor, | President and get the Southern members in ponptemebely ne drag clyplent ys = he sident Calhoun, wore found to be intriguing in | ‘The play upon that occasion was Shakspere's | their seats, The President has done his part— Me” aa elder eons an tn thar gut a the cite could never be discovered by the government, even after repeated drafts. We are quite ready, therefore, to have the iseue made, because we believe that the President will be sustained. Indeed, for many reasons we deem it better that the matter should be forced at once toe conclusion. The government is now disorgan- ized and divided against itself; the progress of reconstruction is impeded, and the country is disgraced by these squabbles, and suffering from the unsettled condition of affairs, Let us have some definite sctiloment of the negro question, and let the Union be restored with- out further delay. ‘The Blush ond dud in the Greets Yood terday. ” . The streota of the metropolia yesterday presented @ very uninviting appearance to the unlucky pedestrian who ventured to stecr his or her eoerse- through the Deols of @ush and mud that covered sidewalk and pave- ment. Nature may pride herself om her spotless mantie Seavy's Island, Portamouth Navy Yard, which was | steamer Esmeralda, and Commodore Nuner succeeded to his command. The blockade of certain of the ports was future action. The President's Message was then taken | gti kept up; but there bad been no further pos Boo UP, and the remainder of the day’ rssion was occupied | since the date of previous advices between the Chileans a ara felative to (he status of the Southern States | and Spaniards, The Chilean flect had returned to one of 'y Messrs. Deming, republican, of Coffnecticut, and | the southern ports, conled and received supplies, and Smith, republican, of Kentucky, the former opposing the | sailed on another expedition. The governmentghad made early admission of the Southern reprosentatives. The | arrangements for a loan from the banks of the republic. Houso adjourned ull wonday. In Peru there had been no. further revolution to disturb THE LEGISLATURE. President Prado, and he was pushing forward his schomes: There was nota great deal of business transaciea im | Of reform and war preparations vigorously. The Dern- the State Senate youterday. Notices were given of bills | ¥ia government had not yet formed a coalition with appropriating two hundred and fifiy thousand dotlara for | Chile against Spain; but the expectation still was that it the oxtension of gle Chenango Caual and avthorizing | YOWd soon do so. All the other South and Central towns to raise money for the cregtion of monuments in | American republics were still enjoying tho unusual sea- memory of national soldier: killed during the late war, and | ®8 of profound peace heretofore noticed, the conflicting Dilla were introduced relating to the restoration of securi- | Parties boing too much Interested in the dosigus om Chile ties of Hife insuranes companies now in tho keeping of of thelr common enemy to devote themselves to their the Insurance Departnien', and to amend the Militia law | “*¥Orite Pastime of revolution. by repesfig the ciause requiring boards of suporvisors to The Fenian Senate was in session vextertay, anda raise any deficiencies of military fines by tax. The bili { °t! fora Fenian military congress in Pittsburg on the Fequiting receivers uf insolvent corporations to pay over, | 1h of February was issued, with the approval of withia twenty days afier removal, all moneys in their | President Roberts. ‘Twelvo military Ofcers who ar bands, was passed, The other maticrs considered are of | Ted ou the 14th from Ireland appeared before the little tnterest, Senate and made a very important detailed report of In the Aseombly several bills were roported from com. | [it republican matters, and of the reception of the mitteos, among thom those to ameud the act governing American quarrel news by the I. R. B. and its looters the public schools of this city, to give the closing arg. | TU Preeident of the Senate made an important «pee:h mont ia criminal trials to the counsel for prisouers, and | Te8*Pding the policy and intentions of that division of to divide the Seventh Now York Judicial district. Billa | Fehiana. ‘ wore introduced, among ‘thers, to doftae the taties of | _ TB¢ skating season was brought to an abrupt close yes- out hater to include Richmond county within torday, owing tothe recent thaw. The ball in the Park the Metropolitan Police district, to increase the rates of | “Ame down at two o'clock in the afternoon legal advertising, and for ‘hi better security of the health | The streets were almost impassable to pedestrians yor. Of this city, A Lively debate took piace over a resolu. | *T#AY 0m account of tho slush and melted snow that tion calling for & statement of the manner in which the | S°umulated on them, Their condition iu some of the money appropriated for the new Court Mouse in this | “TUS 's rendered loathsome, and perhaps postilential, City has boon expended, ral memberr takiny part by the prevalence of the custom of tenants throwing Te wae charged that of two miltion ove hundred thou. | 18t them the refuse and garbage of large tenement ened dovoied to the work a large houses, A number of men were yesterday engaged in eenhenn 7 dered in corruption and exorvi. | P*bing the sewers and attempting to keep rome of the tant fos. Finally the eubject was tabied by fifty-four to | CTOsimgs and sidewaiks at least tolerable. twenty, A wae wnade from the Committee on Mrs, Martha Griude: was executed at Pittsburg, Ponn pon bh of reporters and providing | *Y1€0!8, yesterday. Our despatch gives a complete his- for their Jon and that of cewspaper corre tory of her crimes, conviction and sentence, together = wblide the appointment of now riyle | it ® graphic description of the scenes attending the vomem Committee, regulating the presentation of | *x*eutlon. The criminal confessed to having poisoned canal damage claims, and excluding committee clerks | MP Caruthers, for which murder the sentence of the from the privileges of the oor. The report wos ordered law was carried into ofect yesterday, as alto @ to lie upon the table and be printed, Both the senate | Mi" Buchanan. The demeanor of the wretched wo and Assembly tilt Monday evening man during the night precoding the execution and i : his interest for the succession. Upon the sur. | Pulius Cesar; and, as Wilkes Booth was evon | b&# done all that the law enables him todo. The | $!');iug down in « siting posture, face this lack of ministerial harmony appeared | then plotting President Lincoln's murder, 1s ig | P08 {8 with Congress, and if it fails in ite duty | Dow crom. Te has neatly plloted her ‘seross to be limited to the social recognition of one | no stretoh of imagination to say that the assas- | !¢ 4008 60 at its peril, and the country will hold | Sonr and wlorns her Sine at faeege met of the ladies of the Cabinet circle by the others, | sination was ually rehearsed there upon the | !* tesponstble. neo ea Ai amttng sul tay end Jackson, finding that in this matter «| mock Cesar previous to ite actual performance | Raptoat Srma ee moT—Tuz Dror oom compromise ras Out of the question, | upon the real victim atthe theatre in Washing- | tst oath which the cosh cannons toen:} cee ae rare promptly settled ulty by turning the | ton.” ‘These facts are quite sufficient to invest | bility against all Sontherners who bad been | fesciet ii at kgs'tet cual, contractor, $ S' H bite f Hy at the gallows was wonderfully calm and collected. She sewers EUROPE. passed a portion of the f neh whole Onbinet adrift and appointing a new | the establishment at which Mr. Booth appears | engaged rebellion, which nded. The steamship Nova Scotian, from Londonderty on | siopt casing ia th Gib terug ppt heen eng one, Then the real plot of Calhoun and his aod Compal cht hte gate, EER tees lg tp a oe January 6, peaked Porttand, Me., yesterday, Her news | Sue wale from her cali to the gujlows, and on the seat. {Clique wae rapidly brought to light, and from ao ‘else tay weal atbee ta sae “tat the toot of bag a vn ‘ii ‘3 perohropecnigg <*> papal laewere—e that discovery Calhoun, es « Presidential aepi- panitieechaber extagen ‘with the ant Saas ae farious. ‘erperienced On terrible ‘Tho Improperty adjusted, never to qmame A coast, ant hens of dhsknere te Amiecing Spplte vrai eg betray bata raat, fell like Lucifer, to rise again. On their fear of mecting & direct issue on North river, we a eohiaey yet Pe me, Yesterday Commisaicuer Osborn took io wf. aitesatee aoe of the re- ® pointas the exaction of loys Baa‘norgit theres fast out pre at aspen wow sesso sad vet vous wut |coalanstpauien stoves cas sericea | saliea} Beak of at tag we setts Bon Ss a ares | ene eee eae Postponed to the next aasizes. M:Cafferty and Mackey, | are alleged by the officials of tho Internal Revenue De- | banks, tho President found himeclf pene oboe ‘x nnd | showed « on ley A . “cat If resisted by | of @ good king by his wicked bi one conaatiney being aliens, wore admiited to bail aud ordered to leave | partment to have been forged A further charge le made 7 rother. Hamlet | would prevent them practising before the Su- | ing in bis drive, very litle of which == the country against Mitechelling of Yaring Deen conceraed ta the maa. | “yorerenry Of the Treasury who would neither | himself ts about to assassinate his mother— | preme Court, This looks like a concession, | Cacti imemieMg it tne Gime thai of the Mix pth tanto Pim tine ah the French troops witt | ufsoture of steGisetpl plateo from which the alleged obey 4 eee re mn was | docs assassinate Polonius, and is always en- | but in fact it is merely throwing away part of ged bignty = ‘ih orov Taedieni rm oak m Mexicy and Romo during the present | counterfett stamps have been struck of Several wit. | PTOmp! 'y the removal the refrec- | deavoring to screw his courage atick- when otherwise refuse house month. a nesses were examined for the proseoution, after wai tory member. In these summary proceedings ing point that he wig enaliaats af wanna hen i i tom ope ated prevalent ‘a many parte ot the i Napoloon, ai Lis New Yeor's Day récept on of ihe diplo- | the defence produced evidence to show that the accused | Old Hickory ato; 4 q case involving this test | ana the only” reseptacie for such filth mills bots, Gigriand Ge lige Oo ae che ¢ ‘ory stopped not to inquire what would | who is equally anzious to assassinate him. Fi- | oath is before Chief Justice Chase, some | Rocees fe © small wooden bem plated a ope th oral horas an axcelleut character. The Comminioner | te the consequences of a majo of and he has | or" ine sidewalk ‘and entirely wncovere!” Im year of peace obverved that on the tata tA CRD gp rleongy's rity oppoged to | nally the play closes with the quadruple assasai- | got to decide against the oath. But, to prevent ee eee ae Dablin each house is provides A fire, supposed incendiary, tind destroyed about two | connsel intimating that on the law be Wbubt submit | CUZ Sey bee of Congress. He bed | nation of Hamlet and the King and the Queen | that, it is moved to repeal the point which has} "2 ,* focaasreepeaneh ie hema dennen a ovine worth of property at St, Catharine's | brief to his Hovor by Téesday, ‘Theselarges preforroa | marked it certain line of poficy, | and Laertes. The whole tragedy is instinct brought the question Into the Supreme Court, in throws, abd aah Cart vy heme i Sail, Mr. Bright is again hopefu! that Pari Rosset will advo- ‘Su uhiges age x ce rac oth had resolved upon certain great measares, and | with ghostly horrors, and is admirably calou- | and so stifle Justice and keep certain Southern Any pave ct, of throwing filth near cate reform “with the energy of thirty years aco uate actomcane a | against bitterly hostile majorities in the House | lated to heighten the sentiment with men under ® disability which cannot be sus- | Mont se that this ordinance ia observed. In Tho Bank of England hed advanced the rate of dio | Tu the Saprome Court chambers Judged. F. Barnard and in the Senate, from time to time, he per- | spectators enter the theatre; and ii wag tained whenever fairly brought up for decision. | sights tnd’ senctin that. grove py Wt count te eight por eon Festeniay directed the (ue of « peremptory mandamus | eFered and Anally overcame all impediments | tess sclected by manager Stuart for this vory | Such is the love of truth and right that charac- | N°% YoTk.. 10 street seems to ve rian bo ome ws aiev a cere! ewoursvsnar | barton irat ont taet | nmralrookwunteoretre ea at | Sone cod” sameat retess nr | Sea te cate mee, ten. | Sah nas aa her en on the time ther ware de otive contrast vervonal resemblance to his ' Sugh ina fair voecimen of the radical stratoay. | try not atovied :

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