Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
2 NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1866.-TRIPLE SHEET. , , Ti aati ; ae. » ee | persons? promiaes and aeiging books and This } EXECUTION IN NEW JERSEY. | Stage idamtariety, “M5 % “8 8) UNION MASS CONVENTION IN KENTUCKY. | fast exec, ttae, ese ee CHOLERA. : . ‘ conan waa ebicnd eeieaictiesd of mibpher imrtso Om pas bs them to furdish from thele private books stavements of aaceven. ~—_—~~r~rrrr of which I was not guilty. I did not intend to kill ay their cusiomers’ and neigh! us Dess, ey | Brevet Major Thos. ©. Brainerd, Assistant Surgeon - ae c. i amen ! havo mot auy logal authority to do. The persons fur- | yrited States “Armyy from duty in, the Department of Wife, and only struck her a blow, | Sie wos Ak ure | Presidemt Johnsom’s Poliey the | nbshiog such satemonts are gullty of a breach of mor- | \tkancas aud ordered to 9 2 ,, Mipatyatty for | eme, and fell wit 7 Its Progre d Rav. res in ag Ge! or i eth fer a 5 Gantile honor. Brevet Colonel Jas. ¥. GI United States 88 ani James Glennon Hanged at Elizabeti { wi eat ound” ora Ui ay ha al ae Rallying Note. “tn how, dmc th dain of Suen Sate, |e tag gel, Sargeon “ 5 ae et ag : : " et possessi ooks of busin pair ag) fi oO" f the Murder of His Wife. veges: Sueriff—tIs that all, culprit? Yes, ele, that ke, &e. &. men under the. provext. that, they want them to test | Calttornia spas zsteend rmer Years. ; cot ay keh Mie aaa | ger a A, Mee, Aina Supra, ne : i upon. Wh +] Ta clergyman then advanced, and handing # rtyo. | Adddeess to the People of the State—Com- | bioks they will overhaul them with reference to | and ordered to yetara to" - letter 1 Action “Alarming™=The | 0! mations, £0 as. to ferret out some incorrectuoss im | *P4,o'gereton Genera, © Now Nore and report By The Disease Prevails Only in i : ale. Gleonon then. shook bands with'the jailer, the His Confession and Speech at | yori als who had been at- provions returns. ‘This will be done to impose penalties | ‘iiiary ctorekeeper Gustavus Hull, Quartormaster’s is eaten ‘Satie coli during his nearceration, nad then, turning eae Der tie teeta to ence eunline | and enforce forfeitures As one-half of the amount re- Department, from duty at Louisville, ‘Ky., and ordered Filthy Places. the Gallows. to the sheriff, signified his readiness to die, artics Inv‘ to Unite for covered govs to the informer, the inducemen| to duty at ‘Ohio. The deputy sheriff then advanced to the prisoner's | Preservation of “a Constitutiumal | !aw improperly for private gains is very great, and'it is | Military Storekeeper W. H. Gill, from duty at Cincia- side, and, pulling the cap over his facc, addressed the Union.’ apprehended that Dime otters cannot resist so great @ | nati Ohio. crowd as follows. ‘winptation. Brevet A.C. Woodfolk, Assistant Quartermas- ‘And 7 ott ‘of New Jersey, the sheriff of ‘The following address and call for a convention of the If a person is summoned to appear before an ter United States Army, from duty at Cairo, Ill, and | If fs Alw: and: IN{ERESTING SCENES AT THE SCAFFOLD, | this county'{ about to carry out tue ordcr of tho Gourt, | Union mon of Kentuoky, appears in the Louieville Jour | with bis books he hava rit to, seal them up to far ag ordered a setura to duty t Betrl,ah : ays Imported Quaran- Tea er be Chere Cotaiee to tne, datnenl Ws Gant You, | TST APRILTS, ant 16 sighed. Ry wore: than.e handzed Telurn under consderation. The. assessor has ‘not any Volsntecen ons duty atone Tenn., and or- tine Can Keep It Out, \ &e. &e. &e. James Gleanon, be banged ‘by tho neck. until you” are Tight to oxansine ay pect of the book, not relating to Jered to report to the Adjutant Goutal of the army oy rad, Eee Rew bare ney ve. nee eee If tho law is administered in accordance with the | Ger, v With the last words of the deputy came the signal for . c: Captain J. B. Dexter, Assistant Quartermaster Volun- B James Glennon, who was convicted of the murder of reaper | elt of the culprit irit of Judge Smailey’s decision it will cease to be as | teers. trom duty in New Orleans, La. bis wifo, Mary Bitzaboth, at the February term of the | was dougline iu'the ais ‘A few brief sewggles, and ‘all oftenaive fo pene Rl nel mt anger oesinrmggeg aL B.D, alloc Ascistaat quartermaster volun; Filth, Pright and Degradation Court of Over and Terminer, at Elizabeth, N. saaared Was OVEE. ined hie sot pili Nines to the Adjutant General by letter.” Invite It. the extrome penalty of the law yesterday, by hanging. | aica‘tutly penitent for a misspont life. Ho was thirty PEACE JUBILEE IN ST» LOUIS. Hospital Steward Charles Gercke, United States army, The culprit was remarkably firm and self-posseased upto | yoars of age and was a Brooklyn. As a curious ° from ee nates CO eee es hi elicited the incident we might mention the fact that the culprit was es, and ordered to with medical ‘Department the-leat moment, ond Ue Racoon Syme | Horn, killed his wife and was hanged on the eame day of | Moughiful men throughout the sountry, ina fee | Immense Torchlight Procession—Prest- | the Platte, at City. : thy of all who witnessed his dying moments. the moath, namely, the 26th. Soe Seep meee nee De ue MT) | aunt: Jebienn Meeemadmaiaite Mine ORDERED. | THE VARIOUS TREATMENTS OF THE DISEASE THE MURDER, “The bold and manly efforts of our present Chief dorsed=The Oce: the Meet the Captain W. A. Wainwright, Assistant Quartermaster The mnrder of which Glennon was convicted was com- Political Ne {mtn arresting the revolutionary movements of achem, ing, % to duty at Chattanooga, Tenn. yesterday, 80 that he suffered drpred sectional majority have thus far saved us from the fatal Mottees, the Speeches, the Resolutions, Captain G. W. Cushing, Assistant Quartermaster Vol- prampeaketonstsir titi = Couruavar 10 Sexatom Hasmm ny CoLonu Max.— | eects of permanent consolidation ot all power inaces-| die. untors to daty a Calo, UL ho oxtrome penalty of the law on the first anniversary | ..-°o1' Gmcaes of the New York Stato Equal Rights | eralized, t, unknowa to-the founders end fatal | 75 priends and. AE ew eee me ‘J. H. Betcher, Assistant Quartermaster Votun- Maps of the Infected Sections in New of his crime. He was living with his wife in the third a ta, our free eprint ot government ‘The danger is not sapportens teers, to duty at ., as military: story of a tenement house in Morris avenue, and was em- League and of the Albany Reual Rights League passed ; the bei and mea.who have inaugurated | the Union restored celebrated in St, Louis the issue of | Brevet rm. Myers, Assistant 1832 ’ i om Senator Harris, at \Albany, last wook, to thank him | these. échemes for the overthrow ef con- | the President's proclamation of peace in s most becom. | termaster United States Army, to duty as Chiof York City in and 1849 ployod as a laborer on the Now Jersey Railroad. On the | 7° 0 ait eae ‘slitutiouat freedom, though bailed by the action of the | ie? ana joy tad Fs ‘ast. ‘The | “Fmaster of the Platte, morning of the murder he arose quite early and went to — indepen aves ‘are not ; but, with renewed zeal Seay mannan: Om: SeSECap orang Captains E. D, Baker and H. W. Janes, brevet major, Diam of Geonaia Famxpuex.—The Atlantic | IToMenl ote te af uo Shaheed im fring te annexed account of the affair is given by the St. Louis | asstant Quartermasters United States Army, to duty in. Commercial says—“@nly three things are denied the | ures in rupid succession which to the certain de | Repubtican:— the Mititary Department of the Pacific. 1 froediman in Georgia that are necesary to constitute | Stictio ofthe rightful powers of tho States over Ne |” The grand peace demonstration in the city of St. Lous MUSTERED OUT. QUARANTINE REPORTS. him a complete citizen, the right of sulfa, eligibility | $9 thom by the loundors of our ational goversoncat | ORSuLUNUAy Right was one of the most successful, aa It | | Captaina Mervin C. Dely, Brevet Major, and Sylvester 4 came ; Major 4 to office and competency as a juror, The former may | Men of all parties possessed of an enlightened Bi. peep pe a toe opnprtiemert ie proy wee, Wilson, Brevet Lieutenant Colonel, Assistant tant work. He returned about nine o’clock, and had some trouble with his wife. Leaving the house, he did uot return until twelve o'clock, when, finding no dianer ready and his wife infa state of drunkenness, he became exasperaved, and beat her to such an extent that she > [ i i at no distant day be conferred on him.” ment end a Just appreciation of the difficulties w: It was at once cheering to all patriotic hearts and mag- | General of Volunteers; HL & Tremain, dint sort while aferma” The marder was rat |“ T."Tetmouy ana on Manucneere—The New | camp the tah relent Joann ns erie! | ahead ina "ho previous ovation of thi chare | Braair General hor ‘San ‘Ramsay.end'Cartus | THE HEALTH OFFICER'S STATEMENT. discovered by a man named Budd, who, on entering CS micunae See eer eae t une fever equalled it in numbers, in simple yet elegant dis- | Charles Spraul, Ard-de-Camps; “ . “ York correspondent of the Springfield Hepublican mn iy uggle . lay, in the enthusiasm of the participants, and in the | Clark, Brevet Lieutenant Colonel, Additional Pa; ; Glennon’s apartments, found the deceased lying with her has seen a slate of tive Congressional nomi- | etlorts of a dominant party to reduce one-third of the somal ft f the 7 5. ‘A. Sabin, Additional Paymaster &. &. &e. head across a cradie, in which there was an infant afew | Doli noni. Wet lacnusatie, as follower First district, | St#t# of this groat Union to the condition of conquered | Mein cel tivoines on dhe Pookie, grand procession largo ‘ins’ Charles H. Dean, brevet Heutouant colon months old. ‘The prisoner was sitting on achairin the | ™ Merman ot teiseenkie: Macanks Sake. Av An: tlre pa pei pe Mould prove alice aisas | numbers began to gather at and-in tho vicinity of the | George C. Winslow, H. C. Lawrence, Court House, ‘The rendezvous of the several Johnson | H. Russell, Alexander McIntosh, John An emment physician, Dr. Marsden, Iays down the drew, of Hingham; Third, William WhRing, of Roxbury; | Of our national arms a solemn mockery and ruinous | chins in each of the ten wards in the city, were Iterally | Crowell, Edward P. Graves and Ea following as certain of the laws of cholera:— . . id alive with the masses crowding thither intending to - | sistant quartermasters of volunteers. Fourth, no change; Fifth, Caleb Cushing (1); Sixth and | ““Rogarding the Union restoration policy announced by | alive with the masses crowding thither intending to par. | sistant quartermaster of volunte + of volun | _Fir¢—That it is a communicable and controllable dim Seventh, no change; Eighth, F. W. Bird; Ninth, Profes- | President Jonson in his annual message, and also the Setnepoaaten yah aneat ae aoek aaopaies | Wore ineten telat ort ease. a ES e 2 e i et i ve essages, ag “ 1 Secd—That its causes josphere. sor Clark, of Amherst; Tenth, no change, Dipl aor ow shad oes conatittssonal erty aad free | fom each and every ward in the city having formed at | — Captains Marvin A. Daily, brevet major, and Sylvester | ‘7hind—That it accompanies human travel abd human room, and, in explanation of the affair, stated that tho deceased had fallen on tho cradle and killed herself. Mr, Budd suggested the propriety of sending for a doctor, but Glennon scouted at the idea, and said his wife was only fit to dic ina ditch, or words s os . . thelr respective quarters, and marching thence in the | A. Barrow, commissary of subsistence of volunteers. to thas effect, He was. promptly. arrested and. sages: fe geal ee aaa pani recast Be cea Ceeaauten ot LEME: TEE ned aateank order announced in the published programme, had | Assistant Surgeon Alexander Lelong, United States pg ee it progresses at the rate of vessels acrosa quently indicted for murder, Upon the trial it was ne support of tho policy and principles sct forth in said | Tetehed the common nucleus, at Washington avenue and | volunteers. ‘the ocean, and never precedes them. : eget tion at Louisville on the Ist day of May next. This | S4PP0! ; ° Sixth strect, Here the whole was formed into ohe grand ORDERED MUSTERED OUT. ‘That it is transmissible by clothing and effects shown that the deceased’s windpipe wis broken, and, messages, that the Presiient may be encouraged and ee helper me wo | Ave y | convention is called by the committee appointed | have his hands upheld by a grateful people while he | Proc im, Nader the coms: iptain Geo. A. Mag- Eighteenth New York cavalry, now serving in the as well as by passengers. there being finger marks upon the neck, the theory of wv A wire, acting as grand marshal, and Messrs. John’ Finn, | {tary Division of the Gulf. Par A nage yee Ne peat SL te) at the State Convention in 1864. The call an- } makes battle for the right without regard to party assocl- | rm ee Wa is Mig Me ipre: ith: in appears iv the prosecution was that the unfortunate woman had ations. james . John ‘oe, Thomas Curley, Erastus DISCHARGED. communication, directly or indirectly, with persons or nounces as tho basis of the Convention ‘the consti- or Wells, and §. B, Stanard, as assistant grand marshals, on | Rospital Stewards Edward G. Hardy and Orson ©. Cole, | places. been choked to death. Tho defence set up was ; Unfortunately for us at this time, when unity of action | Horseback, with a large corps of neo ey ite Pi i h 11 eed. OF tution and its friends, irrespective of party.” The | has become of the utmost importance, we find rival | Denpoacks wih & sabi peltatiaae ak in command | United States army. Seventh—Lastly, that it may be arrested, like the Chak OE ah SORE Oem y intemperance, | steadfastly loyal men of Kentucky, however, have no | parties in our midst preparing for political meetings 1¢ Fespective ward delegations, on foot, and took up MISCELLANEOUS. plague, by an absolute quarantine of a short duration. a : > the line of march down Washington aventie to Fourth | prevet dier General Charles H. Howard, Assis- Part or lot in this resurrectionary movement, and have | Sive\,herto divided them, and thus destroy the moral | Steet, down Fourth to Walnut, out Walnut to Fifth, wp | tant Commissioner of the Freedmen's Barend, 1s 1B 32 cowragrous? issued a stirring appeal to the citizens of the State, | force and effect of their power, when it 1 obvious that a | ¥ifth to Pine, and thence surrounding the entire square | jeqve of absence for three weeks. If it be true, as above assumod, that cholera is conta- calling a grand mass convention, on the basis of the | common interest 18 involved which can alone be justly | CoDlaluing the Court House gud adjacent grounds, the |" “( olonel C, G, Sawtelle,.Chief Quartermaster Military | gious, communicable from person to person, and not im head of the column, however, reaching around to policy of Andrew Johnson, as opposed to the sectionalism | 4nd appropriately vindicated by a harmontousand united } Pirty jong before half the column had atrived at that | Drvrionnceiar ot tne Depacement Cf Laueians, and ill } the atmosphere, then it is cortainly a disease that can be and not by any injury received at the hands of the prisoner. {t was shown that deceased ‘was continually intoxicated and that on the day of fhor death she drank a quart of rum. The coun- sol for the accused urged that in any ease the jury could point im the course of iis march. shut out of or cit; ‘an “absolute,” that ry aly convict of manslaughter, bat the appeal on behalf eos the radicals and the rebels, to mect at Louisville ulti the view, therefore, of proventing, if poarible, | P2rho procession waa headed by four delegates bearing a take charge of the depot at New Orleans, La, if addition | shu tnd sy prt y by | te, by of his client was in vain. Glennon was convicted of | M4 disser those large ana handsomely painted banner, on which was in- resent seudn: 6 perfect quarant lived in these vital issue: id the “ n Brevet Licutenant Colonel W. T. ptain and Barman: Seances, or ALamina.—This gentleman is | SeBera! principles Involve an aes vat to all’ mon of | sofibed in gigantic letters the words, “St. Louis John- Nod "Srates Araby was re. | S0me of the facts relative to its contagiousnpes as bear- "y * Assistant Quartermaster, Unit now the candidate for Probate Judge in Mobile. His | all parties, who carnestly desire the restoration of good aa, cear teas theta Bont ee baba otis with a lif. | ported for duty as an assiseant to Colone! Sawtelle in his | ing upon this point will be interesting, friends named him for the place as soon as he was re- | government and the preservation of @ constitutional | O/'tne United States. Each delozation of the ten wards | MCS. 1 tenant Colonel E. J nana | __ The following refers to the first appearance of the dis- leased, and a candidate previously nomtaated cheertuliy | Unions 1 meet in, mass convention at Loula: | had borne in its van a large transparaney on which was | auttnst Quarterataren, Volunivers, hay, reported vo | case in Constantinople, withdrew in his favor. diving the ‘voiss of the people of Kentacky” utterance Raeaeee te ee yaa Toke Crate oa euowed, 1 and | Colonel Sawtelle for duty in New Orleans, Lo. ai¥2, "the 28th of June nothing in the hygiene com- How. J. M, Scovay ox Tux New Jensrr Sexarorsmr.— | upon the questions of the-hour, and also to place her in |- ras Painted conspicuously the motto * Civil and Relig: | RETUEN OF THR ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-SINTH On wis, day the pescen oe cannes OL, antes. Hon. J. M. Scovel, President of the New Jersey Sonate, | janmonious gaye 3 * ous Liberty”’—words of significant import when they REGIMENT, NEW YORK VOLUNTEERS. ‘Alexandria with cholera sick on board; they are landed as written a letter to cago Tribune, in and West, who, in the language of the gifted Stephens, | are taken in connection with certain provisions in the | ‘The Ono Hundred and feventy-sixth regiment New | at the arsenal, and not five days pass before the first, ¥ ee eee: te ebe Cnionee 2h reply to | in his recent address before the Legislature of Geortis, | Tow constitution ot Missouri, aud fucidents recently | York Volunteers, is at Savannah, Ga.. enrmte home a - an i j 4 . , mili '8 some strictures of the Washington correspondent of that | are ready to banish the pr:judices engenderad by the late | trnyniring under its wicked aid unhallowed provisions. | under orders to muster out at once and fa igi don agreed wo An a . 4 y Journal, who said that Scovel spent a long time in Wash- Prep oa ging rey tho restoration of a con- | Tarze numbers of other transparencies were borne in | Hart's Island, New York, for final payment and dis- | grsenal. From this day cases multiply in murder in the first degree and sentenced to death des- pite all his lawyer's efforts to the contrary. An effort ‘was then madg to obtain a commutation of the sentence from the Court of Pardons, but that body refused to inter- foro, and it was decided that the law must take its course. SYMPATHY FOR THE PRISONER.- [BThe prisoner had becn in the employment of the New Jersey Railroad Company for several years, and previ- ous to the murder enjoyed an excellent charactor for in- H z 5 ! ¢ : aS arsenal dustry and sobriety. The Supermtendent of the road, Palas exerescences which have | tho long line of the procession, each bearing one or more | charge. The regiment has seen hard service on various ‘board the veusels anchored there; the cor- Mr. Woodruff, who seemed to take quite an interest in the ae nape is bag wer Signe rel ropes [Farell da SE rade Sepat eet br perigee priate mottos. Prominent among them were such | flelds in several ‘departments. It. was turough all the | SU4c%, board the vemels anchored Whore te ee cer ‘cage, told our reporter than Glennon was one of the best Pade i nig rae rstrag i sewed sic ef | im all of its parts, and the complete restoration of civil bhy a (ouls, April 3, 1866—6,000 Dead Ducks.” Guage Beats: in the ot, of 1 Sat ‘after Rite if ros ppg ‘the pono a. oases watured fellows he ever saw, und that he never lost a | , F se in | Authority, with the restoration of thegreat writof human | «andy, the White Man’s President.” ‘was sent North by sea with the Nineteenth army corps, | further off are visited by the disease, ‘guard day's work by reason of drunkenness, Such being the ‘There is no truth in this statement. Ihave been in | freedom, which is the citizen's ri tite of peace, to «We are Reconstructed Now." in time to join Sheridan in the brilliant campaign of the | of Parmak. ‘at the entrance ‘arsenal, Washington but twice im four moaths, and on neither | Mect in council on that day and give embodiment to thew | «ciate Rights and the Rizht of the People to Govern.” | Sh Valley in tho fall of that year, whore the | ana only a fow’ paces distant from the barracks, is fact there was considerable sympathy for the prisoner, | cccaseon did I say one word about the case of Mr. Stock. | Wited aud harmonious action. «To Forgive and Forget is Magnan/mous, regiment won 9 Feputation, and was frequently | roughly dealt with in its turn; finally, tho rest of the and the many and frequent, visits made by ie friends | Oveassoe ia Tony a3 bs “Our Tasior President will make Robes of Peace for the | complimented in orders, among other things for being | guard and the workshops are infected. In the mean- owed how deeply they were interested in his fate, _ ‘on. contrary, my opinion was publicly expressed ‘ SOUTH CAROLINA ‘Nauion.’* ‘ the first regiment inside of the rebel works at the storm- | {ime the corveite ‘Ismir is towed to the exterior port, it THR DAY BEronE HE RXECUTION a that John P. Stockton was legally elected, ‘and tbat, " A Pn trey en wang ing of Fisher's Bil It was afterwards ment by sea a where sho remains for forty-cight hops; the cholera sthe culprit was vi ov some distant ef ousted, ae e turn of Peace," met Sherman vannah, since done serv! moved to ‘timan; several Foisives, who conversed wish lm for several Bours aad. | coe re ne wan LeMay Sesto’, sad that the man who Our Charieston Correspondence. ppeal to the Batlot Box.”* for more than a year in Southwestern Georgia. About | Gave later"the, first caso of cholera appears ia the ex- tried to cheer him up. Glennon was quite calm, and | 0+ Persistently hurled Stockton from his seat in the Cnitelaaied SCL. pelt “our Fresident,"’ &c. one hundred and thirty men and the following officers | terjor port. On the other’ hand, the citizen workmen received his visitors with unusual self.possession’ He | Senate was not the man who ought to take the vacant Tox, 8. C., April 19, 1806. Persons unused to witnessing such magnificent parades | return with the reciment:—Colonel Charles Lewis, Lieu- | employed at the arsenal py the disease im said that he was prepared to Sebo thought it sean chair in the Senate.” Effects of the President's Proclamation in Scuth Caro. boda ba fanden quate cones sof uve tae 8.80. oan a Colonel Wittens ee ae = ae Kassim-pacha. If we turn to Yoni-Kes y, which a 4) rather hard to die ime id not be- ° ina—. law Removed—. Order ually marc! on. modorate estimate | tw! a uns George P. }, Edwi a distance from it ° Hove bimeeif guilty. a hoes Cxtuneation or Jurvencox's Brermpay ix Crvcixxatt.— | lina: pap re pa. pecoahan : xii ‘would oot the number down a vom coven to elght then. Epragt Wood, Ethan G, Locke and William W, | (ose teen ase ia propagated from fhe arsenals To the Rev. Mr. Clark, of St. John’s church, the pris- | The anniversary of the berth of Thomas Jefferson (Aprit | rom the War Depariment—: i sand people, Some placed the number as bigh as ten | Smithson; Lieutenants Frederick Gill (Adjatant), Samuel | for the first. established ‘case is that of a stone. ‘ener confessed that he might have been guilty of man- | 18) was obsorved im Cincinnati by a festival of the de- cussions Between Planters and Freedmen—New thousand, and 6carcely any one reckoned them below five | Gage, Alfred Halviead, Morris “ey on eeenas D. | mason from Kassim-pacha arriving, already sick, at slavghter, but not of murder. He stated that being ex- | imocracy, over which Hon, idod, | @nd Charleston Line of Steamers, de: , scx Cheumals people. Among. che netionabie objects | Aasith, ‘Charlee, Doris, Tooaar + Lake | Yeni-Keny, where he dics the next day with all the Sorrel ite vnhen cena Sn oh act | Tora tae pope rn an eapendeas tpn | te in Qretamaion of root dohawn, oath | ARP aa Meneame setts. ret | ky ee | on the cradle, where she was found dead by Mr. Budd, } ent members of the party commonly known as thie cop- | AV° such general satisfaction to the conservatives | which was carried by the very largo dolegation from the NAVY BULLETIN. Let us state, then, the fact; it is this: cholera patients fof, and dasiod tn Co that ho tsod any facane of strane, | Petbead party. Among the toasts were these:—‘The | tiroughout the sihanieie nepayrede *Silany residences slong the line of march displayed the ~ Tae "wuich ‘as happeued to, the: Marine Hospital . ; / majority doctrine, amd the greatest good of the greatest | letter, #0 far as immediate political liberty to the South | national colora, and ‘windows and doorways peered bre A _gulation whatever, and concluded his confess‘on by saying DETACHED—AaPRIL 16. furnish it, The first cases of cholera ha that he firmly believed death was caused more by intem- from ‘Bumber—ruinous heresies, which bave supplanted the | concerned. . The following despatch from the War | thousands of eagbr oyes upop the magnificent procession. | acting Master F. S. Osborne, from receiving ship | the hospital hardly longer than a ow days the petionte , Porance than violence. He expressed himself quite Department has created much feeling and comment:— { It was, indeed, a j umphant celebration, a time | princuts leave of abse remaining there for other diseases were and fea tont lor what had occurred, and ‘he Nope | Sovereignty of the States and the sacred rights of indl- War Drrasreran, WasurtoronsD. ©, Aneto, tags, | of kenoral rejoicing and oxultation. It was such a demon. | Frinevtnn, and granted lenve of abwence.. | | remaining, tate she sticks of cholera. The at God had already forgiven thm for w he had done. viduals.” “The Reeolutions and Report of 1708," and | prover Mejor General y Me Bannan, Au sta, Gi j ony Crs Ata with @ ac pad ee recovery | and granted leave of absence. ward, where the first ease of cholera, ot local origin, was Heonon slept poorly on ee one to the memory of John C. Calhoun were also propos- ‘The Assistant Commissioner pene etal eed — > Heh yo ‘spirit, corey a Acting Master James rea receiving ship | observed, entered, on the 3d day of July, appotite was as good as ever. Indeed Mics a lp ed Mr. Long made a specch in response to the following sentiment:—“The Kentucky Convention of the Ist of May—the greatest democratic gathering of the last twenty years, May it assert the old Kentucky doctrine itn ated Mterasignal conagenrth'kinetea | owracana, APatL 10n 8 a del contagion, till it CRED, “4 to involve the whole population. Men, women and chil- Assistant Surgeon E. A. Dulin, from steamer deont sie conght toe lnapionion, sak teony a hoot-| Danand entered ve ohtemear e who Cp ge yy CE swelled with a buoyancy unexperienced perhaps for long Mate John F, Peterson from duty at Navy Yard, New ple contact of the patients; but the days of his existence. THE MORNING OF THE EXECUTION was apont by the condemned in receiving and taking | o¢ state sove which includes the remedies f before. York, and granted leave of absence. Yeave of his friends for the last time, He was attired in spree chor i oslo, for | itatepicinace jurisdiction. : e Woes varcires datedsta of ths Me, Lavin Crnet Meme wes | ate [Any ‘artshora, from Coast Survey | "ber develope contagion like those affected with small a beet belt of black clothes, and cocugied a ebely outside | SSG wiNaONs sesertion of State rights. AB } resort io miliary tribunals in any ease where justice caa be | more than filled, anda large meeting was held outside, | steamer Bibb, and granted leave of absence, Pox; Sur ae & ae semen Of his calt door, 90 that he'might more easily converse | address, drawn up by a previously appointed committee, | stained through the ted! addressed by some of the most prominent citizens of the | . Acitag ‘Assistant Surgeon,F. N. Johnson, from steamer | Communicated pg 7 ee upon him } and entitled, “An Address to the Citizens of the several State, The immense Totunda of | Parapero, on reporting of ‘relief, and granted leave of | CxCretions, expecially, the sindle ‘by cholera pationtay ‘ was a girl, about eighteen years of age, whom he fe my ibe " ‘An opinion bas been entertained here by many saga- | $h5'Gourt House wax absence. oa harbor tho San coresadl teuh aitieten aa" te’ Seeman parity Sancaniger State Rights,” was } cious mon for some time past that the President will and DETACHED, APRIL 18. phones ee hee ‘uncle, and os a a submit to the radicals until he is freed from their controt | *"Pported by a long list of vice z Boatswain Wm. Green, from duty at Pensacola Navy that the stools of Son of tncie, wept continually durin Stam Coxvexnion ix Omwo.—The Democratic State Yard, and ordered to Guif squadron. tho iatorviow. "The poor croature | remained with | - St 2 as sg toe ie by the ballot box, and that he will enforce the civil | oan’, yer ‘Commander F. M. Yard, from ordnance daty at Pitts. agar eg Sees We tases ehh Coan eee RT fee Sar cote Uae, Hambas on the | Rights bili unless the Supreme Curt pronounce it uncon- | C. Moody, Colonel N. burg, Pa., and ordered to duty as General Inspector of of these gmake arrangements for the appraaching tragedy. Mr. J inion Stato Convention on | ciintioual. The hopes of the most sanguine of the | 82d roe Suppiice ob More letand Huey, Ford. suffering from therefore, easy ‘Woodruff also called upon the prisoner, and co the 20th of June. The offices for which candi- | friends of the restoration of peace and harmony are dis- | Sept a long, and pa eemanet okers | , from duty at Norfolk Navy | to conceive why a shi ing, &c., may be received an order trom Glennon for two keys in the pos- | dates are to be put im nomination are Judge of the | appointed. But it is «question, even from an extreme ty ne 9 tee} ie the ana | Without a case of cholera having ocourred, ‘ senaion of the juiler, ome of which belonged to the rail- | Supremo Court, Secretary of State and member of the i agg granted leave Foc: petite toads Prof. Wiemeyer, of Tubingen, makes the following Detvorkond, ut which tive prissneruas a mbeiwen ‘M® | Board of Public Works, The Columbus correspondence Mate E. E. Bradbury, from daty at Navy Yard, Bos- | statements on the same point :— “fan was quite collected during these interviews, | of the Cincinnati Commercial says the Union Convention ton, and ordered to steamer Miantonomob. ‘The question whether or not cholera is will probably nominate the present incumbents of the ORDERED, APRIL 17. ime places without contest, As to the platform the party ‘acting Basten Beaty ¢ Whitmore and Acting Passed Kendall, to steamer Don. will abide as a unit by the decision of the Convention, onpreep, apni. 18. coll and there is a fixed dovormination among the mon of in- Second Assistant Engineer K. 7. Phillippt and Third | Wich it" cuene peuher te the class of covemmoor mar fluence in the party—and in this they are sustained by ~ Assistant Engineor James M. Clark, to steamer Marble- | that of nod-contasious disease. Jo a, on the cap band, the great mass of the organization—to let no differences bis publ ‘Second Assistant Engineer Josiah C. Chaffee, to eg om en Ll gene map telomere Sg 4 Of sentiment as to minor details of legwlation or ad- political wisdom and his eas aie eas Solemn: wet gery gp ministration prevent them from presenting a united frout | ill Pe gang tem G Berger ey ity at Navy Yard, Nor- | tainly by’ patients eicted with the die to those who voted the war for the preservation of the ests of his country. iontenant Commander 8 Livingston Breeze, to, duty GE cides Gaigh ween temas Gee jucated, and Union a failure, The Democratic Convention wil! proba- Resolved, That ee oe af hae te ean tainly in most the disease is propagated. The tion Wht Yt mizbt never hear anything of the teagic end bly boldly adopt the Indiana and Connecticut tactics, any State ever has ae Se en '. A. Roe, to ordnance duty at | aamission of ‘his theory, for which we are indebted et carmel eae aart ppg ye inf tar strand pray for the welfare of ttle on "ne ¢} le we loa. A. itman, Lynch, 0 Sinnott, Frank 7 Soon promand that he would faithfutly attend to ceete: fathers fought the battles of the Revolution; Holler and Jos. Duggan, mates, and ordered to receiv- sokbes ths diovens has tounmboniea a teal ony ‘oan ink Me Exrcisiox oF & MaMmne rrom Tam Texxessrn 11 y by an insig- quest, and received a paper of guardianship from the 4 babar sOmA- ought to be no taxation without ( and we | ing ship Vermont. niticant (seemingly) diarrhena, cholera can be conveyed ‘ Prisoner so that he might take legal possession of the | TURe.—A member of the Tennessee Legislature, denounce as unjust, oppressive aud tyrannical ‘all laws APPOINTED, aPrit 18. ton hitkerto Beukhy locality. ‘Tile person soap’ weoen base ous scares Foe a ae en a ey. ee cee RT MareT a waned, | Senco pmemtien r' * | Cibte Gener come eam ne nr | cane, poker apes Ceci, Seruanroe, of fp . passed at i a wu “ od , r, but 5 ‘The seaffold was an importation from Newark, where | In the resolution accomplishing this, the following | )orss MNAti Orin Oh Md tues of the past, whilea | _ Resolved, That we can only look with apprehension eutan uuveans,avuen 10 . | matter which may give rise to the most deadly epide (t tno born used cn © muanber of sissiier occasions, It | rensene ore apecited:—ftat Re bed, on several OP | spins of kindly feeling strikingly marke the shelel and-| O84 Slarm upon the vicloat, erusl and bigoted policy of | 1, wy, SUGSE Sets ciemmee Mlamonemah, mic, It is thus no longer inexplicable how the cholera was orected on the ground floor of the prison, and was | casione, insulted the body of which he was a mem- | business intercourse of old and new residents. The | the party, now 5 ee Sh eee 2 Tee f° : in its wanderings takes no defined course, but spreads entirely excluded from outside view. ¢ prisoners in taking up his bat and cane and leaving the | South—in this city—I am convinced extend a hearty whose leading oy yey itred and revenge, APPOINTMENT REVOKED, APRIL 17. indifferently, nsw from west to east, now from east to the ceils facing the gallows were removed to another | ber, by taking up welcome to Northern men of capital and business energy | “emanding uo less the political proscription and en- | Mate P. M. Topham, of New Bedford, Mass. ‘west; now with the wind and wow against it; how Part of the jail, where they were excluded from all view | House, in order to reduce its members below a quo- | who come here to reside. slavement of four or five millions of our people, and APPOINTMENT REVOKED, APRIL 18. it always follows the routes of travel; bow it dose of the preparations e rum, and when sent after and brought back by order of the ACRICULTORE AND LADOR. facy ober the South dod to set. upremroat centoai | Mate David Fader, of Brooklyn, X.Y. hot go from place to place in a shoriér time then ie ’ PERAK woos FoR THE eoree House, persistently refused to amwer to his same, in | ba Th anon range ger et despotism, to the destruction of all ‘Hate und local au- HONORABLY DISCHARGED—apnit 16. ae Selon ot always, tsa bone abt to the puine are taioman ta tees ae uttor disrespect of that bagy; that he went home and re- | the planter and freedman, have insured to the country | ‘orities. Acting Ensigns H. Slay Leslie, from April 13, and R | more quickly than bofore. We can thus, at least im Mrainain order, and deserve mach crede for the com | mained absent five weeks, without having obtained lave | an average crop of he saps this year: thi ratifying e New License Law. Wave wiilom G1, from September 16 Inst. Made. “Tn the lotaliieg walled by ‘the. dieease the Farge pore force was’ on and ouisioe eC ane prison, | (2002 ring 8 cheering future to dhe ourreat of iheit thoughts | Siare Monday last Colonel Bartram, Inspector of Ex- | Acting, Audaiant J map beg a while the inside of the building was lined with men so Convention ix Vinatxia.—There is a call out fora con- | and dispelling distrust and gloom from their hearts and | cise, has issued about five hundred blank formeof appli- ‘Actitig Master James Nash, from April 16. the places of the a, Loy the oan thet oth the peamagese tight be Kept, clear. About | vention of “the loyal people of Virginia, for the thor- ES ener aune of things between cation for license, some of which have already been POSORABLY DISCHARGED, arRit 17. sowern th te hot ouscoen teas 0 fing’e toes or street, mod . sey aie ough and permanent organization of the Union party of been effected by the filled owt and returned to the office of the Inspector. Acting Third Assistant Engimecr George Westinghouse, is even for a long time the only infected locality, and the alton ticket went to | the State,” to which “original Union mea" are especial- hy capt K. No action will be taken upon ,these applications until yl; 2 last, 4 poo men EX —_ oman disease. lows. ‘e orons wanna, = 8 Hie true, Dat it | ty invited, to beybeld at the city of Alexandria, on Thurs. gomneye rer emer by ‘partment they have been passed upon by the Board at their regu- ng Andy Hartshorn, dated March 1. ~ a cam te ae isited by for am occasion vi ” uous | aay; May 17. The only authority given for the call is untiring energies. He oteatty lar meeting next Tuesday afternoon. Several communi- by nen, al pong yi or later is communicated to other houses and streets INO LEAVE OF HIS PRLLOW PRISONERS, ‘ey qreer.” Sad nae ieee cations have also been received and placed on file | ‘acting Master C. F. ‘from April 18. _— Sree ts eee Gas aie aie eee raised this year. The privies partly by other ways which cannot " Glennon expressed a desire to take Tune Usiteo States Sexators To ne CROSRN FY THR efforts for a ‘awaiting the action of the Board, many of which seek Acting Chief Engineer John F. MoCuthen, from Apnl always discover. Often, at the end of an epidemic, the Next Vermoxt Lecmtarcers.—The next Legislature 7-9 “cient the Freeman's aren exemption from the law under various pretences. 16. Reuben Mi Cagerhan aetna! apes ee Bn heap ate - held in Vermont will bave the unusual duty of mak. | institut ina, and no PROCEEDINGS OF THE LIQUOR AND BEER RE- from April 19, ning was completely while these wards ing three elections of United States Senatorn The | ¥B#® it passes away, to be soon no more forever. TAILERS. ~ rit 19, aud | frst wore decimated by free A first election will be to fll the unexpired term of | wow phase of the Internal Revenue Law. ‘The liquor dealers and innkeepers, who are at present rs jer, from . Jacod Coliamer, deceased, which expires Masch 4, | pecigiox OF JUDGE SMALLEY—THE ASSUMED Pow. | in great tribulation about the new license law, which i] sain, Daan, densely crowded ci 1967, and is now temporarily filled by the appoint- ‘ER OF AS®RSSORS CURTAILED. gives the Board of Health unlimited power in the prem- 19. i ment of Judge Folmd by the Governor. The second | |. ocr emrarin ee eater ie oto ises, continue their agitation in opposition to the law in I can cite election will be for a Senator to fill the long term, be- PRL yf ‘matter of Brown, is of nage | question, but they gradually appear to come to the con- Assistant | 1859, which speaks sinning March 4, 1867. ‘The third election to fill the un- practical importance, It abows that the maaber in which clusion that they will have to submit and obey the law. py SE, expired term of Solomon Foot, deceased, ending March i) Internal he hag dm ype ly acl eg pte ay of Prominent Mwyera, and the District Attorney of Kings from’ Stettin, which 4, 1860, The Vermont Legisiature, upon which wilt de. | {i many respects itegal, eu county, in a specch delivered before the German retailers disease; and during ‘ ‘olve these important di will be chosen on the fisst Assessors have been in the habit of persons | of Williamsburg and Brooklyn on have told th : ity ‘es returns after the wx had been | thalthe aw a coustional and at i vo Tuesday of Reptember next, and will mect on the second | 0 incomeand all will have to of his (ather confessor, who was unremitting m his at- | Twesday of October. dentions to ar Phe pe Rem@xatiox oF Seaton Doourrren —The Madison im Re) bd ir approached, Glen- | naily Wisconsin of the 20th has the following :— uben House; ‘Zolt that ‘bis religious duties bad got-been ne as comply teres they should, and ‘aited the shori’ form | ‘Tt I8 reported that Senator Doolittle has ideter- ply i ofan hour. The request was promptly acceded to, | mined to resign his seat at tho close of the present as the Germans ite the prisoner was once more closeted With Father | session, and accept a foreign mission, perhaps to Russia, the sale of liqnors the wind Qi 7 5 restaurants and from “Village to village, from one mMfitary station to THE EXECUTION. as Mr. Clay is said to have asked to be relieved. We ‘lone tMeir estab- another, and in the exact route of troops; from Nagpore minutes one, fom Ro peuene should not be surprised If the report should prove true. "* on Sundays, inasmuch as they have to accom- to Jauinah, from Jautnah to Aurungabed and Muiligaum, to the scaffold by the sheriff and his officers. Muscat Etacrion i Viners.—The Richmond Whig mn. ina. from Aurangabad to Seroor and from that to Bontbay. in hie shirt sleeves, bis arms proceeding, an Ttbes ‘vinited the different vi between back, and the fatal of the 24th inst. contains the following items:— ‘an unwarrantabie exercise of authority, according to | ¢ committee, are to meet the German organiza. this and "At Hyderabad two have, from his neck. Amidst the most deathlike The election in Portsmouth on Saturday last passed off | Jadge Smalley's decision. 1t is & violation of personal pH 8 TE lately fallen a sacrifice to the malady. One of these had Lies that of the pillows and tstened to quietly, atid resulted in the triumphant success of the | r@hia have a conference with the of Health, and on the ly attended the death bed of the other, and ho ’ of consolation which fell from the of the | atizens’ ticket, We the ing result :—For “Assessors have been (n the habit of requi citizens | same day a meeting of the New York Liquor Dealers’ As- himself was a corpse forty-oight hours after. The prayer uttered in such « low tone , J.C, White it, James Williamson, | to produce their private books of account submit | scciation is to be held, to take action in reference to the * CHOLERA ALWATS IMPORTED. {wee with aditiculty any portion of Nt could 188 votes; for 's Al , Colonel David | them to am unrestrained examination. This cannot be | maiter. The pobiie im general also cope to be much by the spectators; but the culprit to | J. Goodman beat Claedias W. i done to the decision of Judge Smalley. | concerned about the opesations of this law, ‘whicb, : beam six In every one of the cases in our city Las bem: of it, and seemed to be im- | The election for Trustees in Manchester, held yester. | The bas that the law does not authorize an SS a ee ee, 8 & | six inches, 32 inch cylinder, seven and one-balf feet | visited by this disease we are able (0 trace it to the ship Sots of the speaker. The religious | day, was one of the most spirited which has taken place of ' books of account and private | vory obnox! ‘On account of the “Sunday | stroke. Ei arriving at the Koto ey that i about five ‘when the con. | thete for some ‘There were two tickets in the save #0 far as the entries relate to a return which | clause,’' so that even members of the German Re- | served up in excellent etyle at the expense of Mr. & brought om sation, hie Rnevling ‘and calmly Sele, ons cunicind rae eas which was com. castaner bee act etted wpes. it be eoted on the ee ms a penans, —, ‘of the owners, The (Cessepes lo shegantty tra geet dat epee thea i eae crowd. posed at oe week fetara, aed callostor, bis euthority [1 = “ ; her It followed the shen then ached the and, | members old reformers were, mans are fore demoe- Ca will rua te Rogkawag | on rue gu bis bead, wrvcweded to read ths excootign. elected by on overwheimige majority. "7 Thcee ofjgors hare boom in ybe bait of exterias eave | stoyuse ty valereqin Ya toe Yoeoxines iweh +O erivel of the bce ‘hqtia, wink w oe ide