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4 NEW YORK HERALD. JA‘*S GORDON BENNETT, LDITOR AND PROPRIETOR OrriOk N. ©. CORNER OF FULTON AND NASSAU STS, THE DAILY HERALD, published every day in the year, Pour cents ps: copy. Annual subseription price, $14. THE WEF .Y HERALD, every Saturday, at Qe gents per coy Annual subscription price:— One Copy... Three Copies. 5 Five Copies... 8 Yen Copies. 6T Any larger number addressed to names of subscribers $1.50 each Anextra copy will be sent to every club often, Twenly copies to one address, one year, $25, and any larger number at same price, An extra copy will be sent to clubs of twenty. ‘There rates make ihe Weary Hens. the cheapest publication in the country. Postage five cents per copy for three months. YERMS col madvance, Money sent by mail will be a1 the risk of (he sender, Nono but bank bills current im New York kon. The Cauroeta Eprrox, on the Ist, 1th and 2ist of euch month, a! rx cents per copy, or $3 per annum. ADVEKTIEEMeY ra, to limited number, will be inserted inthe Weexiy Hxpap, the Eurcpean and California Editions, ‘The Ecrersan Epmion, every Wednesday, at Six cents percopy, $1 por annum to any part of Great Britain, or $6 to any yor! of the Continent, both to inclad> postaze. NO NOTICE taken of anonymous correspondence. We do not return rejected communications. Volume X ¥ XI ANUSBMENTS THIS EV WOOD'S THEATRE, Broadw: Rotel.—Fra 0 .vao—Tur ke opposite the St, Nicholas Diamonp. TONY PASTOR'S OPERA HOUS®, 201 Rowery.—Comre Vooatisa—S cao Mincreeisy—Baccer Diveuresement io Hove » oy rae Wan. CHARLEY WHTTE'S COMBINATION TROUPE, at Mechantes’ (all, 472 Hroadway—In a Varrery ov Licnt ry pis GNreRTalMesTs, CORPS Dx BaLtnt, 4c. Your Turn Next, STREET OTRCU: ».-Kipine, Vaourt BLEECKE ® Charles 4 |. betwean Perry and is ke. TERRACE GARDEN, Third Avenue, between Fifty- aighth and Pity ninth streets, —Twi 0" Gaaven Cos ers, commenci: SOOLEY*S OPFRA HOUSE, Brooklya.—Ermor:ax Maw arena —BA L405. BORLNQUES AND PANTOMIMEs NEW YORK MUSRUM OF ANATOMY. 618 Rroxdway.— Laororss wou tae Oxy-Hypkogen Micnoscors twice daily, Oper rom 8 A.M, till 10 P.M. New Vorky Monday, A NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS. All adver!\ cments handed in until half past nine o‘ctock in the evening will be classified under appro- priate headiugs; but proper classification cannot be usured after (bat hour. THE NEWS. FUROPE. Wo have news from Europe through the Atlantic cable dated in London on Saturday, August 4 A epecia! telegram from our correspondent in London, dated on Friday, Auguet %, which was received at the fixnaLy office yeatorday (Sunday) evening, contains highly important intelligence—it may be said, the ouly news of great importance sent through the cable during the day. ‘From thts coures we learn that a Peace Conference is to assemble at Pragua, the main subject for negotiation being the reconstruction of Gertuany, The bases are that withdraw" from the German Confeclera tion, lose Venetia and her part of Schieswig-Holstelu, and pay ten millions of doilars in the shape of war ex- pensea, It is proposed that Germany shall be divided orth and south of the Maine; the States north to con stitute © Union guided by Prussia, aud the States south © form an independent Volou Martial taw had been proclaimed io Lower Austria, Venice, Prossia and Wurtember,. Previons to ‘he armistice arrangement Austria had hoon very sorely pressed by the Prussians and [talians in the field, and the revolutionary Hungarians under Miapka, encouraged by Prassia, Her troops were at tacked by the Prussians near Vrosburg, and being lndly peaton, were in retreat when the fight was ended by the reception of the armistice news on the feld. Klapka oad taken a Hungarian legion of nine thousand men, war prisoners liberated by Prussia, to Southern Silesia, with che view of wnvading Hungary. They had a respectable cavalry and artillery of Hangurian maintenance. In the Southern Tyrol the Italians had been very successful. ‘Tho Prussians have entered Mannhoim and Heidelberg. Carlo Laigi Farint, an eminent italian legislator and patriot staterman, is dead. ‘The French Minister in London had been summoned \o Vichy to consult with Napoleon. ‘The Goodwood cup wars won by The Duke, and the ‘00dwood stakes By Special. This interesting turf news was also fleshed specially io the Hrmaiy through tho cable, running far ahead of the time of the horses, A Dill for thé eontinance of the suspension of the Habeas Corpus act ip Irolaud was voted on second read- ing in the House of “Commons, Angust 4, by 105 against SL Mr, Gladstone supported tie Cabinet mesrore, ond praised the treatment given the Feuians by the Uuited Mates government The Derby goverumont had, it war fully believed, entered into some sort of compromise with the Reform agitation leaders relative to (he legality of ther holding meetings in Hyde Park——a step which must damage the Vabinet, ag abigh tory and aristocratie ministry, in the extinction of ite supporters both in and owt of Parlia ment, United Btates five-twentic €8% Inet Baturday, Augost 4 money the same day. ‘The Liverpool cotton market wax flat Augnot 4 ‘Tho Liverpool breadste%, provisions and produce markets, with the London markets of July 2%, ar pasted in our adviows by the Moravian off Father Point, Nowa by the Atlantic colic was “momonterily’ ox pected in Liverpool on the 2tth of July, advices of the wevious day from the expedition beng very encour aging. MISCELLANEOUS. ‘The cholera tn this city tad not seemingly abated for the twenty-four hours antecedent to seven o'clock P.M. yeaterday. Twenty Meinl cares and nine de were during that pe: reported. In Brookly: MMoulty waa experi>s ning correct returns om Sunday owing to (ie ity oF ral mont of the nanitary loath viously reported caves }.6% Om the other islands no») Dr, Moreau Morrts, Si: trict, forwarded. ® com) nt Incident to the digguntioy Kast Forty sixth atreet A list of the reeruite for the Seventh infant died of cholera on be s Intand, is given in oor co eane appears now to have been gotten a the deaths last reporie’ ace were quoted in London at Console were 06 87% for e « manage of pre nd Sixth dis Health tone t first effects of the diseate olera e among the passenger A Mat of mannfact in the Sigth aye ar Ninth Congrensional dietricts one alae are er $20,000 per snnum, is published in our 6 t ine in the N viet, | morning, and also a! + amounting to more thaw $10,000 por year. the coroner's jury returned s verdict of wil ul yonlorday agninat Ira Munn, proprietor of the W ton House, Newark, for having stabbed Alvin Friday morning, #0 as to cause his death Our correspondent who wae recently with Covers Meodman tn his invest in the Bouth, writes from formation concerning (he malpracticns in that rin New Orleans giving fur()« tion 0 the country, No records wore found to form an e-tisnate upon, an thay Were convenently made away wilh ope the orrival of the inaperiors The charges of pr as of aublin momar ers oy sale of negroes by the Bureau officers, spoken of in former letter, has been fully co: With Louisi- ana the investigations close, and the full report will doubtless be made pubfic in a few days. Fefior Jésus M. Palacios, first deputy to the national Juarez Congress of Mexico from the State of Chibuahua, in a letter to the Congress protests against certain do- orees issued by Juarez Nov. 8, 1885, as President of the Tepublic of Mexico, The old questions of the constitu- tionality of Juarez’ course in retaining the presidency during the present war is ably discussed, the deputy strongly favoring the right of Ortega to that position, ‘The Corresponding Secretary of the National Union Ex- ecutive Commitee at Washington, informs all interested that moet of the railroads bave agreed to carry delegates to and from the Philadelphia Convention tor half fare. In a recent assembling of the delegates to the Phila- deiphia Convention from the First district of Georgia, the election of A H. Stephens and Herschel V. Johnson to be delegates for the State at large was ratified unani- mously. The imperial consul of Mexico at San Francisco bad rece'ved intelligence that the liverais had attacked Aca- pulco on the morning of July 22 and been severely de- feated. Their commander was slain. His name is not given. Vessels coming from New York according to our Consul at Cadiz, are hereafter compelied to undergo five days’ n of the Freedmen » Bureau quarantine at Port Mahon or Vigo, before being allowed to enter any other Spanish port, The Union and the Conservative domocratic parties had mass meetings in Louisville last night. At the latter the names of Leo and Johnson were received with ap- plause, and the names of Grant aud Shorman with hisses, Vallandigham and Pugh addressed the body. Commissioner Rullins, of the Internal Revenue Bu- reab, has decided that savings banks are subject to the tax of ten per cont on their circulation after the fst day of August, as well as other banks or banking ass0- ctations. Despatches from Los Angeles, Cal., state that the United ‘tates forces at Camp Cady had been engaged in @ desperate fight with tte Indians, in which three soldiers were killed and one weunded, ‘The captain, crew and passengers of the ship Hornet arrived at Honolulu on the 7th of July in a longboat, The New Orleans Riots-How to Defeat the Revolutionary Radicals, We published yesterday, trom one of the New Orleans papers, a full account of the origin and progress of the recent riotsin that city. The evidence of eye witnesses, of reporters for the press and of the negroes themselves is over- whelmingly to the effsct that the negroes began the -disturbance by abusing the police as rebels, Then, when the police attempted to make arrests, the negroes forcibly resisted them. The principal fighting was between the police and the negroes, and every effort was made by the police authorities to prevent the white spectators from interfering against the blacks. Of course such efforts were in vain, especially when the members of the illegal Convention openly took part with the negroes. It isin evidence that the blacks were armed and ready fora riot. Dr. Dostie, one of the members of the Convention, who was killed in the melée, repeatedly declared that “there was not a negro in New Orleans who was not organ- ized and prepared.” General Sheridan, in his official report to General Grant, says that “ the leaders of the Convention were political agitators and revolutionary men, and the action of the Convention was liable to produce breaches of the public peace ;” and he adds that he had made up his mind to arrest these leaders as soon ay they committed an overt act. These facts prove conclusively that the radicals are responsible for the whole affray; that they assembled the illegal Convention under revolutionary leaders for the purpose of provoking « disturbance; that they organized and armed the negroes, and sent them forth to pick a quarrel with the police and white citizens, and that the blood- shed which followed was anticipated by them, and formed a part of the plot by which they hupe to create a new sectional feeling at the North against the South, to break up the Phila- delphia Convention, to carry the fall elections, and ultimately to impeach the President. This grave conspiracy is now being carried out by the radical organs among us. So soon as the first news of the riots reached the North, and before any definite information in regard to their origin could be obtained, the radical press began thelr infamous work. They repre- sented the fight between the police and the negroes as a rebel uprising. They called the black rioters “martyrs to liberty.” They asserted that rebel flags had been displayed by the municipal authorities. Growing bolder as they proceeded, these papers accused the President of the United States of conniving with rebels and being accessory to the murder of loyal men. They forged despsiches from General Sheridan bolstering up their state- ments One of the radical journals seid thai “General Sheridan had telegraphed to General Grant that the riot was not the resnlt of a mere mob, but a preconcerted and prearranged plan of weeks for the slaughter of Union men.” Compare this with what General Sheridan did actually telegraph, as quoted in the preceding paragraph of this article, and the full scope of this astounding forgery will be discovered. Other radical organs advised the negrog “to atrike back” and “to take life for life and limb for limb.” Had not the radical charehes been closed for the summer vacation we should have had appeals for contributions to supply the negroes with Sharp's rifles, in the old Kansas style. There can he no mistake as to the spirit which instigated the radicals (o cause these riots, and still lese as to the objects which they seek to accomplish by their en- deavors to poison the Northern mind. He who lends himself to their schemes, directly or in- directly, encourages anarchy and a new civil war. If these riots are incited at the South they will spread, like an epidemic, to the North, and the radicals will be the worrt sufferers. Should the President be impeached by the present Congress, and removed from his office upon partisan grounds, to be succeeded by Charles Sumner or Ben Wade, as Vice Presi- dent pro tem. until a popular election be held, the country will not quietly submit to such on outrage. It seems thot there has not been enough blood-letting to satisfy our radical Chandlers; but if another intestine conflict shall | come the radicals themselves-—who eseaped | scotfree during the recent war, and mule | money out of the miseries they had caused | will certainly be the first vietims, | We hold that the best, the safvat and th reunite the country is to carry the coming ional elect for the congervatives. | To that every energy should be devoted and every tt else should be made subsidiary The mercial interests of the conntry cen | well alford to contribute all the funderequired, aince they will anrely he destroyed if the radi- | cal plans ancesed. The masses of the peaple will overlook all minor istues and direet their | aitention to the dlacomfiure of he raiieats. | ‘The Poliedotphia Convention, opening ite doors | to all true Union men, from tie North and | roy to dofeat the radical conspirators | NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 1868, of past fal as it subserves that end. We believe that | powerful an engine of war as an iron-clad | but they fail to inspire public confidence. it is too early to talk about building up a new party until this violent, destructive, anarchical radical party is put down. There are a hun- dred issues that will have to bé régulated and compromised and arranged before a new party can be successfully organized; but there is now only one great issue before us to be fought out at the Congressional elections. We want to see on uprising of the people against the radical rebels like that which startled the Southern rebels when Fort Sumter was attacked. There was no talk about a new party then, but every loyal man ranged himself at once upon the side of the Union. The extremists of Mas- sachusotts must be put down as thoroughly and eff-ctually as those of South Carolina, but it can be done by the ballot instead of the builet, ifwe begin at the fall elections. Tho radical loaders say that they may lose New York, but that they are going to walk over the course in Pennsylvania and every other Northern S'ate. We trust, for their own sakes, but more for the sake of the country, that this prediction may not prove correct. It can only come true be- cause of the negligence of the people at large, and in that case the radical conspirators will be nerved to more open and revolutionary m:as- ares, and will have-to be checked by the very Jaws that they have themselves enacted against other traitors, But the desperation which they exhibit is the best proof that they have no confi- dence in their own prophecies, They far the Philadelphia Convention ; they dread the ver- dict of the people upon the jobs, peculations and speculations of the last session of Congress ; they tremble at the result of their reckless, ex- orbitant and unnecessary taxation of the labor of the country. They hope tht the riots which they have instigated at the South will create a false issue and blind the people to the issue already made. To our clamors against their taxes, tariffs, high prices, corruption and ex- travagances, they seek to reply by lauding negro rioters as “martyrs,” and by loud outcries against the “rebel barbarity” of those who will not allow the blacks to shoot down policemen. We doubt very much whether this “ bleeding Kansas” game will again deceive intelligent voters. we : The Superiority of American Iren-clad Moni- tora and the Felly of American Self-Glorifi- cation. When business men or a mercantile firm find a good market or engage in a profitable enterprise, or when an inventive genius makes some great discovery, it is usual for them to avail themselves of the benefits of their enter- prises and discoveries without letting the whole world know the secret of their prosper- ity. The American government has been at fmmense éxpense in experimenting upon and testing the value of certain kinds of iron- clad war ships and monitors, and at last its efforts have been crowned with success, The Monadnock and Miantonomoh, iron-clad moni- tors, have made successful sea voyages—one to California through the Pacific and Atlantic, and the other has crossed the Atlantic to Europe. In both instances their qualities aa sea-going vessels were fully tested, and they were pronounced by scientific and experienced men to be the perfection of invulnerable sea war ships. A prominent official in the Navy Department accompanied the Miantonomoh in her junketing trip to Europe, and he has been especially distinguished for his urbanity and courtesy to the crowned heads of Europe and their Admiralty officers. Every particular con- cerning the construction of the hull, the ma- chinery, draught of water, consumption of fuel, calibre of armament, speed and seaworthiness, was explained, to the infinite admiration of the English and French naval officers, and to the especial self-gloritication of those who en- joyed the task of showing up the vessel. The London Times is excessively laudatory upon the completeness and offectiveness of the Miantonomoh, and declares that against such vessels the conats and harbors of England are comparatively defenceless, Of course the English Admiralty will take immediate steps to supply their navy with vemels constructed upon the principle of the American tron-clad monitor; France will do the same, and in a brief space of time we wili find that all the sd- vantages we have guined hy our enormous ex- penditures and tedious experiments in perfect- ing « complete sea-going iron-clad war ship are enjoyed by Enropean nations without their incurring either the expense or delay of experimenting upon the vessels. In Burope it is extremely difficult for strangers to obtain access to thé government dock yards; bat in our case, in order to gratify some sense- Jess feeling of vanity and self-glory, we parade all the minutie of one of our grandest naval inventions to the curious and gaping eyes of foreigners who, we know not how soon, may become our enemies. Both France and England have attempted to construct ‘iron-clade; bat their attempts have in most instances proved complete fatlures. England, always self-con- ceited, had her eyes opened to our superiority in shipbuilding by the appearance in her waters of our fleeta of packet and clipper ships, aad finally by the performances of the yacht America. She will now adopt our style of iron-clads, and thus we shall be deprived of the material benefits arising trom our important naval inventions and discoveries. The truth is, our aaval vessels of new and improved eon- strnction should very rarely be allowed to be shown up in foreign ports. We cannot afford to xet ourselves up a# patterns from which the | old Admiralty fogies of Great Britain can copy. Our naval inventions are w *ource of our power and strength as a nation, and the secrets of the merits and peculiar construction of our naval vessels should remain sealed in the | Navy Department, and sot expored to foreign nations that are notorionsly inimical to Ameri- | can interests, As things are now conducted | our finest war vereels, like the Miantonomol, | are sent te Europe to facilitate some private | speculation or to seoure contracts by some val constructor or naval officer who has re- Fovoritiom ie | signed his post in our navy. | shown by out Navy Department in this respect to an extent never to be found in the navy of ny other country. This evil is at once abom- inable and diagracofal, and should be no longer tolerated. Our own safety and defence de- pend upon the inventive genius of our people, | and oar discoveries and improvements in naval ‘ and military warfare should be securely pro- tected. Prudtia keeps the secret of her de- structive needle gun to herself up to this day, } although it fs an invention of many years ago. sed the iafanone | from the South, irrespective of antecedents or , Why should got owr government ia a like man monitor? The Peace News from Eurepe. Our special London telegram published this morning virtually announces the end of the warin Europe. The armistice has resulted ina conference, which Austria enters, after first ad mitting all the demands of Prussia, The terms accorded her are very humiliating, and their acceptance indicates the great danger in which the empire was placed by the rapid movements of the Prussian armies, A battle had taken place near Presburg, in which the Prussians bad again been successful, cutting off that place from Vienna. This may have had some- thing to do with forcing Austria to consent to the terms of Prussia. The terms on which the conference is granted and accepted are, first, the retirement of Aus- tria from the Germanic Confederation, the relin- quishment of Venetia and Schleswig-Holstein and the payment to Prussia and Italy of $10,000,000 as par‘ of the expenses of the war. The retirement of Austria from Germany of course settles the fate of that confederation, In fact, the dissolution of the Diet was accom- plished by the first movement of the Prus- sians; and that part: of Bismarck’s plan which looked to the des.ruction of the confederation has long since been an accomplished fact. We are therefore prepared for the statement that Prussia proposes and Austria permits the establishment of two confederacies out of the old one, to be under the supervision of Prussia. Before these two confederacies are formed Bis- marck will doubiless demand and receive full satisfaction and his own terms from Saxony, Bavaria, H :sse-Cassel, Darmstadt and Hanover, which Powers joined with Austria, but which were overrun before aid could be sent thera. To this destruction of the Germanic Confed- eration we can readily believe that Austria offered little opposition; but she must have hesitated for some time before consenting to the abandonment of Venetia and Schleswig- Holstein. The latter possession will, of course, go to Prussia, which already holds one-half that State; and, as its coast frontier is very valuable, it will, doubtless, not be soon re- linquished by its new owner. But to whom does Venetia got To Napoleon or Victor Emanuel? The “great day’s” work at Paris and Amiens of the Emperor and Eugénie has been ruined by the insane obstinacy of Victor Emanuel; and, backed by Prussia, Italy will doubtless boldly demand, an4 in the end triumphantly occupy, the province as if really “conquered by her own arms,” Tue war, though brief, has been a momentous one, and has thrown light upon several very important questions, The humiliation of Austria is complete; Italy becomes enriched in getting her own again; Loufs Napoleon finds that he is not the autocrat of all Europe, and Prussia, developing herself at once as a great Power, proclaims that in the new map of Europe she is to fignre as the controlling Powcr of Cen- tral Enrope. Secretary McCulloch_Movement of New York Bankers and Brokers. According to our telegraphic advices of Fri- day evening last it appears that on that day there was an arriva) in Washington of a dele- gation of New Yorkers, claiming to represent the commercial interests of this city, being mostly bankers and brokers of radical tenden- These professions are rather believed to be the cheap condition agreed to for the retention of the desirable office held by each of these patriotic Secretaries, The President may feel bound to treat such apparently honest protes- ——$—$ $$$ $$$ $a differences, will only be use- | ner keep to itself the secret of constructing so | McCulloch, Stanton and Welles may be sincere, AMUSEMENTS. ‘The Metropolitan Entertainments. The seductive attractions of the watering places and invigorating breezes of the rural retreats have wooed, anc we believe won, from the city the great bulk of the peo- ple who fill our theatres and music halls during the other seasons of the year. This fact, however, entities the mans sions in good faith ; but still he lacks in the | S°f$ 4nd proprietors who endeavor to’ amuse the large public judgment a harmonious and reliable Cab- inet for the new dispensation, with these mem- bers inherited from a different state ot things and a different policy. clasa, made up of “stay at homes’ and ‘can’t gee aways,” which etill remain in town, both to praise and support the entertainments for the week. ‘Wooo's THEATER. The very pleasing engagement of the Worrell sisters i We hold accordingly that if Messra. Seward, | ™Pidly nearng its close at Wood’s theatre, Broadway. Stanton, McCulloch and Welles are heartily devoted to the President’s policy and really desire to give him s crowning and decisive triumph over the radicals, they will gracefully This evening the performances commence with the comedietta, The Rough Diamond, Miss Jeunie Worrell personating Margery, the Rough Diamond. Fra Diavalo will be given in conclusion, the Misses Worrell sustain ing the leading characters, The season at Wood's closes retire from the Cabinet. In doing so they will | Pe*+ Saturday. . Tuesday, August 7, is set apart for the give him the opportunity which he has all along desired, and which he must still desire benefit of Mr. M. W. Leffingwell, when Cinderella, Mot- @ mora andToo Much for Good Nature will be played. On Thursday, @ grand complimentary benefit will be for such a reconstruction of his Cabinet as will | given to the Stage Manager, B, A. Baker. Saturday, have no old stick of timber in it, great or small. In this view, alihough the political record of Mr. McCulloch my be satisfactory, he has otherwise become identified with Secre- August 11, te for the benefit of the attachés of the theatre, TONY PASTOR'S OPEKA HOUSE, Tony Pastor’s Opera House, in the Bowery, is crowded nightly, Toay Pastor with a very numerous corps of art- tary Chase and bis policy, so that his retire- ists appearing. The original Bedouin Arabs are am- ment becomes as essential to a Cabinet clearly representing the policy of Andrew Johnson as the retirement of Mr. Seward, Stanton or Welles, The Nuisances of the City-Work for the Board of Health. nounced for thig even'ng in addition to the attractions of & very good bill. The performances are to conclude with ag farce entitled Home From the War, with Bill Willams, @ New York volunteer by T. @ Riggs, Mr. Smith by G, F. McDonald, Mr. Pickoming by J. Wild, and Betsy by Mes, Frank McDonald. CHAKLEY WHITE'S TROUPE. Charley White's Minstrels und Combination Company The chapter of nuisances which we pub- | continue. at Machanics’ (Bryant's) Hall, Broadway, ex- lished yesterday shows conclusively that the work of cleansing and purifying the city is far from completed. It reveals the fact of the ex- istence of cholera nests of the worst character, hibiting and evok:ng an immense amount of wit and pathos, ‘The bM for this evening concludes with a very funny skeiwb, called Your Turn Next, having Mona Jaromy by Bob Hart, Diezenduff, a journeyman, by Charley White, and customers by Seymour, Thompeon, and that disease of all kinds is not only fos- { Kerns, Nocton, &o. tered, but invited, by these numerous pest houses of the city. What is more, they are not confined to one locality, but are scattered all ‘THE BLEECKER PTREET CIRCUS, Charini’s Royal Spanish Circus Company, with the addition of the Nelson Brothers, exhibits every afternooa and evening at the c.rcus between Charles and Perry over the city, endangering the health and lives | streets, of our citizens in almost every section of the metropolis. Not only are the occupants of the buildings described subjected to epidemics and ROOLRY’S OPERA MOUSE, BROOKLYN. Hooley’s company, at the Brooklyn Opera House, i@ as numerous as ever, and the talent of the members ts exercised in some fine pieces every évening. The pro disease of all kinds, but the very character of | gramme for the week includes the sensation specialty, the nuisances is such as to poison the atmos- | 4 Hurrah Trip Around the World; The Banner in the phere for blocks around them, rendering it Sky; The Liquor Dealers, &c, dangerous even to pass through the strocts. | pheodore Themas’ Orchestral Garden Con- Tae wonder is, not that the cholera is on the in- crease, but that, with such material to assist it, these neighborhoods have not long since been depopulated by that or other mias- certs. We have never yet heard or seen in tho metropolis af any place of amusement such enthusiasm on the part ov the listeners, eeeh genuine life and spirit in the playing of the per‘ormers, and such crowded audiences and of matic diseases. Were it not that the facts | so superior a ciass as at the orchestral concerts at Ter and data given in the description of these | "ce Garden, Phe success of Mr. Thomas’ risky under- places were obtained from a personal ex- amination, it would be almost impossible to taking is unequivocal, and garden concerts for the future will be as necessary an element of amusement and recrea- tion in the summer as tho Phitharmonic or eymphony believe that such things exist in the city. How | soirées are in winter. Thero is something of real owners of property and landlords can be 80 rovardless of life as to allow their tenement houscs and other establishments to relapse into such a condition is beyond all comprehen- enjoyment to sit in one of the cool, shady arbors of Terrace Garden and listen to a symphony, over. ture, pot pourm or salum piece Interpreted by the best artists in America On Friday night there ‘were nearly two thousand people present, the majority sion. We should think that they would be | of whom wore of n class whose rank might be easily afraid to go near enough to their own property determined from the number of squipages drawn up af to collect the rents. The Board of Health the entrance, from'the respect and attention paid to the should obtain the names of the ownors of all these houses and tenements and publish them music and the order that prevailed. Occasionally a few disorderly persons get in and attempt to create a dim turbance, but appily such occasions are rare, and the to the world, that the public may see who the | parties are quickly expelled. It is very strange that tp parties are and who are responsible for these | this public resort, where every evening are agscmbie@ nuisances. Lot us have the names, thaf the from one to two thourand people, there should not be » people may know whom to blame, and who in our midst are so parsimonious as to thus endan- solitary policeman deiailet to preserve order. The Superintendent of the Police has repeatedly refused, we are informed, to allow any of the force to enter the ger the health of the entire metropolis. In | garden on duty, owing to the’injunction obtained against thie way, perhaps, if in no other, they may be | the Excise Gommiecioners by the proprietor. Now, Mr. shamed into decency. But let us look at the facts as described by our reporter, It is true that they sre almost too disgusting to consider. Here we have Thomas’ concerts have nothing whatever to do with exciae or injunctions, and certainly deserve more con- sideration. The programme given on Friday night was one rarely equalied ta strongth end character even during the regu- cies and opposed to the general policy of | tenement houses crowded with Laman beings, | sr musical seasons. The grand symphony in D by some of them with upwards of thirty families Mozart, a splendid fantasia on tho Midsummer Night's President Johnson, as well as the financial policy of Secretary McCulloch, and that the object of this deputation was the removal of said Secretary or to present such statements of his mismanagement of the affairs of bis depart- ment as to secure « reform in its conduct. This is ceriainly @ remarkable movement, financially or politically considered, and what- ever may have been its precise object, and whatever may be the results of the embassy, it is caleulated to call publie atiention to Mr. McCulloch and his management of the national finances, The question is thas suggested, is Mr. McCulloch, as Secretary of the Treasury, a suecess or « failure; and, if a failure, wherein has he failed? We think he hase failed in fril- ing to comprehend and grasp the reforms which the retarn of peace has demanded in the crude, insecure aud unreliable paper money | and national pet bank system inaugurated for the purposes of the war and the radical party by Mr. Secretary Chase. The abortcomings of | to James, Madison, Varick, Clarkson, Washing- | comprehonsive Kies of Mr. McCulloch in the matter of these reforms we have repeatedly indicated from time to time, and especially in reference to the pet na- tional banks, which sheorh in their protite some twenty-five or thirty millions of dollars that might be saved to the Treasury by dis- pensing with their services, We have also shown the inevitable dangers of, and tenden- cies to, corruption inherent in thie pet bank system, from the examples of barefaced trand and deliberate robbery among them already disclosed. ‘Nor have we been able to discover any purpose or inclination on the part of the Sceretary tor a thorongh cure of the evils of this vicious pet bank system. Mr. McCulloch seems to be content to follow in the footsteps of his illustrious predecessor, Secretary Chase, ws if entirely regardless of the fuot that the | restoration of peace demands « searching and comprehensive reconstruction of our loose and desperate flaancial aystem of the war from-the top to the bottom. f x Mr. McCulloch has alxo loat caste as a finan- cial statesman in bis recent experiments to influence the money market by his sales of gold. It is also understood that he has of late | been largely exchanging one class of securi- ties for another, If so, we bave only to re- peat that the Seeretary is making @ lame de- | fence for * breach of daty, and that | with such devices he cannot stand againat a | hostile radical movement im the shape of a | | Congressions! investigation, a movemeat which | the implacable “Old Thad Stevens” hee br | hinted will be pat into practice with ans like « justificble indictment to act upon. Independents, however, of the shortcomings | and mistakes of Mr. MeOuiloch in a purely | | financial view, he has, under the cireamstances | | which surround him, ceased to be » fitting rep. | | resentative of the new policy and the new party contemplated by the administration. | | Mr. Seward, Mr. McCulloch, Mr. Stanton, and Mr. Welles, as members of the Cabinet, are | now recognized more as the connecting links | } | | which still bind together republican radicals | and conservatives, the radical polity and the Johnson, than ax repregentatives of the latter | in opposition to Thaddeus Stevens and bis Tol- | lowers. ‘The professions of adhesion to Mresi- j dent Jobuson vouchsafed from Mesges. Seward, | | hot weather is aver under one roof, with leaky roofs, sewerage obstructed, cellars in an abominable condi- tion, while in one place the water stands #0 deep in the basement that the approaches to it have to be nailed up to prevent the occnpants of the other ffoors from being drowned. We Dream, the chotcest gems of William Tell, the overtures to Maritana and Zampa, and some lighter compositions, were given in a superior style, The music'ans, inspire by their leader and the appreciative audience, threw all their energies into their work and brought oat every light and shade of color and every delicate imagining of each author, The Midsummer Night's Dream fantasia ie @ very clever arrangement. It commences with the cannot imagine what fiend in human shape | nocturne, breaks off into the scherso, Drings in the could have the effrontery to rent ont such » | march and returns to the accturne again with « brillias® building or even to allow any person to oc- cupy 'teo long as it ia in such a condition. This, bad as it is, is not the worst place de- scribed. The slaughter honses on the cast side and telling frale On Saturday evening the audience was smaller on account of tho rain, and the oom- cert waa given in the largo hali attached to the gardes. A lighter but equally attractive programme was pre- sented, The overture to Maritana was repeated, aud of the city, especially in the Fourteenth ward, | Kreutzer's charming overture to the Wight in Granade present # horrible state of affairs, where “stag- nant blood stands in pools in the yards, with was played with spirit and feoling. One remarkabio fa- ture in the maaic of these concerts is that some of ‘ha most humorous ead laughabie pieces are frequently im decomposed offal and vermin in. all their dis- | troanosd. Of thie character is the Bauern Polka and the gusting details;” the effuviom from which Fool's Galop, Rot pourris, embracing an endless variety penetrates one of the ward schools, whore the | of rs, chorusss, Ac, are also given. Ricde’e chikiren in attendance are obliged to inhale the foul atmosphere. Thas it is, whether we turn Tuemorcaken and Bach's March pot pourns are the best typea of the latier style of composh tion. The selection from L Africoine gave the most Mcyerbeer's opera that could be ton, Marion, Elizabeth, Mott, Leonard, Thomas, | comprised in a single orchestral pioce, but the African West Broadway, Thames, Suffolk, Ludlow, Stanton, Dry Dock, Jevsey street or Second avenue, or evon into sume of the uptown streets, such as Twenty-third, Thirty-ninth, isa hard subject to manage without the ship and tree, It te unworthy of the composer of the Hugnenots, Robert Je Diahle, of the Prophet, and is entirely dependeat om scenic effect and the stage carpenter for success, There are not only numerous reminiscences in it, but positive Thirty-fourth, Forty-seventh or Thirty-second, | pisgianems, and we doubt very much if Moyerbeer would we find in some portions the existence of theae | have ever permitted t to appear in public had he at disgusting places, inviting disease and epi- demice, The very material is found in all of these places to assist the spread of disease of all kinds and almost insure the decimation of the population in the neighborhood. But what has the Board of Health been abont all summer that these nuisances have tended one rehearsal of it, The fifty-third concert will be given to-night, with a weil selected bill. Miscellaneous. Monagor C. W. Tayleure hae extended to Frehter, the London celebrity, ® Mbersl offer to visit the Unite@ Stator Mise Maggie Michell will appear at the Brooklym Academy of Music im Sepvember, under Mr. Tayloure’a not been abated? We are aware that some of | management. oar judges bave interfered and prevented their removing the fat melting, bone boiling and slanghter house pests, but their injactions do not apply to ibe tenement houses or any such dangerous places as those described in East Thirty-second, Madison or Washington street. Extraordinary powers were given | them by the lest Legislature for the ex- press parpore of correcting all these evils, | which the owners, either from enpidity or moan- | §, would not remedy themselves, The facts which we published yesterday show a neglect of daty somewhere, It may he thatsome mem- bers of sanitary squad are im lenge with the owners of these places. We know of im- where they have notified parties com- vd against that they | nolde anything, and this practice may bi been extensi At any rate, there is evidently great aegligene: somew! ; end we insist, in behalf of the people, that the anthorities now go to work | earnest. We bave given them suilicient f to act apon, and now let us se they u will took to these nuisances and have therm shated—these disgusting 4 overhaaled, | and cleansed. If this ix not done at once we may expect to see the mortality rm. cords increasing at en appalling rate bolore the ‘The Interests of the pub- Vie, the besith of ovr citivens and the repute tation of the metropolis call for immediate and prompt action. Let us hope thatibe Board of Health will heed this demand aod rommenre without delay at thiv almost Yerenlean task of abating these nuisances and removing the cholera veels ia our mids. ‘The right wing of the Hanlon Hrothers Combination troupe —the aix brothers having divided—will commence an engawemeut at Wood's theatre, Brondway, on the 13a mmstant The seotion will conse of Thomas, Edward am@ Frederick Hanlon, Mons. and Mastor Seagrist, Mile, Zaa- frets and Senorita Galletii The engagement is Ukely ta Prove & RUC GENERAL SANTA ANNA'S LAWSUITS CARO FROM COLONEL MAZUERA. Genrer Ann B the differen ‘ai lawy real one ¢ Walz, 1 thing © were thine ny Sonta Anne which T entertain towar fens vod will and affwetion which be bas shown tne and continues to give me, The following let. ters, whieh Tf beg you will publish, will remove any a of JI regarding eur copnection. . DARIO MAZUERA. New You, Angust 4, 16a ‘ Don Aste La TA ANNA Aix ant RRiENe woe that your lawvew eh the r | 940.001 iqnidaw will Be T hope that yor coh & reply to this am ae au wy amt kind eaough te write m uty me ie the eye } acomation tae beow pubi de voto (riewd, vt Don Damo Ma cens fim ano Pre ~ with tawyer haa erroneously tare. against Seoor A Lato beet em us, there belng Mueete F~ A yrict middling, sold for ‘weeton. om ae of & eb Th. 1D specie, ane reel et toe ' Virober from totus & Co