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10 NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1866=—TRIPLE SHEET. 7 ee eRe Dennen ranean eo See ED ——= anne AA Secramento; Lieutenant Commander F. J. Nalle, to the ‘and for the judiciary to pronounce judgment upon the ity r WwW JERSEY PO P mati ‘and validity, By what office can ean ATles. Presideat Johnson restore « “uate without the 138 to Serr, 12.—Boatswain Edw. Kenney, to du sanction of the law~ of the United States? | He said there was thing for which the Presi- p pevere he could y on ladelphia Navy Yard; Chief Engineer Montgomery a na Wir ah entnou ur ebute's per ermetraony | dnt chute telmpaaee, Tenpeonoge beconty | POLITICAL MEETING AT TOLEDO. ye oo tet ee pep POE ar bs sy in the South are and its | consult themselves to discuss matters bearing on Hy. he made desired arrangement. | vous, " w rang 4 ‘b words in to this affair led to blo a a Bpeech of John ‘ginor Botts at ta wero ibe opal et of be node agaiost the ity oem iret, lib alting of - SPECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE NEW YORK HEBALO. | SvJfloc'struck his wife a blow over the shoulder with» | VALUATION, TATATION, @C., OF THE CITY OF BOSTON. Pa’ cerson. ‘and said that he could never be trasted again, | could say it had committed no treason nor broken any |/"Endorsement of the President’s Policy and rortan, whieh disabled her for two or three weeks, He ja the police court put under bonds to [From the Boston Journal, Sept. 17.) at some length ‘of the danger of having | law. It had as good aright to assemble as the ia Platform—Specches of / ‘copper- arraigned and said that the question | head rebels had to meet in Philadelphia, Yet by tho General Mullen, Stephev keop the ee peconiaey: part of the transaction | he following is an official covy of valuation of the add ee power, and Pky nao x — ould be left with the States. | encouragement givon by the President, and the taki was bushed vy ing over all his interest in the | real and personal estate of this city, the number of polle, O aulrigteact of a letter written him by | of power fae ee labial cama esings J. Meany and Others. property to his wife. Since these events he has beon | mount of tax, fc, as made by (uo assessors of taxes {Or . fhe Presi*ent’s Policy Condemned and the | an ‘ex-revel “otscer, showing | the fecling of | it, im the hands of military satraps, | wholer ale Toumpo, Sept. 19, 1000. | unusually quarreleome and has nursed his anger till it | the fnanolal year 1866~'67. ,. fouthern people as’ against reunion and said | slaughter of loyal citizons was the result, and this ‘also, | To-night White's Hall has been crowded to exows at | Da horne bloody fruit, | Wards, Real Extate, Personal Extate, To'al. Pole. <” — fetion of Congress Approved. Mr. Johnwon says iBere are nly (wenty earain, and they | autecudiier count in two analsumens ages hy oat | a mecting called for the ratifeation of the Philadelphia | drunkenness and vexation that made aim doit. iis | 2 SATA IS “RL ese.dee “Sin eTEe): Som . a : : Union at etsacn out_af the Uuion, fori one were out | tlemen, we are threatened by his friends, by thre preva | platform. General J. B. Steodman, General By F. Mul | statement of the afr is that she set the barn on tire, | 3:------ 16 S5at99 S'a40.200“at7HT'I00 3167 eee the rebellion has been successful and the Union is dis- | iu his service, and his confidential friends, and specially | 1en, H. D. Chase, Judge Potter, Dr. White, W.'J. Finlay, | m4 aller it had bean oxttaguished | ve chorea! aha | * 991029;225 65,908,800 114,988,025 4,204 icra “I/the ato ccemon mare eanttationa there | by that eccudary Montgomery Hii, we aw ‘rewind | 4. Cho, MPa Shphena: Meany, Judge Denlap | Woe" amastce heomethe meee eae ahd | feces agnuone ‘anon "amma Satz Ampeachment of the President | HP Niny" ous It was. unconstitutional," When | perheads in the ‘North should succeed jn ‘electing | and other prominent citisens occupied seats on tho plat- | that be himself set the fre, and killed his wife in the Iu- | © Ean fans be Wiyseoee ees the United States said you shall not go out, | a quorum with the Southern representat’yes, Andrew | form. The Union band was im attendance, and the aval between that time and the time the fire was dis- 8 ar ty 4'148,030 13,982,270 2'353 Recommended. but you must obey the laws, and that is what | Johnson will recognize them, and igne.re your loyal | meeting was most enthusiastic, Covered. 9. "626 | 6,535,700 18,161,600 1,985 brought on the rebellion, which was eventually | representatives. Candor compels me to’ say Ido not be- General Mullen was the first speaker, He reviewed at 10. 6,269,400 18,477,100 2,309 PRS crushed, The governmedt of the United States | lieve such an absurdity. It would reqr ire a bolder man | Jength the objects of the late war, paid a warm comphi- ARMY BULLETIN. n 9:414.500 24,179,600 2,203 was successful, consequently all the States have been in | than Andrew Johnson. More, it woul’ require a great | mont to the bravery and endurance of the army, and 12 2,673,500" 9,201,400 2,364 | the, Union; and i | were co give an opinion I would say, | fool, and Andrew Johnson 1a uo fool asked vere these objects to be onnullified’ and ee ens The Negro Suffrage Question Shoul while no man or body of men had the power to carry a ‘A WIT ON SEWARD, that bravery and endurance to be disregarded by BXTENSION OF LEAVE OF ABSENCE. Totals, $25,107,216 $180,505,190 $415,902,945 34,102 State out of the Union, each person living in them had ‘There is aye standing at his right hand, bis | disunionists in the name of Union? General Mullen de- The leave of absence granted to Brevet Colonel J. H. of Aogge —< 298, 107,215 be Left to the States. individually the right to go to a foreign Power, take the | right hand bowor, who has been playing court Jester | fended the policy of the President as the only policy cal- | Baxter, Surgeon Uniied States Volunteers, from tho War Total real estate, 1866. ” + $226, 767, oath to that Power and expatriate himself, and therefore | lately, letting himself desce'ad from ah “bout # lasting and effective union of | Department, has been extended fifteen days from the | Total real estate, 1865 carry themselves out, The bp German, Irish and | position, He has thrown cut such bg aa Shel rte te enforced ihe neceasity of sending to | 18th instant. other foreigners come here, take the cath and become | uation, and has asked Vue people “Do you | Congress men who would sustain that policy and pro- DEATH OF SURGEON M‘DONOUGE, citizens of the United States. Some of these men did | wanta President ora King?” But as for him itis only | serve the Union. The questions agitating and dividing Information has been received at the War Department | Total personal estate, 1966 so, and they became citizens of a foreign See to ay he 1s more to be pitied than to be | the American nation wore ably dealt with, and that of of the death on the 8th inst., at St. Louis, Mo,, of John | Total personal estate, 1865... lamed, I wou! The Southern States Never Out of government hostile to the United States, and Iw say I beli¢.ve Seward’s mind is gone, he regarded as one for State arrangemen' ough, Assistant Surgeon United States Army, the Union. directly alienated themselves from the government of | for it would require to tv) unusually ‘aevcloped to 50 Oe aes ‘atall tothe general government. Tt | aud recently Medical Director of the Ninth Army Corps, | Increase ........ eerer) poe the United states, and ought therefore to be declared | through the domestic affliions and the scenes he went | the people of Obio wished to give the nogro the right of | from cholera, after an illness of eight hours. Total real and personal estate, 1366. Ree ae. aliens by law; as Congress omitted to do so ae through without their Waving an effect upon his mind. | the Panot—(Cries of “Never !’)—he, ag a citizen of the ASSIGNED TO DUTY, ‘Total real and personal estate, 1865. . their late session they ought to do so in their next, ai I came to that conclusien after two late interviews with | State of Indiana, had no ight 40 complain. General Hooker, Senpading: Department of the rrsnan THT ew vot ema, | ea RS a uc eS | Metered Nat aerate | Bags MGe™ eaten, “at, at | Kear aes te Ser my tba snc cheers. ny an was not tho man as __ brancl A S7CHIAL TE ——— bo brought foto tue Uulon, ‘eo thal General Magruder, he had been; therefore, instead of blaming 1 pity Saar te inctple that ~would subvert all | to.duty as Medical Director of the Department, to date Paterson, N. J., Sept. 19, 1866. ‘The Union League Wigwam at this city was filled to- mgt to hear an address by John Minor Botts, who, it was upderstood, wished to correct some misapprehen- of General Bterling Price and other officers of the late Con- | him. It is immpossible otherwise that such a | real Hberty in America, and was thus regarded by tho | from August 23, federacy have eee to Mexico aud taken the oath | man could have let himself down to such a | true fricnds of Ireland and tho Irish. It was is wish ORDERED. to Maximilian, which is a de facto government, but | depth; but if such*h freak should ever enter their heads | that when the day of Ireland’s struggle really came Brevet Lieutenant Colonel J. G. C. Lee, Assistant Quar- not hal’ as og er as powerful as was | you have twenty-five millions and an army led ws ‘America should be free, happy and united to give her | termaster, has been ordered to duty in the Department the government of Jeff Davis; and now when they | loyal head and heyrt to protect you. They dare not; but | aid in the fight for freedom. He then turned to tho | of the Gulf. 3 #5 2/3 & : Es iE | lz ' arisen in the minds of many concern- | come back, having taken the oath toa foreign Power, | let them if the; ‘he gentleman then went on to | question immed'ately before the country. He would HONORABLD MUSTERER OUT. wicns whieh bere ‘i yey itlcal avestions or | Will-you permit them to take a part in the government | review the recolutions of the Sbiladelpnia lich or Avaust | ie Germ Steediian and. Iie brave seaociates who | _ By Special Orders No. 450, from the War Department, ae ne ing his position upon the leading po q of the United States? Here are Tuttell (pointing to the | Convention, which, he sald, was composed of the prin- ed life and forfeited all the endearments of social | dated on tho 17th instant. the following named officers of Lepeneeng ae ‘the day, since the holding of the digunion convention at | chairman) and myself—say citizens of aSouthern State— | ciples of the radicals, but enunciated as their own. Rite for the preservation of the Union, if they could | the Volunteer force are directed to be honorably mus- | the city for the fuancial year 1860-67, 5,274, Philadelphia, Accordingly he was invited by the citi- | Suppose we go and take an oath to support the Confed- PITCHING INTO GRERLRY. afford to forgive and forget, why could not such men as | tered out of the United States service, their services ity, th nh the ney of the Loyal | crate government and go into hostility to the United He hoghl nwy pretty bard into his friend Greeley, | Mr. Ashley and the radical Mom! ‘of Congress? Gen- | being no longer roquired:—Assistant Quartermasters— MYSTERIOUS MURDER. - wens of this city, throug ane. Yl | States, while say two others go to Mexico and take | who, he sald, had sometimes gone off balf cocked and | eral Mullen was warmly cheered throughout, and his | Captains Moses K. Goodridge and James 0. Churchhill, — Jeague, to address them this ovening, at eight o'clock. | the oath to Maximilian, who és not t war | dare not show his usual wisdom by proposing thin, advocacy of the President’s policy was enthusiastically | to datefrom September 16, 1866; big en J. A. Cottman, Purapeirnia, Sept. 19, 1866. ‘At the hour appointed Senator Buckley, of the New | With the United states governmen, I ask you, who | which only add new cause of strife, and whieh font approved, Commissary of Subsistence, from mber 15, 1866; A woman named Emma Miiler, aged sixty years, was : . ‘cal pes * has the best claim to come back and become | tend to be obstacles in the way of the general success of General J, B, Stedman was the nxt speaker, Ho de- | Brevet Lieutenant Colonel Samuel A. , Additional | found this afternoon in a house in the northern part of Dersey Legislature, called the meeting to order, and pro- | 4 ojtizen of the United States? That is my feeling on | their party, and concluded by saying the only locality in | nied the right df secession to any State, and on the same | Paymaster, from September 20, 1868, the city with her throat cut, It was at first supposed that Mr. & Tuttle be appointed President of the | the question. Act thi keep their men from parti- | the North that would make a decent show for “my policy” | principle repudiated the idea of any number of States APPOINTMENTS OF HOB!ITAL STEWARDS. that sbe had committed suicide, but investigation shows y policy”” | principle rep y maeeting, which was unanimously adopted. cipating in your government, and it will serve to place | was the city of New York; the only State he was appre- | assuming the power of keeping any others out of the ‘Tho following appointments of hospital stewards inthe | that she must have been murdered at an carly bour this 7 the Southern States in the hands of loyal men, t | hensive of was New York, and if he had fear of any dis- | Union. While the war lasted ‘ie army fought for the | regular army have been made by the secretary of War:— | morning. A slight clue as to the perpetrators of the | Mr. Tattle in assuming the chair said that he consid- do so, and these Southern Ftates are going to be an ele- | triot in New Jersey, it was in Paterson—(laughter)—and | integrity of the Union, and were civilians now to undo | A. 5. Pierce, L. M. Soper, Edgar 8. Robinson, Winfield | crime has been obtained. T; ‘ered it a high honor to be chosen President of the meet- | ment of weakness, distraction and confusion in all time | requested them to give as much power again, if not | all that had been done? Peace had been conquered by | Scott Olive, Wittis ‘De Pomeroy, W. J. C. Neate, Charles . SS tng. Ho would rather be President of tho meeting than | te come. ‘You are bound to and must show the power | more power, to the next Congress, and his labors would | the sword, and were the results to be nullified by those aan cece A. Sanders, Charles Ambrook, Herman THE OREGON SENATORSHIP. St t now. After a few | °f the United States government to execule its laws at | then be amply rewarded. who had never drawn a sword or faced danger for their | Schmidts, Thomas W. Hewitt. pinta President of the United States just now. a all times against all enemies. It is asked of these | The speech was not concluded until near cleven | country? General Steedman in a long apd eloquent | CHANGES IN THE QUARTERMASTER GENRRAL'S DEPARTMENT. San Francisco, Cat., Sept. 19, 1866. iate remarks he said that he had the honor to | States, if they are in the Union, ‘why are th o'clock, having taken nearly three hours in delivery. | speech advocated the right of clemency ‘to their late ‘The following changes have been made in the Quarter- A despatch from Oregon dated yesterday says ox+ Spprop) peecl 4ntroduce the Hon. Jobn Minor Botte, who spoke as fol- | ROt represented? ‘There is an old Roman proverb | There was no extraordinary enthusiasm evinced by tho | antagonists in arms when these an laid down |. master General’s Department since the 8th inst, :—Brevet | Governor A. C. Gibbs has been nominated United States zi which answers that and says:—‘‘The safety of the | audience. thelr arms, admitted their defeat, and expressed their | Colonel R. N. Batchelder, Q. M. U. 8. A., ordered to duty | Senator. The vote stood:—Gibbs, 21; J. H. Mitchel, Jows:— people and of the republic forbid men who throw ob- willingness to leave their destiny in the hands of the | at Nashville, Tenn.; Brevet Lioutenant Colonel E. E. | 15; scattering, 3. The Senate held an election and gave ADDRESS OF JOHN MINOR BOTTS. staclés in the way of its success from holding any place Hudson County Politics. Union soldiers. He denied that there was any treason | Camp, Q M. U.S. A., ordored to report to the command. | Gibbs a majority of four, but the House adjourned with. in the government of its council.” When Mr. Johuson Democratic Commrten or Hupson Couxry.—This com- } to the country In magnanimity to a fallen foo. He de- | ing goneral Military Division of the Missouri for assign- | out action, and subsequently appointed the 25th of came into power by the death of that great and | visto will meet this evening at Jersoy City, Taylor’s tailed his syorienvas ona esearulaniouen on the Freed- | ment; Major Alexander Montgomery, A. Q. M. U. 8. A., | September as the day for the election. Great excite- lamentea Lega ir, Lincoln, he undertook to p ’ men’s Burean system {n the South, General Stedman | ordered to report to the commanding general Depart- | ment prevailed throughout the session. reconstruct the Southern States. If he had been | Hotel, at half-past seven o'clock. asserted that President Johnson was carrying out the | ment of the Arkansas for assignment; Captain J. H. a A 228 Se SES successful, and they grateful and faithful to the | Tue ANpew Jounsox Cuup.—A large meoting will as- | policy of President Lincoln for the reconstruction of the | Belcher, A. Q. BM. U.S. A., ordered to duty at Jofferson- RAILROAD ENTERPRISE. ‘Mn. PRESIDENT AND GENTLEMEN OF THE CITY OF PaTER- pow:—1 am here to-night, gentlemen, by invitation, and from no choice of my own, for 1 beg to assure you that public speaking is at all times distasteful to me, and I amnesty oath, reconstruction would have gone on un- . peak ct ied hi: If to | ville, Ind.; Captain Treadwell Moore, ordered to duty at mever do it except from a sense of necessity or | interrupted up to the present moment, In accordance | semble this evening at Ballard’e Hall, Montgomery reg mer pre here Xchtent anit advacated the | Nastivile,'‘Tenv.; Brevot Brigadior General H. M. Whit- New Lonrox, Cony. Sept. 19, 1866. @uiy, But I am here by invitation to address | with his policy they were invited to send their represen- | *Feet, Jersey City, in support of the Executive policy. | claims of Mr. Commager, the conservative candidate, | tlesey, Q'M. U.S. V., assigned to duty as Chief Quar- | | The New London Northern, Raitroad extension has been completed through to Grant's Corner. The last you upon tho great and immediate political topics romofice every man who took up | met on Tuesday evening, at Kepler's Hall, After stir. | "Mr. Commager noxt addressed the meeting in support | Captain G. T. Browning, A. QM. U. . V., ordered to | rail was Tald to-day. A'party of iuvitod guests will leave existing exclu tatives to Urs Caray) and they well knew there was a law Sevzwra Warp.—The democracy of the Seventh Ward | with much earnestness. termast-r Freedmen’s Bureau, Washington, 9. C. ing ‘ef the day, and shall endeavor to introduce such | arms against our government. Did they accordingly the President’s policy. duty at Washington, D. ©., to report to Brovet Brigadier | Brattleboro, Vt, to-morrow for New London, to cele- “questions for your consideration as now occupy the pub- | look for proper men, loyal men? No, they did not. Po rufa Frege Ve en made, a club was ae Stephen J. Noe addressed the meoting at some | General J. A, Ekin; Colonel W. T. Noblo, Caj taint. J. | brate the opening. fi No wind, because such must determine the issue of the | 1 tell you and T toll them I can flud ten times ing the coming campaign, length in defence of tho President’s Canadian proclama- | Farnsworth and Captain W. L, Rynerson, A. Q M. U the required number in their midst; but they did Tent WaRp.—On Tuesday evening the citizens of the | tion, and entreated the Irish not to yield to the bypo- | V., are ordered home, RAILROAD ELECTION. glections in your own States soon to take place, 88 | not want to do #0, They sent mon most obnoxious | ronth Ward met in their new hall, corner of New York | critical blandishmonts of the old enemy of ther race have been informed by your President, and a8 | tothe laws, knowing full well they would not be ad- 04 t . Buvrrao, Sept. 19, 1866. yen aitknew before T camo fron that Siato in ihe Union | titted, and’a more impotent. spirit Could, not have been | avenue and Jofferson street, and listened to specches | *™d.creed. | The spiaicor was onthuslast cally appisuded NAVY BULLETIN. At a mecting of the Directors of the Buflaio and State hich perhaps suffered more than any other from the | evinced, and they showed that the moment they had ae eminent speaker, supporting the policy of Presi- | with cheers for Johnson and the Union. POC TERRE RE AES, Line Railroad, held at the office of the company, in this Feat rebellion. as oa thelr areas | 5 bre pockets, for sey earee turned lent Johnson. ‘The New Sloop-of-war Madawaska. city, ee ae Pe yok eels oraak = 1 do not propose to have much to say upon the aub- | hall only be represented by men who wero in the WEW JERSEY LEGISLATURE. THE MANDAMUS AGAINST STREET COMMISSIONER CORNELL. | Tho now first class sloop-of-war Madawaska—scrow, | Tormor Superintendent, waa clected to fill the vacancy. t or — Freaaery ve gah but gt caning creel 2 Southern — oe — herpph aaa ove gov- a ' —— In He Compelled to Exhibit the Records of 8,281 tons, 20 guns—built at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, ernment, '@ acted strong! wal om while in war; Vonfirmation of Cattell’s Election, &c. 2 1 and recently completed and equipped there, ret D LOUs. Peatrenca‘uikea's dans WP Vagae auras | tio sreet ok aay naa te ea mae Tuco Semis iom,_ | le Dovarement, ce Ail Cntne otnre $0,| (ome gesrey eraser aon wal ue w | “GELS EGE at rebellion, my sympathies were not with my Stato. ihecetore, that they are nee Tepresented in the legislature. The joint meeting of the New Jersoy Legislature bas SUPREME COURT—CUANEERS. “e the Lower Bay and off Sandy Hook. The trials were bg HIRAM ANDER: 8, 99 BOWKRY. 8 pplanse.) My sym; jeg were with the Uuion and the conducted upder the cjose corporation system by | Fall importation of Royal Vely: inion army. (Applause.) My sympathies aleo were with Beisotone deceived and cheated men of my own Stat», ul In reference to the course pursued by the President in | declared Cattell elected by forty-four votes, the demo- Before Judge Barnard. hig late tour Iwill speak, mildly; but 1 will ay that in | cratic members not voting. The offeers of both Houret | guey.10.—he People ec vd. Biherd M. Binry we. | which are kept "a piatound secret, Newco we | centeto 8! 3 pervert geverumont, He has wudertaken to legislato,with the | Were allowod $3 por day for their servicss during the | cycries G. Cornell, Street Commistioner.—On the Tih of | &f¢ unable, to lve. the dala to which the public are en- | Shsand table Govern, Window t not one particle of sympathy did I feel for the rebel- people and abuse the legislative power of Congress; aud | extra session. The Legislature adjourned sine die at one titled, The Madawaska is one of a number—tho | pieces white and checked Mattings or those who had brought it on. (Applause.) I sym- zed with the Union party and with the Unionarmy, | worse than that, he pat up to publ ces of £eptember a mandamus was issued by Judge Barnard | Amorossuo, Idaho, Chattanooga, Neshaminy, Hassao | yard. Look for No. 9 Bowery. use Tflt and knew that my own liberties, and the the country to thove who’ support sing patioy. ot Btweas eee ar directing the Street Commissioner to exbibit cortain aut Mampanong_of fist clase eee Le the patid. | * ‘A.—A,—-A.—A.—DECORATED DINNER, TEA AND jon ose who surrounded me—the 106 you considered the results of such conduct? Just reco! in his office to Mr. Richard M. Henry, — “Borie Setec ta gveat variety; Silver War Whole country—depended upon the success of the | imagine Washington, Madison, or others of our great KINGS COUNTY POLITICS. pple erator ape Richard M: Henry, | paged about three years ago, One or two of the ves. Ant ets, tm groat variety; Siver Plated Ware, Table Wnion army; and I may say with truth that I nover did pattiots stumping the country 'and asking the people to acitizen of New York, or show cause 6 rary sels were built by private shipbull the others wero ‘EDWARD D FORD'S Great Emporium, a sar that whole rebellion, of a Uniou vietory that | support a dovtrine rejected by two-thirds of oir own the third Monday of September. The points of this man- | constructed at the navy yards in Philadelphia, ‘Cooper Inetitute and Astor piace, corner street. ‘not re] rE icrmeraege joice, and I never heard of a Union defeat ‘that I did not mourn over it, because I knew that every success of the rebel army only prolonged the war and’in- @reazed tho sufferings of the people of the South. Well, bd rebellion was crushed, and I dispose of the rebellion HIS POSITION AT THE CLOSE OF THE WAR. After the rebellion was crushed my sympathies, 1 may wy. were with those whom I regarded as a conquered, subdued, overwhelmed, repentant peo) le. I erased at ence ail resentment against those who been work- jog inst the country—working against me and pro- scribing and punishing me by imprisonment; and I set y vo work at ance to ‘co-operate with the President ‘the Uuited states in bringing ‘About peace, amity and Republican Mass Meeting in Williams- Hxrat . | New York, Boston and Portsmouth. The build- burg—Specches by Hen. Jebn Oakey, Judge | “t Were publishes in the patthetime. To- | in7° of the machinery of all tho vesselg was | (ORNS, BUNIONS, CLUB AND INVERTED NAILS, A. H. Dailey, Captain Jones, of Alnbamn, | “#7 Recorder Hackett appeared as counsel for the Street | jot out to private contractors, the government indi- ¢ diseased jointa, &c.. cured, without pain, by Dr, RICE, ha Commissioner, and submitted the following return, in the | cating the class of engines, the forco of power to be om- | 58 Bowery, Hunk Building. | Rice's Aunihilator cures corns, and others. form of an affidavit made by Mr. Cornell: ployed, the rate of speed to be attained, but no limit was | buulons, nails, &c. By mail $1. A spirited mass meeting of Union Republicans was | form tg _ ine made to the area space to be occypied in the veseel. MONTHLY MAGAZINE FOR OOTO- held at the headquarters of the Thirteenth Ward Re. | Charles G. Cornell, of the city of New York, being | A stated price was to be given to the contractors if the By gee eget AS iba, sworn, says he is the Steeot Commissioner referred to in | yessel attained a stated maximum speed, and the down- iince af Mirary Tonite tals Popular Periecioal Publican Club, corner of South street and South frst, | ino wrt of mandamus in this matter; that it is truc, a8 | ward scale to a stated minnimum speed, the failure to emg on this continent. ite “fake up” exhibits last night. alleged in said writ, that the contracts, vouchers, | meet these requirements to be attendod with a consider. | the highest order of taste in magazine literature, and ls as John D. Darlington, Esq., occupied the chair. poy rolls nats, erie yAsnaed Kevooe to bed able default to the contractor. Two of these vessels | “seful as itis beautiful. Now ready. The Hon. Joux Oansy was tho first ipeaker introduced. | fine benelit of the Corporation of thie city and tho | Ce °piocee one tats ae eee eaay the tect, DORCHS LEGALLY OBTAINED IN NEW YORK He said:—I know we have had losses in our ranks. | citizons thereof, and that deponont is responsible for the | proved a partial failure, and the second, the Madawaaka, | aanin? {eer yhttten ee pay or ee toad Andrew Johnston, elected by our votes, has deserted us, | safe Keeping of the mame; that on the 22d day of Au- | was condemned (unoficially) before tie left, tho dock, Gouuscllor, 78 Nassau stroct. The opposition have placed another deserter on their | fnxnown to deponent, who informed him that his name | Chinery’was too cumbersome, bulky and complicued nay t Taplmmectaeaceryer State ticket, The Rev. Henry Ward Boecher, aman | was Henry, and who demanded, on the part of the Citi- | an efficient war vesse!. Neatly th old of the CAPITAL PRIZE $90,000, revered and beloved by all of us, has thought fit to give | Zens’ Association, possession of all tho contracts and | vessel, fore and aft, is occupied with Honers, donkey caine encouragement to the enemy, but we cannot follow bim vouchers under deponent’s charge, made on behalf of | engines, blower engines, main engines, coal bunkers, | We have th Congress, and offering them as a bribe the public offices of the country, and if for these and other reasons Congress does not use ite power by an impeachinent they will signally fail in thetr duty to the people and in their efforts to reconstruct the country. (Cheers.) That is not all Mr. Johnson has dono to eit an impeachment and a removal from office. je has charged that Congress with being traitors; ho has valled them a rump Congress; he has called them no Congress at all; sald they were standing on the verge of the government. ‘ell, now, if he believes in a] thia, that Congress is not constitutionally organized, bee dete he [ae a mort to those bills of SS sna wi @ millions of your money @ How can ns do so? For this alone Te” descrves \mpeachment. How daro he attempt to stir i) rebellion against the constituted legislatures of the country? How dare he encourage resistance to the law? Now, for instance, suppose you took it into ys 1. I set myself to work sedulously and earnestly ‘support the President, in whose truth, in whose honor, and in whose sincerity I placed the most implicit reli: ance. en THR POWER OF THE PRESIDENT. our head to think these taxation laws were passed by Neasure to announce to the citizens of the I never did believe in the power of the President an unauthorized body, and you resisted the collection their The ‘Bread and Butter Brigade” the Corporation of the city of New York, in the year | absorbing the most desirable portions of the ship, thus | United states that before trial and conviction. I nover did | of - the tax, would ‘not that bo resisting the | 'theircamp. The and Butter Brigade” may | 1863, in order that he mieht examine and make copics | ignoring the comfort of the crew—a feature of vital im- RELLYS ORAND in the power of the President to recon-| law, and would you mot be justified 5 ‘#0 | not prove so valuable on the other sido as some sup- | of the same; that said contracts and vouchers are very | portance in a war vessel. Asa small illustration to show jah ade ots State, but I did not think it tmoum-| doing by tho President of the United Si ae Their desertion is no loew to us, Mr. Henry | DUmerous and voluminous, and have been carefully | tho fauitiness in the construction of the Madawaska’s NORTH AMERICAN PRIZE CONCERT t upon mé to make the only objection; and, | telling you it is ordered by an unauthorized body? If be | J. Raymond, who formerly did us good service, | fled away, and that a compliance with the request of | engine, we will the fact that tho engincs of the therefore, I supposed he was in favor of the principles | does not deserve impeachment ‘on this, then farewell to | 18 not received well by his new friends, (Mr. Oakey | Sad Henry would involve a sorious disturbance of the | British'screw sloop of war Galatea—a vessel of about Will positively take place, at the that he had enunciated himself, When I asked for the | the government. It fe nothing but a rope of sand. Take | then read an onslaught on Mr. Raymond from the New | necossary details of deponent’s office, and impede the | the samo class as the M—, do not oceupy one-fourth are Cate. Dane fing el ee age President of the | my word for it, as an humble cltizen, and as no poll- | York Werld.) But because those men havo abandoned | Proper working thereof; that deponent did not consider | the space of the latter; and she has s logged, under an or- WABASH AVARDEB RINK, CHICAGO, ILL, Hed Bt Staten, honestly and t to good faith, eee carry | ticlan, that the only issue {n this contest is whether the | their friends, there is no reason why wo should abandon ae vy Bopp er irno abe ee gree ot diary Preaware of steam, twelve ‘a half nota por FRIDAY, SEPT, 28, 1866, or Money Refunded, on which poorer Jove ni neortgn edna barony be copled ontnde of deponont’s’ office, lest any of the | Pout .,4 visitor on board Madawarkcs, | snack time our principles, It is trae that some time ago the course | 2" of the President was thought favorably of by many of us look at any pies im consequence of his previous loyal record, but there | same might be lost or some alterations, erasures or iater- | decks—but w! he abuts some horrible monumont | HALF A MILLION DOLLARS IN PRIZES, INCLUDING can be no hesitation among us now between | Sac) made therein, which might defeat or impair | of the engine department. Comfort 1s sacrificed EP RR eg the course of the President and Con; Who | the validity thereof, Gn the contrary, deponent deemed | for an tnauiainable rate. of speed; the WILL BE FRESENTED TO TICKET HOLDERS, are the friends of the former who applaud | that by te with the possession of sald documents | health of the crew is racrificed for speed. There see! "mab tickets—The d him, to the echo? They | are” the ‘ai eetd | he would be guilty of a violation of bis offcial duty; | t0'ne' probabitity—exprossed by naval officere-that | craceing. 3,000 tickets sold it a single aay--The whole foun the South and the copperheads of the North. ‘What aro | Delther was it possible for deponent to give facilities t0 | ail the vessels of the Madawaska class will prove failures, | tryon the qui vive--Orders constant! Ma the in hisinterest? The News, the World, the | Such copyists as would be required to make copies of | jt jg said that they might do very weil in northern lati- | 10 Georgia—Frem Atlantic to Fogle, and the valturee are writing his'praises and'pick- | Such numerous and voluminous documents in his office | tudes in wintor time, and then they would be objection. | North American Prize -be tng up the crumbs he drops—some of them not without interference with the business of his said office | abje on account of their enormous consum| po emg ag cag he Re Re A to taking 8 office. iption of coal, and impeding the working thereof. That im; but for tro upor reHable Gift Organisation 11 Capta'n Tom, loyal Southerner, from Alabama, was | With these ‘views, and bell that sneeting te to it for service in the tropical lattades, where our fleots | United Staten, and, having full faith yn the promises of the North American Prize rojns of government, and which was first proposed, “To make treason odious’—(applause)—and to toyal men in power in the Southern States. But when | ont that by his indiscriminat state of pardoning was restoring the worst men in the Southern eountry to power—when I assert that he was selecting emnemiés as the agents for the government, in AO ceed fag Provisional Governors of states those who made Vhemecives particalarly obnoxious to the government— when I found that the President looked nowhere for your government and your country. is the pod ‘and on that you have to decide. fo are told no man can please two masters, that no man can please every BIS OPINION OF THE MBRALD. are chiefly employed, they would be wholly unavailable rietors of A. A. Kelley & Co. {0 offer bim an ce. Tribune, and to the Hint I will have to respects | next introduced. he had been opposed to the | the said demand of Mr. Henry a might be | for tho reasons already stated. The conteuntine P | Poucert, they ‘respond liberally, and the indications are eal samrOnAtton ou ens. oratan, to-night. “The Tritune ‘ands fault with PA. Wecause at | democratic party and secession all his life, Trane now in. | establised in virtue whereof any number of citizons from tog the engin have, already discovered that mayen: that on ihe 2h of September not a ticket will remain up And now, gentlemen, comes up the question, ‘What | the late convention I did not support suffrage; but | tended to support the republican party, When he was | mero cu » or from trivial or malicious meet pat ‘cannot be Their comtracta cannot | ‘4 to be done for the restoration of these States?” | T said then, and I say now, 1 do not think the negro is | compelled to lebve his State at the breaking out of the | misbt 4 the production of original documents lied, and thelr onty hope to save themselves from Cuicaco, August 3 1866. re aro two plans proposed if the President's policy for it; I do not ¢ the time has come yet; | rebellion he joined the naval forces of the Union and as- Jd Tight to copy wee) deponent did refuse to give to iwiary loss is to secure relief from Congress, which, | — This is to certify that Mesars. A. A. Kelley & Coy have tha gan be considered at a pian, for I must confess wat to | {do not belleve that, after years of bo the Aisted at the capture of New Orleans. Immediately | Mt. Henry Posteo ot ee eet be hen | allowed, the country willbe victimized to the amount | day leased tho Wabash Avenue Rink for the eins ob Instantly bo wet free ad olodbed with ail ye peroges after the ire he delivered tho first that was | de day of ‘sane the sum ve pg 7 didi oS ig Gent’s plan is, le hes « policy of his gue but how that policy fe to be carried 1 Y bave not yet ascertained. ee to have thirty-six States in this oye Neo now, at the same time, that there will be shi ; but deponent then stated he would be of twelve or fifteen million of dollars. 9 ber, paid for the ever heard In that city in favor of ‘and againat | 10 give or procure for Mr. Henry fall and exact informa. | a4, Wntted States War Steamer Susquehanna. three Bas oh ee traders. Judge A. H. DatLey was then introduced. He delivered | Contracts or vouchers, and would allow Mr. Henry or | _ Thie vessel, which returned to this port from the | we aavige ait partion wanting ticka* to send for them at a forcible address, The Judge thought his any other citizen to test tho accuracy of such informa- | Brazil squadron a few months ago, is now undergol . iaeey 80 Priday evening, Earth tn the Bale thia fai bur if ie did nee tte | Hon by personal inspeotion of the documents themselves; ‘yore gnee, tate bunks wi wing wiv.ben commences. All orders J & CO., Lesees of the Rink. ‘Brats. (applaces.) I know that he to have Memphis, they would have to vote for the | hearts of loyal Southerners would be for tickets will be promptly 6**!. Theso Btates in the in Jones—"'That’s a0.”) Tho enemy wes clothed ot ihe United Ststee, Uut tpon whet conditen or paren ely i gal gp Soma. gm pgm rg | sacar amiesaas cavaepaoes cnet NUMBER OF TICKRD ISSUED, 500,000. PRICE @. 7 ‘what reconstruction I bave not been able to NDUCE! EVER oF- bie PI PLE 0 ‘THE UN! STATES. EVERY OTHER TICKET DRAWS A PRIZE. EVERY OTHER TIOKET DRAWS A PRIZE. boat Rhode Island, bearing the | the drawing will take place after ral Palneer, of the Kastern Hote Gquatron, | s0'S perasen gan withers 1A commitane wilt Be appolniea ‘anchor off the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The Po the wudiance to take Charge of the same. Sometimes we are told that thoy will be admitted upon those tests the constitution, which ts y the constitution of the United States, the law of the United States which Pequires no other test to be taken. Now I say ‘emphatically that I do not give back to the President of the United States or any other man within the grates, 1 aap pp dt rg ny the 0. ‘may call us disunion’ dat we will doytl abeeaen tbe couse of univenst for the it and they received; but while be pitied them he could never consent to their taking possession of the govern- The United States gua! a Broad limits of the Uniled States in my earnest 4 more there than I ever gave. (Laughter.) | ment. now lies . A 4 tow emphalle desire to see thio State restored until | fam ‘not “going to enter fire” an “ugequal | “Peter Ostrander, of the Seventh ward, made the Rhode laland is. ewift side wheel steamer and bas a vory |, AMARSNAADAL'S wom nx puniishods ns vin SOFT power be the power that she exerted before she re- | contest, in which my competitor would give me three | closing speech, and was frequently interrupted by ap- peat aud trim appearance. | On her recent tip to the |" “hoketeare fot sale at the principal nows dellion ; bot in doing this I desire to ave 18 ro-tstab ished | hundred and sixty-six knocks to my one; but I may say uae, sural cima ake vesledieke imiration of the British | ang bookaigese, and at our 0 a it loyalty to the government, (Applause. ) that to ny surprise | read the following in yesterday A neries of resolutions were then read and adopted. val officers who Ir. Of tlekeya Oi each, Gent by ma capaition that the power of | morning's Hexato. (The gen here read the ar- | They pledged the mecting to the support of Governor The United States 8 three oT Snontbente are offered te agents, who are wanted : the government of the United Siates—the power of this | ticle referred to.) ‘are sentiments ascribed to me | Fenton and the State ticket, and endorsed the policy of Mo! ore bere. Write for our terms at onee. ference es ES, Unica all wi to wrery part and territory & in that artiale ee ste 2 ee sentiniénts | Congress. Adjourned. The United §8tates steamers W: with application, tates, jause. rigtin 4 t attend done upon these privclpies and. with abeclute safety vo | tities tet are teat atmos ee et ieieritiawon. the due performance, of the ordinary business theroot, | K_ Murray, and, Mohongo, Commander SPECIAL TERMS, OR CLUB RATES. A avery iene, womee and child within the nation who is | diate them as atrocious im any man, Northern | Tux Dwocaanic Partanme.—A special meeting of the i tannee ef tae Cours action ia matter to the | fe raere ad the Initer On Teguldr tiation. The Uninet dress for........ "2 ai 40 abe tt qutabianed: thal (Long asunes - 4 ony ane = aL 4 ae ede ed Democratic General Committee of Kings county was CHARLES G. CORNELL, Street Commissioner, | States storeship Faraliones, Actiug Master Neison 7T0- saarene £ a eT _ want you, gentlemen of the Nort life to favor such conduct I am ready to | held last evening at No. 347 Fulton strect, Brooklyn, £. After hearing an oie ecpunanes freee Deere hl ‘Vort, was also at the same place on regular duty. Tickets een ae i sens 33 power Sat Ee eg tem gt DANO {hs | forfelt that Mf, What right hat any man to speak to of | J. Lowber in the cair. Resolutions were adopted 10 | {n sUpport thereof, Judgo Barnard Wok the papers and Miscellancous, Prem to ctecud the marie ot each subscriber’ and their Of the United States that tt auits your pleasure to | ton or Mr, Wardmouth. si Hows ccvernor Hamil: | call primaries for the election of delegates to the various | ro. erved his decision, HONORABLY DISCHARGED, post oll address. rafts, Post ofice order, ex. Wi nv a to say what you think and to think what. you | ever hi Sra inoue caprae’ eoiaieatinenie: f od mil choose; 10 do what you like provided you invade no btber man’s rights and violate no law, without disturb. , ‘ance, lot or hindrance from any quarter. (Applause.) 1 propose, tlemen, to contrast the policy of the President tn the 8 recommended by Congrees; and let me Money city, county, Congressional and Assembly district con- Sart, 8 —Acting Third Assistant Engines George C, | Press or in registered letters inay be seat at our nek, ventions on Monday, October 1, between the hours of | THE MURDER OF MRS. FALLON AT WORCESTER, MASS.-FULL | Brown, from July 5, 1865; Acting peg Ww, w. EVERY OTHER TICKET DRAWS A PRIZE. five and to’clock P. M., and to hold the conven. PARTICULARS. Cragin, from Sept. 6, and Master M. M Stanard, — tions on Wednesday, October 3. The nominations made — Serr. 11.—Acting Third Assisteat Engineer Henry REFERKENOES: at the recent State Convention wero unanimously en- ‘From the Wroroutee Spy; Sept, 18.) from August 7; Acting Besdnd Assistant Engineer Tappin, MoKellopp & Co., Cominereial Ageney, Chicago, dorsed, and @ committee was appointed to draw up Thomas Fallon or Follan, who has for some time lived | G. W. Ketrsted, Sept’ 8; Acting Ensign 8 8 Hand, Lot0, Whitford, Wholesale saree One cere 10, the country where there is moro civilization than in New Orleans; but fora journal like the Hrnaxp, which has a circulation all through the States in the South and in Europe, to ascribe to me such sentiments would, if I i ‘ay here in advance that if any have come here with | bad come trom some other locality, havo cost me my | suitable resolutions in relation thereto, The President | unpleasantly with his wife, is tho murderer, and his | Sept. 7. Bere. Whetenie daweare, 0 \ An’ expectation that Tam going Yo indulge in coarse sod | Hr What right bad it to do ZY. I chanced to wep | anounced that a ratidcation mass meeting would be | wife, Nancy Ann Fallon, was the victim, The parties APPOINTMENTS REVORED. liny holesaie Jewelers, Chlengy. Yolgar abuse of the President he will be very much | a papor yest from Richmond which speaks of me | held at tho Academy of Music October 6. meeting | lived, with their six children and two or three boarders, Serr, §.—Mate Dania! E Knox, of the Vanderbilt, Harlem Importers, New York. \ fusaken. | (Applause) Iam no politiclan; T bog that to | aa follows:—(A gentleman hero read for Mr. Botts an | soon afterwards adjourned, fat No§6 Pond stroot, in n house owned by Fallon, On | Sart. 10.—Mate Goorge Newin, of tho Vanderbilt. Yer Nalkenbergh & Con lisyorvers, Now Work, Catacty Um jong to nO party; and | extract from the Richmond Ezaminer referring to Botts ba =! Sunday evening there was company at the house, and DETACHED. A.B; Sabb, Chicago. : more than that, I uever will belong f> any pacer (Faiat | eect a ete eet te Telente Te kts Breas |, Axt-ADatamataarion Max Dacarrraren—Two woll | Doon’ Sivanke but there isnc evidence that there was | Sarr. &—Acting Ensign Andrew J. Iverson, trom the | {rusty RAneworth: Publishers, B ig 4 Spplause.) I will be bound down by no party trammels, | to religion, to Justice; 10 his own friends nd to his God. known opponents of President Johnson's reconstruction | any intoxication manifest in any of tho party, Fallon | Muscoota, and granted leave of absence, Ti camstuatebises Seeaah Ge rarenien ve Pay party rales; 1 wilt subject that judgment which | This was recelved with loud cheora) I a traitor to the | policy, who had appointments under the government for | himself was known only to drink two glasses of bor. Snr. 10.—First Assistant Engineer Poter A. Rearick, a A. KELLEY & CO., has given me to no set ot men to ‘used inst | Union, to my country and my family! Thank God, my | some time past, have recently been discharged for thoir | The visitoraleft late in the ovening, and at half past ten | from the Naval Academy and ordered to duty in charge 108 Rerdolpn a my will, and I had resolved during the progress of this | family wasaunit, f @ traitor to religion, justice, God o'clock all the inmates in the house fetired to rest, Fal- | of tron-clade at Mound City, Ill; Second Assistant | — Hoadquartors for New York— Merch rebollion th ho earthly consideration should bave fn. Opposition to the powers that be. The President of the ‘at tho Naval | rers’ Stock Co., 656 and man for upholding the constitution of my country! Jon and his wife occupyin, dway (ap stairs.) 9, Chins bed in # room opening out | Engineer Josiah Chaffes, from duty duced ma to tke part in the politcal I wondered what justified of called for this article; and I | Board of Aldermen, Mr. Archibald M, Bliss, who is also | of the sitting room, on the same floor with the ‘front | Academy and placed on waiting orders; Commander O. | ,,7cketa.siso for 8 ee pA x have only been induced to do it be- | also see by another paper I ans threatoned if I return to | the city fathor representative of the Seventeenth Ward, | door. Asister of Mrs, Fatlo jod a bed in the | A. Kimberly, the Colorado and ordered to return to | —O°nS* ~ wowed nner MO wae Felt that 1 oad int the, country was in danger, end T | my home, which I intend to do shortly. But when I | has, up to within tho last few days, held office in the | kitchen, and on account of sickness was awa the United Biates; Midshipman Joba C. Kennett, from | PREPARED OIL OF PALE AND MACE. e my tongue. | bare wet © May at home and bold } tare a o from @ paper that has got such a cire Custom House. The services of Mr, Blias being no | At about a quarter past two Monday morning Fallon | the Pensacola and pl on waiting orders; Carpenter PRESERVING RESTORING “ Juhvsok personae nating to say against Androw | tion a& the Henato and eee not one papor in the South Jonger required by the Executive, in that capacity at | came down from his room and went out through the | John Southwick, from ial duty with Rear Admiral 8 Obie at His, pumerovose to deal with him as a | North to take my part, I feel I am cut off, and know that | toast, he ban tet o Yacaney Worth $1,500 for somo | kitchen tothe back yard and soon returned. A few | Grogory and plaved on waiting orders; Chief Enginecrs BEAUTIFYING THE HATR, 4 Anes ‘and cansure ne a nie Mets are open to animadver- | it wae the article in the Herano which led | warmer adherent to the aforesaid policy. The other | minutes after ho wont up stairs to his room tho sister in Jaa B. Fulton Jos. V. Starr, from duty at Mound | gnd isthe most delightful and wonderful article the world “ every public man's acts are open to | to this attack in Richmond; but that from politically unfortunate, rastly unfortunate, is the Alder. | the basement heard him snoring heavity, and about the | City, Il., and ited leave of nce, ever produced. @oimadversion and censure: an @ Mr, Johnson wore my own ceases” uroline t would deal with him as 1 propose to deal with » | Andrew Johnson to-night. (Applauas) No one map . } can be permitted in this country to et himaclf up ta Richmond | deepise, as it came from an unworthy soarce—(rom a man who has no respect for any- thing, not even himeecif—a man charged at the Present moment with the committal of an Infa- mous crime in Richmond, of which I am sure be will ‘be convicted. 1 understand the reporters of the Henao are bere present, and I hope tho C8. \- Ladies will find it not only a certain remedy to Restore, man of the Twentieth Ward, Mr, John K.’ Bulmer, who | #me timo sho saw that the barn or woodhouse in the Commander L. A. Kimberly, formerly Lieutenant Com. Wat alto o dauirable artic’ has been removed from his position in tho Shipjoiners’ | rear of tho house was on fire on tho inside. She gave | mander and Executive “Othtor of the alias States pny Co Be 2 ignty perfumed TX, Neos departmont of the Brooklyn Navy Yard. th iy , ani hee [nee from vessel | cate perfume, independent of the fragrant odor of the olls of Verena DELEGATES To TH Syaacvar Coxventiox. had got but little headway it was easily oxtinguished. | and ordered to return to the United States. palm and mave, ‘— | Fallon came down stairs with the rest when the alarm — Assistant The delegates chosen to represent the Eastern District at | was given, and assiated in extinguishing the fire, anu did the Syracuse Convention of soldiers and sailors are an- | Ot again go ra opposition to the law of the country. Now, it was the RVBL OF habit of Mr, Johoson in bis late electionsering tour, and THE MA! BRU, N AUTIFUL PERFUME, The Pa A seught tat extract and ite wonderful : i uit ie the habit of all bis friends, to talk aboot thore being | afforded me of explaining myself to ‘While those outside shed the fire, one of the alled ing of the kind : Whirty-six States in the Union and thotr anxi ‘ene nounced ax follows:—Captain F. W. Obcrnier, August | @ Wile those outage ox ty coy lasting gualiles are. w by an; ek ‘ 5 Festored. | Now, who i againal restoration? “Bind | ao that man who. shall aur op ari Wolting, Coroner. Smiths Lieutenant ‘emits, Captaln into the house to look ‘or her. Bho ¢ Knows ifthe world, and have sielaped W th ge pivs ultra me the {mon of any party who do not wish for the ear- i ree tH of perfumes. atte toe PEcheneetare perfumers. George | Gleb, Captain “Henry Willis and’ Edward | Ot\the door of her we eoula O08 to Mest restoration. How does Mr. Johnson propose t 1 lead to the total extermination all heard went to the (Sacha ei ae oe ees | Sk te ote ramet ‘ sim rane, | Patoenree Gatemeeee eee oR SAAS RTE” § now, A. thn 5 4 and i ony a thie | sed qhe Bug ‘cencaat gee me 3s | ADDITIONAL PAR TICU OF THE CANADA FAILURE, ua ry ‘of the Fall ‘wens WINER'S © N LAY 5 ie Caplin. ih What dees Mv. Jenaccn “ser | neat te Gaprers. Gay Berea at ae Burraro, Sept. 19, 1868, | Into the room with ae Se Sones wan bat Remember, ihe the onl sng earitware wit Some dot, Te, admit the States, Immediaely, the 4 despa a jit been resstved. frost ebers Com, inutitiee of blood, pare ovaide wer cle 4 joy by the a CRNTS PRR BOTTLE. specifying a care | sella, manager of the Ban! pper Canada, In which several of heard the ty What conditions,’ Ts his propostion, fikely to succeed? | todo'none pt the Aghting, aud during, the’ war, when | rivets the eeiel gure at che ‘the Me | aio eame in, ‘Mr. Fallon id not oome Scie For sale be pW. WRIOUT 4.0, Sole Proprietor, | ‘Toe structure of thie government ts divided into threo | conscript to be resorted to 40 fil Lage ~ Nabilities of the bank at | trier ihe act ut walked away Just aa peithaatee ARADO | apartinenta—ite legisative, executive and Judicial; we te? $2,700,000; ete, $4,000,000; $1,200,000 are due die et vest ‘or — ‘and there i# no ‘of Mr. John: ey ge Bo BK : $780, Pea Reteet. ure Wollon died eh, halt past CHILBERG'S ORBMAN OUNT Mist danger, one Ee SP part of Mr. John- | empiton from duty and fell back on the freedom ment; due the pubi 000; current accounts). | for hie feet, Mra died at four, abou certain cure, wi eek danger, a hy oh ae OLN. Mice anspor can ta cot ae elon taro hours after the wound was infloted. - spans ecutive, His province is to execute the law. and not Ay ‘ m= were $0,000 noteq Paces the ay bs bas been = : his respectable and Be decause make it. (Appiause.) It ts for the legislative engaged in it, teal a Of ike greremeat to make the law, Thin tne ange were eure Soni ing Se Seo ay etibelon e esued, | peat eoopafd ry pase ing “eotae- copper, Hoa i ee ane (bel the ‘public would Dot egw. bus ihe < and saved anme manae Sears an es ae [