The New York Herald Newspaper, October 10, 1866, Page 6

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8 NEW 1 JAME: it r ED! traber} elev ceri Lsvaiy Horgan, @ Siete tt te Fens TON AND HASSAU STS. | Omog station A, who is accused of having overcharged & the postage of @ letter to THE DAILY HERALD, published every day in the year, eer Kavanagh in Pomnsesispencore. Anni iption price, $14. | rne United States Circuit Court, for the proseoution JOB PRINTING of every description, also Stereotyp- | of criminal cases opons in this city on the 16th instant. ‘ indi Promptly to be tried, among p neatly and executed at the | Thore are over twenty counterfeiters: png fay . whom are some of the most prominent operators im that line in the conntry. Au inteyeting acount is given of the counterfeiters now in 4ustody and their mode of operati vig vv about “Par American Cousin,’ which has beon before the cosrts for some years was termi- nated yesterday by Verdict in favor of Laura Keone. ‘The action was iv the Superior Court, before Judge Jones, and was { damages for performance of the play without permission of Miss Keene, The jury gave a ver- dict for $2,046. An intevésting case which involves the question as to the indjridual liability of stockholders fog the debts of « corpomtion, came up yesterday in special term of the Supfeme Court before Judge Daniels. The suit is brought by Lecnard B. Lindsley and others, holders of notes amounting to $19,000, mado by the European Pe- troleum Company against Frederick Simonds and others, stockholders of this corporation, After hearing argu- ment of counsel Jucge Daniels reserved his decision. ‘The clogant sidewkee! steamship Morro Castle, Captain R, Adams, will sail fom pier No. 4, North river, punc- tually at three P, M. today, for Havana, The mails will close at the Post office at half-past one o’clook, OFFICE N. W. CORNER Volume XXXE.......... ceeeeeeeeees AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING. TABATRE FRANCAIS, Fourteenth etreet, near Sixt avonue.—JUDITE. WAY TH , near Broome ees? Se. Broadway, ne! NEW YORK THRATRA 8 opposite Now Yorks Holel'—Auunican Orauantun Docrox OF ALCANTARA GERMAN THALIA THEATRE, No. 514 Broadway.— ‘Tus Pausos. a * ‘os. 45 and 47 Bowery.— —Xr. axp Mas. Howarp ing Ee xo CHanacteRistic EN- Page iw tueim Musicat, Vomic 4 DODWORTH’S HALL. 806 Broadway. —Paorxsson Hants wus ac is MiRACLES FRANOISCO MINSTRELS. 585 Broadway, opposite N the Hotel—in rusin BrmioraN Rirenratn- ye Netropalian to =A NC! BURLESQUES— Goons ee APwican Bauer ThouPe. The fine steamship Euterpe, Captain Kldridge, of C. H. poearyeaaetet Mallory & Co.'s line, for Galveston, Texas, is unavoida- vr P| OUSE, N 2and 4 West - F PSTETH AVENUE OFA tous eyareets. sermon | bly detained, and will gail on Saturday Bexy 13th instant, Pg or a aleemaatel 4c.—Hantem Lam, | 9: pwoive M., from plor No. 20 East river, KELLY & LEON'S GREAT WESTERN MINSTRELS, 10 Broadway—Ix ruyin SONGS Daxogs, ECCKNTRICTIRS, Fe Botton or Att Can-Teaw- tien TONY PASTOR'S OPERA HOUSE, 201 Bowery.—Comio —Necro MiNSTRKLSY, BaList DiveRTisseMENt, Ropusa King. Matinee at 23g o'Clock. ‘Tho stock market was steady yesterday, and yrices ad- Ynced. Gold closed at 14934. Brginess was moderate in nearly all departmentarog. terday, put especially on domestic produce, which \s genorallydull and lower, This was particularly the case with flour aq wheat, which, under tho influence of ex- pected incrédyed receipts of wheat at an early day, were decidedly low®. Corn was quiet and gc. lower, while oats declined 10, . 2c. per bushel. Pork was scarcely 80 firm. Beof was steady and firm. Lard was without de- cided change. Whiscey was steady. Freights were quiet. MISCILLANEOUS. Furthor particulars of the loss of the Evening Star vo been received. A tospatch from the purser had CHARLEY. WHITE’S COMBINATION TROUPE, at Mechanics’ Hall, 472 Broadway~In a Vaniety or Licut anp Lavanasie ENTERvainwents, Conrs D& Bauver, Tus Suapow Pawromimy. MRS. F. B. CONWAY'S PARK THEATRE, Brookylo.— ‘Tux Tioxet or Leave Man. HOOLEY'S OPERA HOUSE, Brooklyn. —Erarorian Min- ereeist, Bac.aps, BuRLEsques AND PaNtomimes. 618 Broadway.— 1oRoscOPE twice Saige ufteay ayo Hour aKa oF BE putoRQSOOrE / emg | been received, saying tha sixteon wore all that were A.M. th 10 P.M. . known to be saved, none ef them being women. Mr. Paul Alhaiza’s opera troupe, which reached this city last Thursday, consisting of fifty-nine singers, and Spaulding’s circus troupe of about thirty peraons, with Peraphernalia and baggage were on board. Ninoty seven ‘amates of tho Now York seraglios, teatiued for the houses of ill-fame i stew vives Were algo on board, and aro supposed tO have been lost, The only name mentioned by the lograph as lost is that of Cap- tain Kuapp. The Savelnah News of yeatorday pubishos additional particular of tho disaster, but all of 4 ig ‘Tho returns of the clections in Pennsylvania, Indiana, | incorporated in our eport this morning. Ohio and Iowa are very meagre, and the accounts are | ¢ The steamsbip adrew Johnson, from this port on the in ome cases entirely conjectural. General Geary is | 34 for Chariest~» With Afty passengers, went ashore at undoubtedly elected Governor of Pennsylvania by &@ | Currituck ber" The passengers and crew were all majority of between fiftesn and twonty thousand. The | gayeq, The ‘**mer North Star, from Aspinwall for New vote im the city of Philadelphia shows a democratic | york, atysPted to ansist the schooner Mary McKeo in gain, although it gives a republican majority, and in the the sew Bale of Cape Hatteras, but,owing to the rough Anterior of the State the increase is on the side of the | sq ¢y-¥° Vowels collided and the North Star withdrew. republicans, A heavy storm has prevented the trans- ow of the McKee arrived in Fortress Monroe yes- smiaston of despatches from the West, and those received ' naluepoanctdermtbesteo™ is sist shoe 2% ar! ‘are (acomplete, Pendleton has been defeated in the }..stress immediately after parting with the schooner, and district, atthoagh the majority swims passengers on bosrd showed evidences of slarm and teim shows a republicaa loss compares” <“X the forme| commotion. wote, fn the tar- sho fepubns! ‘Tmajority is betwe* A mob of radicals attacked the National Union Head- thirty thousand and trty-five thousand, which 4 | quarters in Baltimore yesterday, tore down the United gain over the elec in 1864. In Indiana the re®> | States fing and made an assault on the Transcript office, Woan majority + ‘wenty thousand, and in Iowsit iFM | but the police promptly interfered. A fight also took twenty-p-~ ‘thousand t thirty thousand. 1n 9} these | piace on Monday night between the rival factions, in Sta eae ase aie are aboxt th Same as | which one man was shot three times. One man was «aey were in former e¢ctions. killed in Cincia Mond: In the Newark, Nw Jersey, charyt elestion yester- | agnt, for panes prin sah aol palm vy day, the republions carried eight of the thirteen | small Aight occurred at one of the polls in Newark, wards, receiving + majority of 1,143, a lom of two lun- \ yesterday. Another occurred in Torre Haute, Indiana, dred on last yes's vote, _] (a which one man, « damonrat, was killed, and several Napoleon's bealth is said to have improved considers- | cher persons wounded, and & teeihle riot took place bly at Biagrits, The Londen Times expresses much regret | q Richmond, Indiana, the republican organiza- at the reports of its failure, asserting that the most | ton called the Grand Army of the Republic driving importeat questions of the present day can only be solved | Gearral Meredith, Colonel Bickell and others from « by the Emperor, and by hin “alone,” free from the dis- | stand at a democratic meeting, Cordant “‘agencies” which surround him. Tho writer | ur correspondent ia Mobile farnishes us with the by- Gaya that the issue of the Roman question would be | iaws of the Order of the Knights of Arabia, an association Joas favorable to the other Powers nbould Napoleon | established by the ex-rebel officer John C. Braine, of be removed by death. Chesapeake notoriety, who is now under arrest in New df ee ae ee a sar York. ‘The objects of the society are, to occupy and pos- meeting’ . Mr. ave © | sess a peverely rorsonal to Lord Derby with coantry not named, and cultivate the soll as the ka TRIPLE SHEE New York, Weduesday, October 10, 1866. THE NEWS. THE ELECTIONS. @pecch. He was property of the participants in its invasion. Cuba is un- regard to his polities! career, and asserted that | adubtedly the country in question. The organization is if the people of Old England were drunken, | in full biast in that country. A detention of trains for a hours occurred on the with the frnchise, as alleged by the governing class, Siok Vota ed Mantes Raoeshontenaheey, ove ‘they hed become 80 from the effects of an aristocratic | to a achooner running aground in the opea draw of the ule which controlled all the powers of the State for Norwalk bridge. The delay gave great annoyance to Contaries, for the people of the same stook were moral, | hundreds of passongers, who believed that the Superin- educated, happy and oxorcising the franchise in New | tendeat of the railroad line was guilty of neglect in not Sagiand, under another form of government ~ causing the mast of the schooner to be cut away so as ‘The steamship Bremen, at this port yesterday, brought our Buropean files, dated to the 26th of September, con- taining ample and very interesting details of our cable | ‘e company to # strict accountability for all pecuniary despatohes to that day. losses to passengers. Port wa Prince, Hayti, was visited by another oe ‘ler ar the greater portion of the and several vessels. The loss of lit vant? le is reported a2 nocident occurred at Chemung, ant Erie Railroad, yesterday, were injured. The Association of the Army of the Tennessee will lave aed, arand meeting at Cincinnati on the 14th of No- vember next. Grant, Sherman, Howard expected to be present. ‘ ee ‘Turks, THE CITY. ‘The Board of Supervisors mot yesterday, the President {athe chair. The forfoited recognizances of last year, collected by the District Attorney, to the amount of $8,500, were appropriated under ths head of disburse. ‘meats for county offices and witness fees. Lists were received of the members of the reserve militia who failed to attend parade on the firs Monday in septem- ber. Seine on the New County Court House a Feported in favor of paying the bills for materials used Tar Presr " Prociama- ‘tm the construction of that building, The Board ad | rion.—The coli gercnnt Journed aubject to the call of the chair. dit * Proclamation recom- Thore wore three fresh cases of cholera reported us | Mending Thursday, the 29th day of November the olty yesterday, and burial permits fortwo cholera | NXt 88a general day of thanksgiving, prayer dead wore issued. The weekly report of Dr. Haris | 80d praise in the several States and Terri- pope It stated that last week a group of Cur | tories, we hope will be adopted by all the bs pedir occurred in Thomas strost, which were treed | State and Territorial government washing of Althy bed sacks from the cholerash'p. | the churches, Protestant and C iol, Jew and ind Catholic, Jew ‘The question of the proposed excursion of the Sevent - i we Gentile, Quaker, Shaker, Mormon and Spiit- onthe New York by which four persons fegiment to Paris is the great subject of discussion in his that organisation and among ite friends, and a beard of | Uadlistic, will join in the devotions of Officers has the mattor under advisement. The cost in | in @ spirit of brotherly love, ‘on ate The posrccipdonen ipunsichg soaks met last oe ee hope that President John- evening to put in nomination candidates for te county | °°" 84 Parson Brownlow, Beecher, Cheever petwrsy and Greeley, Ben Butler and Mayor Moaroe of At Cooper Institute, last evening, Wee Ano F, Dick. | New Orleans, Archbishop McCloskey, Bishop {nson delivered a lecture on reconstraction afd its inct- | Potter and Rabbi Raphall, Governor Fenton Aa duaach hess Phish Ga republican m9 ow Weed, Fred Douglass and the gauche detien thine » an Dicived with Hon, Ben Wood, warlike Anna Dickinson and pr oe ao the irrepressible Brigham Young, “Old ‘Thad The semi-annual meeting of the First Presbytery of | Stevens” and Henry A. Wise, and, in short, tiie roo oom. sl Univer. | that men and women of all sections, all creeds street. 7 » Magan aie ait and all colors, excepting the constitutional ectindtet wae (es tom —_ Sauna it es ong, exception of “ Indians not taxed,” may join for Drooklyn and Jersey City to-day infgrand procession, | Once in the same general exercises of praise, yaad nae stews ord city on sus. | thanksgiving, conciliation and forgiveness, murderer er, the hor, Sane, ob Oust, “Se an brtieay rt ar ry - Maine té California. Such a day of gene- Walher's auatia, ral reunion and thankagiving among the OMicer John Hipwell, of the Metropotitan Potice, was | Churches, saints and sinners of all denomina- shot dead upon his beat in Broadway, near Third street, | Hons, always excepting “ Indians not taxed” — in Brooklyn, E. D., about three o'clock on Tuesday | such ® reunion, we say,on the civil rights equality of the law of Congress on that sub- ject, will surely qualify all the people of all the States for the ratification of the constitu- Morning. The motive for the deed is ankeown, and no ue is given to the perpetrator except the fact that a tional amendmente and the speedy restoration of the Tniom on that atid heale ‘Witness states that he saw @ man running away imme. Giately after the shots were fired, whom be pursued bet ps ll Overtake, A coromer'e innuest will be held 0 rd # th ‘ . or w the ofubbings end shootings and guttings in of an immense lot of useless cohihvant vastly Philadelphia and other places, all the inser of to their apo y cons aby mere dribbling politicians ; of representatives This is. » of corrupt “rings” that are in danger of being Which tie Southers Cian sneha Sice broken up; of men who hang on the outskirts more or leas disastrous. We expect to hear of | hove all other release from all that and the verge of partics and by thelr violence | Yomels driven ashore by the violence ofthe batch of peatiiential old politicians thet aannnvor te atireet attention, in the hope of | “FHlcame, of crew and passengers saved with | pinged the South into the abyss of this late soiiing cami pltry ofce if the aide they ee- | ClMeulty end ship and cargo utterly destroyed. | digatrous rebellion. But not only wit te pouse happens to come out uppermost, And We ‘now that there will be thrilling stories | people and the States concerned be relieved yet such parasitesas these have it in their of pers escaped and gallant deeds of heroism | yy this amendment of these old mischiof- power to cloud aver all the bright visions of pyre “ener nn EN OS makers; they will be free to bring into the pence $ Haar of the ree of Tale ie rene other and even sadder features. The wreck of vi the Starlight, after striking upon Barnegat millions of quiet, peaceable citizens are called South Shoals, is A pe Aalioot upon to suffer in their reputation abroad end ‘omprehensible, and does not | how {ideas they will have learned from in their self-respect at home, necessarily imply same either in the captain, | war—ideas consistent with and adapted to The course of these violent and unscrupulous the owners or the builders of the ship. It is | the mew order of things. ‘This is the only both polltion) pasties a jeopatdis- | TC'7 Uterent with the toes of the steamships | reconstruction, after ell, which will put the agitators of both pi Pp Daniel Webster and Evening Star, which foun- | south at once en the high road to prosperity, 1 A on eciarh at tne quit, con | cored in open sen without srking upon Tc | wealth and power , CON. servative strength of the country does not dis- pea: ai sion Dero Custom House ee countenance and check thom we shalleoon| The Evening Star belonged to « line of Invasri ex taiinaa Aap same the “charseter wwe have established | #eamsbips celebrated for their speed and | The Congressional tt ppciegen by . ere. superior r accommodation. She House of Representatives at its last session to abroad and bring new dangers end sufferings caged Was | | quire into alleged abuses in the New York and upon ourselves at home. built with an especial reference to these points. | 24 oe Ashes SD Whether other requirements equally essential Boston Custom Houses comme “aa The Eastern Question in Europe. were neglected in her construction isa matter House to-day its inquiries into affairs a ae The European news shows that there is 8| for inference only. Her commander was port. If anything like the corrupt area constantly growing uneasiness among the great | favorably known as a tried and experienced that are proved to have existed in saintly va Western Powers about the Eastern question. | seaman. On Saturday week, the 29th ultimo, ton were followed in immoral New mene The revolt of the Candians against the Otto- | the Evening Star sailed from New York for committee will have a busy time of ‘ ut me man government, the defeat of the Turkish | New Orleans, having on board two hundred think that in that respect, if in no 0 ae troops in Candia and We Lei se and fifty passengers and a crew of fifty men. saints have got decidedly ahead of the ors. among the Greek population of European As to what befell her on the voyage, w> have key, have really given a secon pepe pair as yet only imperfect accounts, A hurricane, WASHINGTON. old and troublesome question. amatter of | or rather cyclone, was ing, end off CRIA Se course, too, there is a great deal of speculation | the coast pA Georgia, tiers hundred ‘Wataixatos, Oct. “A all in the press of Europe, and particularly in the | and fifty miles of Savannah, she foun- Pioteectod cabinet eee eee an preas of London and Paris, on the probable | gered, and a mere handful of the passengers | The Cabinet meeting to-day was prolonged to a muok consequences. In fact the journals have be- | and crew are all that are known to have been later hour than usual All the members heii Loire come quite nervous about the matter, conjuring | saved. Four boats put off from the sinking ber protege’ apsolbpecerogry psted acta oe up all sorts of apprehensions. The reciprocal | ship; but two only have since been heard of | 54 qual disposition of Davis’ case, courtesies and friendship between Russis and | fyen had they all reached the shore they could | Reported Settlement of the Santa Anna-June the United States are looked upon very omi- | have rescued but a gmall proportion of the | rez DimeultyThe Former to Head an Expe- nously, and every movement of the war vessels | three hundred souls on board. At least two papaya -Prar Slated tive tx cael whe are of this country and those of Russia in the | hundred and fifty, we fear, must be set down as | intorested that Santa Anna and Juarez have settied their Mediterranean and in the neighborhood of] iost, Among the passengers were many | personal dificalties, through the intercession of mutual Greece and the Golden Horn is watched and | women, Probably they in their helpless terror friends, and that before long an oxpstie with Sante, commented on with deep interest. | broke through all discipline and hampered the pwenseet nek eee upon eaaril “ieshgerand All this shows the apprehension that exists | cforts of the officers of the ship to save the sa ee pcg giant i ‘at cael pA of trouble on the old Eastern question. We | jives of the passengers. At any rate it is sig-| that Juares ts to wrest from Maximilian the confiscated are inclined to believe that the time is near at | nigcant that of those reported saved there are | church property, and Santa Anna is to recover his ows hand when every part of Christian Europe | thirteen officers and crew and only three pas- confiscated property, must cease to be under the rule of a Mabome- | sengors, The wreck of the Daniel Webster lous value. ually hold their own. General Geary is elected Governor of Pennsylvanis by a majority, from the returns before us, somewhere between fifteen and twenty thousand, the latter Sgure being Abraham Lincoln’s majority in 1864 The demoorats gain some three thousand in Phila- delphia, but lose generally through sll the interior and western counties, The Oongres- sional delegation of the State in the present Congress stinds—sixteen republicans to eight democrats, The delegation for the new Co gress will probably be the same, thoug! Forney’s Press claimsa republican gain of one or two members. ‘It is claimed that Obio has gone republi by forty or fifty thousand majority, an of fifteen thousand over the vote of 1865. State still retains her delegation of seventees republican Congressmen to two democrats. Indiana is claimed by the republicans by a majority of from twenty to twenty-five thot sand, although the returns indicate a loss pf one or two republican members of Gone Towa has re-elected her full republican qu of Congressmen, and the State has gone for that ticket by from probably twenty to twenty- five thousand majority. Altogether we think the results of yester- day’s elections may be pronounced sufficiently decisive to call for a new departure by the administration and the Southern States\ in favor of the constitutional amendment of Qon- gress now before the States for their ratifica- tion. The gains of the democrats in the com- krative popular vote in such cities as Phila- deinia and Cincinnati reveal the assistance draw, from the administration; but the gene- ral drii.of the popular current outside of the great cite indicates more clearly the predomi- nant publicsentiment of the North. Ries of the Politicians. A little over, year ago the army of Leo, ex- hansted by the \all-dog tenacity of General Grant, who had at its throat from the Wilderness down tothe gates of Richmond, gave up the fight and\yrrendered. There was rejoicing all over the ®untry; for the people pined for peace and expéted to enjoy its bless- ings. In the loyal States the exultation was universal, because with Pert came the restora- tion of the Union and the reestablishment of the government in all its stength. Although the gall ofdefeat may at firsthave embittered te cup to those who had s0 réently been our enemies, yet even they soon c\me to regard with heartfelt satisfaction the cessation of a ‘war that had brought them nothing but suffer- ing and destruction, and were thatful that it wasatan end. If a shadow darken the sky it arose only from the fog of those mey’s minds who failed to appreciate the American charac- ter and predicted that the released soldiery would wander Abvst the country murdering and robbing and burning ana preying upon the peaceable citizens generally. aaxt: clouds were speedily dispelled when the sturdy men ofwar beteok themselves to the workbench and the plough and quietly resumed the employ- ments they had quitted for the tent and the field. The nations of Earope looked on in wonder. They were not prepared for the grand spectacle of two mighty armies disbanding, as it were, or fmt olga er i ine le ana pruducing population, They saw with amazement a governmem great enough to extend a generous forgiveness to States that had for four years waged against it a war of rebellion, and a system perfect enough to resume its working harmoniously just as soon as such @ conflict ceased. The country was at peace; and this fact,a0 less wonderful to them than the immensty of the resources we had developed during the war, gave us a credit in Euroye greater than any we had previously enjoyed. * are The Late Dieaswaug Shipwrecks: The equinoctial gales of September and October always supply a record of shipwrecks straction a new set of young snd vigorous men, controlled by the which is eaid to be of almost faba- tan government, The present state of things | 4, happily anne ompanied by any such loss The iceman 6 ara Sram anne ‘og is contrary to the spirit of the age and the pro- | o¢ ifo, She also foundered im open ses, but | The Commissioner of the Freedmen's Bureau bes re grees of Christian olvilization, and its end can- the scrow steamer George Cromwell bore down ceived a communication from an agent of the Bureas, not be far off. upon her in time to save the forty-four people | "mites from Bairdsiewn, ane Seema tag which che informs the General that everything con- We arenot able to say at present what.course | on board, The Daniel Wobster was an old set vines ened oer fone al events will take, what Powersmay be involved | post, built in 1851. Shesailed from New York | is working. amoothly. ‘The'freed people are conducting in the vast changes that may occur, or who for Mobile on September 27, and, like the themselves with decorum, and the whites seem dtspesed. will iahorit the magnificent and classical tortl- | Fyening Star, was caught in the cyclone off the | '? 49 them jestice. “Bo scates thet there isa large body, tory & European Turkey. All this is in the Georgian coast. of aged, infirm and helpless freed people in that section womb oitime, Many unforeseen ciroumstances | tp looking for the cause of these disasters the | Sune State who are in absolute need of aid from the may bappin to modify from time to time the | government, and he begs of the Commissioner to take nor frst thought that gccurs to the mind is that | some mensures for their relief. He states that many of espect of this most interesting subject. both the Evening Star and the Daniel Webster, the strong and healthy freedmen have left the county, We have no ides that the Anglo-French alli- | a5 wot! as the Santi do Guba, which put | While the dependent have all remained, and the civil ance can ke revived again for another war | neck into see port on Sunday disabled, after | “ub~rities are unable to provide for them. similar to thaven the Crimea to check the pro- | j,.ix¢ four of her passengers, were sidewheel Me lglg Precepur legen! ag pevet gress of Russia inne East. The motives which Th steamships. e steamship which rescued the | will scarcely make the seed which they planted in the Pasa ee ee an ee crew of the Daniel Webster is a screw propel- | spring. Most of the freedmen were werking for « share and French pride—cannovanite again to con- ler; and the Fung Shuey—another screw in the crop, and of course they will make little or {rol the future on they appearot to check for ® | steamer, which exiled from New York for New erage prt pa omar orn ~ eat dept ~ the impending events of the past. Only Orleans the same day as the Evening Star—has peng faa Bhagat pen cate courses appear to be open for the / reached port in safety. But there is something 4 yee ‘another year."’ settlement of the Eastern question—that is to | more than the distinction between sidewheel ‘The Anxiety to Hear Election Returns. The excitement at the Johnson Clab this eveniag ia referenes to the elections which have taken place to-day te bY & conference of all the to establish independent P eomaang ates ments over that part of the continent, md the other by the advance of Russia to thy shores of the Mediterranean, the Dardanel}ss and the Bosphorus, to deliver its coreligfonists from Mahometan rale. These are the uncertainties and complications of the future. With regard to the United States in connec- indifferent to the rain in their fierce anxiety to pick up afew crumbs of information. The despatches hitherte, leave us room for thankfulness if the tragic But it was not long before the politicians set | tion with the question, we beg to inform our old Far Building, and, Iike their party opponents, are hosupechs 40: didabeaty' the qridens of tne Pool of) aesvoud Colldenporsitie ol’ Ltnden apd Farls| ern eee me eres recetving telegrams upon the all absorbing Siloam, through the virtues of which the eyes | that they need not be alarmed. America—the Santa Anna anp THe Fantans.—A very amus- oo Ata ely’ pag yee Papa European meddling. But we shall enter into Vales no entangling alliances with s view of control- | in his mind’s eye just now, he cultivates the | Certain persons in Washington and elsewhere have for ens LE tH be thrown in favor of Mberty and the progress | Willing to of civilisation. This is the réle of the United | Ireland may turn up. States in both hemispheres, and we shall not | Dimself tn the full depart from it, So, with regard to the Eastern | eral, with question, all we desire is a good and liberal | Medals and historic sash. Christian government for « Christian people, audience to s good spell without troubling ourselves much about the | Spanish, presuming, perhaps, that ae there balance of power question which appears to | *0 affinity between trouble greatly our contemporaries in Europe, | 80 they understood all he knowing very well that if they not Tar Firu or Sswanp, Weep anv Raruonn.— would get his remarks, in plain English, in Thurlow Weed is out in s long rigmarole of «| Hxnat next morning. The General alluded | _ TH President has appoiated John Soys, of Ohio, Mia- lotter, in which he defines his position to be in | to the legion of San Patricio who fought with | (ys rene ar toes ced Charlee tents naa Opposition to the copperheads, but in favor of | him in Mexico, under the misapprebension that p Reale ym ghy a Thapar ER mates, of Hoffman. The firm of Seward, Weed and Ray- their religion was being attacked by our army, | Massechusetts, to be Commimioners to the Paris Expo- mond may therefore be considered as thus dis- | because a few places of worship were abused | sition. posed for the present :—Seward is completely | on the march. He praised them as the best over on the Tammany side of the fence, Ray- | troops he had and insinuated that he would | pointments to-day :—Doctore Ezra B. Sprague, mond has gone completely over on the other | like afew more of the same sort to aid him in | N- ¥., and G. A. Dayton, Mexico, N. Y., 10 be nounced him ase“ oe bounded, and thy President was alluded to as s applicants to employ agents to facilitate the business, sination.” dent himse?; and for the past two months the government scolding at each other and calling each other names, like two angry drabs. oxamia- riotous and violent. The Butlers and Brown- | *!4¢, while Weed is hanging over on the same | his forthcoming enterprise. In saying that the | '# mess, and George F. Tilden to be pension notary lows and Hamiltons on‘ one side, and the | *ide, all but one leg, astride of which is Hoff | Irish are the most apt to sympathize with |“ “Pardes ef Convicts by the President. __ Tae Tewrrrance Socretins’ Caeprarton To- Dar.—A very interesting ding comes off | the probabilities of Mexico becoming the in the-city to-day—a proecssion of the Father seat of the future papacy. Hie speech, at all Mathew temperance societies, in honor of the events, was @ bold bid for Fenian reeruits, and birthday of the benign and venerable foundor | f Teport speaks true he may not be disap- of the total abstinence system, the late Rev. Polated in his expectations in that quarter. Theobald Mathew. The influence of these | The cocked hat and feather, the glittering deco- societies as moral agents, conservators of ofder | TAtions and the sweet Spanish brogue may and promoters of good conduct and presperity prove as irresistible temptations as the ribbons among ® large class of the community cén of the recruiting sergeant and the martial fife hardly be overrated. Apart from the good ond Gram. which they effect as benevolent institutions, Stern taeda coe gear tetas Ox» Potrrca Rossman or THe Sovru.—The furthe: industry and sob: among the | acotion of the constiiutional amendmont before ‘Nebraska, working classes is far peeves = ey oliher roa amen 1 -cheatvbe: by 0) OO ST Ee ON tom Gabbtoren, seek or receive credit for. In all our outdoor | two-thirds vote of Congress, to debar from all oon Ts Taapection ston of | ~ ny empaal ay must have boon observed | federal offices hereafter all that class of men | Captain William M. Mew, of che United States Trean- societies comprise a most respect- | who violated their oaths to support the consti- ury Department, left this city on Saturday last for New able portion of the procession, attracting uni- | tution as officers in the service of the United Pease oe ines p eemaperon versal attention by their numerical strength, | States, civil, judicial or military, by engaging in i on aoe rt ot Super. : present at the meeting Of the Board of Super- handsome insignia and orderly demeanor, | the late rebellion, is considered in the Sonth a veuinal ‘Steamboate at Buffalo, N. Y., at which enetag Not the least interesting featare of these bodies | severe exaction. It has been suggested to us, ae additional measures will be suggested and considered is the number of young boys from the schools | however, that in thus cleari with a view to providing farther security to passengers 4 ing off all the old steamboats, These additional atopes attached to the different churches who form | politicians of the South that bronght on and By the Board, will be submitted sy - Ar} ite next part of the pageant in oleon amd gay attire. managed the rebellion—such as the Masons ’ As a portion of the most creditable and eivil- | and Hunters and Wises, of Virginia; the tine & In tile commpantty the PFathar Leite Uamatons apd Quattlebuma, of South Sharkeys, Dawsons and Monroes on the other, the pardons of the follow: have done their best to excite the prejudices and passions of the people and to destroy the blessings of peace. One set of men in the their breath unceasingly to fan the smoulder- ing embers of fanaticism and sectionalism once more into a flame. On told that Congress is to be by the Southern members tion carried at the point of the other we are promised ment of the re-assembles, mere ravings of The South will quietly iter Con- gress under the constitutional amendment, if the States are sensible enough to secure those terms of readmission, and Butler could not get fore than fifty or sixty votes in the House for his threatened impeachment, The balance of the Representatives are quiet and peaceable men, who have already shown their inclination and their power to cheék the revolutionary i i : offices:—Humboldt, Kanms, 6,640 acres; } ble radicals, and they will do no act in which the country will refuse to sustain them. But. bapeleas ns are theso threats. thev pre’ eler

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