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rg v 6 NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL U, 1867.-TRIPLE SREY. _ lic Tho letters of our Ubarleston torréépondeat afford ample and gratifying proof that the work of recoustriustion goes bravely on in South Carolina. Aa onoocuaging sign of ite progress is the fact stated by him that at a meeting of prominent citizens in Charleston, on the evening of the 2d instant, {t was unami- maously agreed that the freedmen should be! entitled to ran some of their own color on the whites’ ticket for representation to the ooa- vention and the State Legislature. “A letter from General Wade Hampton, urging this course and a thorough submission, by acs and not by words, to the new order of things, was read at the meeting. It is now believed botter for all sides that this radical change should take place at once, that it must come, sooner or later, and that by edopting the mea- sure now future strife and bloodshed may be avoided.” ' Our correspondent records the ad- hesion of the most influential. mon in the State—such_men as ex-Governor Magrath, Governor Orr, Lieutenant Governor Porter an@ Hon, 0. H. Simonton, Speaker of the South Carolina House of Representatives—to the viows recently expressed. by the leading Con- federate Generals—Lee, Beauregard, Long- street, Hampton and the rest—who recognize the necessity of some provision to prevent anarchy in the South, and urge submission to the Sherman and Supplemental bills. “Under these circumstances,” adds our correspondent, “there ia very little question, if General Grant were run for President and General Loe for Vice President; the ticket would command a larger vote, North and South, than bas over been given to any President except Monroe, who, by the amalgamation of parties in his time, was elected unanimously. It would be @ happy result, and hailed with delight by every lover of the Union founded by Wash- ington. It would rally the old affections of North and South around the flag, and, in the language of Webster, make us truly ‘one and indivisible,’ ” In view of the wonderful change of opinion which is now taking place throughout the South, all the petty quibbling of Judge Sharkey and Robert J. Waiker, and their utmost efforts to interrupt the progreas of reconstruction by aid of the Suprome Court and the “law's delays,” must prove ineffectual aad contempfible, NEW RK HERALD. for both foreign and domestic merchandise emer, aad | worthless, as an ice-bound region, which has | theloss certain and important, and will become YO © | etatr business was transacted. The activity im bewed: } no resources, and in which the Anglo-American | more evident every dey. The one thing necded : suite noticed in our last continued, oad Nidhes Brie | race cannotlive, ‘The British press and people | to mako our arrangement still more valuable was | express themselves in the same way, because, to the public Is to receive advertisements at as wore | while they oannot venfure to, oppose the ces- | early an hour in the day as possible. Perce ae MISCELLANEOUS. pnccmoe ti bop at ‘Tho Delegates at Large te the Convention of In the United Slates Bonate yesterday the resolution | States, and do not lke being flanked in this cath Moe oes oe) A veselation providhay Ts 1B4. Wriyes. 9 .Sae8P. et om pita. Ro pedal State conventions yesterday to nominate dele- ‘eand copies of the Army Register for 1867 was adopted. regard tereitory, #0 gates at large to the Convention of Revislon. The credentials of Matthias E. Manly, Senator elect from | they are known? Why, the southern portion ‘As only of the pa ces North Caroling, were laid om the table, ‘The Senate then | of jt, which reaches to the fifty-fourth parallel | A* *ixteen only etree doleat ‘went into executive session. of latitude, has really @ genial climate, com- be voted for on one ticket, the nominations of bid Lew . pasativaly.. It is well known that the Pacific | Doth parties are equivalent to an election, and we therefore have now an opportunity of judg- conatitation met in Syracuse yesterday. Joha A. Gris- | ocean modifies the olimate very much all along ing of what ma the State pee hat 2 wold was appointed temporary President, A list of | the American coast So mild fs it in road ye ge I omg 4, The Aelogaion was then elected, one to cach district, ant! Oregon and along the British Powessions | CoDven biter d ae Rine forthe Stare at large distributed among the first, | 46° Gattis cam be kept out in tho republicans Syracuse, and their proceed: favoring the incorporation of a clause in the State con- field all the year round. Even in the pera mae emer stitution giving suffrage to the negro, ‘The Convention | southern part of Russian America foe hardly | Os seas dal, paid then adjourned sine die. ever becomes thick enough to cut and harvest, | Puted possession They ‘2 oe ‘The Democratic State Convention assembled at Albany | m4 ogid is not so severe there as in some of their business in a single session and selec! yesterday, and was called to order by Samuel J. Tilden. our Eastern States and in the Canad: ‘The | *xteen names, some of a respectable charac- ter, but all strictly within the pale of republi- On calling the roll it was decided, after considerable de. | temperature in latitude ' Atty-four on that side Antrshaye te dates are William bate, ttmt the Tammany Hall delegates were alone on- | of the continent is not higher than in forty-four | °°” nd ap rar anesinn ony titled to admission as delegates from Now York city, and | or forty-six on this slide; besides, it is not 6o M. Evarts, ox-Mayor Opdyke, lo Hutchins, the Mozart and Demooratic Union organizations were | variable and trying to the constitution, It Is State Senator Folger, ox-United States Senator declared inadmissible, The Committee on Resolutions Harris, George W. Curtis, E. S. Prosser, of reported an addi ‘ado 4 the i. 1 8 climate in which @ vigorous race of people site asapster were Pence tine cree ea would grow up. Rye and barley will flourish | Buffalo, and Horace Gresley. The marked vailed during the latter part of the proceedings. The | there, besides a variety of esculents, and wheat, | feature of oe eater ny wes eee convention, after transacting other business of an unim- even, could be oultivated; timber is abun- any recogn! portant character, adjourned. dant and of the finest quality; gold, copper, to representation in the Convention. The The work of registration in Virginia is going om 3 1, "| republican Legislature, with its ¢wo-thirds Se M ired in thoca- | fron and coal abound near the coast and on Cali. eee bapdaeh. aPienee enarene majority, denied the colored= citizen the right pacity of clerks, agents, &c,, and a large force of North- | the islands; the fisheries, beyond all doubt, agli in the alaction, the delegaies,. and the corners are arriving in Richmond under the mpression | are vory valuable; in no part of the world, sae : eta rg vaste that Virginia cannot furnish loyat men enough (0 M1 | Dornan, oan the finest cod and salmon be | "Publican convention refuse to allow him a the offices, While « vulored orator at the colebration ss . place upon their ticket. Not a voice appears ou one $d inst. wae advocating amalgamation two yeung caught in such abundance; the value of the $a Mave Sean on Cuiffoo's behalf, and ladies (white) appeared at his side and shook hands with | whale fisheries is well known; the richest he oe ae a6 CE 40 ‘etitiew a him, John Minor Botts contributed some salutary ad- } furs and skins and the best ivory are found Greeley vi¢ein a letter toa masa mooting of negroes at Peters | there in quantities. In fact, this region favor of Fred Douglass or Downing. burg on the 8th inst, diag - The democrats met at Albany, and their pro- iy tration of voters | #20unds in-many of the very things and arti- © ses selpteneg ee oe Gea ee on mast Pos niechy cles of commerce which we have not claowhero, | °°°dings be tg by die i gore pe on al President Johnson is unable to attond to his official | and which will swell our stock of produce, in | fmiliar to all the State. lemocratio con- duties owing to an affection of the liver, which requires | its varioty, beyond that of any other country, | Vention without a row would be as much of that he should be kept quiot. Wo shall have everything produced from the rarity as Donnybrook fair without o fight. The ratifications of the Russian treaty are to be ox- tropios to the Arctic regions. There was the usual contest between half a changed at Washlogton before the 248 of June or the dozen rival organizations from New York, Our territory will stretch 33 to Asia, treaty fails, The money for the purchaso is to be paid ur ry will strotch acro: a, and ending in the admission by Peter Cagger’s within ten monthe after the exchange of ratifications. that, too, through a comparatively temp2rate In our columns this morning witl be found the potition | climate, along the Aleutian Islands, which are committee of the regular Tammany delegation, of Governor Jenkins, asking the Supreme Court to issue | orion not more than a few miles apart, and and the subsequent voting of the regular Tam- lage pkey the execution of the Recon | vovor over a few hundred miles. With the | ™Any delegation for Peter te motions Tho lower House of the Now Sersey Logislature rofuaed | growth of our States and possessions on the | "4 EREE NS, Here. he cuties to stzike the word “white” from tho State constitution | Pacific, and by the rapid development of our | Zemocratio speeches made by fossil poli- yesterday by a vote of thirty-five to twenty, thereby | oommorce across that ocean with the vast | ‘cians, and an address of the genuine cutting off negroes in the State from the right of fran- populations of China, Japan and Indin, we old copperhead stamp was presented chise, and adopted, in which the reconstruction The eloction in Baltimore on tho questton of a Consti- | shall see 8 great trade grow up from this new ’ . tutional Convention and the ruauing of street cars on | territory. The North Pacific ocean becomes | Dill under which the South is quietly proceed- Sunday rosulted in favor of both propositions by majori- | go narrow in the higher latitudes, through tho ing to reorganize ita States, is vigorously de- ties of ovor eighteen hundrod yesterday. Everything | 175 continents of Asia and America drawing | Nounced; the rascalities of Congress and of Passed off quietly. dicalism generally are indignantly com- ; each other, that the from the ports | y sigronind Havana dates of tho 34 inatant received in Washing- | 20aT Lacie nia Hemost regs BAPAC upon, and the people are assured that ton state that the United States Consul had remonstrated | Of our mew possessions to the populous against the enlistment of Spaniards in Cubs for the | countries of the Asiatic continent will be ahort | the only hope for the country is to restore army of Maximilian. The Captain General roplied that | ang frequent. We shall find in Asia a ready power and official patronage to tho hands of the recruiting should beetopped, but since then about the democracy. The names of the sixteon dele- and great market for the furs, skins, ivory, hundred recruits bave left Havana Thi ’ | eaten to he ted by the democratio eleo- Omit had therefore called upon st Evans fish, timber, coal, grains and metals of that | g94e6 to be supported by the demo 2 republican Consul for affidavits sotting forth the facts, | region. Ioe-oan be shipped at much less oost | Fs were reported by a committee named by with a view of submitting the same tothe eethorities | than from. the Kastera States to all the the chair, and their announcement was tho Doda Cats cod, at ‘Waekingten. countries on both sides of the Pacific; ani this | “gael for a gennine democratic row, The Further partioulars regarding the revolution in Hat! | of ‘itself would beoome su immonse trads; | Site Central Committee were socused of are received. Forty men under command of Victorin s packing the ti forci their. own Chevalier arrived at St. Mark's on the 8th ult, from | American onterprise; indeed, will soon make | P% okot—ot ng Tark's Island, whense they bad come on a British | a wonderful change in the face of everything |, °adidates upon the Convention, and one schooner, and proclaimed a provisional governmeat. | and in commerce on and around the Paciac | indignant member moved that the State Com- Prosident Gedfrard immediately abdicated and wont on} \ooan mittee have power in future to nominate all board slovoed ae cy Foe bo drei But, say some, we havo territory enough. candidates of the democratic party. Now lists but he declined, and a provisional government was | The same class of people, with their narrow of Games wore non agent nig ey porary __ | views, have always asid ao when the count: Committee’s report; bat after a stormy debate Bs renga wo? haces _ eas moa ery ia aia to ieres its borders. The eon and much personality the amendments were je on the ier, and aw are committed daily. ote tion of Louisiana in 1803—that magnificent ter- | 9! voted down and the “slate” ticket adopted. Wondell Phillips has written a letter toa Muscatine, | ritory exceeding 9 million square miles and | The sixteen delegates selected are all, with the Towa, paper, in which he likens President Johnson toa} equal in extent to the whole of the United | ©xception of George Law, of the old Ligh Tennessee mule, and opposes Grant as a candidate for | gates previously, which gave us the Missis- hack breed, and are distinguished only for va ea 7 because he has no political ideas of bin | 1s river and its western tributaries, and out | Serceness of their democracy. ‘The address of The Kansas branch of the Union Paciite Rafiroad from | of which so many States havo boon carved— | the Convention declares its adherence to the St. Louis will be completed to Saline, a town Afty miles | was opposod on the same ground. The pur- | “lective system of the judiciary, and the demo- beyond Fort Riley and four hundred end sixty-cight | onage of Kast and West Florida from Spain, in cratic delegates at large have been mainly sree youve gis aged. Afieca ant aictoea, attomptea | 1619, mot with similar opposition, though not so | Chosen as the pledged opponents of judicial to commit suicide near Weehawken yesterday moraine, | determined, and on somewhat different grounds, | "¢form. because the father of one of thom insisted on their being | The next groat slice of territory annexed was Tho Public Hoalth—Vital Statistics, separated. Texas, but when the treaty for annexation was The weekly report of the Registrar of Vital An abandoned woman in Chicago, who was discarded * by her neighbors on account of hor bad character, mur- first submitted to the Sonate in 1844 it was re-| Statistics, which we published yesterday, is dered a little gitl on Tuesday and attempted to murder | Jected by # vote of two to one against it, when | suggestive of many grave considerations, which another as a means of retaliation. it would have required a vote of two to one to | ought to lead to the adoption of some remedy Ten boys, aged from eight to sixteen, wore sentenced | have ratified it. The opposition was mainly | for the increasing mortality of this city, which ah ’ , wh mi Erg’ rg hislaonced bed sag from the old Northern federal party, as before | is proportionably larger now than that of Lon- peacefully following his vocation. Yesterday the orgen in the case of Louisiana, but mainly on politi- | don or Paris, or perhaps any city in the world. grinder died in Brooklyn of his injuries, ; ae sn ys soar to a war | It is shown that the most potent canses of remap neereiare ee . ith Mexico. California and New Mexico were 2 ener ak ire to the Vaited | conquered during tho Mexican war, and by the on wen ain Wel pormby Ans at a treaty made at the conclusion of the warin | foports, ia the worst and most dangerons Rie aaa tl - sa beiclew ha resid ’ | 1848 this vastand rich region of country be- ra any large city. The facts that the Eman to ithe inter a ha Hs con od one came a part of the United States. Opposition to | mortality of Brooklyn—where. tho tenement Salaitbiin bei iy tay the dnirge 4a m4 decisive this acquisition was useless; for it had come into | ponses are exceedingly fow—is mnch tess than te in the Sen ¢ thi 1 our hands by conquest; but the old non-expan- | in New York, in proportion to iis population, hinted pc of thirty yeas to only two ‘sion party grumbled, protested and and that the of ies so sate rte | eto om oad a to term cg tives will have something to say in the matter, domain. Arizona, anothor slice of Mexico, prove that we owe a great deal of the sickness as tias es 1, | 2ough & much smaller one, was. purchased '} which prevails in the metropolis to what, Dr. Hons of dhtiaal $5 na hy a 4 " afterwards to aottle a difficulty about boundary | Harris properly calls “ crowd poisoning.” We there ls Uitile doubt as to what tho House will | S24 %@ give ws a railroad route south of the | ary waraod that x the summer approaohs do. In spite of the hostility of a portion of the Gila river, from El Paso to San Diego. Now | epidemic diseases will seize upon all those radical pressand its ‘aidaanttadl as ho Sica we have the immense territory of Russlan | locolitics where tenement houses exist. Now, will upset what the administration and Senate America coded to ua. therefore, is the tims to adoptsom> preventive have done, thé money will be: appropriated A great deal of political trowble has resultéd, | fyr the threatenod calamity, Unless some mea- Ths. everwhsluing vote-of te Gea inees undoubtedly, from theso different acquisitions | sires are taken to provide well ventilated ib bout on eae etlaaed, the tative | Of ‘tritory; but have not the benefits been | dwellings for the laboring poor, either in the sich px lbephe dg: rity the sontimeate of thoes | cH greater? At all events, to make them | guburbs or in the neighboring cities in New ofthe other ulicient to justify this bei | as our destiny. The progress and expanding | Jersey and on Long Island, we can hardly ae y 'w | power of a great, active and ambitious nation expect, with the large incroase of population We should be surprised to seo any opposi- | CMD be restrained. Wo might as well | which is cortain to accrue from immigration tion, if wo ld not know that the old. bide. | #@mpt to stop the waters of the Mississippi. | this spring, to escape the scourge of conta. bound federal party, and the radicals, which But where shall we end? Probably not till | gious diseases, whether they tike the form of can Giabndh Aes tinned @E ah the republic is rounded off, as Mr. Seward | cholera or typhus. ave ae canienen, oF Gon said, by the Arctic ooean, the Isthmdp of Cen- Giinaeser erent, However, some of those have lately become 9 fo rere bend per Bebe The new iron bridge at the corner of Fulton enlightened and liberal enough not to ing expression, as applied to this count: street and Broadway is approaching comple- stand in the way of our national progress. gon Tho «san helm gages tion and will be open to traffic ina few days, The principle of Chinese exclusiveness and Classification of Advertisements. There has been but one thistake made with it, non-expansion finds few advocates now, except All those secking employment or in want of | and that is that it is utterly unserviceable for in the small class of narrow-minded dogmatists | help will observe the improved system of clas- | the persons whom it was intended to benefit, represented by the radical press of this city, | sification of advertisements relating to these | We are safe in saying that not more than one Asto the amount of the purchase money— | prominent wants of the community adopted in | out of a thousand lady foot passengers will seven millions and s half of dollars—that is a | our advertising columns. By placing the | avail herself of the facilities afforded by it. mere bagatelle, either to this great country or | number of the house to which applications for | The stairways are so steep and unprotected Russia. The cession was made and accepted | servants are to be made in numerical order | from view that only females of more than an on higher considerations. Russia, in herfriend- | at the head of each advertisement groat | ordinary amount of courage will venture to run ship for this country, from a desire to con- | facility is afforded to those who want to hire, | the gauntlet of observation from below. Male tribute to its progress and power, and for the | and at the same time the interests of the | passengers will scarcely be more disposed to about ag hoer’s consultation the jury returned « | purpose of perpetuating intimate relations with | parties destring employment are considerably | make use of it. The structure is high and irordics (be the respondent. committed sdahery win it, ceded these vast possessions for an insignif- | sdvanced. Advertising in the Hzratp has | laborious to climb, We are afraid, therefore, end that the plaintitwe | Cant sum. Our own government, carrying out | become almost a science. The regularity and | that it will fail to answer any purpose except the alleged edultery with Rulon Coughiin. | stop by step the flat of inevitable destiny, | accuracy with which the advertisements are | that of a post for sightseers on procession which, in time, must give us the whole of the | arranged remove all diffloulty in finding pre- | days. When wo suggested tho construction of alt cisely what every one noeds. The commu- a bridge for foot passengers at this point we Re ee eerie’ tho United Kingdom snd tz | %® North Pacific ocean, surrounded by vast | nication between those wanting employment | had in view a very different affair from that wa morning. | 6ANES GORDON BENNETT, a 196% @PFIOR H.W. CORNED OF FULTON AND NASSAU STS. eee Volume KEXUL.......:eeccssesesee: NOo LOL i oe Ra a ammiaiie that has been put ap the only object in view seems to have been to give the manufacturer of the iron work the fullest advantage that could be obtained from the weight of metal employed. The result will be that for the pur- poses intended the bridge will prove a failure, and that like many other of our architectural follies it will bave to give place to something more practical and ornamental. Tarkev ta Eerepe—The Latest Phase of the In our Paris letter, published yesterday, we gave the programme of a movement for the farther disintegration of the Ottoman empire, originating in the lands between the Danube and the Balkan, where the Moslem power can least bear te be put to any mew test. The pro- gramme is simply a project for the revival of the kingdom of Bnigaria, extinct since the fourteenth century—an ancient Christian Power, overwhelmed and borne down by the original irruption of the Turks into Enrope. It thus proposes to read Backward the melan- choly chapter of modern history that made a great Christian population the slaves of a bar- barous race, and to commence the reconstruc- tion of that part of Christendom at the point where the sword of the fanatic stopped all progress. The particulars of the programme merely indicate poiniain the constitution of the projected realm ; but these points are signifi- cant of the nature of their origin. They show that the project has grown up in the wide- spread influence upon the people of a groat recent example—the success of Hungary in demanding from her tyrannical ruler a separate national organization and government, Hun- gary is made the model for the establishment of the new Power. Just as Francis Joseph must be crowned King of Hungary, so the Sultan must be crowned King of Bulgaria before he can legitimately rule; and he must rule also through a minister and a national Bulgarian Parliament, We are told that the Servians, Montenegrins and Greeks are leagued with the Bulgarians for the sup- port of their demand, and that its denial will inevitably be followed by violent measures, Ita acceptance would itself be a great revolu- tion; and thus, in either event, we appear to be on the eve of a remarkable change in the political and social condition of one of the most interesting portions of Europe—the border land of centuries of struggle between opposing creeds and races. Whether the establishment of a new king- dom, including a. portion, perhaps all of European Turkey, and sure to be soon inde- pendent of the Padishah, is to be the socepted solution of one of tho most troubleseme of political problems, time only can tell; but the case is one thot presses for settlement, and @ settlement mast soon be found. Moteover, according as that settlement is good or bad, so will Eastern Europe be disturbed or at rest for a century to come. The wonderful strength and the.great. necessity of Russia will bear down the scale against the ideas of the West- ern Powers. Russia is ambitious of maritime development and naval greatness. Peter stamped that tradition ineradicably upon her policy when he became a ship carpenter. Frozen up through half the year in her north- ern extremity she requires a southern outlet through the Euxine, and will have it. That is a part of the inevitable future, and Russian preponderance in the Mediterranean will be the regult. France and England stopped this once by force of arms. They cannot do it again. Let France move now and she will find that a united Germany of fifty millions of people is her next-door neighbor and is in close alliance on this very point with Russia, Let England move, and India is gone. Rus- sian military posts are established within striking distance along the whole Indian fron- tier, and any undue expression of British sym- pathy with Russia’s foe will deprive England of the vast wealth of her Asiatic empire. She “has given hostages to fortane,” and must look on with folded arm3. In view of all thia what part should the Western Powers tuke in this present movement. They should,.encou- rage by every means the setling up of this, new kingdom. The continued domieation of the Sultan in Enrope furnishes the pretext that Russia wants. So long as her movement can take the shape of intorvention for the protec- tion of oppressed Christians it will ‘commend itself to the prejudices of Europe anid all will be easy ; but a Christian kingdom, ruling all the lands from Hungary to Greece, will be a bulwark against her, and her first groat difiiculty. ah AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING. Bae i THEATRE, Broadway, near Broome Lrrris Bageroor. wEW goss THEATRE, Brosdway, opposite New York WOOD'S THEATRE, Broadway, opposite St. Nicholas Hlotel.—Camuix. (REATRE FRANCAIS, Fourteenth street, near Sixth Qvenue.—La Dams aux CaMEtias. | GERMAN STADT THEATRE. 45 and 47 Bowery.— agen vor Unauas Lavr'; opar, Dan Buavs Isaac. \ OLYMPIC THEATRE, Broadway.—Tan Exomanranss. WORTH 806 Broadway.—Proresson Hants hans Pearonm _ imacLas—L’EscamaTegn amp His ‘any Surcing Burp. ' GAM FRANCISCO MINSTRBLS, 5% Broadway, opposite Sko Metropolitan Hotel—In ramtz Ermiorian Eoremtay- Sinaia, Dancing AND Borctesqves.—' Buace ‘ap PEPPER TAKEN From Casta Diva, \ KRLL' LEON'S MINSTRELS, 720 Broadway, eee eta ds rene Bonus, Danoaat Weber: Fatorn jurDaE-Linos EN. Buavusqus, (—MaDagascaR: Barer teovre—Tus Two groupfouth sroc—outtror & Gxurrs ‘Minernnee + a NSTRELS.— ian Muwerescsy. Bauiaps, ‘BURUESQURS, &c.—T Hi Croox—La Brigaxpiano. TONY PASTOR'S OPERA HOUSE, 201 Bowery.—Conic Pooattsu. Necro Mixstretsy, Boaursques, Bauuer Divea- Gusemenr, &c.—AN [RisHMAN IX GareEce. CHARLEY WHITE'S COMBINATION TROUPE, at Mechanics’ Hall, 472 Broadway—In 4 Vanierr or Liaut np LavewaaLe Ente TanMEnts.—La Statox Comous. HOOLEY’S OPERA HOUSE, Brooklyn.—Eratorias Mux- ernecsr, Bactaps anp Buruxsques.—Kix-Ka. BROOKLYN ATHENAUM.—Mn, Kuexepr's Exranrarn- ‘wunt—Tie SONGS OF SCOTLAND. THR BUNYAN TABLEAUX, Union Hall, corner, of Twenty-third sirect and Broadway, at &—Move, ine a LORIN'S va Some. Matinee Wedn ‘and Saturdar 4 8 o'clock, W YORK MUSEUM OF AN **OM¥. 618 Broodway.— NEW YORE MUSEUM OF ASioner—Tun Wasnincrox me Megs Sates eS TRIPLE SHEET. NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS. Advertisers will please bear in mind that in order to have their advertisements properly claasi- Ged they should be sent in before half-past eight o'clock in the evening. THs NEW Ss. EUROPE. ‘The nows report by the Atlantic cable is dated yes- ferday evening, April 10. : Spain rejects the demands of England in tho Tornado pase, and refuses indemnity or satisfaction. Turkey, Again threatens to make war on Greece, on account of he Christian insurrectionary movement on the frontier. Comadia closed at 00'¢ formoney in London. United @tates five-twonties closed at 731, in London and 755 in Frankfort. The decline in American securities ig Lon- Gon wan caused by the throwing of a large quantity of the bonds from Germany in the market \ The Liverpool cotton market sed heavy ata de- @line of one-cighth of a penpy; Middling uplands rating At twelve pence. Bregsecuits remained active and closed firm atan advance Provisions dull, By mai we have interesting details of our cable dos- patches to the 20th of March, including comments of sho Vionna prost on the Prusso-South German treaties, end @ report of the effect preduced in Paris by the speech of King Victor Emanuel at the qpeming of the Italian Parliament. A history of ‘the Toruado case, which it appears from our cable despatch muy lead to a war between Eng- Sand and Spain, is published in the Herarn, ‘ THE LEGISLATURE. In the Senate yesterday the Quarantine bill sathor- Ising the establishment of a boarding station at any point ‘im the harbor of New York was reported for consider- tion and made a special order for Friday. Bills pro- ‘Bibiting the unauthorized opening of telegraphic mes- @ages; incorporating the Montague Theatre Company of Brooklyn; authorizing the opening of Lafayette square ‘a Breoktyn; and the Wesichester Turapike bill, wore (pasced. The concurrent resolution relative to the re- vision of the laws relating to savings banks was called ‘ap, but after consideration was again laid over. The Sew York county tax levy was reported favorably. In the Assembly the Annual Supply bill and the bill (ncorporating the Williamsburg Bridge Company were Ordered toa third reading. Bills authorizing the con- @ruction of an clevated railroad in New York, and amonding the Registry law, were reported favorably. THE CITY. A mocting of the property owners interested in the ‘Proposed extension of Church street from Fulton streot Yo the Battery was held yesterday afternoon at Powers’ Hotel, Judge Bonney in the chair. Resolations de- Bouncing the extension as useless end injerious were paased, and a committee to protect the interests of the Property owners affected was appointed. ‘The deed conveying the southern portion of the City ‘Wall Park to the United States for a Post Office site has ‘boon placed in the hands of Postmaster Kelly. A copy Of it will be found {a another portion of the Henavp to- Gay. Tn the Court of Appeals yesterday the case of Charlies Doviin vs. James B. Brady, imploaded, was argued on ‘appeal from # Jadgment rendered in favor of the de- fendant. The action was brought on a promissory note for $3,000, made in 1867, by Brady and endorsed by one Mountjoy, and in consideration of which Mountjoy was ‘Yo use his influence with Street Commissioner Taylor in securing the settlement of a claim of $24,000 which ‘Brady had against the city for grading Forty-sixth Btreet. Decision reserved. \ The case. of Jaudin & Co. va. Henry T. Moore came up n appeal in the Supreme Court, General Torm, yester- fiay, from a judgment rondered at the Circuit against @he defendant. The action was brought to recover 86,126, the difference in the market value of $20,000 in (Wold sold in October and November, 1863, and May, 1864, ‘and which the platntiffs, as brokers, had bought and sold for the defendant. The case of Lyon va. Third Avenue Railroad Com- Tho Groat Eastern. After a somewhat protracted voyage the mammoth steamship Great Eastern is anchored in these waters. For the third time our citizens have the privilege of inspecting certainly the Yargest and, in many respects, the most beauti- ful’and highly finished vossel that ever floated. As gn former occasions, though the novelty te no longer fresh, thousands wilh In addition toher former attra played in the successfal laying of cable. Her, name is now and ever will be honorably associated with the most gigantic and, in. tho interests of ‘civilization, the most useful ont@tprise of modern times. Though « ghe should never prove a prosperous ship in the ordinary sense of tho term, her simple oon; nection with that enterprise renders it forever impossible that it should be said of her that she was built in vain. Atthe same time it cannot be said of hee that she has at all realized the expectations of her original proprietors or justified. the con- clusions of her architect and builder. We are not yielding to a spirit of detraction, nor are we guilty of the slightest exaggeration whea we pronounce it a gigantic failure. For all practical purposes she is, unquestionably, toe large; nor is she possessed of a aingle advan- tage, except for extraordinary purposes, which may not be equally secured by « smatiog vessel. When she first foated in the Thamesat Millwall. it was announced with a flourish of trumpets that shipbuilding had been com- pletely rovolutionized, and that the smaller craft, whioh had hitherto maintained sole pos- session of the ocean, were to give place te floating cities. That dream has not yet been realised, and at the prosent moment it seems as far from belog realized a9 ever. The recent success of the American yachts which crossed the Atlantic in tho stormy month of Decem- ber in leas time than that taken by the Groat Eastern at this’ more favorable season, ren- ders it doubtful whether mere bulk bas ,any- thing at all todo with either speed or safety. In this new entorprise tn which she is embarked. and which, before it is concluded, will proba- ‘bly give us more correct viewa of hor sea- going qualities than any we havo yet obtained, ‘we wish the mammoth ship and the spirited company in whose service she aow is, all success. British Reform. — By one of our cabld’ despatches yesterday we were informed that the liberal party in the House of Commons had split onthe reform ° question, and that on that account the Derby government were cotsidered ont of danger. On what particular grounds. this division hae taken place our cable despatch leaves us im darkness. It has not heen difficult to eee for some time past that this was the object at which Mr. Disraeli was driving. Disunion, to the extent to which it will weaken the opposi- tion, will give strength to the government. Disraeli’s declaration, at the close of the debate on the second reading, that governmont were The War Pautc. Public securities here, as well as abroad, have been unreasonably affected by the result of the negotiations for the purchase by 'rance of the duchy and fortress of Luxemburg. It turns out that Holland has no right to sell either, and even if she liad, Prussia occupies the fortress with her troops, and as possession is nine points of the law, the Datch pradently tefase to conclude the bargain. France cannot well make a casus belli of this; but if she were disposed, she is not ready to do 80. Her new plan of military reorganization will take at least twelve months to complete, and Louis Napoleon is not fool enough to enter upon a campaign against Prussia, strengthened as she now is, until he is prepared at every point. A second military fuilure following close upon that of Mexico would destroy his prestige with the French people and probably lose him his ‘throne, It is all “very well for the purposes of stock operators to start such an alarm, buts great many things may occur before it has a chance of realization. France fe no more in a condition than Prussia to com- mence a contest franght with such tremendous consequences. The revenues of both have need of nursing, and it would be an act of supteme folly on their part to provoke an ox- penditure which would burden them with debt for half a century to come. Still there is no feckoning on what the ambition or fancied ne- was eminently fitted to create confusion factory measute. It reform is granted—such reform a8 shell give satisfaction to the groat bulk of the people—it ought to be no objection at whose hands it is obtatned. We shall have records of numerous and interesting struggles before this much vexed question is Gnally settled. Tar Senate a Brnwo To.—Mr. | | Cone ob the Post Office as half-past Populations, will ere long be covered with the | and those in want of omployée is ronderod | which has been erected. Experience has sails of commerce, hae wisely seized the oppor- | cheap and rapid. All necessity for intelligence | shown that weight of motal in iron structares | cessities of @ rulor like Napoleon may drive | Sumner yesterday moved in the Senste for tho Se rs, tanity to extend our domain end influonce. | offices or middle men in any shape is completely | is not essential to their solidity, Lightness | him to, There is only one thing on which we | offtolal correspondence relating to the friondly Soccer, at anak fe le ‘Theee are the broad, statesmanlike views which | done away with. In fact, the mode of olas- | and compactness are perfectly compatible | can count in his regard, and that is that he | tntervenitiol of the United States in bohalf of Wms. have inflaenced both Powers in making the | sifying advortiooments in our columns will | with security. We need only point to the com- | will not provoke a European war until he le | Maximilian. Ho had doabtless diroovorod ‘The souk ot ‘yesterday, bat treaty for the cession of Ressian Amerios. work a more complete revolution in business | posing toom in tho now Henatn building as | propared for it, and that will certainly not be | that thore has been such correspondonce from ra Gaad donee os Those who oppose the acquisition of this | matters generally than people may realice at | an evidence of the dogroc of strength that oan | within @ period which should oxerolse way | our Wasbington doapatohon in Tyonday's ‘The sdrance in the prieg of gold renderys the fortitory talk Mippatly or snccringly of it ag) the fret glance ; hut the revolution iy aevery [ho Ghtalmed in thle mantoriel without in any |'proveat Indueace upon our atogk market, Banas,