The New York Herald Newspaper, July 16, 1867, Page 6

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6 NEW YORK HERALD; TUESDAY JULY 16, 1867.—TRIPLE SHEET. States military service of one John O'Brion, The Court, upon being informed that tho petitioner was be- yond the outro! of |Major General Buttorfield dis- missod the writ of habeas corpus. ‘The stook market was firm yesterday 139% ‘Thore waaa fair supply of beef cattle at the National Drove Yards yesterday, about 1,500 head boing on sale, cannot forget that, under the shadow of a civilization which France pretemded to confer, were committed, upon Mexican soil, some of the most horrid slaughters that stain the [story of the times, In condemning Mexico we equally condemn those who, bonsting a greater NEW YORK HERALD. JAMES CORDON BENNETT, PROPRIETOR. Gold closed at JAMES GORDON BENNETT, JR, The Pope’s Allocutton. execration of the civilized world. With In another place in this day’s Heraxp we | Surratt, however, the caso is diferent. Look- publish in exfenso the famous allocution deliv- | ing at his antecetents and the language ered by Pope Pius the Ninth on the 26th of | he is reported to have used in regard to Mr. June, in the hearing of upwards of five hun- | Lincol, there is no such improbability as to dred bishops and archbishops of the Catholic | bis being concerned in it. Whether the testi- @ pour little message, transmitting certain doo aments ja relation to reconstruction heretofore called for. Tho Cresident’s Message~Tho Debt: Southera Ataies. Tho President yesterday ent to the Senate He makes a return in thit message MANAGER, Church, Looked at epart from the circum- | mony thet has been brought forward to con- advancement, set her such a bloody examp! ©- stances in which it was delivered there is little | nect him with the murder will satisfy a jury It is time that this inbuman cruelty that blots’ Keo. pound, which was obtained in many instances. ruelty that blots’ | ° ve 4 L repedlasoer pat held aloof, and towards tho | the bistory of the Latin race were laid aside; for ;\ '™ this allocution which makes it either inferior | is, however, another question. One of the close the market ruled decidedly heavy, with sales made | they are entitled to no claim to civilization if | © S¥pctior to the many allocutions which | worst featurem in his case, in our opinion, is at prices indicating that the improvement los, The | they write the record of their progress with | hve gone before it, There are the usual | the alleged attempt made by bis counsel to dulk of tho sales wore at the following pricts:— | biood, Mexico or France, France or Mexico, | oo.¥gratulations, the usual statement of | bribe a witness whose evidence was likely to ie At tho opening holders demanded an advance of ic. a BROADWAY AND ANN STREET. Ali business or ney lotters aud telegraphic despatches Maust be addressed Naw Yor Hana. | Letters and packages should be properly sealed, Bie other Ran psd am A Me: * is equally culpable, grie vances, the ususl expression of hope-| bear egainst hims The statement js made on Rejected communications wil! not be returned. 160, for fair to good, and I4c, a 1c, for common, | There is much work before the Mexican | ful confidence in the Church's future, | the outhority ofa Vermont newspaper, and if The avorage quality of the offerings was unusaally good. | statesmen, and we may expect some local | the usual amount of thanksgiving, and the | well founded will tell badly sgaiust tho Milch cows remained Gall aad prices for ail grades were | turmoil bofore the liberal elements which have | accustoi wed benediction. Popes’ allocutions, | prisoner. In justice to the gentleman whose asia We ne the range 940 to $125 Veal ten for fifty years been hammering st retrograde | like roya.\ and Presidential speeches generally, | conduct is impugned, and whom we connot oxtra, Le. w 11%¢. Ae yi a mers fs td ideas sottle into quit. We wish to give them | seldom sta ttle us by anything new or surprise | believe capable of so disereditable an act, the and common and 73,0. 940. for inferior. ‘The market | fair play, however ; to’assist thom in the march | a8 by any thing unexpected. In this latest | witness should be again sent for and examined for ahoep and lambs was doprossod'by the liberal offer- | of peace; to aid thom with our more practised | sddress ot Pio Nono, however, we discover | 48 to the correctness or falsity of the charge. ings and light demand, and prices wore 3c. per Ib. | theories of aclf-government; to throw into their | fresh evidence of that amiable and kindly dia | If it bo substantiated we need. not point ont fb cneus iy sandone MEGGk a ein se pl ‘igi selling at 634c., primo at 6c. #6<0., begat country some of the cosmopolitan bone and | Position which by genoral consent is attributed | what the duty of the courtis'in the premises. } wo Deacon Trours OF Saraness Ix THLIR WONDERFUL | Tey S04 Common at Ge. a 63¢, and’ Inferior at 4140. @ sfaow that wifl ect their wonderful natural | © him; and’ we believe we but echo the undi- mRFOUNANCKA. Se. Lamba ranged at from 80. to 1044. The hog Dr. Beeoh dt Seti : ee i ‘ . fi : vided sentim: nt ef Catholic Christendom when r. Beecher on Baying au aise BOWERY THEATRE, mower —Feiov's Deara—Tu | MATket was activo amd firm, On Saturday 8xc. was | Fesources tm action; to show to them the we'say that bis' children everywhere are always | Beecher has taken a new objective point— Wivac Dotcaman—A Wire von a Dav. Paid for tong prime corn fed, but yesterday, under libo- | polivy of opening wide their doors to the same ral arrivals, prices declined sc. per !b., but flrnr at the ibers " d truly grat ful to the Holy Father for his | b8* turned a double somersauX out of all his broad libervlism that we stow towards the | 9m! eB 7 usaal topics—a' wilder leap than’ that of the concession. About thirty-throe car loads-were on sale, oppressed of Europe ; to advise them to lay well meant blea sing. * which were sold at 7Xc, a 8c., though a fow lots of és 5 . ‘ Arad over his twelve loaded guas, and comes forior commanded only T4e. The total receipts were | Aside chat jeaTousy of the forefzn element that | THis address of the'Pope is really animport- up steady on his feet in front " ain bran Ne. 197 near Broome BROADWAY THEATRE, Brovlway, Piroot, Tae Huscunacn Saati’ WORRELL SISTERS' NEW YORK RATRE, @ilo New York Hotel —Biack 8. mana “ \ ACADEMY OF MINSIO, ae Mi Saranuse Teours iv fuse A = RFORMANCES. \_BANVARD'S NEW YORK MUSEOM, Broadway and Phirtioth street. —Ceaiosins OF NaTORK AND ARr.—Lapy or Lrons 4,702 beeves, 58 milch cows, 1,809 veal calves, 21,236 | has bean taught them by exclusive Spain, ana | @0t udless yiewea! in connection with the con- 2 a TERIACE GARDEN. Turd avenue, Fifty-eighih anq | 880P An Iainbs and 17,119 swine. learn that a nation, to be great in Bote vention of diviaas before whom it was deliv- Head aamcrcloey is, theme that is bran’ new ili ninty “sizeeia. —Tagobona Tous’ orvcan, Con: MISCELLANEOUS. must proclaim to ‘he world that its lands, its | ered, and especialhy with the deeply important for the pulpit, and’ would be braa new alto- gether if the newspapers had not been bang- ing away at it these dozen yeare. .This will be gladly heard. People had been wondering what Beocher would d6, and whether his ocon- pation was not quite-gone. Slavery being definitely dead he was deprived of one ‘great year in and year out subject, and could give us no raore canticles of cant on nigger misery. Jeff Davis is away on bail, and he cannot pa- rade any more the cheap humanity of mercy Our letters from Matamoros, Mexico, dated July 4, give a dotailed account of tho'trials of Maximilian and his to generals and their execution, Among the doct- monts accompanying the letters will also be found the will of tho lato Archduke providing for a regenoy in case of his death, and tho terms of capitulation grauted at Tampico, Additiona’ particulars of tho execution of Maximilian, received from Galveston, say that Mefia's wife ran dis- tractedly through the streets at the time of the execu- tion carrying a new-born babe, Juarez bad refused to give up the Emperor's body, alleging that it must be the subject f a treaty, Princess Salm Salm waa ordered from Queritaro for attempting to effect the escape of the prisoners, Cortina had been ordered to the Rio Grande with an army of observation of fifteen thousand men, Tae Mexicans were bitter against the Americana for asking the fife of Maximilian, The trial of John H. Surratt was rasumad yosterday. Judse Fisher decided hat tho register of the Webster House, at Canandaigua, could not be admitted as evi. dence, E.G, Lea, a brigadier goneral ia tho confedo- rate army, testified that he saw the prisoner in Canada resources, its political privileges, belong to | Movements to whictr it {xhoped the convention every max who will come and partake of them, } Will yet give birth. From the moment it be- Under this broad policy Mexioo may undertake | Came known that the celebration of the martyr- a rapid mazch towards a brilliant ature. dom of St. Peter wis to’ gather together in Rome so vast an assemblage of the Catholic hierarchy, the represen tatives of the Church in su’many differemt parts of the world, we have been deeply atdentive to the entiro proceed- correspondents. The one has made the letter | ings, and Lave, on more bart occasion, of a correspondent of thofTarazp the text of a | #akon the liberty of tendwring the convention spee~h in Congress, an1 the other hag’ ae some wholesome advice. We have done: ao | & that nedonal nuisance. Nigger suffrage fs with bis friends in trying to whittle down to | bcecae in our‘optaion the comdition of Chris: y # setttod alien egress paige alge the little point of nothing certa’n statements in | tiinity all over the world, Loth within and shes ae papers ee ae eo i a sh deal a letter from a correspondent of the Times, | Without the pate of the Latir Charch, loudly touch it from not knowing which side to take; Ben Wade limited himself at first to disclaim. | callla for revision, and because it soems | fF baving not long sinco been on the wrong ing the inferences which had been drawn'from | 0 us: that a: fitting opportunity is pre- rie nd eee eee bap bed ~ ae a speech made by him at Lawrence, Kansue, | 8ested by this convention in Rome for the sain des ve a Aue eben ees under the influence of the eléctric atmosphere | Cal holfe Church -to take the initiative in a line pati al ear be oe ue iis rae ied yak hides of the Wost, or under other equally inspiring | Of policy which is ail but certain not only to | ‘Ute eae ev ensDar nee Oe On We uae 472° Broadway.— WES, Leini0PiaK, ano SmNrutmera: &C—Tue Leis © Varnor. HOOLFY'SOPERA I RELSY, BALLADS AND Lu ATION NEW YORK Noa! imap ann Nicur Anum oF Brriws—Wornnns in Natrona H xorones D kiya. —Fratorian Mime The PRogiess oF a Beu Wade and Old Thad Stevens, These two dict’nguished men seem'to be in- volved in some trouble with the aewspaper ‘OMY. 618 Broadway. — ave— Tie Wasnixoron STORY, SCMRNCK AND Ant, ‘Oven trom 8 AM un Wwee Me A .B SHEE Now York, Taewiay, July 16, 1867, THD News. EUROPE. ‘Tho nows roport by tha Atlantic cable is dated as late @3 midnight, July 15, tod Siatos Miter in Lisbon domands that wese government shal: formally retarn to Parla nn Amorican citizen named Silvoria, Iatoly ar] on the 6th and again on the 17th of April, | infftences, Bu! he haa since complimented’ a | be extensively imitated but to bring back to a of hapabyeae ror oF eal aioe ested by ils oMcors in the Y'rench capital, Berczouski, | 1365. The defence offered to show by this | Western editor who said that hé could not have | her much of the power and prestige which she] “2° 88 inte of Fiymouth aro about evenly ‘who atioinpted to assassinate the Czar, bas been found | witness that the prisoner was employed by har los. Gividea between the President and Congress. used the languoge attributed to him, by de- claring that he was quite sure he had not used “with extenuating circumstance: and seateaced to be prisoned for life in Paris, | the rebel authoritios to ascertain vay the position of What s) ould he do? N’o man can comoere the Clmrch of the poleon’s | the priconaat Elmira and tho approaches thereto, that He re solves the great ques: Ministor of State decla: Lat German unity is | ho received no money from Jacob Thompson, and that nd the editor had “exught tlie spirit” of his | prosent day with the Church of the elit tha): Gankan hie and ~ ® matior of indifference to France. Prussia is about to | tho witness himself paid him for bis report of atairs at | syoech muca better than those who had heard | Apostles, with the Church of their imme~ ae be cr cheat form a Baltic fleet. A rowing club from .B., | Elmira; but the main points woye raled’out by the ‘von two prizes at the tuternational regatta in'‘Franco, | Court, r onslaught on tho charactor of John Heating English crows, Famine exists in an extensive | Lee, one of te witnesses for the proscoution, was mado, district on the west coast of ireland. Another Fenian | witnesses alleging that he wasa “natural jinr, and that Military agent has been arrested in London. he might tell tho truth if be was neither to gain nor lose, We aro told that tho Engiteh Reform dill was | but it would be accidental,” ‘ordered’! to a third reading. The English govern- | The Constitutional Convention reassembied last even- font denies that regular troops had been ordered to | tne. A preamble and resolutions favoring a uniform Abyssinia, but asks permission to employ Sepoys against | system of suffrage among the States In tio election of King Thoodoro, Prosidential electors, members of the House of Repre- Tho Pope's Allocutioa, dol:vored in Secret Consistory | sentatives, Governors, Lieutenant Governore and Legis- ©n the 26th of June, is published én exlenw in our | lators, were laid on the table and erderod to be printed. columns to-day, translated from a copy of the original | The convention then went into comumittes of the whole document, specially forwarded to the Herato trom | on the report of tho Committee on the Right of Suffrage, Rome. and on the frst count, it being discovered tit a quorum it, Moreover, the correspondent of another | dia te successors, with the Church, in fact, of em i bes (He Pitches into tho buyers Western paper, a Mr. Smith (whieh, to be are, | the first two centuries, without ieling con~ ye Gel; ters, et justice. More than that, he is no name at all), testifies that he was standing | Vi ced that we have grievously wandered EieacKdc oe ly at those i ede who are within a few fect of Mr, Wade and “heard | fro! n first principles, and that in our attention | | ak sir or exchanged,” as the second- every word,” but heard “nothing of the kina” | tof the Leiter of the law and to the mere forms ai : ade gay. ie is very well, and we alloged, and saw nothing like it in the notes | of worship we have neglected the spirit of | Sr° Glad that (he pulpit has ee which the Times correspondent airowed binrthe | bo th. During the progress of the last fifteen Pare sg sen 7k pate e om ie next day. Unfortunately, however, this Mr..| ¢¢? ituries Christianity has contrived to acquire rely. @ are the more glad that a man like se paca ds ” Mr. a Doctor E:eecker should enter this field, since Smith’s report of the speech contained sab-| 4% large amount of civil power, to amnss he must do it at rift i ‘ stantiaily the samo, account ay that of the | 1 calth, to locate herself in gorgeous cather a 2 pe preg _ ees influence or Times correspondent, althourth Tess detaited: | @ ‘als, to bedeck herself in sp'endid vestmente, bh rity; mi as not possible that he does and fall. Mr, Smitir reported tuat Mr. Wade | a xd otherwise to impose upon the fanoy and | DOE recognize in his pews many 9 man who r Z pr Ay : Gia Bas sd ~ | has been deep into the legislative corruption ‘The reply made by the Viceroy of Egypt to a deputa- | was not prosont, an adjournment took place. “entered a protest againsi the present method’ | £ nagination of mankind. retementr smeyenaertgs | Pi. buyer if not a seller. Ho shows his sin- tion of abolitionists who waited on him in Paris on the | Our commercial reports from St, Thomasto tho 2th | of dividing property between the laboring | £ be has unnecesseily multiplied dogmas, and iw Ws Markie bo aoe ah subject of the slave trate in the White and Barbados, West Indies, to the 20th, and from British | man and the capitalists, saying that tho-ter- | # through the exercite of'an assumed authority, | °°" fic Ma ipaionsd ouch these pursy able as showing the antiquity of the trafic, the religions | Guiana to the 25th ull, will be found elsewhere in our | site evil must bo remedied. ‘he capiitliat | to which she has. not even the shadow-of a saints; but heis safe enough, eince they dare Character given to the “, r institution” in Egypt, | columns this morning. : te h Mead th it 68 the not frown their displeasure for fear of admit- d ths perti ‘ vhith European Cbristia ‘The United States ateamer Saco loft St. Thomas on the | 2e#troyed both the mind and the health of the | claim, she has compelle< ie assel 3 i fod th» pertinacity with whith European Christians he Uni ates ateamer Saco le! omas on iciereea cue sicceuil’ evisu Wid oe ignorant and the unressoning. Such a atete-of ting their complicity. But we aro not sure maintain it, S0th ult, for St. Croix, and returned on the Ist inst, Tho e Pi RR nly Rei AS Consols closed at 941, for money In London. Five. | United States steamer Augusta and the Monitor Mianto- | lution must take place soon incfavor of the} things might be admirably suited to the pecu- ab ran m7 para ap aba pice je is twenties wore at 73 in Loudon, and 773g in Frankfort. nomoh were reported at Barbados during the last week | Iaisorers, Thoy onght not to stand it, and’he ' | liarities of the middle ages, but it is not at all n ch -patanes: 3a ‘| perc a ag a thought they would not.” According to the | adapted to the progress and enlightenment of ra! ey nS SRS Show, Tne Liverpool colton market closed with middling | of June ia me “ ° in ert ant i a ap oy ees bieakpastasy vaepadiat e pents) arated te editor of the paper in which «his report ap- | the nineteenth century. Our times are different. pela declare aiesli ra igacs irae peared, the reporter declares this to have beer , | We live in a reasoning, or, if you will, rational- Pr regal visions, with little change. October torm of the Richmond Circult Court. Tho mai! ship Cuba, oens* on th A public meeting was held yesterday ovening in Jerse} +, ee ay, rea re Halifax Bsr fa alles ane city ia favor of the Sunday aw f exactly what li. Wade said. Evom those iticnd = | istic and practicat age. Men reason and object sacred tae Ricard _ ge caper be- for Boston. of Mr. Wade who have been most solicitous’ to | where formerly they blindly followed. The “cs Say ae vl a God 4 Py ee explain away his speech admit that be edt -o- | torch of truth is now carried fearlessly into the Sane a! i saps ea ce me with eo ; We give additional news to-day about} orted a more-equitable divisica.by law of the | taost sacred domains ; and many in all lands rails ufone “site abies ee the trial of Maximilian, Justice, rigid and | avails and profits of labor. Now, the only law | are deeply convinced that Christianity con- netruction, public prayene impartial justice, was not done to him. | which is legitimately comeernca in this ma ttor | sists neither in dogmas, nor in civil power, nor Are not these things, that touch upon. the Mexico has lost much im the mode of) js the law cf trade, which is wholiy indepen dent | in wealth, nor in gorgeous cathedrals, nor in relation of man to God, ‘far more sacred than his trial; for however well the nation was } jn its acticn of aif the fine-spun theories ef rad- | splendid vestments, nor in any other absurdity, | °"Y Mere rie en od Syne convinced of his guilt, we are astonished | jeat refor sers of whatever sebool. whether pompous or paliry, whether sanc- be pela a are ee ei eo in lw that the republic should have so fav forgotien Old Thad is altogether a different mar from | tioned by prelate or by parson, but in some- or equity? Who sheli doubt it? Aad yet itself as to have -placed him on trial before a | Ren Wack, and, naturally cnongh, trerts his | thing different from all these—in something are not even these oe sacred thinzs sold, case wish the Henaup correspondent in an simpler, purer, grander, nobler than either or | 4 does Rot this very Beecher scli them? altogether different mannee. He ingeniousty:| than all of them combined. Christianity | S°nee itis said, wroie his praise of poverty denis sothing of a general or of a persona | can only retain her dominion. over the | °"* table of solid gold; but it isa moze bitter nature in the letter of our cerrespwadent, | hearts and consciences of men by re- bite geno that vhis modern ph ipopher- He simply intimates that cerisin prrsonel | appearing with somewhat of that simple, | Pries? denounces the Luying ae selling of siatoments might as well havo been ©milced, | unadorned aad artless beauty by which justice, oe: before the world. in boots, ani perhaps he is right; for everybo@y knew | she won her first and grandest conquests. breeches and cost bought with the prico of well enough already wit he thouglut of his | Could she so be geen again as she was seen in aareat rag pers a hold tore sacred than collragvoa, He is a beave old man, who has | the days of her humility and sorrow, the world justice. hat is heed price of a pew in nevermirged matters ia exprossing his opinion | would bow adoringly before her, and men Boecher’s church? edo not keep the qnota- CONGRESS. Mexico and Our Government Policy. nate yesterday, Mr, Sumner catled up his 4, but concluded uot to press In tho Universal ft, as tho Son lieutenant colonel and several eubordinate officers. Justice demanded a martial pr general, with geaerals at nt Colonel Pls . about th of age, r, one of the cers of the Jar army in the liberal servic: a fine edncation at the mili court on San Mexivan ry sehool unless they | in the city of Mexico. His appointment to torrea; | the presidency of the court was iaade hy Esco- and declarin further for war exp made accord government bonds shall abject to taxation wer c » the . ; . ‘ * + . +, . Ls 3 but w © i a the samo call ing = the | pedo, whose malignant, despotiy and umprin- | of them. A bit of a wag withal, he may not | everywhere would yicld themselves captive to "9 us vi pes cal gat the aoe aut ace Sen cna Mune teex, | cipled charaeier cannot be t40 highly eou- | have been sorry of the opportunity to give | hes will, ‘The Roman Cathollc Church, for a | “ime the salts tp iat sactod ecitice aro sold aaa ictal domned; tor ho is the great fot apon the | mome point and importance by his Congres- | variety of reaeons—partly- becanse of her | OU! UnGer Ex hora ia en that this par- cae liborala my. To hin is due wuch of the infla- son’s price is high, and, by easy computation, sigual speech to what our correspoudent hal fodthfally recorded. We cannot hesitate as to which of the two men—-Old Thad or Ben Wade—should be put on the same ticket with Grant. We know always where to find Oid Thad. As fur Ben Wade. venerable age, partly because of Her immense following and power, and partly, too, becauss of her fawlis—is entitled to set the example of leading us back to the artless simplicity and aliractiveness of earlier times. It is her duty and her interest to do so, and it is in her Dopartmont, 4 durther cousid y can flad that more is mads,ia that buying and selling than is made by say of our pitiful | city fellows in selling their poor commodity of justice, or even by most legislators. We ave glad, however, that Beecher has opened his eyes upon certain evils in buying: and selling; but 4 fence which was brought ta wear apon the publican government to cca@rm the sentence ed upon tho prisoners. ation of te impeach the taxation of Unite . under the rules to debate, went over der the same call, in » to inquire if Kenta Dotaware have republican forms of go declaring that no n \ hh Onr adv o give 4s notiee of the suc- cess of the republic in restoring quict to the roment, and attempt to palm«upon the public as genuine we must excuse him from comiag forward es appears (o be rapid’g coming under the entive g @ candidate for the Vice Presidency. He i san | control of the nat#onalyrepublican party. if we | @ sort of bushwhacker and fights too shy. except a few Indiyne, under Lozada, in western | Moreover, what can be expecied from one who Jalisco, who wit soon be reduced to quiet. | confesses that he worships Greeley as the wisest Thus the Mex?ean people enter upon a new | of men? We ask Mr. Wade himself, in the lan- era, and (he ‘world will now watch them with | guage of i. Johnson, “What must that man an intense “interest. The future policy of the | be whoxe god is a monkey?” United Sta’ os with reference to Mexican affairs en. | is at lem gth clearly enunciated in the final * Newapaper Prese Fund. erence | paragta yh of Mr. Seward’s long-winded com- We published yesterday the speech of Mr. mapict tion about Santa Anna, He says “ihat } Gladstone atthe annual dinner in London of natior , seems at last to have (riamphed over all the “Newspaper Press Fund.” The sprcech is its i ternal and foreign enemies, and to have | an eloquent tribute to the Press as a great After a resolution relative to the rev ched a crisis when, if left alone, it may be | social, political and moral power, to be hailed Moagher, the Board adjourned until Th A © <pected to restore tranquil and to reorgan- | “as & new benefit which, in the progress of The Board of Councilmen algo met yesterday. Ar% |i. deolfupon permanent foundations of union, ; affairs and institutions, is hae pleased Provi- evn atest etn haga tegen freedom and republican gqavernment. Only | dence to confer upon mankind.” It moreover pera ae cues ite rigor vila cid Fela ee some great national injury, wrong or offence | sets forth and recommends the generous pur- i would justify this go nent in suddenly | pose of the Press Fund “to recognize those assuming @ hostile or even unfriendl de | ties of duty, charity and of brotherhood which toward the republic of Mexico.” This expres- | bind together the members of thie profession, sion of opinion on they part of the administra- | and algo to give an opportunity to others beyond f Tampico. In tet, the whole coun lied w a. The tion bill fident and h the error in tt, was re-enrolled Senate THE CITY. Tuo Board of Aldermen tnot yesterd: Tution was referred to the Committ fing the opinion ef the Corporation Counsel in to the constitationality of the act creating Audit’ Tho Councilmante resolution perm of dummy engines on the Harlem Railroad, between the passenger and freight depots, Was concur ‘wore unan ‘Two vessels from Havana arrived at Quarantime yester uth octrous diseate rue ‘ imi ifestt ‘ aon letained a few dave, the | tion is wise and tiny: It will at once quict | its strictly defined limite for manifesting their Quarantine buildings on W Bank arg progressing the filibustering spirit of the country and | interest in its welfare.’ In view of the grati- rapidiy, but the law's 4 aud the claims of other | place the United States in that position | fying success with which Mr. Gladstone an- partios bave postpon ely the occupation of Goney Isiand, Barron Island and Robbing’ Reef, ‘Thomas Cosgrove, Who was steoded on Friday night ied yostorday at his house, after ma’ mortem statomont charging Philip ™ Anfiiction of his wounds, A Jury found tn ace of dignity which she should assume with | nounces that the London Prese Fund has reference to a neighboring republic whose | triumphed over the difficulties encountered by struggles against foreiga invasion have been | it in the beginning, may we not suggest that it heroic, and whose future is so indissolably | is high time to establish a eimilar institution linked with our own. Henceforth, then, Mexico | here? In addition to the obvious arguments is to have a chance to try the effect of ber | which might be urged in its favor, ae offering great “laws of reform” and her hard fought for | well merited relief to the disabled among the and well won constitution of 1857. Modelled | members of 9 laborious and honorable profes- upon our own, we are anxious to see its rigid | sion and to those dependent upon them, but enforcement throughout the land that has made | deprived of their sid tarough sickness or death, #0 many sacrifices to reach a liberty for which | we must say that fach an institution would be rdance, ‘A warrant was issued for Monahan, and be was arrested last evening. Some of the laborers at Prospect Park, Brooklyn, yor torday mado a violent domand for increased pay, aud at one timo thelr demonstrations appeared likely to lead to ot. They were, however, flually prevailed upon to to work at the old prices until Wednesday, when they Oxpect to receive an answer from the Commissioners, Soven of the Kim Park, Staten Island, rioters, on Sun. Gay, have been arrested. A deorve of divorce was granted in the Supreme Conrt \Festotday upon the report of the referee in the case of Lacy H. Jones against George F. Jones, plaintiff to have Oustody of the childran. A motion was mado yesterday before the Special Term 96 Mee Sunarior Cours for va dischargo from the Yaiied | lofliog Aig) but not QB ber gart wloue, We onward pace Mexico muet, however, step aside | us to discourage the formation of societies that, in her modern history. No move shoot!ng for | spoutSag clubs, mivisture” politiel “sings political offences—no more massacres like thet | within rings,” or, at best, into matual ‘admira- of San Jacinto, The age demands new ond tion coteries, with a large infusion ‘of the hac cuanation element power to do so if she will. idea bas been abandoned of organizing a Council out of the Episcopal materials now in Rome, a grand Ecumeuical Council t& to be held next year. portunity sufficient between then sad now to ventilate the subjects which onght to come be- fore it. In a letter from our special correspon dent in Rome, published in the Hxnaip of yesterday, we have it stated as a prevail- ing rumor the Council will be to declare that the infalli- bility which now attaches to the Pepe whea acting in council shall attach to bim when | was our last great Indian fighter, ar @, in the acting on his individual reeponsibility. rumor be well founded our hopes Romewerd | for many years to have set the #ef ,) on all por- must be abandoned. This will be the crown- they have been constantly grasping. In hor | open to none of the objec lions which hare led } ‘cubstantinted—that Mr. Davis or any of the from the blood red line by which we trace her | tend almost inovitably to degenerate {nto M¢.re | sination plot is, we need not Bay, grow dloss, will he not imitate an ever memorable example and begin his war against the traders. hy Griving them out of the temple? We are giad to observe that though the General Sherman a © Indian War. Geaeral Sherman is evidently the only mar , who can bring the Tadian wor to a satisfactory conclusion, and it is to be hoped the gove .p. ment will let him have his own ‘way wit? , js, and give him all the power and all the me y he may deem necessary. He has, tadeed, a’ | ¢hat of | peculiar energy necessary to make ® great Indian fighter, and in this reapect sit gularly resembles General Jackson. General Jackson There will be time and op- that one of the objects If this | sanguinary struggles of the Creek ¥ Jar, soomed sible Indian straggles. But thov gh this prairie development of Indian life D ag giarted the savage nature on anew line, a0 J given the race & new lease of existence, yet we believe that if Congress will let Sherman have his own way with this, however extrav’ want the way may seem, he will carry thit presont war to as triumphant o conclusi¢ 7 as Old Hickory did the Indian wars of hit day, le must mot be deterred from pr utting their confidence in Sherman on accoun’ of the peculiar features of his genius ;jfor t ey are features that ac- company, even if they qua greatness, He is erratic; £0 ‘was Jackson. He is passionate, hasty, extreme in likee and dislikes ; so was Jackson. “He is foolish sometimes; so wos JackeoD, He gets over ity #0 did Jackson. He is “sory opt, in the precipitate extravagance be “ule fancy, to arrive at wrong conclusi-ns, \*.s Jackson did often, and, lke Inokeon, he alwoye repents, He will succeed in finishing the Indians, we hope and believe, and may yet rise so high in the nation 94 to be able to do Men in their position would not dar to favor | as pe pleases, and even ‘avo the opportunity a schome, which, whatever might be its effect of hanging some of his political opponerig on the fortunes of the confederady, they knew | under the “ second, gection,” resembling 4ack- them jndiyidually the " son evep to ing absurdity, leaving the dogma of the Im- maculate Conception far in the shade. It will be well for the Catholic Church if it be oaly a rumor. ‘The Surratt Triel. Whatever doubte may exist as to the inno- cence or guilt of Suvratt of the crime with which he stands cherged, there can be little question from the evidence already adduced of the complicity of Jeff Davis and his Cabinet in the abductitsn plot. That fact, we think, stands out cle’ir from the fog of contradictory testimony r¥,ised by the hard ewearing on both sides. The communications that were con- stantly rassing between the conspirators and the reF,el goverament, and the large sums that were paid them by Benjamin could have had HO other object. The charge attempted to be members of his Cabinet countenanced the ass” s. must being vp § com the island of Cuba to the Fiorida penine of tho expenses of reconstruction, and veuluxes an eatimute 0. Sta future cost ; and in this aatf- mate mukex the quasi aasumption that as the Sonther.. States have ceased to exist the United Sta¢s has become responsible for ali the Southern State debts that wore in- curred before the wa. Warming up as ke advances, and evidently improased with the notion that he bas at last really got hold of # tremendous argument again'tt reconstruction, the President proceeds to treat this little piece of financial nightmare a3 & legal fact, and to reason from it whether or no such am addition to our umens in the present condition of the nat‘ena! debt may not endanger the publis cred% Who would expect to find the hatmiess face ot little Snag, the joiner, behind the roaring"yt such a terrific liom as this? Who would paw sibly believe that any man who fiad reached” the Prosidency of the United States couta so absolutely write himself dowt an asd on such elight occasion? Surely, if thie Executive buga-boo does not frighten Congress into giving up: all its reconstruction plans and letting tho President have hiv owm will with the States, then it is a bold and obdu- rate body, and will dare go through the woods in tho darkest night. If there is no one in the Southern States properly charged with the debis of those States, persons of ordinary capacity might ‘suppose that (that was one of the risks and consequences of the war, and a thing that we could’ neither prevent nor remedy; but thoy are not persons of ordinary capacity who ad- vise the President. That is very clear. Again, persons who see that twice one are two usually understznd that a State debt involves a pledge of tho property in that State as security, and will suppose that if the Stato is dead it might be advisable to havea public administrator to settle up the affairs of tho defunct in a legal way. But the President and his friends are not of the classof men who can gee how it fa that twice one make two, and it is a useful Yesson that they ought to learn: Tmbecility of the Associated Press. The Associated Managers of this-clty, under the leadership of the Feejee mermaid, were short lived because they attempted’ to restriot musical and dramatic enterprise, and the Associated Press, which has outlived its ase fulness and sunk into imbecility, is now oppow ing newspaper enterprise, and will, in conse- quence, soon follow the Associated Manager@ to the tomb of the Capulets. Their despatches are mostly mere rumors or the record of iiinor local events which are of no importance to the general public. For example; they ono day @ bogus Russian circular for the re- dress of Ireland, which is sent across the cable by their stupid agent in London; on another they treat us with the startling announcement that the corner stone of a new Protestant church hag: beon laid ia Paris, which posseases no more {aterest here thea would the intelligence of ‘the laying of & cor- ner stone of a shanty fa the Groves of Blarney. ‘Then, again, they send usa long “Proclamation on the Rio Grande B order,” telegraphed from New Orleans at thirty-soven cents a word, which was placarded. on the walls and fences of this city over a week: previous. Compare the despatches to vshich we have thus referred with the Hxrarp specials, whicl. invariably embody-important and reliable facts. To cover up their own weakness and imbeciiity the Av ssociated Press. have never failed to. attempt to throw discredit upon our cable, telegrams. The King of Prassia’s’ speec’a, cdthough forced to pub- lish, Shey were ‘slovr to believe. The famous Bisraarck despt itch, which gave the first inti mation, not ow ly iu-this country, but in the Old Weald, of th 3 trouble between France and Prussia, they entirely ignosed until thoy saw the clonds of ; war rising between those two countries. ' (he account of the meteoric showers, vehich weer . geen in England they jeered at, vad eve®’ prevailed upon so-called professors. of astreat ymy to make a public statement thas owe spe vial telegram was manufactured and unwortl yy of belief, Time and the Atlantia steam .3, however, proved the correctness of our de patch, and closed the lips of all doubte ing L oomi-es. Th 4 world progresses, and truth and scionca and enterprise cannot be kepi in tho back- aro and by professors of astronomy or the New ‘Ye srk Associated Preas, More Atlantic cables & eto be laid; a line will soon bo stretched sula,and England will ere long be in tele- graphic communication with Caleutta—all of which will tend no! only to revolutionize the present system of commercial exchanges, but - will give us the daily events transpiring in all parts of the civilized world. News companies are also forming, two of which are nearly ready to commence operations, which are intended to give the public such reliable gen- eral and commercial intelligence as will be, both useful and interesting, and which will soon sweep the New York Associated Press and all kindred associations out of existence. Frauds=Miserable Doctoriag of a Frightful Disease. The New York organ of the Treasury De partment seems to be occupied daily with the question of the frauds on the revenue, but evi- dently more for the take of screening Seore- tary MeCulloch than for anything else. In truth, while it cannot ignore the startling ox posures that have been made, and is obliged to notice them, it treats them in a very gingerly way. To all appearance not only is the infore mation carefally doled ont to it by Mr. MoCul+ Joch and bis subordinates, ix order that thay public may not be too mrcth shocked alk at once, but the arguments and excuses made have the impress of offir;tal dictatioa. It 1s said that the Meiropolitar, Revenue Boar investis gating the frands ir; this city are meting daily reports to the Secretary of the Treasury, that the discoveries implicate some of the promiy nent revenue officers, whe “will undoubtedly be removed soon,” that “refarms are aboat to be intrsduced,” and so forth, ending with the stat>ment, however, that “the frauds in the Dannfacture of whiskey are more gigantic than previous statements have led the public to believe.” This is a very mild way to sponk of the monstrous and unperalleled wholesale robbery of the goverament Renorting daily The Reve

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