The New York Herald Newspaper, August 8, 1867, Page 6

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tn} her . Bradle} 80 concerned, of his q Pat SOE R ire Bors the were perecly willing to allow the Jury to have s copy ‘Hows } “Nt Carrington sald ho must adhere to the established Sa Charge to the Jury by Judge pt the adop- shea ae ry having ogy af th the record. sabe i | e tion of the constitution; but when it had once ‘udge Fis ber said ‘ect the same in this asin ae if Fisher. been ‘spoken into being’ it the same oer casos, and directed the cage 19 be given te the, 4%, spot in ° level with other nations, ‘sod was clothed with all the powers Mr. Mis ee xine n iy pan an independent ey one ee LG na gga and 4 tare and of nations: od eeeasoy io arrest aud iatict Upon fou shall take this jury to some convenient room and } ’ * Oe wa or ree Pike moet summary Punubment, whenever keep them Mbemssives. "You shall not suffer say The How an Attempted Alibi fe | cities shout te et a tgnt tae day at cena Ree Gaal PE tented cow es Regarded. Serenata agente aes | indie = | Ci hatte a ane eee Te og = S A forsee But an honest auc | cir room at twenty-eight minutes before twelve o'clock. nal owes it to himself to strike down the’assassin who ie beat sensible jury cannot fail to regard it with suspicion unless it shall be éo clearly established as to satisfy them of the pris- ‘oner's absence from the scene of the erime, The suspicion which attaches to this plea has passed into & proverb among MEXICO. ww and the constitution. we | the le, 4 GRODNDS FOR ACQUETTAL OR CONVICTION. | f°! 'crrcien “sutes tree thatam Gneucoseafal siierpt to. bil ay ali fap iatanssey Seeetates Mei | “iu people.| _ Vidaurri was alwaye'a |beral, and subssquent to. the: } te t,o Ai kind af etance imple f SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. here “know. that the barbaric appetite is not yee | intervention and up to 1868 supported Juarez, AB that — re, wi ican Presi Wasmnarom, August 7, 1667 Sa eee ee tee eeeaney a the ats | Tho Trials at Queretare—A Curious Circame | usted. The time has come when the nahens oie : rome, Visas :t i re dsawn from them, In this connection I may also observe that when once a conspiracy to commit aerimo shall have been moved of the party who fs on his trial for an act done in pursuance of that conspiracy, he been connected with it; if the evidence shall aatisfy the minds of the jury that he was present, either constructively or actually—tiat 18 to say, either at the scene of the crime in person or near enough to give any, the slightest support or encouragement to the Cony of H,or if he be remote from the scene for the purpose of aiding it and in performance of the part of the plan assigned to hum, be ts equally guilty with bis co-conspirators who actually: perpetrated the erime. You ‘an account, and, if nothing | wards Chibuabua the imperiatics better can be eye and from | Offered to receive him in Monterey, but to history the empire of Montezuma, To wait longer is a | ceiving the large crowd of vi and crime. Itisacrime already. Six hundred officers and | which accompanied him, and which was certain men, the Emperor, his generals, his ministers, shot ag | Cowe 4 charge upon the State he loved, Juarea ould) traitor, By. whom? By decree—more properly an | Bot think of separating from bis ‘uj ? and they order—of Juarez, and he a usurper and dictator. ‘‘Let | result was Vidaurri was compelled to @, crossing the» us bury forever these men, who stand in the way of our | Rio Grande into Texas, and remaii ‘at San Antonio, tion.”? That was the battle cry through all this | Wuen the French took po-seasion of Monterey be re- loody drama, ‘Liberty and country’ is a farce in } turned thither, not intending to take any part in poli- ‘ Mexico. Patriotigm has no existence here; it isa mytb, | ticr, and anticipatmg that be would be allowed to remain f The decree of Maximilian, which ia offered in extenua- | in quiet In this he soon found himself mistaken, sshe’ stanceA Tremendous Waterspout. Maramoros, July 26, 1867. The news frem the interior which has arrived here since my lest despatch i# of little importance. The trial of the’ remaining general officers of the imperial army captured at Querétaro is not yet announced. A San Luis paper states that it has been determined to send them to those States where their crimes were com- ‘Phe trial of Job: ‘Surratt was resumed this morning iD ®e Criminal Court, before Judge Fisher. The court was epened at twenty minutes after ten o'clock. Mr. Merrick said that the counsel for the prosecution yes- Qerday ttroduced s record with regard ‘o Sergeant Dye, ard Af the defence had known of the record they wouki wot been cruel in referring to Dye as they did. Judge Fieber, interrupting Mr. Merrick, asked if the record ‘Was in evidence. France and Spain and Mex- co and Russia territory 'iying far beyond the limits of the original thirteen States, because such power of acquisition and growth is not prsteemene by the constitution. Both these powers are but the imcidents of sovereignty requiring no wartant in written governmental characters, They are derived from the common law of nations, and are co- existent with sovereignty, But with this military commis sion, men, you have no concern at this time; whether it was @ legal or an illegal tribunal isnot the matter upon which you are n todecide, ‘The oath that you have taken requires that you shall have been told, gentlemen, by the counsel for the defence, ‘Mr. Merrick said it bad been alluded to by Mr. Pierrepont. and true deliverance make between th ted, Stated | ina manner not very respectful, certainly by no means com. | mitted for trial. A private letter from Monterey saye Ton erie hard fate was’ istued when the country was | was arrested and gent to Mexico. ‘There he io vain Tudgo Fisher aaid that all Wie defence could do this morn- | Oh Amenes, and Jona H. Burra te rier ae avediarg | faw an well as tees erintidal cater, and teat youhave | that Castillo was to bare been tried by court martial in | completely subjugated, and when no armed organization, | strove {or permission. to. leave the country. It was re- ‘whom you have in charge. and a true verdict give according To your evidence.” “The priscuenstands defore yon indicted for the murder of Abraham Lincoln, on the idth day of 2865, im this city. About the time and place and man- 4 of the death of your lato President no controversy has ppoke of Sergeant Dye belng indicted. Upon examination of } been made in the case. If there had been your recoliection record it was found that the caso bad been withdrawn or F& nation in tears and Of a whole civilized world in mourning would have reviwed your memory of the sad and ned after this had commecced. It was shown, too, } ¢ergible fact. The only question, therefore, Yor you to deter- that the prosecutor withdrew the charge upon the payment | mine is whether the prisoner ab the bar participated with ‘ef the woney whieh had been passed upon him as counter. | John Wiikes Booth and others named in the indi.iment, or fex by Dyo. Certain alleged misstatements of testimony | either or any of them, in this diabolical crime. If. from all ~wero then'read, and Mr. Merrick was about 1© speak upon | the evidence in this case, your minds shall have beeu.con- when he was interrupted by the Court, vineed beyond a reasonable doubt growing out of the evi- ‘Mn Merrick then asked If he could correct some state. | dence that the prisoner did co-operate with them; if that against the empire existed. The mountains then swarm- | fused, and he was permitted to go ed with robber bands, who ravaged and murdered with- | porarily, bayick bain Song parole to return, which he dié out remorse, on the highways and elsewhere. These | when the French He brigands, when caught, evaded the law by pleading a | Gually seemsto have Fielded a reluctant assent to.sup- connection with an organized liberal army. The decree rting the empire, and accompanied Maximilian to punishing by death all found in arms against the juerctaro, Thence he wa3 directed to proceed to Mex. government then went out, and it is a well | ico and assume the position of Minister of Finance. esiablished fact that pinety-nine out-of every one hun- | Marjucz left Querétaro at the same time for the drod who suffered under the decree wero notorious and | purpose of relieving Puebia, Arriving too tate for convicted robbers. But even this mtserable subterfuge | that purpoee, he returned to the capital, and assumi fails in five hundred other cases, What apology is there | control of affairs commenced the levying of A for shooting privates? It wag a desperate game they | loans and other grievous exactions, which so dis- Querétaro, and that he has probably been shot, together witha dozen other generals, ‘Such, at least, ie the smothered report bere.” 1 place no confidence in these asser:ions, and other similar ones which have been ex- tensively circulated, During the war of factions which has so long existed in Mexico, there would seem to have been a sort of free~ masonry established between many of the leaders of the respective parties, through which arrangements for $y wae to make corrections of misstatements of testimony. ‘Mr. Merrick aaid be then wanted to make an explanation, the right to disregard the inetruetions of the Court in matters of law; and they tell you that their exposition of the ‘law and the weight of cha- Facter, they possess may be | more safely ‘relied upon than the instruction which may begives you by the Court. The weight of character of @ prisoner's counsel would be a very Variable and, not unfrequently, very unsafe criterion by which the jury’ should judge as to the law of bin case; perhaps they would have you regard the Court as pon the bench merely to dischargo the duty of pre- jer in the court room, whieh probably the crier of or ‘the bailiff might be dispoued to regard a an usurpation of his prerogative, If the jury are entirely to disregard the Judge's instructions’ as to the law of the case, I confess I see but little left for to the testimony of Cass. ti pager areanende eae conviction - your ate that Hira te ecteres: It-dorttoe wentleries, taud gon Weenie mutual protection in case of need were made, There | wore plasing— hae Mexican ganihale-s08. as it onl, Lege en anon he wed ae a) gets Anis d that testh wae ali . risoner in the conspiracy to murder, er im te perform. 8 true, , that rf 1 6 turbulence rest rom siege 4 tt a $ho privoner did Partie pe ae eae a ee een an cancer whore four consciences are satiation | Bas scarce ever been a great success by either party | Minsted no wonder it appalled then. | They dreamed of } the Utruline dificult to acquire a knowledge of tho coming days of turbulence, when, to them, thero would be no remission. No wonder there was a shaking aud | details of his course. He seems at all times to have trembling among the merciless leaders on the morning | been on bad terms with ‘larquez, though, if the news- of the ‘Toth of June, No wonder they were stricken Peper. accounts are correct, he ace the position of dumb when Miramon’s “Viva Mexico, Viva el Hmpera- sident of the Council of Ministers, who, under the dor,” thundered in their ears, Standing over his grave, | circumstances, cou!d do little more than consult in his defiant ‘I am no traitor’ swelled like a trumpet on | reference to their own safety. *, the morning air, Faces grew paler then, and the ears of ‘That be was honest and conscientious there is no his murderers tingled as thoy awaited the tragic end. | doubt, and he only withdrew bis support from the ‘The dead-sno one can doubt—will yet be avenged. Per- | liberal party when-convinced that through it peace and haps before the sod of their graves is green. The noble | # stable government could nover result to his country, martyrs, may be, wil! have preceded but a brief period | He leaves two children—a son who was with bim in the assazsing in the great procession of the dead. Mexico, who took no part in politics, and of whose fate nothing 18 known, and a daughter, the wife of Don Patricio Milmo, a merchant of large wealth, now tempo- Juarez Commutes the Capital Punishment | tie) Sane inthis city, The blow bas fallen with = jerrick said that some of the testimony bad been @anttied im the reading. judge Fisher said the counsel bad a right io read such tesitmony as he chose, and such parte of it as Ne chase. Mr, Merrick said be wanted to make a persoual expiana. ton as to his statement of the ruling of the Suprewe Court athe subject of military commissions. He (Mr. Merrick) sontended that the military commiesion had been declared a) by that tribunal, , , Carrington, interrupting’ Mr. Merrick, eid that this was opening up the whole question, and he insisted that it "Heaps obey ust tins hee er thought these explanations could be mado al any other tine as wells now. Mr. Merrick then made a statement with regard to the alleged recommendation of Mrs, Surratt to mercy, and sald, “*Bho-counsel stated that I called for the record of the trial Before the militasy commission, and therefore he brought it that tie instructions of the Court are dictated, not by an honest desire to enli law, but by corrnpt right to disregard mislead you; but to claim that the jury are better judges of what the law may be than the Court {# about as reasonable as to assert that a plain farmer or merehant may be taken fresh from his plough or his counter and be more capable of navigating and manquvring a steam frigate, or to lead your armies to certain victory than your admiral or your general-in-chief. In my opinion, you have just the same Fight to disregard the evidence of ‘the witne#ses who stand the facts murder, ao consideration as to the legality or illegality of the tribunal which tried the prisoner's mother; no ferlings of sympathy for other members of the family;no considerations of bia youth, or that other lives have already been forfeited for this crime, should for eingle moment tempt you to step aside from the plain pathway of duty. If, however, upon & full and careful consideration of the whole tastimony, un- induenced in the slightest es by prejudice or bias of whatever character, that moral conviction of the prisoner's i not have been impressed upon your minds, but ‘stil entertain an honest and unbiased reasonable itself upon your judgment and suggesting je proofs pointing in the direction of the Prisoner's guilt’ may be strictly true, aud may still be eon- siient with some hypothesis of Lynocence which you can goastrue from the whole credible evidence in the eatise, you will give him the benefit of such doubt, It is my duty, how. resulting in the capture of prisoners but what certain ones, not unfrequently among the most obnoxious, would quietly eteal out from the carnival of blood which was sure to follow, make their escape without any sort of diffl- culty, leave the country or remain concealed for a while but to reappear as active as ever; and vo doubt willing and anxious to return the favor done then if the for- tunes of war placed it in their power. A number of the Querétaro prisoners have thus escaped, coming by the way of Saltillo, Montery and Matamoros to Brownsville, through places where thoy were well known and would certainly be detected were they making their escape without tho knowledge of the authorities. One of those residing now in Brownsville has been accused of sharing e instructions purposely intended to 2 before vou Court may say to you under official oath as to the la muy apply to the facts. A jury have the powor. if they ehoose to exereiso it, after having assumed the oblgations fm. Let me explain, sir. The Cnifed States District Attor- } ever, gentlemen, to say to you that this doubt, to the benefit | of an oath, to say that they will neither believe the jadge nor rs tag, ib his argument referred to Unat recardy ae ee Se ae te ey ectitied: must net bea mere specie | tha witvedses, but decide the law and facts accordidg totheir | the infamy of Lopea; but the better informea aro and Sets Some Imperialists at Liberty. crushing weight upon this loving and accomplished lady, i fore the jury, in het eerie, eee Want 4 in Bare, or cal aos oF 7 rompied by peste or re) ce we C nae LR eee erp mene Son eon rea certain that his release is rather the result of that ag Caarciterec, July 14, 1867. in which she has the sympathy of all, whatever their in my re commented with some freedom, | or or feeling of aby Kind, save the desire in your | couns ¥ ‘ is ’ wie om piecoten ine conta et ihe ta Beafts i me sachin sna must uot bs 8 van Notiet | nie {aces ware fngudad ond ber ae a8 i 2.100% oo Ee ena ride teow disrogard for'ba, | #0 Generalin-Chief of the Army Corpe of the | political predelictjons, ‘eeu < si wo! 10 eng. ‘ tt ” Eats Poul a apc eis ania the oaet ob be guitie as to the facts, it 1s then the office of the Judge, under Ns man life and their bloodthirstiness, occasionally in- fe Col el Alexander Von Schrader, United estion that after all the prisoner may not be guilty, ft must not be the mere shadow which the angel Wing of | mercy may momentarily cast upon your mental vision, but it must be such a doubt as the volce of mercy shall whisper in your ears. If the tes. timony shall convince your understanding of the guilty Participation of the prisoner with Booth or others in this b_convic the moral certainty required by Judes the idea of reasonable doubt. the case charges the prisoner with being en- ey ‘conspiracy with Jobn Wilkes Booth aud others to eitect the murder of Abraham Lincoln, and with having suc- ceeded in the accomplishment of that ‘most atrocious crime. It has been argued by the counsel for the prosecution that to take the life of the President of the United stacce is a crime 40 helnous in its character that each of the mecoseary to conspirators is responsible for the act of each Yaake it.” The Court sald it need not be made in the trial. 1] of bis co-conspirators committed in furtherance Sid not alt, read the throws on my tate uy the coun. | of the conspiracr, 40 long as be continues to Sel for the prosecution, hecatise be stated that at Came from | beamember of that conspiracy, and that he can only ve re. the Judge Advocate’ Genéral’s office ; and my expe- | lieved of criminal responsibility by repenting, abandonin, Ficuco im this ease teaches, me td mistrust what. | and renouncing bia counection with the conspiracy, Au ever comes from that 00 and I was unwilling | countermanding any orders he may hage given in relation to #0 seem to accept anything which I could not be allowed to | it. On the other hand it is conteuded By the oounsel for the verify by testimony. The record was carefully withheld | defence that the indictment now here charges a conspiracy ‘ald opportunity hae passed for taking evidence in rela | to Kill or the killing of the President of the United states, lot and T did pot choose to fough ft coming before me | but simply charges a conspiracy to Kill OF the killing of the manndr it did; Mr. Pi tat yesterday that {| Abraham Lincoln, the individual—that inasmuch as there is 18 information in regard to thie Fecommendation to mesoy, | not an allegation in the indictment showing that Abraham and the President's knowledge of it and action upon it, | Lincoln at the time of the murder was President of the a4 been derived from Judge Holt. Thold in my hand, sir, | United States, but simply avers the killing of an 0 de! 104 records of that ti uthor- | individual, the case is to be governed solely b; Eee eee, arco ee | ata re offetal oe certifying its bat with it could be inquired into by ‘means of tand. When Mr. Pierrepont came to reply , some remarks upon the subject, he stated that the recommendation of Mrs, Surratt to execitive clemency dy the officers-of that commission was attached to the rec- erd, had been submitted to the President, and that he re- corded hie approval on the back of the paper upon which the Fecommen {78 Written, and thereupon e threw a roll of papers on my waying, “There is the original record, Secatanel canrond for'bensall. bi ‘Mr. Carrington here interrupted Mr. Merrick and pro- « tested against his being allowed to proceed, and said the uence of the gentleman had already been mainly ex- iwlted in an attack on the Officersof the government and dulge in asort of sentimentalism which would seem strange to other people, and not unfrequently some offi- cer, after a hard fought contest, will approach the com- mander-in-chief, and ask as a reward for bis valor that the life of some prisoner, otherwiee certain to be shot, be placed at his disposition; and the request !s seidom refused. The prisoner turned over to the applicant is received with an ardent em! treated in the most hospitable manner and assiste@ forward in such direc- tion as he may wish to go. Many think that Castillo bas escaped or will escape in this manner, as well as others whoee death was regarded as certain to follow shortly after Maximilian’a, La Prenea, of Guadalajara, mentions a most destruc- tive waterspout which recently burst in thatcity. A Jarge pumber of lives and an immense amount of prop- erty were destroyed, The loss of one house was est mated at $30,000. The same paper says that when tl republican army entered the capital the fortification: had been abandoned. Everywhere were found the trains, ammunition and baggage wagons of the enemy; arms scattered al! along the roads and streets, the entire garricon baving deserted and returned to their homes. A largo number of. Indians and Pelados followed the army {n, bearing fruits and vegetables, and when the order was issued that no one should pass beyond the fortifcationg, 80 that none of the im leaders should escape, there was so great commotion among them that the order was temporarily rescinded and thi ere allowed-¢o depafk” tis thought not improbable ‘The Citizen President of the republic, in the use of States Army. his ample powers, has deigned to allow that of all those | By adespatch from New Orieans, dated August6, we =,” Persons who are now captives in this city for the crime | are informed of the death, in that city, on Monday evea- of treason against their country, those included in the ing, of the officer whose name beads this obituary. The following list may be allowed the limits of thia | cause of the death, as reported, was from brain fever, city for residence until such time as the supreme | and took place suddenly. Tbe deceased entered the ser- government decide on thelr cases:—Those who | vice of the United States during the ray,and alter page= belonged to the military service and gave | ing through various grales was eventually promoted to the rank of Colonel of the Seventh Ohto Volunteers, active military support, although they might be} cutsequently he was appointed = major and breves prosecuted in the same way as the rest who committed | cojonei in the regular service, aud for some months past treason against their country, and condemned with all i re ihe eon oe a ord ay the staf of Genet eridan. S the severity of the law to capital punishment, the Citizen | was an able and gallant officer, and grewtly distinguished President of the republic, in virtue of hig ample powers | hiase!f during our late war. pe on Yo cotmate sald punishment in the Soltow- ing mianuer:—Generals of division to seven years im- és prisonment; brigadiers to six years; colonels to tive JERRY O’BRIEN.. years; majors three years; captains one year; lieuten- ants and sub-lieutenants shall be subject to the * surveillance of the chief civil authority during one | The Governor Refuses to Interfere In Hie ty year; but they shall be allowed to choose their place or Case—Preparations for z ead where aihey amy live a full freedom Execution. Ry while cir conduct lio not ake them liable recei to be rearrested dariag said time; aad they may change | _ 7H® following Special tclegram was oe Oe oat be said place of residence at will, provided they give | Hxnato office last evening:— ¥ notice betorehand to the civil authority, so that notice Auoany, N. Y., August 7, 1867, cambe forwagded to the Civil authority of euch new place The Governor does not intend to interfere in the case f official oath, to testify to you In the spirit of trutn, accord- ing to the Lest of bis knowledge and ability, as to which {s the aw which may be applicable to these facts: and an honest jury will" disegard neither the testimony of the witnesses nor the instructions of the Judge, unless they are satisfied that corrupt motives have actuated them. They will leave the party to his legimate re- sa writ of error to the Appelate Court. | Much 48 bas, algo, been lakl by the counsel “for the de- e upon @ fact which they assert, that during the pro gress of this trial, more than one hundred and fitty excep. tous have been taken to the ruling of the Court concerning the admniseabillty of evidence, If they have found them- selves under the necessity of calculating the number of those exceptions and parading them before you with a view of having you render a verdict according to irrelevant ev!- dence not before you, rather than aecording to the testimony which you have he have not the disposition to criticize their tacte,butlenve them to present thelr case thelr own way. ‘At the same time I feel it my duty to remark to you that if counsel will be so bold as to present propositions to the court which, every tyro in the profession ought to Know are untenabie, it does not, necessarily follow that the judge must always be #0 Weak as {0 sustain them, It has hereto- fore been supposed that exceptions to the ruling of a judge at nied prius were inte to be passed in review vefore an appellate court.’ I have never before known them to be neatly ‘calculated and presented to the jury in the way of arguments. In reference to these matiers { may observe that®perhaps I owe it to the dignity of the bencli to have interrupted counsel iu their conduct of the cage in this partie uit in a cause involy- ing the life of the prisoner upon the ove hand and the vin- dication of the outraged justice of a nation in mourning on the other, I deemed it my,duty to cast not an atom in the Witnesses, Mr. Merrick continued—Thie is a personal esplanation, be made after what bas transpired, and I sbail & ame’ principles of Jaw which are applicable to ordinary murder, and cannot be regarded by you as belig rey in any degree more heinous in ite character; that even ad- mitting to take the life of the President of the United States to ite 1} be eccuracy, as will be seen tne pagan inst precadin theeoart, the the moutles at Thest. a more hefnous crime than the der of an individual i one scale or the other which might b; ossibiluey tend ti ra l- re ) ce % dent's approval ibs ‘ot “anding [private station, yet, for the want of an fob in the indlct-. prejudice "either “side of ‘the Teake Lstone, Bbw Sp oberg rope oh inet herrea sarc her gece He ix cones iat: ie ee ae CS oie pion, 4 Ce eee Ciao fon i eh ori taatter:| to, direct | your, ,uttention in 2 general way | “Tuo liberal government has decided that imperial | As to the commanders and officers on the retired list acvisrr 7 Tow Ptnoved 47 TAs TOMS, de 1 no F600! to mercy in the] evidence may'be as tothe ¥iling of the President Abe approval of the President was wrijten on the paper nte and the V: eontaining the f, and the President saw that ‘pa your consideration of 1! case andin paking, ‘up your Pecommendation, why was it not published! I have only to | verdict, regard it ag a crime standing on the same 3 that if what is said now is true, what was pub | fts atrocity with the crime of treason or Cag iinet the a e ou common law a 10 of aking. They argue that although by Mr, Bradley said reference had been made to the map on on the death of a ki wich was the Ogdensburg road. ie desired to sate that | heinous 1p ite charact ‘at map was not in evidence, but only a diagram. the fact, yet the law is different in England and here, and Judge ‘said the jury would remember the evidence | that in cases of murder he who counsels, alds or commands oul o another to commit murder, without being present to reu- ‘urther corrections, Judge Fisher delivered material aid in its commission, can only be proceeded for to xeview it. in detail}. without taxing who lent passive ad to the empil ey shall be per- Some time ago the mothor and sisters, three in num- ere bind ‘bas already mitted pire, Re PS pon tn alot (ha the eau to remain in this cafitat “until Sich time ag the | ber, of Jerry O'Brien, the unfortunate young man cons a "Feocmslqeoce ean teieg.: thelr cates. esta, | demmed:to die by hanging to-mortow, proceeded to =” The following is the jist referred to above:— Albany and obtained an interview with Governor Fen- J nan N, Vértiz, José Maria Ochoa, Juan Cervantes, | ton, with Whom they pleaded asa mother and sisters Joné de Jesus Piiego José Ruiz, Pedro Jorrin, Ramon Villautratin, Jesus Pagazn, José fanacio Boneta,” Joagiin alone can plead for the life of aon and brother. By eros Manuel Seer a do ils ge josé | come means or another while in Albany they were Kanenfild, Mariano Pena y Sant! 10 Sol @ y “= eer erroneously led to believe that the sentenee impending 8, » The 8 fe number of French prisoners, taba fangs bp slowly moving towards the order, At the Jatest from the capital no disposition had been cave O’Horan or Tabera, nor bad Marquez been dis- cov El Cinco de Mayo of San Luis has been fined $300 for an editorial againet the State government and its a dhas for the iy upon av alii topacquit the ner. They also have en- deavored to destroy the cred’bility of nearly if pot all of the material witnesses whose testimony has tended to connect the prisoner with the body of the ‘crime, either ly contradict- ing them by other witnesses on points material to the issue or by attacking their character for credibility. Whether they have succeeded in destroying the credibility of any one or more of them you are to dete! ‘On the other hand After some fi She following charge to the Jury against as an accessory before the fact and not as prin; | the prosecution rely for a conviction on the evidence which rninds $ ‘Grwrusmmp oy Fun Juay:—" man’s blood . they have spread before you, tending to show the malice of | Policy. : Sauna Shenae, Hal over the one they held so dearly would be commuted hia 4 the. pri towards ‘the fed Anew r, recently started at Calientes, says | Querejazu, José M. Ruiz, 0%, jael_Rebol- } oe Brood ber aioa. vite feeeke Fey peas iy towards the deceased abrehats Lincoin form lous | that Mr Lerdo de Matt te President of the 0. | tare Fausune, Ghimelpopoce, Auguntin, Rada, Joaquie | from that of death to tmprisonment for fe and under me prior tothe murder. His frequent conversatious and | preme Court, and that Mr. Leon Guzman will succeed | Primo de Rivers, José Maria Duarte, Ismael | this false impression they hastened tothis city and made’ intercourse, private, confdential and mysterious, with oothian: his interest manifested in procuring quarters don House for Payne, who attempted to ausassi tary Seward; his procurement of arms for ai eape of Booth and Harold, and his con them at Surrattville shory prior to the tion of the President: his fabrication of accounts, and contradictory statements, as to the object of his movements: his expression used to Smoot, shortly before the assassination foi the President, “hat if ‘ankees knew what.he was doing, or was about to do, they would streten his neck for him;”” ‘his fixing the wooden bar against the door of the President's box ut the theatre ; his presence here ou the day of the murder: Iie belng in company with Booth and McLaughlin at tle barber's on that day; his appearance in front of Ford's theatre on the him in the Cabirfet, and Francisco P, Rodriguez will be made Governor of Guanuajuata, Another new published at Saltitlo, and entitled La Voz del in ite first issue favors the policy of abolishing military governments throughout the coun- try. Numbers ef the Victims to Liberal Ven- comRapacity and Bloodthirstiness of wei oe Pors.a, Mexico, June 29, 1867. The smoke of another revolution has now fairly rolled away, and tho transactions of the past six month are passing into history. The spoils, such @ other consptratore, personally aud by letter; the Hern: ‘Jim Juan Francisco Lamadrid, Mariano Bar- thelr way to the Tombs, where they poured tbe glad cio & Trujillo, Joos Luis Hawsi, Joss Mariano tidings into the only too willing ear of Jersy. So troras, oy Lazpita, Joss Mariano Dévila, | strongly had this impression faswened ‘self open. the Francisco Villavicencio, Domingo Najera, Manuel Diaz | mind of the bereaved mother that even up to yesterday ‘Zimbron, José Mariano Lara, Manuel Berganzo, Hipéiito | her hope of a commutation of sentence being an- Salazar, Mariano Galvan Rivera, Jorge Madrigal, José | nounced by the Executive was as strong as when she Maria Garey, José Maria Alvear, Juan 8. Alaman, Luis | bad bad an iaterview with him. at Albany. Landa, M. G. Valle, German Madrid, Luis, Mon- | But yesterday, instead of tho fal news thas tes de Oca, Gerario Garcia Rojas, Augustin Pereaes, | the her, in the eagerness ber maternal Juan Echave, Francisco Vatanzueln, Joaquin Flores, | heart, bad prayed for at each waking hour of night for Luis Hidalgo Carpio, Juan Garcia, Miguel Alvarado, | weeks past, was finshed across the wires = message: Francisco Villalon, Patricio Murphy, Luis Munoz, Fran- } telling her that her entreaties and prayers that the band cisco Laseurain, Ignacio Piquoro, José M. Orozco, Joa- | of death—held menacingly over the head of ber son— io Torres, O6rlos Robies, Miguel G. Cosio, Juan po end | had proven unavailing. This sad news: 3 was v F are some. things of which courts and juries will take judicial notice. One of the eloments of the definition of murder ie the killing of @ reasonable creature. It !s never either a in the indictment or proved in th dence that the subject of the crime is » human betng. not necessary, because it is one of those things that are pre- sumed to be taken judivial cognizance of, | It is not alleged in the present indicument that Abraham Lincoln was a rea sonable creature, nor has any pt been ai to show ity t we take Judicial cognizance of th . So we judicial cogaizance of the fact that at the time of hie mi he was the President of the United States, be- cause it is something known to every man, woman and child in the country capable of knowing anything. And takin, euch pee cognizance of it, it need neither be allege eit tnesecs. Rem mee et the guilty 4 With such sentimentality. you have, as jurors, nething whatever ae Te ts no’ matter of re to inquire whether the prisoner at the . a a Hoge’ aiered ject of ueeieale aameenk ‘ou believe hin guilty of participating in the crime w: stich sisads ebarged before you: bu a u indictment ul It ht of the murder; his ited and pi at elonply to deter] 1s ne. unasotmaas Oe, | Te asd for ihe’ | while teres and. bis calling om the time to Hook end the - eat te he chez Villavicencio, Juan Cagide, Manuel Bucheli, from the Governor by Jastice Dow! on our horizon | defence, that ft has been 1nd down ‘by Sir Matthew Hale, in | otuerg men With themftwo or three times, shortly before as they are, the victors reap; wh! @ heroic, | Wanuel-F, Jimonez, Jons Maria Garcia Icazbaicea, carly yesterday morning, aud was announced to pany ‘was about to gladden | bis work entitled “Pleas of the m,”” that although | fajal shot was fired by Booth, as the signal for action; but misguided, leaders of the defeated party, sleep (CHAPULTEPEC, July 14, 1867. -] his ‘cell by the Sheriff soon after its receipt. As the ' 20, the maain army of | treason is 40 heinous in lie charactor ato’ admit of, no sc- | alleged ackivity in the management of she entire conspiracy; Saari” ‘ah, son ak etal hs captil nf kind-hearted official took iim by the hand, andina { tm Sis retreat from jen before the fact, but that its heinous character | planned f he fatal evening of the Mth of April; bis sigt at ebla, at tan Jacinto, uerctaro, Seetve-Reatnine trembi ‘voice gently broke the tidings, while bidding 15th of April a# soon as trom the wift haste to get into it was possi Canada; bis abandonment of his mother and family; his censori jebmond had been overpowered and had surrendered to | makes all principals who in any way contribute to its com. i der the rebel | mission, yet that murder and other fegnies, not being 80 Se Ee heinous in thelr character, aiders and alettorcare to be bro. and elsewhere. It is useless now to discuss the 7,08 the morning of t je for him to leave; a aut: ie him to of good heart aud meet his fate manfully, Where Did He Get Seo Much Money ¢ the wretched young criminal for moment. Mexico, Juty 13, 1867. gazed steadfastly at his interlocator, question of beljigerents or non-combatants, If the er chapman tadlonn tell os fiona’ at ¢ sorhan af the against only ssories before the fact. Whei ment of himscif in Canada at the house of rebel returned oe tiiilemnfeations © only as acces fact. When, | concealment of himsel nai rel f Sowrtaivof the stronghold of a most wiced and atrocious however, he comes to treat of misdemegpors—e lower grade seimpathizersy Boucher and Lapaire; his disguise of is liberal party, for convenience, denies the right ea bel- | Citizen Minister of the Treasury and Public Credit, Cha | Warmly his pressure of the hand, with- ime than felonies—he tells us rson by theeoloring o ; the changing of his dress yy ee Of “nccensories before ihe fact ‘because of thelr want of | kud wear on “ym ress | ligerents to imperialists, all the world, at least, admits hen the hearts of all loval men were leapit oft + of and wearing of spectacles; his tight trom Canada under ap umed name and disguised personal ap} ce: his free 4 voluntary confessions to Dr. McMillan on board tbe steamer. Peruvian: his constant apprebension of the United States detec even on the British steamer and on British #: flight trom England and entering (he Papal service; his confession to Marle while there asto the manner of his escape from b Wtepec:— out referring to the announcement } a accepting again the command-in-clief of the army | the Sheriff for the kindness shown him, ont dows on bis and the Department of the East, together with the ample | bed and epgaged pleasantly in conversation with him i powers with which the supreme government has | for several minutes, invested me, I have the honor to make known “J hope,” said he to our raporter, as he entered the to Sere go there er taations cay rede tag oan cell some time ye Sheriff's visit, “1 hope you and bands commissary c Par en ccaniaatior'n poe ae Sie ye ‘yates on the press have aot taken offeace ucing to the paans of vietory, and when the eyes Bu lovers of pence throughout the laud were eagerly looking fo him whose great heart had never cherished a feeli falice for even an enemy, but abounded in end charity for, all, in ¥ fear, thould | ah hich had been lifted up be ‘iasped in friendship and brotherly love, and Btates dissev- the fact. It is enough to know that garrisons surren- dered as prisoners of war were court martialed and shot indiscriminately, At Puebla fell in this way sixty-three imperial officers and the governor of the State, At San Jacirto one hundred fell in the eelf-same way. At Pe- character suflctently heinous, the precise reason for which accessories are admitted in crimes amounting to felony. Later writers have gen followed 5 by Lord Hale, and many decisions have been founded on that authority, the writers and jud, with his reasons, or todepart from the princ {ple laid down by him. ButToonfess the reasons are not very ‘ fred should be agate united In harmonious relations: on | satisfactory tomy mind. I have never been able to dis- | Washington immediately after the murder; bis failure io P i Beaded oe Aen peas ths Executive heed ‘ofthis arent | cover any sound reason why he whooriginates the plan of | prove where he ate aud slept during the time when he left | Iayaone hundred French privates’ were massacred in | federal district, $3,517 16; and in the inx receiver's, pins mation, the Commander.in.Chief of your and navy, by murder, but employs another or others as his agent or ‘al on the 12th of April till he returned qu the itth of | one day snd in a body. At Querétaro were butchered $3,184 19, without mentioning the postal revenues, the most foul and wicked racy which has ever =~ to perpetrate tl Cr ia not equally gu Wy with | the same month; his Bight from Kome to Egypt—all these revenue from stamps snd nationalized property, because ‘It was on account of my mother”—here of bisvory was en down at hands of the | the perpetrators of it. If I, actuated by the malice of a de. } matters are presented for your careful and candid consider- | the Emperor, fourteen generals, three imperial minis- | the receipts from the former two bave been eo far | the poor young fellow’s eyes filled with tears and his john Wilkes Bootb, in the metropolis of the re. Sed kad wicked heart, conceive the purpose of murder. [ation You 'are to weigh them all and then make up fmall, and none from the last. vette (ei unantat bea (6 4 Urokee a att or he and tinder the very shadow of ite Capitol. Historians | ing him whom I suppose jlo be my enemy, but. | your verdict. In giving these matters your atieution independenes and reform. PORFIRIO DIAZ, CL Of May thotbet.” Tae ae Ht ads 4 text writers on law treat of the helnousness of the ine the opportunity or ‘courage to carry my | you will not fail to remember the fight from the pen’ on account of my er. want her to seo i trime of imagining the death of a weak or 2 wicked king, or of urpose into. execution, hire another person, who wil- | scene of orime. the fabrication of false accounts and Wi erals and numbers of lower grades of anything in the papers th«t would cause her grief. She, ‘ ® wise and beni t monarch; but you know gent wn, | fully executes my wicked design for me, common sense | eontradictory statements, the concealment of instruments ‘ar, seven gen a , naturally enouch, feels terribly over my situation. and. ; ee well Ruow that you exist, that to murder the duly | and the common Conscience of mankind, which, after all, | of violence, are all circumstances strongly indicative of cullt. | officers are in prison waiting their turn, Without exag- OBITUARY. I fear she will not outlive me a weeks she'll die of » Ved Preadent of the most powerful ‘on earth fe | seldom fails to direct us to the true principles of the law | You will further bear in mind that a confession of broken heart, As for myself, I know my fate is a fearfal: Rot iewe atrocious than to compass the death of a king or | (which has been to be the perfection of reason or | when freely and fairiy madeg he body of the erime being - < r 1 roved, which is in this ease the tact of murder, is the emperor. Ajbeit he may have from the 1g } Common sense), wou! to dictate that I'cannot be less le Don Santiago Vidnu at the ‘who we nsde him their vepresentative ity than the agent Whom the weil | surest noe of ES he ene is the testinony of the Om. Im August, 1866, your correspondent in the prose- Thad upon gets 1, ing thi his | Known principle of Faw, that he who act by another } niacien’ if the caiprit. Y Set Oes Rs CTs ee Sica saes | Ger irioreaeee s Manganese rte see | San Ope eres geen exten ft pectenioel ees ven tnvsting take or the life of bim who was Supreme Court of the United States with it the highest of méral certainty. These are . a to inherit = ply because he may } the case of Goodin, the United States, 12th Wheat ules of law, to which it is my duty to invite the State of Nuovo Leon, On the evening of the 27th, ‘e, but tee to sa Nope well as Roy seer nodes eee observations I have addressed to after riding through @ Jong tediovr day, beneath a 4 bigher au then even the Supreme Court br the wonneTeat s conspiracy formed ta time of war to take the whose fervency would do honor to the tropics, the erazy an i than Lord Hale, or any other writer w life of the President and Vice President of the republic Concord coach in which we travelled, with several gen- 2 the law to which we are accustomed to look for principle the heads of the exeentive departments, for the purpose soa Peetabig there might be Touns-toporied in the soot | {1 ars sanrehy aud confusion is terasoa: es Bolnous and.es a pegartbab yes. me oO mi con fusi OS . < oijbygbeat wuiboriy mown, among Christian nations ae. hurtrut to the people of this country as the compassing the of village known as Lampatas and drew up in front of 1 Cee sabato whoceqoienm tioabalem Teagen ena jerers | of hevreain ee nee Olaf fawhed tracers, bullt of stone, in wilich was occasionally provided, for @ reasonable compensation, Sccond—That every person engaged in such conspiracy, as member of it, is ow not only for the act of treason, but for any murder or less crime which may flow from it. Third—Tbat the government may waive the charge of Will, in the great dey, have thelr verdiets and judgments a em poy ey A «‘entertamment for man and beast.” A bath was fur- nished the travellers by a vivacious and by no means delicate Moxican woman, after which two of them, in- that a free people in any country heinous crime to kills king, oF than it ts to assassinate « 4 treason against all ators roceed tty AT bg net for the smoller ortne ¢ nerdes’ lasted in cluding your correspondent, started for a stroll through dew the That the ancient and much decayed little village. Turning | *Ting that when she would go Lome the news would:be , treason. Fourth—That under an indictment for a murder resulting from the prosecution of such conspiracy, evidence of ths scope conspiracy may ve considered in esti. Thating the heinous eharacter of the offence laid’ in the 1n- dictment. Fisth—That it was not necessary to aver in the indictment the fact that Abrabam Lincoin, the victim of the murder, was at the time of {ts commission President of the Uuited States, or to prove it, in order to allow the jury to take that fact ito the account in detera.ining the 8 character of the crime, it being fact of which courte will take judt- cognizance, ‘Sirth—That he who does an act by another does it by bim- self, and is responsible for its consequeuces in criminal as well as in a civil case. ing of pidity the latter. who offered to purchase it with money or to give it another vineyard, but Naboth was willing to part Wa Decause It was the ritance of his fathers. exci! the wrath and of King to | Abad and his Queen Jezebel, who conspired together to es the death of Naboth, and they succreded by having \ blasp! fopasess Bis’ chy the: plas was laid by desebel. The: motive Yen ‘hte wife his signet “ring. will “O. oeal wi w rorthe elders and nobles, the letters which she sent . whom she emp.oyed as the agents to consummate the wicked plot. ‘sons of Belial, we are told, were the per- off from the main street, the other paused in front Gremvon have been well cared for b it would seem?" of small one story building, but of brick, neatly “Cared for! I have had every fort I could desire. itewashed, with tions I have been allowed many privileges never allowed Temerkeds “ina. fe the birthplace of Vanni Bere -—— TAF aleaace es eee ove been 5 sizty yeare ago thie distinguished Mexican patriot aad | “Tho bearing aad manner o: the prisoner during this conversation could not but have su the re His voice, never raised above a‘full low tone, was plea- sant to the ear, and the fnoncy which characterized hie haem oe quite a contrast to the manner of bis de- livery witha first Hnprisoned. at no one time during. ‘toere were no doubts, only deflance. An imperialist bas bad My guts ps no right, save the right to dic, Diaz sometimes taunted his victims on the eve of death. ae ectrcemete: ingen vannenpet sia dioiy te pire tbeipesntate esa een rine Tess atrocity | jured witnesses who proved lasphemy on Naboth, and r desire the death of & Prince, but not itis eetected his death, Abad, proatin Oy the cee one Seventh—That although an alibi, when clearly established, | « {earn to die,” said he, ‘* since you have not learned to | country, ‘osane age ee bd slightest a pete. Tite Jot the President marion Navn. bathe word of the | forme e comple and unanaweraiie defence, the tere | ive aright” AU the’ generals and military judges | Magimilian, for sco him during ihe day bat were sable’ togais edule ec ie lent ing, ** { lown ate scene a crime resulting frou ’ ai of Tarae\, whicd isin Samariae Behold ruey uurepented of and unabandone fT | geported themselves om these occasions with a forecity | enemies, tint ee pril, 18%5— | and meet Ahab, K and that no one now living ever iabored more assidu- 1th of Ay a co! Shotin his fight from tne scene of ‘of Nabott, whither he has gone down | {t will pot avail him if he were at so unknown in these times It was the coolest proceed, | and that Ses To-day is the twenty-fifth anniversary of the birth of ance of the | to possess it shalt speak unto him, say Thus | him, performing his part in that con ing—the trial and shooting of these men—over heard of > nfs pursuers, | eatin the Lord, Hast thou killed and sleo taken posseasiont fa—that thie ples ts, unless cl jog—the trial ematrieg When, the heartless, merciless, hen in San Luis, Juares, the liberal President, was jn wie tors in this enormous | In the place where dogs licked the blood of Neboth shall ded with suspicion and a circimsiance weighlig aman in their power, toere was ‘hed by certain friends of Vidaarri, who were drumhead courts po! ‘ago by ® military com. | does Nek thy blood—eren thine” And it came to pass | against him who attempts it, because it implies an admis: | DO help for bim. To be accused was equivalent to being | assured by him that should ho be captured overything THE CASE OF FRAZER & CO,, OF CHARLESTON. pa ‘were condemned to expiate | that dogs licked up the blood of Ahab according | sion of the truth of the facts ‘alleged against bim, and the iP, Maximilian declined to appear before his | should bo done that was possible to save him. This was } hair giltt upon the, gallows end grhors, doomed, 10 1 Pas mbes cote uo which I hevoclioded ie tact ct Parid aad | Mobtbal tbe figet from ihe scone or & seit oetand his counsel—she Prussian. Minister—staied | gonerally known, and his summary execution bas, con- | Reply of Their Counsel to the Bill of ¢ . a ie! at of an a the ol 4 gufer wprisonment for ie tbe argument of thie case, | Uriah, recorded inthe eleventh chapter of second samuel, | fabri of false accounts, the concealment of ind to the court wh! ing was a farce, The | sequently, caused considerable surprise. A private let- | plaint=Probable Futare Course of i ny jemen, ip ey Rete the Sore irled before that iuilitary commission fend bong upon its Gadings, were themecives the victimes of nti tue alert oe, oat are een bs | Sos Took, Seg 8 Mag ie not admitted as evidence against him who Takes, yet if * ofaed this. Whoa Quorstaro fell the | execative heed of Mexico, The letter states that some | The counsel of John Frazer & Co. have preparea a p before you ae induman butchers of Ianocent men. Lt | order toeffect his wicked 6 he seat a ieiier 4 not admitied a4 evidence agathet him whe maker, Fett | Of. Sa0y: procla ie | exec a a; a fle | | Toe cum ot Sot a cr mere the proceed! Emperor soared ‘before the case was heard; he ‘been convicted without a prosecation, with- out a particle of testimony or law. Men of force and ter received here from a well known republican general, Case=Distinguished Counsel Both Sides. now im Mexico, explains it all, and adds to the airendy — erarwheiining emouns of Sin ae chad $0 ine proven Cuantastox, SG, August 7, 1567. jeat ments of violence, are circumstances indi Tenth—Although ® confeswon in toe slightest degree tainted with the protaise of fivor, or by duress, oF by tecr, Uriah, a subject of jas 4 brave and gallant soldier y Of Joab, which Was engaged io war with the Am- His wife, Bathsheba, was comely in person and very 01 he: hat (hose wh: organized for a certain purpose; it ito work welt But the liberal party bas overshot the mark, The friewds of the party have ceased to sympa- thize with it, They are horrified with its barbaritios, Tl wo to the credibility of the witnesses you elusive judges, You saw them face to face; jer they are confirmed or ussupported oF ‘other witnesses of credit and other circum: stances, You are to judge whether therr westimony bas been impeached, and are to consider every matier whieh will tend to aed any light upon the question as to what bas been truthfully or falsely deposed by any witness, You Will dilligently collate, and compare, and carefully weigh and consider all the testimony in the case on boll You will not disregard or reject the testimony of ness unless you shall be satisied tha: he has been nd of Uriah himeelf, a Diaz, who did not care to take the responsibility of his disposition; he therefore telegraphed to nares, for in. | them by the government in the United States District t structions, and was directed, in response, to arrest anf | Court. They deny the allegation that the Cuarleston t shoot him immodiatety. The accownts published \by | frm was agent for the Confoderate goverpment for the j { ; vy bite "been “Maid in support of thie denunciation that the at Kupreme Court of Staten have, in the case of he hottest of the batti re returo ye from him that he may be sipitten and Joab obeyed the behest of bis king, and Uriai the Hittite was slate, But the Lord seads bis CT", Nathan, unto David, saying, “Thou art the man who did thts evil thing."? hou hast Killed Uriah, the Hittite, with the sword, bast sian him with Of the children of Ami This jadgme flingal ieibunal, orgapised, withapt law, wit n warrant In the constitu right to tt caure t Johnson, and it has beea said ma. iu my the Mexican rs state that be asked for an interview with Diag, which was refused, and | PUurppses alleged 1m the Dill, and rest their caso upon the that efforts were made to have the execution suspended | pleading made by the Liverpool firm in England and until the arrival of Juarez, but without avai), and | upon the se it there agreed upon as s conclusion naturally enoagh, since that official had given orders for of we The Charieston house wil! move ». his immediate execution, that he might not be called | disaolation of the injunction restraining them from the procured t was a jndgm effect that he who doesan act by another does tt himself, her from cold blooded policy’ murters have re Deen the fact. This is + is Yermed in the law an fate line of 5 oa relean : a thvetr propert ard » the been releas whether it be a civi, or a criminal « The counsel for the | to be unworthy of pure evident reason of - , The case will probably be bi “ miniaing frignds epoueh to have aprlied any ench doc at’ that he was notin | his want ot eharscter "for trun: his Zeonteadictng done, ‘and calling: to account the guilty, | upon to redeam the plodce he bad made ae ¢ thei property ihe cate wil probably be beard nin the direction of their discharge, and they would not ir being flatly contradicted by others of better credit, lost damaging and suicidal has Aeon Barn b jor of San Lule | by theta, dames B, Cainpboll and A. J. Magrath ve there @ week after (ne decision had been | of the murd omesty Of purpose mauifcsied by hie conduct an: of Juarez dut the four past months. Len - pul im the Boletin Oficial of Mouterey | Green’ for the defendants. { - jag rat ~ made to the t they were unlawfully restrained of | material aid Assassin, who fired the ner in Tentitying Defore you. In conclusion, you Will | gents will surely condema; and the in fact, to | officially announces the execution :— are lan t is undersiced that their Nberty. nderstand the decision s | fatal shot, ead hy hf ituced on che part of the | take the case with the honest purpose to do justice to (ho | coves forever all intercourse’ with tl mis. Potos!,—Received at A Caleb Cushing will represent the ment, The ease J overnment as w that defence shows such to | United States and the defendant, bearing in mind that tt is panting. Let the “Cain’ of the ‘Videurri was apprebe: £¢ | will, probably go on appeal before the United statene the office of the inw to secure the punishment of guilty 1 and protesvon of the ingocent. If Joho HH. id alooe. treet, city of Mexico, ¢ was imme- wander the worl B dat half. what ent its sotion be? Shall this infamous ot to death by muaketrys RRC OmEDO. PORK SWINOLE IN MILWAUKEE. ere. of tr authority to uy notwi ing the Je mation was involvedin the ‘ wi Dot Me Mruggig. for las fe. Tbe raajority opiaia & possession of ,bistoric truth, “Rave iopked for a mabe rightful se: RA to the world that (he District of Couumbls, nobapart By the strict 0 * constitution of thé Cited States ou tue, theatee for the ex: it r erimes ia opiniga 4 a Juries, not Fa e a = in uigent one, “4 yout be a ee 4 und that m9 hostile us'may | judgment nsciences ls not guilty, 1 prisoners of war melo! of Indians at the tt oasily supported by perjury, Dut Because it i 0: I verdict; Josso: ft without ‘The journals state that he feated ‘ feiss arraigned inary teivunel, Were.” eed Lufgror time, keto which msiaee areveey | gavuranee {nad a court of justice's thé axpfum of fumomence, | Out Maley pnd, wetter hs resist tho police when arrested, thee i dantinentn was | A Wooden Nutmeg Man Selle Sand ana Sali mn that therefore that tribunal wae ond ed him for acts #0 ph RA [yg OY On thecontrary, if guilty, pronounce him guilty, oud whe Their taal ‘aes tbrown in the immediately established, and he acknowledged that De for Pork—The Warm Weather Causes Mio q eengn comnaltied IO a athole simon eons, | wdeded victims of pet ands continent tone in | Their induence was Wrernment stood godfather wo the | had taken part agsiost the Juarez governmest and bad | Detection. RY BS SSlittony of trutaful and posest witnesses, occupied Position of President of the Council of Mitwacken, August 7, 1867. Ministers under the empire. Prior to bis death be @X- | vosrs Piankerton & Armour, while shipping ® pressed a’desire to see his son, bi concern. Recognized by no other government, the Juarez , strength ‘States, TSaectre force and triumphed, It tri who, on sccoust of the areat of. the humae mind, particularly | when ° ‘or sympathy, ened and sustained by cne U1 wad * eroise of federal power, gives the judicial tees earen: yh : a6 ail loyalgrearis were for ‘88 to the precise time in tial to the protection of t ‘servan| cosas | to the wrath of the lib ‘send for him. quantity of pork and lard yesterday, were surprised at wever, ag ai! oy: ‘would be even | or hours, The past history | eommmiestoned by the people of the. nation Dao their ‘wore! alone threngh ee, fag Loe gore ares whe a empgien-este thate being no leakage, whit the inerasmeseter oo ainetyp po court ia eareot Paar ak pen cant, Senos rere 4 nored from the presence of unguatened aquaee ns a) Gear ot been The present page of Mexican his- | priest who attended bim, with « Cy that masses | se crees, ‘The mywiery was soived with as auger, whee ie thee pu SBeriiy s/s tne coratiblvon of a robbery or ether erisse, io for the def aoe canes ‘rae ae 8 to }- ob. sot tas foe p thy youre pag ME vi sna pola eooned, OF tire barrels were found to contain sand and alt, The Se ear eo age | hid‘ lemry o ck wine ona taro | ri ant hare em tigen yea bles the 107 | Sf marae age tpanen Tee quanion Bow far he | Goneral Carval's caraty, where wo erection ook } evince aloes totus bun verparate MEU) ** re by piace. ive caolial so" tenn the bie of ther ‘army | falibiity of the buchen Imemery. in reepest to the entity | ““Judgy Fisher repped in the adirmacive. setporttcn Ot Waeminasen Sie oma pemietal pre. | 7 as General Santiago Videtrt was born in the | some $20,000. White was treated leat night while re aise ian giro at Top ormgneed”weveraant | esha ib vv Af We Comaapgeeah 9, Maal via jocusag af the jure ene 0 Mb Rete dine kt wre 4 boniglian's village of Lam} ‘of Nuevo Leon, im the year § turaing from a picnic, . , ‘ HAG, 8 jay iNlereet of Ike Dreiguand aovernment | Pethy, Bike cor As We Commopweaie of Mangpenvagiia, ocginap of tbe jure 1 Qedime, Li le 9 porjous qu rR . aay 4 be

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