The New York Herald Newspaper, September 3, 1867, Page 6

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NEW YORK HERALD. ‘AMES GORDON “BENNETT, PROPRIETOR, 6 'NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, {967.-TRIPLE® SHEET, ‘and cited to appear before the Supreme Court on «| have proclaimed an amnesty long ago. No one charge of common treason, He bas catered « formal | who knew his views and feelings can doubt Broveataganet the cages, and bis ve O#8 Pal ve | ttl The unfortunate conflict between Con- apedited oh weocatiat has great age and bad health, | 67686 and Mr, Johnson lias delayed this wise ‘Acosta, the acting President, had declared war against | Measure. Instead of the rebellion being the government of Bolivar, bat the latter beving sub- | closed up and the harmony of the country re- mitted to bis rule the declaration falls to the ground. | stored, Politioal and personal antagonism be- ‘The Case of General Sickles=The Opiion | son to fear the consequences of that negro au- of she Aanapner Geant, Premacy in the ten outside rebel States, which The President feels himself called upon to | is now distinetly foreshadowed under the re- explain and justify the removal of General | construction laws of Congress. We presume, Sickles ; which is a good sign, as it implies, | however, thafas the shortest way to end all | be held down forever. The hour of first, « modest thought that the propriety of bis | doubts upon the subject is to push through the | tion must come. Governments may toon own course may not be beyond doubt; and, | experiment resolved upon, we sball soon have | away, boundary lines may be changed, but the Sate © oes Canes sey ena reincate | *7600 the members of different branches of the pes gr ts wholesome respect for public opia- | » definite solution in the South, if not inter- | wealth of the peninsula will yet be developed Moaquore, had beeu discovered through the treachery of | €OVrnment has drawn us into danger aud at we. Yer for one who Lie rapa rupted by a warning voice from the North, and the people will yet be prosperous ang. Level de Goda, oue of the principals, and several promi. | Tevolution. We are threstoned with a negro | Possible he may be in the wrong and who happy. The misfortunes of Spaia are, no doubt, ent personages had been arrosted in Panama, Moutero, | government. For the sake of political ascend- takes what pains he may to put his acts in the The Second Advent of Dickeus. largely due to her own misconduct; but ghd the Peruvian Admiral, waa at Bogote, ostensibly for tbe | ancy, and not out of regard for the emancipated | ™08t favorable light. But the caso is not very | We republish in to-day’s Henat» the accounts | has suffered long—so long, indeed, that {t fe dif. purpose of oni Te Sie re as slaves, the negro is to he made the balance of well mado out. The commander of the Second | of » few of the ovations offered to Charles | gouit not to express the ope for ber that hee fuse of Mosquera, who bas heretofore been aatrong | Power. The whites of the South are disfran- | District, in the exercise of governing powers | Dickens, the English novelist, when he first | sorrow may soon be ended and her deliveranoe ally of Pera and Chile, while Gutierrez has dectared bis | chised, and everywhere throughout that impor- | iven by Congress, forbade the execution of visited the United States, a quarter of acentury | near, Asa free people we cannot but pray | intontion of maintaining a firm neutrality in the war be- | tant and most valuable section of the republic | °¢rtain decrees of State courts in cases of sult | ego. Dickens had then won considerable | for the downfall of all tyrants and the emanol- teen those two republics and Spain, the negrois in the ascendant. The consequences | fF debt. He exercised his power solely for | notoriety as a sensational police reporter and | pation of all peoples. He who will restore ot a mm Pay, i Ange Te | of gh a tala of age ar igh to conten | 46008 af the people commited to hs oar, | delnstor of tho everyday vornee of low lf | Spain to her aefural onion among the ae slmout sabeldeds Shorten Ming that asetite. | Plate. We are to have negro members of and arrested the arm of the law where he | in England, and bis graphic sketches just bit | tions will receive the world’s praise. manos WAY THEATRE, Brosdway, corner of Broome | mout bad beon made at Washington The Indians have Congress, and, as some radicals Gay,@ negro found it harming the people it was intended the fancy of our people and mado him quite s { —Vinaunies, : been admitted to the rights and privileges of citizenship. | Vice-President, Yes, it is possible that within | © Protect. Creditors, however, transferred | lion among us, to the exclusion of religious Progress of the Paraguayan War. \ RAENOH THRATRE, Fourteen!) aces, aud Sisid ave A peeves “ eolare Callao a free port is being can- | a fow yoars we may have @ negro in the seat ~~ claims, so that the same debts ae nad Pabbige led fighters, distinguished mur- : be oan from Rio Janeiro to August I wpe car TT oe en worably. : once filled by Washington. Lool at the | Ward for collection, not on the authority of | derers, repudiation and other exciting topics. | do not give a very hopeful ploture of the Bra« ie teu acta Ls on i cpgdanemeaie rate the political revolution has a. on | State courts only, bat on the authority of the | Upon the eve of bis second advent in 1867 it | zilian attempt to reduce Paraguay to terms. PoRIRTH AVENUE THEATRE, tations in expectancy of a rise in .the raerixets on the | the last two yoars we should not be surprised | Courts of the United States, The officers, how- | may be well to recall the doings of 1842, in | The attack which was to be made upon the ‘ arrival of the Spanish fleet, The most terride “ morther”” | to see a nogro elected Vice-President, and, in | °Ver, Were not permitted to enforce these de- order that Americans may reflect how small | left flank of the Paraguayan position appears to meet with as much resistance as that which the Seer oF NDR, ® that had visited the bay since 1851 ocurred in the last | the’event of the President dying, he would be- | °Tes, though issued from a court held in North | was tho profit resulting from the Dickens din- Carolina by Judge Chase, the same dignitary | ners, Pickwick parades, Bor balls and Dick | allies have been making for two years in front. a, Piis-eighth ang | Week of July, and lasted for three days. Fifty lives are | oome President, What a6] Ste ae spectacle for the le Ouse" FOrULas GARpae. Mnimaene se Mave bebe lest-emonn the qrewe SEVEN To oi ae counter th. onl Peopl who had refused to hold a court in Virginia | Swiveller soirées by which his first visit was | The change of commanders from Genoral and several persons in the streets were washed away. 8 y template! This a No American vessels wore injured, but the Nyack end | mighty republic ‘to become Africanized! | for the trial of Jef Davis because Virginia signalized. Mitre to the Marques de Caxias has Wateree drifted considerably, the latter losing an | Whether the negro should reach that eminence | ¥@° under military rule. Judge Chase appa- Dickens visits us at the present time, we | nothing but some new phases of military Snchor. The allied squadron was awaiting the arrival | or not at present, he will atill hold the rently found North Carolina in a different con- | are told, not for the purpose of: lampoon- | folly. The terrible rains which have almost ef their Spanish ists, and work aly pro- piven balance | or sates bis ave jork was rapidly p of power, and, as @ consequence, virtually dition. Ho held his court ; issued his decree ; | ing our national characteristics, or trading | drowned out the allied troops have still more Advices from Central America come by way of | Vern the country. Whocan look at this mass the military power interfered with its exeou- | upon our toadyiam, but in order to make | reduced their chances of a stccessful move: Panama, and are dated at the latter place, August 20, | of ignorance—at the millions of poor creatures | tion, and the commander was “relieved ;” and | money out of his public readings. It is| ment. It is reported that the Brazilians, with Guatemala was quiet. In Sam Salvador nothing had | who hardly know their right hi 1 now a formidable docament gives the offloial | just ible that he may seek also some | an effective force of 27,000 mon, awalt the ar ly ‘ight hand from their y f ian more important than « religious revival by | toft being placed ia a position to govern this view of the case, dwells on the peculiarna- | new hints for the characters in future | rival of 6,000 Argentine troops to reinforce a ai money Me ues nite. epi foeretaay proud republio without shuddering at the con- | ‘re of constitutional government, emphasizes | novels, his old run being pretty thoroughly ex- thom, before they make their final attack. It | ried, Cholera was on the decrease in Nicaragua, The | Sequences? Yet this is what we are fast ap- the necessity of an independont judiciary, hints | hausted. We do not see how he is to be aided | is not @ certainty that the Argentine troops « Costa Rican Congress closed its seasion on the 29th of | proaching under tho reconstruction policy of that Major General Sickles has been guilty of | in this direction; for our police reports here | will make their appearance again. They, some oe paciionpes sats ee ome a ss Congrasa and the military dictatorships at the oa pubes and even intimates Lape = oe the same as those from wane has | time coos ew ie ape laser op ee CORTORDORARNS, G5, 8 OW: OXORNE DANCE. Fath, itary interference with the civil power taken his main inspirations at home. 'e can | ment, and, being heartily it themselves, Baca sale a Act pase cam tee ~Atauch a crisis it is the duty of the Presl-| treason. Thus we come upon the remarkable ! show him his own Bill Sykes, and Nancy, and | withdrew their troops. Their own internal gave President Starea two hours to tuswer, The truth dent to do all ho cau constitutionally and | fact that General Sickles, @ distinguished sol- | Charley Bates, and the Dodger, at the Tombs | revolution, and a natural hatred agains! of the story is not vouched for. Ho a’so says that two | legally to neutralize this growing negro power. | dier of the Union, may be guilty of that in- | every night and morning, and he will find broad | Brazil, have practically ended the alliance. hundred liberal officers bave been thrown into prison | Let him give as much power as he can to the | famous crime of which it is held that Jeff | caricatures enough all around him while here | The war is doubtless rapidly drawing to ® peer Meet cen ahnas ce adaee ea white poople of the South to hold in check | Davis 1s innocent, to fill up another budget of “Amerivan Notes.” } close, leaving unsettled the questions which tolligent ica Gascins aireroliliantalatucts pose ‘) the mass of negro ignorance which threatens All this argument of the Assistant Attorney | But we doubt whether he will discover any | gave it origin. Tn the Conatatioal Convention lat oventag a meme. | 40 ‘avolv9 the country in dlagrace end trouble. | General is an old story, and has boon gone | new fold for bis roportorial genit, the most Aciantio Malle and Steamers. rial from the Citizens’ Association was presented, em- | He has been deprived of some ot power, | over several times before. The ultimate ques- | We c@9 do for him is to promise him large au- : bracing a plan for the goverament of New York city. | but ho can still bring up @ numerous body of tion upon which it all oat is eae ara aa dionces at his readings, and a purse of two} By the recent postal convention betwen the ‘The article on the powers and duties of the Legislature | {i tolligent white citi: bal: i hundred and fift d dolla: there- | United States and Great Britain the postage om igent wl tizens a8 a balance against | gtatus of the cee unt an iy thousand dollars or e- was considered in Committee of the Whole until it w the Southern communities—whether a iemhias ackninaies vas present preheat one Degro ignorance, by an amnesty proclamation | the former States are. now States or not, and abouts to oarry out of the country with him letters between tha two countries on and after Vontion adjourned. Y ant by a liberal administration of the recon- | consequently what law is paramount within | When he goes back to England. If he will be bast ene e: eer bot ‘The radical programme for another President, it is | 8iruction acts of Congress, Amnesty sbould | their limits, For atime this dispute seemod | devote a portion of this sum on his return | half, oro half-ounce letter or bess weight, fald, bas been decided upon. It issimply to retura | have been declared long ago. There has beon | to he a mere matter of political adtiphjale: home to the publication of a sequel to his | Now costing twenty-four cents, will be carried. sages 0 the ne : pees cr Camerca, make him | nothing in the conduct of the Southerners to | but the presont attitude of the judiciary, and | “Amerioan Notes,” showing that toadyism is not | for twelve—a reduction which will RS tease i . mpeach an ’ i Tenure DrasatJetaaee, whetacyon te ie sere: | PLCVEM! Hk On the whole, they have been | tho possible collision of authorities deriving | deed In the United State, and that there are | and in » short me, more, them doles th aos tary of War becomes President. pore and baie sh it may ton power from elther side of the question, make rind — living now bigs side of the Sree aa path ly 'beesen Wk The political campaign in Massachusotts is asuumiag | too lats now, ere are, wever, t | its soluti: i 7 antic as there were a qua: of @ century definite shape, and will be betwoen the liquor reasons for an amnesty proclamation than aes spin ates SN ago, no one will begru him the money he | Irish fellow citizens and immigrants and their " a thet eh Pay pethy ‘ lately hostile section has no such political ie ” For the benefit of komplleh elr antegoalsts, independent of party | those relating to the people of tho South. | existence as puts it within tho sphere of the will make. friends on the “ould sod. ‘or | ve ni The State election comes off in Vorwent toxtay ana | 1208 We have noticed. Tho North, the whole | oonstitution, then the reconstruction law is : our commercial people, however, there is aa an iatifernia'toahorrow: 4 F country, patriotism and the future of this grand paramount, the military power supreme, and Genoral Hancock’s Ropert on Indian Afmairs. | other change which might be made, of vastly ‘The St. Louis radicals propose a reception to Genoral | republic demand that we shall not be placed | sickles ard right, If, on tho other band, the oe bind report which we deine ; pe greater importance ‘oar pe epeniyinepe saad Sheridan, Ate meeting last night General Schur: undor @ negro government. Let not the Presi- loates a very uncertain condition of | age, and that is a change from two mail steam- Governor Fletcher made speechos, Throughout dont hesitate, Be issue the amncsty pails: pempteyh woogeten eee Indian affairs. There are several tribes which | ers per week from each side to three, for the whole proceedings (s was remariced tha! Graut’s aame | 4; ‘ 0 e the only survivor from the wreck of the little schooner | a5 not mentioned tion at once. It will be an important flank } commander cannot be sustained. But if the oegeivomrend cn pemapihenal syst tegen ara ba mext; Ss eae - ae we ne Youn ilbabe The Turkish government notifies forelgn | Gengral Sheridan received. his ofoial order traus- | MOVeMeNt upon the orazy and destructive | constitution isthe supreme law, how comes om posed ly mail steamer each way. ponte that je war in Candia is atan end. Anamnesty | rerring nim to the command of the Department of the | Tadicals, and the poople will sustain him in| General Sickles there anyhow? Whereabouts of peace, The report shows that the Cheyenne | weekly line, in conjunction with the cable, an + Absa peg insurgents, and the Porte promises many | wiscouri yesterday, and will Loave imusediately on the | the act. in th fitation fe th thority f and Sioux tribes are more d.sposed to wage | would be a great gain to mercantile men and ni gorge Pinay hac arrival of Genoral Grifu, who wil! command in the Se ee pe eta caps agate ga hog 'y for | war than to treat with our Commissioners. | the Post Office Depariment on both sides, com Legislative Xnterference with Municipal | %tting up is pegs Governor over & 80ve- | ao Apache and Comanche tribes are also | sidering the intimate, extonsive and constently Rights. reign State jus, at the shortest step that ether, i i - x The action of our State Legislature within | can be taken in this argument one stumbles promiees ee eel ae ee ae pee he — -pek and Py gens yee sir a the past few yoara has been of a cbaraocter that | against that great fact, the war and the laws it 3 Console closed at Of 11-16 for money in London. | yiry district until the arrival of Genera! Hancock, Five-twontios wore at 73% in Londow, and at 7734 10 | qhore wore thirty intermenta of yellow fever casos in bundred millions of dollars before the Indians . indicates a design to destroy the franchises, the | has made necessary, and we see the absurdity ov be whipped into « treaty. The ake Great Britain and Ireland. Vrankfort, ‘ New Orleans yestorday, among thom deing the remaius Tho Liverpool cotton market closed firm, with mid- | orgom King, the puglllat, and Lieutenant McCormick, of vested rights and privileges, belonging to our | of attempting to bolster acts of doubtful pro- | », . t few thousand men, who are completely lost in municipal oorporations, The queétion arises 4 priety by arguments drawn from the state of a ~ ly JAMES CORDON BENNETT, JR. MANAGER, t #BROADWAY AND ANN STREET. All business or news letters and telegraphic despatches ‘Bast be addressed Naw York Hanatn, Letter and packages should be properly sealed. Rejected communications will not be returned, Te No. 246 AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING, 2 and 4 West Twenty. ica FoR Goon Nature, klya.—Casre RRACE GARDEN, Thi yninth streets.—Tamo JoNCeRTS, commencing at 8 THBATRE COMIQUE, S14 Broadway, opposite La RY’ Nicholas Hotel.—Waurs, Corros ax» SuaRPLey’s MIXSTREL ‘amp Vaniaty Comsmarion iy 4 Ligut anp Pusasing SevresralnansT—Tus fF MILUINERS, ( QRIFFIN & CHRISTY'S MINSTRE! . wapaud Pwerty tod sect —memiorias Bowes. Baccass Dance, Bostaigcas, &c.—Tae Mupicat Srupext. ‘ ae (SAN FRANCISCO MINSTRELS, 58 B: ’ @ Metropolitan Hotel—In taza Etmios ip. Fe reg Gorn Graivo, ‘Dancing “sno” Bttienaa tiene Rawen rxow Lowa BRaxce, ERLLY & LEOW'S MINBT! SELLY & LEON'S MINSTRELS, 190 Broadway, oppo. eg New. duate ‘Bonan Dances 7 URLESQUE! JOUTHERN FLIRTATIONS— Kitt Trovatons. is ‘_ TOMY PASTOR'S OPERA HOUSE, 91 Bowery.—Cowt Wocatanm, Neono Mixstnscay, Boruesques. Bate Diver, Mitt; o8, Tas First Suot ror see \ SIGHT AVENUE OPE treet and Eighth avenue. Pe —SINGING, DAXcine, inna InvoRmawon, ' RUTLER'S AMERICAN THEATRE, 472 Broadway.— atuet, Vance, Pantomime, Buscesqurs, Eruiorian, Pome ann MENTAL Vocatiems, &c.—Tur Fewaus Sry, , corner Thirty-fourth Kass’ Combination Ua axy Pantouinn, | HOOLEY'S OPERA HOUSE, Brooklya.—Eraoriax rere w9Y, Battaps awd Burcesgues.—lur Biack Bui OF ANATOMY, Seruxce axp History axp Pourracaxic Ix. Open from 8 A, SHEET. Now York, Tuesday. Soptember 3, 1867, THE NUWS. EUROPE. Yue uews report by the Atlantic Cable is dated yeater- ay evening, September 2. ‘The Knogtish government has issued a “Blue Book” containing the international oficial correspondence on the subject of the Alabama claims, Tho latest despatch, as alroady announced, embraces a proposition from the British Cabinet to refer al! the olaims—American against Gangland and English against the United States—to a commission of arbitration, A man named Armstrong Ming uplands at 10\¢d, Breadstufls and provisions un- | ing ironclad Mahaska. he ‘The jury inthe Lansingburg abortion case yesterday rendered a verdict implicating Mra Pamelia M. Wagor and Jon Henry in the orlme of murdering Caroline Hubbard, by an attempt at abortion upon ber person. AB overseer, named Bradley, on « ptantatioa near Marion, Ark., recently atiompled to chastise a negro; Y them, fired {nto the the Board of Councilmen mot yesterday and adopted pall angry ee ae ts, and had the resolution directing the Hudson River Railroad Com- | necroes arrested. In the court room one of the negroes pany to discontinue the practice of keeping care loaded | cstieg nim a liar several times, when he strack bim, prith cattle and swine on Eleventh avenue, The Mayor | ang was beset by a smali mob of blacks, Bradley agaia etosd « resolution passed by the Common Council au- | nog resort to hia pistol, and killed two of them, whore- Morizing the Second Avenue Railroad Company to x- | upon he fled, and has not been hoard of since, Yond their tracks to Sixty-third street, om the ground ‘A young man named Carom Carr was killed near Ahgt such a privilege was contrary to an oxpress act of | Boonton, N. J., on Saturday night, by a stab with a | over thelr vested franchises, then and from | on points on which the common sense of the Vue Legisiatare, His Honor the Mayor will present ® | knit, Before dying he charged a man named John | that moment liberty is im abeyance and the | people is sure to he against him, he has moved stand of colors to the Fifty-fifth regiment, New York | nespsey with the murder, Dompscy was afterwards oun of ten .cltintn te In feudal | in vain. ‘Sate National Guard, at the City Hall on Friday next, at | averted under ciroumstances strongly indicative of his | Tee hs waly eee ae ane ae ae a aint Ry the steamship City of Boston, ai this port yester- Aay, we received our special mail telograme, written cor- respondenee and European files, embracing very inter- esting details of our cable daspatches to the 224 of Au- nat THE CITY. the change. We would create no unnecessary | intended to make an issue with Congress on 4 ited States troops to carry it alarm, hut calm reflection on the subject im- | its authority to set up military districts, it = ve 7 pels the enunciation of the,idea, that whenever | might as well dispute any result of the war. to one Indian. The government evidently fails to recognize | nsmes of relatives, nearly two thousand are ladies. Since the fact that our system of managing the In- | the 10th of August the “order bores" have been greatiy dians has at length become inapplicable, | ‘ucressed. | Thess are designed te faciiltate the transmis Civilization, with all its attendant public im- | cannot provements, has now left the Indian no hope government especially, permit elther the State | broader or newer departure than this, if he or the federal power to exeroise an authority | only revives his old bickering with Congrass ——— H : af a a bei Fen o'ctook. it, The difficulty between the two issaid to have of a retreat free trom contact with the | of five cents, one to the order ' A wass meeting of the butchers of this city and - ewe old pene | they were seen together on the cipality. The emperor or the king might issue ee ee Sun ae We may fight the Indians ten Titiccnaue gory Segre and coca 3 Brooklyn was held yesterday afternoon, for the purpose | signe of yhe murder, both far gone in liquor. his ediots for the government of the State at | There is # very fair prospect that the revon- and the fesult will leave the necessities | D2” or ia pam often bes, on its ‘at Astor of tatig oon in Grimm _ ore rset Weave files from Bermuda dated on the 20hof | Jarge; but any special intervention—any | *tuction of the rebel States and their readmis- poe wire oem We ry place ee ummoditely deageiced to ony patt of Board ; ¢ driving oF slau; fe eame. may chec reading room, which originally pet too heme Se aor ASI Paty Reishi oe order affecting manioipal rights and in- | Sion into Congress will tavolve ton, twenty or tended to have closed for ‘one week only, 1s not yet progress of our Western maroh, add hundreds of millions to our public debt, and go intoa barbarous method of killing on both sides, and find the condition of things at the end of that time unaltered. The Indian, by primary right, is entitled to some consideration by those who live in contact with him. If he finds that war Governor West Point. ton yesterday reviewed the cadets at | 4) oats was eure to meet with the condemna- | thirty Senators and Representatives of African tion of the masses, When the will of the em- | descent, pure and mixed. Greeley professes Amuesty Pro- | peror became law, when the imperial edict to be delighted at the prospect, under the im- cla was made the rule by whioh the people should | Pression that theso African gentlemen will be Our despatches from Washington inform us | be governed, the simple enunciation of muni. | of the calibre, and will possess all the modern that the President contemplates issuing a pro- | olpal privileges ofttimes checked the power of | improvements of the black Douglass, the clamation of amnesty to the South. It appears, | imperialism. The Apostle Paul prided him- | orator, and Downing, the oysterman. There eral parties present, a committees was appointed to em- ploy legal counsel to bring the watier to an saue before the courts, The last instalment of the $4,000 stake, for which row at was deposited by th this city yesterday. | ©, M. Medanich, alias Jose Bonaido, a young Span- tard, who has bean sought after by Mexican detect!ros, The President’s Forthcor the ‘office in Liberty street, whiob, since on ion $209,000 na : 7 too, to be a ral tion pays him better than peace, he will do as we : a engi ee > hea oraeail: eid Fa in fact, that a draft of such # proclamation bas } selfon being a “Roman oitlzen”’—not of the | 8PPOaT, general dispositionamong | Tia ao under. the i ir | gation, bas been ereatiy en ‘and improved, there is been eubmitted to the Cabinet. At the same | empire especially, but of the olty. Back in the | the Southern blacks, in coming into tho exer. time both the President and Cabinet are reti- | gloom of the Gorman forest the muntclpal prin- | cise of their newly granted poe privileges, cent as to the precise terms of this document | olple was born. Ages afterward it found its | te “put their beat foot foremost,” in order to ‘and the discussion upon it. Mr. Johnson seems | way to Britala’s shores, and the sturdy barons | Prove to their white brethren, particularly of to have the impreasion that this would be a | of those days wrang Ilberty from a reluctant | the North, that the Southern negro, though good stroke of policy. Has ho the firmness to | monaroh—liberty as belonging to the munici- just relieved from the trammels bed slavery, is carry it out? Are any of bis Cabinet timid | pal corporations. The Magna Charta came in reality “® man and e brother,” and not the about the consequences? Do they advise him | thence. The principal of trial by jury itself capricious and credulous semi-barbarian of setting aside a tion of territory for him, to pursue a different course? Hesitation and | was one of those which, in the progress of ages, Hayti or Jamaica, nor the stupid, superstitious chant Wali to We Sood of immigesllad, ves secrecy appear to indicate want of nerve some- | had been transmitted from the Justinian era to cannibal of Equatorial Africa. tect it from the white settler, it fe that where, We want, and the public wants, light | the days of King John. These were, from the What the undiluted African is, “dressed in | 1, should try to protect it ie gage FM gerade . em an ward yesterday in the Supreme Court in the care of | upon this important matter. first, of municipal origin, and pertained | @ little brief authority,” we know from the is that Indien appropriation bills, and agents Reyer samed ogee pti on ocueiia andrew Rhode ve. Julia Rhude. Whatever opposition or hesitation there may | emphatically to the cltizen—to him who from | bloody festivals of his Sublime Highness, the to absorb them, reservations and white men to | sn A geroy' " wen fy votes, when, pee ‘The further bearing of the motiou for tue disevarge | he on the part of his advisers, ifsuch there be, | birth was vested with municipal rights that | unapproachable King of Dahomey. But it | settte them, United States troops and Indians attempted to chastise bi on habeas corpus of Thomcs Kealey, who is acoused of | .avieo the Prosident to issue the amnesty | not even the edict of the emperor could | appears that in his peculiar notions of that others interfered, wae Brandley crew « pistol and reg, Nerday and brought before Justice Ledwith, sixty he finds that the gov t him thousand dollars in gold bars was found in his posses- sion, and it malieged by the detectives that the rest of ¢he money is ‘n the possession of Lis accomplices, rome of whom aro on their way to this city, aud another, « woman, is on ber way to Europe, It is also sald that dhe bars are coppor, covered witl: a thia coating of gold, to deceive tho unwary. ‘The wotion at Supreme Couri, Chambers, for the pay- sweat of extra exponditures in the case of Charlotio ‘Wynne va. Dr. Vinton, guardian, which was reported in the Hanacu of Friday last, bas been granted. A deoree of divorce was granted by Mr. Justice Bar- partment, and that, before it reaches him throngh the numerous hands that manipulate it, it is reduced toa red blanket and a string trouble, If he finds that the United States, in : j i r ropa hd Neopesarbtne seca Fariy cneshai proclamation forthwith. It is the trump card | overrule. When the Roman people, inflated | “divinity which hedges ina king” his negro sede sie tea, Go oad Genta a kulling & ranges! eagag tal asien aia ond Sng, tn consequence of the absence of Judge Barbour, | in his hand. The game has been going against | with the power of the empire, slackened their | Majesty of Abyssinia is quite up to the standard ‘The Indigh and the white man must now live p aenog are pth . tated Dofore whom the case came up on Friday last, him for some time past, but if he plays this | watchfulness over the loglslation pertaining to | of his worthy brother of the Westera coast. In in contact and occupy the whole country in attack on him were irresedseand es “Sietay were The French steamer Themis and the ironclad Oue0- | cag poldly and skilfally he may turn it in his | the clty proper, then and {from that moment | a recent letter from an Abyssinian correspond | . mon with all its people. one negro Aervea Bradley a lier several times, waen BO; aga salied yertertay for France. : favor. At all ovents, reason, sound policy, hu- | the decay of thetr gigantic Imperialism may be | ent of the London Times it is stated that all we oF pero ree ee ee sweat ity and the good of the country, call upon | dated. Added to intestine wars came the | the European workmen in that delectable ‘The Spanish R. . mR pate mont ascuritios were frm, Gold closed at 141i 8). manity and the ry, po I. 18 iilng, tno, parvous, 4 country are held as prisoners, and liable to be | Notwithstanding the fact that Spain is in sacrificed by the King at any moment; that | Burope, and that Buropo is permeated by tele- ture to say that nine-tenths of the people of | proud mistress of the nations, had taken the | this amiable African “has heen playing the | graphs and railroads, it is extremely difficult, Wheat waa quiet but rm, Cora was scarce and higher, | ‘Be loyal States—all, in fact, but ® few | primary step in decadence. devil at Debra Tabor, patting women and | at any time, to get hold of a plece of reliable bat quiet, ahile onte wen Auli, avsetticd and ge, and de, | rabid radicals—would approve of @ The municipal rights portatuing to our most | children fu wax cloth and roasting them news from that country, We do know that tower, Pork was dall and a trifle easier, whilo beet, | broad and liberal declaration of am- | important cities have antedated the powers of | alive 3” that “the other day he butchered six | Spain is ins state of chronic discontent—she jard fod freight were wnobanged. Whiskey was moreac- | nosiy, embracing all rebels, except an in- | either State or federal government. Lord | hundred of his most faithfal soldiers because | has been in no othe state since the commence- Live, Naval stores wore moderately active, and petroleum | i sinoani number who have been guilty of | Baltimore, after having made his settlement in | their relations were in rebellion,” and that | ment of this contury—and that the government tmgood demand snd firm. hesuaheneyean An nt other crimes in addition to that of rebellion. | Maryland, applied to the crown for a charter, | “his fingers are itching to shed white men’s | of Queen Ienbel is and has long been eminently iy wanes. 30a ber = pond extras setiing | He bas nothing to fear except the hostility of | not for the colony especially, but for the city | blood.” But this is the unwashed negro, on | unpopular; but whether Spsin is now in a wat 1640. aite, prime 160. 0 16!/0., first quality 18340. | Congress, aud we think he neod not fear that. | which bears bis name. He obtained it, and | bis native sod. The blacks of our Southern state of dangerous insurrection, it is extremely Jc, ordinary 126, #1956, | 4 few ultra radicals might bluster about im- | the old vested rights of the Monamental City | States, through the cracible of slavery to the difficult, even with the help of telegraphic ro- Milos cows were dul) } rowciment, but the dominant party ts already | to-day are owing to this municipal charier. | white race, bave come out as fine gold com- | ports, to say. him to do so, whatever may be the consequences | whelming of the Northmen, and, even before the time of Alaric the Goth, Rome, the once ‘The markets were generally very quiet yesterday, but Abere were fow important changes in value. Coffee wat | for the time to himself personally. We ven- steady and firm, Cotton was du/l aud unchanged Oa *Change four wasin fair demand and shode firmer. Killed. . . (From the Evening Telegram, August 23.) ‘Mounos, N. ¥., Sept. 2, 1667, At balf-past ten o’clotk last might tne seven P.M. express train, Erie lina, from New York, was throwm’ & disarranged ewitely The locomotive was cormpletely npast; two care and the ameking cat smashed; the floor of the bag, ange car was driven through the swmoking car, tearing off the roof gad neadly the entire side, Miraculous te er cael vane divided on the question, and it would not dare | Boston is the legatee of the Plymouth colony. | pared with their savage pene mo ee > Naar rity = orsign Lora = pede bere Dut cuts aad bruises wore i ‘th a moderate do- | to defy public sentiment. Several of the lend- | Before Andros demanded the charter of Con- | And yet from the same civilizing influences o! 2] # ineurrection. rnd pene pemed Charles Sitios, of Eimira, wad maand, at 120, for extra, 10',0, a for prima, 100. «| ere of that party have been urging all along | necticut to be delivered up to him old Ply- | slavery in Jamaica (to say nothing of Hayti) | Rumors bave from time to time reached us of 10346. for ordinary and common, and THe. a 9 for | universal amnesty. The principal organ of the | mouth bad formed {te municipal corporation | we flad the descendants of the imported Afri- | his success. Bat what shape the insurrection simone hey erie ak oo unbaees Gomes radicals in this clty was, until lately, inces | and was in the fall enjoyment of tts city fran- | can, under the blessings of emancipation and | has aseumed, if it has assumed any, or whether rte im the leg and died profussty, The ov, oar was well Gilled with "fom pitehed themselves Through the wibdows, i i _ — " throne of Queen Isabel or the head of General 7 plete ‘the baggie cars being pl ‘Lambe ‘small supp! frm. W santly demanding it. Greeley bad amnesty on | chises, In New York—our own Manhatten ‘manhood suffrage,” rapidly relapsing into the | the tl , hhayor, the See TATE guaeeh$ica. 8 ie, pm mre the Bere and went 0 fat as to go bail for | the Dongan charter was jntonded to make | indolence, superstitions and barbarism of | Prim is most in danger, we are loft at ad Te, Momagen py ee eae ar, paoa at 40. 0 60., oxire lame at Sc., medium to good ot | Jo Davis, the greatest and worst rebel of all. | forever sacred the rights of this metropolis; | Congo, Have our Southern blacks, under their | to guess. what mystorioug agency their lives wore preserved. A train coming |: direction was 70.0 7Ke., and inferior at 6c. ate, Swine were io | Ho has iuenod round, It te true, since be seos | and eo {t has been throughout all our natfonal | subjectiop to the white race and the refining | Spain cannot remaia much longer in her sigealied feirefonaing to the wreck, A j pale demand end Sage edger vag egyeeds yt this would be a master stroke of policy on the | history. Oglethorpe at Savannab but fol- | influences of Chslgtianity, been advanced be- | present state, There is a depth of oo ert} passengers on, , vermin a tice 13. tor fat to boar? prise cor fet. | part ot Mr. Johnson. He is for universal am- | lowed the example of the Mynbeere at New | yond this danger of « relapse eee | ae Miety sad «: peel ee 1 Amsterdam. Oity governments — municipal | dafety bd With the whites ofthe South on | durance which may bo said ‘to be fiuzl, pe 363 beoves, 36 milch , if the radical party would proclaim it, 9, 4 a val ves, ne em gee ina aed a8 Per cot if the President o pe other party | corporations—wore the origin of Américan | a of anal in the political and social | Deeper misery or further endurance is sais comer stone of Ln pow Jamin hg ia ad swine, meatecawtene. should give it hgpnage he sees it would be a | Liberty. Lot the peoplo look to it tbat the | community there are reagone to be deawn | impossible. Such is foes condition of | 2 Yo miss ne Penns tee te cated Angus 96, Mooquars bas | POPOIAE ak iS governing principle of that liberty be not taken trom ur} of forlous doubts upon | Spain. She cannes much Geeper; she 3 is dndaaed ewtades trom We vesiing YY | Had ‘ee lnmiedied Ldaoola Lired bo would | from thom, otter br State or tedloral géwor. | thége questions, Row fanch gore i Gece tes- ! ononet ondare much longer, leh Im antural { sepdwiter ’

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