The New York Herald Newspaper, September 22, 1867, Page 4

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4 NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1867.—TRIPLE SHEET f dont and the probable thorough reaction at the North on T Ee | E BS) oO U i Fa | qnestion of negro saffrags, Many believe both coming event not recorded ia the ordinary di jar, I found this event to be a reception ball Goveruor Pease, on whose shoulders has lately been thrust the guberoatorial mantle, Kveotng cams, al with it burata of martial music from a band, and car riages. freighted with fair women rustling in silks, and officers, brltant in brass buttons a: epau- tetten «lt «owas altogether an officers’ The martial music soon turned to waltzes and tho tische and the redowa, and the old programme incident tot ting of youth and beruty on similar occastons was carried ont—that is to say, it was a good way be- yond the small hours when the party separated. The thermomoter was at ninety degrees nrenheit; but Notwithstanding the heat, which wag y counteracted by the abundant supply of home ice and the gena- ine champagne and homelier fluids, through which it great y dissem nated its cooling qvalities, the participants very successfully manufactured & night of tt, An agreeanle featnre was the absence of any stupid speech- making and proffering of threadbare toasts, All went away ploased—the Governor at the handsome reception tendered tum, the ladies at the handsome opportunity it afforded them to show off their charms and Jnery, and the gentlemen through thus being ennbied to display their haed-ome tiberality, as wellas appreciation and worship of the newly risen political star, Governor Pease, on whom { called the morning aftor the bail, I Ond to be a very agreeable, weil meaning and evitently a most earnest and hearty maa in ee, Born ia Connectiout, where he oe Arse iy COLOMBIA. SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALO. The Impon t of Menquora-E x Minister Sulgar and Consul Agudelo fudicted with Him—Their ishment—*os- overnment of thought that, even without exposing more of "s c Seoust a Mooqsere HILE. condemn im aad ons — ia walls: oninion ef ui eternity, And they did not wall to bart more than SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. T understand that the Peru Minister wil! soon | Th trength of Chi withdraw from the chilly simoaphere of Bogoté and | ne,.eauting ae oe Cee -Wetnneiat Proceed Estimates ferithe Coming Yeur—Ret p wnenes je Venezusla, to which republio ne WWalsow-| wilt ietere Comarens ated The (carn for, President has taken pines im the Varraraigo, August 17, 1667. several it only remains for the respective as- The only change in the military situation, as regards Semblies to make tho tiny and deel: the It, alliea decrease So far only Cauca and Bolivar are heard from, ‘he for: bas sepetieont'tyhia, isthe OF enette. mer for Eustorjio Salgar, late Minister at Washington, | ment and the revival of hopes that Spain does not resty we uy expeoted on the istnamue by next steamer, and | intend to renew hostilities oh this coast. Merchants r of rez, Salgar certainly not be President, “His record’ of the lat ervil | DAY® #uspended the transportation of goods from the Ta oE Mosquera is not very bright, as be is eaid to have Custom House to Santiago for storage, and busines te pep pamaeen « A Deaple a one Loe ~~ improving, but Bow long this state of things will exist w ploits jomatic lise heve n¢ better [nis reputation, The oaly reasoa why he was | 12 02 determined bY the talgligence which the next mam is because Moaqaera w: steamer may bring. The tenacity with which the M: country clings to the hope thas the Spaniards will met retura ts remarkable, and, to those wao have attentively ‘watched the progress of affairs, inexplicabie, I domes the necessary absolute majority of entertain the aligutest doubt Spanish fleet Prbaginn ts tea), Congress would have to elect a sie a haa soon in these and {Cal woud hare ben bie settnnanse inp the end of eppear waters, the govern. events have occurred too lato to benedt the South. ~~ ~ Others think the diacks will never bo allowea to vote Bw the former the most gloomy apprehensions of negro Reports of the Special Correspoad- , sremary are entertained, Registration is rapidiy | Grawing to a close, and the ropons thus far show be- eats of the Herald. | twoon forty and Mitty thousand negro majority, in some Gistriots this majority 18 ton to one against the whites, Wiil the President's action prevent the calamitous result THE RECENT ELECTION IN RICHMOND | °,40%0 ito seonbst “Gee ne do cnyuning? aro the vital questions of the white poople of ‘ i every Southern State, but especially those of South Fight in Fayetteville Between North Caro- | Carolina. A diderence of opinion also exists in reference 4 to the effect of the amnesty proclamation. Those who linians and Soldiers, eupposed it removed all disabilities or disqualifications in the exorcise of the rights of citizenship have applied for permission to register, but have been denied the priviloge Great Satisfaction wit! Gene | dy the voardsof registration, Conoral Canby's adminis- tration witli be marked by an infloxtbie regard for the eral Canby. law of Congres, anda total abstinence from all inter. ference with the courts of the diate or of the United VIRGINIA Staten Sofarhe has givon general aatiafaction, His ‘ withdrawal of military injerference in the case of Jgn- : ins, a freedman, convicted ia tne Stais dourt of murder, SBRCIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. sentenced to be hung, and respited three times by General Sickles, 1s considered a rebuke to the latter. a Jat | Next Presideacy=A Revolution Im Panama, Sopt. 11, 1867. The impeachment of Mosquera, his secretaries and other helpers is now undoubtedly oocapying the atten- tion of the Senate. The bili of accusation, signed on the 6th of August by the House of Representatives, commences ta the following words: — The Mouse of reaentatives, by virtue of the power ribsrepan sea crmaseronos of ochre ‘eet Steen emcitieraegeiet fee Siege Fis aagi has ee tvo functions, ‘Then follows a long list of charges against each of the above pamod individuals, Those against the Jadges and some of the Seorotarios are very light, referring only to thelr tacit acceptance of Mosquera’s illegalities, and will probably be thrown’ out by the Senate. The charges against Mosquera number twonty-three in all, and ® , + of te ema bis continuanss 39 oe oe | wee Chile, whi it affects to disbelieve of on the Giret of April (a very ap- | being pushed forward with all possible despatch-on the faa B ater incd to a single idea so in term, | fortifications, and guns are being rapidly mounted. Twe moat essentially oc! istic of Eastern bora 3, Thirty yeara’ life in Te: which, barring the war's int jon, be has de: Principally to the practice of law, bas not servid to eradicate the principles of his earlier teaching, and weeks ago the country was in » high fever of alarm, bat in now perfect serenity prevails, to be disturbed, probably Geanral Gentnenn, ant-onn therefore be shorter ROW, If | as seriously as before, by the arrival of the first foreign at the Polls— gain and allurem: f Gene: ernor Orr, exlonded to a freedman named Smart | 20 ther have the eaticomonts of gain and allurements Of } sis saeh many will berhape be put aside by the senate, of the Prosidency on his Lapressiouy and Conctusions—The Collecters | Chisholm, convicted dor of hie ‘ata part him from @what he believed to be right | @ arrival at Bogot: rg shou! ‘then can. | ™aila, Thearmy has been reduced almost peace ship—Health of John M. Botta. deaghter, This, sake rod comnsation son ts eee It was thi: comfdonce in the integrity of bw character | enough remain to condemn bim, He end tle prinoipal | not bo one! ap eererpy article of the | footing, The.national guard, whose De at aed eocrotarieg, will most likely be banished from the coun- uy. Felipe Zapata was elected “aceuserby the House, and, on his declining, Dr. Pablo Arosemens, from Panama, was.put in his place. The indictment for the secret treaty with Pora, of which { spoak at another place, wil! be separate from the general one. A fow days before the bill was approved Mosquera Ruicrxonn, Va, Sept, 1867, advocacy of a convention, is regarded «9 as indication ‘The Oyster law, as passed Sy une eat that the Govornor is ready to make another leap from if slature, WAS | the ‘‘ao party party” into the ranks of the redicaia. In found to be oppressive to persons engaged in that trade, | the case of Jenkins the blacks have manifested moro nad the tax was such that it prevented competition with | 'nterest. His associate, who was convicted with him, « died in prison, of consamption, but before hie death the oystermen of other States, Representations having | mao a confession, in presence of the officers of the been made to this effect to General Schofield, he issued | jail and tho clergyman ia attendance, that he was the an order modifying the law. This is quite an extensive | Murderer, exonorating Jenkins from anv partictoation Atad Su in the crime, Tha has caused a good deal of excite- snd proiitadie trade in Chia State, and affords am annual | ment among the freedmon, and somo few favor an at sed the people to elect him twice as G.veraor, ho last ran against Governor Throckmorton constitation Srphibiie-one pecan te hold that of- | tion and anti-democratic tendencies the Minister of War we deem successful then . eo perm geee ae in the chair bis election will be paternity Rep che os ales purpose he is now 0 at, | preparing & to aubmit to Congress, consists at present: crane none areantion ba bed vatten bane Remaised of Ofty-four thousand rank and file; of which ttree from good accounta, ng thoronghly si foarte thousand are artillery, eighteen thousand cavairy and place, Suppose, then, that Gutiérroz ts left ont of the | thirty-three thousand infantry. This force, however, te count, who will bo the chosen individual? The conser- . valives, who aro dalle guiniog ground, are in hopes that not the regular troops, but is a sort of ae keptine they may secure the next election for choir candidate, | Digh state of military drill and discipline. The roguiee fa wolt kno wo, get of the war, and had to flee to Mexico to eave his neck, He is.as unflinchingly Union. to-day, and if there 1s any person who feels more bitter and unforgiving to- wards rebels atill remaining disloyal I havo yet to find revenue of some millions, tompt at tescue, As the prisoner will have to be re- | Yim our, while to those who willingly and houestly con- | sent in his resignation as President. The document ts | Pedro J. Rerrio, the Governor of Antioquia; 4 rue, ‘ é 2 f quia; and this is | army amounts to but a few thousand troops; but the For (ho drat time in the history of this far famed eity, | sentenced, it is more probable that the Governor {oon thas allegiance, mm ane measaignmeetinest prada fall of tae phrases, but rather ridiowlous, as coming | not unlikely, for they will Concentrave all thelr -strangi, and Ge volunteer force ts scarcely leas dboliet and idate, the only acknowledged jer 4 from a man who is in prison on a charge of treason and other crimes. Conzress, of course, took no notioo of it, Every day almost brings to light some new and start- Mng piece of statosmanship of Mosquora's short but eventful administration, One of the darkest parts of his policy was bis singular conduct in the Spanish-Chilean war, After having given the most solemn pledges of remaining neutral, we found him mysteriously involved in the “Cayler”’ affair, an active correspondence was kept up between him aad Prado’s government; Poru- vian bonds were discovered tm Bogoté, and, lastly, an admiral of the Peruvian navy was sent up to get him out of prison, In former letters I have already hinted at some private understanding between the government of Pera and Mosquera, by which the latter, tor a consider- ation, lent his name and that of the republic whitch he rated over for farthering the Interests of the former in the diMculty with Spain, The cat has now been let out of the bag, and there is no need for disguising the simple fact that Mosquera, together with Salzar, his minister at Washington, aod Acudelo, the the nogroes have voted, and that filegally too, as is ia | Mill commute the punishmeat trom hanging to tmpri- contended. Tho question at issue, to be decided by the } I hava recently paid a vist@to Greenville, 8 C., whore public voice, was, should Richmond subscribe two mil- o pee ‘States Court, enna oe sd Bryan, ior a8 been in session more than five woe ‘ho Court ns, her quota, of the subscription to build the Chess | has heen occupied mach of that time ia tho crial peake and Ohio Raliroad’ Tt was contended the negroes | cases of violation of the Internal Revenue law, such as had no right to vote, not being property holders, and | distillation without Hconse, not keeping hooks snectty- also not belug qualified as registered votors; upon | WK, \h® quantity, Of whiakey dintied teens which grounds tho officers of the election refused to | last case on trial haa occupied five days, the def record their votes, until a telographic order from Gene- | ® Mr. Arnim being the proprictor of vinorar wor! ral Schofield, thon at Fortress Monroe, decided im favor | Augusteand at Hamburg, 8.0. The defendant » that he rectified some rior whiakey and m; of CuMeasa voter, It was amusing in the extreme to | into good Itquor, but that ho never distilled waiskev, witness t! eclat with which the sooty suffragans and therefore did not needa license. Ho called thia Savaded the sacred precincts of the polling booths | business clarifying. He also contends that ho made low to the infinite disrust of the Cavaliers of tbe first | Wines out of molasses for the purpose of convertung it families, They rushed to the poils en masse and enjoyed | !ato vinegar. Ex-Governor Perry, Lieutenant Governor tne citizenizing ae 10m of casting their first vote, as W. D. Porter, General G: , Genorai Easley and Vr. they did in the days of slavery the pleasures of. their | Th for the defence; United States District ‘Christmas holiday, and many and ludicrous were the T. Corbin, J. P, Road, State Solicitor, and expressions and remarks {et tall on this auspicious occa- | Mr. Eat peared for the prosecution. sion by the unsophisticated Sambo. It is safe to say that | General M. W, Geary, who fought go bravely for hie bat few of them knew what they were really voting for, State during the war is now one of the most earnest and and one swarthy sable citizen when asked “Are you for | thorough going Union men. Ho is @ lawyer of great the subsoftption, or against ?”” answered, “ Skription; l’se d eloquence as a dobater. Indeed the apect- dono gid Mr. Hupnicutt nuff skription al of eloquence dally exhibited at Greenville could and gencronsly disposed and more ready to give thom the hand of friendty co-operation, “How does the tone of popular sentiment as regards loyaity to che general government,”’ I saked bim, “com- pare cow with what it was before the war f'” “(Texas is just as ready now,” he replied, “for rebs!- Non as in 1851, if there was any hope of success, The views of the majority of she eo have undergone no change, It is true the lives of Union men and mon from the North are more secure than they have beea, but it isthe fearof federal bayonets that makes it so. The foulest of crimes have beea comm!tted here, and there has been a0 attempt to bring the guilty to punish. mon A hundred and more negroes bave been mar- dered and no one has been punished for it, Justice has not only been blind, but deaf and dumb, and.ali appeals to her have been in vain.’? “Bat you have some hepes,’’ I interrupted, “of an improvement on this state of thi though | coufers it atrikes me that you are drawing the picture too darkly." “The picture is not a bit overdrawa,’’ he saxwered; “bat there are gleams of hght show ng themselves, Wo are going to hi ®@ different set of judges and jurors, and Union men and negrocs are going to have for their rghta, [he work of regisiration is accom phat Its, Woe are going to ha can. soon, The vote, as I figure it out, will be 45,000 their party, M era was shrewd enongh to damage | ‘6 aiways ready for uso. This organization is being re- forever the ro) ion and influence which some of the | duced, but to What extent the Minister of Wer will pro. PeSotoe! conseraastoas edie pete pap an Loge pose to reform tho army remains to be developed, The son-in-law but political opponent, was yer 1 the | fortifications of Valparaiso are at last assuming a formide- er 4 na a bed Levy er leaner ble character. Noarly a hundred guns, most of them ef m ex! restoring im bis aced rank and talary, General Canal lost hia prowige pac Boe a fare tee Me oe Vy Pecetving {rom Mosqnera @ graut for building a road | tho lerista ore daily drilled in the use of heavy tried | ordnance. Some of tho practice with the large guns ie from ‘Taqurres to Barbacoas; the same trick was with General Posada, but with bad snoceas, as ane. very creditable, and although there are many grave ol to remark elsowhere. Posada, howove: and not ambitious. Berrio, therefora, is the ‘onty can- | defects in the construction of the batteries, euch as tae ft ee conere ney pater) i empierrd Be masonry where there should be earth, magazines of um- in #0 position 8 looati nik riends, by sending flerran to him with a fiatering let- | Substantial matorial looated in the exposes teeet- ter of reconciliation ; but Berrio declined the honor m a | tos, and very bad gun carriage foundations that are ver deciasive tone. Bosides, Berrio is an excellent | already break'ng up with target practice and seriously But the votes, owing to Mosquera’s skilful maniouta- | {terforing with the working of the guns, the defence ‘fons, will probably split among different candidates, | Promise to become suiliciently stroug by the time the and the fruit of this manwuvre will most likely be for | Spanish flect reaches tho Pacific to doter tho Spanish bus creat Se eee aa A eae or ine | admiral from attacking the city. Should he undertak ¢ erred hastens that no candidate has the absolute ma. | to bombard Valparaiso hewill suffer heavily, but there jor of votes, and Concross has to make a choice, Dr. bt if be desires he ld dostroy the city ina Murillo will probably be tho fortunate one, Fes | Hedachecbandittor elie f ” 168, 45.000 Union votes, and-40,000 nevro votes, very sbort timo, in spite of the batteries, by shelling the gwine to gib eny mo.”? Showing cove ll be @: lod by any bar im this State or the ae ¢ Guitérroz may, for their time, beable to keep the coun- af facta =the volnr's extreme ignorance aud Hum Uaton. Lee or eee oantom tad wal adopt tio kite | ve ae Porerinn. gororaneah, ned eitated the pabite | rPetGioomparaure. quletope Dat a eoen. as the com: | Somaastle, eteas ot seer rauit tne’ ey ee, to the Peruvian government, and violated the public trust reposed tn them and international good faith as well, The documents which I translate below, servatives gain the upper band, or even if the radicals | started by shells would 5 should return ec, there will be the boginning of | whirlwind, and would eave of the business parts m the end of th» +« on ited States of Colombia.” Tho re | butrafasand ashes. He would certainly lose one or two Public will fall into pieces; and, if I am not mistak vessels in accomplishing this, but it is absolntely impos. sible for the forts to prevent a fieet in this opon road. position, The latter gentleman had, however, advocated The people of Groenville district are the most thor. the subsoription both in his diminutve paper and in | OUebly reconstructed of any in tie State. Of the many uightly barangues, so that the majority of the negroes | Prosecutions by the government for ofences against the knew thoy were not to vote . and they would | /a¥s, there has heen but one acquittal by the jury. of constitution required by Con; a8 conditional to the State's readmission to the Union, When once the Btate is admitted back to the Union shore will be no dif fl. A igration will F . im ide of Unton | then ht. Hac the Great Mogul opposed it, they Judge Bryan bas gained many friends at Greenville, ‘ ae «fs fos of which I have recetved through a private channel, | Cauca will be the first to declare itself independent, would have been as unanim ” “4 tion,” | His decision, however, in reference to the invalidity of te’ contro! will speedily be in 80 example which will soon th by to the town if the naval co! lor is ee The mniaeuse #45 oat ous azainst the “‘akription. y Geonasanet Veta abe, Though no ‘nor fon of | ¢Xpose the whole thing, These documonts aro a report . ane ‘a 2 be a owed PY amikgny) poet from fring ma mand bya ty of whites even, | Payments made in Confederate money, has cauasd con- tvaving the blacks out of the question, and many whitea | Siderable consternation among those who purchased who were anxious for its success turned away with | Property or paid their debts in that carrency during the Joathing from the perspiring, sweltering mass of black | WT. humanity crowding, elbowing and pushing eagerly for. ‘The press fn the interfor of the State unanimously ward to the polls, as if for life and death, an aroma | ‘¢precate in the atrongest terms any revocation of arising, ander tho burning rays of a noonday’ sun, that General Sicl Order No, 10. The repeal of that order was neither agrocable nor much of an inducement to the | lading to the probable restoration, arrest and imprison- cavaliers to push im and vote. ment for debt at this time, they would be more ‘the observer of this first experiment In the African- | Tuinous to the country than Stevens’ mild confiscation. ‘zing process in Virgmmia cannot fail to be sadly im- @ prophet, I foreseo this result as ol as if it was written on yonder wail."” Two men who were prosent at the interview camo out with me. Said om them, “I see you were ratber diginclined to believe the Governor's statement about the present disloyalty of the people of Texas, but I tell you {tis ao, Twas eleven months in a dungeon in irons for my Union sentiments, and I know what Iam talking about, The rebels would to-day marder every Union man in the State if they dared to do it.” “Yes, d—n 'om, thoy’ve tried to murder me since the and an Indictment, drawn ap by the Committee on Viola- tion of the Constitution and Laws of the House of Rep- rosentatives at Bogotd, which will undoubtediy be read in the United States with some interest, especially with regard to Genoral Salgar, who, on his leaving Washing. ton, received such a eulogy from Mr, Johnson. I need hardly moation that the whole scheme by which Colom - bia was to be draggod into the squabble between Spain question of time. allied squadron ig still waiting for something to “earn up.’ 6 Peruvian ships are at Coquimbo, and the (‘hilean vessels in this bay. The Clilean corvette PERU, Esmeralda is receiving new boilers, sent out from oped tas, Joie poem sola by Gi caltetas goversianes noud has just 80! e governmess. SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE WERALD. This steamet was formerly Keown in the United States Plan to Assassinate Prade—Arrests—Peruvian pe te Chareke® so oe a eae peed Teiee Revolutions—The Constitution Bill Passed— | have been expended on her in changing her from @ preased, and draw from the scene ominous and dire con- war, but Thave managed to eacape them thas far," re. | andthe South Amorican ropublios is now forever ex- to be Inaugurated Constitutional | merchant vessel into a man-of-war, and pow the papers clusions for xe furure of thi ola Commonwealth, ‘At TEXAS. marked the other gentleman. ploted, and ‘that Admiral Montero will meet with no a August 31; 1 ee natin ser eb tener miete, wens piace of voting for the Anglo-Saxons had a ‘thereat en- SPECIA CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALI sitdine niet one, herons the tine Reet WAT Yoh” | suoceat in Bogots ta bia exortidns for the “Gren | 44 oiy us full of of rovol ime o = ans ee ears: trance and ogress from thai of the Africans, Miseegon- HAL 8. ‘rhat'n my belief too,” kid the second one, Tho | Jenoral" The gallant Admiral, when last hoard of, was | sis Pre lbi aa panera fy ee anne eetimetes or he seeming: pent heveseme ation in this respect avoided, each keeping to hisown | New Hraunfela, and Thrift and Industry of | belief of these other two gentlemon I was prevented be- about four days from the capital, and a Colonel Espejo, ®sort of sullen, dogged silence on a few days, the principal being two colonels in | $11,605,002 43, and the estimated receipts show the German: rack Hd | ing enlightened upon, by some other gentlemen siep- | a cabiuet courier of the Peruvian who was on v8, pri persons ig two ia {20 000 and en ofultant leer o the othor, the frowning | eee ete on pelt | pisgrips etter wich’ the conversation ‘ook'a diffrent | his way to the cout, went up eho rivpr again with him. | chargo of two battalions IM this city and Callao, ‘The | wnioh is enrected te be covered Pegged tne blacks, showing too conclosi iy 3 4 8 pte Immigration—Desecrip! bg is set Meer cadena aiekanetin) I — emp peels mneele Jacob on boron Papers are very quiet in respect to it on account of the | last loan. ig the expenditures is included the pay haired, which only awaits au opportunity to burst | Public Hutldin a1 ean ne ovont has becu anticipated for some time, | ized dealings with & foreign goverament. without the | Goverament trying'to keep it secrot. Tho plan was to | Mono we facond, dividend pig acid a deadip hestiiit Durio, ee ee aa destruct had State Capitol to Governor Pease—Interview | there is unquestionably a very general dissatisfaction. | consent of Congross and even against the will of that | assassinate Prado on the 30th inst, during the coremony | the financial estimates under discussion, and is expected & ‘cavaity troop paraded tho streets eonetantly aad | With the New Governor, His Views of | His “‘addrese to the people of Texas,”’ which is boing | body and of the whole people were discovered in the | in honor of Santa Rosa, the patroness of the Peruvian | toi some rotrenctiment in the national ex| at each booth a company of the Texas Loyalty and Heglstration—Decapita- | Widely soaitered about in pampbist form, is regarded | archives at Bogots it was necessary that the Legislature Aig ae diures’' ‘The total amount of the. national debt of Ohite Tidumberenan aaounah : z ‘ther Oana! by bis frionds as avery able defence of his course as | of the country should take notice of the fact and make | ®rms, and then for the two ions in question | 1, a mooted question. The Minister of Finance announces NE : pect and determined mien, ther je—Reatstra- | into Governor, and an unanswerable refatation of the to declare in favor of Canseco, the former Vice Presi- | it as being $31,000,000, while Congressman. tho jou See such iilicie negotiations responsi- were statioged as 8 menace and a curb upon the dense for them. At County—Hoar ut volume of suppressed intense passion, that needed only A) eet ‘Seay A pretext to break forts im all ite fury. Virginia must Austin, August 26, 1867. room be radically recoustracted accord the pre- waded stage scribed pian if arvaction wt the North does hot gave | 4 4ay and a night's slow progress in a cro her, and Schotield’s bayonets will bristle at elections no | Coach from San Antonio, and over roads heavy from longer, nor wili the veteran Eleventh exercise such a | recent rains, brought mo safely, but in ao friendly mood potent influence on the black mob they once dispersed here when on the verge of ariot. Who then will keep toward stage travelling as an institution and in no physi- the peace between the two races? Who then will | cal condition to engage as principal ina prize fight, to control the destinios of this grand and noble | the capital of the State. Entering the great mosquito State? What will no the fate of the race now | prairie bounding San Antonio on the north, and crossing same time gress wished to le all unpleasant feeli which might result to the Peravian government out of this un- It was for this reason that did not that in the indictment they only ” business, although they mention ott connected with those negotiations; that instead of the word treaty they use that of agree- ment; and that they finally do not even treat that busi- noss in its international bearings. I bave it from good authority that one of tho stipulations of the secret treaty was that Mosquora should fortify Santa Martha and Car- dent. The one who was to commit the assasmnation, and | who unti! recently has been one of the leading of the administration, asserts in who is in prison now awaiting trial, isa Captain Varela,the Fo Reepenprmpemeereg ey mein hn rife =~ A yn eame who tried to take the corvette Union in Valparaiso | Both assertions have thoir defenders, and it 1s impossible Bay about four months ago, and whon he found he could | to decide which is correct. not succeed jumped overboard and swam ashore. Ho sae pn can separ rine — er | returned to this city after Castilla’s death, under the Capital event Snciaee ebslehing. preeemers pardon granted by Vongress. Tho conspiracy was de- | for debt, and another to release municipalities from thelg nounced by a man named Espinoza, who was to have responsibility to the national Executive. The first twe will probably be passed, but the passage of the other te taken part in it, but when he learned ef the proposed | doubtful, owing to the powerful opposition it will meet charge of having been “an impediment to the recon- struction of the State,” But it is certain that for the it at least he has been very offec:ually placed on Governor Peaso has set bim- pore goons panne 1@ disc! weds new da- ties, as far as his power goes, evinces a determina- tion to oust the old incumbents of office uhder bis pre- decessor and appoint new ones in their places. Ho has inted Dr M. C. Phillips, one of the late registers of the county, Secretary of State, and Mr. Perry, another register, his private secretary. Poor Scroggins, the col- ored Magee See ‘been Jeft out in the cold, which, con- PY exalted to @ position which already has shown i sntegrnicious Paflecte? “Tine sions cau’ answer | the Cibolo, now nearly dry of water, upon whose banks | *iderine bis Rtbiopian blood, i considered a0 aot of tie | ined re ae ee ee ee seri their pue. | @tassination ho denounced the whole plan, There is | with at the hands of the government party. It is aise those grave and solemn questions, The negro has | are located the little Post Ofice and hamlet of pe Oite Denis like, bas obliged to walk off | poses and to be prepared against thoir attacks as soon as | no doubt but that the country is all roady for another pao one pom ot the conabalians bak pe ngresie Srp the voted ia Virginia, and his freedom has beon sanctified by tho ba!lo.. Wil! he bear his new honors with becom. | Selma, we entered the German settlements st sag mod and humbleness? Will it prove a blessing | New Braunfels, oxtending in a compact neighborhood oracurse? Time will tell for sovoral miles and lining the wood on olther side »pointment of Goneral Joha f. Mulford as Col- lector of Internal Revenue, gives induite satisfaction to | With cottages, gardens and small farms, and altogether al! classes, oven the extreme radicals, who had two can- | showing a thrift and industry far surpassing anything oseee their re. heey iad appointment was not Thave seen in all my travels thus far in the State, Men, political one, and not made for political purposes, and is “ consequently regarded more ak a compromise betwoen | Women and children wore at work inthe fields. Nogro ns than anything else, So that the Presi- | laborers were rarely to be soon. It is this class of poo- t that pleases all parties. Mulford | pile that give wealth and prosperity to acountry—people Yor, and prior to the war Was | frogs), goif-reliant and not ashamed to work—people commenced with bie head under his arm, while Mr, Gurley, Adju- tant Goneral, saved himself from becoming a victim of the official guillotine by sending in his rosignation. As to these last two offices, ‘it is claimed they wore sine- cures any wav, there not being a single public school in the State and not a corporal’s guard of State militia Other decapi ‘ Columbia, or rather Mosquera, would hi open hostilities against them. If this is tru‘ to know how Loe oor would have fared in the conflict with the United States in which be necessarily wou'd have found bimself on account of the transit of the Isthmus, It is very probable that his intense dislike the Uni e4 States, (heir covernment and people, was 01 of his motives in this very foolish Intri; and blinded him as to tho fatal results it would have for him and his repuh'to. The report and bill of indictment relative to the secret treaty with Pera, and which is soparate from the acca- sation mentioned above, reads in translation as follows :— revolution, but the beginning will have to be, like all the | nents, prominont among whom is the present Minister of others, in Arequipa, for all plans in this city are sure to | the Interior and Foreign Affairs, Mr. Covarrubias. This be found out in time to prevent any chance of success, ee we enmamnet toad pon tn Arequipa is the keystone of all revolutions, and being | Congress to create the ineligibility of the revolution is sure to got a good headway before gov- poorer of bec bl a beter a more ernment can take any steps to stop it, It ts strange how ae soretanian ial inte: mate, increased the rights of Chiloan citizeme rich province, and at some distance from the capital, | ship, the right of assembly and the limitation of the infatuated these people are with a revolution, aud the perenge em fh at bind ae Leer ll The Lad moment one is started, how soon It gots to be the | Pin, “ailing for a national conven gpa agi fashion. Since 1853 no President but Castilla has servod oral favor, and wit r seaney’ ts aplintea te tee one i i 3 pursuits in Oswe ported id secessionista; * ; ‘ war, serving who considor “the nobility of ixbor, the long pedigree | while Judge Maby is related to ba poblicly ohn Sota ehaeeaa ethaioa tne pee stitution snd Lars | out his time, and he only succeeded in doing so by hard | of po binmetei of the Interior and tis frieada, rin the Third rogimemt of New ¥ of toil’? the richest inhertta that can be left to thom | that he would not enforce the law States | ring to the a'go private agreement concluded on the 28h of | fighting. The country, however, has been gotiing already commenced eattiog y remnern ds apneaeliagg last August between the President of the repaolic and the Peruvian government, tn virtue of which the war steamer Rayo (formerly Cuyler) was acquired in New York and brought to our porta, proceed to present their respective re- port and, separate y, the bill of Indictment to whteh said Agreement and I's execution have given rise. It appears from #iid documents that on the 28th of last August General Haideoindo Lopez, Secretary of War, and Froflan Largacha, Secretary of the ‘reasury and Pubic Credit, with express auth rization of the President of the repubil conclude a secret agreement with the Miotster of Peru, ( onel Manuel Freire, having for ita object, among others, the Acquisition of vessels which should oom} to our waters un der the Colombian flag, and as ships belonging to our navy, under certain stipaiations which, besi‘es Mewal, might have led to consequences wiileh thie, comm: ¥ frais from stating. I: also appears that the f: lowing Min- D abroad, Manuel Maris Mos His ba: rir = senveee at and who will transmit the same inheritance to their “Exchange, which position he | ehildron, ‘The scene was vastly different from the lazy, ¥ to ie eet ot se lounging white mon I have seen clsewhero, and the shift- mien and the confidence o that period he has made this | /©*8 negroes, who, under the pretence o labor, accom- where fortune has favored hint in bu plish bat little more than consume time and their President of an extensive tions, 1 the German ighl we by ihe mercantile community | through mites of vory beantifal country, a rolling open here. prairie, whose higher mountainous poaks were John M. Botts is reported in a very bad state of | once the lookouts of the Indiana There are no settle. ealth, his constitation shattered, and his condition hito- , 06 1 Mis friends are extremely ao. | ments for miles apart casionally a monster buck raised bis hugo antiors above the brow of a neigh- when they came in contact with the laws of t! The registration for this county has been completed with the following result:—Total number registered, 1,425, of which number 883 were colored, and 542 white, besides 293 rejected. No trouble attended the regtstra- tor n. Acourt martial, of which Brevet Major General Mc- Cook is President, has beon in session here for the past two months, and promises to be 1m session an equal time longer, The cases under trial are principally of privaves accused of desertion and minor offences, Companies B and ©, Sixth United States cavalry, under command of Brevet Brigadier General James Oaks, constitute the present garrison here. They have their headquarters in the old State arsenal. The present understanding is poorer and poorer after each revolution, until, as in the | the Chilean legatious at Brazil and Ecuador to the sec- present administration, the public Treasury exists only pe class, it was also proposed to do the same iu name. A little account of the different governments | {ne "ebreneniative to the United States and to Fern, bat mav be of interest to the many readers of the Heratp, | passed a bill senaing to Mexico an envoy of the highest In the year 1853 this country was governed by a good pens 4 on Psonnd —— ates ber news (ond re we e death of Max! jan, and indicates man, aman of good charactor and conciliating In bis | opinien of Chile respecting that savage murder. The principles; always ambitious of tho public welfare, and | J’atria or Valparaiso say behoviog that the happiness of the country consisted in ‘This shows that the representatives of the nation sbandance, Rivers of gold run through the Republic; | Sy"princen® torveinle’ mcording: to. last, a.com misery was them a thing unknowa—a plant that at | of the Old World governments were sertousty thinking of breaking off Uplomatic rel i War of Com fitted with t that time bad pot been discovered in the | the execution ef artaiion inn i taamenionaseaai both country; Echeniquo was turned out becauss in Chambers witbeus a dissenting voice, Reels thie the eolanan D yon! inters x boring hillock, but quickly rushed a I took my | that these companies are to be sent to Buffalo Springs, nera end General Fustorjic Salgur. and the Consul teneral : re wy ex. td of Congress alowe ‘The unanimous verdict of th NORTH CAROLINA. furore veet with the driver, and did not ure looking at | 02 te frontier, and thelr places filed witn infantry.’ | Branco Again | ut them lveacolunariy Put enid | using the pale parse he repreveated too, magaifeant | ina hac chat ie eat of the snitious Hanubug wae a ¥ oo eae tad ratificati f the aime were excha: the 2ist of last H , - ‘al necessary. ere in nota the far-spreading view before me, the clear sky and A CHANCE FOR THE NORTH TO CONTROL THE SOUTH. Wiiberhort and that in eonsequencs ofthe aame the steamer | NOt @ speadthrift, always took good care that his rae who navocate tne abolivion of the Cuyler turned out to be bought tn New York and brought to employés wero wi Paid, Castilla finished his term, pen feelings of bumapity have not out waters under the name or Rayo, after ceriain difficulties of the prisoner of Que and San Roman cam He was the first to make SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. feecy clouds casting their flitting shadows over the : x : nite in the public expondituro, for be well knew that | {hia painful impression will vanish when we consider thes landscape, the graceful waving of the tall grass along TO THE EDITOR OF THB HERALD. J . = whieh preven ed th ff the steamer from North « clliston Batwoon u roneas ges eldtore 4nd | ino prairie ridgor, tho sunlight glistoning in the valleys, | Never was.a better opportunity for one people to get | Amerioun waters had ed. Carough the Thee ot Tasintaiaey tek been eulag Gb Wes. Codeine Paes bo, more than execais pan the . the islands of timber scattered all about, the lines of | the control of another legitimacely, and to the benefit of Nad uct dituhon abode tuts inantialion te | He was just beginning to get things economically ar- | hi et anid a sph As Terror of the Citizens—Order Restore eg an opinion about this negotiation in tis | 78 eee. died, and’ last © A . ease naned againd Meni rma woe bas nome taternational relations, partly becanae they believe that this stant mountaina— each, than the Northern people now have to the title We me part belongs to the Department of Foreign Relations (always Rateron, N. C., Sept. 19, 1867. soft blue haze overshadowing the 30 wondrous fat pleasant sight to see how Pozet used the money, as if | country—a decree which wasexeeuted with unsparing rigor. Rulers who in the second half of the nineveath century and control of the Southern internal improvements. Information just received trom Fayetteville represents The vision of reserving the interference of Congress and the oficial re- | it was his own and not the country’s, After I am satis. ‘ The: l- jsonsibilty, in so far as they are concerned), ond partly be- ‘can have a share, orde an unarmed enemy to btsianghtered piace themselves the usually peaceable and orderly community thore to A feebly observant traveller, ho fs he in this y are insolvent institutions, and if Northern capt. ‘conus your comaatanen Goel wo aed thes too near law png 28 President, Mucpneet aa cee —_ = beyond the pale of Inw and aiveiention. talists would procure transfers of dobts on them, if they do not now bold debts, they could throw every one of cn be applied here, as far as tegaccusation goes for judicl- ary and penal logisiacion bas not yet been provided for in ses of violation of international law, accord'ng to number dent when one remembers tha: hi ve 000, The guano entorpriao at Vexitlones is eat eae t patrimony to the coma of the eocatey og | fAcorabiy, and hopes are enterained of geiting out vase a reward to the Spaniards for insulting the national quantities of good guano in astort time, The Chilcam bo io astate of great terror and alarm, Indeod, had the | oouptry who only looks out for the beautiful and plo- mooted war of races commenced in good earnest the | turesque, A streak of practical sonee carries the mind . . thom, probably, into bankruptcy, buy them at the nomi- een of the seventeenth ariicie of the constitution. Your quiet citizens of Fayetteville could not have experienced | farther, Ono sees in those millions of wild, uncultivated . counmittee, therefore fines feel te io sald | honor and violati ‘ational terri Pezot ernment bas commenced the sonstruction of custom fs greater degroo of confusion and constornation. Tt ap- | acres the future homes of millions of earnest, tolling | 24! Prices at which they would sell, at prices 90 low as Settee stan ieieraah anh te seperd weabteee! ‘Tee'| Petasenguanigny to his follewern, Geukiet siwupe t Eonsca, to be erected at Mexillvnes, and {e about to importance given by the l’:esident of the republic. to this negotiation was 60 great that when the House of Repre. sentatives tried to investigate the reasons of the Rayo's coming to our shores, the President did not bestate ® mo. ment to. commit the great illegality of dissulving Congress and holding this body up before the nation and the whole world as responsible for the crime of high treason and for to enable them to put them in complete order, and run them atsuch low rates as greatly to increase their re- venues, and from their profits to build or complete some lateral Iinos, which would render these railroads the most valuable property in the Union, The war has worn * One sees populous cities and villages springin, pears that on sntardey night last a party of wnrecon. Up tm these valleys; one 8008 coll aad one structed tar heels. having neither the foar of God im | peautiful villas crowning coe hu tops; one sees thelr hearts nor a just respect for the government | these roves filled with academies, eager under which they are permitted to live, in their PC. gee Cosy — han ha ioe ME ie of if he was warns out a pudiic charity, and always eg necessary appointmerts of custom tk! particu: cara, to commence with biti ‘which practice flnally’ opened the doors for hie tall, |» At a now iron mole ie to be constructed te Prado came in, and, contemplating the state of the pub- farilitate ‘ne loading and reloading of cargocs io was astounded. The public- Treasury a ‘The steamer that came yee th the other thing of @ name without an existence, ‘All dating Bie day discovered the remains of a genthaan floating as minds, met @ party of United States “Boys in Bine,”’ ry side; one hears the hum of indus- the very grave consequences of a | war. You know, | ministration he has been trying all to im wea, Tho body was elegantly dressed.and an attemps ata house of {li fame, All were quite boisterous, and re, gity pulsations of the steam | ‘hese roads out, and #0 reduced their profits as to render | the natwn knows. aud the whole word Kone or the | the pablic income and reduce ‘the expendivare, Due with | was made to holst the body on board forthe purpose of old campaigns, and the merits of respective generals | Press, the pul buge locomotive, and 1! id | it impossible for their prosent owners to repair them. | “C20 hwnioh was rather mysierious, asthe President bad | no result; (Or not succeeding in any of his undertakings | sscertaining, ie, 'y ; Dut tecomposition Dogan to be die: when an altercation ensued in When will this bi ‘ot | The tolls on them aro necessarily so high that few can | ¢yrmerly delared in an official document that she was bis | to meet the pablic oxpenditere the country has lost hope | Was 80 far advanced that the effort was aiandoned. It hope to li 0 i. There are United States | afford to employ them, and they consequently have ‘one of its constitutional | in him, and is now ready for bis successor, Who that is supposed that the unfortunate maa wis lost at sea D804 ‘ tong ; Stopeananer sha pe ggg We ggg me 4 pom officers living pow who once were stationed at the their own, while the ex-rebs | Dost where Chicago now is, and had to send a hundred were equally obstinate; diows soon followed; weapons miles for their mails, and only onee a month at ries, and soon a severe fight was | 4 to-day Chicag the centre of twenty-three rail- Inaugurated, reeuiti driving the sotdiers from the pom * A a SE Pa Ja she Sot house, ex-rebels then barricaded the house the Col a, 004 Badge) rising RE oy yon aaa a Cage omer? ag a yee tong ‘aap seeming a very castle in the air, is the lofty dome of for reinforcement, followed up dy the victorious | tbe “tate Capitol. Austin impresses me more favorably than I had antici- ond requiving | ceceiderable | pated. Tt is floely aituated, has about seven thousand charge, inhabitants and is rapidly increasing !a wealtt popu- tas pemantbe best lation, ‘Tbe streets are broad aud Jntersect at right array. ‘angles, those running parallel with the river being named ‘will be, and if he will do any better than Prado, isaqaes- | fom some steamer, Wot ian aued Robert H, Reddy has madé a repreeen- THE SCRUPULOUS MAYOR OF HEW YORK ‘A man nam 4 a8 a tation to Congress, offering to load ships with guano — the rase of seven reals a ton, which is a great [From the Albany Evening Journal, Sept. 16.) ‘The Legiglaturo last winter created a board o than what tt costs vernment at present, audit Congress bas been acy Deap anrtog the past the claims againnt the city of Neg York, and dy mother act the same board to antit the peek wap in respect to declaring the new consti and lo constitutional President. Long speeches claims agaipst the coonty of York, and provided Deen made on both sidés, and I’rado has been compensation for services rendered in both roughly handled by the opposition. Up Mayor Hoffman objccta to this as being dowble pay. Bus opposition have been strongest, but the Mayor has no euch scruples ja his own ease, He te great deal of argument, and co: ceives a salary of $7,500 as Mayor of city of New the question was put to vote and carried b} against 28, | York, and then for the simple service to the county & i be declared om the Sist } signing the ordinances of the Board of Supervisors he property, not only ex powers, but fulfilled ite duty got to be remisa in the clearing up of facts of the highest Importance, which the light of the parent. Without any neither credit nor en acta no of made Beats tgsnopeth arms se omer’ pri we improvement. The abolit! slavery bas i ions which the it ven to No. 2 of the Slat article of the constitution, partly in rati- fying it and ordering it to Le carried into effect without the Py yy ‘Congress, as stipulated in No. 11 of ¢ 49th article and No. 3 of the 64th article of the constitu. tion, And it ts further beyond doubt that the Ministers Plenipotentiary of the repnblic, Mannel Maria Mosquera and General Kustorjio Saigar, a8 also the Consul General Francisco Agudelo, hare ineurred grave responsibility for having lent themacives to carry out a secret treaty without previous approval of Congres, and without making an; Temonstrance against its illegality, as provided by crit £ 2f Hs 8 H nies in lands pervaded by them and connectin migration ‘along with |, where can be conceived a bimself at after the different kiads of timber uliar to | grander scheme of money making, more certain, more | jaw for such cases. go that the constitution é a the State, and , atreets seme after | speedy? It = pao that ee ae, has Such te ft Purely tnternat wast this grave Fogel = and ogo] eee, installed gets $5,000 more, besides $1,000 Fg oa a pode the pu rivers of the state, Codgress avenue, not looked into this matter, whic! legitimate and | which your commitice has taken, hey respectfu: ay. There {s no doubt but that some of esi the Sinking Fund. We shall ex; & reconnoitr rebels were found to be posted under | Me “tives vrei the head of whieh is situated the | will be equal both parties mit to your enlightened judgment. y. missioner of the Sioking Fu: To the House of Represeniatives. Booora, August 7, 1887. Manuel Suarez Fortoul, Manuel D. Camacho, Julian Her. made a good ag | out of it and sold their vot tre- of those gume. Mayor # mendous price, The countey pare it all, however, and | has on this question sinew ws poorer meanwhile, ¢ Minister of War deciares | he was Recorder of the city. He them drow from the Congress, in secret session, that from information the | city treasury, for sercices a» Rec 000 3 wernment had received, it was mot ag that the | missioner of tho “inking Fund. $1600: o» panish fleet would return to the Paci! TR ge Of Revision and Atsesaments, £1.00: lor t Chile te that the truce hae been als employed, $600; for oiler rent, $1.09 cover, with a view to atnbush him, which was soon de- p veloped by volleys (rom different directions, scattering py Pac however, to the adopted syste: hie forces and causing some confusion, He succeeded win a 4 el ot fo rallying them, when @ ‘ordered, and the | ® bil! and corresponding Tebela were routed. Pars and » number | Striking though miniatare re he 4 Washington and Penusy!van) omy were captured and lodged in Fort Macon | (1s) auy substantial bi provements of the South, especially of are now the great power of the State, Whoever trols them, and the land they can acquire with thom le they can throw for hundreds of miles their lines, will soon control the State; it can be much easier and tore effectually than by Confisca- these three members of the committee tement to the efiect that, as one of the bas made accused Individuals is related to him, be has not taken Duilt mainiy of stone, of y of th The whole city had by this time become alarmed by the hich there ie - r ‘ t ‘ao inexhi 5 ly worked, | tion or any otber odious and unconstitutional mode " th jous | whic it party bas to give the other six months’ | refond the monoys drawa (or extra sory rollers & Mtr owl and gt ve om —— in the vicinity. There are seven churches and Siteon | which has been A combination of afew cap- | 8°¥ Dart up the Yepers as aan gate teem Peartiet: notice before commencing active operations. feaued, 7 Faces hed faitly began. A scone of doutterarie nildren | schools of various grades, besides three for freedmen, | jtaliste could thas own all the internal improvements in ne debates on the resolution proposed, Congress has ordered ibat a company of competent ssa - reat Fe ceeetona could be | the latter being jointly taught by black teachers and | Virginia, and, subj them all to one will and one in- solution, of bill of indictment, as brought im by | engineers be appointed to survey and report on the pro- MELANCHOLY AFFAIR IN AST Aging of — “-. Colors, sexes am Pag itious, ir ‘ strong-minded Northern women, A short distance fro can tell Power they would exert and the | «6.4 committee, reads as follows: — ’ posed railroad to Jauja Once finished, that will be a ; om ey ior Ge Ss + eae b yi 4 the city area deaf and dumb asylum, a blind institati y they could e?. These improvements cannot po pa x valuabls improvemeat in the country, for being a very Two Young Ladies Borved to Death. Stilt more terrible. The c nent made the pame | Sn ‘neane asylum, all under State management, and | be placed oma useful footing by the States, certainly | The Moise Ot Referee lie remit ang General to. | Fch valley. the provisions which now have to be im- [From the} pt 16] Pam ey Tho commanding oicer, however, | tig pulldings are capacions and admirably adapted for | not by the ¥inte of Virginia; and the interess of all her To impeach before, the senate, tho Grand (enera! ihe | Ported from Chite wilt come from there, Senshi tne: bones fan Oa we tan TO eee cische, whe tgue beeen to rare, teough | Wheie respective eeca The Land, Treasury and Comp- | people, of all parties in the and they see {t, ie that | PAS. do Noman General Rudeoindo Loper aad Frotian | — Tho ice monopoly is to be sold again Mm a fow daya at { aringion, wo in 9 Noe Orden Sap Genera fearnet she meant, = e gan Co rouire, CBOUBA | te olier's offices are Ane stone buiidittgs; but the Capitol | these work: ar ona oad es nae ~~) ao Rargsedn, for perine conetadee & feetet eareee a at publie avetion, the basis of the sale being an offer fire, and, 82 to his two dangeter aed caly \ jut Very few of t tl intater Plenipotentiary of Peru, Colonel ont, 2 " e en, Abby ‘ od Lueg, t¥ “4 This not sated what the respective forces on both | i Dalit of Texan SD aero mode su, he were bah a Se —4 Peis on hein ol lat Ascent, without previous Insteae already received by government, 25,000 soles a year, children, Av : @ y, twenty-one, aides were during tha short but brisk engagement, and basement being occopied @ offic dividend, ase they y the phen, Slomn dress th wr having exchanged and Fait —_———_ perished {nt « mother slept in the lower Kisremarkable that nove of the Alricaus of the city | second story cont the balls of t TE TE ie eee eer ae Cates antiae | fea ee come to be carried out on the Sst o! i Part of the oe, andl the daagiiers ia achamber dle Involved, of Reprasentativ Suprem stock. Polity ag Ls ern ber, without previous approval of Congress, INTERNAL REVENUE INSTRUCTIONS. reotly over'ies \t elowen o'clock Mra, Keene wae oes qaiesepsnnmany ftory, the State Library and galleries of the Senate and | now, and incompetent stockholders the private shares, Leuet the Attorney General of the mation to onde? OP Sieamtomee tv tre innne ts he tiem ivesh caaieaae SrORain Houses, In the centre of the front has been erected @ | The cost of constructing them has been vastly beyond of the Ministers Plempotentiary of the republic, erin a thei chamber and screaming. She reshed immediatel SOUTH CAROLINA. monument to the heroes ‘On {t are in- | the cost, probably, of any other works in the world, and rin Mosquera and General Fustorjio, Y SPECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE HERALD. to the stairs, but the passage Way was go filled will the people are not able to use them, in consequence of the enormous tolls they must charge to keep them going. ‘Their stock sells generally for a cong, their securities are depreciated to the lowest mark and there is no prospect of improvement. Wagons are found much ebeaper for smoke, and the etairs themselves 8@ entirely on fire, that Burvat, Sept. % 1%} she could not get to ber childrep, She then ran to the 9 o'clock P, M. nearest asiehbors for help. Dr. Caderwood was the first The Commissioner of Internal Revenue has informed | to roach the burning house, He entered the house the Collector of this district, in answer toa number of through the chamber window 6y means of a ladder, and mee of t hem the words:—‘“Thermopyiw hed her at the Alamo bad none.”” The mem- martyr band, who fell im defending ‘will evor remain first in the recollection of the Consul General Francisco Agudelo, for having lent agreement; to which themeeires to fulfil and erecute said end he will receive copies of all the documents, Proposed by the united Committee on Violation of the Constiiution and Laws, ‘ MANUEL SUAREZ FORTOUD SAMAOH! nd the Northern Reaction= The President a i ; = Administra- | of overy true ny distances of one hundred miles, and the people along Urb tearched for the youn, 7, i inddrom, til his hair and face were The United On the occasion of my first visit to the Capitol it was | the railroad lines are retarning to that mode of trans. J, HERRERA t ios, that collec ve ority to remit pen- od a fla te we i evident there was the Dasy note of ration for | portation, I give you these hints in the that at. | Bosora, August 7, 1967 emmy benpenenichysedee be sete ef oun, sod For certain reagons it might he regretted that the docu- nts reforring to this matter have not all been mado bile, avd that Congress has not taken into ounsiders mn the Wtgrnational bearlogs of the treaty, But they alties imposed on persons foe failing to pay their annual | unsuccessful, The house was burned to taxes within the ume required ae. th all cates, he | this na the remems of the unfortufate young says, Where tho penalties occur, it must be issued and | women wore found in tie ruias. ‘The fire is suppoeed vo collected per instructions issued March, 1867. Lave been accidentak tention may be attracted to thie subject, ‘that capi- taliete yy A J eo mm it Sev, ma ane tion on the su Which can Anse be had, a 5 out com VIRGINIA. States Court at Gree ac 10, 1867 sonnet abiag. Instaiments of m: es ing oes Cusmnannes gore. wiches, cake ‘candi . copeerves: Considerable diversity of opinion exists bere as to pe and tase of festooning the larger legis- (he effect of Lue positions recently assumed by the Preei- ‘oa ‘with American flags gave a foreshadowing

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