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6 NEW YORK HERALD. BROADWAY AND ANN STREET. All business or news letters and telegraphic despatches must be addressed New York HeRaLp. Letters and packages should be properly sealed. Rejected communications will not be re- turned. seeereseres No, 206 Volume XXX AMUSEMBNTS THIS EVENING, WALLACK'S THEATRE, Broadway aud [ita street.— Sra. Warers Kon De, BROADWAY THEATRE, Broadway.—Ifoyonssce. FRENCH THEATRE, Fourwenth a(reot.—Tax Geaxp Dvcwnss. BOWERY THEATRE, Bowery.—Kir Vax Winxns— | Guwmacxe or Moscow. NIBLO'S GARDEN, Broadway. Back Croom. NEW YORK THEATRE, opposite New York Hotel.— Naomt, OLYMPIC THEATRE, Broad’ —Rir Vax Wiveue, ND MUSEUM, Broad. AveTiON, BANVARD'S OPERA HOU: way and Thirtieta street. —Vi NEW YORK CIRCUS, Fourteenth street—Gramastics, Equmsraianise, 40. FIFTH AVENUE THEATRE Zand 4 Weat 2tth street. — Cenpaneita—Fra Diavoug. Matinee, THEATRE COMIQUK, 516 Broadway.—Wiire. Corton &Suamriar’s Minstaxts. Matinee at 2 0'Clock. SAN FRANCISCO MINSTRELS, 585 Broadway.—Ermio- Pian ENTERTAINKENTS, SINGING, DANCING AND BURLESQUES. KELLY & LEON'S MINSTRELS, 720 Broadway.—Sonas, Danows, EccuxTRicitias, BURLESQUES, SO. Bowery. —Comic TONY PASTOR'S OPERA HOUSE, iSTRELSY, £0. M as 4 O'Clock. Vocatusm, Neco Mum BUTLER'S AMERICAN ATRE, 472 Groad — Bacter, Farce, Pawtomius, &0. +. eee BUNYAN HALL, Broadway and Fifteeath strect.—Tus Pranm. DODWORTH'S HALL.—Apventuaes or Mas, Brown. CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC, #2 Fifth avenue —Crasst. Car Sores, HOOLEY'S OPERA HOUSE, Brooklyn.—Ermoriax INSTRELSY, BALLADS AND BURLESQUKS. BROOKLYN OPERA HOUSE, Williamsburg. —Tae Avge. oF Mipsicur, FINE ART GALLERIES, 845 Broadway,—Exmiactios oF Paurinas. AMERICAN INSTITUTE. —Exuimmion or Nariowat Ine pusTRIAL PRODUCTS. NEW YORK MUSEUM OF ANATOMY, 618 Broadway.— Serexom aNd Ant, BROOKLYN ACADEMY UF MUSIC.—Itullan Opera.— Danonau. ACADEMY OF MUSIC, Opera—F aust. TRIPLE SHEET. Now York, Wednesday, October Fourteenth street.—Ttalian Tana WNAW EUROPE. Tho news report by the Atlantic cable is dated yester- @ay oveniog, October 22. Italy romamned deeply excited. General Cialdini failed to form @ Cavinet and relinquisbed the task, The feel- ing against France was extremely bitter, and the King ‘was loaded with reproacnes, Crowds clamored for Rome. Garibaldi is said to have reached Italy and Joimed his son Menott, The Paris Moniteur says that the Papal territory was invaded from the provinces of Italy, and that France would bave sent an army ucrogs the Alps and a fleet to the Roman waters to sastain the September Convention, butall hostile preparations have been ‘suspended,’ as Ktaly has given “ampe pledges’ to fuldi her obliga tions in the largest sease Consols cloced at 93 16-16, for money, in London. Five-twentics were at 6934 in London and 744 in Frank. fort. Yhe Bank of Amsterdam advanced the rate of | discount to 3 per cent. The Liverpool coiton market closed heavy, in conse- quonce of the unsetiled state of Gaancial affairs in the town and an unfavorable report from Manchester, Mid- dling uplands was a: 8 7-161, Breadstuils inactive and irregular. Provisions without marked change. THE CiTx. [n consequence of no quoram appearing yoaterday noon, the Board of Audit held ao meoting. Tue United States Inspector of Steam Vessels com- monoed yesierday a eearching investigation into the re- ovat Dean Richmond sud Vanderbilt catastrophe on the Hudson, The pilot and the two wheelmen ot the for- | mer veseel were examined, and also a passenger who was on board that ill fated vessel ai the time she wad run down. Ali the evideuce brought forward seems to | Dear on the question of there being a wrong whistie from the Vanderbilt, or from some propeller or tugboat moar, Which was mistaken by the pilot of the Dean Rich- | mond for that of the Vanderbilt, —* The investigation into the Wood-Newcomb tmbroglio | was commenced in the United States Commissioner's Court yesterday. The principal witness, one Dow, is at Present under two indictments for utiering counterfeit | currency, and one warrant for perjury. ‘The Commis- fioner threatened to commit him for contempt as well, Dut did mot, Most of the facts of the case remain yet to be brougt! out. The characteristically good natured reply of Mr. Bou- ner (o Commodore Vanderbilt appears in another column, 2.174 has occurred only once. The steamelip Ponnsylvania, Captain Lewis, of the National lino, will sail to-day (Wednesday) from pier No, 47 North river for Liverpool, touching at Queens. | town to land passengers, &c. The Inman line steamsbip Etna, Captain Bridgman, | ‘will leave pier No, 45 North river at moon, to-day (Wed nesday), for Antwerp direct. The stoamship North America, for Rio Janeiro via St, Thomas, will sail at three FP. M. to-day from pier No, 45 North river. The fine steamship Wilmington, of the Mexican Mail j Bteamship tine, will leave pier No. 4 North river for | @ical and Vera Cruz, calling at Havany for mails and | Passongers, to-morrow (24th), at throe P. M | The stock market was unsetiied yesterday. Govern. Mont securities were strong, and especially coupon five-twenties of 1862 and 1965, closed at 14334 a 3. | Trado contioued to languish and in most departments | Dusiness yestorday was confined within narrow tim: Holders, as the demand for merchandise abates, evinew more disposition to force sales, and in some commo. ditios important conc ssions were granted yesterday, ‘This was move particularly tbe case, per! wih moatic produce, MISCELLANEOUS. Ny way of Havana and the Gulf cable we have speciai telegrams from Jama'ea, Barbadoos, Trinidad, Demerara, Bt Vincent and St. Thomas, The crops ix Jamaica were nil gathered aod proved an abundant yield. The beaith of Barbadoes wos good, The subsidy grant for tho mail service to Englsad had been voted by tbe Trinidad Legisiature. The bisck vomit was raging in Demerara Five bondred cooties baving wervod their time were permitted to embark for home, Despatches via Havana from Porto Cabello, to the Lith fnst., state that a revolution against Sanlos Acosta, act ing President of Colombia, bad brokeu out ia the Stato | @ Bolivar. Porto Rico dates to the 24 inst. state that the authori. | tice had determined to potition the home government | for permisson to contract a loan, in view of ine deplor. abie state of the country. } Out Mexico city correspondence is dated September | ho. The returns of election from (he interior indicate | the success of the Juarez ticket, Corona and Escobedo | had declared their preference for Juarez, The election in tho capital passed off quietly, No diswarbance basas yet been reported in any part of the country. Guzman, the candidare for Vico President on the Siax ticket, refused to Publish the order for am election im his State, and had Deen ordered to the capital to take his trial for disobed!- | @ace. Admiral Tegothoff was adil in the oty, The body of Maximilina was being ro-embalmed, Our © ontenes from the South Auerican States '| Gold was steady and | | stakes for the succession, | “ principles ‘NEW YORK HFRALD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1867.-TRIPLE SHEET. comes to band by the steamer Arizona, which arrived at this port yesterday, from Aspiowall on the 13th, to which day our Paoama letier is dated. The secret treaty with Peru made in Aug’'st, 1866, had been disap. | proved by the provnt Colombian gov-roment, aud ros0+ lutions were passod to return to the United Siaies gov. ernment at Wasviagton the steamer Rayo, or RR. | les in a Colombian port, watched as nh fr | crew, Bogota dates to the 20% of September reported | all quiet, Our Santiago, Chile, letter is dated September 16. There was no news whatever in the litce republic, In. | formation had arrived of the proposed early departure of the Spauish floot (rom Baenos Ayres for the Pacific | coust, but it created no excitement, The neutral flee were assembling in Valparaiso bay to await the arrival | of the Spaniards, Our Lima, Peru, letter to the 28th of September con- Cuy le ich o clos ¥ | taing fall details of the Arequipa revolution, Tho dis- satisfaction was widespread and the people geucrally belioved the rebellion would result in the.overihrow of Prado, Several battalions of the national troops bad turned against him, The government had taken prompt tneasures, however, and the steamer Meteor bad been despatched to the disaffected region with 1,800 men on board. The Virginta election commenced yesterday and will be Onished to-day. The conservatives were aliead io Some counties at the close of the polls last evening, The Indian Commission commenced their first grand talk with the warriors at Medicine Lodge creek on Sat- urday, Senator Henderson took the floor in advocacy of the Commi-sion’s princ’plea, The tribes answered in attirmation, but were more anxious for presents than they were for peace, The Kiowas refused to go ona Feservation and said thoy were willing to bave peace, but did not waat civilization. The Nashville Legisia'ure is balloting for a Senator. ‘The race lies betwoen Brownlow and Stokes, The Governor of Maine has appointed the 28th of No- vember as Thanksgiving Day. There were only thirteen deaths from yellow fever in New Orleans on Monday. George Wilkins Kendall died at bis residence ia Toxas on Monday evening. Grant clubs are still organizing in Philadelphia, The Vhiiadelphia cotton manufacturers intend pe- titioning Congress to reduce the tax oa that article. ‘The cutter Wiiderness, which was to have conveyed |. Romero to Mexico, has put into Savannah river in dis- tress, The democratic gain in Ohio is officially shown to be 39,787. General Sheridan visited Providence, R. L., yesterday, where be was received with the usual ovation, and made one or two of his customary short addresses, Award politician in Baltimore was shot and killed yesterday morning ip the affray which originated from cutting the halvards of a democratic hberty pole, The Commercial Bank of Canada, at Montreal, sus- pended payment on Monday. Presidentin! Nominatious—Movements of the , Politicians and the People. Public meetings endorsing General Grant for the Presi ency were held in half a dozen ditferent wards in Philadelphia the other even- ing. They were all of a very enthusiastic character, indicating the powerful hold which the name of General Grant has taken upon the popular mind. At the Twenty-fourth ward meeting Hon. W. D. Kelley made a lengthy speech in support of this nomination. He ad- vocated General Grint, not on account of his availability (wo had had enough of that), nor on account of his glorious military services, but because of his fidelity to the Congres- sioval plan of Southern reconstruction, and of his perfect accord with Schofield, Sickles, Pope and Sheridan, and “the great War Minister whose cour ge and integrity Andrew Johason could no longer abide.” “Yes,” said Mr Kelley, “S'an.on knows and confides in Grant, in the same unstinted measure accorded to the honorsd District commanders. Let us, then, inscribe the illustrious name of U.S. Grant upon our standard, and emblazon around it, in broad letters of gold, our precious princ'!ples, not doubting that when th= National Conven- tion assembles it will approve and confirm our action by acclamation.” Such are the beginnings, on the part of the ind»pendent misses of the great Union party | of the war, in fivor of General Grant. They remind us of the similar movements of the people which brought into the foreground, each in his turn, General Jackson, Ge veral Harrison and Goneral Taylor, in spite of all the opposition movements, caloulations and schemes of the poliicians and party managers concerned. It is the same everywhero else as | in Philadelphia when the name of Grant is mentioned at a gahering of the republican rank and file. It revives the old popular en- thusiism which carried “Old Hickory,” “Old Tippecanoe anl Tyler too,” and “Old Rough and Ready” into the White House. United States Grant is the people’s ticket for 1868. Meantime, the poli icians, this man and that main, on both sides, ore trotting out their fa- vorite horses for the grand four mile sweep- On the democra tic side, in view of possible contingencies, General McClellan, it is said, bys been sent for and will soon return from Earope. In Now York, how- ever, Horatio Seymour is looming up again above the horizon, while in Ohio and Kentucky George H. Pendleton is proclaimed the coming man. A Cincinnati paper says that “with him as our candidate, stand- ing on the platform of the constitution, equal justice to all sections of our common country, with equality to all (a bold bid), special privileges to none, the same currency for the bondbolder that the people are com- pelled to receive,” &c., “we shall sweep Ohio with fifty thousand majority, and also the coun- try, as we did with Franklin Pierce in 1852,” against General Scott, the conqueror of Mexico. A Connecticut payer nominates Governor English, but this is probably as far | as he will go. On the republican side (in addition to the prevailing movements for General Grant) they have an earnest Chas? organ in Philadelphia, which is of the opinion that the Grant mvetings | in that city have “more influence abroad than home ;” that in this Grant movement have been kept in the back- ground,” and that it will notdo to make a Quaker meeting of the coming campaign. An Indiana paper rans up the name of Schuyler Colfax for President ; a New Hampshire paper rans up the name of Sheridan; a paper of the interior of Pennsylvania has hoisted the ticket of Grant and ex-Governor Curtin; another paper of the same Stave proposes Grint and Stanton ; and lastly a Massachusetts raral paper (doubtiess an old line whig) thinks that Charles Francis Adams, our present Minister at London, is the ablest and best mau for Presi- dont that the United States can produce, but that he has been so misrepresented that he has hardly a betier chance than Charles Suaner, at It is the game Adams who ran on the Butfalo | free soil Van Burea ticket of 1848, All these newspaper side nominations, how: ‘ ever, omount to nothing. The fight in the re- publipan coavention will be between Grant and Chase for President, while for the Vice Pre ident the field of choi¢e will be sufficiently widened to embrace almost any one of the secondary characters named anywhere for the but abandoned by all iis | first office. As Grint and Chiso are both Western men, howev>r, if either is nominited | tor President the associat» candi late tor Vice | Presiient will doubtless be token fom the | Est Inths view, Stanton, Curtia and Cam- eron of Peansylyana, Fenon an! Morgan of Now Yo-k, ond Fessenden of Maine may be nam d among the probabilities for Vive Presi- | den’, fall we dare say they will get the Vice Presi- dent, but with the signal defeatef Mr, Chase on the negro suffrage test in Ohio t ey have a them down, The d-mocratic chances for the nomination against Grant or Chisg, lie, we think, and in the order named, between Horatio Seymour ot New York, Pendleton of Ohio, and General McCl:llan. As to General Sherman, he has too many peouliar crotchets of his own to serve the political purposes of either party, and so he may be counted out. He was nominated by a little conventicle of lobbymen at Washington not long ago in this shape :—For President, An- drew Johnson, of Tennessee ; for Vice Presi- dent, Lieutsnant General W.T.Sherman, of Missouri ; but we are inclined to think that in this movement this aforesaid conventicle had othor fish to fry, and have, perhaps, tried them. President Johnson will be a looker-on in this cominz national contest, and the whole shap- ing, char:cter and issues of the battle will de- pend upon the republicam gomination. If Grant, the thing is settled and the coast is clear ; if Chase, wise men will take im sail and look out for squalls. To say nothing of the negro question, on his financial sysiem alone Mr. Chase, as the republican candidate, will be apt to throw the country into inextricable con- fasion. Castle Garden and the Railroads. The Commissioners ot Emigration have been summoned to appear before Judge Barnard to- day, to purge themselves of contempt of court in refusing or neglecting to obey a mandamus issued a few days since to compel them to admit the agents of the Pennsylvania Central and New York and Erie railroads to the emi- grant depot at Castle Garden, for the purpose of receiving passengers consigned to them from Europe and of supplying tickets over their roads to emigrants who may desire to travel by either of those routes. This order of the Supreme Court the Commissioners failed to obey, and to-day they are expected to explain the reasons for this apparent contempt. A few years ago the several railroads, steam- boats and canal lines running from this ciiy competed for the emigrant travel, and em- ployed runners, who hung around the Buttery, snatching up the emigrants as they leit their ships and committing all sorts of depredations upon them, The unfortunate strangers were subjected to the grossest abuses, and were sel- dom suffered to get out of the hands of the rau- ners, baggage smashers and boarding house thieves until they had been fleeced of the greater part of the money they happened to have in their possession. To remove these evils and keep the emigr ints out of the hands of the outside robbers, it was determined that tickets should be sold to them inside tho Gar- den, and that they should be forwarded at once to their destinations. In order to accomplish this the three trunk lines of railroad were ad- mitted to Castle Garden on condition that they should make an equitable division of the passengers between them and discontinue com- petition for the emigrant travel. This plan worked very well for some time, but recently diffvulties have arisen between tho Castle Garden Superintendeat and the agents of two of the trunk roads—the New York and Erie and Penn-ylvania Central—which have ro- sulted in an arbitrary order from the Superin- tendent or Commissioners turning those agents out. of Castle Garden and keeping only the representative of the New York Central inside. The effect of this is, of course, to compel all emigrants arriving af Castle Garden to travel by the New York Central road,or to compel them to go outside to get their tickets at the offices of the other lines, thus subjecting them to all the dangers, abuses and impositions that beset them a few years since. It is pretended by the Commissioners of Emi- gration, or their Superintendent, that they have not excluded the two railroads in question from Casile Garden, but only their two agents, whom they accuse of some irregular practices inside. This is a mere evasion of the issue. The directors of the two roads request to be turnished with the evidence of any inproper act on the part of their agents, when they will at once remove them and appoint others. To this reasonable demand the Commissioners refuse to respond. They therefore turn the roads out of the Garden when they refuse their authorized agents admission. The people care very little for these squab- bles except so far as they affect injuriously the interests of the emigrant and the credit of the city. It is very clear that by favoring the New York Central Railroad, to the exclusion of the two other great trunk lines, the Commissioners of Emigration are doing « direct public injury as well asa gross act of injustice, and they should be restrained by the court on the ground that they are abusing their official power and diverting the law under which they act from its legitimate purpose, If any rail- road agent has been guilty of improper prac- tices inside Castle Garden the Commissioners should make a public investigation of the charges against him, and if they are substan- tiated the road be represonts will, no donbt, at once remove him. They have no right other- wise to dictate to any rovd who shall or who shall not be retained in its employ, At pres- ent the whole affair has a very suspicions look, especially as the only serious charges ever | made against any road doing business inside Castle Garden have been laid at the door of the New York Central. At all events, the emi- grants are the real sufferers by the singular courae pursued by the Commissioners ; and the court should make a thorough investigation of the whole matter and compel such action on the part of the Commission es will at once put a stop to these disgraceful squabbles and pro- tect the rights and interests of those for whose benefit the emigrant laws were enacted. The Park Bank Obst ection. | Assistant District Attorney Bedford, in another part of this paper, in reference to the Park | trouble and money, by tailing back within the | lines of its own property, without any farther | resistance. As the case stands it is not neces- say to gay anything more at present upon the subject. Ifthe repub icans carry New York this | | heavy load to carry, and we guess it will break | The Virginin Election. Our reports of the first day’s voting at the Virsinis election (they vote two diys) in the city of Richmond for a reconstruction State conven 'ion and delegates there!o show a ma- | jority of some five hundred tor the white con- | servative against the Hannientt, or black radi- | eal, ticket. This is a good start, an! it looks as if tho expectations of a conservative victory | in the city and in the State were well foun ied. | Itis probable that many a black bas lost bis vote by forgecting the name under wh'ch he was registered, A large proportion of the Southern blacks under slavery were only known as Bob, Tom, Cesar, Pompy, Sam or Jack, Christmas or Friday, and when going to register they gave for “de odder name” any- thing which at the moment most pleased their fancy. Thus in Charleston the registration, it is said, exhibiis sixty-three black Abraham Lincolns, forty-six Georze Wash ngtons and thirty odd Andrew Jacksons, So we suspect that some of our “fellow citizens of African We refer our readers to the statement of Bank encroachment. The Bank will save time, | descen!” in Virginia have been caught napping in forgetting their registered names on election day, and if they lose tho State from this pecu- liar sort of apathy. they must grin and bear it. The white conservativos registered, however, have a decided myjority in the State, and if they all come out they will doubtless defeat the Hunnicutt radicals, which will be a great thing. Napoleen and the Pepe. “The question as between France, Italy and Rome, has asgumed a new phase. Taken out of the region of possiole war, it is now planted in the region of diplomacy. How-it may fare in this new region is the question in which Italy in particular, and all who sympathiz2 with lialy, are now interested. There is little likeli- hood that the Italian government will allow itself to drift into war with France, even for Ronde ; and grieved as the Italian people may be at the course which the government have taken, they cannot but admit that it was the only course which was open. The Roman question, however, does not cease to bea source of annoyance to Europe because Italy is forbidden by a powerful neighbor to claim the Eternal City as its capital, More than ever it will be found to bea fruiiful source of dis- cord. Italy and France are now alienated, whatever they may profess to the contrary, and nothing will, nothing can remove the aliena- tion until Rome is, as it ought to be, the capital of the Italian kingdom, Napoleon, in fact, has placed himself in an awkward and most unenviable position. Reason, right, justice, precedent, his own avowed principles—all are against him. The Papal dominion in Italy is not one whit less objectionable than the king- dom of Naples and the numerous duchies and gtand duchies which he ‘helped to uproot and destroy. If the Pope hasa right to rule in Rome as a temporal prince, it is dificult to see why the kingdom of Naples should not be re- stored, and why Austria and the various petty potentates should not reclaim their possessions, Napoleon sets his foot on bis own principles and gives the lie to the doctrine of nationality which he has so long and so successfully preached. It is not impossible, however, that d:plomacy may enable him to escape the diffi- culty in which he is placed. The changing aspects of ihe question will be attentively watched. The Dean Richm ‘anderbilt Col- lision. After some four weeks of inactivity the proper authorities seem to have at last stirred themselves up to a searching investigation into the circumstances attending the recent steam- boat accident on the Hudson. Yesterday the United States public inspectors of machinery and steam vessels commenced an official ex- amination of all the facts which can bear upon the Vanderbilt and Dean Richmond collision ; and from the evidence, which will be found at length in another part of the paper, there appears to be an earnest desir on the part of those implicated to fully sift the matter to the bottom. The whole gist of the affair at present seems to rest on the signals of the two pilots, and the examination turns on the possibility of some mistake having here arisen ; although itis acknowledged that there was no lookout man stationed on the forward deck of the Dean Richmond, as required by law. In such a stage of the inquiry, however, where the wit- nesses on one side only have been examined, it would be unfair to draw any conclusion. It is to be hoped-that when the facts have been fully investigated some warning example will be made, so as to prevent similar accidents in future ; and if any blauwe can be proved against the pilots or other parties implicated the United States inspectors should allow no scruples fo stand in the way of the enforce- | ment of the law to its fullest extent, Religloas Courtesics. the Catholic primate of America, extended to him the courtesies of « cordial welcome in the cathedral of his episcopal see at Baltimore, on Sunday, upon his return from Rome, where, in conjunction with other American prelates, he went on invitation of the Pope to partici- pate in the late grand pious festivities at St. Peter’s. The Archbishop described in glowing terms the magnificent spectacle he had wit- nessed at the celebration in presence of the three hundred and sixty-second successor of St. Peter, at the most critical period of his pontificate. All that sincere affection and respect could inspire was observable in the greeting given to Archbishop Spalding on this occasion, On the next day the Episcopal clergy and a large number of the laity of New York paid a similar tribute to the Protestan’ bishop of this diocese, Dr. Potier, at Trinity chapel, on bis return from London, where he had been in attendance upon the Pan-Anglican Synod. The Bishop gave some of his expe- rience of the English Protestant Church and the bishops and clergy, whom he described as meek and lowly compared with our ideas of them. From these two acts of courtesy extended to leading lights of the different religions we gather the grain of consolation that we have some right to be regarded as a Christian country after all, despite the corruption and rascality of the politicians, The Uprising of New Vorks Greeley expands himself in double leads on | “the uprising of New York.” | and universal negro suffrage, The same idea is afoot here as that which swamped Chase and Wade in Ohio, and the sane forces are here in action against it. | Royal Bank of Liverpoo! has suspend d, and | that this quieting announcement was not made, | suould have been but one, and tha: the natroval The congregation of Archbishop Spalding, | | se Krom present | appearances on election day it will be very much like the uprising of Obio on immediate Suspension et the Royal Bavk of Livew pool. We have been informed by telegram tha! the that its Habilities are over twenty-!wo millions of dollara, The invariubl» statemen’ added to all such news of bank suspensions, “that it 1s thoucht the bank will resime business,” is made, of course, No bank ever suspended however improvable resumption might be, We hope there may be good reason for itia the case, We hive not yet received any de- tails about the causes of this tronbie with the Royal Bank of Liverpool. Looking at the magnitude of the estab!'s iment and its enor mous liabilities, there must have been, we think, some general cause outside of the ordinary ac- cidents of business or mismanagement. I: is known that there has been a great and general stagnation of business in England, and this, too, with an extraordinary plethora of money. ‘There has been, and is, in tect, a want of profit- able employment in England for its accuma lated capital Such an institution as ihis bark would hardly know how to employ its capitel 80 as to realize profits enough to meet the ha- bilities and demands upon it, particularly if these were contracted under a different state of things, A bank may be damaged by having no profitable employment for is money, as weil asfrom having a scarcity of it. However, the suspension may have arisen from cotton or other speculations, We shall look with mach interest for a statement of the cuses which have brought such a gigantic institution to suspend amid a superabundance of unem- ployed capital in England. ‘rime iu New York. We have to lament som? instane:s of murder and sanguinary assaults that have lately taken place in this city. Prominent among them is the assassination of a policeman by one of the lost creatures that nigh!ly disgrace our thoroughfares. The metropolis bas hitherto enjoyed a comparative immunity from such outrages, considering its extent, population and cosmopolitan character; and even with these late crimes it can show a cleaner police record than many of our provincial towns. The number and character of crimes com- mitted in some of the Wes‘ern and neighboring cities exceed those of New York, not only in comparative but even absolute number and character. In many instances murders are commicted in those cities by well known despe- radoes, while among us they are generally unpremeditated and the result of intoxication or suddea outburst of passion. No desperate character can defy the power of the law and remain at large in the metropolis, a terror to all respectable and peacefal citizzns, as-is the case very often in other cities, Besides, many of the crimes committed in New York are the work of importations from provincial towns that make much ado about the wickedness of Gotham. The police authorities need to exer- cise more than ordinary vigilance at present, as the frequency of murderous assauits, wife killing and street brawls would indicate one of those epidemios of crime that periodically afflict great cities. Another Committee Wanted. Congress has a great many committees out on various tours of duty just now—on? in Connecticut, to see if any excuse can be tound for ruling out a domocratic member; one in Maryland, to sce if that State has any right in the Union, and dozens on general corruption. Congress will be called upon to appo'nt one more committce on the very first day of its coming session—a committee to find out what has become of the great republican party, THE FARRAR CASK, Itis reported that the defendant in this case, who has been cashiered according to the findings and eentenco of the recent court martial, 1s about to appeal, in conformity with the State regulations, which say :— ‘The right of appeal to the Commender-in-Chief, as it now exisis by m.ltary usage, is reserved; but no appeal sball be received unless made withio iwenty days after (he decision appealed from is made Kaowa to the person appealing. INSPECTION FIFTH REGIMENT INVANTRY, XO, The weather was rather dull and damp yestorday morning in Tompkins square. In fact, it began to rain by spells, and the possibility of an inspection withia some armory was being discussed when tho regiment arrived, some half an hour afier time. They made a solid and fino ance, | baving three fleid, ive commiasioned stall, twelve non. commissioned stall, twelve en; ers, thirty-two dram- mers, twenty ave band, twenty-one line officers and five hundred thirty men—a total of six hundred and forty, which exceeded the strength of the Seventh ac- cording to one count, although not tativing with the re- turns a3 made out by the Adjutant. Major Godfrey and Major Frolich, of the brigade sta, were upon the ground long beiore the arrival of the regiment, We noticed quite ® ber of errors, which surprised us in such an 01d com Tosiead of having three colors out, there Instead of ooly the roviewing officer (Colonel ieaveri ond the inspecting oflicer (Major Godfrey) passing along the front and roar of the live, wholo stat accompanied them. Instead of passi made & detour to the the acting optonel. who ment. rev.ew was not pr: perly completed, the tinal salute being Omitted. Many of tne line officers, in pass- ing in review, failed to look at the reviewing officer, and quite a number dropped their swords too goon. While the reviewine and inspecting odivers went around the battalion, after being broken into column for jaapecton, nono of the staff accompanied ; so that when they should not bave been seen ihey were on hand, but when it was for them to be prevent with their two above named officers they didnot make their appearance, We teview of the column was going on A handsome making the fargest tarmout, wards of 90 muskets), and Ser- ee ort company K. also received a neat gold d noticed that whil i for having recruited 16 out of 22 new men. At five o'clock the officers of the regiment partook of dinner at the quarters of Colonel Meyer, corner Broadway and Broome street, LONG ISLAND INTELLIGENCE. Mysranmocs Arrain—Tite Rewarss ov an UxKNowN MAN Founp 1s THk Newrown Woovs,—On Monday, aa @ colored man, named Smith, was wandering through the woods just outside of the village, be suddeniy and without thought of such a thing came upon the skeloton of what wan supposed to be a man, suspending from a | tree with a rope around the neck and the flesh entirely | pd nothing remnioing near it except some decayed | hes and A suit of cloilies partially rotten. When the colored man saw the object at firet he was astonished, | not knowing the nature of tt, and Onaily waked closer and touched the emaciated frame with barrel of his gun, when it — dropped several pieces, leaving tho rope dangling from the | tree, the head in one piace and the other numerous | boner lying atound, presentinga bewtidering sight. = the darkey finally gained his self-composure, and, ifting the skal’ in bis bande, be carried jt to the village and showed it to some mon, woo immediately went to the spot where the remains were found, but none of them were uoabie to identify tue clothes or form aay sort of | ‘an opinion as to whom he wae or whence he came. There was gothing to indicate whother it was done wil- fully of ‘Ube individual himself or whether fouliy accom. plished by vicious and bieodihirsty persone; so until fature period the caso must remain a myetory, te itieas, Yesterday au inquest was held upoa the | remain#, but noting new or definite was elicited | the go | worth notice. Deserven Hoxon.—Richard T. Jacob, Jr., only son of Richard T, Jacob, of Ola.ai cou baving been Appointed asocond tioutenant ja the Si United States mfantry, passed a bighty creditable the Board, in thi ordered to jon bie Nation, Lieatenant y's Young men. Ho ta the grandson of Hoo. Thos. H, Benton and Jobn 1. Jacod, and has ever shown bimn- self to be worthy of tho disingaished Klaship,—damir the | in| ville Journal, cl, 19 W ASEINGTON. Wasuixotox, Oct. 22, 1867, 11 o’cluck, PAL The New York Election aud the Impeach. meat Project. Tet te tr 3 previously stated in thes a that Churobill, Wiison and Wooabridge, of the Judiciary committee, have not authorized it (0 bo stated that they had changed their viows on impeachment, Neverthe- less, I have good authority jor stating that at least two Of these gentlomen bave changed their Views on the Subject, and now rather lean to the policy of impeach. mont, which before the adjournment of Can. eres they opposed. The cause of this change is the Pr sidont’s course since that time. They beiiove Le bas shown an inten‘ioa to obstruct reconsiruction, dehberately and determinedly, and that, uniess sus- Peuded or removed by impeachment, he will wholly deleat the laws of Congress, A good deal will depend, ag to how theas gentlemen «iil act, upon the result of the election in pew York. Shouid th» radicals sustain a decided defeat there, the impeachmeat project will probably be entirety abandoned, Probability of a Kadical Vice President from New York. Apropos of the New York election, it is said that the Vice Presidency will be accorded to the Empire State, should the radicals hold their own in vopular iavor there. A good radical majority would probably gain the nomination for the Vice Presidency either for Fentun or Morgan. Both are working bara to obtain the honor. The Commitice te Investigate the Workiug® of tho Treasury Department, It is expected that Senator Buckalew will to-morrow Join senator Edmonds and Representative Kelsey in the investigation of the besiness transactions of the Printing Bureau of the Treasury Depart- ment These gentlemen are a sub-commitiee of the Joimt Committee on Rotrenchment which was appointed durmg the second session of the Thirty-ninth Congress to make s thorough ex- amination into the various branches of the government, with a view to reform and economy, rhe sub-com- mittee, after takiog important testimony in the city ef New York, commenced its examivation here a week ago, since which time it has sat five hours a day. The scrutiny has been very close, including a thorough inspection of the books of the Printing Bureau, the mode of printing checks and guards, the amount of issues of bonds and notes; in fact, everything connected with that branch of the government service. As yet but ike tle testimony has been taken, as Congress dirccted a thorough examination of the financial transactions The sub-committee has entered upon ita duties with a determination to obtain all the information which is desired. The session, owing to the heavy duty to be performed, will probably be continued until the reas- sembiing of Congress, in November. Quarterly Reports of the National Banks. Tue Comptrolier of the Currency has received all the quarterly reports from the national banks excepting the First National Bank of Fort Smith, Ark. The abstract of the condition of the banks, classified by States aad cities, will be veady for publication next Saturday. it appears from the abstract from querteriy reports of the New York city national banks, as made to the Comptrolier of the Currency October 7, that the aggre- gate of circulation and deposits is about $19,009,000, for which a reserve of twenty-five por ceat, $47,000,000 in lawful money, is required by sections thir.y-one and thirty-two of the Banking act The abstract shows a reserve @f $62,000,000, oreight percent more thau is fequired. The exchange for clearing house is nearly $103,000,000 and the amount of specie about seven millions and @ third. The Steam Launch Explosion at Aanapelis— Farther Particulars, ‘The following particulars in relation to the explosion of the steam launch at Annapotis, on Saturday last, are gathered from a letter received by a gentieman in this city:—The launch is the same that was used by Lieu- tenant Cushing to blow up the rebel ram Alvomarie, and had since then been altered into a miniature steam brig. A short t'me before the expivsion Admirat Porter and Captain. Lewis (not Luce) made preparation to take a trip on the launch, but couciuded first to go on board of the Constitution and observe her rate of speed belore starting on the trip. The launch had possed tbe Constitution twice, and was returning to taka the officers on board when the explo:ion occurred. The colored fireman was instantly killed; another men wag, jammed between some timbers and badiy scalded, and two ethers were blown overboard and sank im- mediately with the wreck, The bodies of Engineer Boyt and the other man wore recovered by dragging tie river at night, It is difficult to obtain any sutisfactory account of the cause which produced the accideot, as the Messengers boys, who were on board and who were also more or less hurt, were the only ‘persons from whom any information could be obiained. But as the little vessel was fairiy ilying turough the water, moving at the rate of about | eleven knots, it is supposed that they had on epurely | (eo much steam. Movements of Secretary Seward. secretary Seward writes that he will leave New York on Wednesday evening, and arrive at Washington on Thursday morning, ‘The Tarkish Minister atthe Navy Yard. Mr. Blacque, the Turkish Minyster, and bis Secretary, Mr. Battazzi, paid « visit this morning to the Washington Navy Yard, and were received by Admiral Redford with all tbe cusiomary bonora, A salute was fired in com. piiment tothe distmguished visitor, Ihe Adm.ral con- ducted the Minister to all points of interest about the post, and he inspected the different vesseis now at the yard, Mr, Blacque manifested great interest in the im- proved machinery for the manufacture of fuses and percussion caps, ae also the experiments in waterproof fuse, and seemed mach gratified with the visit and te courtesy shown him, Present to General Hussein Pasha. Previous to the departure of General Hussein Pasha, of the lurkish army, from this city, he was presented with a bandsome sword by General Carleton, United Staies Army. In presenting the sword, General Carle- ton said he offered it as a gift froma General of the United States who bad been fighting the Bedouins of America for the past ten years, to a Turkish general whe bad, for a longer time, been fighting the Bedouns of Asia, General Husseia respouded in becoming terms The Form of Government in Delaware. The sub-Judiciary Committee to-day had two witnesses before it on the Delaware branch of the investigation. ‘These were two Wilmington lawyers, Mossrs. Nield and Higgins, who testified as to the distribution of the politi- cal patronage in Delaware, The committee wil! probably conclude the investigation next Tuesday. The Oficers and Crew of the Steamer Sa- cramento on Ti Way Lieutenant Commander P. C, Johnson, in « lever to the Navy Department, dated August 20, from the Presi- doncy of Madras, says:—I report, by order of Captain Collins, that the officers and crow of the Inte United Sates steamer Sacramento, with the exception of Chief Engineer Brooks and thyself, embarkea on the 6th in- siaat and salied for Now York, via the Cape of Good Hope, on the following morning. Military Reservation at Fort Wadsworth, Dakotah Territory. The President tas directed @ reservation for military purposes at Fort Wadsworth, Dakotah Territory, covering an area of one hundred and thirty-five square mies. ‘The reservation ig made of tho extent indicated in order to afford the re,.site amount of timber and meadow Jand for the use of the governinont. THE PRESIDENT AND THE REVOLUTIONISTS. Waahington (Oct, 21) correspondence of the Boston Post ) ; very device nes n resorted to by the radwal par- tivans to discredit the atatement of your correspondent that President Johnson bad declared his purpose to resist any atiempt to depoxe tim before tial and couviction by all the meaus which the constitu. tion affords for ita own provection and preservation. Quo writer says the intitnate friends of the President asaort that he denies the correctn the janguage at- tribated to him by bis Boswon organ; but my aespatch was not obtained trom the intin: friends, but from Johnson himeei(, who declared, at the same time, that it would be crnminal io him to eater- tain a different purpos®. The !’revident said farther tuat tt was weil the people shoult know his views an@ understand bie parp.©e4; aud your correspondent has no (ear that Mr. Jobuecn will retract the statemem, however unpalatable it may be to those engaged tn the revulu plot againet the Executive Department of . But iavacion of President Joba- purpose to prove not new. In his letter to General Grant, dat Augit 19, 1867, he says:—By bis oath the son of bound to the best of hs ability to preserve, protect and de- C nd itis bis duiy, without regard (© equences to bimself, to hold sacred and to ea- any and all of ite provisions, Any other course would lead w the destruc of the ropublicy for the Constitution onde abolished there bike ep od lessees 00 for the exorcise of legislative powers, a0 Executive that (oe iaws are faiibfally exccutod, and wo Judiciary lo allord to the citizen protection for live, limb and property