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a ~ France, Italy, Rome aod Belgium, and a a ‘tions. The French fleet which sailed frst from Toulon, * pamy the French troops to Rome. Marquis de Moustier, -NEW YORK HERALD. BROADWAY AND ANN STREET. JAMES GORDON BENNETT, PROPRIETOR. mata open until Saturday evening for the reception of votes om the ceavention question. Se far ne ene but the negroes have voted, with the exeeption of ene white man ta end twenty-five in Colymbas. A separate poll will probably be opened for the whites The Young Mea’s Christian Association of Maryland and the District of Columbia met in Wasbingtom yeater. day, and a colored vice president was elected. At this the Maryland members took umbrage, aad seme lively debate ensued. A proposition was made that the colered viee president should withdraw, bat the majority de- So the contractor promises, and we hope Street The Utter Cerraption of Our Feliticians. We are perfectly satisfied, however strong | dating or reducing the debt with the greenback may be the contrary belief among the people | money of the country before an effort be made Of the rural districts, that the old man Satan, | to force specie payments {es most discussed. All business or news letters and telegraphic | sed to suspend the rules to admit of the vote being | WhO bas given the world 60 muoh trouble dur- | The press has begun to take it up earnestly, taken. despatches must be addressed New Yorr Himracp. Letters and packages should be proporly scaled. Rejected communications will not be re- turned. Volume XXXII AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING, ACADEMY OF MUSi Opera—Apaianxe, Tum A: Fourteenth street, —Ttatian S38. BOWERY THEATRE, Bowery.—Turex Fast Mex ov New Youra—Laar vor Lirs—Love axp Munves, NIBLO'S GARDEN, Br —Brack Croos. NEW YORK THEATRE, opposite New York Hotel Fanowon, ras Cricket. OLYMPIC THEATRE, Nrour's Dreax, WALLACK’S THEATRE, Broadway and 1b street,— Stu. Warxns Row Deer. GERMAN STADT THEATRE, Nos. @ and = En Omatcperan Havexnncn, bee” O84 AT Bowery, Broadway.—A Mipsumaee BROADWAY THEATRE, Broadway,—Insuavocur— Tarioe Mannix. FRENCH THEATRE, Fourteenth street.—Tuz Grayp Dvcuxss. BANVARD'S OPERA HOUSE AND MUSEUM. Broad. way and Thirtieth sireet.—Devit's AUCTION, NEW YORK CIRCUS, Fourteenth streot.—Grunastics, Equesrmianisu, &c, FIFTH AVENUE TH! » Zand 4 WwW — seca een ae EATRE, 2 and 4 West 2th atreet. THEATRE COMI! . 5M Bi Wi Me aTREATRE, comrgue, roadway.—Wuirs, Corrox SAN FRANCISCO MINSTRELS, 585 Broadway.—Erni rian Ewrentainuants, Singinc, Daxoina aNd ‘BUauesaues, KELLY & LEON’S MINSTRELS, 720 Broadway.—Soncs, Dawons, Eocewraicrrizs, Buniesques, &c. TONY PASTOR'S OPERA HOUSE, 91 Bowery.—C: Voostam, Neaxo Minstaeisy, &c. or EIGHTH AVENUE OPERA HOUSE, corner Thiriy-f street.—Munstaxiar, Fances, &c. ini” sane BUTLER'S AMERICAN THEATRE, 472 Broad — Baur, Fancy, Paxtowue ee im, do. BUNYAN HALL, Broadway and Fifteenth strest.—Tus Pugeu. DODWORTH’S HALL.—Apvestorts or Mas. Brown. STEINWAY HALL.—Graxp Concert. HOOLEY’S OPERA HOUSE, Brooklya.—Ermiorian Minsreaisy, Bactaps anv Burtesquss. BROOKLYN OPERA HOUSE, Williamsburg.—Uxper vux Gasuigut, FINE ART GALLERIES, 845 Broadway,—Exuinition or Paurranas. NEW YORK MUSEUM OF ANATOMY, 613 Broadway.— Scummos aND Ant. | Now Yorly Thursday, October 31, 1867. TRIPLE SHEET. EUROPE. By special telegrams through the Atlantic cable from dating to yesterday evening, October 30, w: important intelligence relative to the progress of events tm Italy and Rome, and the probable consequences of the revolutionary movement against the Papal woveresignty. Couat Bismarck is reported to have assured Victor Hunnicutt is reported to have tolé the mogroes in Richmond who had been discharged by their employers to ask them for work again, and if they were refused to apply the torch to their dwellings, The New Orleans Board of Health have suspended quarantine, A proposition to deolare the yellow fever no longer epidemic was referred to the Committee on Health. In his remarks upon the motion Dr. Warren Stone stated that yellow fever was not Contagious undor any ciroumstances, General Sheridan was in Montpolier, Vt, yester- day, leaving by the night train for New York, where he was expected to arrive at noon to-day. The British steamer Amsterdam, wrecked on Montauk Point, went to pieces during the storm of Tuesday. The official vote in Ohio shows 60,629 majority against the negro suffrage constitutional amenament. The Governor of Borneo, who Yankee from Roxbury, Mass, paid a» visit to Gonerai Grant yoater- day. ‘ The Roassembling of Congroes—Tho. Pre- 1 ary Skirmishings. The autumnal stagnation of Washington is beginning to be disturbed by incoming mem- bers of Congress looking up their winter quar- ters, and by flitting committees and sub-com- mittees of investigation. The two houses, fully organized, will reassemble on the 2ist of No- vember, The session will doubtless be one of the highest interest touching the groat ques- tions which will come up for discussion, and of the gravest importance in its legislative mea- gures, From present indications the radioals will open the session in a deliberate movement against President Johnson, and they will leave no stone unturned to effect his dislodgement from the White House. The initial reconstruo- tion elections of Louisiana, Alabama and Vir- ginia show that, under negro supremacy, if pushed rapidly through, the whole ten. outside rebel States may be brought back into Con- gress, with radical delegations in both houses, and with the certainty of radical electoral col- leges in the coming Presidential election. But Andrew Johnson stands in the way. A des- perate effort will, therefore, be made to remove or suspend him. The Philadelphia Morn- ing Post (a new Chase radical organ) says:— “Take all that remains of slavery, all that is left of the rebellion, and we find it summed up and embodied in Andrew Johnson. He is the point of attack. He is the great enemy of the republic, and it is idle to dream of reconstruo- ing the last fifty or sixty centuries, has no | and many of the leading public men of different sbiding place in this great city of New York. | political parties discuss it freely. It has be- Tt may be that he has passed over the metropo- | come second in prominence only to the recon- lis, as he passed over “Leipsio’s plain,” on his | struction question, and were this latter dis- celebrated drive to London :— . Then loudly and wildly and i laughed he, Methinks they have here iitsle weed of me. At all events, he has no business in such a community; for the politicians occupy the whole field, and against them he would have no chance of success, Their cauldron bubbles more furiously than any he could supply from his own fires, and whatever bargains he wight make with them they would be certain to cheat him and get the better of him in the end, as they now cheat and overreach each other. There is not a single nominee for office on one of the numerous tickets in the field for the election of next week who is not deceiving his friends every hour of the day, and doing sll he can to secure his own success at the ex- pense of his associates. The factions that have put independent candidates in nomination are selling them out and making bargains with opposing organizations, The election will be nothing more nor less than a guerilla struggle, in which every participant will be ready to cut his neighbor’s throat and steal his purse. The Inst spark of good faith and party loyalty among the politicians bas died out, and henee- forth every man must be for himself, and the devil catch the hindmost. The utter corruption of the politicians may be seen in the effect produced by the famous document of Peter Bis- marck Sweeny, in which he recently announced his determination to give up the two hundred thousand dollars a year interest money, hitherto pocketed by the City Cham- berlain, and to'hand it over to the city trea-"| on all sorts of clap-trap expressions,.as “repu- sury for the benefit of the taxpayers. No such | diation,” “national dishoner,” and the like, remarkable and exemplary case of disinter- | for the purpose’ of damaging the democrats. ested honesty omthe part of @ public official-| But this is only » specious dodge. It is nota has been known of for the last half century,.| party question, as parties Rave beet: divided and the act ought to have disarmed partisan | heretofore. The organ of the democrate-in this enmity at once and have secured general ap- | city, though it has twisted about a goed: deal probation. And yet, not # single republican | on the subject, holds in the main the same journal has mentioned it approvingly, and | views as the radical papers hold. The Chicago licans, however, to Africanize the. South and to give the semi-barbarous negroes the poli- tical power in that section and a balance of power in the republic, is so revolting that any other question must remain secondary till that be settled. Still, as we sald, it has be- come prominent, particularly throughout the West, and it had considerable influence in turning a large vote at the Inte elections in Ohio and other Western States against the dominant republican party. A very interesting phase of the discussion upon this proposition to pay the debt in green- backs, and upon the other cognate subjects of the national banks, taxation and revenue, is the position the press has taken. ‘Fhe radical organs of the East generally denounce the pro- postion, and are in favor of maintaining the iniquitous privileges of the national banks. They are, im fact, the organs of the Dondholders and the national banks, Their policy is to favor capitalists at the ex- pense of the fndustrious classes. They would not pay the debt till the bondholders could re- ceiveit all in gold—till the people would be compelled to pay from thirty to a hundred per cent more than they ever received and more than strict justice requires. They must have’ the pound of flesh though: the:. victim bleed to death. Conspicuously among these organs ot the bondholders are the greater and lesser radical papers of this city. They endeavor to make it a party question, and ring the changes berlain before they know what bis official con-| tics; General Butler; of whose radicalism no duct would be have not a word to gay in com- | one can doubt, and numbers of other news mendation of his wonderful. self-denial and | pspers and prominent individuals of the repub- tion while he remains in office. If experience has any value, if danger inspires any courage, Congress will not be in session three days be- fore articles of impeachment are laid before the Senate, and the first step taken to vindicate the national honor and seoure the safety of the republic.” 5 Within the first week, therefore, of the coming session we may expeot a bill from Mr. Stevens providing for the suspension of the President on being arraigned for trial ; and we may expect a report from the Judiciary Com- mittee of the House, embodying his manifold sius and transgressions, winding up with » reao- lution to present him to the Senate for trial ‘Emanvel that Prassia will not permit Napoleon to make “war on Italy on account of the Garibaldian complica- Including the clads, had arrived at Civitia Vecchia, and the troops Were being debarked rapidly, The Pope ‘was expected hourly at Civitia Vecchia, Gari- Daldi was at Monte Mario, within six miles of Rome, at the head of is victorious troops. The Italian army had crossed the frontier. ‘advanced into the Papal territory, and commanded Gari- bald! to disarm. The revolutionary army was, however, reinforced by hundreds of deserters from the Italian forces, Rome was in a ferment, and a revolutionary rising was imminent, Orsini bombs being exploded in | the streets at night and during the day, The second French fleet bad left Toulon fer the Ro- ‘™an watera. French troops were pouring into Toulom in great numbers, and the naval conscription ‘was pat in force in the maritime departments, General ‘Moenabrea, the Premier of Italy, will, it is said, accom- Foreign Minister of France, has issued a circular, ‘whiob he says that the Emperor intervenes to dri | *hostile bands” from the Roman territory and uphold ‘the lawful time-honored rights of the Pope.” The Pope announces that he wil] not remain in Rome under any circomstances if Italian troops enter the city. ‘Console closed at 04}; for money m London yester- day, Five-tweaties were at 607; in London and 745; in Frankfort. ‘The Liverpool cotton market closed dull aad heavy, with middling uplands at $d. Broadstufis and pro- virions quiet, By the steamship Russia, at this port yesterday, we have our special mail telegrams, written correspondence and Eafopean files reporting very important details of on all these charges and specifications of “high crimes and misdemeanors.” But Mr. Stevens has said that a two-thirds vote for Mr. John- son’s removal cannot be obtained in the Senate, and Mr. Stevens ought to know. It is safe to assume that if two-thirds cannot be mustered for the regular remedy of removal, two-thirds cannot be found in the Senate for the doubt- ful expedient of suspension. So we are in. clined to regard this apparent fiery dragon of impeachment as only a hideous scarecrow of rags and straw swinging about in the wind. But upon this question and upon the main issue of reconstruction itself the radical leaders and the conservatives of Congress, and the ad- ministration, and the ouiside politicians, on all sides, are now only skirmishing against each other. They are all awaiting the issue of the New York November election. It is claimed that the Maine election and the California election were controlled by side issues or per- sonal quarrels in the republican camp; that publican strength on reconstruction ; that the Pennsylvania election amounts to nothing; but it is admitted by the republicans everywhere cal negro supremacy the people of New York for their judgment, Congress and the administration, accord- ‘the political situation existing on the Continent and ia England, in detail of our cable despatches, to the 19th Jest night at the Brooklyn Academy of ingly, are awaiting the verdict of our Novem- ber State election. As goes the Empire State so goes the Presidency. Both sides are fighting | France had refused the co-operation of Italy mecting of the soldiers and sailors of Kings | Under this idea. A decisive majority against | anq was hopetul that the expedition weeld be the republican State ticket will be accepted at the Ohio election was not a fair test of the: re- first, that this radical Fortieth Congress, and its radi- | Soaaitiona were complied with. On the schemes, are fairly before | apy s portion of the French fleet. had reached honesty. On the contrary, some of the radical | licsn. party, take pretty much the same view papers consider it very absurd and improper | as Mr. Pendleton, of Ohio, takes with regard conduct on the part of # public officer to re- | to paying the national debtand to the national fase to enrich himself at the public expense. | bank. system. ‘The republicans ef the West They do not like the action of the City Cham- | are with the democrats of that séotion -on thie berlain—frst, because it disarms them of a | issue; No doubt parties will be formed on weapon of political attack, and next, because | questions of national finance when the courtry itshows theirown party up in-a: very pitiable | shall: become surfetted with radical negr> light. It reflects, by comparison, upon the | phobia and reconstruction be accomplished ;: thousands of radical politicians who have en- | but then it will be the bondholders, the mono-- riched themselves out of the war-and whiskey | polists, the capitalists and the-mational banks, and cotton to the amount of hundeeds of mil- | as one purty, against the mass. of the industris lions, and not one of whom would disgorge a | ous classes as the other party. single dollar for the public benefit, to save the There will be, evidently, a great popular: nation from bankruptcy and ruin. movement, a movement that.is swelling im-~ mensely. in the great Westnow, to pay the Diticulty—Cemplications national debt, or a large portion of it, in gove- Europe. Ms ernment lawful money. The people begin to In to-day’s Heratp wo publish: a list of ape- | gee that unless this be done, and we come ta cial and other telegrams relating: to the situa- specie payments with. an enormous debt rest- tion in Burope. We say the situation in Eu- ing upon us, this deb/t will remain, like that of rope, for the question of the hour begins to as- England, a vast and perpetual burden upon sume European character. Our-specials con- | the nation. The people will not bear such'a firm the news of yesterday... The success of | waight for all timv2 to come, and they have Garibaldi is now confirmed beyond all dispute. | gonso enough to see that this would be the case On the 28th; with a force already numbering | if the currency be ~ontracted, specie payments twelve thousand men, and hourly increasing, forced, and their incomes and the income of he had taken @ position without: the walls of | inp government r¢duced before a large portion Rome. On the previousday the-city was in @ | of the debt be paid. While there is an abun- state of the most intense excitement, and Orsini | dance of money in circulation and the currency bombs were exploding in large numbers on depreciated, and, consequently, while the gov- the principal thoroughfares, But this success| ernment receives a large income, is the time to only hurries on the drama. Italian troops | liquidate the debt. To do this would not be have crossed into the Papal’ territory to act. repudiation, but in all probability would be against him; French troops. are at Civita.| the way to prevent that ; fora people who have Veoohia, and the Pope is rendy for fight the making of Congress:and the administration On: the 26th it was stated that the new min--| every two or four years are not likely to auffer istry had accepted office under two conditions: | themselves to be bowed down perpetually that the King should declare himself. op-.| by an overwhelming debt. to the Garibaldian movement, and The itelian ta frontier to co-operate with:France. Both -eame ian journals, though, moderate in their tone, were divided as to. the King’s policy; that conteact the. present amount till all or a large portion of the debt be liquidated. That is the those who were ready to aveall the City Cham- | Tribune, which is theroughly radical in’ poli- |' narrow, and indicating distinctly the failure of intellectual power in its author. Thad’s frankness in which he declared his contempt and hate toward everything that stood in his way, and boldly avowed his purpose to be the worst that was conceivable in the circum- stances. There is none of this flavor in the utterances before us. This may be because worthy, “formerly of the German universities.” This person’s name is Pfeiffer, and he dis- coursed with the member from Pennsylvania “with the familiarity of ancient times,” meaning as Abrabam talked with the angels or Socrates with Tom, Dick and Harry in the Agora. The subject, as stated by Pfeiffer, is “the present Prospect of our country, and whether we now are likely to approach any nearer to the true principles of liberty than our fathers did uader their old and constrained constitution.” More- over, they discussed “in a desultory way,” the means of getting rid, “ without further delay or convulsion,” of some heinous blot or crime in the constitution; said blot or crime being neither described nor named. Stevens breaks into this lofty subject In a vein that for a moment seems characteristic. He notes that the construction now given to the constitution will be accepted as its real meaning im the future, and that this should stimulate men of his particular views to give it as strong a twist as possible in their direction at the present time: With this flourish off his hands’ he drops tamely into the sea ofniggerism. His‘ argument is that the “appropriate legislation” provided for in‘ the Jast amendment to the constitution must be used to force the nigger down the national throat whether tlie people like it or not. He admits that he did: not alivays believe that Congress had the right to legislate over the States on such matters as making voters, but holdsthat it has this:power now. The ‘constitu- tion, as to general nmiters, is only “perverted” for the‘Southern States, and is still binding on the others; but as to this precious nigger it is “perverted” in all alike. The “great com- moner” can in this respect see no ‘difference in position under the constitution between con- quered country, for which the’ eonqueror prewcribes: law, and country that has never been conquered at all. He main- tains. that there is no principle of repub- lican justice if a man whois a voter in one State is not fm another, and cannot vote wher- ever hé may chance to be.’. All election laws, therefore, are pieces of ‘tyranny, and any restriction om-voting is unjust. Let every one vote—when, where, and as-often as he chooses. This is the inevitable result of the argument. At this stage it is not surprising that'Stevens ‘should run into the usual hifalutin om texts from the Dectaration of Independence... Life, liverty and the pursuit of: happiness, we hear once more, are the inalienable rights . it guarantees; and.to secure them each man must have a vote; therefore, they are not secured unless he bas. vote; therefore, if the nigger has. not » vote he cannot secure what the Declaration says he shall have. Suppose: our German citizens relied on the Declaration, and appealed to Congress against the Excise law;. that interferes with their pursuit of happiness, every radical jack- daw would have his answer ready. The Ger- man’s right to. pursue happiness is limited by the right of society to good order; but the nigger’s right to the-same pursait is not sup- posed to have-any such limit. It is not -ad- mitted that order, or even the wery existence of society, in the Southern States fs of any. moment by-comperison with the great neces- ality to the radicals.that the nigger should vote. Poor old Stevens! How feeble he must have become, when he can descend to drivel through all this. trashy argument of constitu- tional metaphysics, as if he were only another Sumner !. How much moze worthy of respect was his position when he boldly deciared that ment, or could not stand-at all! He could only have gone one step further in arrant nonsense would have been more it is, we can give him no better, extrloate himself from the snares of the clans and hasten out West, even if he comes up - with the Indians only in time to sssist in the di, ttibation of the bats, coats, pants and socks which ‘ve Comanches are expecting to get from Uncle Sami. If instead of winter clothing Uncle Sam should decide to give the Indians a are confident Sheridan on horseback is a very different vidual from Sheridan 0.2 foot. The Revolution im Italy. The telegrams announce stirring news from Europe. Prussia says to France, “Strike at Italy and we strike at you.” It is, therefore, evident that were France to crows the Alps or throw troops into any but the Pontifical terrl- tory she would have at the samo moment to meet a Prussian army on her northern frontier. This attitude of Prussia gives Victor Emanuel an opportunity to head the popular move for the consolidation of the Italien nationality ; but he has shown that he is not the man to appreciate the demands of the hour. He fatle to-meet the call of Italy and show himself e true king. The present revolutionary struggle indicates that the country is stirred to its profoundest depths by that same republican sentiment which gave such force to the old Roman people. Garibaldi, in levying treops upon Italian terri- tory to make war against Rome, does so is direct violation of the laws of his government, and is therefore engaged quite as much in leading @ popular revolution against Victor Emanuel as he is against the Pope. He leads to-day that old feeling of Roman republican unity which, since the empire was wrecked by Constantine, has slowly been pressing upwards: into a mew republic: From the date when Italy began to emerge from her feudal condi- tion and feudal lords were forced’ to concede privileges: to the cities-which finally absorbed: the neighboring territory,the process of Italiam: consolidation has been going on with rapidity. States have finally united with each other, until: @ nationality of twenty-six: millions of people is formed fron the disintegrated backbone’ - of the Roman: empire. The’ battle has beem” - fought in the face of all those retrograde ideas | which have clung so unrelentingly to the ~ chair of St. Peter—a chair which represents to-day the ideas-of a thousand years ago struggling against the nineteenth century in-- carnated in the people of Italy, France, im supporting the Pope and in undertaking s- crusade against liberalism in defence of the Vatican, only moves to the aid of « principle: bequeathed to the French throne by King Pepin. Louis Napoleon will find, however, that'the Roman will produce worge fruits, if had not very dissimilar interests involved. The Italian people appear to have cut loose completely from their royal family in their de- termination to complete their revolution. The latest news is that even the government troops are deserting in large numbers,.and that, crossing the Roman: frontier, they ory “On to Rome!’ and array. themselves under the fisg that their king denounces. Not only those, but numerous squads of men are flocking from all parts to the standard of Garibaldi as to a central point which promises the-consumms- tion. of their hopes. The new Italian Cabinet demand that the national troops. be moved against the insungents. This only indicates that the government fear the movement of the people, which makes Rome but-the initial ory: to, republicanize the country.. Let but the. - troops of Victor Emanuel. strike at the insurgents, and. they will at the same moment. 4 harry the overthrow of the throne which Is. ; now, in reality, breasting a revolution. But Garibaldi, carrying Rome by assault, as. he threatens to do, according to our telegrams, will have. the whole of, Italy at his heels and, as the modern Brutus, oan strike at everything that holds itdown. Qnce on the tide of vic- tory, the Italians will. demand a new Roman republic. The glories. of young Rome still ote Ree narehical principle, which fears the march of: republicanism. If Italy be thus-revolutionized, will France be.able to overthrow its wish in Rome? The French people themselves have proved nation can do in eelf-defence. During French Revolution their population was. leaf; than Italy new has, yet they baitled » fally against. combined Europe, Can. it doo supposed for s moment that Italy united @an limited to Civitm Vecchia. The. Pope, mean- of ratifying the nominations of | Washington as a warning to the radical man-| while, had stated to the Freach Minister at ‘on tho county and State tickets, Aa | agers to haltin theirmad career, and the warn- | Rome that if Itslian troops entered the city ho by General McKean and others. ne Oo the other band, « of the Commissioners of Emigration | 126 Will be respected. should leave it. hows that daring the year ending Octoder 30, 1967, | Tepublican majority in New York, however | qn» moat important despatch of all is that 208,498 imenigrante arrived at this pert. small, will be accepted asa verdict for Con- | trom London, dated the 29th, and which shows A fire ccourred yesterday morning at 343 Brosdway, | gress, and ae ® carte blanche to the radical that Prussia has not forgottea her former friend. leaders of the two houses to gq ahead. Then | Count Bismarck, it is said, has pledged himself an abundant circulation, and the government | rable for the surrender of Leo’s army and the tavolving a lons of $200,000. would have its coffers full. Why, one-fourth | conclusion of our great civil war. “Sheridan’s not only this, but a restoration of the ‘The Dean Richmond investigation was continued yes- we may expect by s vigorous epplication of | to come to the ald of Lialy if Napoleon, in ” has been fly immortalized in verse, and | of the old Roman republic. She leaps inte, terday. evidence was mainly corroborative. of the interest-bearing debt—which, after all, is | ride’ y im verse, an vega Gurwen Lore's steamship Union, Captain = wna poe ge a consequence of this Papal imbrogiio, ¢0- | really the only debt—could be paid off in a Sheridan himeelf enjoys the workt wide repute- | the lists among the nations in trig Romam johnson, . Wade jnstalled ‘Vou Seaton, will leave Hobeken st noon to-day (There. croaches upon her territory. This will seriously | vege, If the national bank currency were’ to | tlon which he won as the most brilliant soldier | fashion, and at the firet stroke therateua dap) for Seathamnpton und Bremen, The male fr she | in hie place, a vigorous pushing forward of the | its the action of Napoleon. He may Ind | 7°" inarwn and three hundred, clllince ot of the federal army. But since he retirod from | general European war, Uaitea Kingiom ae Cond eg close at the negroes in the work of Southern reconstruc- his troops and taka what action he pleases greenbacks issued in its place, with which the | Louisiana and entered the Presidential foot- FINE ARTS. > nn, Y aeaaamams ote, cuore M. R Greene, witt aan | Hou; #0 that before the end of this coming | within the Papat Gominions; but to cross the government could buy up and cancel three | race be has run at but a halting pace. It is — from No, 4 North river at3 P. M. to-day for Havana, the dk market was firm yesterday. Government securition wore strong. Gold closed at 140% « 141. The artists have neariy all retursea from thet sum- mer and fall wandorings, and thr, galleries of Kaoodier, Schaus, Snedecor, Leeds and ‘ether picvare dealers seesion we shall probably have the ten outside | ratian frontier at/any point he may not, under hundred mfilions of its bonds, the interest | true that the trash and balderdash which have Southern States restored as radical negro States | Dorit of a war With Prussia, Italy has little | bearing debt would be lessened that amount at | been wasted at the ovations concooted by poli- to Congress, under absolute negro control, and | Sosgsion, therfore, to dread an invasion from | "°wrine 40 once. Then, Mr. McCulloch has on hand and | ticians ostensibly in his honor, but really to | Broadway offer a fresb variety/of attractions, ‘The first MISCELLANEOUS. with fret ~— bac ry! negro poeta the north, arrangement on the part Of | unemployed all the time gold and notes | advance their own private and selfish ends, paeshagtod betes | VAll take place at Sater ‘Telegraphic adviess from Havana of yesterday state | the House, an & dozenes mo! Prussia italy will seriously annoy Na- blight his ta ions 4 + earn had declared war agsinet Bayti for | consto, ag the practical beginning of the new and, Italy sertously ‘4 amounting {n currency to about two hundred | cannot blight his laurels, It is even creditable wae pierre ot pote pevpr ivory rg! ‘ihe -oepurt poleon, ang it may yet prove the fruitful source | mittions. The application of this, together | to him that he has not proved « supple and of future tomplications. with the three hundred millions of cancelled | convenient tool in the hands of the politicians. bonds, as proposed, would reduce the debt five | He has had the good sense to keep his mouth Heantoutt and Brownlow. hundred millions. This could all be done | shut for the most part, and the few speeches These individuals are the two best represen | within a year or so. The Secretary of the | which he has been induced to maka have been tatives of their party—the negroes. Brownlow | Treasury does not need such a reserve; for | quite different from what the wicepullers who is already booked for the Senate, and Hunnicutt | with an easy currency and money market the | trotted him out either wished g¢ expected. The complicity in the plottings of Baez. President Cabral cas oa tho Haytion frontier with on army of 4,000 | era and the new dispensation of Southern negro Carsce, plotting for «return to, | supremacy. Thus reinstated on a negro besis regeony <. the Bae who recently revolted | the ten reconstructed rebel States will be in « to break out of the jail at Sentiege de position to cast their balance of power in the deen shot, and the rest sentenced 101006 | Drogidential contest as Mr. Chase may order, peat Commisioners now holding a grand connei! | Md thus the radical Chase faction calculete tribes at Medicine Lodge creek, Kansas, | upom winning the snocession against all pro- Market Place of Rio J:,neiro,” and about thirty Productions of Job V‘rnet; ‘The Resurrection of Jairus? Daughter,” by Prof, F. Stever, of Dusseldorf; “Tha ‘Young Obieftain,”/by W. W. Morrie, of Lendon ; “Sua- eet on the Nile,"/by James Hamilton, of Philadeiphias “Weaving Wild Chaplets,” by H. Von Seben; “Wilds of Lake ’ by Thomas Moran; “The Italian lovers,” by £, May; ‘* A Portrait of General Grant,” by is sure to be sent to Congress by his colored | revenue would always come in ae fast as the | specches of General Sheriden have been hap- | & Leutze, ana pictares by Neblig, Mount, Tait, Hall, armed over the discovery of an in- Josses in the North. * ‘ poy White, and other favoyte artiate, ‘part of the hostiie Cheyennes to make are the contingencies dependent on | Constituency. Who will they associate with in | drafis upon the government, or faster. That, | pily free from those “ludicrously stupid cong iow bye OT them, These warriors have ail Te area, ane hwo? been i ae this New York November election. One way rapidly 1 result, for good or evil, during the holding of | or the other the general g i Ihave openly discovered thetr treason by | will determine to @ great extent the course of Congress? What white men, rather, will asso- | too, would be the shortest way to reach specie | blunders that were sa, fatal in the apeeches of ciate with them? Shall it be Ashley of Ohio, | payments. With five hundred millions of the | General Scott. Bu‘ although less-pungent, as Nye of Nevada, Chandler of Michigan, Pe debt paid and the process —_ om oo ae lene ridlglous, their ultimate a ti Kelley of Pennsylvania’? Certainly, for we should soon return to a specie m equals unsatisfactory and vane tothe other Indians te get out of the way, | Congress, the shaping of parties, the candidates ps most puissant champions We the new | with the national bank notes in circulation, and | tageous. po are sorry that Sheridan fell into coe eee Tae only three hog, | 80d the Issues of the Presidential election, and dispensation at the South. with the ruinous financial policy of Mr. MeCul- | the t¢igke of committing himself #0 far to the seoppeve them ibe commissioners | the final form and settlement of Southern an2-* Toch and the bondholders, we shall be * long | radical politicians as to enter the Presidential White Clond, am Indian chiet, recent. | Pweg ~ secre med " vt Tur Prestoent ano His Camwvet.—Is it not | while coming to that. The trae course ag t,, | foot-race, and we presume that by be Governor Hunt, of Colorado, that he | foreign relations. time for the President to rout and reconstruct | pay the debt off as rapidly as possib’e in| they are as sorry for it as weare. H4d Of pence, but that be wouldn't tad to learn- | hip Cabinet? Repeated rumors have led us | greenbacks, and with the means at our com-| possessed the tact of General Shormsa, who ave sly i ae. | Mavisox Avenur,—We are glo earn jor some Gays past to expect a movement in mgpa, before we attempt to fore eoie pay- | declined the invitation to make & of auch works of art as only the rish,coald hitherte i this direction. If delayed until after the New | ments, And this, if wo mistaxo not the signs | to the Holy Land, and wont onk Wost to moet | care oes or Constant mayors lave’ v of the times, is what the poyple will domand, | the Indians, eitber in Gouncil or io fight, it | by é number of pictur. which be has lately fnished—amog them a copy, “sith variations, of bis famous “Venus.” + Bucheor, & Swiss artist, has recently exhibited a6 Sohaus’ ‘fveral pictures whieb have excited great atten ion °44 discussion in art circles, For originality im con-eption and execution these works merit the caretul ‘Mzamination which we purpose to bestow upoa them.” Launt Thompson has nearly completed in the clay @ colgasal bust of the poot Bryant. / Chromolithographs are rapidly multiptying. They wilt offect great good by popularizing the taste for art and sup- plying persons of moderate meaus with excellent copicg important war news, Tho dui ea: communication of the Stregt Commis: teen tnorenend to teem per cont. 7 | Vioner, published elsewhere, that tho work of us, published bas ordered the polls in Georgia to re- | grading Madison avenue ia to be comploted in by Yor elogtion it will prove too late, : ” »