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. NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1869.—TRIPLE SHEET. SRN EER MIDs comer wore raarera men TU Tn pment reenter RT NES es reece na RRR TTR EAI oy mee.) NEW YORK HERALD Siem oe So oto Rene tae Sea ow | AS BROADWAY AND ANN STREET. Cambria. Beasco—Sh: n Pre ai JAMES GORDON BENNETT, @ict of homicide against McDantels, who was com- mitted. The boy, Thomas Leonard, who committed suicide Tecently in Brooklyn, was # dutiful son, steady and industrious, and his father can assign no reason for his suicide except that be mildly reprimanded him prefer peace. If war should become a neces- sity, war with Great Britain would have for us as few terrors as war with any other Power. We know that Great Britain is mighty and dangerous as a foo; but we The war in Cuba gathers intensity and cha-| The yacht Cambria has been “badly beaten” | We publish to-day an abscract of the second racter. There appears to be more formality | in a race sailed by several boats owned in the day’s proceedings of the radical convention im in the military operations of the patriots, and | RoyalLondon Club, As the cable report gives Nashville. We might give a longer abstract, PROPRIETOR. on Sunday week for his apparent carelessness 2 | know nothing of fear. We know what we | the reports of Spanish victories come with | us only meagre statement of this main fact | for the Nashville papers contain several SSS case of officer Clougher, charged with attempt- have done; we know what we can do; and | less frequency and less bombast from Havana, | interpretation is necessarily somewhat at fault; | columns of the report, but it is so dashed, volume IEE sacseoassacscctonittbccwulllite 145 are maneemen on ‘Broadway, was before any Power that will attempt to trample upon Our special telegram yesterday advised us of but we venture the thought that the defeat, | double dashed, and extra double dashed off, when all its particulars are known, will prove | like a Georgia cornfield laid out in rows ready far from disgraceful to the gallant craft that | for planting, that more of it might confuse our became famous for her victory over the Sap- | readera and render what we already give al- pho. “Badly beaten” is a phrase sometimes | most a perfect blank. These reports demon- to be taken with salt, and we have known in- | strate that the convocation was among the the landing of a small expedition near the port of Gibara, and that fighting of a serious cha- racter has taken place in the jurisdiction of Cienfuegos and Trinidad, in which the Span- iards do not claim to have obtained their usu- us will feel that we, too, are mighty and dan- gerous. But we prefer peace to war. War could occasion us but little loss; it might bring us something in the shape of gain. Peace, however, is more to our mind, Woe are the Police Commissioners yesterday, when it was shown that while he was trying to take the child to her mother she became frightened at his uniform and appealed to several citizens, to whom the officer surrendered her, Rebecca Fitch, a young lady of twenty-one, whose AMUSEMENTS THIS EVENING. FIFTH AVENUE THEATRE, Fifth avenue and Twenty- fourth stroet,—BaRexe BLEOR. WALLACK’S THEATRE, Broadway and 1b strect.— Casta. counsel stated that she was respectably connected | now doing well. It is something to be able to ally asserted triumph, with utter annihilation | stances in which it meant simply a hairbreadth | most disgraceful of any,kind that ever assem- LGADENe OF MERION ENGLISH OrsR4— | and that her father was wealthy, was sentenced to | say that we are reducing our debt by some | to their enemy. ‘These are pregnant signs. | escape of the victor from the fate described by | bled in the State, Its proceedings were the State Prison for three years yesterday for grand larceny. She had previously served two terms for similar offences, and has shown such o remarkable propensity for stealing that her friends and relations can do nothing for her, The steamship Hammonia, Captain Meter, will leave Hoboken at two P. M. to-day for Plymouth, England, Cherbourg and Hamburg. The mails for Europe wil! close at the Post Office at twelve M. The steamship Colorado, Captain Green, will leave Pier No, 46 North river at three P. M. to-morrow (Wednesday) for Liverpool, calling at Queenstown to land passengers. ‘The stock market yesterday was active and bnoy- ant, with a general and large advance tn the ratlway list. Gold was irregular, but finally closed at 1414. Beer cattle yesterday were only moderately sought after, and with a fair supply on sale, the market was heavy at the following quotations: Extra steers, 16c. @ 16340. ; prime, 1540. & 15%Xc.; fair to good, lic. a 15c,, and superior to ordinary, 10c. a 13};0, Milch cows were dull but unchanged. Prime and extra were quoted at $90 a $125 each; fair to good, $75 @ $85, and inferior to common, $45 a $70. Veal calves were only in moderate request and prices favored the buyer, prime and extra selling at 10;c. a 11}c., and inferlor to good at éc. a10c. Sheep were in light request, and though the arrivals were light, Prices were heavy at 7c. a 8c. for prime to extra. Sheared, 6c. a 6%c. for comman to good; 4ke. a Sic. for inferior, and 63¢c. a 10c. for unshorn. Lambs were dull at 1c. 3 1c, For swine the mar- ket was dull and, with heavy arrivals. Prices were heavy at 10c, @ 10)¢0. for common to heavy prime. Prominent Arrivals in the City. Governor John T. Hoffman, of New York, and Mr. French, of Washington, are at the Clarendon Hotel. sudge J. W. Porter, of Louisiana; Colonel Alex. Warwick, of Texas; Congressman A. H. Laflin, of New York; Dr. W. C. Hurd, of Connecticut; W. F. White, of San Francisco, and Jonathan Taylor, of New York, are at the Metropolitan Hotel. Judge Comstock, of Syracuse; General J. C. Fre- mont, of Tarrytown; Governor R. K. Scott, of South Carolina, and G. B. McCarthy, of Washiugton, are stopping at the Fifth Avenue Hotel. Dr. M. K. Hogan, late Surgeon and Brevet Colonel, United States Volunteers, is staying in the city. Prominent Departures. State Senator R. Crowley and Col. Barrett left yes- terday for Albany, State Senator C. T. Folger for Washington, and Dr. W. Young for Troy, New York. the emphatic words. The Cambria may have | marked by profane and vulgar declarations been beaten on time allowance, which huthan | that would have caused those who uttered nature naturally looks upon as at best only a | them to be thrown from the windows of a con- technical defeat, and it is likely enough that | gregation of horse thieves and cutthroats, It the race was not on a course fitted to afford | is absolutely humiliating to the whole Ameri- the best chance for her splendid capabilities, | can people that any political organization in o asit was, perhaps, ariver race. There may be | State in the Union should so outrageously con- many reasons why this defeat should not de- | duct itself in its representative capacity ina tract from the world-wide and well-earned | public hall. No term of opprobrium is too fame of the Cambria as a fine sea boat of the | strong to apply to blackguards who befoul first class in regard to speed. Still the fact | their party and their country as remains that she has been beaten, and we must | these Tennessee radicals have just done. not lose sight of what this implies, especially | But what is the cause of all this to our yachtmen who visit Europe this sum- | political demoralization? It can safely be mer, and who may be tempted to a too ambi- { ascribed to the polluted political career of tious clutching for laurels, It implies, then, | such intolerant radical leaders as Parson that the Cambria is not the fastest boat to be | Brownlow, who, with one foot in Satan’s do- met on the other side the water. Despite all | minions and the other in the United States we have heard of her, and despite her victory | Senate, scarcely knows which way to turn for over the American boat, it seems to imply that | either spiritual or political salvation. He British clubs can upon occasion present several | seems to have endeavored to make the reign craft greatly superior to her. We have, in- | of Satan as complete in Tennessee as possible deed, heard it whispered that she must give | in order that the contrast might not be so great place to such British yachts as the Aline, the | hereafter. Tennessee must repudiate such Alarm and the Blue Bell, and now we have a | men altogether or live in constant terror of po- fact worth many whispers. If, then, this | litical and social Ku Kluxes until she does. Of craft that came off with such a good record in | course the radical convention burst up in a her contest with a visitor from the United | row without effecting a nomination—the con- States shall finally appear to be only @ third | test being between Senter, the euccessor of or fourth rate among British yachts, our own | Brownlow, and Stokes, a radical momber of adventurers must consider what they under- | Congtéa. Andy Johnson did not come in take in their summer excursion. anywhete, Indeed, he seems to be nowhere in Apparently such a warning is not needed to | Tennessee just at this time; but it will be stimulate the efforts that are in progress to fit | among the wisest acts of his life if he man- our yachts for a gallant struggle. We hear | ages to steer clear of every such shameless very favorable reports of the improvements | gang of bummers as that which has jyst dis- that have been madein the Sappho. It is said | graced by their presence the capital of the that her performance on her recent trial trip | State. The radical party in Tennessee, thus was up to sixteen knots an hour. She will | being hopelessly split, why do not the con- then in all probability go to Europea decidedly | servatives rally once more and endeavor to better craft than she went before—a faster | right the ship of State? boat, and in hands likely to present her at her Mr. Hatz, in his letter published elsewhere, best. But even though she be beaten we have has very completely turned the tables on those still the probability of making @ good show | wno assailed his honesty in showing that all with the Meteor, recently built by Mr. Robert | the acts on which he is charged with corrupt Fish—a naval architect of great ability and practices were done by that very secrotary originality. The Meteor will perhaps prove to | wo, in his discontent, made the charges. be very fast. She is, as the America was, an experiment, but an experiment in a direction Tuosz Cans.—When shall we see those that promises the best cosults. From experi- | graceful and commodious Hansoms whirling ments thus boldly made, and from no other | alongour streets? Some envious persons and source, can we expect any real progress or im- | papers have insinuated that the bill which provement in the build of yachts; and here | passed the Legislature the other day, incor also we must remember that there is a great | porating the “Hansom Cab Company,” was point against us in the fact that where we | only a blind to prevent other parties from make one experiment English yachtmen make | establishing a line of cabs in the city. We fifty. Whatever may be the capabilities and | are informed, however, that the company is fitness of our boats for performance on the | sustalned by large English capital; that cabs other side, however, we must suppose, from | are being built in England for shipment as fast present appearance, that Mr. Ashbury and the | as possible, and that the company intends to Cambria are in advance ruled out of any con- | carry out all the provisions of the charter at test made there; for our champions cannot | theearliest moment. We hope that there will match with beaten boats. They must race | be no disappointment about it. The public with first rates or their victories will be of no | are anxious to have a good line of cabs run- value. Besides this they must be warned by | ning at a moderate rate offare and under good Mr. Ashbury’s own example. He has per- | regulations. i haps been beaten because ho made a river! Paxiwa Apvick.—Grant was informed by race with boats smaller than his own; and 98 | his official logal adviser that there was no he fears to venture our boats in the open 808 | warrant in the Eight Hour law for giving men because they are larger and their size isan | ton hours’ pay for eight ‘hours’ labor, and he, advantage in the sea, so they must naturally therefore, did the thing by proclamation, sup- refuse a contest in waters that give a better Gibkie weaslentedl chance to smaller craft. But this need be posing, perhaps, “s ee © The expedition reported to have banded is probably one of two which have left this coun- try recently. The first of these was under the direction of General Jordan, who was chief of staff to Gen- eral Beauregard during the siege of Charleston, and left here about three weeks ago. It com- prised an assorted carg¢ of munitions of war, with a good proportion of small arms and ar- tillery, and carried something less than two hundred and fifty men. Its destination was Port Padre, on the northern shore of the island, about ten leagues west of Gibara, thirty leagues east of Nuevitas, which is the base of present Spanish operations in the Central Department, and thirty leagues distant from Guaimaro, the present residence of Presi- dent Cespedes. The other expedition was a small one, organized at Key West bya number of students of the Havana University, and which was ready to leave Nassau on the even- ing of the 10th instant, on the steamer Sal- vador, It gomprised 9 small cargo of arms and amutunition, with abou’ one hundred and thirty young Cubans. Whichever of these two expeditions be the one that has landed in Cuba ita material of war will bo a welcome supply to the patriot forces. The reports of serious fighting in the jurisdiction of Cienfuegos and Trin!- dad is the more remarkable in view of the fact that the Spanish Minister at Washington, a few weeks since, formally an- nounced to Secretary Fish that the revolution was effectually suppressed in that region and would soon be extinguished throughout the island. This locality is the extreme western limit of the revolutionary movement to-day, and is contiguous to the Western Department of the island, where the Spaniards claim to have twenty thousand organized, disciplined and enthusiastic volunteers under arms. Any portion of these who are willing to take the field could be thrown in thirty hours by rail and steamer into Cienfuegos. The fact that a few ill-armed country bands should again be able to give the government trouble in this region would seem to prove either that they were not as effectually put down as the Spanish officials recently claimed they were, or that the thousands of mad volunteers in Havana are not so ready to take the field as they proclaim themselves to be. It seems to us, as calm observers of the con- flict, that while the proceedings of the Cubans are exhibiting more signs of organization and. of operations customary in regular warfare the efforts of the Spaniards exhibit less vigor and resource than they did at first. In their streas they are placing greater reliance on the action of our government to deprive the Cubans of the material of war. Thus we see the strange anomaly that, while the Spanish officers are pushing undisturbed the construc- tion of thirty gunboats in our shipyards, the Cabinet at Washington details a United States armed cutter to watch one little steamer in New York harbor because the Spanish officials suspect that she is preparing to go to Cuba. The ground for this action Is the asserted re- quirements of the neutrality laws. It will be well if the cold-blooded and cow- seven or ten millions of dollarsa month. In all the arts of peace the success which has attended us since the close of the war is in the highest degree encouraging. We wish to go on peacefully, believ- ing that the enormous prosperity whioh has attended usin the immediate past is but an imperfect foretaste of the prosperity which will attend us in the immediate future. We do not want to bully, but we will not be bullied. We have given Great Britain no real cause of offence. We have simply said that we like not and will not have your terms. We have stated the case as we understand it; but we are not pressing. We are disposed to be magnani- mous, We can wait for months, for yeara, if need be; but we cannot, we will not abate one jot or tittle of our just demand. War, how- ever, is not necessarily connected with the maintenance of our dignity, our pride, our national honor, We are willing to say, ‘‘Let us have peace ;” but we are not willing to say, “England has done us no wrong.” Tag Frexou Ergorions.—France remained orderly and peaceable yesterday, the second day of the general election. A very heavy vote was given in the rural districts. Paris cast over half of the city vote on Sunday and concluded the balloting yesterday. The general result, as reported in our special cable telegram from London, is not by any means assuring to the imperial cause. The govern- ment obtains one hundred and ninety-three supporters in the members, and the opposition ninety ; an opposition gain of forty-five since the close.of the session. MM. Garnier Pages, Jules Favre, with a number of “reds,” have been chosen. M. Thiers is probably de- feated. Will the empire remain “‘peace?” Exeuisa REFINEMENT.—A London journal partially acknowledges that the arming of the Alabama against the Union resulted from a “misdirection of sympathy.” This isa most refined manner of expressing the word piracy. It is to be hoped that Great Britain will place her sympathetic current in an honest direction soon and pay our bill of claims. No more “misdirection,” cousin John. GERMAN STADT THEATRE, Nos. 45 and 47 Bowery~ RisLey’s IMPERIAL JAPANESE TROUPE. OLYMPIC THEATRE, Broadway.—ficoony D1ccos¥ Doox. is ROWERY THEATRE, Bowery.—Mazgrra—Poor Dog RAY. BOOTH'S THEATRE, Bist, between 6th and’6th avs— OTuELLO, GRAND OPERA HOUSE, corner of Eighth avenue and 2d wtreet.—PaTRie. NIBLO'S GARDEN, Broadway. TRAVAGANZA OF THE FosTy THI a8 BURLESQUE Ex+ Be. WAVERLEY THEATRE. 720 Broadway.—Pr@sALton— A Surres Faron. WOOD'S MUSEUM AND THEATRE, Thirtioth street and BrowiwayAfvernoon and evening Performance. THE TAMMANY, Fourteenth street.—CLORINDA—PETEB Guar. MRS. F. B. CONWAY'S PARK THEATRE, Brooklyn. Muon Apo ABOUT A MERCHANT OF VENICE, THEATRE COMIQUE, 514 Broadway.—ComIc SKETCHES AND LIVING STATUES—PLOIO. CENTRAL PARK GARDEN, 7th av., between 58th and Sth sts.—POPULAR GARDEN CONCERT. SAN FRANCISCO MINSTRELS, §85 Broadway.—ETu10- PIAN ENTERTAINMENTS—THE UNBLEACHED BLONDES. BRYANTS' OPERA HO! street. —Erntorian MINS’ Tammany Building, Mth 40, - TONY PASTOR'S OPERA HOSE, 201 Bowery.—Comto Voca.isu, NEGRO MINSTRELSY, &c. STEINWAY HALL, Fourteenth etreet—OLe BULL'S Granp Concent. EMPIRE CITY RINK, corner $d av., 63d and 64th sts.— GRanp ConogR?, &C. HOOLEY’S OPERA HOUSE, Brooklyn.—Hoo.sr's MINsTRELS—VSL-AU-VENT. NEW YORK MUSEUM OF ANATOMY, 618° Broadway.— SOIENCE AND ART. TRIPLE SHEET. New York, Tuesday, May 25, 1869. Europe. The cable despatches are dated up to May 25. The following London newspapers, the 7imes, Standard and Star, of yesterday, contained long and critical editorials on the Alabama claims from Mr. Sumner’s standpoint. The police are unusually vigilant just now in Cork. Search is being made for concealed weapons. The elections in France yesterday passed off in a quiet manner. The vote ts very large. The govern- ment 80 far has 193 representatives and the opposi- ton 90. The oppositionists have made large gains. ‘The Bourse was much excited in consequence. The German parliament of the Zollverein will meet in Berlin on the 34 prox. Prince Karageorgewich, who has been imprisoned on a charge of being implicated in the murder of Prince Michael of Servia, has been released on bail. It is reported that Czartoryski, a descendant of a famous Polish patriot, has been appointed by the Austrian goyernment as Governor of Galicia, Tue Innman steamship City of Antwerp, Captain Morehouse, from Liverpool the 13th, via Queens- town the lath, arrived at this port late last night. The Alabama Claims and the British Press. In another place in this day’s Heratp we publish special cable despatches which show how Intense is the excitement which still occupies the public mind in Great Britain on the revived question of the Alabama claims. The Times, the Star and the Stand- ard had each, as will be seen, editorials on the subject yesterday. Tho Times, though independent, generally contrives to be on the side of the government ; it may, therefore, in the present instance, be justly regarded as more or less the mouth- piece of the Cabinet. The Times makes no fresh point of any consequence. Its one great Cuba. concern is about the instructions which Mr. The Revolutionary Junta in this city publish in fa | Motley may receive as our new Minister at the the prociamationgof Cespedes, extracts from which | Court of St. James. Naturally enough it were recently given by the Spanish authorities to | comes to the conclusion that Mr. Motley will show that Valmaseda’s late infamous order was a receive no fresh instructions, and that bis ar- consequence of it. The proclamation in full, how- ever, shows that the Spaniards had been carrying on rival in London and the presentation of bis cre- a war of extermination, killing prisoners, mutilat- | dentials will throw little fresh light on the sub- ing the dead and laying waste all Cuban property | ject. The Zimesregrets the failure of the treaty, wih : their r esa! fapraheesoetr order was called | trusts somewhat to the power of conscience, “a z ‘eng salpaiee retarned to Nassau and hopes great things from some futare tri- on the sth mst. from the nortn coast of Cuba, wnere | bunal. The Star, which is notoriously in the in landing all her men, arms, ammu- | interest of John Bright, assails Sumner bitterly, Bition aud provisions. Soon after her return she and calls attention to the speech of Mr. Forster Savace Wit.—The Indians call General Custer the ‘‘Creeping Panther,” and another general the ‘‘Portable Pantry.” Bicotry vs. Cunristianiry.—The New School Presbyterians in session in this city adopted, one day last week, a resolution recom- mending the Grand Army of the Republic to change the day from Sunday to Saturday next for the decoration with flowers of the graves of those brave soldiers who died that the nation might live, bécause these Presbyterian Pharisees hold that this Christian service on Sunday will be a ‘‘desecration of the Sabbath."’ We are glad to hear that this outbreak of Puri- tanical bigotry will not be regarded by the Grand Army of the Republic. Of all the seven days of the week Sunday is the very day for this service— this beautiful religious tribute of respect to our dead heroes. It will be in the highest sense keeping the Sabbath day holy, this rev- erential sprinkling of our soldiers’ graves with she succeed was wired » Recetver General for violating ¥ i . ; . as a fair expression of the liberal sentiment of | flowers. The Founder of Christianity himself | ardly Secretary of the State Department at sort of supplementary law. An attorney gen- casuve ave eae as Sete sory, estar country. If England has committed any | was once taken to task bya roundhead for | Washington does not involve the administra- om oe brated metho SS ee this | oral, then, is a person whose advice is of no Beast. offence a all the offence is to be charged to | desecrating the Sabbath, and these New School | tion of President Grant in a general burst of | © safari et i ™ pi bs . account when it stands in the way, but is all ! ne vices trom £40 Janeiro, Aprit 20, | te upper ten thousand, and not to the masses | Presbyterians concerned in this aforesaid reso- obloquy from our own people and subject it size ready mon any fair terms. We | important when it affords pretexts for disre~ | have here the Fleetwing, a fast yacht, built by dein of cue! best MAUL: eucbiieelys. ME Van Te homme eT Dusen, which boat was second in the race of Tar War 1x Cuna.—The steamer Salva- 1866 across the Atlantic. This boat is as | dor, which lately ran from Key West to St. nearly as possible the size of the Cambria, and | Thomas, has just returned to that island from Mr. Ashbury, if he could beat the Fleetwing, | Cuba, after landing some three hundred volun~ would have laurels worth the wearing wherever | teers, with arms and ammunition, for the re- fine yachts and good seamanship are held | volutionary forces. Seven hundred sympa- in honor. But even in contests on this side | thizers were landed, and engaged almost im~ we should regret his recent defeat ; for in beat- | mediately with the Spanish regulars. The ing his boat, say in a race for the Queen's cup, | raw levies fought bravely, and the we should still feel that we had not beaten the | struggle was, as usual, very severe. The best boat that British clubs could send. volunteers are eaid to have had sixty men Dapper ray ea REI killed and 160 wounded, while the Spaniards Waers's Moszs?—In these times of confu- | sustained only a slight loss, It must be borne sion among the colored radicals in Tennessee, | in mind, however, that the account comes the question is asked, ‘What's Moses?” from government sources. If the war should Stanrricant,—It is a somewhat significant | endure for any lengthened period Cuba will be fact that the only speaker at the late radical | desolated; it may be almost barbarized. On to the contempt of every Cabinet in the civil- ized world. The idea that seems to animate him is that the so-called neutrality laws of this country really bind the government of the United States to an alliance offensive and de- fensive with Spain to preserve the outrageous tyranny she exercises in Cuba, and that, too, at the very time when the Spanish people have, by a glorious revolution, overthrown it at home. In this policy Secretary Fish goes as far beyond the true policy which should animate the government, and the true feeling of the people of the United States, as he did when he so timorously stated that he wished to wait and see what England sald about Senator Sumner's speech before he wrote the instruc- tions of our new Minister to London. The neutrality laws, properly interpreted, state that ue ¢ market was very firm. Noship- | of the people. The Standard, a tory ments had beea made for four days, aud the receipis | organ, is as offensive as it well can be. were hglt. Weet Indies. A tory journal, however, can scarcely be any- The steamship Mississippi, on her way from Rio thing, cise Sisn oflmstve. The sofe-apeskiang Janciro for t's city, Was wrecked near Martinique | Party now in power have deceived the Ameri- on the 2600 u ‘, and it is feared she has provena | can government and people, and the wonder total loss. » passengers and crew and the mails | is not great that Brother Jonathan should turn were all y tranaterred to another vessel. on Brother John and express himself with » bip Arago arrived at St. Thomas on the The Spanish tron-cisd Victoria was in certain amount of impertinent boldness, Ac- ng the Peruvian monitors. cording to the Standard, the gentry rule Eng- Hayti. land, the masses being only followers—a hint wae again bombarding Anx Cayes, in | Which it will be well for the masses of Eng- of Uelan had been destroyed by | land to strive fully to understand. With the exception of the Standard, which is slightly bellicose, it will be seen that the war spirit is not so emphatically pro- nounced as it was on Saturday last. Our English cousins seem to be coming to their lution belong to the same order of bigoted sim- pletons. How they would roast all disbe- lievers in their senseless crotchets if they had the power! Whata glorious blessing is re- ligious liberty ! Porro Rioo Jomnine tN THE Fray.—We are glad to learn that the revolutionary fire of Cuba has extended to and spread over the neighboring Spanish island of Porto Rico, because it gives more employment to Spain and is so far a contribution to the cause in Cuba. Porto Rico isa fertile island. It has ® population of some six hundred thousand, and in importance is the fourth of the isles of the West Indies—Cuba being first, St. Domingo or Hayti second, and Jamaica third, though Jamaica is but little larger than Porto Rico. We expect the annexation before long, by the ningo, was still trying to negotiate ui sent another ation to Europe s his adherents were going over to Hane Psocsnagas tite ahi Sate aka lee ee eben our ri remy has We | consent of all concerned, of St. Domingo, pdt Bory yeas agp prveenare liy convention scrimmage in Nashville who suc- | her arrival at St. Thomas the Salvador por be ™ , a 0 ad " by toe utterances of ofl- iia ith that ah oa hie sole iri y | Which lies between Cubs and Porto lee, and ee peaceful dominions of our neighbors ; but eee > eee er Pere Coen TUL GaEnt dae tk aed tee ob ere of the Bag nent during the war, tat | > hig ts tay, seawi od Wad eae cae - so, with the annexation of these two, when when d tio tyranny has forced an entire delegate from an interior county. sterling for having left port with an excess of England av ; t.' avoid participation in tue ’ tg the war therein is over, we shall have the ee passengers, England is becoming very deli- people to overthrow a despostim and estab- lish a living and free government by the side of the shrinking form of misrule, no past diplo- matic courtesies can ever be interpreted by a live or great statesman as obligating him to be false to the true interests of his own coun- wirife. Gewor \ reply to wa inquiry, statea | Senator Sumner has acted on the English St Minister Movey hag 0eVed isiructous of | people very much as the first shot fired at . j | Fort Sumter acted on the people of the North. ce-soeking rambles, | 7+ hag made England o unit, The y and proposed to of Legation at | People of all ranks and classes, the tory and to General | the whig, the radical and the royalist, tho A Sorvs Rack—The coming election in | cate and careful in her construction of intor- Tennessee. Cannot the conservatives pro- | national law. Who or what does she fear? duces Peyton? A New Nationat Cnain.—It is stated In a Texas paper that a ‘‘chain of cattle and horse droves” for Northwestern cities has been cross- three islands all in a row. the public knew noth, “* “t. Walker, m her on, ‘seretary Fish yostera, “wom of Secretary . vetery referred Comrort From CaNnava.—A London jour- nal, in reference to the cloudy aspect of the Alabama claims, draws comfort from a late resolution of the Canadian Parliament ‘to Atarmina Expiosion or Gas.—Cincinnath has experienced a new and alarming sensation, The city gasometer exploded at noon yester~ : con freedom-loving impulses of all day, ita i iron holder, one hundred and . tif ne agreed t. »mmend | high, the low, the rich, the poor, are all of one | share with tho mother country the fortunes, | try and to the jay, ite immense , p~ wen “ Departascas 7a 1 take | mind. If there has been wrong they want it | the trials and the chances.” Very good; but | mankind. Compared with « Canning, » Ca- ing ~~ is Semuouren wns ince thirty foot in diameter and having capacity aocent es 4 on ™ . , | proved. If there is guilt they are not | what chance would poor Canada have in the | vour, a Bismarck, tpg an Secre- ae ng and a producing country, and ee- of half a million of cubic feet of gas, being a, Tee . % & ti shrinks imensio! grazi i po and states a %, ‘Montane, wa unwilling to pay the penalty. But insult or | event of a fight? This Canadian resolution is | tary Fish to the ns of a pigmy a er important link in the obain torn to pieces and scattered in all directions, in the presence of Titans. President Grant owes it to the dignity of this nation and to the and honor of his administration to ‘A May 6, endo njustice—to neither will they submit. It is * — sifest that if sorely pressed England would ma. war; anditis not to be doubted that only for buncombe. of national unton. One man lost his life, a companion being Novet Porsor or Avstria.—The Austrian ee fatally injured, s number of others having,’ Wanrap—The platform of principles of the | a3 if in miraculous preservation, just aursckod poner : rida ‘stry, which, in the present nag bog se has named the descendant of « a mateo ro parr in ae Tennessee radicals. ; descended from the point of danger. The ser nemooh i\e man ¥ ce® guised *‘tself with the national dignity, ‘lish patriot—Czartoryski—Governor | crisis, req & petty cowardly PARpow Askep For.—The Nashville Union | neighboring buildings were scorched an@ sud weaiped: One WH y atated = 2g A tiers, | identify + of Galicia, This appointment is regarded as on. The Neckyille Unton badly woudl: wa sands 4 Git oe. | would have ~ eee on ean ne | an cnti-Russian demonstration mede openly | Sees ohe 10 an toaloal Interpretation (Of | asks pardon of its readers for the profanity pay dew os aie at Se eee would rent run was ered inte Xl a by | national symp. s by the Cabinet in Viertna. If England inter- in the jation of the world b: which appeared in ite columns on « certsin also * A ral o componed of fi po b of the p Ple- We have thus learned and apprec! Y | day, being » report of the proceedings of the | sions of the subtle agent are becoming very vand, epvene Nd Memphis masirond, we pe ‘The »,Peech of Senator Sumner, sages ry wher d ssi the io bored making us the effective ally of @ hateful, de- | -aica convention in Nashville. It consoles | frequent. Where are the inspectors ont a 801 } , w jar sense ave | episod espotiam a an ogg ae, ta, Longer o taken in connection TT TLIRK Guan ta ite either gna e om with ot wes Oe Itself, however, with the reflection that “‘pro- Comto aNp Ittvstratep NewsrarErs.— pterudh even wal — awe an wt British press and the eigen gay Mr the Amertoan people long since. Tax Cunan Caves m New Yore.—The | fane history has been serviceable to the world, While it is true that our comic newspapers . pe oe, alt ante ‘ British statesmen, a ——— organization which speaks in the name of the | and trusts that this chapter may be of service da permanent guc- pose ww Dt os and was cine jaar com- | . ar all is just as stubbord and full of fight Doos.—One great public benefit is likely t© | Gabgn revolutionists in this city has issued @ | to Tennessee.” Lot his pardon be granted poorer | pd ge a to lack ‘ot 4 rage of we oe ge pea a rity-six cet ought ho was; but i has not taught | grow out of the law for the prevention of manifesto, addressed to the native patriots | without the interference of a pardon broker, ‘ood management rather than to want of . radon sraered to report to based John » * must retrace our steps or abate | cruelty to animals, Mr. Bergh, in his sym- | 444 jovers of liberty generally, which we pub- | like Mra, Cobb or a pardon granter like Andy ii We have quite as much talent in thie wt as registrars. NO i awa | os we th ve demand. pathy for the dog, is likely to force upon pub- | jish to-day. The exciting causes of the move- | Johnson. try for the purposes of comic and illus cabs nein eayarnie polle for © us that we +, just to say—and we say it lic attention some knowledge of the real fact® | ant on the island—the oppressions of Spain 4 | country esting, they have.in Migtand, ot tn the New | one tittle of O% ‘+ that it may have a sooth | of hydrophobia, and thus prevent much evil | 444 inherent love of the right of self Teo Hor ror Him.—The Nashville Union | trated newspel batt ral 8 tac provinces of cunetio OA cect tore It is, OT eat s somewhat the interests | resulting from ignorance and panic. He could | 1494 are recapitulated and reaflirmed in lan- sates thes Parson Beowalow Se dlegusted with | BeOS a ‘ee - ; me “ te we bed & ne ‘The prev opposed to grant pa his pl in | the taste je people, w ave but litt yo, wre ove ‘ tne ancient the more real’ + ‘teh le have got | not do better with the funds of his society than Washington and wants to give up his place in Dominiod, OF sai by Nove scotls, unless UT neut | oll 4 subserve ‘sh peop! gaage which cannot be mistaken cither by | 11. conate to Horace Maynard, in order to be | leisure to scan these journals critically, to cul pes wat ‘oe See we po pone" the Eng. ¢ ea yh this poo ch sgerena peer Nihon poo onemion or friends, The cause of Cubs pro- | 4, Goreenr et idan again “The idea | tivate a very elegant finish in our engravings, - con- g u better : ‘ —_ Fe aspen ore reported 10 oe ecessasilf a ene is Bah food of | than his letter to Hoffman, and must take the BE nmasctnencnnieneme that Washington is too hot a place for the | For rey eri ge Ahan 2 a a of pignieen new cares wt oot ove ent characters | maior, They ag pecome —-quld have | true ground that there is no spontancoushyd¢o- { Presperenan Srimt.—Tho Proshyterians | Parson Is pretty good evidence that brimstone aa wane Ls ye 4 pret seerans oe ene city, owt of them removed, ws rorcemecee | in that we . with England *- “ey are | phobia, but that the disease is always commu- regard the decoration of the graves of soldiers | and faggots will have to be piled up in cine ae ie mayo taoren i gucgant oe. ae past Ore 590s BOREAS ce upon tie | war, and thal TO fn this "sists | nioated from dog to dog as amplpox ia dom | who saved the country as en act that would | quantities in the other place in order to ma al nike cad: eel Sa Nile 0 mo sary, vo tne ee commuanoners creconvempiated tot | jor us © special © No such “0 | man to man, “dosocrete” the Sabbath. it all comfortable for him when be gets thore. | trated publications, ar : enna. wee together Wee ot afraid of Wats > sada sa yesterday Tue Coroner'® araar, we Iu rendering ves concludes 9 .