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4 _NEW YORK HERALD MUNDAY, JULY 12, 160. i. et it bah ited Ps ees pase oval J A. NE y W YORK HE R ALD ‘The ‘Alabamne’| Chitns—taten ey Views | contest walsh contrasts most favorably with Tho Cubau Cuibaia's of Likeratios. poker on board e Missiocippt steamer, when one Parls Charities, Ate ay seh BE on the Subject. the bratal and bloody prize fights that used to Time is calling the roll of events which mark | of themi—a professignal—managed to extract | It redounds greatly to the honor of Paris BROADWAY AND ANN STREET. JAMES GORDON BENNETT, PROPRIETOR. Tho course taken by Mr. Gladstone » few be patronized even by gentlemen. Boating, | the decay of Spanish power in America with a | surreptitiously from the deck of cards the four | that the sums annually devoted by this model nights ago in the Honse of Commons in regard | yachting and the other manly outdoor sports | rapidity that has ‘no precedent in the history | aces, When it came to the turn of a Yankee, | city to the noblest charities bear a very hand- to the Alabama claims is entitled to a little | in which young America and young England | of the Spanish American colonies. On the | who had noticed the cheat, to play, he adroitly | some proportion to those expended in amuso- more consideration than ft has yet rébelved on | now generously emulate cach other cannot be | 4th dey of January of the present year | took another ace from a pack of his own and | mentand display. Among tho charities which this side of the Atlantic. Sir Henry Bulwer, | too highly commended. General Dulce arrived at Havana full of high | planked it on the table. ‘Hallo! fire and | peculiarly enlist the sympathy and aid of Pa~ rene hope to assumé the command of that impor- | furies!” exclaimed the outwitted gambler, “I'll | risian ladies of rank and wealth must be counted New Vork City as a Southern Summer | be d—-d if there ain't cheating around this | es créches, or houses of refuge for the little Letters and packages ‘should be properly | who is one of the ablest surviving representa- sealed. tives of the school of Lord Palmerston, and taut colony, Four months before that day an ' Rejected communications will not be re- | who has still some faith in British pluck, in- Resort. apparently unimportant revolution had brokea board,” So with the radicals. Having been | children of mothers who are obliged to go out turned. dignant at the speech of Senator Sumner, had The situation of New York is singularly fa- } out in Yara, which his predecessor had been caught at their cheating tricks they cry out | daily to work, but who may leave their infants 3% given notice of a motion some time ago bearing | Yorable for health and enjoyment during the impotent to suppress, Sid Cespedes, as the | with indignation against the democracy, | at these places, visiting them at noon and Allbusiness or news letter and telegraphic on the general question of the Alabama claims, | 8¥™mer months. The breezes that sweep over | ruler of free Cuba, was then installed at Bay- | ‘There's cheating around this board.” taking them home in the evening, sure that despatches must be addressed New YORK | pig object being to call forth the sentiments of it from the rivers on each side and from the | amo. General Dulce arrived when the Span- : they have been tenderly taken care of during the House on the subject, Once and again | Splendid bay below purify the air and neu-| ish power rejoiced in the full flush of its Charity and the City Debt. the day. A project was started recently for had Sir Henry yielded to the solicitations of | ‘ralize even the worst negligence of those | strength. Its army had not yet been depleted ; A legal fire is going on betwoen the Commis- | founding a new oréche in one of the most des- the government and allowed the discussion to | Whose duty it should be to remove all local | the great sugar district of the island was just sioners of the Sinking Fund and the Excise | titute quarters of Paris. The lady patron- AGUGREIRAS Gao praMING. be postponed. On Thursday night Mr. Glad- | causes of pestilential disease. However | beginning to harvest its product and pour its | Board about the disposition of the liquor | esses wear several of the most distinguished stone again asked postponement. Sir Henry | fiercely the sun may blaze upon us during the | wealth into the lap of the colonial power, and | money. The three legal members of the | names in French society and in the circle of pQLYMPIC THEATRE, Bronaway.—Httocorr DIGOORT | Vistded to Mr, Gladstone's request, but threw | day, our nights are almost always refreshingly | the Spanish population of the cities and the Sinking Fund Commission claim that the | foreign residents. Among the lattor is the BOOTH'S THEATRE, Siaat, veiween 5th and 6th avs. | the whole responsibility of the postponement | Col in July and August, Moreover so many | large towns had been recently organized in license fees in the city of New York are | name of Madame la Marquise de Caux (Ade- Enocu AgDE sol of the discussion on the shoulders of the gov- | Of our streets and avenues are well shaded | battalions, filled with enthusiasm and hope. expressly pledged for the redemption of the | lina Patti), who sang a few months ago, with pUALLACK'S THEATRE. Broadway and Ukn streets | ernment, From Mr. Gladstone's speech, and | With trees, and in the upper part of the town | The promises of peace which the words of city debt. The country members of the late | other eminent artists, at an extraordinarily ———- from the remarks of the London press on the | 4F¢ 80 comfortably broad, and we have still | Dulce bore to the revolted Cubans were sus- Legislature, with that spirit of liberality which | brilliant concert in behalf of the new créche. ont Srrteitinus Weaves, ao.” A" °F MAS | aay following, it ig manifest that the govern- | #0 many pleasant little parks within the city, | tained by the possibilities of a strong and rich | human nature indulges in when voting away | In addition to this concert, which was held at GRAND OPERA HOUSE, corner ot Kighth avenue and | Ment and people of England are fully con- | *24, above all, so grand and glorious a Park, | administration, which seemed to have full other people’s money, gave these excise fees to | the Grand Hotel in Paris, one of Molitre’s Kid atreet.—OLivER Twist, vinced that this is » great international ques- | With its yearly multiplying attraction, that it | power to enforce its threats and satisfy its |® long catalogue of benevolent societies. | comedies was enacted, and the whole enter- THEATRE COMIQUE, 51¢ Broadway.—Cacouwe ar | tion which must not be trifled with, The | is not surprising that while a large number of | vengeance. These socletios are as thiok as blackberries | tainment concluded with » ball. The pro- Last--It TAKES TWO TO QUAREEL, failure of the recent negotiations has evidently | rich and fashionable New Yorkers spend the | But six short though eventful months have | #24 as variegated as dahlias. The legal opin- | gramme of this entertainment might well be gRIRIOR GARDES, Broadway TUR APROTACULAR pained them, It is better, they think, to wait | Summer in Europe, or at Newport, Saratoga, | elapsed since we looked upon this picture, and fons in the various newspapers are as complex, | imitated by some enterprising New York ee eat until public sentiment is @ little cooler on both | West Point, Long Branch and elsewhere, no | again we behold the spectacle which attends | 80d various as butterfly wings. So the Excise | manager, and institutions similar to les oréches Peay ited ant THEAT Performance." “4 | sides of the Atlantic. At all events irritating | inconsiderable number of our citizens are con- | the advent of a new Captain General. The Board button up their pockets and say to the | might advantageously be established here. - speeches are to be avoided. So far so good, | tent to remain in town, and the place of the | wealth of men and resources which existed at charitable societies and the Sinking Fund | Madame la Marquise d’Assailly, one of the lady sine Ernoriast MINGTEELOE. 20. see The postponement of discussion on the sub- | Sbsentees is abundantly supplied by visitors | the opening of the year has been lavished, but Commission, ‘‘ Go to law about it, and mean- patronesses of the newly founded créche in Paris, CENTRAL PARK GARDEN, 7th av, between 58th and | Ject, if it pleases the British people, ought not | Who hail from beyond the Potomac. the enthusiastic hopes of the battalions of while we will put the money out at interest.” | has made an appeal worthy of a hearty response sis.—-POPULAE GARDEN CONOKRT. to displease us. From all the Southern States and from the | Spanish volunteers have not been realized, | Very likely the large liquor fees will become | to American sympathy in favor of the enter- HOOLEY'S OPERA HOUSE, Brookiyn.-HooLEy's The London Times speaks with less caution | West India Islands the influx of summer | while the failure of Dulce has compelled his | ®00ther corruption fund for lawyers and politi- | prise. Thirty thousand francs bave already MINGTRELS—SINBAD, THE SATLOR, than Mr. Gladstone. According to the Times | Visitors to New York had become remarkably | involuntary return to Spain. General de Rodas | Clans to butter and surrebutter about. It is | been secured for it, and sixty thousand will NEW YORK MUSEUM OF ANATOMY, 18 Broadway. | “the late treaty was virtually American ; for it | &teat before the war, and it now promises to be | comes to take his place; but how different is all bi casera tae pr cinetd to a aes place it on a permanent foundation. LADIES’ NEW YORE MUREUM OF ANATOMY, 6» was made, altered and realtered by Seward | greater than ever. The Southern guests who | the situation! The revolution has enjoyed a | Tura! treasuries an menos Nevo! i A Wun, Vien) Gules kiko Laeocenion us Brondway.—FRMALES ONLY 18 A\ and Johnson. It was rejected as muoh | crowd our hotels and theatres and concert | six months’ longer lease of life, and life to an | New York city money; but if the excise fees Bowron (the | eusepetal’ wattle’ of ie lator ce through party antipathies as from any discon- | halls and stores and streets have discovered unsuppressed revolution means organization | OF any other fees can go towards redeeming beer kegs ma sa m4 Jay zi Bannca tent with its provisions, England is ready to | that it is convenient to make New York their | and on increase of power. The army has | the city debt we hope the Commissioners of : Pyrenean he anit wu am Ne THE HER ALD IN BROOKLYN, _ | stem to any proposals from America; but headquarters, availing themselves of the facili- | been depleted till it has ceased to be the | the Sinking Fund will maintain their legal SUNDAY RESORTS. hesiteaa ie weecies to display a desire to receive them favorably | ties which are daily offered for. flying excur- | hope and the reliance of the government, | Position, = Notice to Carriers and Newsdealers. would increase, not lessen, the demands. sions to each and all of the favorite summer | The harvest has been gathered and all its GENERAL Grant A Lover oF Music.—In ‘The Beach at*Rockaway, ‘The respectable, middle-aged pater samiltas wh wealth expended without diminishing the | answer to the committee of invitation from the | ie the past ERAS ity had noe sibel a needs of the administration. The enthusiasm | numerous German singing societies concerned | tne witness stand to testify in @ delicate case, have of the volunteer battalions has been changed | the President has promised, accompanied by | “#trived at the years of discretion,” remember to discord and distrust, and the first act of | his Cabinet, and General Sherman, Admiral baci pie aad friars pieced the new commander is a significant order to | Porter and other distinguished officials, to be watering place for the Gathenitas of thirty or forty the few hundreds of troops he has brought | present in Baltimore this evening to attend | years ago, and it is certain that as a health-impart- with him to march into the great fortress that | the prize singing at the Maryland Institute. | ing, body-invigorating place there 1s no resort on all commands the island capital and hold no inter- | The festival is the eleventh International Saen- | ‘te Atlantic coast that surpasses the “‘sea-resound- course with the volunteers or troops in the | gerfest of the musical Germans, and over a ae peace aris Frakypoy ofbrapahaht bar tie city. hundred societies will be present. Whether it | «the upper ten thousand,” or his associate in the After this General de Rodas lands and walks | ig the Italian opera, opéra bouffe, a peace ju- | Mirror of a quarter of a-century ago and of a literary in solemn procession the distance of a few rods | bilee or a German Saengerfest, General Grant | hebdomedal of a decade or two later, Nathantet I’. which lie between the landing place and the | evidently is a lover of music. We can pro-| Willis, nicknamed the aspiring arisocrat of past sti It “the lads id lasses" wii palace. Nota female face beams upon his ar- | mise him, too, that at Baltimore he will learn Sialted Rockaway in those good old Knickerbocker resorts of our city, The number of such resorts within easy access has increased to an astonishing degree. Miller might well add to his clever guide books for New York, the Park, the Hudson river and Saratoga Springs, still another, entitled ‘“‘The Environs of New York.” Not a few of the strangers within our gates content themselves with morning and evening drives in the Park and the amuse- ment which they can find without leaving thecity. In the fall they will return even more invigorated in health and spirits than if they had wasted both in the ridiculous dissipa- tions which are fashionable in most of our When Mr. Motley considers that the feeling of America is such that a treaty consistent with the honor of England will satisfy Ameri- cans he may address the government for a renewal of negotiations. Only such a treaty will have a chance of acceptance.” The Times discovers the prevalence of more moderate views among Americans, and attributes the change to the discovery which we have made that England will not concede beyond a certain point. According to the Star, now more or less an official journal, “American resentment against England is likely to become weaker, and her desire to Brooxtyn Carriers axp Newswen will in future receive their papers at the Branca OFFICE or tae New York Heracp, No. l45 Fulton street, Brooklyn. ADVERTISEMENTS and Svsscriprions and all letters for the New York Hreato will be jeceived as above. Tr a BNGB w 3. Eareve., ‘Yhe cable telegrams are dated July the Lith. ‘The yacht Dauntless arrived yesterday at Queens- town, having made a quicker run than the Heuri- cotta in the ocean race. reduce the burden of public debt stronger, | Northern watering Places. rival, and the grim and belted volunteers | something new of German harmony. ing nbNtT onan Inoomye OC ‘owe or taree thouead At ® meeting of the English Cabinet held on yester- | wu. ont thing for both countries is to hold 7% receive him with a few scanty cheers and an EMEA agPELECE RAR dotlars, and accepted the lon round about day it was decided not to agree to any of the amend- " A Niaagr iN Tuat Fexoz, Suee.—Tho — Bowling Green as quite enough for an ments made by the House of Lords that will in any | their peace for awhile.” The Times thus ae abundance of criticisms upon his bearing and | Norra Canouina SeNaTox,—Some of our generation. Ant ‘the. Gelles of that Woman's Rights Agitator in Chicago denies that Western women, as a class, oppose negro suffrage or the adoption of the fifteenth amend- ment, and adds :—‘‘Western women compre- hend that humanity is one—that the colored man cannot be elevated without at the same time uplifting the colored woman—and they see very clearly that through the gap in the fence made by the colored man as he passes way impair the principle of disendowment. ‘The French Cabinet met in privy council yester- day, in order to discuss the Emperor's message on y = she opening of the National Assembly, which takes the Times and the Star are of panion that place to-day. The Ministry has not been changed. delay will be to the advantage of England. It Frequent Cabinet meetings have been recently held | seems to be the opinion of all parties on the to deliberate over the interpellation of political re- | other side that the less that is said for the forms now pending in the Corps Législatif. present en the subject the better. Count von Auersperg is the newly elected preai- > dent of the upper chamber of the Reichsrath. The British government and people can do takes it for granted that the initiation of fur- his supposed intentions. : They had violated | €Xchanges are intimating the probability of | wnen the Battery was the pride of New ther proceedings must be on our part. Both Vauxhall now is all law in deposing his predecessor, and in the | Colonel J. W. Forney being elected to the United ey grandmothers Tekin and the. gray ae four weeks during which they had controlled States Senate from North Carolina. Forney | who have become fossilized mercbants, brokers and sp | bankers, were they who the government they had learned the urgency | °Usht to know how to manage the business, if erhiled the hours away of Its needs, and had come to appreciate the the idea be seriously entertained; for there Hr pee ene ee great fact that their hopes could triumph only | °F but few Senatorial intrigues and dodges he | Ana, despite the changes which mark the genera- tt shin th of hundreds of New York- through euccor from Spain, He is the Grst is unacquainted with. But it is not unlikely mg wa uedue combate manta of his uplondia ers; de instalment of this succor and the depositary of that when the project comes up in a definite metropol is cepice ue Sie Baier) we an eancted : ‘ . hape not a few political stagers in the old } hy a there fs to human Great political excitement prevailex in Lisvou, | just as they please inthe matter. It is their into citizensiip all Ameri the power of the metropolis, and his words are | ™ ha” magnet) tere a and fears of an outbreak are felt. affair rather than ours, If they can wait so can he ee oe waited for in anxious silence. These are soon | North State will ory out to Forney’s backers, fonous, mat elo one four "found it the. breakers ne pass to the “same destination.” There is a yy gather and comb— colored gerson an p that fence, and no mistake, heard, and they recognize that the hithertode- | “ffold-in!” throwing up y gin Ringe ume rided insurrection is now the fearful calamity | “Taz AtcEp Custom House Fravps.—A | Warriors plonging' Peet woes a of civil war, and they express the hope of | son of ex-Senator Doolittle, of Wisconsin, and ore advancing, ever retreating arr: aye being able to triumph in the contest, through | a son of Senator Van Winkle, of West Vir- sottung, carriage dr Rs «hoa persctes- Cuba. we. If delay will be any gain to them it will Letters received in Washington from the insur- | be an infinitely greater gain tous. Year by geuts state that they were despondent over the news year we grow stronger. Ten years hence it of the arrest of the Cuban junta, but they had been | Witt not be safe for Great Britain to speak of Arrest of Alleged Countorfeiters. After several weeks of ineffectual efforts to o driving or horse paps pate ciate Pieper ibis terms. Ten years hence, what with the multi- } fathom the recently discovered mystery of an | the ‘‘brave and disciplined army, and the | ginia, appointed each to a place in the New Sent ee It ta wee are reported to have deserted to Quesada. plication of our railroads and telegraphs, with | extraordinary increase in the circulation of | #*med volunteers, to whose determined epirit | York Custom House at the close of Andrew span expended 1n levelling and adorning Mexico. the development of our enormous resources, | counterfeit five and fifty cent bills, the officers | 804 efforts the salvation of the island is partly | Johnson's impeachment trial, have been, with int erection ey LATOR Secon tee yd of ancive summer cottages aud be jolent due.” Then follow words of unqualified praise | some other parties, accused of defrauding the war fe tue oid Gon rol bid aan gh ed of of the volunteers, who are declared to ‘‘deserve | Treasury. We are glad to report that on his | York did not number a third of its present popuis- well of their country,” and a proclamation to | examination before Commissioner White Mr. a it ts Rockaway 1s not without its the army and navy, who are exhorted ‘‘to be } Doolittle has been honorably discharged, and Brn Red rere the unostentations order ; faithful friends of the volunteers, now your | we hope that Mr. Van Winkle will be able to ee giitteriog gene! neraittion” of fashionable fr tava: brothers.” These words of General de Rodas | make as clear a case of “not guilty.” These But, dotwituatanatn a Tim ee eereaon, ie wonld may be the words of wisdom or they may | appointments of the sons of outside Senators | of the geanois Pee Med were to counte- be those of policy and craft. His posi- } to the New York Custom House, of any party, peemhore teeth te those witode tate nee ee. pon’ tion is a precarious and a dangerous one. | are not exactlyjthe thing, anyhow; and if mm she grow and Cane His policy, he tells us, is embodied in three | such parties come to be convicted of frauds it toe the past five vears the avenues of approach words—‘‘Spain, justice, honesty ;” and he ex- | will at least operate to break up this vicious Ea. rege. eee rica boda plains these to mean that Spain will find in her | system of distributing the spoils. In the ype ey soca REL dl “ted patriotism inexhaustible resources to preserve | cases in question there has doubtless been fours, from the foot of Broadway, Bastern District, the integrity ot her territory, will render an | some malictous persecution; but still the from Caruaras two weaniboats combantiy ply io the equal administration of justice to the high offi- | spoils system involved is demoralizing. Candin fps sop Hotel and the Hansom and cial and the artisan, and require honesty and et sa BLP de Wore di fe In consequence of the «backwardness of the sea- strict economy in every branch of the govern- Tas SaRAeES Were not for the | son” tue “seaside,” whtoh ls the largest aud most ment, All of this appertains purely to the large floating population which the summer | Popular establishment, hagnot been so crowded witt Spanish population and officers, as the Cubans permanent boarders as tt was at this time ast gum- have no part or position in the colonial ar- For New Yorkers are either out of town or | Not vet despair of remunerating themselves for their flickers behind the footlights. It bids fair although the water was not in temperature quite up and the increasing emigration, which is rapidly in the surt” and a struggle with the “tide-ad- Vera Craz dates by telegraph are to July 5. The elections had generally gone favorably to the ad- ministration. A new election for the Legislature has been ordered In Querétaro by Juarez, Busta- mente, Governor of Sap Luis Potosi, has been ar- with our increasing immigration from Europe and from Asia, we shall be without a rival among the nations—a match not for Great Britain only, but for the world in arms. We of the United States secret service division succeeded last Saturday afternoon in arresting in this city four men who seem to have been largely engaged in manufacturing and nego- tiating counterfeit fractional currency. On the persons of the prisoners was found a large sum of money, good and bad. The trunk of one of them contained a jimmy, a dark lan- tern, several chisels, thirteen other burglars’ Instruments and a five hundred dollar package of counterfeit United States fives of a very poor quality. Very little has lately been heard of ~ counterfeit money beyond: the fractional currency which circulates so freely, almost unquestioned. So much of this is afloat and it is so difficult to distinguish the bogus from the genuine that counterfeiters themselves have thought it hardly worth the trouble of manufacturing any more. Fortunately their experiment of an additional issue has been frustrated by the Saturday arrest. We trust that the Treasury Department wif now hurry out the new frac- tional currency, and that the bills will be #0 skilfully executed as to render imitation im- possible. The bills of a higher denomination have generally been of this character, and very few of them have been successfully coun- terfeited. At least one great advantage of our national currency over the old system of myriads of different and bunglingly executed plates is the unitormity, which renders it com- paratively easy to detect counterfeits. season brings to New York most of our | mer. ioe pices of the various hotels| how. theatres would now be comparatively deserted. Soe of Poe imeende, eal therefore ‘ie rangements. Of other matters he says little. trouble. The temporary custom since the opening -and- | of the bathing h has been itent—-hunar Reforms are poripone tl the endo he cel | traalar drama, which tl tly | Seats an ota ao arbling oreo war, and this he will accomplish at any cost, | /°8 *Pec! = — “4 Y | them every reasonably warm day. Yesterday, He recognizes the decline of commerce, the to the mark for those whose constitutions are dc- long to be completely extinguished. E: bilitated, the magnificent beach w: yalated with ruin of industry, the disappearance of property ee pi nis 6 sa aibh it tad vee ueiy very orderly peopie who enjoyed “the | axury of a } ott ” diminishing the elements of wealth. If he | Provoked only feebly excite the public curios- | VATO%E Rot exactiy algh for the ‘good old times of fails to suppress the revolution through « ity as to what mysterious connection there adam and Eve," ag the song has it, but we do tong for a return of the tide, which ebbing fell off to New- united and desperate effort of the volunteers, | ™AY be between bogus y ellow hair end real Port and Cape May, so that dear old Rockaway will in a campaign which must be made as soon as black eyes, false calves and muscular action. | be Whatit once was—the sanctoriuin of New York, the rainy season is past, it will be the final It is too hot weather to try to solve the con- Cousy Idand, failure. Spain must then turn to other views, undrum, and we give it up. Au immegse number of persons visited Coney ; . raging tay ’ | aan aera Isiand yesterday, and by two o’clock in the after- for which she is already preparing. What | No Suxstrokes,—The fact that there have | noon the beach was black with poopie, while hua- success General Rodas will meet with we shall | been so few sunstrokes thus far this summer | dreds availed themselves of the opportunity which soon know ; for he must move soon in support | has created some remark. But it is hardly | ‘¢ briny deep afforded of laving their weary and of the many harassed garrisons now holding | time for these coups, Besides, the political ec ites a packs aus “Wegtioat Aheet precarious positions in the interior of the | caldrons for the fall elections have hardly | were heavily trcighted on each trip to the island island. These must be partially relieved be- | yet commenced seething. Wait until the con- | With humanity of all classes and conditions, and fe their lives it t be said th fore the campaign opens, and time will soon | guming fires of a night’s heated orgies at a | managers of these diderent modes of transit from show what events remain in store to mark the | political caucus begin to operate upon men’s | {ite cate rea aR ae came Runctually nh closing days of Spanish power in the New | brains in conjunction with the blazing rays of | able regularity. ‘the horse cary were rum World almost =momentart from the Fulton ferry, orld, DMRS eet Old Sol at midday. Then look out for fatal pnd several ex + cars were pus on Eastiy Satisrigp.—A number of leading | sunstrokes. In the meantime, we advise all songs is socape trom the conanee sr bemteeeinee republican papers express themselves entirely | politicians and wire-pullers to keep their brains Settee AHonis OohGmy Son Lemeeerie tae tie satisfied with the election of Governor Walker | cool and their heads leye!—not literally—and, ieee the day partook of a diversified, yet in Virginia. The republicans are just now in | if they go to the watering places, let them | MMhly pleasurable So ananties un wanient” Wis a condition to be satistied with almost any- | abjure politics, bathe frequently, live tempe- | freely and voractousty consumed. Yet the class of i ho visied the island yesterday seemed thing, and there is no wonder they smile | rately and not mix their liquors. They may ey ogg respectable and orderly than Litherto; Napotgonto Ipgas—Tae Last tHe Best.— Louis Napoleon is a model Emperor. He is a close and sagacious observer of the drift of passing events, and in his present movements looking to something like a free French Legis- lature he has neatly outflanked his adversa- ries. While Prussia, Austria and Spain are 80 rapidly advancing in the path of popular rights and opinions Napoleon sees that he cannot stand still. And when be sees this he acts, and this is the best of all hi« Napoleonic ideas. Oup Pour as AN Exposive.—Deslers in “prime old Port” wine bave been so long accused of using logwood in the manufacture rested and imprisoned. have no objection to wait; for delay will make Miscellaneous. our victory secure. As to our forgetting or The United States steamer Tallapoosa was quaran- | becoming indifferent to or in any way abating tined below Washington yesterday, because of hav- | our claims, nothing can be imagined more ab- ing lence: trem. Key ee ape erase surd. To entertain such a thought argues an however, showed that there was no infectious fever on board, and the commanding officer stated that amount of blindness onthe part of the British there had been only one case of yellow fever in Key | government and people which it is really diffi- West during the season. cult to account for. It is no longer denied by The Chinese Labor Convention in Memphis bids | the British government that wrong was done fair to present a large attendance of those *, é Southerners interested in improving their present | S%- 1+ 1s untyerselly bleak baal oad Lin labor prospects. It convenes to-morrow, and the | Sued towards us during the war, while it crip- delegates are already crowding Memphis. pled us and had the effect of prolonging the The Semiramis and Curieux, French men-of-war, struggle, was a grievous failure, Wrong unre- salied trom Fortress Monroe yesterday for St. Pierre, t nor easily for, 0 ‘The iron-clad Seminole has sailed from Fortress paired a ae eerie if ses bya Monroe for Cuba. great and high-spi people. e immense Tom Allen and Mike McCoole have drawn up an | popularity of Senator Sumner’s speech showed agreement to fight on the 10th of November, within | how deep and widespread was the feeling of gd ses bee a eal epee + the country nave | #@ American people on this great question. ‘he general postal e: ol cow ve * % been reduced $764,000 by the discontinnauce of use- | That feeling is as strong to-day as it was less Wesvern and Southern mail routes. four years ago. It will, be as strong ten years Secretary Seward is ill of rheumatism, m San | hence, if these claims are unsettled, as it is Francisco, Gd cannot es visitors. to-day. The attitude taken by both the great Pee rcip toting oath tinea on ne bi political parties on this question ought to con- General Frank Blair has gone home to his fatner | Vince Great Britain that delay is danger- in Maryiand. _ ous. We are not forgetting the wrong Zee Omy, that was done us. We will not forget it, Three millions of United States vonds are tobe | Nothing would afford so much gratifica- purchased in this city every Wednesday during the present month by the Assistant Treasurer. tion to our Irish population as war Rey. Charles B. Smyth preached on the Salvation | With Great Britain. This, in fact, is the of Nations, at the Eleventh street Presbyterian | climax of their ambition. The political party churen, yesterday. Archbishop McCioskey“will not | which in the next election will give greatest preach at bis Cathedral until the first of next month, ‘ A % when he will deliver @ valedictory sermon, propos. | Prominence md set Er aah with Great ing to sail for Rome on the 7th, The closing sermon | Britain and will press the settlement of the at Eglise'du St. Esprit, in West Twenty-second | Alabama claims under threat of war may street, was preached by Rev. A. Verren, yesterday, | count with safety on the Irish vote; and it after which the church was closed unti! Septemver. * if the Irish vot Dr. Vuapin closed hls church of the Divine Paternity, | Wi not be had pontine 5 is, finds in Fifth avenue, with a sermon of his usual ability. | bimself strong enough to force upon the coun- Officer Higgins, of the Sixteenth precinct, was | try an aggressive policy. It is safe at least to assaulted by four ronghs in West Sixteenth street | say that if the democratic party were now in about half-past twelve oar Hated biota power Great Britain would be left no choice He fonght them vigorously, but was overpowered ‘ ‘and seriously injured, when assistance came in the but pay ve or abandon Canada. person of two other officers, Edward Lannon, ove it ie all nonsense to talk of delay, as the of the roughs, was captyred, but the rest escaped. Times and the Star have done. Delay will ug y Tv The Seventh regiment ls to visit Saratoga on the | not cool our wrath. It will not weaken our resentment. It will not lessen our demands. 22d inst., when the opening ball will be given in the Unton Hotel. , i grimly at the defeat of their regular candidate | then come out fresh and in fine condition for | 804 See eeen ome tee Nees enritond at iideress po Re But delay will give us in time our opportu- | of this article that but little surprise was } in Virginia, the fall campaign. points, not the emghient potent occurred to demand nity; and when we choose to speak we shall of Washington, are at the Fifth Avenue Hotel. speak with effect. i Great Britain will not General Charles 8, Huger, of Alabama; J. Lyons | pay, and thus make just reparation for the Lane, of Louisiana, and J. W. Dixon, of the Umiied } wrong she has done us, we bave but to atretch goose flea er Cato Lehr Major 5. B, | OPE our hand and compensute ourselves by in W. Grace, and Major J. B. sie % pean, of Saratoga, are at the st, Charles Hotel, | the annexation of the New Dominion, General Strickland, of the British army; Governor eee 9 seme cece R. M, Patton and Rev. W. N. Mitchell, of Alabama, and Governor John Evans, of Denver, at the St. Nicholas Hotel. Prominent Departures. General Partridge and family, for California; Colo- nei J. V. Beckenhoff, for Saratoga; Major L. Merritt, for Newport; and Captain R. Wilson, for Buffalo. as ae —_—_—— their interference, and ia had nothing to do dur. Tue Drama in MoRMONDOM.—We gave our PRESENTS OF SILVER FROM Mextco.—A mag- gmt iy ae any task ® hehe AT as aeae readers yesterday an interesting letter on the | nificent collection of solid silver urticles, from | The hotel sparta’ jubilant over the proceeds created when the papers contained an account of the fatal explosion in ‘‘Porter's logwood distillation works,” near Boston, u few days ago. Old Port occasionally brings his de- votees down, but never before, that we recol- lect, has he been known to blow them up. He leaves that for the men’s better halves to do, Count Adair, of England, and General J. J. Kuox, the variabl a drama wi Great Salt Lake City. There the | somp modert citizen of Mexico, who declines | tem ous part or te: stiminer hind wnteriorsa theatre is one of the institutions set up by the | to make known his name, and sent through | ™¥tially vith thelr business, Prophet for the amusement of his sainte, It | Sefior Sabos Yturbide, has ¢rrived in Wash- Staten Inland. serves hima good purpose in diverting the | ington. The articles are presents to President ‘the sultriness of the weather in the city yesterday minds of bis followers from dangerous and | Grant, General Sherman, ex-Secretary Seward | ‘empted thousands to betake themselves to the cool, and Mrs, ex-President Lincol this breezy heights of Staten Island. From about ten forbidden things, All despots must amuse Is tncolne. waar o'clock in’ the morning until four o'clock in the their subjects, and Brigham Young thoroughly | foreshadow the annexation of the Mexican | gnernoon every steamer going to she island, wir understands the game, silver mines? Quien sabe? pi gd Dia wectre ouch seas steamer “own Blan vine “Some Ong to Br Cakarep.”—-This is NapPoigon’s PARIIAMRNTARY Smuarnay. ay Tereg the run a iy OO pity " the title given by the Albany Moening Journat | After the organization of the French legisla | some of the | metro carie ‘ine pose ane to an article proclaiming the existence of | tive body to-day the oppositionists of the Left (ee eee ae ‘s large nara ver ff Germans. some cheating project on the part of the | Contre will prepare to agsail the Emperor's | macs staten Island a bunday: eso, hence fest democratic party. Taking the expression in | policy generally, M. Rouher will cut the a ag oy ad of ore int periods tater we gt he connection with the notorious cheats and cor- | ground from under their feet by reading a mes- | ness smong the well- arenas, well-belavod nit ruptions among the radicals, it reminds us, as | sage from Napoleon recommending the more paper forattie Whom he tmtant tote area. nap it a gs Lincoln, of te ae raecrggaeg 0 of = they ad- wot na i a a torent a tan, m \ eorr:—A puerly Dassongers were ing | vocate, imperial coun . rofresamouta ui W Le DOOM. DEPARTURE OF THE Hazvano Crew ror EN@Lanp.—The “Harvard four,” who left by the City of Paris steamer on Saturday to com- pete with the champion oarsmen of Oxford University in rowing over a course perfectly familiar to the latter and on terms necessarily disadvantageous to themselves, will worthily Tux Lorrery or Lirg.—Ladies are man- | and, we hope, successfully represent American aging regular lotteries in Georgia. Why pluck and muacle abroad. Our reporter has shouldn't they? They know all about lotte- | described them as being ‘‘as lithe a set of young ries. How many men have taken tickets in | muscular Christians as the eyes of a profes- the lotiery of matrimony and how few have | sional oarsman cowd wish to behold.” They dravn prizes? have shown true grit in adveaturiag upoa o Honoxgp ix His Own Country.—Twenty- four guos were fred in Binghamton, N. ¥., in honor of the election of Governor Walker in Virginia, Governor Walker is a native of Binghamton, The usual congratulatory com- munications were exchanged between the citizens and the Governor, without dis- tinction of party, This is about as near the political millennium as anything we have seen lately, wu Tur Monanod or tug Hus—-King Gam- brinus,