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SPAIN. & NEW MINISTRY FORMED WITH GENERAL JOVEL- LAR AT ITS HEAD—CANOVAS DEL CASTILLO DECLINES ‘TO ACT—THE NEW CABINET—CAUSE OF THE CRISIS. Maprw, Sept. 12, 1875. The dissensions in the Cabinet were due to the de- cision of the majority that cleetions should be held for the Cortes by universal suffrage, Seiior Canovas de Castillo desired to open the Cortes on November 28, the day King Alfonso comes of age, THK KING SUMMONS THE MINISTERS. The King summoned the Ministors to a consultation at nine o'clock last night. Canovas del Castillo would only consent to preside over a liberal Cabinet of con- Ciliation. A new Ministry was formed under General Jovellar to-day. The following is the list as officially announced :— $ THK NEW CABINET, General Jovellar, President of Minister of War. Alcala Galiano, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Calderon Collantes, Minister of Justice. Durau y Lira, Minister of Marine. Salaverria, Minister of Finance. Romero Robledo, Minister of the Interior, Martin Herrera, Minister of Public Works. Ayala, Minister of Colonies, the Council and UNIVERSAL SUFFRAGE IN THE ASCENDANT— CANOVAS TO BE PRESIDENT OF THE CHAMBER. Loynoy, Sept. 12, 1875, Private advices from Paris say the new Spanish Ministry represents the triumph of the principle of universal suffrage. Canovas del Castillo will probably be President of the Chamber of Deputies in the new Cortes, FRANCE, BUMORED CHANGE OF POLICY OF THE RIGHT CENTRE—THE ORLEANS PRINCES TO RENOUNCE THEIR CLAIMS AND ACCEPT THE REPUBLIC, Panis, Sept. 12, 1875. Ia France declares it has trustworthy ine formation that a chango is likely to take place in the policy of the Right Centro; that it is due to the wishes of the Orleans Princes, who are said to be about to renounce all claitms to the throne and adhere to the Republic without reserve, THE SPANISH MINISTHR NOT RESIGNED, ‘rhe Spanish Ambassador here has not resigned. THE STEAMER SHANNON ASHORE. THE VESSEL LIKELY TO BECOME A TOTAL WRECK, Hauirax, N. 8. Sept. 12, 1875, Information has been received here that the West India Royal Mail steamer Shannon, from Southampton, fs fast ashore on Pedro Bank, south of Jamaica, Her Majesty's ships Dryad and Heron have gone to her assistance from Port Royal, Jamaica, The Dryad has slready brought all the passengers, mails and specie from the wreck, and landed them at Jamaica, THE MISSISSIPPI TROUBLES, WELEGRAMS OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL—THE EXCITEMENT SUBSIDED—GOVERNOR AMES STILL CRYING ‘WOLY,” Wasnrxetoy, Sept. 12, 1875. Within the past two days a number of telegrams have been received by the Attorney General from people of oth political parties in Mississippi, stating that it was now substantially quiet in the recently disturbed por- tions of the State; but for greater caution the Attorney. General telegraphed on the 10th inst., in response to the despatch from Governor Ames asking for federal inter- ference, the foliowing:— DESPATCH OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL, Dararraxnt ov Justice, WASHINGTON, Sept. 10, 1875. To Governor Avgs, Jackson, Miss. :— The United States forces have been put in readiness, No orders have yet been given them to move, and no proclamation has been issued, Everything is ready. Is there such an insurrection against the State govern- ment ag cannot be put) down by the State military forces, aided by all the other powers of the State gover nment and the nid of the true citizens ? EDWARDS PIERREPONT, Attorney General, This was telegraphed carly on the morning of the JOth inst. ; but no response was received thereto from any source until yesterday, when a telegram was re- ceived by the Attorney General from ex-Senator Pease, now Postinaster at Jackson, saying:— REPORT OF EX-RENATOR PEASE, The excitement has subsided. A civil force, com- posed of good citizens of ali political parties and of suff- cient force to protect life and property, can be had in any county in the — State. No effort has yet been made by the State authorities in this direction. Until all legal means have been exhausted, Lam of the opinion that federal in- terference is unwise, impolitic, and will only tend to aggravate the evils. Senator Alcorn, of Mississippl, was present when this telegram was recoived by tho Attorney General, and confirmed its statement. The Attorney General on the 11th inst. telegraphed again to Governor Ames as follows :— ANOTHER TELEGRAM. To my despatch of yesterday morning, in which I mentioned that the troops were held in readiness, and asked whether the situation of the insurrection was such against the State authorities that the State gov- ernment and the aid of loyal citizens could not pub it down, I have received no reply. To this no response came until between eleven and twelve o’clock last night, when the Governor sent to the Attorney General a very long telegram giving an explanation that it was a question of race, and he still Vhought there was necessity for troops, The Attorney General has made a full report, sending all the tele- grams and communications by special messenger to tho Prosident to-day, and expects further suggestions from him (the President) to-morrow. THE ARMY OF THE KHEDIVE. IMPARTIAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR APPOINT- MENT BY GENERAL SHERMAN, Wasiuxaroy, Sept. 12, 1875. It ts said by army officers that General Sherman, in Tesponse to the request of the Khedive of Egypt to Tecommend worthy men for appointment in the Egyp- tian army, has been impartial, and that he has sug- gested the names of as many ex-Confederates as he has ex-federal officers. The selection of Joseph E. Johnston was on account of qualifications for a high command worthy of the man’s military ability. None of the fed- eral generals cared to leave tho country to engage in the service of a foreign potentate. SUICIDE IN BED. TWO SIMILAR CASES OF ATTEMPTED SELF-DE- STRUCTION UNDER SINGULAR CIRCUMSTANCES, ‘The report of a pistol was heard last evening from the tecond floor of a small frame building corner of North Third and Second streets, Williamsburg, and OMicer Lyons, of the Fifth precinct police, who lives next door, hurrying in to seo what the matter was, found Peter J. McNamara lying on a bed shot through the templo, and holding a pistol in his right hand. Medi tal assistance was at once summoned, Police Surgeon Murphy answering the call, and he pronounced the wound fatal, but as McNamara got up and walked Around the room, recommerided his removal to the Eastern District Hospital, whither he was taken in the ambulance. Dr, §, J. Brady then took charge of the case and extracted one of three slugs with which the pis- id to have been loa is fifty-three years of age, single, A son of nara, the old ‘shipbuilder, and brother-in- law to Mr. William Pease, of the old firm of Pease & Mur- phy, iron founders, He has been pecuiiar in his man- nef of living for some time past, and about a year ago Jomed his fortn a, character as singular as his own named Re and the two lived together, McNamara pre ng by oceastonally working os an engineer, men have been drinking e, ay night of last week, Gillespie hearing the click of a revolver, awoke in time to take a pistol away from McNamara betore he could carry out an attempt at self-destruction then, That weapon was bid, but the deed was accomplished last evening with a pistol belonging to Gillespie, while the latter was absent from the room a few minutes, Shortly before seven o'clock yesterday morning the of the house No. 30 Greenwich avenue were by the loud report ofa pistol, proceeding from amber of George A. Lincoln, aged forty-five years. When the room was entered Lincoln was seen ‘ying in bed, having in his hand a pistol, with whieh he had shot himself in the right temple. Drs, Deming and Henna were promptly summoned and dressed the wound, Which they do not consider to be of a fatal character, No causo is assigned for the act of Lincoln. vert hort, inmate NEW YORK HERALD, MOND THE INDIAN: FRAUDS, —_—_—_———_— The Testimony of Samuel Walker Be- fore the Commission. THE ENUMERATION AT RED CLOUD, The Methods of Defrauding the Government and the Indians Explained. Wasuiatox, Sept. 12, 1875. The investigation into the alleged mismanagement and frauds in connection with the administration of affairs at the Red Cloud Indian Agency was continued yesterday, All the Commissioners were present and also Professor Marsh and the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, The day was devoted to the examination of Samuel Walker, who, as well as the Professor and Mr. William Welsh, has given a good deal of attention to the subject. Mr. Walker was clerk to the Board of Indian Commissioners and occasionally acting secretary, and he visited Red Cloud and Spotted Tail agencies in November, 1878, to examine the condition of those agencies, It was partly wpon his report. that the Com- mission, of which Bishop Hare was chairman, was appointed to make a more thorough ex- amination of matters there, includin§ Mr. Walk- er’s charges, Bishop Hare’s Commission. reported that they did not find affairs so bad as Mr. Walker rep- resented. Mr, Walker protests that the evidence col- lected by himself and subsequent developments fully sustain his charges and suspicions with reference to frauds and the complicity of various persons, includ- ing notably the responsible officials of the Interior De- partment and its Indian office. MR. WALKERS BXAMINATION, Mr. Walker was examined at great length yesterday upon the grounds for the charges made in his report— first, with reference to his knowledge concerning any mismanagement, irregularities or frauds at the Red Cloud and Spotted Tail Indian agencies, ‘and then with reference to his knowledge of the alleged complicity of the Secretary of tho Interior and the Commissioner of Indian Affairs in them. So far as the examination went he answered all the questions promptly. Mr. Walker said when he visited the Red Cloud Agency in November, 1873, the agent, Dr. Saville, was absent, so that he did not sea him, But he saw other Persons at the agency and his conclusions as tothe agency were founded on information obtained princi- pally from persons whom he had talked with'there, part of it consisting of affidavits, to which he referred the Commissioners. He said Otis W. Johnson, an em- pire at the agency, and Dr. Daniels’ clerk, whose name © could not now remember, told him they knew of the fact of Dr, Saville withholding from. the Indians pro- visions which he charged to the government as having been issued to them. With respect to the agent over- stating the actual number of the Indians for purposes of fraud in egunection with the issue of sup. plies he said Dr. Daniels’ clerk had told him that he had eonnted the number at the old agency under Dr. Daniels’ administration, and there were not more than 8,000 at the most belonging to the Red Cloud Agency. Red Cloud’s son-in-law, Nick Janis, and his. brother, Antome Janis, had also told’ him, not that they had counted the number, but that it was undoubtedly overestimated. Nick Janis gave 1,290 lodyes—about seven persons to a lodge—as the whole Strength of the Indian population at the Red Cloud Agency, including all the Cheyennes and Arapahoes as well as the Sioux. Martin Gibbons, who has been acting agent at Red Cloud, put the number down as low as 900 lodges, This was im November, 1873, Mr. Walker eould not say whether the census of the Indians, taken under the direction ot the agent, in November, 1874, a year later, was correct, as he h not been there at thai time and had no positive infor- mation, but he argued that if the number reported was 18,000, he believed the actual number to be overesti- mated, because if the actual number was 9,000 in 1873, he did not see how the additional 4,000 could be ac- counted for according to the laws of natural increase. When he was at the agency, from all sources of infor- mation at his command, he, himself, had estimated the number of lodges to be not exceeding 1,100 or nearly 8,000 Indians, and, unless there was bome very clear way of accounting for the increase, he would be in- clined to think that 13,000 was not the correct enumeration, Still, in answer to questions, Mr. Walker said other Indians could — ha come there since that time, Taking the estimated number of northern or wild Indians upon the authority of Lone Horn, an Indian chief, who has since been killed, he could not see how it was possible that the number re- ported at the agencies could be increased so much as appeared by the official statements, He based his con- clusion as to the number of Indians there upon state- ments made to him bythe persons he had already named, and also upon those of Jules Coffee and General Smith, who was then commanding at Fort Laramie, Another reason for his conclusion that the enumeration made in November, 1874, was not correct was the showing made by’ a comparison of the number represented on the provision returns as hay. ing received rations with the number stated in th report of the Commissioner of Indian Aflairs to be at- the agency, In 1873 Dr. Saville reported that he issued rations to 2,419 lodges of about 13,933 Indians, while in the report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs for that year the number at the agency, as appeared from Sa- ville’s own report to the Commissioner, did not exceed 9,000, Mr. Walker testified as to the POOR CONDITION OF THE SUPPLIES furnished and to the general mismanagement of affairs at the agencies. He went into the cattle question at length aud explained the various ways in which the government and the Indians were defrauded in the fur- nishing of beet. He said that Mr. Steele, the delegate to Congress from Wyoming, bad informed him, in the early part of 1874, that be could bring forward good, reliable men who could prove that Indian supplies were being sold. at Choyenne. With reference to the charges of Professor Marsh, he said he had reason to believe, from his knowledge of aifairs in the Interior Department, while Secretary of | the Board of Ludian Commissioners, that the Secretary of the Interior and the Commissioner of Ludian Affairs, had had the abuses complained of brought to their at- tention by the Board and in various other ways, and yet had not put a stop to them, that those officers knew that the distance tor which McCann was paid for the transportation of supplies to the agencies was greater than the actual distance. He detailed the manner in which illegal payments were made to McCann for his service in other respects. The over deliveries of cattle at the Red Cloud Agency had also been called to the at- tention of the Secretary and the Commissioner by the Board, but without a He charged that tbe contrac- tors bad been illegally allowed to sublet their contracts to other, parties, by Whom the government had been de frauded, Mr. Waiker’s examination will be resum ed to- morrow evening. THE COUNCIL FIRE, FEELING OF THE INDIANS REGARDING THE PRO- POSED BLACK HILLS TREATY—WAR THREAT- ENED BY SOME OF THE CHIEFS, Rep Coup, Via Fort Larastzn, Sept, 12, 1875. Tho Indians from Standing Rock and Cheyenne River agencies, camped near Spotted Tail’s village, visited the Commission to-day and held a council, They wanted to get on Shadron Creek, but were firmly told by the Commission that they must come to mect them with their families near Crow Buttes if they wanted to join the council. They agreed to camp op Ash Creck and meet the Commission for a great talk at the spring, near Crow Buttes, Major Howard returned from Spotted ah to-day, and reports that Spotted Tail has yielded and will be hero to-morrow with his band. In a confidential talk with his head men yesterday, Spotted Tail said he would not ask less than $6,000,000 for the Black Hills, He would like to have it in an annuity of $100 a year for each In- dian, He would not expect to get more than half that aiter the agents had done stealing, INTERVIEW WITH RED CLOUD. Red Cloud met your correspondent’s inquiries to-day diplomatically. He thinks the Biack Hills a good coun- try, but will not talk betore the council meets, and says he does not sell a dollar three or four times a day. Sitting Bull of the North, chief of the Uncapapas, says he don’t want to make any treaty. He wants to fight the whites and threatens ‘to attack them on the Missouri River, reinforced by the young men of the Ogatalas, Arapahoes and Cheyennes his fall. He has 120 lodges. ie says he will raid on the North Platto this fail, Both the chiefs, with their Oneyenne, Oga lala and Arapahoe allies, can muster 200 lodges. A foung man ot the Southern Cheyeunes is reported to | threaten to break up the council and kill the Commin- sioners, Itmay be that the conspiracy story is not al- together reliable. CLOSING PROCEEDINGS OF THE GRAND COUNCIL IN THE INDIAN TERRITORY, OxauLons, 1. T., Sept, 12, 1875, The General Council of all the Indian nations and tribes, held at this place, before adjourning passed a regolution unanimously repudiating Caddo Boudinot. In regard to opening up the Territory to the white man a resolution was adopted, all concurring, expressive of the principle that this is the Indians’ country by many solemn treaties, and if ever it is settled up it must be by the Indians, with a government suitabie for Indians, THE CHICKASAWS, STATUS OF THE COLORED PEOPLE FORMERLY HELD BY THE INDIANS AS SLAVES, Muscoone, L T., Sept, 12, 1875, General J, P. ©, Shanks, Special United States Com- missioner, arrived in the Territory to-day, Ho is on his way to the Chickasaw Nation to attend their National Council, now im session at Fisher- mungo, with a view to settle the future Status of the colored’ people held as slaves by the In- dians before their emancipation, By the provision of the treaty of 1860, the United States agreed to pay the Choctaws and Chickasaws the proceeds of the sale ot leased lands west of the ninety-eighth degreé owned by them, the sum of $300,000, contingent upon their ad- mitting THEIR FORMER SLAVES and descendants to the rights of citizenship and forty acres of land in the nation; on failing to do this the United States were to remove the colored people at the end of thirty days from the expiration of two years, deducting that amount from their national fund and applying it to the expense of their removal from the limits of the nation, which has not been done, Itis to be hoped that the vexed ques- tion will be definitely settled now, as much dissatisfac- tion has grown out of the non-fulfilment of the treaty, CALIFORNIA FINANCES, THE GENERAL BUSINESS LOOKOUT—CONFIDENCE BEING RESTORED. , Sax Francisco, Sept, 12, 1875, To-morrow will be the semi-monthly mercantile col- lection day, The money market is in a somewhat easier condition, and it is believed a little mutual forbearance will enable all to pass the ordeal without disaster, Thus far merchants have shown a universal disposition to help each other, and avoid pushing claims to such an extent as to em- barrass each other, The prospect of opening the Bank of Nevada by the Ist prox., and the. prospect of the early resumption of the Bank of California, have tended to increase the confident feeling in business circles, and large transfers of coin from the Treasury and receipts from the Mint have had a fayorable offect, ‘The action of the National Gold Bank and Trus| Company, in accomplishing gradual resumption instead of hoarding coin against formal opéning, has been of material assistance to the money market. ‘The institution is now doing a general business with no signs of any run upon its resources. The syndicate of the Bank of California is continuing preparations for a resumption with no special new de- Yelopments to report, A CARD FROM MR. SIMONTON. Associarxo Pass Oven New York, Sept 12, 1875, To rue Eprror or Tur HERALD:— Certain journals, whose grievance is that they are ex- cluded’ from the Associated Press, persistently reit- grate, day after day, vague and general imputations against this office. By ingenious perversions ana dis- tortions, they seek to impress conviction upon the public mind that our reports in connection with the Bank of California suspension have been fabricated or dishonestly moulded, partly for the purpose of affecting stock speculations and partly in the pursuit of what they are pleased to style a quarrel between the bank and the San Francisco Bulletin and Call, two newspapers in which the undersignod has long held a proprietary interest, I have waited in vain for any distinct specification that would enable me to hold some respectable party responsible in such way as would bring the facis to a Judicial decision. If our assailants believe a titho of what they put forth by means of craven insinuation, they are false to their duty as citizens when they fail to make such formal complaint as would subject the undersigned to the perils of that law which makes utterance of false news for the purpose of affecting values a criminal offence. But that course would ex- plode the calumnies and expose their utterers to public reprobation, and so they will not abandon safo innuendo, the stiletto with which timid assassins of character, in every age, have sought to reach their vic- tims. I repel their charges with indignant scorn, and both challenge and defy them. It is due to those who have learned to trust the gen- eral accuracy and fairness of news for which this office isresponsible that I should set my general denial against the slanders aimed at the integrity of our ser- vice. To that end let me say:— First—uur San Francisco agent has no connection with and is wholly independent of any newspaper of- fice in that city. He has a good reputation as a fair and truthful man, His reports regarding the recent financial difficulties have been uninfluenced by any sug- estion from this office other than that they should be il, prompt and accurate, Careful comparison of his reports with those of the local. journals proves that he was conservative, discreet and ‘remarkably successful in giving us the facts, as they uppearcd to the best informed judgment at the — respective dates of his several messages, and without any bias one way or the other. When those who have the right shall choose to investigate they will find that his sources of information were thoroughly respectable and as reliable as intelligence and good faith can make hu- | man fullibility, 1 fail to seo how be could have fulfilled his duty by omitting anything that he has forwarded. Second—It is not true that our work has been uffecied in any way by any ‘‘quarrel’? between the Bank of California and the San Francisco Bulletin and the Call, for no such quarrel existed. Several of the most in- fluential directors of the bank always have been and still are among the stanchest friends of the journals named. It is a significant fact that none of them par- | ticipated in the recent public meeting, orig- inated by personal friends of the late Mr. Ralston as a tribute to his memory, but which the combined “ring” interests of California seized upon as a convenient opportunity to ventilate their hate of independent journalists who, during fifteen years, have stood between them and the people whom they Sought to oppress or plunder, Nation, if you pies, that no report of that meeting (and the Hmratp had its own special) claims that the principal speaker, Colonel Barnes, added to the chivalric eulogy of his lale client and friend a single word that was disrespectful to the journalists who had opposed that friend’s course in public affairs, No other respectable or prominent gen- tleman among the hundreds whose names are familar is reported as taking part in the denunciatory pro- ceedings. I appeal confidently to any old Californian whose own character is above reprouch to sustain the assertion that, when the intelligence and moral worth of | San Francisco undertakes to utter indignation it will find some more reputable mouthpiece than the one selected to vituperate the eer on Wednesday night. The notorious Tom Fitch, who did the Billinsgato | on that occasion, was pilloried in the San Francisco | in by the undersigned, in March, 1863, by publica- | tion of sworn testimony taken before Special ‘Treasury | ‘Agent Thomas Brown by order of President Lincoln and | Secretary Chase. That tesumony implicated Fitch in | the gale of subordinate appointments in the San Fran- | cisco Mint for money. The disgraceful facts were 80 | clear that Mr. Lincoln dismissed the then Super- intendent of the Mint on account of it, Here you have Fitch’s motive for abuse of us, a motive intensified doubtless, by the fact that, while I have never repeated the publication of the above recited facts until now, I did, within a year or two past, refuse to meet him, | simply because I know that “‘whosoever toucheth pitch shall bo deilled. ”” The books of Laidlaw & Co., agents in this city of the Bank of California, show that'my partners were remit- ting considerable sums to me through that institution down to within a week of the suspension, Does that look like a deadly “quarrel” between them and the bank? Nor had they any “quarrel”? with Mr. Ralston, its president, My partners believed his course in. re= gard to a certain well known scheme, vitally affecting | the public interest, to be vicious, dangerous and perma- nently injurious ‘to the public welfare, Accordingly they opposed and criticised him in such manner as | they thought duty required. Their assailants, with tho usual recklessness’ of unreasoning passion, ‘urge that Mr. Ralston was driven to suicide by these criticisms, | and in the same breath they protest that his death was accidental, as every humane man prefers to believe it was. They characterize We criticisms as brutal and cite never a Paragraph to support the shrieking lie. Whatever the Bulletin and Call said of Mr. Ralston was uttered honestly and fearlessly when he was in full health and vigor, surrounded by powerful friends and | at the head of a financial institution that had been looked upon as invincible. We have no wish to pursue him in his graye, But something is due also to the living, and | itis unmanly to demand that the living should be silent under the blows of persistent calumny, lest their self- defence against moral desassination shall reflect by in- ference upon the dead. In California we rest 8 upon the people. We know our constituency, a the masses approve and sustain the general’ course of the Bulletin and Call, and so we have no misgiv’ to the result. ‘The reference herein to San Francisco journals finds its apology in the fact that in my connec. | ton with them is sought a plausible motive for the base | betrayal of my trust, with which our assailants chargo me, Third—No one will be moro ready than the directors | of the Bank of California to acquit my partners and myself of baving done anything to precipitate the | recent disaster, Not a whisper of its troubles was uttered by either of us through the press until the bank had closed its dvora, When T was in San Francieco 1 May last we knew that Mr, Ralston was on the brink of | failure, but not the least intimation of the fact was | given through our agency. In the general interest we | oped that the measures then taken would avert his danger and the panic which his full at that time would have brought about, and we decided that duty should seal our lips, Is that evidence of deadly malice? | Again, days before the suspension I telegraphed my | partners to “buy no more dralts from the Bank of | California,” giving in secret cipher the facts which | dictated this’ precaution, as “hints for private investigation only.” Not a word of — these premonitions was given to the public by either of us in any form, and yet you are told that the general agent of the Associated Press breaks banks, creates panics, and smashes things generaily in some mysterious way and by such subtie deviltries that noteven our over- willing accusers are able to specify when, where or how | the wondrous work was done. Ii “coming events cast their shadows before” our crities are evidently appalled | by the shadowy spectres of their own approaching fate, acatastrophe which their reckless economy of justice and trath both presages and invites, Ido not propose any further trial of this case by newspaper. Time and inchnation forbid i, But any decent opportunity “| meet the whole issue in the courts will not be shunned by, very respectiully J. W. SIMONTON, | Deen in its beginnings very crude. ‘hero is no instance ' yearning for the life-giving energy of the spring and AY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1875.-TRIPLE SHEET. THE FAST MAIL TRAINS. THE PENNSYLVANIA ‘TRAIN OFF THIS MORN- ING-—NEWSPAPERS CARRIED TO CHICAGO FOR NOTHING, While the great city slept this morning the Pennsy!- vania Railroad started from Jersey City its first “limited” fast mail and newspaper train at fifteen minutes to five o’clock, The Post Office Department, however, will not have thg mails ready for it before next Thursday. ‘The connecting ferryboats left the New York side at half-past four o’clock from Cortlandt and Desbrosses streets, and soon after entered the Jersey City slip, adjacent to the train, which took out many thousand newspapers. Last evening a Heraup reporter called upon Mr, Samuel Carpenter, the gen- eral Eastern passenger agent of the road, who went out in charge of the train, to gain his views on the sub- ject. He said:—“We are to run on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday independently of the postal authorities. We will deliver free of charge for these three days all New York newspapers intrusted to our charge, at Newark, Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Oolufnbus, Cincin- nati, Indianapolis, Louisville, St. Louis and Chicago We are determined to show that we can do as well as any other road. Our road is steel railed, double tracked and stone ballasted, and we intend to run to Chicago as quickly, if not more quickly, than any other route, We only carry passengers to principal points, but we don’t want many of them, as {t would make the train heavy. We go to Philadelphia without stop- ping. Mr. D. M. Boyd, the general passenger agent ofthe road, will join the train at Philadelphia and go through to Cincinnati ana Louisville, The first sepa- ration of newspaper matter takes place at Pittsburg, where the Chicago papers will proceed by the Fort Wayne road, arriving at A.M. The original train proceeds to Columbus, via the Pan Handle road, with the Cinoinnati and Louisville matter, and another train on the Vandalia road instantly goes on to Indianapolis and St, Louis, Not a moment's time will be lost and quickness will be constantly aimed at,”? ‘The following is the schedule of time, showing the distances from this city ;— Miles. Stations, Time. Leayo. ..New York... 4:30.A. M, 0—Arrive.. Philadelphia. 4M Leave ,. Philadelphia, A.M. 195—Arrive, Harrisburg. .10:25 A. M. Leave ,. Harrisburg. .1 A.M. 827—Arrive.. Altoona P.M. Leave ..Altoona...... 2:25 P.M. 444—Arrive,. Pittsburg... 6:00 P. M. Penn. R.R. time, Leave, .,Pittsbur; P, M. Columbus time, © 912—Arrive,.Chicago . P.M. Chicago time. YOR THE SOUTHWEST. 867—Arrivo. Louisville. ., 7:20 A. 637—Arrive.,Columbus...12 767—Arrive. .Cincinnati.., 825—Arrive, .Indianapohs, 1064—Arrive,.St. Louis. Washington. 6:07 Calvert...... Leave... Union Depot. Arrive. . Harrisburg . 1 25 A. M. Mr. Carpenter says that he thinks the road can do still better than the schedule time. HOW THE TRAIN WAS MADR UP, The train this morning consisted of a locomotive (No. 420) considered the finest and most powerful on- gine that runs on the Pennsyivania road. It is com- Daestltate DANG and was run to Philaaelphia by ‘ineer Thomas Brady, who is a stickler for fast. time, @ once took Commodore Vanderbilt to Philadelphia én route to the Baltimore Railroad Convention in two hours, Behind the engine came the baggage car, con- taining to-day’s New York papers, which were to be distributed at all stations along the line, according to the addresses affixed. by their various senders. After the baggage car came postat car No, 10, alter which caine mail car No, 14; then came the car of Mr, A. J. Cassatt, Vice President’ of the Ponnsyivania Railroad, which contained the representatives of the New York press. It is one of the most elegant of the palace cars, and accommodates about a dozen journalists, The conductor of the train was Mr. Samuel Knowles, one of the oldest conductors of the road, ‘There will’ be no feeding at restaurants on the road, the cars being all provisioned. No passengers were taken by the train. It was thought possible the run to Philadelphia would be made in two ours, although the schedule time is two hours and forty minutes. THE NEW YORK CENTRAL FAST MAIL. Tho first fast mail train West on the New York Cen- tral route will leave New York at 4:15 A. M. Thursday, September 16, and the first train East will leave Buffalo at 1:35 P. M. Friday, September 17. These trains, both Fast and West, will ran every day in the week and have right of Way over all other trains. Conductors will not allow passengers or persons other than the train men or postal oflicers upon these trains, except by special order froin the Superintendent, ~ -*THE NATIVE DRAMA, Park Tneatre, Sept. 11, 1975, To tne Eprror ov tar HERatp:— I ask to. write some words on the strictures that have been passed on the American comedy of The Mighty Dollar,’ now presented at this theatre by Mr. and Mrs. Klorence. I do 80 en- tirely in an intellectual and, I may say, national sense. I trust I could not utter and never have uttered an un- gentlo word against the members of my own order who have a critical duty to discharge, and who have, I am proud to acknowledge after an experience as man- agor of nearly twenty years, discharged it ever with a sincere and true impartiality, tempered with kindness, I do think, however, that an eifort should be mado to encourage the struggling strength and indulge the anticipating weakness of a young national drama. If the sunof the morning was suddenly to blaze upon the opening eye it would blind by its excess of light. The day steals upon our eyesight from the cool gray of the early dawn into the russet which precedes the silver light that lends the golden beams ot the day god; and while it s¢ 8 to be a law relating to the drama that a period of preparation must be mado by crude dram- atists before the full flower of periection is educed, 80 there is a correlative preparation of public tasie and judgment to appreciate it. Otherwise, when the pearls come they would be cast before swine. Whatever is excellent in nature and art must be a | slow growth, and it is unnatural to look for perfection at | the starting point. The drama in ail countries has in any nation of @ sudden fulness of dramatic power. Minerva, springing {ull armed and efficient from the brain of Jove, belongs to mythology, not reality, ‘The genius of Shakespeare found a most rude drama, anproportioned and inexpressive, and yet it was trom such he bodied forth a Lear, a’ Richard, an Othello and his other characters, ' Indeod, what in dramatic art had gone before seemed to be but a prep- aration for hig advent. The ~~ month_— in which he was born—April—does not find nature less the rich glories of the summer than did the barren skeleton of dramatic art seem to await the clothing of his creative faculty, Woe in America cannot expect a great dramatist in the future unless we encourage exsiys that tend toward pertection. Lisping is the lit- tle life of future speech. I produced, with perhans a foolish ambition, at Wal- lack’s, airs, Ward Howe's “World’s Own,” antl paid the largest price then ever given for a piece, It was grace- | ful in design and exquisite in language, It was crashed | beiore it could crawl No nursing of encouragement came. The feather whi Might have maintained its fight was torn, It fell. 41 next produced “The Octoroon,” the truest and most picturesque exposition of life peculiar to the South. ‘That at least was clean in construction, tender in portraiture and of a dialogue cut with the cunning chisel of « literary Canova, But its native notes stirred no literary American heart. Aguin come tho “Gilded Age’! and “Mighty Dollar,” It is objected that the character of we ion, Bard- well Slote is an exaggeration. It is, But it was nearer to life than was Dickens’ creation and Burton's portrayal of Micawber, In arustic merit it can front it, Macaulay says all striking likenesses are necessarily more or less curica- tures, ‘This peculiarity of excellence is equally inherent in prosperous dramatic art, Richelieu draw: ing around Julie the awful circle of the Church, and hurl- ing defiance at Baradas and his King, is grand and im- | pressive on the stage, but would only excite derision in | real lite, as did Burke, when in the House of Commons he threw down the dagger aud manutactured mirth, Had the actor done that in & mimic seene the spe tators would have been awed. Richard, desperately wounded and following his adversary, shows the po sistent nature of that monarch, and is true to the pur- pose of dramatic art; but no royal sold and Richard was an accomplished soldicr—could have fought across. the field with such unmeaning and oljectless tury, Who ever saw a Micawber or Toudles in real life? They are the exagge- rations of a truth, Eclaim for Mr, Florence's picturing of a characteristic American sucial and political life the same consideration that 18 too cordially given to por- traitures less interesting and faithful in questionable plays of foreign concoction. Those who accepted Dun- dreary as a sample of English nobility ought surely not to shy at the Hon, Bardwell Slot ‘Let us be simply just to our own if we cannot be generous. Your obe- dient servant, W. STUART, SUPPOSED MURDERER ARRESTED, Srrinurienyy Mass., Sept. 12, 1875, Joseph Dwight, one of the supposed murderers of | Joseph Riley Farnsworth, was arrested at Coleraine on | Saturday night. Search is being made for Harvey Davenport, his companion in the crim OBITUARY, PRANK GRINNELL, Frank Grinnell, son of George B. Grinnell, of this city, died at the residence of Hon, William D, Bishop, Bridgeport, Conn., last night, from the effects of an injury received on Wednesday last, while playing baso ball. © Young Grinnell was struck by a ball on the head, immediately behind the right ear, which rendered bim insensible. He remained in that condition nearly all ‘the time after the accident until his dea, BEECHER. The Sixth Sermon of the Plymouth Pas- for in His Mountain Parish. MR, SANKEY’S HYMN OF NINETY-NINE. An Eloquent Discourse of the Love- liness of Religion, HOW TO MAKE RELIGION BEAUTIFUL What Constitutes Faith in the Gospel of Christ. Twix Mountain Hous Sept. 12, ‘The Rey. Henry Ward Beecher’s sixth mountain ser- mon of this season was preached here to-day in the tabernacle to a large audience. The platform on which he spoke was profusely decorated with beautiful flow. ers and richly colored autumn leaves. The train from Portland did not arrive until about a quarter before twelve o'clock, and the commencement of the services was delayed until that time. The singing was con- ducted by the Rev, Thomas Kyder, of Nottingham, England, who, preliminary to the regular exercises, Sang one of the songs which Mr. Sankey has sung with eminent effect at the meetings of Moody and Sankey, in England, Ireland and Scotland, On being introduced to the audience by Mr. Beecher, Mr. Ryder said that this piece, called “The Ninety and Nine,” Mr, Sankey was provided with by alady in Scotland, and had been blessed of God for the salvation of very many souls, The music, he said, was Mr. Sankey’s own, The fol- lowing are the words:— There were ninety and nine that safely lay. ‘n the shelter of the fold, But one was out on the hills away Far off from tho gates of old Away on the mountains wild and bare, Away from the tender Shepherd's care, Lord thou hast here thy ninety and nine, ‘Are they not enough for thee ? But the Shepherd made answer this of mine Has wandered away trom me, And although the road be rough and steep T go to the desert to find my sheep. But none of the ransomed ever knew, How deep were the waters crossed, Nor how dark wns the night that the Lord passed throngh Kire he found his sheep that was lost. Out in the desert he heard its er Bick and helpless and ready to die. Lord, whence are those blood drops all the way ‘Tht mark out the mountain's track? They were shed for one who had gone Ere the Shepherd could bring him back. Lord, whence are Thy hands so rent and tornt They are pierced to-night by many a thorn, p Andthe angels re-echo around the throne, “Rejoice, tor the Lord brings back His own.” The regular exercises were begun with the reading by Mr. Beecher of the 101st and 102d Psalms, after which the hymn commencing Your harps, ye trembling saints, was sung. Then followed the prayer. Before the ser- mon the hymn commencing And let this feeble body fail, was sung, after which the preacher began THE SERMO! based on Matthew y., 14, 15, 16:—‘Ye are the light of A city that is set on a hill cannot be hid. the world. Neither do men hght a candle and put it under a bushel but on a candlestick; and it giveth light to all that are inthe house. Let your lght so shine be- fore men that they may see your good works and glorify your Father which is in heaven.” ‘The discourse was unusually loug and was able ande eloquent, and it cannot be adequately represented in a condensed report, After a brief exposition of the fore- going passages of Scripture, Mr, Beecher proceeded to say that religion by many is looked upon as a kind of dog's life. Said he, it is not so; religion is nota night march, it is daylight come to men who have been sitting in darkness, Mon are characteristically regarded in the New Testament as the children of light, and what is light but the revealer of beauty, by which all comely things ‘are brought to men’s eyes? They who toliow the Lord Jesus Christ are the radiant people of the world, or should be, In the estimation of God, as in the revelation of the gospel, religion is not a restriction. It is a cross; itis a burden to be carried; it is a bar- ness and a’ yoke; but what must be that state in which even a yoke is easy? And yet that harness which is contemplated im the New Testament is described as easy. Lf men can mount into the higher realm of their own souls and live by the force of divinely inspired, noblo sentiments, there 1s that in life which overcomes sorrow and trouble and fear, and conscience itself is a servant and nota master. Religion is that which sees men free, You are the devil's slaves and he is a hard master who promises big wages aud who, however kind he was when he coaxed you into his service, when the debt is to be paid takes you by the throat and anys, “Pay me what thou owest,” and never lets up. But Jesus Christ is one that sees men free from bondage and forgives them their debts when they cannot pay them, Now religious life is husbandry. The divine conception of religion is that it makes splendid men and noble women, For the most part we are born aniinals, we are bred animals, and we dic animals, but we are born animals that out of this lower nature may be evoked, by the omnipotent power of the spirit of God, the higher elements of the soul. Youdo not know the possibilities of the soul of man; you are poverty- stricken; your husbandry is like here and there an oasis in the desert. The sight of the freedom of God in men should be THE MOTIVE POWER of all religious teaching and of all Christian institutions, the inteliect not to be thrown away. Philosophical teuching is good in its place, but the central characteris- tic force of religion is to be ii Dbeautifulness. God in man makes him noble and — beautiful and is there anything that brings God nearer to you than the thought of your mother, of her patience, her faithfulness, her wisdom and her love? When everything else fails you, when you are an outcast and when your heart is broken, there is one refuge for you; when you have deserved obloquy and it has even overtaken you, and you have gone down into very filth, there is one altar Where you can be heard, and one shrine where you willbe acceptable. I mean the heart of your motlier; and is any mother as good as God? Yeia mother’s love interprets God and brings him before men’s mind. Father, mother and home are the trinity words of the language, they express more deep fecling in more musical ways tha y_ other three words and they are the three words which are employed to represent to us the soul and government of God. ‘The duty of making religion beautiful would seem to be the command of this text, by which we are called upon to let our light so shine before men that they shall see our goodness and shall glorify God. 1 have seen a great many men who, beholding the goodness that was in Christian people, cursed them. I have seen men look upon the Church as they would upon a snarl- ing, quarrelling kennel of hounds, I have seen men Jook upon Christians and gay that if what they saw in them Was religion they did hot want it, and I fear that sometimes they felt justly. But if Christians were obedient to this command men would ad- mire thom, would be drawn toward them and would desire to be like — them, If the chureh in every town and village were like a bride, adorned and waiting for the bridegroom, men would be atiracted to it, But churches are ragged and un- comely, They are a thousand times better than nothing; but, as compared with the divine thought and. ideal, how low and poor they are. We are, then, to live such lives, cultivate such dispositions, aud form such habits and associations that when men look upon us they shall wish to be like us, because we are so good and so beautiful; we are to make the Gospel known: by showing whaé it is The ideal of the New Testament is that in Christian life you are fruitful under the sum- mer of the Divine Spirit, and that the fruit which you show is so beautiful, so fragrant and so desirable, that men, When they have once seen you, say:—‘Where can I get such iraitt?? But how many men who enter the Christian life bear the fruits of the spirit to such a degree that men want to be like them ? THK POWER OF RELIGION * ag it is defined in the New Testament is to be the in- ‘d power of the soul. You cannot stand in tho pres- of an individual who is inspired by the essential spirit of the Gospel and not be influenced by it, Faith in God gives elevation to the life. This was the primi- tive power of the Gospel. Persons who see what vic- tory over trouble the power of God in Christ Jesus has given meu say, “If it is such a Killeare, if it 18 such @ means of overcoming trouble, it is able to tread down all suifering, if it can make men, no matter what their circumstances are, happier and more glorious than kings and priests, then let us have it,” Now I say that be who makes re ligion unlovely is an infidel, If I were to say *‘Heave is all a myth; there is no hell excopt in the fool's brains; there is no Trinity; there was no Lord Jesus Christ and no atonement; there is no Holy Ghost; there is no Church and there are no or- dipances, how. long could I hold up my head in society? I should be drammed out og an in. fidel; But what would I be denying except certain dogmas? Yet there are men who hold to dogmas while they deny the nature of God in the haman soul and the importation by the Holy Ghost of divine disp jong to men. They do not dony baptism, nor ordinances, nor apostolic churches, nor the creed, nor the catechism, but they deny the fruit of religion which these were designed wo be the servants of, and yet they do vot think they are in- fidels, Now, I say that every man who treads down that which was meant by the New Testament to be the wisdom of God und the power of God to salvation is more infidel than he who denies the doctrine of Chris- tianity. It behooves us, therefore, to see to it that we have ‘THE ORTHODOXY OF THK HRART, It is best to have both orthodoxy of the heart and orthodoxy of the heads but if you will make a choice let it be im favor of orthodoxy of the heart, Men who “ranes, Steamship, Commercial,’ Ther let the worla ™ order to save the Chureh, the Sabbath and the Bible are idolaters. These institu are instraments for saving the world, and they shi be subordinated to that end. Wherever religion imprisons man’s nature it is misrepresented ; wherever fear made to be the predominant element in Christian life it is misapplied. ‘There is experience of fear which is wholesome and there are experiences of fear which are unwholesome. I did tot fear my father as I did. my schoolmaster, and I did not fear my schoolmaster as I did a big burly boy that used to thrash me. A man whose religion is domin- ated by an overhanging gloom misinterprets religion as much as a cloudy day misrepresents @ scorching day, We are commanded to be watchful; but if & man is al! his life watching he will lose the very ends which watehfuln ig set to accomplish; for if ® man wants todo anything well he must not think of what he is doing. Watchfulness is not the characteristic of religion it ts one of its instruments. Religion must bot be made to march before men in shackles, ag a prisoner to fear or to watchfulness, That. rel which produces no joy and leaves out that quahty which produces in men enthusiasm is not patierned after the divine idea of the beauty of holiness in men, Such a religion does not represent the spirit ol the Gospel of Christ, You are not for your own glorification, but for the augmentation of your Master's’ praise, so to live and to pour » out such experiences that even the wicked around you « in their unstormed hours shall look at you and say, “beautiful !’” In religions life there come emergencies im which & man must sufler and disown selfish instincts and stand for a higher conception; but they are alterna y hey are not characteristics, The characteristics of Christian life are bountifuiness, lverty, peace and righteousness, joy in the Holy Ghost, t is THe BUSINESS OF CHRISTIAN MEN to exhibit these characteristics; but how seldom do it! And so those who look upon them as exemp! cations of the Gospel are cheated. There are men who g0 about hateful as hyenas, howling religion. Where 18 the spirit that descended on the Master’s bead im baptism’ Does it ever come with a bloody beak? Where does it go searching for carrion? The cou Ghost descends in all sweetness and purity and trutl and giory into the souls of men, and they Who prevent all the outward features of beauty are the hinderers of religion, Where asceticism predominates in men they cannot represent the true spirit of religion, nor ¢@an religion represented as imperial conscience be beautiful to anybody save the man who owns that imperial con- science, Conscience is made to be a kind of rudder, but must men hoist their rudder on board and have it for breakfast, dinner and supper? Conscience is a good thing when in ite own place, working quieUy and invisibly; but it is mis chievous when men are bound by it aud do not fear God as inuch as they do their conscience. Then it leads ta sciousness, and self-consciousness makes a nag vo around hinself as a centre; and a man whe revolves about himaclf is a poor worshipper, The is bad enough; bat the imperial conscience whieh men exercise upon others is worse. The command, “Go ye out into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature,” has been interpreted as though it was every man’s right and duty to ineddle with the affairs of every living creature, and men go out with their consciences to tell everybody else how he ought to use his conscience. They misunderstand the very spirit. of this command. Is that a right kind of a conscience which makes a man indifferent to his own disposition and leads him to hound other people im regard to their dispositions? The disposition that we should have is that which was mant- fested by the Saviour, Would you pamt him? Bring the sweetest virtues, bring the gentlest manners, bring the clearest wisdom, bring the longest patience, bring the noblest pleasures, bring all that makes heaven a garden of delight, and from these rare quali- ties, sublimed by the imagination, with trembling hand touch here and there the features, and then it will be but the. shadow of the reality, But when men daub their brushes in the dirt and mud and ichor of their lower passions, and smirch their. portraits and say, “That is my Christ, I am a Chris. tian,’? then they falsify Him. It is devil worship, whe you are called to look at such men as representations God, for God is sweet and beautifal, # The preacher here inveighed against the a _frtotioe among iucn of ignoring their own faults and. criti t the faults of others, and condemned the cruelty of ap-- plying such tests as are possible to the bighest natures, in the highest conditions, to persons in the lowest state, and making them feel that they are tests which repre sent the law of God. After which he closed his dis- course with one or two POINTS OF APPLICATION on the subject of the cheertulness and vivacity of relis gion persuading his bearers to make their Christian ife joyful, and dissuading froma desponding and un smiling Clirisuanjty and on the importance of a right personal influence in Christian living. The exerciset were concluded with a brief prayer, the singing of the hymn commencing “My country, ‘tis of thee,” and 4 benediction, Mr. Beecher has withdrawn his appointment te preach near Greenfield next Sunday upon the repre- sentations made to him by the Christian brethren im that vicinity, He may spend another Sabbath here, but otherwise he will retire to his farm at Peekskill. The dafly morning meetings undor Mr. Beecher’s direction are still continued, TRIBUTE TO MR. OSCAR BARRON, JR, Tho Twin Mountain House is owned by Messrs. Ast & Oscar Burron, but is under the management of Mr. Oscar Barron, Jr., whose administration has been s¢ Batisiactory that those who bad been resident gues presented to him a. splendid gold watch on Wednesday night. There was no ceremony, but the ladies, in whose hands the ailair was, were represented by Mrs. William b. Dinsmore, Mrs. G. W. White and Mrs, H. B. Loomis. HOTEL SOCIALTIES. Last Tuesday evenimg in the drawing room of this house was given a ajoyable entertainment, con- sisting of readings Tes Harriet Beecher Stowe, from her charming “Vid “Lown Stories,” and singing by Mra, Comstock, of Brooklyn, N. ¥. On the whole it was the choicest of the many choice entertainments which have taken place here this season. DIED. Wanxer.—In Stamford, on September 10, Mrs, Sorma, Wanner, relict of Hiram Warner. Funertl trom Presbyterian church to-day (Monday) af two P. M. [For Other Deaths See Kighth Page. LET US BE CLEAN iN ORDER THAT WE MAT be lth; To be th hly so aud to counteract eruptive sadeuaten daeeodar whe ‘in white and siaceth, let us use 's SULPHUR Soar, eruption can withstand it, 0) No. 7 Sixth avenue, THE DIRECT UNITED STATES CABLE COMPANY, 16 Brond stroot. Notice is hereby given that on and after the 15th Septem Der this Company’s cables will be opened for the transmis: sion of messages between Aincrica and Europe and the East genorally. ‘Tariff rates will shortly be published. The whole system of the Company between New York and London will b¢ worked by the Company's own operators. THE NAME OF THE PLACE FROM WHIOR MESSAGES ORIGINATE WILL BE TRANSMITTED PREE OF CHARGE. The Company's offices are at No. 16 Broad street, where messages will be received, and at all the offlees of the Atlan tie and Pacifle and Franklin Telegraph Compantes throughe out the United States; also at all offices of the Dominion. Telegraph Company of Canada. Gigued) LAWRENCE OLIPHANT, Representative of the Direct United States Cable Company tn Amerlea, s| | | | | | New Yorx, September I, 1875. 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