The New-York Tribune Newspaper, April 10, 1866, Page 4

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A ——— Amasements, ITALIAN OPERA, ACADENMY OF MUSIC. ! . ed Flotow's opara of o o6 dliss J. C. ¥ o, Miss M DWAY THEATF wpril 10, DT OR, TH b Oweva, Mise Locills v Western, WOubLo GALLERY, No exliuition of the uew pic heve been eatabished ne, sud ol the newspapess PaTeNT ALL Rigut IX THE GREAT TIRE. Nuw York, April, 7, 1076, Co.. No. 25 Drosdway ALox 0ud DRY Prastam Sar. d story of th Metars. Manviy & Bave just ¢ d d foil into ce. A lorgs assoitient of Baniers’ and Mo avis & Co, {50 s Patext Door LocEs Many Fon Hovens AXD STORES. Tury cAYTOT DA P dury na Kex weier 2ep. AN ovxC, 7 qQUARTYR OP No. 265 BRoapway, Net T Aleo, Marvia's ! TDEBILITY A ability in the stomac tho dig-stive urn to the muselee, fes’ reciotte the the food duto putriment, S s Brrrens, end vizor wil 1o d frame, sud the ce dsverons complexion love with ¢ ibuted to otlicr canees, fs ocsasioned by Worms. Bmow's Van 1 i destroging Worrns, and ean dono pos o elild. T7's Kavistox la g bo & most po anmatic Aryuoss gaveel Ly the v nd Tt softers th Muse.~Use of sdein the # Massts. Jobw 1. Brown & Son, Bosto o b with vewy bes * For Covghswud Culds 1sis Tnocuzs * servicentle TRoow: fawed exd which 1 Lave clor ellaying broncl v prompt rel'ef. P LATesT STYLE.—KN0X of mear Brosdway, sud Brosdway, Lus i bis new s of AT T ub«‘m LR It 13 Nor A HNumu WATIC R RXEDY mendad by the il s ziined o best dociors in Ne ARKET MeN AX ] 3. dn TOMATOBS, Just 13y +wle by the bo. & Certes Viguette €3 1 lersd, pudoy b TRUSSES witbout steel » "Trussns, ELABTIC STOCKINGS, FURPENSORY LAN- Aces, Prepontsm, Lo.-Mirea k Co's Hadical Cure Truss Oftice eniy ok Kor 3 Veveyat. Ly s Tourzas, and ORNAM Parcoeson’s 16 ) M ruE e Cures fs {r: 2t 48 hours, Ewarnn's OymiaNe all Skin Dis ayne & Son, Ph Nrs & THE Ana AND LEG, by B. Fra; The *best” freo to soldicrs, kud low to g:m-vm Poiis.; Astor-pl, N.Y.; 19 duisat initatios of his pateals. The best in tho ATCHELOK'S LIAIR Dy ] l'n:.u. I-:tg-ul. relisble, harmless and fnstentsneous in offect. Th . . WiLeisx A, BaTouLon. Sold o ped Wi 'y by all Drugg ‘Hiw's a1k DYE, 60 conts, Dlack or Drown. Ia- 00us; bost; chespest. Dapot 66 Jokn-w'. Sold by o/l Droggists, Elovn & Bakeg's Hicmzst PreyavM Erastic Sxwing MACHINES, for fani'y cae. No. 493 Brosdway. Hows SEWING MACRINE Cox PANY.—ELIAS HOwE, r., President, No. 829 Brosdway. Avents wanted. TMPRovED LoOK-STrTeH MacmiNgs for Tailors and arers. Omoves & Baxzs Bewing Macmive Coxrixy, E‘::ub Broadway. WHEELER WIL30N's LOCE-STIIcH SEWING u, No. 625 Brosdway. BBOOND-HAND SAFES 1n large numbers, of our % ‘make, takoa {n 108 our mew patont ALD: R Sapps. For ssle low. Makvix & Co., 265 Brosdway, and 721 Chestnutat., Phils. Elliptio Sewing-Machines.—A. 1 ‘ITud iptic Sewin, S—A. Fepio et i 0. wery bard, and unlisble to It is melaucholy for & white bishop, who is making -appesl North for funds to eid the Freedmen, to be publicly accused by these same colored peopla with n d T il baving beon a cruel and hard master, and & relentloss E:zmn‘lm. .3.".:;"&.3"{' of Unionists. 8o stands the case with the t Rovorend Mr, Gregg of Texas, If wo daro | ouid Wl Delicvo such a thing of the eacred cloth, it is only ith foar and trembling, for though Bt. Paul himself 0id once live “‘after the most straitest seot a Pharl- which thero wa insur £ $ 108,000, A serious fire is reported to have oceurred at Deckard, Ala.; ) | $190,u00, Other fices yrted, NewDork Duily Tribune TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 18 e eSS = e The Teibune o L TETENS PROTHERS Gnien, W ( . To Advertl vk our advertising customers to kand in T cedved after TRipose must be banded in To-Day. To Advertisers, ing widened the colun v of cliarging more, per line, for adver- deration of this and the fact of the ng cireulation of THB TrrsvxE, we bave to correspond with the in- it ¥ BT decided to incre | those most 1i the past experi selves of Tus Tn rench customers i i scale of prices to prove geod customers; and wo believe ! sers, who have availed them- as o medinm through which to oth in City end Country, will ant increnso in our rates, Ournew DPAILY TRIBU OEDINARY ADVERTISLMENTS, ¢ heads, 20 conts per lix SpzeraL Notices, on fifth page, 30 conts per lino. BUsisgss No1icks, 50 cents per line. 17EM ADVERTISEMEXTS, under head of ¥ City News,” 60 cents per line. Business Notices will bo inserted on tho fourth page. we know will greatly pleaso those who insert or that head. The ck: ssified under different ue of ad ] Notices, which will continue on the Lfth hosd of Spe page. Book Notices and Literary Itema will appear on { socond page, to be followed by the Book Advertisem We beliove that TRE TRIBUNE has always been considered the very best medium in which Publishers could adver- and this arrangemont will edd oven to its previous 8, will soe that, by the changes in m ez, their anpouncements will be presented more y to the reade Friends, we Lavo hitherto 1 you the worth of your monoy, and we kail co e etz NEWS POREIGN NEWS, 3 al of the stewmehip Hansa, and of the st to do so. 51 Jurope. rlund had 160 cases of cholera o | NERAL I | Meteor case I that of LIOUL rishioners e friends of the Rev, Brooklya Lave prescuted 1 7 Mr. M. M. Eaton, an exy The censorship on co New-Orlenns has been reinc ! The crevasses in the Mississippi cor counts, and it see 4 highly h P b of Lo A | yerr—wonld be at St. Louis was $300,000, on o Kentucky *" Convention has adjourned, d . limited aud price pex passon at 7 per ceu “ut, CONGRESS. SENATE. Arrin 9.-Bills were futroducel to duties on produes; to equalizo the dist tho currency, by withdrawing and reissuing b ) w‘_h ted to National banks; to rog: o York for goods arriv quarantine, Various peti Y lutions, wero presented. tion was passed construing certain words in the ¥ net; aud a Lill to appoint Comuissioners for tho codification ' and revision of the United States Statutes, The Loan bili reported from_Couamitteo as it passed the Hotge, was taken up, debated at lenglh, aud pa-sed by 33 to 7, " Adjourned, Ho: Tho Davis resolution of confidencoin the Prestlent was n motion of Mr. Ri ond, postponed for two weeks, Re: ons were adopted dirceting an inquiry by the Ju- | | diciary Committec into the enses of Jff. Davis and others, ond a8 to the trial of those persons for assassination Regolutions were presented from various public bodies. Mr. Raymond oftered other resolutions, coneerning the tiial | of Jefl. Davis for treason, which worereferred. Resolutions were adopted concerning & Navy-Yard on the Hudson; concerning an allowanes of office-rent 10 asscesors under the Interual Revenue act; directing an inquiry us to the expediency of amending the vaturalization laws; direct- ing an inquiry as to restyicting tho issue of a elrculating dium; directing the Sceretary of the Treasery to with- fifu\ 1{‘43 digtribution the proeceds of captured” property tntil the Supremo Court shll have determined their le- ality; and directing au inquiry concerning land ofiices, iils were introduced coucerting tho comstruction of Nutiopal roads; to amend the Bureau of Tiamigration aat; and concerning the Provisional Court of Louisisna. cortain bation of | of the_ | | ¢ T A resolution opposing taxes on incomos was laid on the table. A joint resolution to increase the duties onim- m:r‘tg 50 por cont,for 60 days, was Isid oo the table, 107 The Civil Rights veto was taken up on a meesage from the Senato unnuunflnlslu sago by that body, The Veto Message wes read. Mr. Wilson of Towa, moved the rovious question on tho paszago of the bill, the Presi- 5.- 's objections to the contrary potwithstanding, Dils- tory wmof intervened, but flull{v the "rmvlon- question was socouded, and the question beinj on by yeas and ereupon the Speaker a law. Tumultuous "“"""fi.‘?‘.‘;‘.‘h M‘hn‘;)o?mflhfl“ sud on the foor, LEGISLATURE, EENATE, Armip 9,—Bills wore passed to incorporate the New- " aud perseouted Christians ““even unto strangoe | y. 0 i R ok Women's Medical College; to i o the tar- still has many a white Dives boen convicted of | lem River .fi.‘b'm (‘.'huuor kaxmd Jmf;c ¢ Ao colorell Lazarus, In these premises the good heo- ASSEMBLY. Mr. Krotdlor offored a rosolution approving the voto of of the North will thivk how mnch comiors ®ill | the New-york Kenatars in Washington oin s Cisil Rights | s Freeduon after belng filiored (hough tho Ll of 48 papogmloror Tyemistn® - § Wl hnd voqusating the Reprosuitatives of tho Biste to | x‘m;hlho will 5 tuithstanding the Pm-im.:'n‘:- velo, e v SRR ¢y 2, N, Ave | passed into th NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1866. Sta=ipi @01 Aldrich Yousg with 1o Demoeis T. G, tatanet it Mr. Raymond has mada his firat joke n the House, and it is creditable for a beginner. He moved to postpone for two weeks the cons eration of AMr. Davis's resolution of coufilence in the President, re- marking that he supposed a postponement wonld the views of the House, ez it certainly would . me Lis! That is where the laugh com The Houso yesterday adopted the Jeff. Davls reso- Intion of Mr. Boutwell, dire Jefl. and others are guilty of inciting the assassina- tion of President Lincoln, whether legislation is neces- sary to bring them to trial, and whether there is probable cause to believe them guilty of treason. Resolutions offered by Mr. Raymond requesting the President to bring Davis to trial for treason only were referred to the Judiciary Committee. The Houso yesterday adopted resolutions directing the Secretary of the Treasury to withhold from dis- tribution the proceeds of caplures by military and naval officers, claimed by them for their own benefit, until the Sapreme Court shall bave decided the legglity of such claims. The Benate yester paesed the Loan bill as it o from the House. Mr. Sherman opposed it as giving too much, and Mr. Fessenden as giving too littlo, power to tho Secretary of the Treasury, Tho vote on its final paseage was 32 to 7. et ] ay A salute of 100 guns will be fired, under tha aus- pices of the Union League Club, at 8 o'clock this morning, at Union Square, in celebration of tho final passage by Congress of the bill securing the Civil its of the whole American People. The Assembly of our State yesterday adopted a resolation spproving (he action of our Senators at Washington on the Gth of April, and requ Representatives in Congress to vole for the Ci Rights Bill notwithstanding the veto of the Pre dent. Only two Republicans, Messrs, T. E. Stewart and Aldrich voted with the Democrats against the resolu- tion. P —— rhead, proposes Mr. Ancona, Pennsylvania Copy that the income taxes should be repealed or greatly modified. The House laid his resolution on the tab ————————— A resolution to increase, for 60 days, the existing rate of duties on jmports 50 per ce tug paper wostzed, vsed for b clusively, was offered ye TWINTV-FIVE ¥ Toe New-York DAy Trisvx s of War fora bricf e as to intermit two or t We were very glad, howe be, to the good old fashion of issuing on six days oaly per week, and of taking and ivi | (w con tiox ofess to regard and ny Wo are ecu t that the gr ild be nei fed, clad, arted aloge by Lim who hias been who (though a cou 18 to remain a weiter f atall, B man ise ments of a fis paper in our day ictors, and eabals to chango t) per, 8o word of this has ever been whisporel ors themselv need aimong the pr Tur TRIBUNE Was o d a8 an organ and intorests than those to which tho Jouraals previo existing in thisCity were devoted, They were, very 1 d epirit; Tis Trist rally, Commercial in their scope & regards Labor or Proluction as of jri and Trade or Commeree a8 subordinate and su In 6o far a8 Commerco tends to cucourage, develop, aad in its pros- r the re- perity; in g0 f erd of Productive hor, wo esteem it otherwise, 1f C merco were to take all the Geain, Cotton, ¥ and Wool from our proda its gent thercforo well-b tothe extentof our needs,at what would seers lower prices | than could be afforded by American millers, bakers, spin- ners, weavers, and tailors, we do not believe it would bo wise or well to acquiesce in such o traffic, For In- dustry is something more and higher than a means sical needs of mankind. It is Training, Education, 8kill, Efiiciency. A people variously ewployed as farmers, manufacturers, inmber- ors, &o., &e., us, more mechanics, artizans, millers, n. inevitably be moreintelligont, more dexte: effective, than if thoy were farmers or lumbermen only: nay, thore will be fur fewer idle awong them, with a much larger aggregate product. Does any man seriously doubt that if the climate and soil of portions of our country shall prove favorable to the growth of Tea, that it will uot be better for us to grow what we use than send around the globe for it, even though the home-growa shall cost more perpound? Wehave no shadow of doubt, first, that it would be wise g0 to grow it, even at a largor nowinal cost; secondly, that it would soon bo eheaponed here by growing it on our own #oil, even though the importors should (as they doubtless wowld) occasionally lower the prico of their article so as to undersell the American grower, aud keep their organs dinning In tho public car tho hardship of taxing the poor man's daily beverage, for the bencfit of @ few home-growing mg:oli s in whoss interest the duty was imposed, We aro secnstomed to their tricks and dodges; but nono of them shake our steadfust faith that it is tho true, sbiding interest of ali producers to skorten tho distances across which their products are exchanged, wherever Nature has interposed no barrier to tho process. Lot us coutinue to gock Spices, Cofee, Cocos, Cotton, &c., &, in the climates to which Neturo has restricted taom; but lot each nation be counscled and encouraged to fabricate and fashion from thess for the supply of its own tastes aud necossities, ‘There is, thoro can be, uo real advantage in sending our food and our fibers to Earope to bo fashionsd 1ato fabriea for ouruse, Lot us rathor i ekillhei prticops and artissns of the O * orlde-noariy ing an inquiry whether | print- | as well | Dlosses Law as the guardian of his i nither the | yarie al of Shom {ntelligent republicans—and enccurege them 1 to minlewe to ous wasts whete we ean waluister fully and profitably to theirs, end where their children may ba reared with ours to s Leritage of frecdom, hope and com- fort, such es Europe, in the main, affords vo promizo of, Tz TRIBUSE, in its i 7, fought under Hensy Clay's 1ead in the great struggle for Protection to Home Industry which, culminating in the Tariff of 42, raised our country rapidly out of the Slough of Despond into which it had been cast by the Rerenue seale of dutios to which we had gradually descended under tho influence of South Caro- lina's Nullification bullying in 1833. And, now that the clans are evidently mustcring for anotber raid upon the Protection of Homo Industry, we shall endeavor to do our whola duty in the contest they invoke, Profoundly believing in an essential Harmony of Inter- ests botween Cepital and Labor, Agriculture and Manu- factares, North and South, Employer and Employed, wo shall continue to plead for Universal Amnesty, conjoined with Tmpartial Suffrage, as the true bases of National Re- construction; for the Protection of the exposed departe ments of our National Industry os beneficent alike to far- mer and artisan, produccr and consumer; and for an Organization of Labor on such a basis s shall bo deemed just, subject to be modified according to the lights of ex- pericnco. Wo do not believe that employers nor em- ployed should elone dictate the rate of wages, the hours of daily labor, &ec., but that these should be settled in mutual conference, and that the true and only mode of obviating sll collisions between hirer and hired is to be found in such a comprehensive arrangement as will co and constrain the and forcenst not graduate recompenso by performa workmen to evince n calculation, th hitherto required of them. In the South, it is already re- markod that the negroes who are making Cotton or Sugar ite sharo for £0 much per pound, or who are to havea de of their produet, aro working moro steadily aud doing fur better than those who are hired by the month, Wo be- hangs in tho mode of pay &e., as well asin lievo a correspondin ces, Founde furaiture, &c., & ns pow arising betwe men in Iron Fu will beneficently smployers und tion must inev at any diferent 1aud transitory. prove supe BUNE is now printed on a larger sheet then ever which it was compelicd to o; larger than that he Tow pri muation of busi s0 often that prth war- co of our Though our type b than that of most of our ¢ ate them at whatover cost, But we ea True, the prices of Paper | still | and we have | 28 expect | inter 1 s Markets, Ship , mast #till bo i pr 0 or not at k f en orlinary hont the use of some bo had w Slave peared uestion, by 122 Yeas to 41 N ¢ P «entative chosen on a Repn Rayraond of The other 40 were Do a law, let us nover It 20} will il of gefied and ostentatiously v vare confident, bo rej “bil furnish a standard of right and justice tows nt will i ation, usage, and publicsentin ate. Let usr country Las t that loug ard on the rond to that goul” where, Law being identical with Right, every o freedom. THE PARIS UNIVERSAL The n: bition at the Paris Universal E EXPOSITION, pud variety of articles offoved for exhi- 3 will be te the fecling of our people as to th ntation of the industry and w g, at the World's Fair, to be le Paris during the Sumuer of 1867. Tho a come from every scotion of the country, East and West, aud cover over 2,000 rep articles, The French Government and peoplo are making the most extensive preparations for the reception and ex- hibition of articles, and for tho entertainment of visit- ors, detesmined to havo such a World's Fair as the world nover saw before. Every cffort is being made to astonish the people of other nations, as woll as the French people themselves, with tho extent and variety of the resources and products of the French uation, and the graudeur of the arrangements, tor the enter- tainment of the world, It is proper, therefore, that the spaco set apart for the uso of the people of the Unitad States should bo fully aud well oceupied, 50 that the assembled na- tions may ece, with astonishment, that at the close of a five years exhaustivo war tho industry of the coun- try remains unimpaired. Franco will, unquestionably, appear to great ad- vantage; ol her products will bo brought out o their fullest extent, and in their best form; her fine fubrics and hor tasteful display of metallic manufaetuies may, possibly, establish the superiority of the Freuch arti- ans in achiovements purely attistio and ornamental, Dot in war munitions, agriultural implements and prodacts, labor-saving wackinery, the quality and t v, ead the pumber, extont aad postie, v ek nanessariiv b bane importance hoof | at ations uth, entative wth, & nes* #1s bw comngrigon, The list slready containg every vaiety of war munitions, from the model of our most powerful iron-clads to the smallest part of & soldier's acconterments; the assortment of labor-saving thachines is especially full, and must command the admiration of capitalists, and the intelligent indus- trial classes throughout the world; the American reapers, mowers, rakers and binders, and tho com- Dbingd harvesters, gleaners; and thrashers, a8 well adapted to the grain fields of the Eastern as to those of tho Western Continent, will not fail to attract the attention of transatlautic farmers; the wood-work- ing machines, and the excellent tools used by Ameri- cau mechanics will commend themselves favorably to foreign artisans; the cotton gins and presses will re- commend themselves to the planters of Northern Africa and Southern Asis; the great variety of sewing machines, and clothes-washers and wringers will insinuate themselves into the good graces of the maunfacturers, the seamstresses and thrifty housckeepers of Germany, France, and England; and the full exhibition that is promised of American building timber and woods employed in the manafac- ture of wagons, carringes and other machinery, will not fail to teach all Enrope what a few of the more successful and enterprising mechanics of the scaboard cities havosalroady learned, that American wood is su- perior to all others when lightness and beauty, com- bined with strength and dorability, are degirable. The exhibition of cereals, of which the United States produces more than 1,200,000,000 of bushels per annum, aud the demonstration by our commissions in Paris of our ability to quad- mple this pfeduct, will do mnch towad convineing all nations that we ean furnish breadstufls for the whole civilized world, and that the capacity of this country to receive and support a large and con- stant emigration of the Industrial classes fromall parts of the world is immeasurably great. “Our Commis- sioners may also demonstrate, by actual specimens and statisties, that our gold and silver mines, yet in their infancy of development, are farnishing more of the precious metals to commerce than all the rest of the world; and that these, by the employment of la- bor and capital, will be augmented five-fold ina very fow years, Nor will the Commissioners omit to present, with abundant epecimens, a statement of the vast extent of our coarser, but not lees valuable, mineral deposits; our vast territories of iron and coal; our rich deposits of lead and zine, and reservoirs of petrolenm. sa, from their number, richness aud extent, crs of interest and wonderment. s were greatly benefited n in London, in 1862, The Amer by tho World" an ipt of large order n iz no good reason why a lik carrent should not be indu even its to American indu a full at the Paris Exposition. By gether from all parts of the world of art, industry, and nature, the attain- skill and science of all will at on property. The producers and world will be brought together, and, the most desirable aticles in knowledg and of duplicates of those building adu n will be free, i Ve offered for sale. A de- for the United States, BAILRUCADY, cting the proposed Rail- pted, we now under- i3 Was pro adway Surfaco ed it, That ng to iefly re- for is to ground and an Ele- od and built, Bat r on Dr Iy oppesed to placing any Ra inst the p and o omir rtered to trave e track of that on. AUSTHIA AND PRUSSE We have fou later ady om Earope, but 83 yot Lo { the crisis wny, On the “ clond is 1} r than belore. . rating large b s of ps and hastenin, to the Prussian froutier. From this sian Government con- s of the 1 3 i to bring on the war at y b 4 finances in he | of It 1 ) General at Milan ) cere- mony i P who died in the W dZainst 4 eads the Austrian papers to int nee with I for bumbl The Prussisn papers try to prove that Aust L of Anstrian that Prassia oug dismembered and stricken from (he List of ers il elie accepts the war, An open, te Landgrave of He another of the minor German States The number of States composing the Federal Union has now been reduced to at tie establishment of the Confedsracy it The little Landgravate falls to Hesse-Darmstadt. It i3 boped in Germauy that the new Government will at ouce put an end to the gembling-tables, to which Homburg was indebted for its prominent notoricty as a gambling p! Homburg, becomes extinet CiK DENPALKR. an, who portrayed the hour of nerable conservative tearing his y and exclaiming, “My God! conserve Chaos!” was not nearly 8o extravagaut as he is com- monly supposed. Witness the following extract from the private lotter from a venerable and Lighly respect- able Texay, whose name we have no right to print, who is secking a home at St. Louis, and writes con- fidentially to his agent as follows: #The South da for yesrs destroyed, aud & total change of the pocial and material state of the country must inevitably eusus, At picsent, o seoming prosperity exists; but thed must eoon end. From habit, tho megro uow is inthe waln tndustrious; Lut, 08 bis satural traits assume control over biam, be will go from had to worse, till he reachos his natural level, Thot great depreointion in the lands of this State thoro hecetatore and now reclaimed to caltivation pastioulurly —wmnst take place, L thiok s plain, They already aro fully 50 10 73 pox ceat, below the values of 1860, Socially, too, sopiely must greatly deteriozate, Tho ewigration to be expocted will be of alow staudard, aud, combicing with the megro, will form the controlting publio opiuion of the country. The Eonthorn country wontioman, a0 besntiful & ohnraoter in tho paat, will tatalle disanpear. The marcansry rrader. or the oniah ML, The ditly somipraton of B bum Yo bit pisc 13 ks fom the Bowlhemn egTie: | then tha tarist all bis clams to respectability. o worthy of note fhan will be €id BAlENS DI il use n bie farm Iabor.* Thero aro many in New-Tork who cherish » recollectlon of the forvid sud brilliant oratory of vhe Rev. Henry Giles, and who will hear with sincery sorrow that he has been for some months smitten with disease, which ronders him helpless, and from which thore is mall prospect of his recovery. Mr. Giles had 10 resource but his pen and his tongae, and in his misfortune it is proposed to assist him by the publie reading of one of his latest and most characteritic dis courses, & lectare upon the * Compensations of War.” This lectnre will be read on Wednesday evening, April 11, at 8 o'clock, in All Souls’ Church (Rev. Dr. Bels lows's), by Mr. Giles's friend, F. J. Nicholls, esq. The ticketa are $2 each; those who cannot attend, but would gladly help a sufforing mau, can send any dons- tion to the office of* The Christian Inquirer, No. 523 Broadway. The N. Y. Times says: “Senator Laveof Kansw, no doubt J when ll:!-fllhl that ‘the Ropublicen Party h'm“‘m —We arc happy to be able to agree on this point with The Times. It is the Senator aforesaid who s “crumbling,” not the great party which has kept Lim ‘noflice ever since he joined it--at least, over since it bad an office to give him, His state of dilapic dation is shocking tocontemplate: bence his mistaken notion that the party is going to wreck, It is s parallel case with that of the exhilarated gentleman who was found, in one of the small Lours, standing stock still under a pouring rain in the middle of a public equare, holding out his night-key ashe earnestly peered into the enshrouding darkness. ** What do you mean, standing out here in such a storm ?” queried thy puzzled watchman. **Why, don't you see,” hio conghed out the bewildered expectant, *‘that the square is revolving abont us? Iam waiting for my door to come “round.” If the Senator has any faith in his own assertion, leg Lim resign aud throw himself on the people of Kansas for a reélection. They'll soon teach him that all that has broken off from the Republican partydon't amount to a crumb—is oy a little fine dust which the wind has blown away. A T TWENTY-FIPTH ANNIVERSARY of the establishe ment of T TRIBUNE i3 an occasion on which we may e pardoued in indulging in reminiscences, as the habit is with people who are getting along in yoars. One of the pleasantest, though of a recent occurrence, is the reflection that we did something, in our poor way, to support the brave men who offered up their lives on bebalf of their country in the great struggle for o newer and holier independence—the froedom of all men born upon her soil. Wo comply, therefore, with an earuest request to publish tho (following letter, received somo months gince, from the soldiers who went out from Tg Tripuse ofico to fight the great fight, and from the rep_wseulnlivus of those who never came back: To the Tribune Aseoclation, Gextianex: During the Sammer Jof 1972,%s0me 25 of the cuployés of THE TRIBWXE ofilce became mewbers of the aroy, We weso not promypted to tie eonrse by the laducemeat of large bousties, but we lefs our homes and famtiies in the full Lat it was 8 duty we owed to our countsy, It we “Tribune Assoaiation 8o nobly came to cur ald, and pssured us that we shon'd veseive Four Dolisrs a wesk swhilo we remained in the service. Tho gift was entircly vol- uutary on your part, afid mot eontributed by a sebscription arong, or a tax upon the workmen of the establishwent, s have been in the scrviee until the present time; and esch and all bave regularly reoeived tils sum through oor fricnds o7 families at home. It bas been & constaut gource of gratification to those of us who left femilics at home, to know thet tiey were 80 goneronsly assisted by you durfng our ab- sonce; and we feel it to be a daty wo owe'you as well as one* sclves to cxpress our gratitude and acknowledgments for ths bonnty thus liberally bestowed on us; and, that the acknowledg. iment may be s pablic one, we would solicit #be publicatios of this card in the columns of The Tribune, and thereby allow tie to boeome aware of one of $2o masy bighorto wak: t5 of unsefish patriotism and lopalty of The Tribuge Assock wtion toward our eoun nd its dofencers. JOHY C. BAKER, 14tk New-York State Militia. MMINGS, 2ith New-Jorsey Volunteers, 8, 26t Now-Jereny Volumteers. Jersoy Voluuteers, t Volunteers, st 6. Foré). Volunteers. ARR, 24 Now-York State Militia. {ICHAEL J. O'BRIEN, 24 New-Vork State Miitis Ti103, MeDONNELL, 152t)s New-¥ork Volunt A. . FREED, 21th Connecticut Volunteers. JAMES D, MCALISTER, 119k New-Vork State Voluntoers. N ROW, 1334 Now-York State Volunteers. X (wie of E Houteman. ¢ WAL E. WILSON, 9k Conn, Volutenrs, who was kiiled st the Battle of Gettysbusg, Yuly 3, 1954 1 desige, i bebaif of bis famlly, to acknowlodgn the roesipt, until Lis death, of the woekly bounty contributed by the Tribure Associstion. R.0. HAK ¥, Foré, 24 New-York State Militla, kilied st Gettysburg, 189th New-York Volunteers, ki'led st Chepla's 20s. couviet SYLV GRO. T. BWANK, MARY E. FORE (wide of Rol Mich To tho support of the familics of these brave men, ¢ term of service, it was the privilege bune Association to contribute Three ght Hundred and Seventy-seven Dollars. Some of them, since their return, have resumed thoit places in this oflice. To thean all be praise, 8s to all brave soldiers: to the dead, an honored memory : Before the Association had docided to pay the above bouuty—at the first call of President Lincoln— o but patriotism and love of covutry, Thousand Ei the following persons, working at that time, or who bad previomly worked on Tus TRIBUNE, eulisted and were in tho field. Those marked with an asterik (*) -vere killed in battlo, or have died from wounds aad The first enlistment took place April 15, 1i disease, 1561 : E. L. ALvorp, 126 N, Y. 8, 3L aud 5th R L Vols. TnoMas WILEY, 12th N, Y. 8. M. WiLtAM BABNAKD, 12th N, ¥. 8. AL and lst N. ¥, V. Bat- tery. “EDWAPRD BiatToy, 09th N, Y. 8. M. killed at Antietam. SULLIVAN, 7¢th N, Y. S, M, (Highlauders), woundad ttack on Clarlestony Wul.rl:dmlnl Antiotam. 3. W, Suirm, 10th N, Y. V.- Lost on the Gea, Lyor. Tuoxrsey, lst N. Y. Cavalry. svy 90th N, Y. V.; engaged in siego of uded in arm while on picket et Dozsldsoo | | | Jauss ONrL, Sth R, L V. *Josrrn faviys, 5th R L V, Hanry Rowraxp, 7ist N. Y. 8. AL G. W, Prasce, 22 N, Y. 8. M.; two terma, Wy CLacuz, 223N, Y. 8, Nreisox Row, 133N, Y. 8. V. Tue Tiievse AssOCIATION has to acknowledze the veceipt of a letter from Mr. J. M. McKim, the Cor- respouding Secrctary of tho American Preedmen's and Union Commission, an extract trom which is suflicient for publication, The Secretary copies from the wias utes of a meeting on March 3, 1266, as follows: “The Corresponding Secpetary announced that he had | just roccived o check—which ho held in bis band—ob #1,000 from Pz TRIBUNE ASSOCIATION: & gift from that body to this Caumission by 8 gpontaneous and uneniong vots, Much gratification was expressed by the Clairusd and other mombers, and the Correspoaling Secrctary wed requested to write o lottor to Tie TRIBUNE AssocIATION acknowledging in suitable torms our sonse of obligation for their genorous liberality.” Telographic mul: l.-.::; NEW-ORLEANS, Mouday, A) All restrictions on_commorcial g:hu dhpllehlm romoved by aa owdor from the War Dopartment. i Fapsit VPOETABLSS.—Au advertisemont elsswhoro (8 referonce to She iuportation of fresh vopotablos, at enrly soason, from Bermuda, will bo gead with interest. Tno poopta of New-York will welcoma® ae & bletsing a1y offo-t (o inerass the supply of freed vogolablas i ocf markets. Tho supply Litierto Las boo 'W DW‘:‘ especially during the war, when the o of Berm: ‘more anxions to atiend to tho blockade-runuing Yizsinaga than ta 11 end sow, W tHIL £ .-,,: one, .wzm-irg nch oowfurt i the wdy o4t sabion o 3 Aot quriig thy 17 Wt yeuih o j 1 |

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