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S THEALE Honeicault's mw comedy, HOW er \Waliack, John Gilbert, Chas. no, Ward, B. T. Ringgeld J. C. ry Ganoon, Miss lie an, Miss Timoy. w THIS EVENING st 6 SHE LOVES HIM. M or, Norton, Johu & Lismson, Fope, G Heariques, Miss Far 10N, THE r,'Becks, THIS EVE NG, CRICKET. Miss Maggio Mitchall, M Bumett, Holmes, Barry, Rovdie, nd Mesdawes Fatren, Blseder, Burke. OLYMPIC THEATER. THIS EVENING, st 8, THE THREE GUARDSMEN. By every meumber of the Company. 2 WINTER GARDEN. THIS EVENING, THE LAKES OF KILLARNEY: Mr. sud Mrs. Barney Williams, Meswrs. C. Walcot, jr., H. Bland. W. 8. Audr Mrs. C. Walcot, jr., Miss Blauche Grey, Miss E. John- Non:to. eancinde swith ANHOUK IN SEVILLE: Mr. sad Mew Burney Wiliiams. BROADWAY THEATER. THIS EVENING, at 8 DOT:; OR, THE CRICKET ON THE HEARTH: Mr. Jobn E. Owens. WOOD'S THEATER. THIS EVENING, DON CHESAR DE BAZAN: Mis Lucille Western. ~ Mr. Barton Hili: to couclude with WOODCOCK'S LITTLE OAME. PARNUM'S AMERICAN MU M. THIS AFTERNOON, at 2, snd THIS EVENING at founded on Iugrahsm's Pillar of Fire, MOSES, OR I EGYPT, in which will be Panorama of the HUNDRED THOUSAND 3 OWERY TUEATER, , JACK AND GILL WENT UP THE HILL; lown; o, s DRAMA snd FARCE. NEW-YORK CIRCUS. THIS EVENING, at #, EQUESTRIAN and GYMNASTIC PER- Mr. Jumes Robiosou, Little Clarence, Master BRYANT'S MINSTRELS. THIS EVENING, CHALLENGE DANCE. OUR AFRICAN POLKA, PAWNEROKER'S OHOST, TIN PAN.OXION, CLOG- PEDALITY, THE ELEPHANT; Mowrs, Dau Brysut, Ira Paine, Chas. Henry, G. 8. Fowler, W. P. Grier, Rollin Howsrd, D. Reed, N. Seymwour. TRVING HALL. THIS EVE! Musical Performances by BLIND TOM. No. 9 LIBERTY.ST. ‘zslhAY. Free Exhibition of SKETCHES by American and Foreign 5 ACADEMY OF MUSIC. TO-DAY, free extubition of CARICATURES of PROMINENT PERSONS painted for the iste Bal d'Opera, by Mr. T. Nast. ITALIAN OPERA—~BROOKLYN AGADEMY OF MUSIC. THIS EVENING, the opera of FRA DIAVOLO; benetit of Miss C. L. Kellogg. . o, L T S Business Notices. ORGANS FOR DRAWING-ROOMS. FUBSTANTIAL |MPROVEMEN A large portion of the musical public are unaware of the very great fmprovement which has been effected {n reed instraments within s few years. expressed by callers at the rooms of MasoN & HAMLIN &t the five qualities of tone of their CABINFT ORGANS, end the sduirable effects of which they are capable. Such persons had not concieved it possible that such excel ects could ever be obtained from reeds. Indeed, the undenisbly dissgrecablo qualities of tone of reed instruments of the past, and the consequent prejudice sgainst them, is the greatest obstacle which the Mason & Hamlin orzans heve to contend with. Undar these circumi , the great success and rapid introduction of those fwproved instruments ste among the best evidences of their intringlc excellence. A few yoars siuce the sale and use of reed tn s ns, being struments was confined to such small charches and school obliged to bave something, could find nothing better: sud o dividusle as, from choice or neceasity, limited thewmssives to s very moderate expense for & musical {nstrament. They were sold, not 30 much from their merite and attractions, as from their low prices. Mhe fimprovements which resulted in the production of the Mason & Homlin Cabinet Organs have slready effected s great change in this respect, and are undoubtedly destined to work s reater change io the fatare. The tize is not far distant when one of these iostruments will be deemed st least a8 much o necessity in every houseliold of taste and refinement 85 a pisto forte. The wales of the larger and more elegant styles of the Mason & Hamlia- Cabinet Organe (the prices of which correspond with those of first-class piano- fortes) are increasivg very rapidly; each season bringing a demand for those styles severs times as great as that of the preceding season. Thay are now regalarly employed anl deeied o uecessity in the operas, and many firet-class orchestras and concerts, and are in con stant use in those private houses where music s wost cultivated and best appreciated. Alone, or es,an sccompamment o the voice, for wacred or] secu a3 8 solo instrument, or in concerted pl with the plano-forte, violio, violoneello, the Csbinet Orzan s appro- priste and effective. From tained tones it is cspable of adequate 1y renderiog very much music which canuot be weil prosonted by any other ope tustrament, ss well as of perforcing sn importent part fn combiastion with other ivstraments. Mason & Hamlio have the Lonor toWefer, for hearty testimony to the grost improvements which bave been combined in their Cabinet Orgams, and of the geveral justness of these claims in their bebalf, to the moat prominent artists and composers of New-York, ss well as other principal cities, to the most distingaished organists and planists, 10 the artists, conductors and mansgers of the Italian and Germsn Operas, and to those generally of recoguized highest musical profi ciency, s larze portion of whom are scquainted with the M. & H. Cubinet Organs, and csn spesk advisedly as to their excelleroes. M. & H. refer also, with gratification, to the fact that they have, within a few years, been awarded FIPTT-TWO GOLD OF SILVAR MEDALS, or other highest premiums, for important improvements 1n iustruments of this class, and for the superiority of their work. In all that time they have failed to receive the highest premium fn but three or four instagces. R A very significant indication of the repute fn which the M. & R Cabinet Organs are heid, aud that they are recoguized by mekers of reed instruments aa the STANDARD OF RIGHEST EXCELLENCE in this department, is afforded by the fact that fu the rare instances elluded 0 in which sny otlies maker has, by eny mesus, vucceeded in obtain #ng & premiam over Masop &k Hamlin instrument, be bss not failed, thenceforth, to make it, in bis rtisements and circulars, His MOST PRONINENT CLAIN TO PTRLIC Pavom, o jevvilg incontestably the price-souuary excellence of bis work ! But that test of the merits of these instraments which will prove most sativfactory to musical conuoisseuts, and which M. & H. are therefore most anxious to have applied, is & careful examination sud a-pwhan of the iostruments themse!ves. They therefore iavite all “@vhio have any interest of curiosity in the matter o visit their waro- Yoous, where it wiil aiways give theu pleasure to exkibit their Cobl- oot Organs. . The 1mount of space on the floor ocenpled by one of thess instra- oents is from 18 {nches by 3 feet, to 3 feet by 5 foet; in bight, they are from 3t0 9 fegt. They have from one to 12 stops each. Prices, S50, $110, $1%, $160, $170, $200, $250, 83, $390, B35, S0, 50, 600, $750, €1,000, &., cach. i Thwir freedom from liability to get out of tune or otherwise out of QAmugements MagviN's PATENT Door Locks For Houses AXD STORES THRY OANNOT BR PIOKED. THEY AAYE N0 APRINGS KEY WEIGHS ONLT ONE QUA! Marwix & C l&l5 N QUNCE. o 45 Yoo Ko 124 Cunsryv d Burglar Proof Ngw York, " Phitadelphis. uerautes better Ferrotypes than cen be Lad clty. No. 615 Brosdwsy, near Twolfthst. Tue UNIVERSAL CLOTHES-WRINGER, with cogs, and the Doty Wa MacuisE, esch took Fitet Premium st Fair of American ud for ILustrated Price-List. R. C. Brow! o Ageut, No. 32 Conrtlandtat., N. Y. s of all kinds repeired or exchange: i Axotagr Cure.—H. Mullan, esq., of No. 134 Grandst, Williswsburgh, bas been comipletely cured of 8 violent sttack of Rheumatism by one bottle of METCALYE'S GRPAT RHEU- Mmi0 Rusr oY aul is willing to state bis case Lo auy person who wil call st tho above addrees Fag Faces will find fifty different nl?'lvfl of elegant Promensde TORONALS, conmonly ealled Fancy Hats, st GENIN'S, No. 513 Brosdway. Have you seen his lstest dashing and hing vovelties in s dozen varieties of Straw #7 1f not, ** stand not upon the order of your guivg, but go st once.” e Wurte, Tne HATTER, (Formerly under the Museum), Has resnmed business at No. 373 CANAL 7. (0pp¢ House.) An ELeoANT AssORTMENT of GrNTs HaTs aud Cavs, sud Misszs end CuiLon WraR in ofiered to his old patroos and the public generally Much sickne attributed to other causes, is ocoasioned by Worms. BROWN's VER wirvar Courits are effectus! ip destroying Worms, and can dono pos ess with ohildren, as well as adults, sible injury to the most delicate child. BRAUTIFUL LIFE-LIKE PICTURES. Cortes Vignatte ®3 per doven; Duyiicates $2. All negatives reg- i R. A. Luwis, No. 160 Clistham-ot., N. ¥. istered. Trusses without steel n!)mlgs to chafe. Supporters for the abdomen, the uteras and the anus, of the most approved kind. All elastic suspensory bandages, wholesale and retail, st Dr. SuEx woon's. No. 545 Broadway. TRUsses, ELASTIC STOCKINGS, SUSPENSORY DAND- aoms, Stepontrrs, &c.—Mansi & Co.'s Radical Cure Trus Offics only st No.3 Vereyst. Lady sttendant. t qual- Dye sud Dyding at BATouELOK's. 16 Fond st. by B. FraNg PALMer, LL. D.— 4 low to officers and civilians. 1,609 N.Y.; 19 Green st., Boston. Avoid ARy AND T " free to ko . Fhila.; Astorp ations of his Ch frandulent iw Barcueror's HaiR Dye.—The best in the world. Perfeet, natural, réllable, harmless aod inetautancous iu effeet. The imed WILLIAM A. BATCHELOR Sold by all Drogsiste. GROVER & Bakkr's Higuest PREMIUM ELASTIC Srivom SuWisG MAcHixEs, for (ani'y use. No. 405 Broadway. Compa v.d—E;us Howg, Howe SEWING MACIHINE % bt ident, No 629 Broad Tiren MAcHiNgS for Tailors and Suwixe Macmixe Coxpasy, WuesLER & WILSoN'S Lock-Stirenm SEWING Macuixs oud Durroxmors Macuixe, No. 625 Broadway 6. —A. 11. —wood for the ~Tue m.k.fi‘-v'.'.i‘ 5 sorine. No. Cugap Soap—Py 11 Brosdway. Agents waiie P 00 NEWSPAPKER ADVERTIS- 8. M. Perrexcin & C 150 AosNTs, No. 37 Parkrow, New York (have been established sevonteen ). are sgents for The Tribune, and all the newspapere In the United States snd British Provin. NewDVork DailyCribune. Te Correspendents. No noties ean betaken of Anonymous Communiestions. Whateveris intended for insertion wust be suthenticated by the nune scd ad dress of the writer—not necesearily for pubilcation. but e agusr anty for his good fuith. Al businoss letters for thde oftice shoula be addiessed to “ The Tars- oxe,” New York We eannct undertake to return reiected Communicatione —_—— . braries. 17 Hentletta of THE TKIBUNE STEVENS BROTH st Covent Garden, Thiey will also receive ¥ Amenican Agents for Agents for thy Advertising of the City Press. THE TRIBUNE THE GREAT ORGAN OF THE BUSINESS PUBLIC. Anvexed is the aggregate amount of advertising re- turned to the Revenne Department (according to The Herald's figures) for the 13 mouths ending Doc. 31, 1864, aud for the year endivg Dec. 31, 1865, by the TRIBUNE, Timer and Herald respoctively: + Baper. i e Noj ef Liges 012373 1.595000 1,655,460 TripoNE over Tim 116,193 TRWUNE over Herald 366,193 ‘This shows Tug TRICUNE to be, by its extensive and com- proliensive circulation among business peoplo, its laror sheet and clearer print, tho chief organ of the advertisers of the metropolis, and the medium of communioating their wants to the publie. Note.~The number of lines in The Herald colomns aver- ages about 260, connting sbort and long sdvertisewenta. Tt seems, then, that THE TipuNe published, in 1865, four Aund- red and forty-seven columus more advertisomonts than did The Times, and thirteen hundred and secenty-ico columns wore ad- vertisements then did Tie Herald. Theso facts eonclusively decide which paper is the chosen, business organ of the poople. . Toespay's TRisuNE.—The demaud for The Tribune of Tuesday, April 10, baving excoeded the suppiy on that day, we have reprintod that number and have it for sale ‘order, and the convenience and ssfety with which they can be trans- ported, pecu'iatly sdapt them for use in the coustsy. Warerooms, No. 5% Broadwey. at our counter, Price four cents NEWS OF THE DAY. FOREIGN NEWS. The steamship Asia, bringing two days' later nows, arrived at Halifax yesterday. The Gorman dificultics were still increasing. Pruseia is mobilizing her army, and is reported to have concluded & formal treaty of _lliance with Italy. The Emperor of France has sent Prince Napoleon with a secret mission to Italy. The Grandduchy of Weimar has replied eva- sively to the Prussian circular dispateh, and claimed fed- eral intervention, The New-York, Newfoundland and London Telegraph Company have contracted for the manufacture and sub- mersion of two cables in British America for the Prum\:l transmission of all meseages between the Atlantic cable aud the United States, GENERAL NEWS, All was tolerably quict, Fenianwise, on the Maine bor- dor yesterday. The trisl of the arrested party in Toronto was going forward. The papers of that city have 1o doubt as to the purpose of O'Maliony. An unknown Frenchman was murdered at Albany yes- terday by an Irishinan named Chesuut. The exciting cause was a political discussion. Another fire occurred at Pithole, Pa., yesterday, con- suming $15,000 of property, If this sortof thing continues o groat while longer,there will be little left of Pithole, Pa. Green, the Maldon (Mass.) murderer, will be Langed | next Friday, a final appeal for commutation of sentence having been denied by Gov. Bullock. There wero 247 new post-offices opened (or old oncs re- «‘)fmml) in the Southern States during the month of Augusta, Ga., and Cha by nilw;{ communicatio Copt. K. B. Winder, sevoral months imprisoned at Richmond, has been sct et liberty by virtue of orders from Washington. The book-trade sale of Messrs. Leavitt, Streleigh & Co., closed on Tuesday. evening, and was the largest salo of the kind, with one exception, ever held in this country Can fesuds compare with pure Naaut-BLooxise Cerevs? —the receipts reaching nearly $200,000, (Bath Courls A frightful case of crime, involving the murderof seven persons, comes to us from Philadeiphin. Plunder was the Coups, and similar | object of this gross aud dreadful offense, Villiam Grady was exceuted at Elizaboth, N. J., yester- day, for the murder of Fe g Colling, Aug. 25, 1865, A Peekskill, N. Y., on Tuesday, the municipal election resulted in the election of the entire Undon ticket by 200 masjority. Mississippi navigation is now open from St. Paul, Minuesota, down $o the Gulf. A steamer was sunk by the floating ice near Lacrosse, Wis.,on Wenesday morning. The Wisconsin Legislature has adopted resolutions se- verely censuriug Senator Doolittle for his recent political course. An entertainment at the Rev. Dr. Bellows’s Church last evening, for the benetit of the Rev. Henry Giles, re- sulted in & net profit of $750. A new Orthodox Congregational Church was recognized in this city last night in public reli@ous exercises, promi- nent smong which was & serwou by the Rev. . W. Beocher. A strike of car-drivers on the Third and Sixth Avenune 1 1 roads, yesterday, proved a source of great tromb Masoy & Haxuiw. MaBvIN's PATENT ALL RiGnT 1N THE GREAT PIRE. New Yomk. Aprll, 7, 196, Messrs. Maxviy & Co., No. 205 Brosdwsy—O: We bave Just opened the ALow and DRY Prastem Sare we bought of you & short time since. 1t was in the second story of the bullding corner of Brosdway sud Barclay-st., asd fell Into the cellar, and it gratifies us very much to be able to say thet every book, paper, and bank bill fs in good order—very much better than we could have expected after the intense best. We shallwant enothier and much larger one of the same sort very soou. Yours truly, Wx A Drown & Co. A lusge assortment of Bankers' and Mezchants' Safes on haod. No. 265 Brosdway, New-York, Manvix & Co, § XT' 73] Chestnutat., Phila. s | Burserr's FLormEL closely resembles the odor of » rare and delicate bouquet of fowers, and in this reapect stands enrivalod. A few drops will lexve ita peculisr snd delightful fragrance g pon the handkerchicf for many hours. Bukyerr's CoLoaxe is equal to the best imported. It is put up in best and clegsnt style, and wins for itselt 8 Gavorite piace on the dresing-table. 1ts lutrinsic merits really justify the bigh reputation 10 which It is held.—| Providence Journal. For sale by all druggists. Loxvox HAIR CoLOR RESTORER AND DRESSING. Tux Most Erpscive Ham Rustorarive Evei INTRODUCED TO Tas AMERICAN Prowie, S. C., are again united £8TORING ORAY HAIR AND PREVENTING BALONESS. Soup By ALL DEvGOISTS, AT 15 Omnts & Borzie. A WARNING, Beware of sparious extracts deletenous, Sore Turoats, Couaus, troubles, if suffered to progress, resalt in serious pulmonary afections, oftentimes tocursble. Baowx's DRONCHIAL TRoOES reach diectly 1he sest of the disease, und give simost tnstant reliel. They have been Ihoroughly tested, and mainieln the good reputation they bave justly sequired. As there ere imitations, be sure to opTAIN the genuine. ] am a man more sinned against than sinning,” erted King Lesr, snd we think any man might say the ssme (hing who Bad been y-v-hibyhhmmunnhnalum--, one ot Kxo of Nos. 151 Fulton-st. and 533 Brosdway. The pilgrimsge of fife is bard epough at best, but when it mast be traveled without wwearing Kxox's Hats, it fs slmost 8 justifisble act to make oue's own ““quistus,” and throw dewn the burden of existence. No DisappoIsTMENT—NEVER FAILS. Swarxw's OmTHrT Cares i from 12 to 48 hours, SWATNE'S OINTUENT Cuteg Hiching Filen, inconveniouce, us travel was almost wholly suspended on Head, Rash, both 1i kin Disesses, Gold closed yosterday at 1204, after selling at 1274, Govern- ment stocks of all issuce are firm. The 7.30s are epecial favorites with investing parties, and 100t is r Iy bad. Money on call is abundant at 6 per cent. The rates for com mercial paper are unchanged. Sterling exc !:ll.rr is strong st bighor rates; Bankera' Sterling bills are quoted st 1072107}, ‘L bus {1k Sub Lrgusury was: Jeceipts, 81,855,170 45— ue & Son, I Anxes & C “SEcoND-TIAND SavEs in large numbers, of our own sod others’ make, taken in exchange for our new patont ALoX ead ¥ LLasyen Sarrs. For sl lo; My Vi3 & Con 05 Divabar, g5 71 Choniant th Rhlet omes very hard, snd uniiable to waste. | | NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, APRIL !2, 1866. P:fl';"v’fv";’m t;:-xm il—on -mm of | The suggestion that Congn;sc should impeach and try for Customs, $393,000; Loan, $40,000; Balance, Gold Notes, 894,100, CONGRESS, BENATE. APRIL 11, —After various petitions had been presented, a resolution was introduced to extend the time for com- pleting the first. 20 miles of the Western Pacifie Railroad Resolutions were adopted directing an inquiry into the ex "flil‘nc( of educating soldiers in the army; and to prohibit the sale of liquors in the apitol building. The latter was debated and finally passed by 33 to 2, The bill to reimburse Kansas for war expenses was passed. The House bill concerning the writ of habess corpus was read and postponed till to-day. The bill relating to :‘m.lmmm.n- of Jurors was called up, and postponed till the same time. The bill for relief of paval contractors was debated and postponed. Mr. Wil son introduced a bill to establish & uniform militia system. Adjourned. to next November, HOUSR. Bills wero passod to suthorize the issue of American registers to certain lake steamers; to establish a land office in Idaho; and (in Committeo of the Whole) to ap- propriate $6,775,000 to reimburse Missouri_for war expen- Ss—the vote on its passage being 08 to 25, The bill to regulate the pay of the army was reported from ommit- tee and made @ special order for Wednesday fortnight. Resolations were adopted directing inquiries a8 to pfi'iu a pension to Wi, Mereer; as to making Natioval Banl shares liablo for dobta under State laws; and as to allow- ing three months pay to returned prisoncrs on the Sulta- ua. A bill for the relief of paymasters was debated, amended, and went over till to- “A bill to amend the Agricultural Collegoe act was pas i to 33, A bill was A Institute for the introduced to_ineorporate the How: District of Columbin, and referred. The House went into Committee of the Wholo, and after passing the Missouri Reimbursement bill, adjourned. LEGISLATURE: SENATE. Arriz 11.—Among’ the large number of bills passed yoiy torduy woro those authorizing the extension of the Dry Dock and East Broadway aud Battery Railroad; to pro- vide for the appointment of an additional number of 100 Notaries Public in and for the City of New-York; to re- peal the soldiers’ voting law, passed in 1865; also, cone current resolutions addressed to Congress in fayor of claims of volun of the war of 1812 werc passed. The Seuate refused to consids April 14, The nomiuatic ers were not confirmed. In were made relative to a dan Rochester; to amond the general railroad law, oral matters of minor importance. Adjourned. ASSEMBLY. The Assembly passed bills to incorporate the New-Vork and Rondout Steam Transportation Company; for a rail- road in Escex aud other streets of New-York; tho State Charity Bill; to inco ment Compan, Ne wals; to ineorporate the Drew Theolo authorize the Controller of the City of N money by loan. The bill to incorporate the North-Amer- Company was lost. The bill to authorize h truction of & railroad in certain stroets in New- York was recommitted to the Committee of the Wi The bill to allow husband wife to, becowe witaegses for or against cach other was lost. A motion to reconsider was lost. The Select Committee on the Air-Line Railroad from Washington to New-York have instructed their Chairman to report a bill tothe House at an early day providing for the construction of the road. The sooner the better. Mr. Wilson deserves the thanks of the country for | introducing, and the Senate for passing, a resolution to prohibit the sale of liquors in the Capitol. We presume we are partly indebted to the opposition of Mr. McDougall for the almost unanimous vote by which the resolution was adopted. If the Senate has any dislike to secing one of its members regularly drunk on the floor, it is remarkable that it should not before now have taken measures to keep him sober, or to rid itself of responsibility for his indecent exhi- bitions. — STRIKEN, The conductors and car-drivers on several Horse- Railroads in our City struck for higher wages yester- day, as they had a right to do. Being free men, no one has a right to demand or can reasonably expect that they shall work for any less sum than they con- sider their services worth, But they must be vory careful so to use their liberty as not to infringe the equal rights of others. They Lave a right to refuse to work under a certain price— any price—for each day's service; they have mo right whatever to assail, abuse or menace any one who shall see fit to accept the wages they refuse. Yet some of the proceedings yesterday looked suspiciously like attempts to impede or intimidate those who might 300 fit to take the places they had chosen to throw np. To do this is to take issue with the Police and with the law of the land. It is Spring-time; and we judge that a clever, handy, willing, educated man—one who is really fit for a conductor—ecan do better than to run A car for fourteen hours for #2 per day. But let him who acts on this presumption go right to work at something olse—if there is no work here, let him go where work to be had. To stand idle, in the hope of com- pelling a concession by employers of the terms re- quired is almost certain to court defeat—at least, is very rarely crowned with success, The world overflows with work. It has rarely been more abundant than it is to-day. Those who can't find it are cither persons of very slender ability or very poor seekers. Do ot stand idle then, becauso you are not wanted in a particular calling or locality, but go to work, — SURPATION DEMANDED. The unchanged, unhanged Rebels who edit The Duily News, are determined not to rest until they shall bave relighted the flames of Civil War. Their last bulletin says: o President. in his prosent position, is a mere puppet. States and their populations, silenoed and outlawed by 1 dictatorship, bave been kept out of the arens. Their wellare, their enfety. thelr very jolitical life, depend upon the ivsue in the settlement of which they are denied all voico and pirticipation. They have the right to representation in the National Legislatare, Tt s the duty of the President to protect them in the enjoyment of that right. The vindication of great priuciples, the intorests of the yoopl. the fntegrity of the Union, the very essence of the Republie, in a word, the enforcement of the Fxecutive policy of regtoration, demands that the Representa- tives of the Southern States aud the people should imuiediately assume their official funotions—should take their seats at onee in Senate Chamber and Hall of Representatives in the Capitol of the United States. “'"I'he Kadicals oppose their admission. They bar the doors. They stand srmed with ‘stolen aud unlawfal weapons to dispute the passage of daly clected membors of Congress to thelr rightfal seats in the National Legisiature. Then why does not the Chief Magistrate of the Kepublic interpose his Nority to prevent this outrage against the representatives of t tes and of the people+ 1o las the power to do wo. He Is Commander-in-Cuief of the armies of the United States, and has at bis disposal an armed and disciplined forcs amply suflicient to preserve the peace at the seat of Government, and to enforce obedience to the laws beueath the root of Ropublle. Let a day bo fixed for the representatives of the Southern States asd people to take their seats in Congress, The seats aro th ready to receive the rightful claimants. Let them enter, t possssion of their own, and fultill their official funetions, Should violance be offered them by any man, or number of men, under any protense whatsoever, let the President send a detathment of Federal troops to preserve order in_ the Capit Radical conspirators attempt to support their usurp, force, the consequences bo upon their heads. It is time that the Republic stould have s complete and costitutional Nations] Legisiature. We bavo been ruled 00 long by fac- tion. Wo have been too long subject to the caprices of fanatics. The country must be permjtted to resume its nor- mal condition, and if revolutionists stand iu the way, the Executive arm isstrong cnough to sweep them from the path the Capitol of the of restoration.” Remarks. —The Federal Constitution (Act. L. §5) says: “ Kach House shall be the judge of tho elections, returns,and qualifications of its own metabers.” It was not necessary to preseribe that—it is the common law of legislative bodi A Congress into which the President was at liberty to inject member, at his diseretion would be less respectable, less potent, than the * Corps Legislatif " which servilely respouds to every word of Louis Napoleon. There is & law of the land—passed by both Houses and approved by the President—which excludes from seats in either House all who have voluntary aided the late Slavebolders' Rebellion. What would The News bave done with this? The present members will not repeal it; the ex-Rebels cannot repeal it till th y 0".ainseats, and cannot vote till it is repealed. What would *the armies of the United States” avail in the premises? It might possibly destroy a quorum: could it make one ? Will not the ex-Rebels spurn such mad, suicidal coupsels? Have they not Lad bloodshed enouzhi the President is rash and foolish eneugh; but it is not treasonable; for the Conatitution exprossly confers. the power so to impeach and try. But what The News commends is naked, downright treason—treason inthe R second d: only. These words in tho ples, murder in the first degi®e,” are not responsive (o ment, and do not concera * th premisos, in am“am#i-duf fonnd before now that it is & grievous mistake to said ind t | their crews unsottled down to within three weeks specitiod and oharged upon hiw, ofa "Aud therefors the sentence of death is erronoous. match, in hope of securing one or two first-rates, & When the court refused to reverse its decision, a [ second-rate man with plenty of practice is bettor thang last appeal was made to Gov. Bullock for a commu- | a first-rate who condesoends at the eleventh hour tg iuterest of older troason—treason to relieve traitors | tation of the seatence to imprisonment for life. At | go into training. from the milder penalties incurred by their rebellion. | that hearing, as at several previous hearings, a mass | We will defer comments on the Oxford victory till The President has* too much good sense as well as patriotism to dream of following such counsels, He is nowiso responsible for their utterance, and has shown what he thinks of such conspiracies and their anthors in his speeches against Secession in 1361. We affec- tionately advise the Rebel chiefs to let the old wounds be scarred over before they instigate another pro- Slavery Rebellion. “SECTIONAL.” The World thinks Tig TRIBUNE has been eminently a power in tho past, 1. Beeause of its ability; 2. Be- ocause, until The World confronted it, there was no adequate counterpoise in the scales of journalistic efficiency—but now—— The World’s ambition is laudable, even if over- strained or ill-directed; and, in the hope of aiding it to attain the goal of its aspirations, we urge it to avoid henceforth the use of partisan catch-words whose only use is to mislead those who naver reason. Its talk (for example) of Tug TRIBUNE'S inculcations s having filled the public mind with ** fervid sectional animosity " is quite unworthy of even a second-class journal, Now that even the Rt. Rev. John Henry Hopkins, P. E. Bishop of Vermont, has ceased from pressing the New Testament into the service of the slave-auctioneers of New-Orleans, while Cauaan and Ounesimus have been relieved from an enormous, un- reasonable excoss of fatigue-duty in the same line, we insist that this cant of * sectionalism " shall be re- mitted to the moles and the bats who have already boen too long defranded of their rightful due. Intoxication, unhappily, is nol a * sectional” vice, as Dueling is; yet he who reprobates Intemperance is no loss and no more ** sectional” than he who wars on Dueling, m To stigwatize Gerrit Smith and Lloyd Garrison as “ sectional,” to the exclusion of Jeff. Davis and Slidell, is & monatrons abuse of language which one who can write tolerabls English ought to blush for. Let us hiear no more of it. BADLY RECONSTRUOTED. A Hard Shell Democrat, who voted for Breckin- ridge and Lane in 1360, but who saw some new light on *“the Nigger question” during a sixty-day’s flight from a Rebel prison-camp at Columbia, 8. C., to the Union lines at Knoxville, Tenn., recently proposed & visit to arelative, who was also a New-York Demo- crat till late in life, but who has recently resided in Southern Kentucky, and been there imbued with the Southern viras, The latter responded to the invita- tion, whence we quote from the original manuseript as fellows: 1 will conclude by saying that we shonld rejolos to see you here to vistt us; nor need you fear being tarred and foathered. ‘This peoplo are not of that low, malignant, base, cowardly kind as are, or were quite recently, the Northern Radicals or Abolitiont but I can with trath tell yor, that you do not comprehend them at all; either does ono Northorn person in one thousand. Nor to me is this strange. But Iocan assure you that if you should come down here to see us, you would be treated courteously und with all due consideration. But, as for auy kindly feeling existing bore toward Northern people who took an active part in the late war, it exists not, nor nover will. When the timo comes round that Irishmoen will lovo Englishmen, Poles love Russians, Hungarians love Aus- trians, then, and not till then, will the people love or cherish their late murderous conq bt MURDER BY LAW. Massachusetts to-morrow hangs a man for murder who has not been proved to have committed the crime for which he will suffer, who never confessed it, who never saw a jury, who Las had no trial in any legal sense of taat word, and who, on the testimony of his own townsmen aud of the highest medical authority in the State, is a dwarf and an imbecile. That man, in those circumstavces, Massachusetts hangs to- TNOrTow. The history of this case is without a precedent, and we trust may never be drawn wuto a precedent in the fiture administration of what is called law in Mas- sachusetts, When Edward W. Green was brought into court and arraigned on an indictment for mur- der in the first degree, he refused to plead guilty to that charge. Under the Massachusetts statute, only murder with premeditation is & capital crime, and whetler the murder be with premeditation is a ques- tion not for the court but for the jury. Green asserted that he did not kill with forethought. It wasstated to bim that the prosecuting officer would not accept a plea of guilty i the second degree, because upou the proof in his possession there was a degreo of deliberation in the act which legally amounted to premeditation or malice aforethonght. Green still reiterated, as Le had steadily doue while in prison, that there was no pre- meditation in his mind. Thercupon his counsel took him out of court to argue him into the opposite con- viction, and by presenting to this half-idiotic intellect the legal distinetion between murder in the first and murder in the second degree to persuade the miserable wreteh to plead guilty to the first. That counsel Lias since statgd that Lad ho then known the faots subse- quently brought to light, he would not bave given such advice to hid client. But he so far suceeded that Groen came into court and made a plea, which was entered as a plea of guilty in the first degree. N court should have permitted such a manipulation of a prisoner. There was a time when it would not have been tolerated in Massachusetts. While the late Chief-Justice Shaw presided over the Supreme Court, be consistently received a plea of guilty with hesita- tion aud reluctance. In a well known case at Taun- ton, he talked to the prisoner an heur before he would allow his plea to be entered. **Yon don't know what you mean.” *But I killed the woman." “You mean you struck her and she died.” * Yes, £ “That is manslaughter, is it not 1" don't know.” **Then,” said the Chief-Justice, ** Mr. Clerk, record a plea of Not Guilty, and let us t this man.” Were there no other element of injustice in this case, it would be a gross outrage to hang a man whose conviction was seeurod in sueh a way. ov. Andrew, himself one of the most eminent was g0 convinced of the irregu- lawyers in the larity of these procecdings, that he refused, so long as he was Governor, to issue a warrant for the exeeution of Green. It was his opinion, and is to-day the opinion of many others of the ablest criminal lawyers in New-England, that Green never had had a trial. He not only never meant to plead gailty of promedi- tated murder, Le never did plead guilty, legally and within the contemplation and purpose of the statute under which he was arraigned. The forms of law had not been regarded, and to hang Edward W. Green, is to hang & man not legally convicted, and, therefore, in the eyo of the law, innocent. The legal propositions bearing on the case are brief- Iy and clearly stated in this summary of Gov. An- “r e | drew’s opinion, and wero argued by other counsel to the Supreme Court on a writ of error: T of death upon the Edward W, Grego. ins tenco to imprisanment for life. Greon had been indieted for murder, Tt does not appear anything contaioed in the indictmgnt that the murder was committed in_any manner which constitutes murder in the first degree. Nor ia murdor in the first degree in anywise specifically alleged in the indictmen Having heard the indictment re Groen “forthwith being demande bove spec al h thereof he is guilty of murder in t was no trial nor heariog upon the s coustituting murder tn the firet degree, under the 3 distingnishod from warder n the second degree, etatute, wore specifiod aud charged upoa Lim in the t. e record sets forth that coveorning the premises uarged upon him, fizst degree.” s. eny such facts wpecified and confessel In the de- plen. r ot togres, 1+ warder 160 See. 2.) ar in the indictment, » bo in the fi id it appear in o. The offesse, tuerofore, on tuls rogord. Iy wmurder iu the of testimony from men who had known Green all bis | fuller particulars come to hand. The geueral charag. life, agd from physicians who had examined Green in | ter of the race did not vary from last year's. Came jail, demonstrated his want of moral sense and ao- | bridgo got lead early in the race, kopt it most of the countability. The Governor and Council are deaf to | time during three miles and more, lost it shortly afteg that evidence, and seem to hear only the previous | passing Chiswick, and never regained it. The pace clamor for vengeance which the bigotry and gallows- | was tromendous from beginning to end, and the race loving conservatism of Massachusetts have continued | was little else than a succession of desperato spurte, to raise, and by which they bave inflamed the *popu- | That is a game in which weight and condition are sure lar mind and perverted the popular love of justice. to tell in the end; and the Oxford crew, being superiog - = in both respects, finally rowed their antagonists to a EUROPE ON THE EVE OF WAR. stand-still, and came in winners at their own pace, The uews from Europe coutinues to be of a very | about three lengths ahead. The stroke of both crews warlike cLaracter. Both Austria and Prussia are | is reported as ** rather more than 40 to the minute,” hastening their military preparations with great en- | and the two crews interchanged styles, Cambridge ergy, and a collision, it was expected, might take | this year rowing steady and long, while Oxford way place at any moment. We no longer hear of efforts | two or three strokes faster at the start, and feathored for the preservation of peace, but only of armaments, | high. The rough water made this latter an advan- of mutual charges, and of endeavors to devolve the | tage. responsibility for the disturbance of the peace of Eu- [+ On the whole,” says Zhe Time “the race was woll contested from first to last. Th f the Oaford rope upon the opponent. umhfl‘ not up to their raw.tnl’ :fo p::;ioru a-.r';. sty The signs of the times, at present, not only point ;omodm 3 n;i ofimlnly n’t one time foll into the old Cam- to a war, but to a war which may atonce assume a o;.d .I“l :.nn:}hzrr .:%.,mg." :‘h“l lg:.'fi- :fi' ::nmam‘n'fl foarful dimension and be franght with far-reaching | o1d style seemod to retarn to them; aud from that moment the . race . E Cambridge done, conscquences. Count Bismark shows that he fully e eflorts whish i s et appreciates the prize which is at stake. If war really and the efforts which they were enco to make were ad- mirable. But they were fairly outrowed, and Oxford at lsst A won with comparative ease, aitor coutestiog what for a time does break out, Austria will find him a merciless | Wwas one of the most severe matches erer witnessed on the enemy, who, in order to settle forever the struggle h',"" botween Austria and Prussia for the supremacy of THE CITY LOCUSTS, Germany, is determined to aim at the utter There are a horde of clerks and officers attached onnihilation of Aus Bismark undoubtedly | to the various departments and courts in the City of knows the weakness of Austria as well as any,| New-York who are never called upon to perform an European statesman, and no one can doubt that he | nour's service. If any specific duty is taken from & means to avail himself of all the advantages | dopartment by the Legislature, the force of clerks is which it offers. The Asia, which yesterday arrived | kopt on the pay-roll for years after a new set of at Halifax, brings a report, that Prussia has already | officials Lave taken charge. Manure inspectors and concluded with Italy a formal treaty of alliance, 8ad | thejr deputies have been paid for three years services that considerable armaments are in course of prepa- | after their duties were abolished. The Paid Fire De- ration in Italy. This is fact of ominous importance | partment went into operation a year ago, but the for Austrio. The Italian subjects of Austria (about | Deputy Superintendent and his subordinates who had 3,000,000) are unanimous in their desire to be discon- | charge of the old Fire Department under the Street neoted from Austria and be united with Italy. They | Commissioner, are still drawing their pay at froms will not hesitate a moment to rise in insur- | &1 900 to 3,000 per anuum each, and will probably rection if they bave reason to expect aid from | sontinue to do so for years to come. A host of Italy. The Italian Goverument has always frankly | looches are paid from the contingent funds and declared that it has ot abandoned and | ghecial appropriations, of which the public kuows never will abandon the hope of effecting the an- nothing. Such are the clerks and messengers of the nexation of Venetia. No more favorable occasion for | various committees of the Common Council and Su- achieving this end can ever present itself than 8 Joint | norcisors; the distributors of notices of all sorts; the war of Prussia and Italy against Austria. Combined, | jnspactors of each petty job of public work who dr the forces of the two Governments are vastly saperior | pay both from the City Treasury aud from the con: to those of Austria. The latter has a population of | tractors; the horde of overseers, gate-keepers, watch- 33,000,000, but deducting the Italian population, | yan and supernumeraries on the New Court-House, which would show themselves at once open¥ | and an army of others too large to cnumerate. If @ hostilo and swell the Italian army with volun- | jist of tho names of all persons who are to-lay living teers, the number would be reduced to 32,000,000. | op the City and County Treasury could be published, Should it be possible to call forth another insurrection | j¢ would startle and confound the veader. It may in Hungary, the power of Austria would be still more | with safety be said that a thousand men are at pree- weakened. On the other hand, Italy and Prussla | ot drawing their subsistence from the public without together represent a population of moro than | ronduring the slightest service in return. 40,000,000, or if we add the Ifalian subjects of Austria, of moro than 43,000,000, which is fully 11,000,000 more than Austria in the most favorable | A Jorsey friend wishes to reopen in our columns case can rely upon. the late Senatorial controversy in that State. It Tho only belp that Austria can possibly find in this | cannot be done. The matter bas passed by. Bat alarming complication is the Federal Diet of Ger- | a5 ho mistakenly construes somcthing we havg said many, which, leaving out of account Austria, Prussia, | as implying disparagement of Mr. Cattell, lato Union and the Dutch Provinces of Luxemburg and Limburg, | candidate for Senator, we will print what Le says of represent a population of about 13,000,000, At | Mr €. Itis asfollows: present, the majority of the Diet aro friendly to Aus- | Tosuch aa are unacquainted with Mr. Cattell, I wil! say he tris, which has generally treated the authority of the | is a nativo Jerseymen; bas been a member of the New-Jersey Dist with respect, and tricd to concert with the minor | Legislatore,and alded in the formation of the new Constitution powers & rcorganization of the Federal Constitu- :’:;5‘::'32 ‘;:::‘:::‘ o ““:““:;“":‘:' “"hu.‘“'-' tion. Tho majority of the Iiet may, therefore, | yvorining required to give s g e i emresrs be inclined to declars & Federal war against Prussia, | positions; liberal aliost to o fauk, bis benefactions are large, which, in anticipation of such an event, has threaten- | and be is always ready for “every good word snd work,” is ingly called upon the wminor States to define their po- | ove of the most ardent and earnest Union men in the land; sition. Some of the States, however, sympathizo his name is sssociated with many of the religions and benevo- 3 £ M bt lent enterprises which the wants of the past five years of ous with Prussia, and others may be sufficiently intiml- | oo history have called into operation. On several osce dated to refuse to join ina war against her, and both | 4ions be has been consalted on practical guestions by the su- olasses together would, to a large extent, neutralize | thorities ot Washington, and there, where well kuowa, most the effect of a declaration of war. highly respected and honored; bas seen much of the world, It is generally expected that in & war in which Aus- spent longth of time in Europe, and is now in the very prime : g ¢ of manhood and maturity of experience. In the position the tria, Prussia, Italy and Germany should be eogaged, Unlon party wish seco! one France would not remain neutral. The present in- 3 it o plass Bim, ho wathd he AME fo bime 15 that body as a tborough practical business man, able to nnder- tentions of France are not known. The latest ad- | stand acd appreciato the many intricate questions which are vices from Europe state that the Emperor has sent | now, and will for years occupy the attention of the United Prince Napoleon to Italy on a secret mission too im- States Seuate. B C. B portant to be intrusted to anybody clse. The Empe- ror Lias never formally renounced the design of en- I NEW.JERSEY-MB. CATTELL. CESARINT. 4 A 1 h Why is it that an Irish patriot is so generally—wa larging the frontier of France to the Rhine, and A war | happy to say, not uniformly—an enemy of Liberty between Austria and Prussia would undoubtedly be 8 f ¢ ocore other people or race but his own? What strong temptation ln{ gmnfy. what is still the favorite proportion of those among us who are iutensely hostile wish of a large portion of Frenchmen. to Saxon domination over Celts are not thick-and-thin It will l{e_ucen. frvm‘u l}m above facts, that whether champions of White domination over Blacks ? tho prevailing anticipation of & great war may be | “yyp o afitehel—defoated in bis aspirations for ““"“‘"l Or nok ,u'" paeseas c_umyhcnuon of European | oo guderate triumph and fora plantation well stocked politics is certainly of a foarful character. withfat negroes for himself—is now in Paris, ** writing up" Irish Freedom and French Al)napu’lilm for The TR UNIVERSITY BOAT-BACE. “When,” says The (Loudon) Times, **the salient features of English society in the nineteenth centary come to be desoribed by some future Macaulay, the Derby-day and the University Boat-Race will not be forgotten among ponderous reports of Parliamentary debates and the dreary records of our foreign policy.” The remark is so apologetic in tone that we must pre- sume The Tomes had for once to put a green hand on its leading editorial work. A thoronghbred rowing- man—such a oune as hitherto has written The Times's vould as soon think leaders ou the University race sing for the sunrise as for his discussion o the great rowing event of the year in England. We quote the romark for the beneit of the unmuseular fow who may even yet be unaware of the supremo wmee which England attaches to the unnual ¢ on the Thames between its two great Univer- of apol Tho race this year was pulled unusually early. The day Mareh 24, and fellon a 8 ay, so that the last steamer but one brought nex day's steamer brought the daily newspapers’ accounts of it; and it will still be some days belore we shall get the more elaborate comments of the we: Row- ing men on this side of the water he ard without sur- prise that Oxford is again, for the sixth time in suc- cossion, the victor. The surprise to us is that Cam- bridge, which had found the utmost difficulty in making up its erew, and which was believed to have no chance of winning, made a most gallaut struggle, and came near snatehing the laurel from its long- triumphant rival. There is but one tolerable report klies, : and yester- | in the dailics—that of The Times—but, if that may be trusted, this race was rowed in the astounding time of 20 m, 21 9-10 The distance is four miles and a quarter. The wind was high and the water rough. What becomes of our crack performances by the side of this? Until we have como somewhere near it, might it not be well to postpone that ** Intemational Mateh” heretofore talked about by sundry ambitious but inconsiderate persons ! Spite of all disconragements, Cambridge seut a very fine crew to the Thames. Mr. Kinglake, President of the Cambridge Boat-Club, remarked, in his speech at the dinner after the race, that men who had promised to row had at the last moment disappointed him, and he believed, if the crew he counted on had been in the boat, the decision of the day would have been re- versed. Mr. Brown, the Oxford stroke—one of tho most famous men that ever woro the dark blue— frankly confessed that he, on the other band, had found no difficulty in forming his crew, which at an y day had acquired a thorough knowledge of e We commend these statements to th Captains at Yalo and Harvard, whose Summer work at tiis moment lies all before them, Thay have Daily News. Hear him! People talk much of * Caesarism’ here, Lo an accurate notion of whai they mean by stitations eome Lo the point that they must b transitory here helow)—when all the o! been long in unwholesome commotion aud fermentatio the people Lave been decimated. exhausted, by eivil ad foreigs stri t befulls sumetimes thet a potent wilitary chiof seisee with a band of iron all the functions and atiributes of gov- ernment (being resolved to put an end to this tiresor e aa- at any rate), and the people, recognizing in the tron hand or, biadl it wich & blosring, all hearts yesrn iven governor; and the people, like ‘th ancient Frauks elccting their kizg, lifc on high upoa t with clangieg armor and hearts,” this IPI‘H 1t is the history of the gover: 1 by Augustus, aud ending in s dynasty @ history of Napoleon the Firet, coutinued b Napoleon the Second. and likely (I shouid kope) to be car onward by the little I Twpertal.” —There is the Mitchel philosophy of Government, compactly and forcibly set forth, ““the tools to him who can use them.” A government that can mansge t exist is proved rightful and beneficent by the uaked fact of its existence—until another succecds in toppling it over, which proves this latter its rightful successor. This is, and ever has been, the Asiatic idea. Julins — Augustus —Tiberius—Nero—Commo- dus—these were intermediate links, but they do not disturb the order of succession. Thenk Hea America has—though at o heavy cost—decided to’ raise the superstructure of her institutions fons ® very different base. —_— TuE REFORMED PRESBYTERIAN CuURCR lolds that the property of any religious society ought, according to Seripture, to be held and managed by its Deacons alone. The laws of our State have not allowed this; but an act has just been passed authorizing it The act is as follows: AN Acr relating to Reformed Presbyterian Churches or Con- uunlhn-]pu d April 6, 1906, ot mo try to give When u!rllw ‘ork, vepresented in Senate and Sollows SECTION 1. When any Reformed Presbyterian ehurch or eon- gregation shall, by resolution daly passed ata meeting of the church or congregation, determine that the deacons of such on | be the trusteos for sach ohurch or , then it shall be lawful for the deacons of every such ohureb OF CONEregation HOW OF hercafter to be e tablished in this State to be the trustees of every such ehur omnnlm; provided that they shall Bave been elee’od a g to tae Tales, constitution and usages of the Lefor asd Presbyterian church and are actively engaged iu the exe reise of their office in said church or congrogation. And it sb all be 1awfal for the said trustees, it not already incorporated, 1o es- semble together and proceed to lnowxom themselves, 1n the ‘mode preseribed in and by the act eotitied *An act to Hrovide for the incorporation of religious societies.” passe’, April 5 1813, and tho act entitled ** An ot #n, tary to the act entitled * An wet to provide for the incorporation «yf religious socioties,” passed A pril 5, 1513 wed April 13, 18 22, The speech of Mr. DAWES of Massachu ibtts explain- ing and defending the decision of the Committee on slections that James Brooks was mor, and that William E. Dodge was, clected to the House from our VIIIth District, was given in full ‘n our last, as a just and forcible defense of action vehich has been grossly assailed as partisan by thise whose impulses werg only partisan, until many, 8a nduced by louds