The New-York Tribune Newspaper, April 19, 1866, Page 4

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Amnsements. ACADEMY OF MUSIC BLANCH » Habs THIS EVENIN ™ Wik E I <O Joha Dyou, €. Wa re 1. P, Gra p ADWAY T} THS EVENING SOLON 3H Mr. John E. Owens. THE LIVE INDIAN; Mr. Johu E. Owens WOONs TH THIS EVEN THY | AC: € i ] SEUM N E HIL STUDIO ¥ N TO DAY, Free ix @ AR DANCE and OTHER | TUR W.H. Beard THE 8 R e e €93 Nolices, Ea d propos Lis § Stock Fashio vu! THIN e workua ou the § ' bithert ensbled bim to command f the pop 1o of Now York and th u at most . N 121, & i ) ferald Co vlimin ) li cinal prepa ratio of 3 LOTENGE . isib'e and convauient, more especially as regards a ¢ Broxouiar Trocazs” or Cough " w Induces cou mt rel s, Suenss, and Corsumptive and Asthmatic comp AT Wi L knowiadges th displayed i elogant Spri N tation JBuRN: £ refivement, you mu r's Frormuen closely te of & rare sud delicate bonquet of flowars, s A few drops wil! isndkerchief for many hours. upon BUkNETT's CoLoGN® s equal to the beat i It is put up i ported. and wine for iteelt a favorite piace vegunt style ble. Tts intrinsic merits really justify the kigh repot drassi In which it is held.—[ Providence Journal For sale by all droggists. MarviN's PATENT Door Lociks Fom Hovews aAxp Stomes Tawy cavvor CRED. THEY HAVE N 1NGS KeY WKIGHS ONLY ONE QUARTER 07 AN 00N # way. Now. Y. Marvix & ( Also, Marvin's §N AN ut Fire sud Bury A slight Couan, which attracts but littie atte In its Inciplency, may be the forerunner of CONsTMPTION. What sently ende in B times called s trifiing Cotd fre Toas folly to aliow & cough or cold to beco: eomady ¢ prompt and certain s JATNE'S FXPECTORANT can be read ENT—NEVER huu B NE§ JINTMENT Cures in from 12 to 44 hoie, fly procured. Sold evarvwhere, 'npfled onlz by B, “The Best issued in 12 months, See FRANK LESLIE Thursd LUMBER. Witieox, Warkors & Co., First-ave., corver Thirty-uinti st., ty, which they sell in com. havs the largast stock of LUKBER in the petition with the Alvauy sud [roy Yards. Buy Fu.\'s Lesuig's ILLosTRATED. Out on Thurs- Soe FRANK LESLIE'S ILLUSTRATI Issued Thurs- N Bl il il Wonderful anmplr of American (munn m l’lA\K Lustws. this Tharedey'e. Barcarror's HAIR Dye.—The best i the world. Perfoct. lllMHl‘ reliable, Larmless and instantsaeous in effect. The ulne is WILLIAM A. BATCHELOR. Sold by all Droggista. Fittory, No. 61 Barclay-st. 3,600 BRICKS per hour L. which is & clay tempering machin®, .mllh» bricks m U WILE sTAND ALL GLIXATES. Those made be dry-pre chines will all crumble to_pi ..,n.—d to frost. lNuA U-M'll | Agent . roved Elliptic Sewn‘x:f-.\!mmum TS ) Rnsmd-.v Agents wan Cnur e Soap—PyLE's 0. K."—good for the y. Bath or Toilet—becomes very bard, aad unlisble o waste. y Yarocers everywhers. & Asean BROOND-! p-HAND SAm in lnrgu numbers, of our own g takes chl. for our new patent ALUM sod o low, rosdway, and 721 Chestnut. Man is not equi a8 l()entlemun ought to ..f.m.:-..u.a -..3- ?.M ¥ that artistic . Phita. bandsomest Ha i B the same ot Gamix's, 519 Brosdway ‘s CoMPOUND munl{:ch Bn.s:n gr Fir The curstive for all Throat, Chest and Lung Diseases. Tt o moblte speakers ud singers. For sl everywhere. ww...u-m. 333 Hudson st. Tausses vxmout steel Uterus an Tnngcwchde. Supporun the Anes of the most upproved .y Ablyll KT CALFE'S GIIATRI!UIA‘I"W Rnunt is_traly onder of the Cases of bave baffied the E‘I'H'.fm‘lfldm" llhdtyllnh-um'kfil{un‘ bys s as infallible caa be. Soid by all druggists. __1_._-— Seat & hloofl‘n Swol AXD 8. '-‘tu--..:-':u-m Kanguroo eki) for Spring and 3 o aos atber 1ivet for bessty d,by-ul--.uluwrbdnu used 1o this i m %00Ks & SoXs. + No.&M lndn’ ‘corner Howard st. B Lk Porous e Vit 89 r e o Mt 1 umn:! AMENTAL HATR, firat qual- by B RAWE PALMER, LL D.— Tan At axp Lao, by Auaten, L. n T e G B Baxza's Hicuest Preumiod Enastic ..o-.-'mn‘ '. for family use. No. 435 Brosdway. e Howe SswiNe MacHINE cwm ~ELis Hows, P No. 629 Brosdway. Agents wi LOCK-8TITCH MACHINES fur Tailors and rlgu:?g Grovan & Baxsn Swwixe Macuixs Con:n, way. o. Wurnier & Wluou Lock-STITCH BEWING aomixe sud Borroxmors Macnins No. 036 Brosdway. m SuspeNsoRY BaNp- P S NEW- YURK DAILY T RIBIWE THURSDAY APRIL 19, 1866 | 8. M. Perre NEWSPAPER ADVERTIS- | 1o harm; if it is true that men are made to work 13 186 Aarsts, No hed in 1803, sre | (0 15 hours, then it will do great good. We trust or The Trib United States | be Railjpads will ngres that their employés shall = [ 10 I an other people do, We AT hose who hope and trust that the laborer’s { N “I0TR ,‘D 1in@) .b work may. ultimately be reduced below ten e ir m D 3 fl\ 3}11’2_-’,’1 unc’ ask that the Rail- I RSDAY, ATRIL 19, 1365, To Correspondents, f Ao Whatevaris nd a1 Commaun ted by the naie No notiae san bt stisne 15 oftice shoula be sddressed to * The | NEWS OF THE DAY. FORIIGN \l W Ave 18 mak 0 i I [E) 119! ¥ 0 R ¢ Lol ) Vi 1 v b s : with 1,013 B 5 1y i r hetwe S Van V1 1 ot N 8 ' . 1, and ten 1iv posed 10 K 1l " k1 was 110 the wa 12 k irs are T 1 of rdinary plo S k “ 1 1 4 s 1 I I Now-Y B D Al 1 CONGRESS, SENATE. »the Pay De- ameadin tion _bill was Tis Rouss and t In vote reconsidercd eran R LEGISLA SE TURE, E. ArgiL 18, Bills wore passed for the botter pr o care and ¢ of the citi of sick and v rk; increasing th on of deaf m unh State to lun o »..,.«.;«.' n for ning the ti A throngh th r the better Tho Anuual Tax il ls) was also passed. 1 “York Central Ra Fare bill was passed bya \oh of 19 to 13, ASSEMBL the N ail Steamship ‘The Assembly passed the State Tax bill County and the New-York City Tax [ increase the capital stock of the Pacitic Co.; to alter the map of the City of New he bill for the better regulation of tho s (,um,mmwl s lost. The bill to prohibit Kailread Companioes from issuing froe tickots was ordered to a third reading. The Assembly by & vote of 38 to 51 refused to order to a third reading the bijl q;flru nnuux the waters of Oriskauy Crook for a foeder to jong lovel of the Erie Canal. The bill regulating the fare on the New-York Central Railroad yestorday passed the State Senate by a vote of 19 to 13. Two amendments, the one providing that the law shall continue in operation only three years, the other, that the through trains shall not be run slower than 13 miles per hour, nor faster than 25 miles, had previously been rejected. —_— Gen. Van Wyck has struck a note to which, we are confident, there will bo a general and hearty response. Let us ** equalize” payment for services in the War for the Union by increasing the pittance hitherto given to the permancotly disabled and to the widows and or- phans of those Who gave their lives for their country. ‘We are willing to bo heavily taxed for this purpose~ not to pay $8 por month extra to thos¢ who wont into the War with & bounty and came out of it unhurt—as Gen. Wilson's bill proposes to do. — The Legislature, wo trust, will not adjourn without pessing Mr. Jenkins's bill declaring ten hours tobe a legal day's work for car-drivers and conductors on our City Railroads. There i3 a collision between the car- drivers of our City and their employers with which we no further intermeddle than to insist that no party to it shall break the peace nor the laws; and we do not assume tho truth of the current assertion that car-, drivers and conductors are required to work an ex- oessive number of hours, If the prosent practice is (I 1 the benefit of a Labama, late a prisoner of state , has liberated on parole Ly We interpret this as a clear indicatior » credit tepthe tales which to dssassinate Presi- been lay with the plot son Davis od upon? If t—we can im- tak tried=—no matter for 1 up an wi while, alid reason for not trying him soon; tried, think he should led at the public cost, —_—_— rzine no v if he is mot to we do not that the Undereround and We wnother, we m 83 to and egress from and a do + Railroads—if room uld be found for uld not help us to No road that i crossed on its own he were run by steam, that both plans must aud sooner the bet- may be given andoned till tried. made in proposing where the property- This will they as heen adway ¢ against any Railroad. ; aud we shall undoubtingly believe it is triel. Some way of getting to Harlem Rivel ) minutes we cannot admi s problem I Virginia, from Liverpool, ar- rived nd anchored at Quaran- t eaths on board during the v s »” f Asiatic cholera. As she 1 1,043 passenger f whom, with four ex- cop are in e wonder is that no Whether xists on 1 among them 1, or whether it still 1, but ity is that her ship was to e me. ¢ Lower Quaranti nd being good, it sh Unquestionably, she should not have withi reach the upper station, les of the ¢ The very fact that she a number of passengers, and that deaths on board in a voyag for detaining & sson by the Health Officer, t we suppose, to expect of the captain of an steamer that he should not try to slip into port, cholera or slera, but we have a right to | look t the flealth Officer of the port, who isalsoa | rof the Met 1 of Heal such measures of p in his power to ) hip at A We can 1o | by the Vieginia was not boarded sLoppe in the Lower Bay till an ation could be made into her conditi and prevented from any nearer approach, \\‘Iu'lnr a Quaranti ent the introdu of the I tion, for the a s have t shall be made by sending the 1 been allowed to come into r harbor. o such measure of which w #hould have pen resorted to 2o irt to them at last a conf 4 We do not say this to da ot believe that there is any wse f we are to have s Quarantine, it 11 aud this first case of care we Liopo w t warning of the There should be The Board of it it Las & good deal aration. does not rest solely in t m every individual | 7 oreed everywhere; Wy These being attained, keep sober, and keep th more than it kills paration is to Cholera fright wd th A PLEA IN ABATEMENT, g Mr. A. H. Stophens's testimony World, ¢ ises under the Consti- ed to plungo into the Rebel- 'y reno treason; but then it can after a legal tr d judicial sentenee, 14 must be triod by a jury of the State and djstrict whers @ orime was committed ; and, as the whole people were in the Rebollion, the jury would consist of persons who wers themaelves to be tried tor the same offonse—who were, in faet, s in the crime. The Government could have gons the faree of such trials had it choson: but, assuredly, » authority to punish for treason provious to trial, By the humane principes of the aw. every man is to b held in- till e is proved guilty, and the Constitution forbids his put in jeopardy of ife or limb twice for the same offeuse.” —Wae wish the Unionistsof the South could have bad efit of this doctrine. They were shot, bung, 1, tortured, for loving their couutry and rally- mg to hier flag, without a shadow of ¢ legal trial and judicial sentence "—some of them before any State Inl pretended to secedo from the Union. Others were executed as deserters from the Confederate service, because—being conscripted into the Rebel armies—they chose to serve in those of Lhcir whole country. The World must bo again remindod that “the whole people” of the South were not in the Rebellion—not by at least Four Millions. Of these loyal Millions, juries might easily be procured wha'would hear every case impartially, and render verdicts in strict accord- ance with the law and evidence. It is The World's mistake that those who have been flagrant, ostenta- tious traitors and whose hands are red with loyal blood, cannot be convicted by Southern juries; and, a3 to a good many of them, there would not be the faintest possibility of putting their lives in jeopardy a socond time. —There is one plain, beneficent way out of these complications; and that lios through she adoption, in substance, of Senator Stewart’s proposition of General Amnesty and General Enfranchisement. If *‘the South” shall suffer itself to be * run" by our Northern Copperheads, it is very likely to go further and fare ‘worse, + ure, the penal Ono of the Superior Courts of Indiana has lately readered a decision, whicb, if sustained, will be found of much practical In & suit by a negro on a contract, the white defendant set up the Black Code of the State, which disables them from making a contract. It was replied that the Civil Rights Act superseded the State law, The Court held that the State law was controlled not only by the Civil Rights Act, but that the anti-Slavery amendment abolished all incidents of Slavery, among which was the code of Indiaua concerning the §lacks. And the Judge de- cided that the negro plaintil was a citizen of the susalingnt Rigpsod by AL Joakios cande | Uniied Slaien aad satitled 9 ogual lusioa Ia of 13 | | | | | ) at Halifax and another | | courage, arrogance, and determination courts, thongh the Constitution of Indiana says he is not. Wao are evidently getting on. WIDENING BROADWAY A correspondent proposes this method of widening Broadway, 50 as to give room for a railroad, if one hould be deemed desirable 1. Throw both sidewalks into the carriage-way. 2. Take 15 or 20 fect of the first floor only of the huildings on each sid ks, leaving the upper t. e for sidewal stories i projections t wl gr iron pillars the strect more attractive aud g than now. only to say that, when property shall as it would proba- protected above them to rest or columus, renderin, the shops more inviti hich we ha owners and ses of Broadw: t we shall not stand out. Bat biy impose on them an expenditure of $1,000,000 between the B square—we don't think they are q agree to it - lum 1 y and Union- ready yet to —50y HOW THE CITY PAYS THE COSTS OF BOTH RIDES, When the Metropolitan Police Law was passed, Mr. nando Wood, then Mayor, resisted the of the Law, in order to retain pow In 1264, was paid $11,565 for his share of |'n~n\~ penses of that litigation, the #16,550 been previously paid for the expenses of the ul'm side. he w um of there was a controversy bhetween Conover office of Street Commissioner, in Conover's expenses of litigating the n were paid, to the amount of 300, and in s in the same litigation were Lu 1857, and Devlin, as to the, and, 1855, Devlin's expe also paid. In addition to the ab that, in December last, the Towed and paid the 1 troller Brennan in defending hims misconduct in office, before Gov although Mr. Brennan has never been acq said charges, directly or impliedly., Aud that, inthe present year, Mr. Boole, In- spector, presented to the Common Council h.- bill of #9650 for legal expenses incurred in defending him- ymour, the the Senate instances, we will add isors al- £<,000, ted from self against like charges before Gov. § mittee of the Board of Aldermen and Gov. Fenton, althoug! never been acquitted, although said charges aro hove all, on Committee and 4 nging over bis hiead by an annual levy the money to pay the identical ¢ — the empl office, THE ELECTION FOR CONTROLLER. Under existing laws, onr Charter officers, including the Mayor and Controlle ed in D This was so arranged in order that our ( should not be involved in State or mof this arrangement was [mn.--l at the lu' Had the Mayoraity election taken | of the State canvass, in November, ¢ Tammat ate would have slipped in with crowd. been no necessity for and & much There would bave nominating a respectable candidate; worse man than Hoffman would now be May The mo in the City—the Con- December, There Democratic nominatic Brennan, and Judge G. m that neither of these s, if com- important officer ed next troller—is to be ¢ \l o s for the sent incumbent, M. It would s entirely confident of succes out company and withput the ex- pi I t ction. The friends of both hm the effort to pass a bill hanging th f ting a Controller from De- cember to November, when the Governor and Mem- bers of Congress are to be elected, This bill has | | passed quietly throngh the Assembly, but we think it | should not become law without full and careful con- sideration. » FOR THUE WHAT FREE TRADE souT “(otton is King " shouted the South, * and Labor is the business of slaves.” Selfish, arrogant and con- fident in the secure possesgion of a fancied monopoly, the South determined, < play it alone” on Agriculture. She p.-rmd“nll) smashed our Protective Tariffs, and e i Free Trade on the ruin of Northern manufac- and sought to drive the Mechanical Labor of States to the unoccupied Western land to force it to augment the production u' bre meat to cheaply feed her slaves while raising cotton. The South played deep her **lone” game on Agricul- ture, Inthe midst of it she burst into war on the North—stalked out of her cotton-fields into battle- fiolds. How naked the lunatic was! Exclusively levoted to planting, importing everything, making nothing, free trade from her crown to her foot, an fighting without iron manufactures, without cloth manufactures, without leather manufactures. She had no metals nor machinery for making arws and ammunition—no establishments for making ma- she 000 per lot ) per lot | \ Mr. Boole has | although he has | wre | | | | | through ber politiciaus, to | I | chinery of transportation—no powder mills—no paper | mills to make cartrndgesor even regimental musterrolls. She had no navy to keep open her ports for the introduc tion of supplies from Europe; no rolling mills orshops to keep her railroads in running order. Cotton alone she had, but she had no bagging to put it in. She was poor, needy, naked and powerless, save in her ument of the fruits of British Free Trade. There are Southerners who elearly this truth. Among them is Alexander H. H, Stuart, Congressman elect from Virginia. He declared in The Staunton Spectator of Feb. 27: “The recent war bas taoght vs some useful leasons, Jc has beew on the North and foreign e when cut_off from the ‘outsile ntul and humiliating experi- n & better footing in future. the North with their own pous ! We have as much inventive genius as they, aud we have, a8 [ havo show tly the advantage in geographical osition, and all the physical eloments necessary Lo success vantian ol gge acturing industry. ‘TM North asked protection for ber white labor which w: ossential to its existence, because it Lad to compete with labor of Europe. TI South, needing no protection for mflficllhr labor and pr lons, because they had no able competition in lhfi markets of the world, refused to sccord it to the free labor of the North, and thus, by a short- -I hited and mistaken policy, the two -‘uum were brought & relation of autagonism which culminated in the war, lj.t ‘had supported the protective system, I really beliere we would Rave had no war. 1f you will revert (o the Aistory of the last forty years, you will find that whenever we had @ protective tarif com- parative quiet prevailed in the country ; but as soon as protection to Jree labor was withdraien, sectional excitement and aximosity Jol- see These age the words of a statesman, honored and distiaguished by twenty-five years of service in im- portant public trusts. They outline a plan for the truest, best, and only reconstruction of the South and restoration of the Union. Will not both North and South aceept it? The Nashville Banner, edited by two ex-Rebels, one of thom was in the Rebel army, while the other ed- ited 3 Rebel paper, during the late civil war, says: '-mumm m lwy of the mlllod lrlli """.':K:u in s -lvllh-d o_ully JlnuLMm Jnhnl.m Edward Bates, Horace Maynard, George H. Thomas, Andrew John- son, George W. Bummers, were found in this *‘low trash" company. The Do'n't-Care-a-Damns appear to be quite a numerous sect in Texas. As M. Alexander, the loyal Attorney-General, writes: *‘They want the State Governmout turned over to their men, and when that is done, as one of them expressed it, they don't care (a8 aforesaid) whethier the State is readmitted or not.” They want to be relieved of the Freedmen's Bureau— from which we reason that they don't care (as afore- fox opridins olso. Viok ol seins (@ s an &g an awfulmon- | | glish writers, who | per fi Trish charactor ment of the ny of the Celtic oronely unexacting spirit, we find a quiet pleasure in witnoss- ing the acting of Mr. Will as O'Carolan and of Mrs. Williams as Moleshee. They act with an apparently exlisust iess flow of animal spirits, and this io itself is a natural soures of gratification to the spectators of their Hibernian pranks. 1f we were in that stera critical humor, which it is at once so lesirable and so difficult to preserve, we should make the pm»m an occasion for of the Irish drama. But th be reserved for an us not forget to me gument with t Ares are Ln ily in a condi- d much : Don't i tod w less should that of the ju: to their subl to these, and yof D, d to the most me od even treate depre- g just nmn-m Mr. Hind ae the principal members, Mr. Donald. now—there is a curious passage in a | from Lord ad the sable villain of *The Fairy Circle” last H\'rm to Lunl Holland, dated Oct. 14, 1312, The whelmingly sepulebral, gloomy and peculiar. rs did not especially attract attention aud * Customs of the Country” will b re’ or notice, In the latter plece Mrs, Williamas ste for the I OO had agreed to pay the proffered pri nderstood to be & Yaakeo girl—the like of of twenty guineas, and says ‘We do not sd.. You will, at least, o o 0f any great and better anon ym,m.m hich I take :,m ‘wbout two thousand pounds 2, Bank currency) and the equally wel- » ADEMY OF MUBIC, This wa of Bank of Eogland suspen- 1am Tell was performed P sion, Napoleonic i pany grandest aud like his I1 Barbicre, has sm tn every country. The 10 faw concert ovortured a1 mpositions, stood the test of time and erit overture has been alopted as one or grand orehestras ars ga itself is rich in every class of asemble pioges 4 respective f British specie hay payment of Austrian and eer at Amer Spanish can pap have every good qualit good wemory. trios, A dispateh to an evening ihat | elody, conatr 1 o President Johnson will the | Tae ntation is rio d, and tho oolor is dassel < i iy + 1, | with that fresdom aud bri cterisad the apark colored citizens of W patch | ting wes 00! usive miod of th9 informs us that the su be the life and public great waostro, Rogsint. Thiere were soiwe potats about tl The overturs and such at alive to the im- that it won & de. The State of Maryland is at last fully portance of securing it »portion of class of crowdod New-| and, as wel foreign immigration s¢ try. The General Ass for the appointment o and the Governor Las immigrat s parquet power to advortise It was, indeed, a performasco avhion theso sre f s to hea: or make a solitary walk to st after the opera endurabie. The clorusss all ¢ pired to sec equally Ho has slready collecte Bt for sale, much of it at & very low pri g t at about 1 s it at abou . Mathilde th quality in the ssioner will ¥ musicianly way, and act 1d 50 acre tracts, to suit t Wilhelm ¥ it lacka somew some of | was also good. Hia voice, thoug o in tenor, more gra 4 by the role, dod and o 5,10 18 of men in modera advertisem cireumstan nt of Com »useq atly r the eros Mr, Wiealich, wh sy apirit To the con alse. Hols tor. Taa It is now tun, profits arod by irs as equ but husiness, wha A yOUung ma: er in which Lo kept the orchestra and the hugy chorus . ry and ¢o; s material whick D o p as 8 whol sucerss, and will was a really great LaDane Hermans, Jolai Tuis oue of th we th it is fair to presume that T were made up for the p does The Her for advert g ber of advertiser Herald, YORK PHILHARMONIC SOCIBTY. A% The last reliearsal of this popular and fashionable 1 4 i i ty takes place at the Academy of Music next Saturday Instruetic 7 t Amuse 19 We also speciy & ITALIAN OP! Max Maretzek's Italia “ Laviois, wi this beue! And another: #2quence of sickness, YA A A A bad, it will ba given at W' Amo Board and L era of Norma wil roran AL = We 18 Norma. This wil for the Lady only The house house of ill-fa with board entioned is reported by the policeasa Also AN ALARM roral parsons whe 2 * A young widow from Baltimore has roome to let to eldurly zen- | have become alar ion in Sso Jemen Francisco appealed to F to kow if thers 18 The Herald o | . . . | was any of the witro glycerias, or blastiag oil good medium in which to inert advortisements of re- | gy Marshal bav iy 1 spectabl 5 The Herald undoubtodly has | alarge cireulation in certain quarters, and that entitles it to a large number of ¢ but With many others as bad or worse. -houses n ES = we submit that Tae TriBUNE medium, although it charges less than one-) charged by The Herald. A comparison of Tug TRIBUNE w FROM NEW.0RIEANS, —— ale s nderpesi—Racing— T H. | show that TAE TRIBCNK has about one sixth more adver- ald will Local Excitements— tising than The Herald, allowing for the difforence in the e rod iRy Jongth of Tie TwBUNES lines (Advertising is paid for by New.Ons w‘.\m tag, April 14 1998 the hne), excluding the Situations and Help Wantedin | _Tho inel Now-York Mait both papers, and advertisements for” Ol Clothes in Tie | Steamsbip € isntie had Mimisipt il aath i ol E PR bkt Steamboat orn down to-lay amid grat erald, a8 they are not inserted in ‘ToE TBeNg, but in- | oxcitement. 7 the City or, by orloe | cluding The Herald's advertisements of Pawnbrokers and | of the Council, o the ground that the iuclosures were Pawnbrokers' Sales and its New Publications (which are contined to A Physiological Viow of Marriage), ulso, As- trologers and Physiciaus for Private Diseases, and numer- | horses. On o ous other classes of advertisers who prey upon’ the un- | others 20 w wary and whose patronage is uot sought by Toe TRIBUNE, ,I‘_“',;["',’r'j“l, A mule rin | Mississippi. T mage doue to ¢ our readers having no need of the assistance, advice or [ ho first rac ats, beat thrae in five, was medicines so pertinaciously offered in the columns of T/ | won by Gilro 2 124, 2:055. The socond N. Y. Herald, and not o The Herald’s Amuse. | T8C€, 4 tW 1o J.m was won b Luxmy Armstrong; | time, 4 ments, in which 7th Anniversary 1 A i . explanatory of the of Luther's Protest and Eller Kuapp's Revival Sormon, | President's fier] along with Nature Un and Banjo and Jig Dancing, | martial | Either the latter are not am former are ou of 1 of course valucless, although many of Tk F Herald's readers m: ely concerned in one part Cotton—Better qualities st Mor; lowor gradss un of tho Elder's advortisement 83 to Why tho Devil | changed: low Middlings 35} a:ibc pts to-lay 1,250 : bales, utry aro discouraging. (oid Lives. or bank The cirenlation of TAE TrisUNE and its receipts for ad- ol Wl6a3d.; to vortising are steadily increasing, and with these we, and we presuime our eustomers, are content. It is not pleasant to be drawn into coutroversies with othoer papers in regard to our business, but we are compelled, occasionally, in self-defense, to allude to them, Is The Herald's circu- Iation reafly falling off and its actual reccipts from adver- tising diminishing, or what is the matter ? 7} @47 90 oly. Corn—Mixed and Hay, #3. Rest ua- NOVA SCOTIA, ey The Confederation Question in Pa HaLirax. Wednesday, Apri A rasolution in favo tho confadoration of tho British North AII an Proviness, and appoi ¢ a dologation to go to K talls, hus passal botis Houses ot the o Winter Garden, An entire change of bill was inangurated at this theater last evening, whea * The Lakes of Kularaey” and An Hour in Seville” were superseded by * The Fairy Cirele " and ** Customs of the Country.” Both are sufficiently familiar to that class of theater-goers which habitaally & tends upon the performauces of AMr. and Mrs. Barney Williams. The | ‘mer is one of the peatest in point of construction, and one of the liveliost in point of fancy and fun, of that large brood of dramas which, while they illusirate Irish romance, do but littlo justice to Irisk character. It introduces the young Irish gontieman, who has got into difficulties by plotting aguinst the Saxon, and the Irish peasant, who protects the aforesaid gentleman at the risk of his owa life. It furthermore iatro. duoes the Irish villain, who has surreptitiously grown rich, and who dou't intend to stick at any crime that bids fair to make him richer. It employs, also, a fow red- costs—what the painters would call & dash of color —and its sction passes chiefly in lomely woodland places. These foatures will poseibly strike the reader as slightly backneyed. We cannot deny thet they have been seen before. In this play, howbeit, their tritenees is somewhat modified by the surrounding atmosphere of ro- mance. The vein of Irish.superstition is wreught, and is made to yigid pretext for a very pioturesque and roally amnsing scene—that, namely, wherein the hero of the drama, the Irish peasant, O'Carolan, falls asleep in the Fairy Circle, and en- dures separation of soul from body. For the rest, tho story of the play is not lacking in intorest—ospacially for sueh specta. tors as may not have seen it before. Affairs gt very much muddled, toward the close, but all eads bappily at last. Mr. Williams plays O'Carolan, the peasant, and—particularly in The Priuce Edward". CHARLOTIETOWN. P K. L. Woadnesday. April 13, 1866, Thie Prines Edwand's isliod Tolagraph, Line s aow in working order ogain, ¢ .nnd roady far business. Concerning the vessel whose arrival at this port with oholers on board is annonaced in our ship nows columa, the Marine Reporter of tie Associated Press stated last even- ing as follows **We bave raceived nothing farther in relation to tha steam. ship Virginis, other thaa that sbe will bo immediatly saot the lower Bay t the'gsial lower Quariiias ashoraga. which is about 20 miles from the city. Tho disease 13 said to be similar to that with which the Eugland is wnfeoted.” The Cholera II Ponllll PORTLAND, M e R g o one of 9 lve Eagland. - lh‘- tn Newpert. RovIDENOR, R. L, Wodnesday, April 18, 1988, Samuel A. P.rkor was tm{-y olocted l-yor of Now. rt by 181 majority over thio prosent ineumbeat. Mr. F:r‘kol is the present State Treasuror. ———— Arrest of Gen. Buibridge Coutradicted. Lovtsvitee, Ky, Weduesday, April 13, 1366, A distinguished Federal umm. lnrm{rlyv:)lllmdl this post, who has just arrived from New-( cene of the fairy oircle—evinces hoarty and mirth pro- dw“P;: Xtively ul Rl T o & l)ré«rna:,nmm: voking relish of a humorons sitaation, and uumistakadle | bridge, or of bis brother Oscar. Tl says such report probe kil in the managemens of funny Udialogus. We are mot d‘.mum-mumo(m ’llk.lfl':m Gl @ Wb G e Wes siesrtolal Ansal (Nmado by Gou. Husbuudgy

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