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A Amnsements. FIENCH THEATER » THIS EVENTS OF ALCANTARA Pose:+. Soguin, e 1€ EYENTNG ot Freder \LLACK'S THEATER % FT 18 NEVER TOO LATE TO MEN] n, Jobn Uijhert, ( Holiand. ¥ B ‘Beanaon Loonacd. Basie ihea o e dbughe, Mive Madeisne Henriques, Mise Toipe | Young Ater thers us the Thive Ulndingars. OLYMPIC THEATER WIS EVENING, of $-OUR MUTUAL FRIEND; Mre. Jobn od WINTER GARDEN THIS EVENING at 8, PLAVING “WITH FIRE: Mr Wrongham, Mics Prentios, Mes. C. Wolcot, r. Mise Mary Carr, | Blesars. €. Woloott jr.. J. O, Burnett. W. 8. Andrews ‘ BROADWAY THEATER TIF FRENCH sPY—THE PET OF THE | THIS EVENIN Western, Mr. J. A, Hecne PETIICOATS ¥ WO THIS EVENING UE N TUE LLsE s The W orrel Troupe in feats o KON'S OLD BOWERY THEATER THIS EVENING, 9t STHE INVISIBLE PRINCE Heering, Mr. G. L. Fox. To conclade with & Fas Miss Fauny | PARNUMS AME . HIS AFTI RN OON ot 2, and 7). UNCEE M'S CABL Mrs. W ¥ Bridgan, Avoc OSITIES. CHRISTY'S MINSTRE LS | THIS EVENING, v 6 10, BALLADS, COMICAL ACTS. FARCES, | HURLYSQUE ~, DANCES, SOLOS, DUETS, cte —Tablesvs, | ) LIBERTY AND ARMY NAVYCA SWEET | IQUOR DEALE « E AT Tk WINDOW=EXCISE v NATIONAL ACADEMY OF I TO-DAY snd THIS EVENING, exbibit'on of LIVING ARTISTS. GN. f the WORKS OF oadway GOUPILS GALLER RES by M. T. C ¥ DAY, EXIIBILIUN OF NEW Pl 214 B THIS EVENING: AN ILLUSTATED LECTUKE ON PHREN MOZART HAL OLOGY by Dr. 6 aabiton. BROOKLYN ATHEN ( THIS EVENING, at ¥, LAUGITING GAS Coiton. M EXHIBITION by Dr PATERSON RACKS, TO DAY, the STEFPLE CHASE and other races on the Paterson o # fiusiness Nolices. Pomiry Tik Broon.—It is an established fact that ured by such reasedie: « vory lasge class of disorders can ou'y be will nter futo the biood, wnd eirculate with it through every portion of the body s ouly can the remedy be brought into Te n this devirable cud. no ¢ loen so uniformly successful as Du. JATNE'S imusediate co preporstion Aurimamive. S King's Evil, Cancer and Cancerous Tumors Wiia Swelllng. ¥ cment of the Bones, Chronic Rhovmatisn ' and Gost, Erugtive Disesses of the Skin, 0/d snd Tndoieat Uleers. | Qoltrone Swe 1 (ke Throst, ke are cured with s cortainty whic touish & every beholder. 1t in, beside. oue of the wost b opersting i be taken into the stom pola and Nervous Affe and health wnwaonicd by anything in the whole jons, and lmparts s | Materis Medicn Ing Kixow & or BURNETTS STANDARD PREPAKA- ol by wil Drogoets atioas heve maintained \ght youts these Pre; Lcreasing sale, +.s1a.5/0g the optulon of the best veled, AL Toors WAk (s & presereer of the testh snd weons —For more | o lnege and constan’ Jolbgr s that (hey ar Bonwere's O B s o weithant Gfory b0 the ensmmel T (bl roapect I ssands alone The avide £ Chiwsnlots and 07 the Dental Faculty sobetan Vistes 1100 faote ¥ oo ein by Wil Dyt Anrex's Live For Tug ¥ Prowato it growth . v ( RNTAIS to lmpart W and viger will Ix VARABLY heep the besd fn & cles beaithy condition oonteing wothing Ijrioce: has No b grat Hare Dunssine ool in ndorend by our best physichns | ssvare you ladies and quire for the hais. Said by el druggiets Saman A Cwevauem MDD e, b a ) I gront Sir Astloy Cooper said that no human ' v 0 hnow uls v o had & stowach ot & vttt who would ot be paluf minded of the axitenee \ of hose o gane By dyspepein and bidousness, fortify snd wvigrste Whe whih oastonn doses of HoRTETTER'S STowAcH MrTTERS all | Doctors disuere upon ma e e 1o adwi g thewe produce Ar astrinpont whieh bin " Reuier Axo HEALTH TO YoUm CHILDREN. —Mrs. W inaow ¢ Soornive STaee for Chbidoen relieves the child frou pon i o the sowach and boweln, cormeets acklity and wind | eote. Penfoutly sofe bn il oases, e millions of mothets con tomily Thisty five wnts s boitie Offiees, No., 218 Poltonst., New York and | Mo 26 [1igh Ho'barn, Londen, Pruland Dyiwo By Inones. — Phousands are drawing rapidly Beacot and noer doun every duy, siuply for (e want o 3 gental et afor o daciinin Dot aud life. Depot. No. 3 Deyoar. rgymen, in their visits of mercy, continnally find thay ehan @ 1o those o b WA Wby fimen i wisl app'y for it € tals purpose. epet No. 491 MoTH AND FRECKLEN Ladios sicied with Discolorstions on the Vace, called math patehos, o1 freckles, shouM use PERRYS Celebrated Morm and | Funoni w Loman. 0w mivilible. Feepared by De. B C. Penay Webmatoagior, No. 6 Hond st N. Y. Eoid bysll druggiets 1n Now York and oigewiarn. Price 92 Tuw STAR MEDICINAL PownER Co., MASUPACTURE AND SELL THE Mokiypey Powonn, 2t Moray.inf estele sope, of Uleots of the Throat and Nose oncsied Poe, Sosling of ihe Tously, Conghe Colde, Qusey, fi . Clergyman's hrowt, Catarr) ave. m‘ Soe < reoler contaiuing cortificates from lllfluw- ¥ Wi of Whteon, Peter & Co., Wholessde Druggists Louaville. Ky D M Hildeath, sne of the preprietors of the Mis Fopsbets Cristenden, W idow of Hon. Jo! - L T L LT T De. J. Cotuis Browsg's CHLORODYN Won. Far' Roswell communicated to the College of P T Davenport iat he hed (scetoed inforiiation to enly remedy of wuy servicg i o war (HLORO} oo, December 31, 1064 Huwmy Switn, Specia A waos NY COSTIVESESS, THR SOURJE OF DisBAsE. — It canses . szivess, Billousness Sour Stomach, O wion, | Indigestion, ke Dr. Hammn x's PeRistiimc Lochwars waranted to cure all these. wnd the ooy cure for FiLes, withor binedi g o1 otberwise. Sold by D) ax & Co. Caswnet, Mack & Co ., snd ol Drugelate. o e e e o iemeas Rendlite Trise =il e lpsed slheoctoes e soety m.';“t.."’.‘.fl‘.‘f"'...&-" “N.,L‘ly JRLR - CHOLERA, in its positive -utq.-- cwred by uggists. f— Troonms. first indioations. ea. and usaal reluzation of the Bowels, sre safely checked by hase prowpt and poteut littie TROCKES 8hoi d be in every pocket | pow. One hox. 1 ome dosen to families. $5. Sole maker, C. H A. A.—Dr. LANGWORTHY'S new PreMivM TRuss, L ensloet in use; 8o back pressure; mukes s final cure. HELNBOLD'S, No. 584 Broadway. [ PSR S S LAY ul).fl"l (.'_l‘l..::u. PO:ADI Restores Guz Hair, BT By RN 10 A Howe. a1 g THE ARM AND LR, by B. FRANK PALMER, LL. D.— The ‘‘hest” free to soldiers, ind low 1o officers and civilians 1,609 Chostmatst., Phila; Astorwl, N.Y.; 19 Green ot Boston. Avoid frauduient imitacions of bis patests. . Mvcl‘nr:. SUSPENSORY BAND- o Cartes Vignette, § Allnegatives * aoms, Sovpo ~ ouly ot No. 2 7 3 per dozen; Duplicates, $2. l.A.!.ml,!l« Wc'flm.!,u.v, Pequot Machine Co., l.l}'ltic River, Conn., mannfac- tove tha most improved Loome foi weaviog Tapes Bindings Webliugs. X & Gipby SEWING MACHINE. T “Tis ‘and loss linble to rip fn It ST A i Y .ih_"-‘mo'mll. 51 o. uma-.i * THR Sx0ER MANUPACTURING Coxrm‘s new FAu- e 8 now tesdy; slso, Button Machive. No. 8 Broadway. i CGrover & Baker'S Hicuest P vM E D , Suwine Maowixes. for family use. N Ivu'ou“'m“ 1 4 IMPROVED LOCK-STITCN MACHINES for Tuiors aud | m’.-w:ln Guoven & Baxsn Sewine Macmie Cowraxy, WaEEtER & Wisox's Lock-Stiten ~ omexs wid BorroNwors Macsine. No 625 Hrowdway. \ Tae improved Eliptic Hook Lockstitch Sewing- o hiname-A. W Sosrm n.mll“"; Agents wanted. A Howe Bewine MacsiNg Coupany.~ELias Howe, ,vgm No 099 Biosdwar. Agsuts wauled r +.4 ING | { | 1 { Joha | | | B | tained by | viewed by the Mayor. amendment to the Congtitution wus indoefisitel Po He " am INHALATION 1N CONSUMPTION dies, armed with the power of | e in the longe. And thus the upon which the cough depends © breathos deeper and fuller, onvey our Te e, directly to the weat of the uhealthy seeretions and the irrit t the greatest imagiuable comfort and This treatment ls not ouly applicable disenses offecting the wucous Persons suflering from any of the above dis and examine (o7 themee ves the numerous tes d thramt and Catacth casenare invite cndance st his New York Offce, No. 113 of Brosdway, every THURSDAY and TR and vuuwyn-xl lassitnde and equires & tonc. To press food upon ke putting fresh cosl upon an almost ire aent the system must be braced +1Via there 1s Bothing which can be compared with Mans- hisara Toxtc. For sale by all Uruggista. 2,500, —THE NATIONAL BRICK MACHINE, with only wo lonsks. wakes 3500 bricks per hour, with etraight, well det sud the bricks will stand ALL CLINATRS, while those e by the dry pressng wachives all CROMBLE TO PIEC be- (14 KEPOSED TO PIROST. A Ruqra, General Azent, No. 141 Broadway, N. Y. 2,000 SHINGLES PER HOUR are made by the EMPIR Suivorn Macuine with only oN® morse powrr; and will make oot of the same amount of timber ONE THIRD MORE SHINGLES than ade by sny sawing shingle machive. A. REQUa, Geueral No. 141 Brosdway, Ne MaiviN's NEW PATENT ALUM AND DRY PLASTER Friw axp Bokarar Steves Prars Sars Highly oruamental, and waarunted pertectly dry. Also & laige sssortwent of Bankers' aud erchauta’ Earea Mauvix & Co., 265 B'dway, and 721 Chestout st., Phila, UPERIOR QUALITY AND hed gratis with the best per com. ‘Ariny. by E. D, Heosox, M. D ARTIFICIAL LIMBS oF . Army ad Nav i the Sugeon Gen ace, Clinton Hall, N. Y. Howe's CorTox PIcKER picks 600 to 800 p er day i the field cle by hand. Southern agents 1owr MANTPACTURING COMPANT, No. 31 C wi Astor Pl Astamie Cronkra.—Let all be prepared with Dr. BrekvrLy s SYROP, whioh is a sure remcdy. s Both Chrouic_and ammatory Rheumatism are ¥ MurcaLre's GREAT Rikvwatic REnepy. Soid . PETTENGILL & CO., NEWSPAPER ADVERTIS- No. 37 Parkrow, New-York (established in 1849), are e Tribune, sud all the uewspapers in the United States Provinces. NewDork Daily Sribune. 1366. for Libraries. 17 Hentietta. ale of THE TRIBUNE. .. NEWS OF THE DAY. R FOREIGN NEWSN. The Ville de Paris, from Brest May 26, arrived at this jort yesterday. Her advices 1" have been one day [iterthan those proviously received, but none were re- cerved by the agent of the Associated Press. The Mexican Minister st Wasbiugton officially denies the report that Prosident Juarcz intended to retire iu tavor of Sants Anpa. GENERAL NEWS, It seems probable that & new Quarantine war is to be | opened, which will prove of engrossing and enduring in- terest. A portion of 8 night by Health Commisstoners, who took with them u suficlent force 1o “hold” the territory they mfl"d' also the means of subsistence, and all other needfl ap- pliances for maintaining & successiul cam , ond their arms, suitable buildings for the use of the uarsntine department. Further developments are looked for with warm anticipation. 0 question appears to have themselves, perhaps, are o cause, but evideutly the ing to eare little about it. There meu and forwarding war to points of rendezvous in Northern ot but the United States Govern- weh length of line to the enterprise, an i the €rratie Warnions uay hecome conseious of fleas in their ears botore they reach wny Canadiay battie-fie Iz tivity in_ enlistin Judge Underwood’s Court opened yesterday at Rich- | | mond, and the custe ry nddress was ‘made to the Grand The tone of this ad Jurymen by the presidibg justice. dress was such as to give offense to the Virginians, and | ps might have been expected to have boon so. Jefl. counsel inquired as 10 the disposition to be made of their client case, but no decision appears 1o have been rondered. The court again sita to-day. An extraordinary case of bhardship was that of the cap- i from up the river, whose child died on ard the boat yesterday, and who was compelied to carry bods around for several hours, in his cforts to comply with law. 1t is denied that any millers in “Orange County, other thau Mr. Marsh of Phillipsburg, have repaired their mill- stones with lead, and i that vo ill effects have followed the use of flour from wny other mill in the | county. Dispatehes from San Francisco show that there have been strocions wets of piraey in the Chinese waters : also that the surveys for the Russian-American telograph are progressing satisfactorily. During the mouth of May there were shi the lately rebollious States 20,4% pounds of 4,599 pounds of 4000 percussion caps, ball cartridges, and 1,185 guns and pistols The Croton Aqueduet Department has awarded the con- tract for building a reservoir and two gate-houses at Car- pedd bence to gunpowder, 156,721 New-Haven, Hartford and or fuel for the ¥ succossful and domon Audrews made 8 eco erin] voyage yes- terday with his fiying machine. 1t was rather more suc censfiil than the first one, but still not an entire succens. 1u Brooklyn, yesterday, & jury gave s colored man $350, (he h"mfl Claimed $5800) as indemnitication for loss sus- im during the riots of 1863, The Bangor Whig is authorized to say that the Hon. | Johy H. Rice is not candidate for redlection to Con- | grows from the Fourth Muine District. Daniel Loroy is said to bave mystegriously disappeared frow Poughkeepsio lust Friday m.ls‘-x mwnmunuslvhnch indicate that he was murdered. 1t i said that Senator Samners health is such as to have excited painful spprebension on the part of his friends for several woeks. At the Paterson race-course yes won by “Merril " best time, 1.50. mond” went in 1.51. Yesterday was the first day of the Annual Examination at the West Point Military Acadewmy. All the exawiners save one weré present. The Fourth Brigade, comprising five ments, under Pl i rgebercr g terday the Derby wis A borse uamed “Rich- A child two years of age was run over and killed by a “dummy” on the Secoud-uve. road near Seventy-ninth-st. oarly last evening. he Board of Héalth met yesterday but their proceed- ings were not of special o i i There has been completed a continuous line of railrosd 583 wiles in legth from St Louis, West. The Old School Presbyterian Assembly at St. Louis ad- Jjourned yesterday to weet next year in Cinciunuti. Gold was very excited yesterduy, opening at 145], scll- bigh as 146}, and cloglog et 1463, Government bonds firm, with & moderate busiuces. Mouey continue t 6@ 7 per cent on call, with the bulk of trausactions # per cent, The demand for foreign exchange is activ rates ure higher throughout. ~ Freights haveadvanced. exports (exclumve fof specie) from the Pori of New-York (o g;:l;npumlor the week ending June 5, 1866, 81,604, CONGRESS. SENATE. Jusk 5.—The resolution amendatory of a résolution re- gulating the investment of the Naval Pension Fund was called up and laid on the table, The bill to reduce the number and increase the pay of clerks in the Interior De- partment was discussed and went over until to-day. The bill to further provide for the safety of steamboat passen- gors was , with lmomllnunlyn from the Committee on Commerce. A bill was iutroduced and referred author- i mf.m. Becretary of the Tuterior to lease public saline lauds and to provide for their development and preserva- tion. 'The Reconstruction resolutions were then called up. The pending anmlnn was on the substitute to the second l?mnn'ofl'm-" bsve lr',‘ Doolittle on Monday, Pendiog its | discussion, the Senate went, into excoutive i i sy oy coutive session, aud ! HOUSE. aten Island was * ocoupied” last | rpose is, to orect and defond if need be, by force and | to Edward Roach and Joshus B. Jeukins, for | NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1866, The Conference Committee on the Milita made a report, which was ted a letter from the Secretary of the House resolution, in refer- fay . Adjourned. same ground. Amh-‘r’:r\‘; Appropriation to. The Speaker presen the Treasury, in answer ence to his gold sales | BT ETCY Reconstraction was debated yesterday in the Sen- ate, but no progress made. The Honse passed yesterday the bill to rednce the | the soldiers. The provisions of the bill are given in full iu the Congressional proceedings. et Judge Underwood opened bis Court yesterday at waited to hear what the counsel of Joff. Davis might have to say. Mr. William B. Reed of Philacelphia preferred a request to know whether the Dstrict- Attorney intended to move in the matter of the readiness of his counsel for a speedy trial In the absence of the District-Attorney, his Assist- ant promised a definite answer this morning. 't does not seem probable that any steps will be taken by the Government, and our dispatches state that Davis's counsel are present really in order to move for the re- Jease of their client on bail or parole. The eounsel who are engaged for the prosecution do not expeet to bring the prisoner to bar lefore October next. B ] The Board of Health yesterday took possession of Seguine’s Point, on Staten Island, with intent to estab- lish thereupon a quarantine station. The account which we publish elsewhere shows evidence ofaresolve to maintain this ground, if need be, by force of arms. We rejoice over this display of energy, and only regret that it came so late. Whether or not Seguines Point Do the best location for quaiantine, we do not care to inquire; suffice it tha' we are to have a quarantiue. We trust, also, that no amount of clamor will deter the Board from putting the sick on shore, and ridding us forever of the disgrace of that Falcon hospi:al ship. If danger ensues to Staten Island, the island must take its chance. Tender consideration may be due to its inhabitants, but not to the barm of a wlole con- tinent, and to the lasting disgrace of civlization. Public opinion will not much longer tolenate the Falcon, but it will applaud the Board of Health for the adoption of every measure calculated to make quarantine comfortable to the sick, and a sure pro- | tection to the city Secretary McCulloch easily vindicates himself from the imputations to which he has been subjected be- cause of his sales of surplus Gold. It was clearly right to sell—would have been wrong mot to do so. Had he held on to his Gold—as The Ervening Post advised—until he had accumulated One Hundred Millions or so, preparatory to a Resumption of Specie | Payment, he would have caused a fearful dearth of Gold and a consequent deraugement of all Currency values. He was right in selling; right in trying to | keep the preminm on Gold low and steady; and Sub- | Treasurer Van Dyck is right in hoping for good results from our recent heavy export of Gold, when it pay of officers in the army and to regulate that of | o Richmond, delivered a charge to the Grand Jury, and | iflictment of Jefferson Davis, and announcel the | conviotion) whici: wonld, if carried out the Soutbern peoplo 1t is, Sir, to ofer West oint oficers who It is true, Sir, Lhave frtion (vhich ts m nkly and gracefully, do more to grat than almost anythiog else you could vestoration to the army and nary to the served in the Confederate army and nary. o doubt that few, very few, would avail themselves of the aer'; but the offer wWauld 3 nefinq application to the F wound the South ha« recefved. . _ - These officers, of all others, deserve especial regard; the attackment to the nothing short uld bave in- s Civil Jove they had for their profession and at service, made a separation a most painful trial; of the conscientiousness of imperative duty co Quced them to surrender their so-valned commission ofticers resigning made no such sacrifice—their tenure of flice was temporary; the military was lifelong. The eivil officers who adhered to the Confederacy will pow find no bar Yier between them and any Federal office; why should there be Any between the military ¢ 1f the honor and fidelity of any men can be trusted, it is of officers; and if they should accept & Testoration, there ix no room to dowbt their fdelity, Individ. ually, 1 apprehiend, there are few men at the North who will clai for themselyes greater personal worth, than they would admit belongs to these Sonthern officers.” —Moore relates the adventures of a certain “ Orator Pufl,” who had **fwo tones to hix voico;” and of an abandoned scoffer who, “ hearing the orator say, My voice is for Wart' queried * FWaich of them, pray { Admitting that **there is no room to doubt the fidelity,” of these late officers of the Federal and later still of the Confederate army, the grave question presses upon us, ** Suppose their States should again secede, would their fidelity constrain them to go Se- cession or Union?! Having once evinced their “fidelity,’ by ‘ going with my State,” would they now illustrato it by going against her?” A settl this point is imperatively demanded. But there is a practical difficulty wl Rebel leaves wholly unsolyed. We have room for but one Licutenant-General in our service; and the place is filled. Even if Grant were willing to give place to Loe and go back to his tanning, there are Lieutenant- Generals Jo. Johnston, Beauregard, Bragg, Cooper, Pemberton, Kirby Smith aund a lot more, stillbe unprovided for. With a strong desire to con- ciliate, we are constrained to reject this scheme as visionary and impracticable. COALS OF FIRE. We shall receive in about a month the Englis newspapers containing accounts of the Fenian in- vasion of Canada, and copious comments therenpon. Probably it would be too much to hope that The Times and its cotemporaries would reproduce those admirable dissortations on the rights and duties of neutrals by | which we were instructed during the four years of the Rebellion. It was an object then to show that nentrality covered all privileges and few obligations. Now, the English press, having completed its homilies on that side of the guestion, will present the other view with equal sincerity and® force, and will discover a vast number of duties which the American Govern- ment is called upon to perform in order to prevent an expedition from its own soil into British territory. Mr. Vernon Harcourt, having exhausted his learning and | his logic to prove that mo precedent could be found against the fitting out of piratical cruisers in neatral ports to prey onthe commerce of a belligerent, will re- appear in The Times with fresh arguments for the ob- ligation resting on our authorities to protect the Can- ada frontier of a thousand miles against all hostile ex- cursions. We have uot the slightest doubt that he will succeed in this new enterprise as well as in the old, and we can easily predict that the dear, stupid, British | shall have reached Enrope. But Mr. McCulloch fails to vindicate himself from a more serious and blasting imputation now gaining credit among observers—the imputation that his sound doctrines touching the importance and feasi- | bility of early Resumption are not adhered to in his | i daily life—in short, that he is not trying to get back | to a Par Carrency. :hnnnvc Minister is really trying to resume, what business bas the pr forties 1" We wonld like to confound them by an answer; but what can we say’ _— We have this morning many new reports of Fenian meetings and of movements to the front, but no new | invasion has yet been attempted. There has been for several days a concentration of probably soveral thousand Fenians on the frontier line, | between St. Albans, Vermont, and Ogzdensburg, | New-York; but every day’s delay of fresh hostilities makes the prospeets of the Fenians more hopeless. The Canadians are now fully prepared to receive any number of enemies at any place along the border, and even should the Feuians slip over, their want of | heasy artillery will seriously embarrass their | operations. Furthermore, the vigilauce of the | United States authorites makes the preparations | for & another invasion every day more difficult. | 1t is given out that we may expect some startling news this week: in which case it ought to be coming | along quickly, or may never get here. —By direction of the President, the Attorney-Gen- eral of the United States has issued an order to the District-Attorneys and United States Marshals to arrest all prominent Fenians who bave been or who | ““may be" guilty of violating the nentrality laws, | Suppose this cheap and easy administration of justice be extended to infractions of other laws, Lot | Gov. Fenton issue a proclamation for the immediate | apprebension of all persons in New-York who * m be* guilty of petty larceny, or manslaughter, or any other offense, . Would, or would not, such an instruc. tion be illegal and absurd ? AN RTURE FROM DIXIE, An imperfectly reconstructed Rebel has dispatched ‘A Letter to the President,” which, after dae pause, he has vouchsafed to an edified and awe-struck world through the coluwmns of The Daily News, Ve bad been, he says, oat of all conceit with President Johu- | son until, in his veto of the Freedmen's Burean bill, “*the first flash of constitutional light broke upon a sorrowing and desponding land,” which at ouce in. sured to its author ‘'‘an honest, uncalculating sup- port.” He continues: " There is, perbape, nothing so irreversible as the barror t soete) equality betwonn Whites and 26 lnu::(‘l:: rt of the former; an iavincible repugnance, which God and Nature Lave implaoted, holhwnggu smell. The idea of tarnishing that beantiful wurfuce on whick floats the soul, bathing and exhibiting ftself fa th ulations of the colored tide, an it rises and falls with cillations of emotion, is fuck & hideous tresson to Giod aud man, that ao insteot, bead- jong descent with the seducer of Eve would@be the those who advocate 8 worse crime.” TN [0 oC —If this be the case, how happens it that there are s0 many mulattoes? And how happen their White progenitars to be nearly all loud-monthed proclaim- ers of *'the instinctive horror " aforesaid ! And how happens it that no other nation of Whites on earth but | just this one erects legal barriers against the political and civil equality of Whites and Blacks? Why hasu't some ex-Rebel or Copperhead the conrage to try to answer this latter question ? After ““cavorting” at length against the * hellish treason "' of political equality and the *‘irrepressible traitors " who uphold it, affirming that a ** wise and beneficent aristoeracy is preferable to an unwise and injurious democracy,” and commending “‘avowed usur- pation,” ke advises President Johnson to deal with the earnest Republicans as follows: *Take these fellows by the nape of the neck, and th out to the Eupll, like rits bemr':.tmlm, and ":vr u.:'&,x'ogfl ity put collars on their necks with ‘negro equality,’ aud let Listory tell low wuuol it served its purpose.” Bad as the Freedmen's Bureau is held to be, he sees how it may be improved—as follows: ““If it be continued at all, it should he under the di such persous as Alexander H. Stephens, "Lobert - Loe Charles O'Conor, Thomas H. Seymour, Gen. Buell, Gen, Mc- of Bills were introduced providing for the survey and sale of public mineral lands, and establishing s live of traction engines and wagons from the Missouri River to the Rocky Monntains, The House passed the Senate bill allowing the New-York and Montana Iron Manufuc- | turing Company to parchase 4 certain amount of the pub- lic Jaudk not now in market. Mr. Garfield, from the | Committee on Edneation, reported a substitote for the bill establishing a department of education in Wash- ington, which was debated until the close of the morning hour. The bill to reduce aud gstablish the pay of the army wos then taken up, &nd after u sharp debate betwecn Measrs. Rovsséau und Rogers, the House seconded the de- dewand for the provious question, and the bill passed—s6 | to 39, Mr. Bingham's 3»:»! resolation, proposing . an | | | | Clelinn, or wen of that class, Who would have the confidence of every one whose opinion was worth coosideration; men of unspproachable integrity. of intelligence, Lumanity, aad intentions. Suchmen could secure the hearty cooperation of the Southern people in all fair and reasonable arrangements intended tu make the jatal Emaucipation Act work out ite ut- nost capacity for good.” Supposing this change effected, we insist that * the title of the bill” should be changed also. The new concern might be ever so good a thing, hat it could | not be a Freedman's Burean. Almost any other name would suit it better. Our reconstructed friend at length becomes practi- cal. Tere is Ais project of conciliation: ht Men reasonably ask, **If our | pinm on Gold away 1p in the | | publie, with its chronic incapacity for seeing two sides : of & question at the same time, will read its morn- | ing Bible and ““Mistoricus” its prophet, with an | faith not less jmplicit than when he discoursed upon the same topie from a ditferent point of view. Tt will not be dificnlt to adduce, in this new line of ar- gument, a number of historical parallels. We may compare, for instance, the crossing of the Fenians with the escape of the Alabama. We find Gen. Grant, the moment the matter promised to be- come serious, hurrging to Buffalo, summoning his officers to duty, and suggesting that the militia be called out to prevent hostile expeditions from leaving the United States. It would complete the parallel were we able to say that the Lords of the Admiralty, | when first warned of the Alabama, burried down to | Liverpool to lay an cmbargo on her departure. Wihen t was announced that the Fenians were moving | between the American and Cavadian shores, the : armed American steamer Michigan, with a number | of consorts, patroled the intervening waters to prevent either rednforcements or retreat. The name of the British man-of-war which did police duty in the Mersey to intercept the Alabama on o similar occasion has escaped our wemory. We find Geo. Meade first at Eastport in Maine, then in Bufflo, N. Y., then racing along the railways to Ogdensburg, to resist successive movements of the Fonians against different parts of Canada. under O'Neill are compelled to retreat, the Michigan captures them, and Sir Frederick Bruce at Washing- ton begs Mr. Seward that they may be detained till a demand can be made for their extradition. Mr. Seward, with his reverence for precedents, might | have quoted to Sir Frederick Bruco the Shenan- | | | doah returning to Livegpool with a Beitish crew, and of Lord Clarendon that there was no evidence upon which auy of the men could be held. Pollowing that example, he should have directed the discharge of the mistaken patriots whom the indis- ereet commander of the Michigan had made prison- ors. DBut we find Mr. Seward ordering their deteation in the custody of the United States Marshal, Surely, this is such an %t of disrespect to the Forcign Min- ister & Gireat Britain as will provoke & dignified re- | monstrance. When Sir Frederick addressed Mr, | Seward on the general subject of invasion, he should have been me!. 88 Mr. Adams was met by Earl Rus- sell, with the assniance that the Foreign Office was in possession of no officin! information on the subject. He should have been assured ibat due inquiry would be made. He shonld have been reteized to the Col- lector of Customs at Buffalo as the proper otticial {o institnte an investigation, and by the Collector should have been passed along to the Board of Advisers, and by them to the District-Attorney, and by bhim to the Grand Jury for the Dis- tri nd so on indefinitely. That would have been in strict accordance with British precedent, and it is greatly to be regretted that Mr. Seward should bLave shown himself so forgetful of these monuments of in- ternational law arising gut of our own most recent diplomatic negotiation. The fact that he exchanges places with Earl Russell, and Sir Frederick Bruce with Mr. Adams, cannot alter the law under which the cases are to be decided. The fact that it is your bull and not my ox that was gored never did make any difference—did it? . —Well, we believe the British nation and Govern- ment, though they did ns grievons wrong and harm, are still eapable of generous impulses, and willbe put to honorable shame by thestrenuous and intelli- ement of | W hich this ex- | Anstria will indignantly deny that on any principle of that would | Wi b | course, take the same side. All these Powers, if Italy his British rival in activity and zeal 7 When the forces : could have recalled with much effect the adjudication | gent efforts of our Government to execute its neu- | trality obligations. To have gone back to British precedents, to have called up all the remembrances from our civil war which might have justified us in disregarding international comity and good will, would have gratified a momentary passion among the people; but we are sure that twenty years hence America will be glad to recollect that no exasperation was bitter enongh to cause a violation of our duties, orto oceasion an official blindness toward the acts of men who, with only toleration extended them, could could easily have wrested from Great Britain her most important North American colony. Whether, however, our Government has not shown an over-auxious and superserviceable zeal against the Fenians, is a matter on which there may be two op whole duty under the la requirements of international comity, There was 1o ocension to do more than our duty., We had a legal, not a moral obligation, to cat Britain, and we "Aed now, in closi; | | knows that it is the Liquor iuterest which desires a Washington telegrams havo stimulated $omes within the limits of the law. THE PARIS CONFERENCE. A Conference of Representatives of the great Powers of Europe, in order to avert, if possible, the impend- ing war in Germany and Italy, has been fully agreed upon. The States which will be represented at the Conference are France, England, Russia, Austria, Prussia, Italy, and, probably, the)German Confedera- tion. The subjects to be discussed are, 1. Venetia; 2. Schleswig-Holstein; 3. The Reform of the German Confederation. Of theso questions, by far the most importaut is that of Venetia. It really is, and is known to he, one of the most irrepressible conflicts of Europe. Italy, now a nation of twenty-two millions of inhabitants, openly avows its design to avail itself of any compli- cation in Europe to accomplish the liberation of Venetia. The people of this Province are unanimous in their wish for separation from Austrid, and for union with Italy. Venetia thus coustitutes a contin- uing peril both to the integrity of Austria and to the peace of Europe, At the Conference, Italy will eall upon Austria to part peaceably with a Province the inbabitants of hich unanimously demand separation. The request of Ttaly will be supported by France aud Prussia. international law, Italy can lay claim to Venetia. No European Power wonld recognize a similar claim, France would not give up Alsace even if the people of that Proviuce aud of all Germany should unanimously demand it, nor would Prussia be found willing to part th any of her Slavie provinces. Why, then, should Austria be called upon to abandon Venetia? The cogency of this argument has been, and will again be, acknowledged by Russia and England. If the Representative of the German Confederation should be allowed a vote on this question, he would, of should bring on a war on account of Venetis, would declare her to be in the wrong. But, while resisting the claims of Italy, some, or all, of the allies of Austria will admit the great danger with which the disaffection of Venetia threatens the peace of all Europe, and they will not be absolutely opposed to asking Austria to exchange that Province for a territorial compensation, if such can be found. France, Prussia, and Italy will also declare their willingness to see Austria fully in- demnified, and Austria berself, if a territory should De offered her not inferior in population and value to Venetia, and less likely to continue in a rebellious spirit, would not obstivately refuse to consider the proposition. But here the real dificulty of the Conference will begin, It has been proposed that Prussia be allowed w annex Schleswig-Holstein, and in return cede a part of Silesia to Austria. The great obstacle to this proposition is that Prussia is bent on aggrandizing her territory, and is, therefore, disinclined to cede any considerable portion of her present area. Moreover, Schleswig and Holstein have a population of less than one miillion inhabitants, while Venetia has two and & balf millions. Schleswig-Holstein could, therefore, induce no government to offer to Austria an equiva- lent for Venetia. The only other expedient that has thus far been publicly suggested is the annexation to Austria of cither the Davubian Principalities or another part of | Northern Turkey. But any proposition of this character would at once reopen the dreaded East- orn question, and in this question all the members of the Conference will move with more than ordinary caution and reserve. Little is known as to the opinions which the mem- bers of the Confereuce hold upon the questions of Schleswig-Holstein and of German Reform. France is reported to favor & popular vote in the Duchies. As regards the German Confederation, the necessity of calling together a Parliament, inciuding representa- tives of all the German States, will probably be ad- wmitted on all sides. It may be regarded as certain that the diversity of opinion on these two questions will be much greater than on that of Venetia: and that, therefore, it will be found much more difficult L order that we ha justice by Great Britain to the Irish race Laws securing Equal Rights. Says The Union: “THE TRIBU m‘-lm- atruth as far- Lo {agacions, and as to Great Britan. Tx TRIsUNE has wisdom to per- celve what the statesmen of England have eitber been toy profudiced, or too narrow, to see; but T UNE bas net o apply ‘segacity at home.” —Yes, Sir! THE TRIBUNE W( epply precisel; the same remedy in the South Y:I: Inlml,-l‘q‘: Rights guaranteed and gecured by Equal Laws. Tha is just what we would have Great Britain conceds tq the Irish, and our country eoncede to the South—tq every part of it, and every class of her people, Nothing short of this will give us true Union an¥ lasting Peace. OYMPIC THEATER-OUR MUTUAL PRIEND, The first reprosentationt of ** Our Mutual Friend,” which was given on Mouday evening at the Olympic Thaater, Qi ot terminata till within a fow minutes of 12 o'clock—for which reason we were unable to record in yesterday's paper the popular success with which it was attendod. Mr. Rows has dramatized the novel with skill aud taste. Setting aside the unmanageable episodes—the festivals of the Podsuags and. the Veneerings, the scenes in which Jonny Wren so delight. fully and touchisgly participatos, the matrimonial speculation of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Lammli, and the business, more or less essential, which falls 0 tho lot of Betty Higden, Miss Pos- | cher and Mary Anne, Fiedgeby, the Rev. Frank Milrey, &e. &c.—the dramatist has steadily kept in view, and sucessafully labored to Mlustrate the two principal featares of the atory, the Tespective experiences on * the course of true love’ that wers encountered by John Harman acd Bells Wilfer, Wrayburn end Lizzie Hexham. His plan bas thus compre- hended the humorous accessories of Boffin's Bower and the plots of Veous and Wegg, together with the tragio lonw and incidents sopplied by the characters, conduct and fate of Rogue Riderbood and Bradley Headstone. Those elements be bas blended, i not compactly, at least judicionsly; 80 that bis play, while not effective in all its parts, is barmo- uious as a whole., To have achieved this vesult with such per- plexing materials, is to bave labored with insight into the ' character of a strange work, aad with fdelity both o the ge- nius of Dickens and to the demands of dramatic art, Great credit, therefore, belongs to Mr. Rowe for the artistic merit of his work. It willbe no fault of bis if that work does not —and we do uot think it will—achieve a permanment sucoess upon the stage, That it will have a prosperous “ruu” st the Olympie during the rest of Mrs. Wood's season, may, indeed, safely be anticipated; but prosperous ruus do not wake stand- ard plays. Mr. Rowe's play reveals to us Gaffer Hexbam's hut beside the Thames, the abode of the Cherub, Boffin's Bower, a bandsoma bit of river scevery, and the lock at Plashwater Weir Mill, together with a few subsidiary scenes that domot linger in memory. It introduces Jobhn Harman—and this is the only ciumsy incident in it—and makes bim tell his own story ta the walls of Gaffer Hexham's hac. It shows us Bellw's lifo at the house of Boftin, and Wegg and Venus in council. It por- trays Eugene Wrayburn's pursuit of Lizzie Hexbawm, sad the attempt at Eugene’s life, by Bradley Headstone. It depicts, in a very thrilling theatrical soene, the death of Riderhood and the school-master. Finally it shows the momentary tri- umph bat ultimate discomfiture of Wegg and Venus, and ends in liberal arrangements of & matrimonial character. Itg dialogue is, in many parts, that of the novel itself: in others, itis original with Mr. Rowe: and in all it is characteristic aad telling. It has been produced with a good deal of new scenery, a portion of which is Jextrsordinarily good. Mr. Hayes merits cordial praise, for exawple, for tbq plenic sceme, wherein Eugeme s rescued by Lizzie, and for the lock scene &t the AL In this latter at the close of the third act, Riderbood and Headstooe, in a death struggle, are precipitated iuto an abyss, whick, seen from the front, is ndeed black and terrible, To depend upon effects of this sort is not to rest upon the resources of dramatia art—as the thoughtfal spectator must be perfectly weil aware, Shakes in the sceno of the knocking at the gate ia “ Macbeth”—succeeds in thrilling the heart and mind to theie interior depths without the aid of stage-carpeuters. Yot effects of this kind have their merit, and the one which closes the third act of **Our Mutual Friend" is one of the best of its ver chanced to see. But Mr. Rowe's play is fortunate in good actiog as well as good scemery. Mr | Studley's Riderhood, Mr. Stoddart's Boffin, Mr. Rowe's Wegg, Miss Harris's Mrs. Boffin, Mr. Kames's Wilfer, Miss Myery's Charlle Hexham were all good personations of character. The best of them—a strong aud truthfully colored delineation —was Mr. Studley’s Riderhood. Mrs. Wood attempted to play Bella Wilfer, aud failed entirely. Bella is neither “fast” nor “loud,” and Mrs. Wood misrepresented her in each of these particulars. Lizzie Hexbam was played very sweetly by Miss Kate Newton. Lavinia, too, was well acted by Miss Glover, who comes hither trom England, and who made ber debut on this occasion, The other characters were not noticeably acted, Mr. Bouiface does not seem te have the slightest idea of Eugene Wrayburn, who certainly was not remarkable for astonishing cravats. There is but one actor in the Olympic company competent to play Eageue, and that is Mr, Rowe himself, Happily, the part has been shorn to come to an agreement. e WEST VIRGINIA. The returns thus far received from the recent voting in West Virginia on_the Constitutional Amendment denying the right of suffrage to Rebels indicate a majority in favor of the Amendment of about =,000. Who is | We lave the following: FOR THE AMENDMEXT. Counties. Barbou | Berkeley Gilme Hancock* Harrison® Jackson. . Jefforson . of much of its importance in this drame, as wiso has that of Bradloy Headstone, who bocomes & beeticbrowed stage- villain, in the haods of Mr. Garrison. These players would be wise to stady Dickens. Ho is not unworthy of at least as much thought as is bestowed on waistcoats and eyebrows, * Qur Matual Friend” will be acted every night. WINTER GABDEN—''PLAYING WITH FIRE.” Mr. Johu Brougham made his appearance, as an- nounced, on Monday, and played again last night as Dr. Sav- age, in his own well-known aod very brilliant comedy of *Playiog with Fire.” He bas had good audiences, aud Las been warmly welcomed. On the first night Le made oce of those eccentric and winuing speeches, which fall with so much grace from bis practiced lips. In reference to **Playiog with Fire,” there is little to be said, if anyibing that has not been said already. We carefully described it when Mr. Brougbam produced it bere last Summer. It illustrates, In a very lively mauner, thronzh the mediuw of a glood plot and Kling dialogue, the danger of trifling with jealonsy. The character of Dr, Savage, woven of honesty, worldly wisdom, bumor, ex- verience, goolaess and simplicity, is thoroughly weil adapted to Mr, Brougham's talents and his weli-known dashiog styla of oting. How well he played the part last season, the readot does not require to be reminded. Ho played it last night with oven greater vigor and mirth, and wou, at every poiat, that tribute of honest laughter so grateful to an artist whose chisf aim is to make evervbody bappy. Tle subsidiary characters bave been judiciously cast, and were acted last evening io an fl"m'; g mpshire. O LAGEE LOGIC. The Germans who met in Union Square on Monday evening to proclaim their hostility to the new Excise Law were very frank in their avowals of their pur- | pose to use the question 50 a8 to defeat Gov. Fenton and the Republicaniz next Fall and give the State to | our political adversatigs, Swid Mr. J. J. Freedma, the Liquor-dealers’ attorney: “Dodging will 0ot help them #his year. Throwing Fenton i even liberal man will I | overbosid and nominating not conoflinto usy and besides, and thelr own friends. No, ve know too well that we L-nuno('uhwlh gurovn votes a suffie,*nt ";“3‘" of "'"l:'" of the Legislature either to or to pr Vent the L] e irtnes heip. ok s, o o that DoLdINg the balance of power, we can defeat the nominees Of the party in power as long and as often as , and we 1,081 t0 do it until the fzation of that party has effected the "epeal of the most odious provisions of the present law and given sutli- clent gusrantees against the passage of similar provisions foF all futare times; and until that is sccomplished. we will oot rest. At the same time, let me say & few words to the leaders of the Democratic party in the State. noeuur!llv benefit your party—not becanse in the sands which are liere assembled that party b claims for reward—but becan 10 punish the party in powe: Very well, gentlemen! *punish” us if fyou are able! but don't forget how the slaveholders tried to do it a few years since, and came out at the little end of the horn. You have heard, doubtless, of the fellow who went out for wool and came in shorn to the hide, Mayor Hoffman—after making the usual profes- sions of regard for Temperance—proceeds: “'But T am as much opposed to intolerance as I am to in- temperance, and & law which, under the pretext of moral re- form, strikes at the life-long habits and customs of a large cluss of our people whioh are as barmless as they are universal, will never be sustained by any consderable portion of our commanity. There is a spirit ‘of intolerance fn some of the Drovisions of the present law ngainst which you are right in remonstrating, aud your remonstrances must be heard. —Now, the Mayor is a lawyer, and knows right well that our laws have alieays forbidden the sale liquors in grog-shops or saloons on Sunday. | any special self-preservation compels us He radical change in our legislation, while we, who up- hold the New Excize Law, stand gubstantially for the law as out fathers made it. Hoffman means to get the votes of the Germans, which he has a perfect right jons. We wonld have had the President do his | pj. position by seeking to expose them to obloquy v, yet keep rigidly withinthe | 4nd disrespect. Mr Prevideat, 1 wil vestarea sug- | doybt whethier all thg activity oy the (rontier whigh | and only elicient remedy for Feniau gouspiracies is to do by fair means; but the trick to which he here re- | corts is wnfair, and will recoil upon him. He is paid to enforce rospeet for the laws; and he degrades his | The Union (Washington) runs right into a trap | which we unconseionsly set, in afirming tbat the true | I | ter, and of ** Uncl exceedingly creditable and satisfactory manner. Mr. Burnett particularly distinguished bimself as the gentle, wife-bunt- ing Uncle Timothy. His taste fs always to be trasted, a0d bis knowledge of character fs comprehensive and ac- curate. * Miss Carr was also—as she l§ alwiriy truthfu), and bumorous, and spirited, as the Widow Crabstick. Inother particulars the cast presents but ons ooticeabls fea- jure. Miss Prentice, a youug actress, new to this stage, ap- red as Mrs. Waverley. She is simple in manuer, and scts with a0 bonest effort after excellence, if uot with the ease of ex- perlence, MF. and Mrs. Walcot, Mr. Aodrews, Mr. Hogan, Mtiss Jobnsoy, and Miss Morton are included in the oast of parts, “Playing. With Fire” is avnounced for oontinuous repe- {ition but we are also 7184 t0 D abio to add that fresker pisces Jss0nghawm's own burlesqueof * Poca- bontas " will shortly be presentea, The Winter Garden, alwars & pleasant place of resort, is never gaTer than when the geoisd face and cordial voice of Johu Broughsm are sheddisg sas- sbine and merriment around its walle. MISCELLANBOUS. The Ravels have been welcomed with lavee audi- encenat Niblo's. Wemast resarve their present satnA11B¢8 for more careful covsideration st another time. g There will be a Matinés at Wood's Theatre tosdag,” “rrell Sisters will appear, in * The Lovisible Prince.” The reaJer is reminded that the present is the last week of It Is er Too Late To Mend," at Wallack's Thes ‘om's Cabin,” at Barpum's Museuu. Miss Western, ** French Spy,” is nightly to be sees at the Broadway Theater, ware in preparation. Ar, L e—— Piracies in the China Seas—The Bussisa-Amers Piracies in the Chinese waters s@lil continue, . e .mf The Captain and erew eseaped in small boats, “I'ie ship Conger, from Hoig Kong for Ban ol or F. L. Pope, Assistant-Enginecr of the R eor-s-Cltef, Bt o has surseyed the country fomy Lake ing Ri route for building a telegraph fine the entire distance. siiow shoes, Major Pope reached the ocen, 700 milesvorthh FROM THE PACIFIC COAST. ican Telegraph. Sax Praxcisco, Thursday, Miy 31, 168, Six hundred fifty Chinese emigrants on th poleou Canavars mutined, and set fire to the v Pirates attacked the ML"IM on the 10th of March, but after & vigorous fight they wore driven oft. R beon attacked o fesk days previous, and one of the cro¥ irates were killed before the latter were repulsed. Ameriean Telegraph, has reported to Col. Bulkley, Enj Tatla to the head-waters of sms , Britisk Columbia, 8 distance of 300 wiles, and found an excclloat The conntry north of the Steeping River is belioved to be of & similar charscter, "fror traveling 500 miles 0n of Victoria, The native Indiaus were disposed to ext every assistance to the 4;3.( enterprise. Mining shares are flat; 50; Yellow Jackot, §52 Relcher, ’ws. Chollaz, ‘rown Peit, $1,000. Ll tenders, 13, - Dean Bopiss AT Figg Istaxp.~Our correspond- ent at Penataguit, New Yark, writes that two dead bydies o washed ashore at Fire Islwad, ;:-:du;.m;l,“ ‘Kh:l;om;fl s been uotified, aud an jog WAl be el \v-h(-